The evening world. Newspaper, April 17, 1922, Page 19

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THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, APwrw 17 ‘IGBILL’ EDWARDS, AFTER 20 YEARS, OFF TIGER BOARD Gives Way to Younger Man on Football Committee at Princeton. RIGHT UP To Ty I Timed “That ATTA BOY SAM — “THa's SUMP'N FoR 'Em To SHOOT AT! For the first time, over a span of twenty years, W. H. (Big Bill) Ed- wards, famous as a footall guard in his ny, and more recently Street Cleaning Commissioner, Collector of Internal Revenuo and insurance man, will not be actively” identifed with Princeton football as a member of the Advisory Board for that sport next fal), The word active is used only In a sort of semi-official sense, “Big Bill" Edwards will always be active in the affairs of Princeton, whether or not a Member of this committee or that, of one board or another. He has given hours and hours of ser- ¥ice to Princeton sports since that day, now many years age, when he cap- tained a championship football team, and he will keep on giving service, al- though he has withdrawn as a member f the Football Advisory Board to make way for a younger man, Just at present this board is not only §nactive but incomplete. It has only two members out of five—C. W.""Hack” McGraw, Captain of the 191% eleven, and Sumner Roulon-Miller of Philadel- phia, The other three members will be pointed in due time py the Athletic Board of Control, and these members ar likely to be of the so-called younger echool, Lest some inference may drawn that changes made in the personnel of the Football Advisory Board had some- thing to do with the recent action of the Committee on Outdoor Sports which, by the way, is strictly a faculty committee) in declaring the Captains of be LEONARD HAS TO REFUSE BIG OFFER FOR BOUT WITH RICE IN LONDON the baseball and football teams in- following words of Dean “Due to having stoned a contract can be emphasized, He earlier In the week calling for Ben- ny Leonard to defend his world's lightweight championship at Floyd Fitzsimmons’s arena at Michigan City, Indiana, on July Fourth, § have been forced to refuse a match for Leonard with Ernie Rice In London,” declared Billy Gibson. “Lewis Healey offered me ten thou- sand pounds and expenses for three for this cont Mr. Healey desired to stage It during the latter part of June or early July." The withdrawal of Mr. Edwards was first discussed last December, when the feeling was expressed in some quarters that the older men should give way to the younger men. He had served so Jong and so faithfully that it was felt he was entitled to a rest, and his with- drawal had absolutely nothing to do with the action taken by the Commit- tee on’ Outdoor Sports recently in de- claring two or Uiree prominent athletes ineligible.” Last fall the Football Advisory Board was made up as follows: Knox Taylor, who died a few days ago, Chairman; W. Want Dempsey H. Edwards, C. W. MeGra R. Munn ° and Donald Grant Herring. W. W. To Fight Three Roper, head coach, usually sat with the sommittee. ‘The late Mr. Taylor and Big Bill Ed- wards had been members of the board for years and the former also planned to withdraw. Knox Taylor had been the nominal head of Princetor. football for so long that his death recently has left the affairs of football from a graduate point of view to a more or less paralyzed condition. Sports at Princeton are governed by In Athletic Bi of Control, made up ‘of members of the trust of the fac- ulty, of alumni and of undergraduates follows: Trustee members — President John Greer Hibben, Robert Garrett of Balti- more, John Stewart, Chicago, and Walter E. Hope, New York, just ap- pointed to take the place of the late Knox Taylor. Faculty members—Dean Howard Mc- Clenahan, who acts a» Chairman; Prof, c. W. Kennedy, former track man at Princeton, and Dr. Joseph E. Raycroft, director of physical education. Alumni members—W. E. Greene of Trenton, R. S. Rausch of Villanova, Pa., and F. L. Wright of Norristown, Pa, ndergraduate members—George M. La Branche jr.. manager of the base- Dall team; J. R. Westerfield, manager of the football team, and W. B, Me- Ferren, manager of the track and field team. In addition there is the Committee on Outdoor Sports, which, as said before, fs made up entirely of faculty mem- bers, who have to do with all questions ‘on eligibility, It is made up of Dean Howard McClenahan, Chairman; Dean Henry B. Fine, Prof. C, W. Kennedy, J. Duncan Spaeth, professor of Eng- ish and director of rowing; Registrar ©. F. W. McClure and Dr. Joseph EB. Raycroft, On Same Night Copyright, 1922 (New York Eventng World), ‘by Press Publishing Company. LONDON, April 17.—The English press seems to be much puzzled by the arrival of Jack Dempsey with his man- ager, trainer, secretary and a small army of newspaper correspondents. The universal query ia, “Who's he going to lek? The consensus of opinion is that t ere is nobody here able to stand up to him. The suggestion has been made that Dempsey take on Joe Beckett, Bombardier Wells and Cook in succes- sive bouts on the game night. “Even this," says one journal pessi- mistically, ‘‘would be in the nature of a holiday for Dempsey. British boxing at present certainly ts below zero." Dempsey insists he is here solely for holiday, but the theory is generally held that he and Carpentler are nego- tiating for a return match in London or Paris as a purely business proposition, ‘The English press {s inclined to with- hold approval of this scheme on the ground that the men are known to be too unevenly matched. ES ES CARPENTIER HURRIES TO LONDON TO GREET ITHACA, N. Y., April 17.—Cornell will dedicate the new baseball park at e Colgate game next Saturday, eyn Berry, graduate manager, an- nced to-day that the work of put ting the new field in condition has gone far enough to permit the first game pf the season to be played on the new diamond. day for London, where he will for- mally world's heavyweight champion when he arrives there, pee ing Alfonso's Team Wins in Polo Match, MADRID, April 17,—A polo team com- ed of King Alfonso, Count Lamanza, a. Marquis Villa Bragima and the uke of Panaranda yesterday met for e second time and defeated a com- ination team captained by Baron Raoul hroeder of Chill by a score of 7 goals 5. visits the French capital, After meet- ing Dempsey Carpentier will go into Lewis, for Cherbourg to greet Dempsey on behalf of France. The champion was expected to come ashore when the Southampton Sa Marines W! Shoot Trophy. Sergt. Victor Beck, marine, yester- day tied with Charles Holmberg, C, E. for the championship trophy of the _——— ad Team Wins Soccer Victory. ¢ Todd Shipyard soccer team, for- r national champions, made sure of THE FUSSY FOURSOME Yi ‘Pin! OW BoY- 1 SMELL A BIRDIE — LOOK DOC = SEE “HIS FINISH - WEIGHT ON MY LEFT FOOT — FORMER RIVAL DEMPSEY United States last summer, left to- extend his greetings to the Carpentier said he was pleased at the opportunity to greet Dempsey and invite him to be his guest when he training for his coming bout with Ted Leading Paris sportsmen left to-day Aquitania docks before proceeding to Copyright, 19: te You'D CALLED IT SWING PERFECT — Wourd y'LIKE A LESSON “ACC Walter J. Travis Returns Here After Four Months on California Links That famous veteran golfer, Walter J. Travis, winner of the Brit- ish amateur title in 1904 and holder of our national amateur title in 1900, 1901 and 1903, and thrice ‘'met' title-holder, is back from a four months’ stay in California, where he played every day. He s: the game is as popular out there as it Is here. Speaking of the links out there, here is what Travis say “Structurally there some quite g none of those that came under my observance had what you could call a real putting green. It appears that they changed, from the sand greens, which formerly prevailed, to the grass at an unfortunate timo. It was during the period of the war and at a time when creeping bent, a seed that is grown only in the southern part of Germany, was unavail- able. With no alternative, they seeded with red top grass, but there are various kinds of red top. The kind they the coarser variety and they kept seeding the greens all the time with the idea that they had to be nourished. As a result, while they now have grass greens, they are ot fhe sort that makes it a terrible effort to get up to the cup. It isn't putting. It is very beavy, and players out that way seldom use a putter from fifteen yards away or so, They use a midiron.” od courses on the Coast, but BY JOHN POLLOCK Fistic News and Gossip i With Harry Greb of Pittsburgh,| Mike O'Keefe, manager of 1. 0. Jotiuny contender for the American light] Stith, has taken two more boxers under hin heavyweight championship title in} ™#nasement, Teddy Russell, the Providen town and showing in Harlem, his Dave at middiewelght, who boxes at the Pic the|morrow night, and Billy Kni indications are that a match may be]! Meee x he eapeets to atart in Jersey’ City x arranged between him and Cham- Wes ALE Sek Baus Harry Galfund the amateur lehtwelght, Boyle's Thirty Acres in Jersey City : on the afternoon of Saturday, May 27, | on tevine ae the neta ane nk says that Galfund waa never champion and twelve-round contest. last four starts as an amateur by manager of Tunnoy, is ready to make Shamus O'Brien Is training like George Engel, manager of Greb, will of his career, Chaney has finally decided to box the articles of agreement. O'Brien is booked to box Lew Tendler at the anxious to make a good showing with Tend: firet appearance {1 Philadelphia since he won the bantamweight title from Pete Her- | Benny Leonard. At the Casino A. ©. of Lynn, Mas« wight, Barney Adair, the local lightwol and Paul Doyle, formerly of Now Yo now of Boston, will clash in a tor fo, to a decision, As both fighters veterans of the fight game they ought to furnish a good stiff battle. heavyweight champion of Connecti pion Gene Tunney to be fought at fs not the metropolitan amateur lightweight Ben Levine of the Amateur Athletic Union for the light heavyweight title in a Frank Bagley, | bene" was defeated threo tinos {1 Weber, Ernie Seltz and J. Ryan the match and the chances are that Cee for two of tho most important figh also be ready to affix his signature to}nin « return match April 25, On May 1 Olympia A. A. of Philadelphia, ile is Johnny Butt of Jersey City will make his ler vo that he can get another crack man in an eight-round go with Harry “Battling” Leonard, the good Quaker City itamweight, the Ice Palace on Thurs- day evening; Young Montreal vs. Joe Nelson, lo and Jack Shar- in eight round O'Donnell welterweight champion of Peter Hobin, Joe Mendell, formerly of Philadelphin Burope, was signed up to-day for another | who is now il me at Lrook! bout in Philadelphia. He will go against wil) be acen ery aearneys in er hen ity Alec Hart of Cleveland in the feature go of fat the Ridgewood Grove ‘Sporting ial at eight rounds at tho Olympia A, A. of that city on Monday evening, April 24. Phil Sal- vatore of California fights on the same car ‘There will be three good bouts staged at Brooklyn on Saturday night. He will against Lou Brody in thi In go of rounds on Saturday evening, April 2 The competition for the point tre be awarded by the Crescent A. ©. of the Arena in Boston on Monday event lyn to the club scoring the most number of Cornell io Dedicate New Baseban| PARIS, April 17.—Georges Carpen-| gonii 24. Pete Herman meets Roy Moore| points In their amateur, tournaments, from Park tier, who ‘met’? Jack Dempsey in the] of Bt. Paul in the main go, Joe Burman of |last November to May ts very keen. Only Chicago will go against Marty Collins of New York and Paul Doyle of Boston will take on Phil Bloom, the game fighter of Brooklyn, For the first time in several months Young Bob Fitzsimmons of Nutley, N. J. will be seen tn a bout In New York to- morrow night. He will take on Jack Reeves, the rugged California light heavy- welght, in @ twelve round go at the Pioneer Sporting Club show. Sailor Maxted of Newark clashes with Joe Thompson of the tights In the twelve months. Al, Norton of Yonkers, who has not fought in some time, will don the gloves again on Thursday aight. He will ex- change punches with Phi! Bloom, the Brook- lyn fighter, in the feature bout of twelve four points separate the three leading cl The Clark House A. A. is first wit points, A. ©. second with 1 Paulist A. C. third with 29 and Ru Gymnasium fourth with 14, The next tou mament of the club will be held April 24 and 26. It 1s said that the opening box At Madison Squure Garden. will bet May 2 and that Matchmaker § already clinched two bouts for th tainment, Pepper ‘Vincent —Murtir Brooklyn meeting Babe Herman of fornia and Sammy Noble of England tling Sammy Steger in the two feature boule of twelve rounds, rnoy has Andy Chaney who has not fought » home town, Baltimore, in over two ean at enc. Gowmbea Sporting Gideon (HHL be, seen ‘Is Action’ there to-mort Yonkere, Nev. Norton has won many|SES te will go on with Joe Duis, the ayes nia fighter, in a twelve bout fights in the last twelve 6 at @ show to be brought off by tho A Midget Smith has left for Lakewood, |can Legion of that city. N. J to start training for several —_a___. matches booked by his manager, Harry Joey Silvers Wing Another Neary. Smith will probably box Young Saturday night at the 47th Reg Montreal tn Boston the first week in May} Armory of Brooklyn Jory x at the Arena providing the promoters meet ve 1 New York Evening World) by Press Publisht BaH! (LL TAKE MY LESSONS FROM SOMEBODY THAT DoEs IT OFTENER — | OUTA TEN OF YOUR SHOTS ARE GUMMED “HAT ONE You'D OF | AN ACCIDENT, AND NINE DENTS*! GOSH SAM -~ 1 REALLY: BELIEVE you've. BEEN WATCHING ME PLAY ! THE FUSSY FOURSOME, Vic’s New Comic, Appears Each Monday in The Evening World. Copies Will Be Reprinted on Hard Paper and Mailed to Eve- ning World Readers on Receipt of a Five-Cent Stamp for Each Copy. You Will Want the Series in Your Home or Golf Club. Series, the First Having Appeared May 30. Address Sporting Editor, Evening World. This is the Forty-Sixth of the KILBANE WILLING TO MEET CRIQUI IF HIS TERMS ARE MET PARIS, April 17.—Johnny Kilbane of Cleveland, world’ champion — feather- weight pugilist, announced last night to @ group of French sportsmen th he was willing to meet Eugene € French bantamweight champion, at any time, Their enthusiasm over the proposed mecting vanished, however, when Kil- bane reminded the sportsmen that hox- ing was his profession and that he hind received for bis last bout the equivalent of 700,000 francs, an amount nearly double the total receipts of the big- gest recent French fights. ANSON IS LAID TOREST TO-DAY, HIS 7OTH BIRTHDAY Cap’s Burial Place a Stone’s Throw From Where He Played Golf. CHICAGO, April 17.—ien and y old and young, paid their al homage and tribute to Adrian ©, Anson, hero of the sports world for fifty years, at public funeral services which were as simple and sincere as the life of the man for whom they were held. To-day, the seventieth of the birth of the “grand old man of sports" who led championship hase- ball teams in days when present srand- fathers were youngéters, he will be }-' to rest In Oakwood Cemetery. The grave will be only a stone's throw from Jackson Park, where Anson spent most of his recent years on the golf links, the beach or the shooting grounds, Within a few days the body of Mra, Anson, now buried in Philadelphia, will be brought here and Interred at his side. ‘Throughout the day an unbroken pro- cession of admirers of baseball's first hero filed silently past the great banks Id Service Winner, Ky., for Di Dy LOUISVILLE The Kentucky Joe! red to make the Kentucky Derby more valuable than was at first announced. have been perfected Matt J. Winn, Viee President eral Manager, to have a 1M-carat six-piece buffet service go to the of the winner, ‘This will make Derby the most valunt of all 0,000 stakes of the year. The gold is to cost $7,000. oe Oakley's Bye an Ever. PINEHURST, April 17,—What sald here to be a new world's among women gunners wa when Annie Oakley, t markswoman and for many y steller attraction of Buffalo Bill's Wild West show, broke 100 clay targets in a row, shooting from the 16-yard line, Previous attempts made during the Inst April ey Club has arra Arrange ments: by Col old owner the the svt anniversary Good Annie an lish: ve ’ three years to break 100 straight re- of flowers which filled one end of the} three years to break 10) simile te chapel where the body lay In state, Deneiot OP montheee of $81 All day long they came, some in pees Mmousines, some on street cars, others| Kramer Starts Hin 2d Season n Loner. on foot. Mingling with carefully dressed men of wealth were unshaven, unkempt persons in rags, Sidewalk trafMfc was blocked and hundreds unable to get into the chapel for the services, Many of the floral offerings came from ‘nationally known persons. One five-foot wreath bore this inscription: “Goodby, Captain. From your old pal, Frank L. Kramer, starting bis twenty- third year as a professional bike rider, was beaten In hia first race of the sea- son at the opening of the Velodrome tn Newark yesterday afternoon. rode a team match with Arthur cer.as his partner and they were beaten In two out of three heats at one mile each by Raymond Eaton, the speedy wel Kramer en- Billy." It was from Billy Sunday, who Hoes played ball with Mr. Anson forty yeara| Joey Fider, and Orlando Planl, tho Italian ago. ‘i —_— Others were from John Heydler,| prawings for Pole in Penm Relay President of the National League; K. Race. M, Landis, Baseball Commissioner; Bill] PHILADELPHIA, April 17. — The Lange, old-time ball player; Clarke|drawing for position at the pole in the Griffith, President of the Washington |championship events of the University Baseball Club; Charles A, Comiskey, Jof Pennsylvania relay carnival, April 25 owner of the Chicago Cubs; Charle and 29, announced te-day, shows an Ebbets, owner of the Brooklyn Club; the Detroit teath, both Chicago major league teams, the New York Giants and several other National and American League clubs; Augie Kieckhefer, former three-cushton’ billiard champion, and from many athletic organizations. Just as thd services were started by the Rev. R, Keene Ryan, it was decided unusually large number of teams en- tered for the big races, Nine or more teams are entered in cach competition, ss sae Rice High Gun at N.Y. ‘The scores were not particularly high at the Travers Island traps of t York A. C. yesterday. A high that whirled the blue rocks into diMoult A, €. Shoo to have Commissioncr Landis give the | shooting angles was responsible for the funeral oration, nimrods missing more than the usual The Baseball Commisstoner culogized| number of Ittle clay birds. Still, one Mr. Anson, his personal friend for forty | of the gunners did fairly well, The best years, a8 @ man who had “played the| was R. F. Rice, who won the high game square” from birth threescore and ten years. “He watched baseball and many her sports grow from Infancy to their esent state,” gaid the I ‘ball Com- through his| scratch prize with a card of 94 out of a possible 100 targets. | also scor a leg on the Lyon Cup. —— N. ¥. MAN BADLY HURT DP missioner, “He went through thelr BY AUTO IN CAPITAL tvoublés and tribulations, but he never a faltered, be never failed in the pinch,| Joh" Foerd, Seventy, in Serious never made a mistake. We of to-| wagemunnun at Howltsl: day should patter. our life after this italia: t man. 1 hove never known him to do[® New York, seventy, stasing |Cosmos Club, w mobile here run down by sn wn on thing that would not bring respect J admiration right from your heart.” \s the Rey, Mr, Ryan pronounce! the}head and bruised abo 4 4 final words of “dust to dust,’ many|may be | nally injur handkerchlefs were lified to the eyaa] At the Emergency 11 he old-timers who were Ist Battalion, Naval Militia, N. ¥., by : FA bantamweight, won his thirc place in the circuit of the Ameri-| scoring a possible 25 out of 25 with a| Manaser Neary's demand sive victory Se bean ee Boccer League yesterday by defeat-| .30-callbre Springfield rifle on the 1 Frankie Jerome, the Harlem bantam-Igional by whipping eg ne the Harrison Football Club, fourth |¥8°4 range at the barracks, 97th Street | weight and Marry London, the promiaing|the feature twelve-round pou! ints, by the score of 3 goal: and North River, vemartay. Holehers | ., bi have been matched to[tsed ‘his left to good advaniuge sid » by foals to 1,] represented the United States in the |Past Side battler, have be loutfought his opponent at all sta ® large Easter crowd at Todd] last two Olympics as « rifle shot. The] nicet in the feature bout of t rounds tthe battle, The weights were in Brooklyn. At half time the thes won the Divisional Trophy. do- at the Commonwealth Sporting Club of Mere 1118 and Littman 120% ringsid: mare leading by 9 to Le” Fialaated by Cant, Whltam Bel Waltifim oo ant snturdey niaht,, Dobby olen [simon tar ean, Joe Glick and 4 solve the Commander of the U. S. . Illinois, fof | takes on Tommy Millon im the semi-final of Mtichaci« fought a slashing tee: at the best shooting average of the scason, [twelve rounds. draw. They are featherweigh grouped on }stated his condition Dr, Andrew J. Foord Y., was notified, side of the chapel, burial to-day will be private, vf Kerho: Seven- Year-Old “Old Slim,” Winner of Har- ford Handicap, — Worth $3,525, as Sound as Ever. BALTIMO) Md,, April 17.—Old Slim is on his way! Exterminator, tillant seven-year-old son of McGee— Vairy Empress, by Jim Gore, started his season brilliantly by taking the Harford handicap at Havre de Grace ind incidentally added $3,525 to the fat growing pile which will soon land him in that hallowed class of $200,- Slim is one of the galloping argu- ments nst the theory that con- mation governs speed or route travelling ability. Long, lean and gangling, he is everything that the theorists insist go to make up the long distance performer, but, he bas igain shown that he is a sprinter as well, Had it not been for his brilliant route races last fall, Marylanders might have considered his winning chance in the Harford more seriously. Last November he went into winter fler taking down the Pim- lico Cup handicap, a two-mile event. Up be bobs after a winter's rest to quarters ru nsix furlongs in 1.14 over a heavy track, trimming such recognized sprinting top-notchers as Billy Kelly, Exodus, Bunga Buek and others. He appears to be the exception which oes to prove the rule that sprinters must be close muscled and have their egs well under them, Old Slim throws nywhere—a typical buck- wheat. But he rums, Morvich and Grey Lag were the niy two horses in America to earn more (han Exterminator, with his $55,290 last year. He has sprinted f As a four-year-old at s) he ran six furlongs in 1.12 and administered a trimming to his stablemate Sunbriar. In fact, he has done about everything asked of him in real thoroughbred fashion, On Satur Exterminator pro- vided Eugene Wayland with the op- portunity to saddle his first winner for his newest employer Willis Sharpe Kilmer, Some say that trainers make orses. In Exterminator’s case he nakes trainers. Henry McDaniel, Simon Healy, Will McDaniel and Willie Knapp have all trained him, and he has won for all of them. Old Slim, as Wayland affegtionately calls him, wintered at Sunbriar Court with the others of the Kilmer string and was shipped to Havre de Grace three weeks ago, Iminedlately upon his arrival he started galloping in a way that surprised all the work watchers. While others just out of winter quarters were being driven out in their preps, Slim started breezing ‘long in midsummer form; airing, they called it, Arthur Johnson, the Kilmer stable rider, has never been compelled to let his head down to re- sort to ur in any work he has ac- omplished this season, Exterminator is just as sound, without a mark or blemish on him, as he was when he giulloped off with Important Over 30 paj in the Union, Full Aviat-on Records. Will Soon Be in $200,000 Class Conference on the Limitation of Armaments and the Pacific and Far East Problems. Peace Resolution, Proclamation and New Treaty With Germany. Analysis of 1920 Census. SOME OF THE LEADING FEATURES Your Newsdealer or Bookseller will supply you at 35c. A copy may be had by mail, postage prepaid, on receipt of 50 Cents. Address: CASHIER, N. Retepniniter the Kentucky Derby four years ago. ‘There seems no good reason why he shouldn't go on to duplicate the greatness of last year, when he be- gan the season by beating Mad Hatter in the Kings County Handicap at Jamaica on May 7, the Brooklyn | Handicap, in June; the Independence Handicap, on July 4; the Saratoga Cup, on Aug. 81; the Autumn Gold Cup, in September; the Annapolis Handicap, during October, and the Pimlico Cup, during November, with several other rich stakes in between. Going all the time, up country and down, Exterminator already owns in addition to @ mileage record that would make an old-time drummer bow, a reputation for thoroughbred versatility that few others can ever be expected to duplicate, Wayland says he'll race a few more times be- fore the end of the Havre de Grace meeting. The jockey board custodian received the office somewhere and dug out a blackboard letter “L. Ensor," confi- dent that he would have occasion to post it with the names of the other riders in the first race on Saturday, and frequently throughout the re- mainder of the day. But plans went aglee. Algernon Daingerfield, the Jockey Club's emissary, who was ex- pected {o assure the State Racing Commissioners that Ensor had been restored to good standing in New York, failed to make his appearance. Buddy was disconsolate. During the morning he had insisted that Lang wouldn't be winning so many ! races for the remainder of the Mary- land season. Tho folks who expected Daingerfield to arrive must have had some justification, because they had only left New York a few days pre- viously and were supremely confident, to the extent of permitting the boy to make several engagements. It ha: been customary for a Jockey Club emissary to attend the opening at the different tracks during other years, and it may be that Dainger- field's train was just a few days de- layed. However, Baltimore is just as eager for its favorite native son to reclaim his lost laurels as he is him- self It was just the sort of Easter Sun- day that a maid would wish for a wedding day, and the track responded wonderfully to the soothing rays of @ warm sun. If Exterminator or any other horse could run three-quarters in 1141-5 when it was heavy, it it ought to be easy for War Note and some of the others in the third race to-day to negotiate the same distance inside the 1.13 mark. New York Again Defeats Quakers. For the third time this season the New York Football Club was successful against the Philadelphia Football Club, champions of the American Soccer League, at New York Oval, yesterday, winning the tntercity match by the score of 2 goals to 1. A record crowd of spectators watched their favorite team outpoint’ the famous visitors in both periods of the match, peas kaa State League Still a Th The Bay Ridge Strollers and the Sone & Fleming Football Club remain tied for first place in the second division of the New York State League, after yester- day's game at Kingsland Oval, Brook- lyn, J, Cunningham officiating as ref- High! Agricultural Statistics compiled by United ad States Government, and now first published President Harding s Inaugural Address. devoted to Diary of Chief Events all over the World in 19212 Diary o World's News day by day, Al the latest daca as to Armies and Navies of the World. Important Financia! and other Statistics about every State well as every American city of size Fuli Racing and other Sporting Records. and 50,000 OTHER FACTS AND FIGURES Y. WORLD New York City

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