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PAT RIE Racing Steward Admits Ride on Lucky Hour Was Incompeten e pass him bn the outside and it was ap- parent to all, Lucky Houh was running on his own courage through the stretch. The stewards accepted the veteran's explanation of the lost stir- rups and the assurance that he had been riding to Instructions by placing the colt through the middle running. The Chesapeake running throws no new light on the Preakness or Derby except the conclusion that Lucky Hour will go In the Pimlico event. Bunting, the winner, was permitted to make his own pace, and was well in hand at the end, . Several horses have worked the distance on recent mornings fast- er than Bunting was compelled to run. Horsemen who witnessed. the race gontend that Lucky Hour would have run the race at least two seconds fast- er under Brydges, Chaimers, Shillick, Martz or any other of the inexpert- enced apprentice boys, and won it too. Lucky Hour was an odds-on choice, At least a part of those whose money had been burned up gave vent to their feelings in most uncomplimentary terms. Extra police were rushed to the vicinity of the judges’ stand while Shuttinger weighed out and listened + injunctions to sell his tack and worse. Shuttinger’s handling of Vista D. ina race at Jamaica last fall when Tenlec won and Goodbye took the piace was @ masterly exhibition by comparison. A peculiar angle of the race was the stout support accorded Bunting in the Clul House Mutuels at the last moment, or after shuttinger must have received his riding in- structions. The pace would have put a buggy horse to blush—there never Shuttinger Tells Judges He Lost Stirrup Irons at Start—Pace in Race Would Have Put Buggy Horse to Blush. (Special to The Evening World.) ' BALTIMORE, May 1.—Lucky Hour, courageous son of Ferole of Hourless-Lucky Catch, remains en- fitled to all the weight allowance Conditions of the coming Preakness Stake permit. Jockey Andy Shuttin- ger saved them for the Lexington stable in the running of the Chesa- Peake Stake at Havre de Grace Sat- urday. About 6,000 were worked into ®@ frenzy while he was snatching and hauling the colt back into last posi- fion almost continuously throughout the mile and@ a sixteenth running or until he had them well saved. -Shuttinger, for the last few years, has. enjoyed the reputation of being _ ne of the most careful riders on the farf—his loyalty to the Lexington le has never deen questioned. the Chesapeake spectators saw Tm snatch back at the start of a four-horse race and take his mount ‘wp three different times during the * Fuaning of the first quarter mile they realized that something must be wrong. When he permitted Bunting fo go off to a thras-length lead along the back-stretoh and was apparently being outrun by Salling Along and Superlative the stands yelled a plea to turn the colt Joose. He did dur- the final sixteenth and then got] was any. thin a length of Bunting at the] Bunting was shipped back to { finish of one of the slowest races ever| Brookdale immediately after the | over the track. race, an unknowa quantity. He is juttinger told the judges that he lost his stirrup irons at the start and only regained one of them during the . Fun around the first turn. Through- out the mile and a sixteenth running ) several close observers trained power- ful field glasses on the boy, but never ‘once. was he seen to reach down to recoyer them. ) Had Shuttinger’s foot been braced | by the Rock of Gibraltar, he could not nave exerted more pressure than he did. at the half mile ground when he enabled the slow gaited Superlative to a better looking colt in every respect than when he galloped home winner of the Futurity at Belmont Park last September. He has grown in every direction, and carrie’ much more flesh than he will a month hence. He submitted to restraint much more kindly than Lucky Hour through every stage of the Cheaspeake run- ning, and pulled up without distress The Lexington Stable's devotion to Shuttinger may prohibit its setting him down for either the Preakness or Derby running Morvich, Benjamin Block's unbi in colt, which is favored to win the Kentucky Derby on May 13. worked an impres mile yesterday ever the Jamaica track in preparation in 1.40 3-5. . Kenneth Roy Williams, the slugging outfielder of the St. Louis Browns, is setting out for the premier honors in two departments of , having’ made nine home runs and stolen nine bases. x In*holding Detroit hit! and not permitting r to reach first base, Charlie Robertson, White Sox pitcher, took his place in. what is Perhaps the most ct circle in major league baseball. Only five ~ ‘pitchers performed the feat up to yesterday, and three of the games were played mere than forty years ago. Of the later day pitchers only Cy Young and the late Addie Foss enjoyed the inction which came _ to the young White Sox twirler yesterday. ° Mrs. William A. Gavin, metropolitan golf champion and prominent In American golf for a number of years, has resigned from the Belle- elaire Golf and Country Club at Baysid vescnetit The curtain was rung down at Pinehurst with the distribution of the last golf trophies of the season among the winners of the Sta' Bankers’ Association's annual tournament. The prizes for the best groas rounds went to two North Carolina bankers, J. B. Granger and C. E. Taylor. ; Arthur Spencer displayed brilliant speed in defeating Raymond Eaton in two straight heats of a one-mile match race before a big crowd at the Velodrome in Newark. University will open golf season against Cornell May mpionships and al! on. semi-professional Women will be allowed to participate in the cl @vents of the Western Pennsylvania Golf Associ The Giants defeated the Providence Grays, team, in an exhibition game at Provi of 12 to 3. Stevens Institute of Technology m: of the tennis matches with Brooklyn Polytechnic, winning the five singles and two doubles on the courts of the Hoboken institute Saturday afternoon. With an unexpected decisive victory by a score of 3 goals to 0 over the fourth national champion soccer team of Todd Shipyards of Brook- lyn at New York Oval yesterday fternoon, the New York Football Club, seoond this year in the American Soccer League, won the final round of the annual cup tie competition of the Southern New York State Football Association, The Naval Academy will have its “football ship,” a unique inci- dent of its preparation for that sport again this summer. All the mem- bere of the squad will be grouped on one ship of the practice squadron, ‘and an officer who was formerly a player at the Academy will be “assigned to take charge of them. « New York University, one of the founders of the Middle Atlantic 4 States Intercollegiate Athletic Association, has been forced to with- © draw from the organization because of a clause in the association's + eonstitution which limits the membership to colle: having not. more than 1,000 students. . Heber Howe, coach of the Crimson oarsmen under the new announced to-day that there will be several changes s-up in both crews when they take the water for practice spins to-day. hone ————__,, Rosenblatt, Morris Rosenblatt, Sts: » | ATALETIC EVENTS IN NEW oberg has. atranged’ the follow! ns May May 11, Brooklyn P mus Hall; May 30, Commere! M 27, New Utrecht. Games with (. Y. freshmen and Brooklyn Pelytech- nle are pending. ‘ ‘Training: May 18, Uras- YOK BIGH SCHOOL. De Witt Cl nton. The ssth § \ baseball chall f Morris High School and the Annex Council decided to form a team, An Annex tennis team has been formed under the direction of Mr, Kaster- brook. Arthur Shakin was appointed ‘Temporary Captain. Spring practice for t was held Saturday at Maconfb’s Dam Park. Mr. ¢ t the English Depart ment has succeeded Mr, Bernstein as Commercial. Mr. Reynolds has been elected faculty celal; Bonneau, Manager; sistant Manager; Klein, Goldman, Anchell, VY. Selovar, K. § ver Goldberg and Schuster are on the wv! yy e soccer team cer team unde pt. Silverstein, Mon- evach. uger Slvertsen and ex-Capt, Weiner A call for enndidates for spring foot-| phe team consists ‘of: Forwards, Ber. practice was issued by Manager| kow, Goodman, Amoury, Lanzoff and ehrelber Friday. Klein; backs are Capt, Silverstel -—————- Parmentola; goal tender, Boys’ High. back fleld positions are Knapp, Kr Feely, Horowitz, Arkus has been Davidson. He lected Track Manager, Evander Childs. By winning the New York Stute riffe match Evander Childs’ Boys’ High will hold its annual Field Day Thursday May 25, At 10 o'clock the -studeyt body will march to Com- wercial Field, where the games will by hela, A special feature this term ts bleyele race of eight to ten miles, open to boys of the Main Building and the of the cups it of the team, Peters and tl relinquishing Andividucd ler mi Conklin; second ack, Wiggins (Ca Inside home, Myloe, and outatde New York State t the Dr 175 Bushwick. The team of ; T, Gelger, in) J. Greenberg, J, Zeithic, LU, Dunn, 174 M72; A O'D adviser of the tennis team ct Commer- Spring practice has begun for the soc~ rifle team won es. All events are handicapped, | the championship of New York City. To-morrow the lucroase team plays] The score, 1,056, bettered by nine points “Prep at Poly Field, Boys’ High|the former record of 1,045 held by Ja- bly will line up as follows: Goal, |maica. The Evander team won three Hens: point, Day; cover point, Wicks; | out of the four matches to determine defense, La: cond dete the championships, but under the rules Flak; third defense, an; centre, of the P. 8. A. L. it can hold only two rophy,, ‘The OT TWELVE HOLES AN’ fe Ev'RY SHOT — ('vE wat =} BALLS N' EVERY THING ANY> RIGHTS ON “TH'COURSE. AND I'M IN AN AWFUL FIX —(LL BE QUTA your way Bg IN A SECOND~ THE. FUSSY FOURSOME, Vic’s New Comic, Appears Each Monday in The Evening ning World Readers on Receip! Copyright, SAY = wourd YOU FELLAHS MIND (F } Go THROUGH? 1M ALL ALONE AND 1 PLAY Fast — 1 won't HOLD You BACK —1 BEEN SHooTIN' BE: ; HIND You FOR LE "VE HADDA TAKE A NAP AFTER TED FOR You T'FIND LOST — 1 KNOW 1 HAVEN'T Got ni 1922, ( 2NG WORLD, MONDAY, MAY 1, 1922. ° HER SPORTING NEWS t Exhibition|THE FUSSY FOURSOME - - - - - - - - New York Evening World) +by Press Publishing Co. FUNERAL, —GRET AND “THAT GANG SE — WHAT'S Bf) WELL - How'D “THAT HELP aS ANY ? WE'RE FoLLOwIN' A Letting nae GO ON THROUGH — E|LET Him THROUGH boc - =) AN CANNELL ARE HOLDING “TH! AURRY ? Entries for Evening World Headpin Tourney Now 1,045 Se Seventeen Teams Scheduled to Roll for Medals at Thum’s To-Night. Entiles for The Evening World headpin tournament continue to pour in to the committee in charge, at 1241 Broadway. The last count shows 1,045 entries to date, the greatest ever heard of in the East. No games-were rolled Saturday night, but play will be resumed to-night, when no less than twenty-five teams will endeavor to win one or the silver or gold fobs that go to bowlers rolling 100 or over and 115 orover Of the teams eched uled to-night the Union Carbon Com- pany has entered eight, Crescent of Staten Island two, Excelsior of Staten Island one, Sacred Heart A. C. two, Palisade of Jersey City three, St Margaret's Lyceum of Riverdale five, Jersey Central one, L. & L. & G. of Newark one, Ritchey Litho. one, Fi- delity Fire Insurance Company one. t Members of the Eastern Alley Owners’ Association will meet at headquarters, No. 1241 Broadway, this afternoon at 4 o'clock for the purpose of reviewing the past tour- nament season and laying plans for spring and summer tournaments. President William Cordes is of the opinion that the season just drawinr, to a close was by far the most. suc- cessful the alley owners have pe. rienced. All of the associntions in the United States are patterne’ after the Eastern Alley Owners’ ‘ssocia- tion, of Trenton, with a mar} The Hudson Bowling Club team of Henry Servas's Hudson Alleys, Ho- boken, N. J., is leading « classy lot of |) bowlers in the Eastern Alley Owners! Association three-man tournament having won thirteen out of the elgh- teen gameg rolied; Hunts Point, from Breakstone & Price's Hunts Point alleys, are in second place, and in ad- dition they arc credited with having the high a at home,.with a total of 666 Budd's team hag the high team score, with a total of 680 The ways, of Schumacher's . Brooklyn, are ered- ad for the mdividual is far in the championship, Last year’s football team of the Hirh School of Con! hos organized Itself into a baseball te: wmposed of Capt, Marvin Hochhauser, Pitcher Mierhoffer and Catcher Alkoff. ther member's of the team are Levine, Howie Donna, Nat Gluck, Angstrich, Mart They have bo played to-morrow Oval Ponce ¥ Javan Thompson, twenty-seven, 2 Negro of No, 2367 Seventh Avenue, glowered at. Patrolman Miller of the W. 135th Street Station carly to-day at Lenox Avenue and 123d Street, and as he reached for his arm Miller saw an automatic in Thompson's hand. A Jin- Jitsu Wwist ended that, While putting the gun in his pocket Millon heard @ click and saw ‘Thompson raising @ six-inch spring knife, His nightstick sent both to the pavement. Dr. Warnuln at H lom Hospital pul twelve stitches ‘Thompson's h in aaa N.S. A. to Meet at Stillmants, There witl be a house worming at the Gym- next new headquarters nasty 919 Wednesday National Sports meeting the tleally com one of the in Gotham. of 1 © Is prac ted to be i ums Ratio the visitars. best this event, standing 6-1 Glenn Riddell, who is representing the season is in seeond place, having won four out of the five game Seering, “Big Bill" ited with the high team score away from home, with 647, and the Hudson, of Hoboken, N. J., has the high aver- age away from home, with an aver- age of 618-50, high-class bowling was turned in b; Five-men, two-' ‘individual events were on the card The Pomona Pump five of Philadel phia set up the best mark.of the visitors by amassing a total of 2,79. and thereby moved into second plac in this event. The Mergenthaler Lino type Company of Brooklyn colfectec 61, the Interchurch Selects of Brooklyn gathered a total of he comfortable total of 717. In the two-men two-men total Trucks, 238 and In the individual event work was accounted for by J. Tam: of the Goldenbaum & Leo Lucke of ulleys, oklyn, qustern Ailey Owners’ bowling championship in the White Elephant alleys fl is In third Following fer, Senators ‘as, Kram mbo and An cading In the ave ume of 210-09, follo' Lueks, 2 i, Cohn. $ and Peters. Cohn, elter ‘or 286. He likewise high series away the and ‘The contest is drawing well are closely 1 rule all of the series contested, evening Pan-American, Homestead 0 Bowling Clubs will place in the Impert iment, Yorkville team, with a total finished second with 931. Homesteads won first’ with an average of 18! Pan-Amerieans was second the high Individual to Koeneke of the Se total of Trinker with Wedn for the prize distribution, 235. After the Evening World ment, Teams from out of town made u} the bulk of the programme in the metropolitan championships at Recreation alleys in Brook lyn Saturday and Sunday, and some event Jumes V Dalton and Charley Trucks of Phila- ¢elphia toppled over 1,249 pins, th: registered, rated as one of the best bowlers in the country, tal- lied scores of 214, also showed excellent form individual event with a pin fall of 606 For his nine games the Philadelphia phenom tallied the exceptionally fin: total of 1,866. Morgan t of 639, on pin more than the total accomplishes by H. Hartinan of the Horsexhoe Tir team of Trenton, To-night the Elis will occupy th: alleys, and the occasion will be one the leading features of the tourna ment. ‘ahl's youn, piace and going strong veering are Falcaro, Stel- Peters, chwind Joe ¥F s with an by Seering, mark to his credit, with has eredit for a} core honors was won by the San Ruhl of Rohrs of ‘ore prize wer irrels with the Wiatons tecelved the second high score prize roll-off ay even'ne a date will be s¢ the men anc while In 258, and In thy the bes! eam SERV | ONE=—~ ICE COLUMN. ‘our palms; formerly Com! UDGES OF THE RADIO TEST. The prize winners of the Sew Yorw Radio Show, which opens at the 7ist Regiment Armory on May 22, will be Judged by the following commit- Major J. Andrew White, editor of Wireless Age; Kendall Banning, editor of Popular Kadio; Roy Mason, editor of | ¢ ernsbach, edl- tee: Radio Broadcast; J. H. tor of ‘Radio News, and Hutehenson, who 1s one foremost electrical enginee: Ume echlef engineer for Thomas Edison, Application blanks for the entry of in- struments in this contest, in gold has been offered amateurs under the conditions published in this column last week, 1 upplication to the Secretary of the Ami Committee, teur Radio Contest McAlpin, New York City. STATIC. Up to the present there little interference trom th: something known polit This is due to the fact been conside! 2 been patting that radio's popularity has seared # the one source of inter! has proved stumbling block that seten tend with In getting good ¢ tion. Grand Centra is In front in th individua tournament the official count “Wa ly” star Oste ee: caro is RUAe Stelter has hig’ total at home and a. next the nd Squtr off f 1 Ho Win + with 177 Vendpin Toarna- Teams scheduled to howl Monday | 1 1 1 h ‘3 all ov have been trying to evolve or means of controlling ¢ the effect of the bugaboo, no nearer i solutto were when the; The indoor ai disturbance, but is subject to interfe: high static, Another few weeks will the warm weather really the neweomers in the fel -the Soclety There is with an out relic men belong tred of Stat! ean be done that will bri weather. There will, alisfaction in owning a proach of otherwise wnni can be foretoid several hou of their arrival by the pre quency of the charac r heard in the recelvers It might be Inte this fa the nvethod wu: Edison Company ting when @ thunderst A radio plant if ew York City heralded by the tached to the radio rece vance and streny res y of the peeswary t veady. ‘The fir is approaching is recelver ver fifty miles away. POPULAR.” Following clos rent radio devel created an unp! nt and popular science, Althous'! to cou: ig inereased C. Behoois, ina ree York fils Mat Includes the known — profe slice young men wh er By Capt. Robt. Scofield Wood. (D. F. Cx, M. Gy Croix de Guerre with squadron, Royal Air Forces.) ilinted Into the socicty to whi ’ however, ringing of the bell at- bell's rh ake rict during the dark pe intimation that a stormy “Y" EXTENSION RADIO COURSES est enrolment by far has been home study or co courses. wiward T. Bicak, head of the en+ - - 7 gineering department of the United’ ¥ S oF ‘ sre mamaria: he as VIALS, BAKELITE make radio thelr lMfe work. There t= so a fair percentage of women student. enrolied in the radio extension courses. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS ] X., Amsterdam Avenue—I have a va fo-coupler, a variable condenser, a Axeu nuer, a crystal detector and a pal! -ohin phones. My aerial ta twe wires, 55 feet long, made of No, 4 B my lead-in is No, 14, nying dlagra ? nig at all with lsh a hook-up If mine 5 In the sketch you show a loose coup! tnd not « vurlo-coupler.! You wil ne a pair of phones of at le in place of the low you are now using, Your 1 18 too short It should be at | t 140 feet long In on line. If you do not get any after rearranging your tnatrumen: scoring to the accompanying hook-wy you will need a new crystal, a8 the ont you are using may be worn out. macider 167th GOLD CON. contest at th & Miller Reese of America’a rs and at one In. which $500 as prizes to vay be had on Hot has been very unmanage Copies Will Be Reprinted on Hard P. id Mailed to E R 0 t of a Five-Cent Stamp for Each Copy. You Will Want the Series in Your Home or Golf’ Club. otic We the Forty-Eighth of the Series, the First Having Appeared May 30. Address Sporting Editor, Evening World. 5 THE EVENING WORLDS peters — Katherine Williams, Gun, Cora Roberts, Mabel and Frank Shackelford, tenor; J. ton Noe at the piano, reh tatre, Chatkovaky, I1.—Tenor solo “This Passion {9 but an Ember, : : (b) Herbert, Frank ! ; . (a) “Rodin {nthe April Trees,” MacDowell. (by “Banjo Sony * Homer. (c) “*Polonaise,’* 3 major, Beethoven, Gloria Trumpeters, Tenor solo, (n) “Little Gray Home ¥ hr; (b) “Pipes o'Gor- Hammond, Frank lections, Gloria Trumt i 1d Favorites, (b) Reces- | Koven, ~V1.—Tenor solo, MacFadyen, Frank Shack+ elford. VIL—"Fackeltanz” in B flat, Meyerbeer, by Gloria Trumpeters. ’Em Through COME ON JIM™ Lut!s W G1 Medford Hillside, Mass, GET OF we Tee On, URN GUN 360 Metres. r “TH'CouRSE -|F We Ler EVERY BODY “TRouch we'tt 7.50—Weekly business report. FINISH ABO ' 7.85—""Tho Travels of a Letter,” UT MIDNIGHT} Charles L. Hammond, Superintendent of \ Malls, Boston, 810—'"The Story of Architecture,” by Prof, Edward Hanscom Wright, Depart- ment of Civil Engineering, Tufts Cole le £.30—Mme. Lucile Delcourt, harpist, member Boston Symphony Orchestra. Selections: ‘“Bourree” (Tach); “Pre lude* (Tournfery, “Spanish Rhythm't (Laparra). Miss Alice McDowell, plan- Etude" (MacDowell). 9,00—Chadwick Haverhill, Mrs.C. B. prano; Mra, P. B, Kempton, ne jprano; Mra. Harold Barnstable, fitet \aito; Mrs. Ethet Peacock, second alto; | Sarah Jane Hillfard, pianist; Dorothy Jonstance Brickett, reader, Selections: -me=not! (Gliese), e (Rogers), by the Happiness," one-act play (J. Harte ley Manners), Miss Brickett, “Hungarian Rhapsody No. 6 by Miss Hillerd, Quartet A Southern Lullaby" (Greely), Made Love to the Moon" (Smith), by Mrs, Ethel Peacock. Duet, selected, by Mrs. Kempton and Mrs. Barnstable. MI chlamano Mimt,” from "Bo- (Puccini), by Mrs, Clarence By “My Little Su “Medley from the (Pike), by the Quartet, is is the Forty-Eighi the i Lethaia At itil Gad K DKA Pittsburgh, 340 Metres. M.D. Courtesy of the Brooklyn Chav-| “3.40 P. M., and at Afteen-minute inter- .00 to 10.18 P, M--Cor vals thereafter—Buseball scores, Jor the divestion 7.00 P, M.—Baseball scores, News. of the New York Weekly review of business conditions, \ebratiog Naw Y by the National Industrial Conference c Wi Prog t Board, te'the Measing o¢ Slusie Weeks 7.40—Bedtime story for the chilaren, ‘Jalrman. ‘Two—Boloa by Mise Bertha | . 7.45—Government market reports end ‘vid, aoprano; Aria from ‘Cavalleria,’ | & report of the New ‘York Stock Ex- acugnl; David Saptro, at the piano. Throe—Maximiilan Rose, violinist, David saplro, at the, plano, (a) Syndphonte pagnole (Andante Movement lo Canadian b) Caprice, Wienlawakl; (c) Ballet Mu- : Rockies, or Fifty Switzerlands in One," : (@) Guitar, Moskowskl-Sara-| [ Scar opi ati, 9 ‘M.—Arlington time stg yen Enoe ton tnce With Gluck: | Pals. ‘Musical programme by Miss Flor~ Misa Rose Roden, Chairn Fi ence C. Kipp, contralto; Mares ‘Dr Hkacesh'n rom] Caldwell accompanist; itn areee sho—-Mice| Sen Stool Works Orchestra, Walter Bail- rd, Aria from ‘*Posca."" Puceint. Seven He Brown, Spngyctne: Mr. Rose (a) Stcitiano, Bach; (b) cee ESTO A Ge choen Rosemarin, Kretaler; (c) Rous | BOSTON CELEBRATES ~ maninn Melody, Barasate; (d) Zapa- caso, Saraxate, Eleht—Mr, Buketot’, 100 YEARS AS CITY. Valentine's Aria from “Fauat,"" Gounod. ne ( Bells Ring Ont Paeving of a Cea- tury—Mectings He’ W W Z New York City, BOSTON, May 1.—Hoston as a city 360 Metres. reached the hundred year mark to-day and church bells rang out the passing aad Tal ee of the century, Mayor Curley, stand- aoe ei ueatan Mae |! at the entrance to City Hall; une . furled the municipal flag, while 2.40—Programme by the Hackel-Berge| gathering sang the ‘Star Spangled Rae ee ae eee rale east: | Banner and national and city flags man,” bach, were thrown to the breeze from $.40—Hrief song reecttal by Edna Ben-} schools, churches, homes and office trice Bloom, aoprano, J. Thurston Noe | yusaings at the plano, (a) “There Is no Death,” | PMUdings. f Geoffrey O'Hara, (b) “I Would Weave] A mass meeting was held at Faneuil for You," Gvoftrey O'Hara (dedi-| Hall, announced as in the old days by { ely as stat that the hot rably delayed and thinking Ly and an- « nce — the P, F. Melody, Bronx—WIll a set con visting of the following plicea recely the ally concert. A turing coll, er} or and a single phone Ans.-No. You will need 4 condenses and an { about 100 feet long, ground connection, J doubt very mucl if a crystal set will give you any resulta 8 you ure wo far removed from the roadeasting station. er the world some method ur cutting out but they are y than they would app! much $f you will Inform me 9 concert, as T have not stull one in m «ilo concert. Is 1 pass before sets in, and It a othing that loor antenna f excerpt: cold oncert and ix hetd people not having sets of thelr own. o Ap- 8 set—the oticed sto irs in ndvani sence and fr ic statle nolses Clty--Please inforny ble to str If there fs ans i apply IL doubt if you ear Charles E me if ft 18 po wire across th ? restrletions, to whom will Ans. asion Is there ket per! the to know thi the company y switch that storm fs ap- its advance is WJ 2 Newark, 340 Metres. } —— Tts ad by the and the s of the od 18, made iver, corde Features for the day. Music every hour, on 11 A, M. to6 P. » Agricultural reports at 12 M, and 6 M. Arlington oMelal Ume at 11.66 to 12 M. and 9.55 to 10 P.M Shipping news at 2.0 M. Weather reports at 1 A. M,, 12 M., 6 P.M, und 10 P.M. 7.00 P, M.—Children's poems, by Mary Allan Stuart of New York, 7.20 2. Stories from St. Nicholas e courtesy of the Century Conv from ne hour, do when It ts] P wake of re. » haa beer ‘The Hopeful Side of th "by Francis Campbell nt addrese to buatiesa ion alone CABINETS A complete stock of parts to buil your own Radio Set on hand. Radio & Electric Co. 3 Greenwich Street, @ cated to Miss Bloom), 44 by e | chiar ringing the ancient bell. Cardinal O'Connell was to address the meeting, one of the features of which wag the clling of a permanent memorial ~The Children's Hour—"Professor ¥ Squirrel Paints a New Sign,” given iste J well-known writer of 8 stor 10.30-—Prograu a ne by the Gloria Trum- THE EVENING WORLD RADIO CLUB Application For Membership 2 OREO Oe eC Cee Se eT es am PRINTED—SURNAME FIRST. te eee eee ee ee rae ‘ce crowte Te ww SVKKET, TOWN, STATE shee Receiving Set..........Broadcasting Set... . 0s» Type eeseccorceccceee Location «swine ++ sens somes Cail Letters ...........Date. 1192 MEN WANTED APPLICATIONS NOW OPEN Begin Preparation Immediately For Full Information or Thorough Preparation Apply to THE DELEHANTY INSTITUTE OF CIVIL SERVICE 121 East 11th Street Phono Stuyvesant 3086 New York City Preparation under personal supervision of M, J, DELEHAN'TY, who has trained thousands for Patrolman, fi “ASK ANY POLICEMAN AS TO MR. DELE- HANTY’S ABILITY.” Preparation FREE UNLESS YOU PASS THE EXAMINATION, Near Park Place, New York.