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Amateurs, Semi-Pros and In- dustrial Nines Are Joining. HE New York Baseball Federa- tion, made up of the leading | amateur, industrial and semi- professional teams in Greater New York, held another meeting last night ot headquarters, No. 21 East 14th Street. The three divisions were well represented at the meeting and grected with nthusiasm the announcement that The Evening World would again present trophies to the winners of the various classes. Although the Federation made Its initial bow to the sandlotters last year when the final game was contested the debut was voted a success. Dif- ficulties were encountered, however, bit in order to overcome these sev- eral Innovations have been promised for the coming season's play. Commissioner Manley of the Bronx stated at the meeting that over 160 teams would be eyrolled from that district. He also said the Federation had much to do with Improving the playing conditions in the Bronx, “TI do not believe there is an Amer- ican youth who does not want to play baseball,"’ said Commissioner Manley, “but if the playing space is not avail- able this canpot be done. This was the situation last year and the main eason for the federation. In addition to securing permission to play on empty lots the federation has also re- volved permission to use the diamonds of the various public parks. “The games also tend to promote Schaefer Credits Young Phenom Says Links Sport Improves His Game, Especially Putting. By William Abbott. HE game of golf now seems to be T @ general conditioner for every other line of sport. While many top notch golfers are proficient with the cue it ts only lately that a billiard champion would risk hts hands ewing- ing clubs. Hels young Jake Schaefer, who successfully defended his 18.2 title against Willie Hoppe. ‘Out in Chicago Schaefer for some time has deen a familiar figure on the public links, where hie angular arms ‘would sweep up and down in a follow through as gracefully as his delicate manipulating of the ‘vories in the sport in which he reigne supreme. Young Jeke insists that the use of wooden and tron clubs improves his tong game of billiards and that the short golf came—putting and pitching —ts helpful to his short cushion work, murae and masse shots. “My father started me at dilliards when I was barely adle to handle a ue,” says the 18.2 champion, “and the ohief advice given me was to pro- tect my hands and stay away from all eutdoor aports in which the hands are used. “When I took up golf many billiard players shook their heads and mut- tered: ‘There goes a fino cue player ruining his hands because he can't help being a kid.’ I didn't argue with them at time, but stuck to my golf, for I was sure that golf would not only not hurt my hands and bill- tarda but would improve them. “A billiard player, Ike a golfer, must have extremely supple wrists and fingers and free working shoulder joints. The. long swing—the follow through—used in driving and tron work was just the thing I found to The Assumption Triangles and the Atlantic Triangles will play the first game of the final championship se- ries In the Brooklyn Basketball Light- weight League. Three games will be played, the best two deciding the win- ner. Tho first contest will be staged at the court of the Assumptions, With sixteen consecutive victories and no defeats chalked up against the quintet the Assumption Triangles won first honors in the first division of the league in spite of the formidable op- ponents which the team was called upon to face, St. Rose won. thirteen games and lost five. St, Andrews holds a record of seven wins and eight losses, Although the Assumptions hav¢@ never been defeated by a league team the Atlantic Triangles are confident of administering a defeat to them in the first game of the series, The At- lantics have won ten games and have lost two in the second division of the league. STANDING OF THE TEAMS— CLASS LAY 6 1.000 5 122 a Mor ’ 400 b 11 3389 Bt. Bren rn 000 Teant Atlant! bf has inereased his He is Raye of st total number of points to 200. N.Y. Baseball Federation Booming; Fine Trophies for Sandlot Teams Making Him Billiard Champion OTHER SPORTS THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, APRIL Government Heads at Loss food fellowship between the sandiot- ters,"’ continued Manley. ‘Instead of picking a boy favorable to either side to officiate at the contests the games are run under the supervision of the Interstate Protective Umpires’ Asso- ciation, This not only assures a square deal for the youngsters but also as. sures the spectators of fast games. Commissioner Loos of Yorkville also gave an interesting talk on the conditions in his district. He is plan- ning to hold a meeting {n Yorkville some time next week and teams in this district are requested to get in touch with Commissioner Loos, In addition to playing for The Eve- ning World trophies, the winning teams in the different divisoins will have an opportunity to play the win- ning teams of other cities. The semi- professional victors will represent this city in the Intercity championships for The World's semi-pro title, Inci- dentally, ading semi-professional teams of Greater New York have already sent in signed entries for this year's tournament and the winners will have an excellent chance of bringing the title to New York. The Fedetation this year will be tun on Major League plans. Offi- cial score cards will be given the teams with home grounds both for Saturday and Sunday games. Com- missioners will be appointed in the five boroughs and any trouble which may arise during the season, such as forfeited games, teams walking off the field, &c., will be decided by a board made up of these commis- sioners. Every amateur, industrial and semt- Professional nine desirious of joining the Foderation may do s0 by com- municating with Dr. P. M. Seixas, Secretary, at the headquarters, No. 21 East lith Street, or by attending the next meeting on April 11. Golf With keep my shoulder joints performing nicely, “This part of my golf game #0 helped to keep my elbows free, and greatest of all, perhaps, it gave me eplendid wrist exercise, the twist of the body in the follow through being just the thing to enable me to twist my body over a billiard table in get- ting at shots hard to reach. “Short approaching and putting gave me wrist exercise and improved My sense of touch and control of the wrist muscles so much used in the nursing shots of balkline billiards, I'm better at putting than at any other branch of golf, and my short billiard game has improved since I took up a steady diet of putting. “The only danger to tho billiardist in golf is that his fingers might stiffen little and become calloused through swinging clube. Mine never have been affected this way, and I don't think there's much danger of it If one is careful to handle the golf club with the same care he strokes his billiard cue.” To avoid unnecessary confilcts the newly formed Long Island Association has changed the date of its initial tournament to be held over the dimf- cult Lido course at Long Beach. The new dates are May 11, 12 and 13. It is steadily becoming more trouble- some for club committees to success- fully handie big tournaments with galleries that come near the 10,090 mark. The Country Clb at Brook- line {8 already formulating its plans for the national amateur championship that will be held over its links In Sep- tomber, It was at Brookline in 1913 that Francis Ouimet scored his sen- eational victory over Vardon and Ray in a play-off for the national open trophy. The gallery on that occasion numbered about 7/000, and It became as gentle us s0 many steers toward the finish of the memorable match when Ouimet loomed up as the winner, the highest individual scorer in the league and his nearest competitor Is points behind him. Since Raye has participated In 17 games in order to make the 200 points his record is worthy of a great deal of praise, Seivert, F. Stuehbury, Rogers and Mitchell nre the other high scorers of the first division. The first man has 125 points, while Stuchbury and Rogers each has 128 points, Mitchell has 116 points to his credit. Bostley of the Atlantic Triangles leads the second class with a total of 95 points, Downey is second with 79, Third place is held by Olvancy of St. Martin with 69 points. INDIVIDUAL SCORERS—CLASS A. Player. Team, Raye, St. Row Belvert, “Anwunipti ¥, Btuchbury, A Kogora, Trinliy m4 Mitchelt, Assumption’. CLASS B. Games. Points. Wy 95 ra Tost! yer. Team. the COLLEGIANS ARE AFTER AMATEUR WRESTLING TITLE BOSTON, April 6.—Collegiana appear as aspirants for national amateur championship wrestling honors to a greater number than ever before in the entry Met for the title tournament to be helt hero next Saturday, day e. Amherst, anno wfeld ( Avrle Inatinate have entered wrestling members, “eurly part of May On How to Regulate Growing Use of Radio Telephones Entire New Code of Laws Necessary to Cope With Situation, Officials Say—State’s Rights Bogy Again to the Fore. WASHINGTON, April 5 (Copy-, have to take the initiative in calling Heht).—<Storm-tossed on @ turbu- re @ convention in the very near future."* lent wea of conflicting wave lengths, | A vi reteus commission now is con- the United States Government admit) «dering what stepa can bestaken to tediy ts ut a loss to know what to do} curb some of the antics of the wire- with the rapidly growing radio phone]less amateurs, but tho task is a traffic, New laws must be passed on| thankless one. the subject, but no one apparentiy| It is realized that Congress ts not knows just where to begin with them.|/ going to act with any rapidity in The suggestion seriously ‘s being} ‘‘squelching’ the amateur when it ts considered of giving the Interstate] known that the ranks of the ama Commerce Commission control of the} teurs are growing by leaps and bounds air so far as the mainiand of the day by day, United States is concerned. All radio phone broadcasting sta- But this brings up the question tions are working without licenses. whether the air over u State belongs | ‘There is still the prohibition that they to that State or to the United States. cannot invade the wave lengths re- Have not the radio residents of the} gory t pas served strictly for the Government sovereign State of Georgia the right] ¢o9 to 1,600 to use the air of that State as they en see fit, without interference from thc] », at RRO AD Boole aa cd Federal Government? Once more the| ny? '0 be modified. Tho alr below spectre of “State's rights’ raises its 6 metres is getting overcrowded. Lied. One can hardly hear one's self think ‘Of course, the Government con-|t the receivers any more. When a tends that you cannot start an ether] Heethoven sonata and a market re- wave in Georgia and stop it at the| Port of curb prices become involved State line, It is bound to ignore} @t the same wave length the com- natural or fixed boundaries and| Motion in the air is akin to that therefore becomes interstate ‘“busi-]!@shed up by a harpooned whale in ness’ and subject to Federal rules} Mid-ocean, and regulations. ‘There is a possibility that the Gov- “One thing is certain,” sald Judge| ernment air space may be placed at William B. Lamb, solicitor of the|the 1,000-metre mark and over. This Department of Commerce to-day, “we | Would open 400 additional metres to need an entire new code of laws to|the amateurs and to the commercial- cope with the wireless situation. The|{zed use of the air. Every one of laws under which we are now operat-| those additional metres apparently ts NEW TEAM LEADER IN EVENING WORLD HEADPIN TOURNEY omnaiisiecen Astoria Team Shows the Way With 507, Six Better Than Previous Leader. Thanks to the good Dowling of Os- wald, Sohl and Back, the Astotia No. 2 team went into the lead in The Eve- ning World headpin bowling classic at Thum’s White Elephant Academy last night. The team's score waa 607, six pins better than the former high team score held by the Nabob No, 1 team. The scores of the players were: Ber- berich, 9 Oswald, 100; Sohl, 11); Heinrich, 88, and Back, 110. Although many good individual scores were rolled nobody was able to top the present high score of 114 held by L- R. Langbein. Six more bowlers suc- ceeded in winning World fobs. They are: Balzer of the Jolly Rangers, 10: Bancter of ‘the Mansion No. 6, 102; Oswald, Astoria No. 2, 100; Bohl, ‘As- toria No. 2, 110; Back, Astoria No. 2, 110, and Bannigan of the Peerless No. 8 team, 101. Fistic News ing were based upon the wireless con- | needed. ventions of 1913. Tho whole use of} Meantime, radio melees are bound and Gossip the wireless telephone has grown up|to continue. There are no laws to since that time and with it have come| prevent, and every ono is convinced entirely new problems. that during the time it takes to put By John Pollock “fT do not see how we can reachla law through Congress in these anything like a permanent solution of | modern days the whole field of wire- The New York A. C. will stage @D-/the problem without another inter-\less telephony may take a new other good amateur boxing show 1n| national convention, and someone will range. its gymnasium to-morrow and Satur- day nights. The preliminary con- tests will be fought on the first night and the finals will be brought off on Saturday evening. There will be four boxing classes, 110 pounds, 120 pounds, 180 pounds and 140 pounds. U. S. FARM DEPARTMENT TO GIVE HELP BY RADIO WII! De Told of Value of Meat Inspection, (Spectal to The Evening World.) WASHINGTON, April 5.—One of the first demonstrations of the utility of the radio for spreading helpful Government information will be given by the De- partment of Agriculture on April 26, At Cobb Is Hurt Teaching Team DETROIT, Mich., April 6.—Physl- clans at Americus, Ga., to-day en- deavored to determine the extent of the injury suffered by Ty Cobb, man- ager of the Detroit Americans, in a Pablic Willie Ryan of New Brunswick, N. J., who has to fight under his right name, Billy Bhine, in New York State, has been booked up by Charley Doenwerick to fight game between Detrolt and the|that time a talx on “What Federal Ment Witlle Fentour, the Harlem weiterwetsht. | vesteh Internaltionals there yes-|Inspection Means to the Amerfean in the semifinal to the twelve-round con] 7a Public” will be transmitted by radio test between Juck Sharkey and Sammy Noble at the Pioneer A. C. on Tuosday night. phone from the large atation at Newark In showing his players the sort of | fyom 7.40 to 8 o'clock P. M aggressive base hunning he expects erat are be given by a repre- . z , sentative of the Bureau of Animal In- Lew Tendler, the crack lghtweight of} cr them, and which has made Mim|Guistry. at is estimated that there are famous, Cobb tried to run two bases on Fothergill’s single in the ninth inning, and in sliding into the ba.;, turned his right angle and knee. Doctors who examined him after the accident were unable to say whether Philadelphia, wil! have an easy bout on his hands on Monday night. He will battle Charley Pitts, the former Australian ight- weight, in a twelve-round feature bout at the Broadway Exhibition Assoclation of Yrooklyn, Tondler outclaases Pitts tn every half a million ree: range of this station. ng sets within a JERSEY FOREIGN WARS VETERANS MEET FRIDAY the injury was more than a sy. pos way: and an E-ray examination 1s to be| Lively Contest On for Commander made to-day At best, it was be of Organtsn' 5 Dutch Brandt, who oat to Vincent “Pep-} eyed, Cobh would be out of the line ‘ON, April 5.—The third annual convention of the New ment of the Jersey Depart- Veterans of Voreign Wars 1 the Assembly Chamber ‘a ac by the per” Martin in a twelye-round bout at the Rink Sporting Club of Brooklyn, last Fri- up for a week. The Georsi cident capped # batting s) day night, the nhow drawing receipts of over! Tigers, In which Ty was credited » House Friday and Satur: $7,000, has been booked up to meet Earll with four safeties. two of them xuard of the dele- Ratrd for twelve rounds at the same club} doubles. The Tigers won 19 to 3, town to-day, prepared ‘on April 23. —s to legislate in the interests of the over- reas veterans and to devise plans for the further strengthening of the forces of the organization, There is a lively Andy Nelderrelter has signed up Ray Weat, the Brooklyn lightweight, fur two fights. He battles Frankie Ryan for twelve EVENING WORLD'S contest for com- rounds at the Collar City A. C. of Troy, mander of the organization. ‘The lead- N. Y., on Monday night, and Andy Thonas, HISTORY ing candidates to-day were D. J. Wal- of Brooklyn on Apr West recently ae ee tem Murphy of Jersey City. ‘The convention MORVICH WORKS FAST TRIAL. |)! Morvich, the most talked of if year-old of the Ameri tw jumped a mile in training at the J track yesterday morning in 147. He wa hard held by a hoavy exercise boy the way. of locating consider the questic » State headquarters at cal organization of the rans has planned a number of ev for the visiting delegates stopped Willle Thompaon. 3, colored champion, who recently k d out Young Dennis, a Weat ern colored fighter, {n four rounds at To: ledo, ©., will try and score another K, 0. to-morrow nleht. He will go against Eimer Hogan for ten rounds at Windsor, Canada Gans haw scored many knockouts In the laa few months. Panaz TO BOOM SCHOOLBOY ROWING In order to build up rowing In tl schools, the National Asfociation Amateur Oarsmen of THE EVENING WO Pinky Mitchell feels so sore over hin de- feat in four rounds by Dave Shade of Call- fornia at Milwaukee Inet week that he in. metropolitan diy: Bion, tends to fight his way to the front, where Name he cnn demand a return fight with Shade | With the national regatta et at the same club in a few weeks, Pinky | Creamer Cup, now held by th fights Pal Moran of New Orleans at Mil-] High School of Washington. waukee Friday night - = a TILDEN AND RICHARDS TO MEET. || Address Eddie Mond and Acotty Monteith have] Willlam 7. ‘Tilden and his recent, con taken another fighter under thelr manage-|Queror, Vince Richard: eet in an STREET, TO 1, Hurman, the Brooklyn} exhibition match on eo vourts of the Zant) Be ie 2 New York Indoor Tennis Club on Sui dantamwelght, Burman has two fights. day. April 15 he wm to Ghuksue fon sen Receiving Set..........Bi sounee st i Conn. and Apr 431 MORRIS RIDES THREE WINNERS Young Mack eight rounde at Hartford, eee ee ee ey w! d Conn. pron throughout a y SOP thre rac i the om ’ Ae kK. ¥ vrankle Daty of Bioven Taint and tarry’ Plenty of evidonce of slis kn eco £v iy London of Harte: one of the Cail Letters ...........Di AUSTRALIA OUT OF IT? Austraiin may not the Davis Cup becaus terson and James O. An two twelve-round bouts at the next boxing show of the Commonwealth Sporting Club on Saturday night. Al. Norton of Yonkers wilt Lyons of Hartera in ay teaun go against Tony cannot go to the United Sti the other feature bout of twelve rounds. pete in the Davis Cup match September, Kis Kneo tn fie recent bout with Jack] SAYS LANDIS, Douglass at the A A. ©. of Je City Kenosaw M. Lan I elie er te Dick in his manager bh bed ne of hin (wel: 1 for a postponement | £ with ®4llor Martin| & uleage fr best le ; Uhwd." He has been making « tour of ob ataten: 209s April 37 to APFil £4.) the ‘apring training camps of the major goes home — league baseball teams. Two heavyweights of the U. 8 Nationaif = Guard, Ballor Jack Carroll and George] TIGERS TO DROP “PEP” YOUNG Ashe, formerly of Philadelp! but now of Waivers have been asked by ‘Ty Cot manager of the Detroit American, 1 New York, will claoh in the { ture bout uf fifteen rounds the next ehow of the Pep" Young, the veteran second hws Oth Regiment Corps on Saturday night. man. ° 4 heavyweights N.Y. U, OPENS WITH VICTORY. | 86th St., at 115 Bway The New ba 42nd St., at 127 We Erte of St. Paul, the veteran tly n opened th win ay 125th St. ai 112 West who has been boxing for iday over th doin Cole =e . years, hae been signed up by bis manager] by a score of 7 to 4, on the diamo 149th St, at Third Ave, Mike MeNutley, to take rankie Mason, at University Rete! ta. 150th St., ai Third Ave. the good little flyweight of the West, ins Brooklyn: at 557 Fulton | | —" | | ten-round contest at St. Paul on the night] COLUMBIA ELECTS BALBACH. 96 Sern a8 AL the meotine of the Columbia « ming team yesterday Lv’ J Al Norton, T Fortiand, Ore, wud < weight Who rover rowert year. Te ts eemations! dra ember of the | Uivone) at it Tin4 La Application For Membership errr rr eee ee ee ee © ras PRINTED—SURNAMBE FIRST. Type ...-. senses eee es Location ...0.--s0eeesenes Signet purchase Signet Men’s Shops 5, 1922. By Capt. Robt. Scofield Wood (0. F. GC. M. GC. Crom de Guerre with four palma; formerty Commander 167th Squadron, Royal Alr Fores). RADIO, RICHARDSON, RAILROADS. Upon the result of to-day’s radio ex- periments on the “Cornell Special Ra- dio Train," which is belng run by the Lackawanna Railroa@ under the pel sonal superviston of David Welles Rich- srdson, a young Princeton senior, di bends to a great extent the tmmedia future of direct communication with o train in motion. Young Richardson has been more or leas active in radio for the past five years. His particular claim to fame lies in that he holda the enviable rec- ord for long distance transmission of low frequency wave langths. While studying he has managed to write a few books, design an tnstru- ment or two for the betterment of the radio service and make several suc- cessful trips in the realm of radio re- search. In addition to which he has designed the Princeton Untveralty radio station, § DH, and found time between lectures last December to get the sta- tion officially In touch with Paul Godley in Scotland, During the last month Richardson's own station, 3 XM, which was licensed under spectal orders from Washington during the war, was burned down and some valuable radio recorila were lost in the conflagration. Richardson has now taken on the job of proving to the world that direct com- munication with a moving train is both practical and of sufficient commercial Importance to warrant further expendt- ture for Installation on all passenger and freight trains in the immediate fu- ture. A number of radio experts are making the trip in the special from Ithaca to New York with the home com- ing undergraduates of Cornell Untver- sity, to sce just what success achleved. ide from the receiving set to which most of the attention is being paid, there will be a small radio telephony set on board to test the possibilities of successful transmisaton of the voice un- der service conditions. These tests are being watched by raflroad officals, radio experts and communication engineers all over the world. A completo log of the trip and the problems which present themselves and their solution will be published in this column on Thursday. PUP SUSPECTED, Don't think for a moment that every body takes all that ts told them as kospel. don't. The old saying that runs, ‘Helleve only half of what you see and none of what is told yc seems to have been changed to ‘Don't belleve anything whether you see it 8 ov hear ft." At least that is the im- pression we brought away from the Hippodrome last night after seeing over half of the audience climb up on the stage to make sure that no wires were used to control the action of the wireless controlled torpedo, famillarly known as the Radio Pup. The femi- nine side of the house was well rep- resented in the delegation of skeptics who walked all around the pup and siveral times threatened {ts future existence while crowding around ft and while it wus negotiating some loft and right turns. RADIO A MONEY SAVER, IC the figures supplied by the United States Army are to be taken as a basis of the economy In radio ntercommuni- cation, there will lota of money saved by comm puses as well as governmentally r future. A statement trom the War Depart- ment shows a cut of over 40 per cent, in the expenditure of the toll service monthly allotment. This saving |s di- rectly due to the use of radio as a means of communication. A FEW RADIO HINTS. Do not handle a er; ture from the hand depoait on the surfa the crystal and impairs its sensibility, Wash the crystal in a solution of carbon diaul- phide or warm avapy weler with a soft brush daily to preserve {ia usefulness, Do not handie an avition bulb any more than necesyary and then with the greatest care as the filament and grid ure fragile and easily damaged Never permit the full force of the ee ee oe ae eee ! j RLD RADIO CLUB WN, STATE roadcasting Set........-5 ate. with every THE EVEN ING WORLDS SERVICE OLUMN. State College, & to v. storage battery to pass into the fila- ment while tt is cold, If it Is necessary to give it the capacity of ‘he battery for good results do so, but gradually. Henry Piel, Hoboken: "Can I use two phones of dine.ent restatance on the one headpiece and get good results, oF should they both be of the same ohm- age? I have an 500 ohm phone and a 2,000 ohm phone? Answer—For good regulta the phones must be of equal re- sistance and matched as nearly as pos- aible. Get a pair of 2,000 ohm phones. F. Dolson, City: “In there any way in which to hook up @ loud speaker to a relona detector? Can crystal signals be Increased by the use of an audion bulb?” Anawer--No, @ crystal set cannot suc- censfully operate with a loud speaker. The signals are too weak. It in im- possible to connect vacuum tubes to a crystal set to amplify signals, PERER WILSON, W. 179th Street— “Can 1 use the enclosed wire for wind- ing a primary and secondary to make 9 loose coupler?’ Answer—The sample marked primary is Number & B & 8, and the sample marked secondary is Number 12 B & 8. Nolther of these is adaptable for your purpose. What you need is Number 20 or 23 double ailk cover, or enameled wire. WALTER MURRAY, Montelair, N. J —"I want to make a pair of 2000 chm phones and want toe know the proper fauxe wire to use? Should it be tn- sulated or bare? Which is better, Ger- man silver or copper wire? Answor— Get Number 32 or 94 enameled copper wire. Don't use German silver wire; it makes a cheap, useless Job, W. E., Flushing, L. L—"T have an Aerolia Senior and would like to get the music and lectures broadcast trom the Government station at Bedloe's Island. What additions to my set are necessary to do this?! Answer—The addition of # duo-lateral col or loading inductance In series with your antenna will give the desired result. FAN, City—"1l have a two wire an- tenna, 50 feet long. Would another wire help bring In the concerts stronger?’ Answer—No, the addition of a third wire will not help, What you need ts a longer aerial, A single wire 100 feet long will give you the best results. T. C. C., Pawling, N. Y.—''What type radio telephone receiving set will | need up here to get Springfield, Newark and Schnectady, and how much will it cost?" Answer—You will need a set em- ploying a detector unit and two units of amplification, which, with batteries and aerial complete, will cost about $160. J, B. BATCH, Rye, N. ¥.—"Whi a Uckler coll and what fs its use?’ Answer—The tickler coll is used for re- generation of signals and ts a coil of wire placed tn close proximity to the secondar of the inductance unit and placed In the plate circuit. W J Z (Newark) 360 Metres Features for the day: Hourly music on the hour, A.M. to 6 P.M, Agricultural reports at 12 M. and 6 P.M. from 11 Arlington official time at 11.55 A. M to 12 M. and 9.55 P, M. to 10 P. M, Shipping news at 2.05 P. M. Weather reports at 11 A. M., 12 M., 6 P.M. and 10,01 P. M. M.—"‘Animal Storles’? by Flor- Smith Vincent, N.Y. Evening 4 M.—"How Much Meat York Consumes," by John H. Bureau of Marketa, 8.30 P. M.—Concert by the Arton Sing- Ing Soctety of Newark; 60 voices; Otto New Dohony, 19 Wick, director. This soctety, tame6 ta Newark for thelr annual concerts, wae founded in 1859. ‘The roster of the or- fanization contains the names of many Prominent musiciane as and members. Though originally « Goran speaking organization and singin 1 man songs, it is to-day as cosmopolitan as any singing society, The programme: Arion Chorus, “Shepherd's Song’ (Ger- ‘Just Being Happy,” (English) Jacobsen; ‘Homeland’ (Ger- man), Fischer, and “Rosary” (English) Nevin. Miss E. Diemer, soprano, for- merly of the Chicago Opera, who re- cently returned from an operatic career in Burope, will sing “Arie der Agatha aus Frelehuts (German); ‘Winter’ (German), Wick: ly Lovely Celia’ (Ota English), “My Shadow.”* (English), Hatley. Habis, plantet, and B. who studied under the late C, Wenham Smith, will play “Polonaise in B,"* “Lisat* and “Scherzo. op. 31." Chopin, ‘Making Optical Lenses,”* by the Meming Miss Marle, plantet, Miss Ethel, violinist, and Miss Florence, cel list. “The “Trio” recently toured the Chited States and won the unanimous praise of the musical critics, Pro- “Prelude,” Rachmaninoff; ir.’ Drdla; “Hungarian Dance No. 5," Brahms; “My Heart at Thy Sweet Voice," from “Samson and De- lila,"” Sal : Selection ‘Minerere’ from "I Verdi; Spring,” aries: ‘Toreh Henry VIII,"" German. “To the Dance from K 0 K A (Pittsburgh) 340 Metres 12.80 to 12.60 P. M.—Noon hour Len~ ten services from the Trinity Church, Pittaburgh, 7.30 P. M.—Bedtime story for the children. 7.45—Government market reports, an@ ® report of the New York Stock Ex change. $.00—"*Pittsburgh—Its Railroad Probe lems," by J. A. McCrea, Vice President of the Central Region, Pennsylvania Railroad. “Helping the Poor to Help Themselves," by J. H. Flaherty, Seo- retary and General Manager of the Pittsburgh Association for the Improve- ment of the Poor. 8.30 P, M.—Musie. 00—News. 9.05 to 9.30—Muste. 9.55 to 10,00—Arlington time signals, Musical programme by Charles K. Ray, harmonicist; Hanna Davis Short- house, lyric soprano, soloist at the First Reformed Church, Greensburg, Pag Cyrus A. Davis, tenor; Mise Anna Mae- Hardy, planist and accompanist, and Mra, Cyrus A. Davia, accompanist. you need PARTS to aon't fall to, visit, we. ‘Oldeat and Iargeat house tn U. ing soe, Sta RADIO. PARTS. cepting our re “Build your iy in parte, Wr over this” le ‘Knoba (40 atyies), binging styles), nuts, switch «a awitehstopa, screw! lock nut whettt apring clips funtenna connectors sole Bincite, Uireaded ‘rods, ‘cop: "fend. Iker for ‘our 200-pagS, ugtrates Ben or our, catalog, containing | 50 at TUBE HOOK-' ida ores full, Information, LES ALE—RETALL 1m dlscount if you bring thle ad. 4-98-W Park Place. York City. Broadway at Reade Any Subway to City Hall Either Elevated to Chambers St Or use any mail box} Deposits more than $33,000,000 Surplus more than $6,7: Accounts may be opened by HIS was the rate of interest paid for the half year ending poeee 1, 1922, by the ast River Savings In- stitution. More important than the liberal interest earnin; the depositors had t protection of a strong mutual savings bank which has paid semi-an- nual dividends without a break for 73 years. You are cordially invited to use this strength and earning power, in build- ing up a fund that will rotect you against mis- fe and prepare you for opportunity. — ; Deposits made on or before April 12 will draw interest from April 1 East River Savings Institution 291-3-5 Broodwey —One Block North of City Hall