Evening Star Newspaper, March 1, 1923, Page 31

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Champion Swimmer to Appear Here : British Poloists Find Indoor Play GIEBEL TO LEAD RUTGERS IN DUAL MEET WITH C. U. Gallaudet Announces Base Ball Dates—Connolly Wins Event in New York Games—Brooklanders Score Over Gecrge urday, and the splash to even score against t R Washington Five. UTGERS' great swimming team is to visit Catholic University Sat- Brooklanders will have to make a mighty he men from New Brunswick, N. J. The Rutgers aggregation has been in five meets this season and has won four gh, West Point, .\nrim‘field and S he Jersey swatters. o'clack, Hink the Rutgers outfit s Capt. Glebel. w regular team in him- | self. holds enough records to! satisty any ordinary man, but Giebel i< amblitous. t plon and fx credited with records In 1 thess eve In the New Eng-| A college 10 he s 220-yard | hamplon und in the intercollegiates | he won the furlony title and made a guarter-mile record. Glebel is no poor sh. Gailnudet is 1o onen its base ball March 23 against the Univer- of Maryland nine at Kendall B 4 'welve other games have been scheduled by the Florids avenue institu vs: Hall Military John’s, at An- arylan at College John's; 18, Johns Hop- altimore; 25, Quantico Ma- . Pennsylvanta Military Col- ester; 28, Drexel Institute, 3 May 12, Quantico Marines, at Quantico: 16, Blue Rldge College: 19, Blue Ridge College, at New Windsor. Capt. Jimmy Connolly of the George- | fown University track team failed to | lower his three-quarter-mile record last night In the Knights of Columbus mest in_New York, but he won with ease in 3.114-5. He ran from scrateh | and finished ahead of Schaefer | Knights of St. Anthony, with a forty- | five-yard handicap, and Webster of St. Anselm’s, with a forty-yard handi- cap. In the fintercity relay at the meet the Washington team, composed of Connolly, Herlihy, Plansky and Gegan, all Georgetown men, ran third to Boston and New York. Catholic University quints triumph- a1 over George Washington teams | iast night at Brookland in that marked the end ball sea i in wn | that both over George | tions. Lington ag its lone loss being to Brown University in a 37-to-34 competition. warthmore all yielded to the prowess The week end match at Brookland is to start at QUINTS INTHiRD ROUND IN TITLE TOURNAMENT ATLANTA, Ga., March 1.—Third round matches were being played today in the southern Intercolleglate champlonship basket ball tourney, with no team an outstanding choice to win the title. North Carolina, 1922 champion, was the victim of the first real upset in the tourney vesterday- when the Tar- heels fell before Unlversity of Mis- sissippl, an outsider, {n a thrilling contest, 34 to Today's schedule Chattanooga vs. Virginia Poly. Alabama vs. Mercer, Missiasippl Aggies vs. Univer- alty of Misxinsippt. corxia Tech va. University of Georgia. Results of yesterday's games University of Wissiasippl, North Carolina, 33. Virgina Poly, 26; Vanderbilt, 23, Misxissipp! College, 47; Furman, 21, Alabama, Georgia Tech Mercer, 343 HARVARD DOWNS TIGERS IN PLAY-OFF AT HOCKEY BOSTON, March 1.—Harvard won the deciding game of the annual hockey series with Princeton, 1 to 0, last night. Mauran the six Beals, at Crimson, scored minutes fifty right wing for the goal after seconds of play. A fund is being raised at Brown to revive rowing. WILSON NORMAL SEXTET JUMPS INTO TITLE RACE Hurricanas and Capital Athletic Ciub figured they had e race for the girl themselves, in steps the Wilson ast, it handed the Hur: ' basket ball ch: nship of the city all to Normal team and hands them a jolt! ana sextet a wallop, and, as the latter took the measure of the Capitals last Saturday in the first game of a series purported to be for the title, that Wilson Normal 21-to-16 win over the Hurric s last night means much. It's dollars to doughnuts that the Wilson crew will be calling for a chance at the winner of the Hurricana- Capita STANLEY WILL CAPTAIN NEXT QUINT AT VIRGINA TNIVERSITY, Va., Sta March 1.—Boli- . Ga., has been University of n for the sea- eason that | tlan auint T or the awarded m squad by ac- ul Athletic Associa- who received the “V" are liam Brown ‘of Hunting- : Paul Walp of Charlottes- d Thomas Selman Hall of guard, Capt.-elect “harles 1. Lewis of Lynch- and Thomas McCoy of e, N. ", forwards, and Clifton Miller of Richmond, Va., center. None of these men played varsity ket ball before this season. Hall, Walip, Lewis and McCoy won foot ball etters last fall. HEADS INDIANA TRACKMEN. rON, 1Ind, March 1.- ke) Hanny of Aurora. ted captain of the Jiversity trick team. He the 1 foot ball team, nd full back. He holds record in the javelin lion of the Gener on. Those vapt. Wil (i . has been ele anna rined ng end he university throw, COLLEGE BASKET BALL. At Brookland—Catholic University, 22; George Washington, 18, Bend—Michigan Aggles, lege, 37 At Carlisle—Dickinson, as; .\lonnll St Mary's, 34, Tips on Playing Basket Ball; Correct Rule i clinched series before the season is over. The game last night was keenly ntested. The Hurricanas were fore- most in attack in the early part of the fray and at the first_intermission led. 11 to 10, Then the Wilson outfit 1allied and.’ with Misses Ewers and Young tossinz brilliantly and the others guarding closely, went on to victory Walter Reed was downed, 40 to 33 by the Yankees, but managed to gi the latter a good battle until the last few minutes of the match. Nikula of the Walter Reed team tossed ten field goals e Athletic Club i eams in the 115-125 pound lephone challenges to iurd Sparks, Lincoln 1 Semi e Aloysius Club, which is to meet the Yankees tomorrow night in Central Coliseum, pointed the way to the Dominican Lyceums in a 38-to-18 Dis- trict League match. The win all but red “the league title for the Aloysians. The Aloysius management now is endeavoring to book a series with the American Legion team that beat the Yankee Navy Yard basketers easily disposed of State Athletic Club in a 45-to-29 game. O'Connor starred for the vic tors. Warwick tossers beat the Washing- ton Preps, 33 to 19, in a game of the junior championship series. Thomas of the winners threw six fleld goals. American Legion keters will be hosts to the Fort Washington team. champion of the Army district of Washington, at the Arcade, Sunday. Mohawk quintet overcame the Owl Athletic Club in a 33-to-22 engage- ment. Clarke did some good playing for the winning combination. Princess Girl® beat the Epworths, 22 to 4. The latter were outclassed all the wa: NEWARK GETS BIG MEET. NEW YORK, March 1.—The na- tional junior indoor track and field championships for 1923 will be held in Newark, N. J., March 21, it has been announced by the Amateur Athletic Union. . Interpretations BY ED THORP- IVE-MAN (man-to-man) de- fense. When your five is lined I up across the center of the floor in playing this defense .and cvery man is keeping directly in front of his opponent, you allow the other team to pass the ball around their back court without opposition. As soon as a player of the attacking side crosses over the center of the court his opponent immediately cov- ers him and stays with him until he returns to his back court or the ball i3 recovered by one of your own m. Should the opposition start their attack before your five-man defense is formed, every defensive player should try to cover an opponent as soon as possible. In such a case al- ways see to it that their leading players on attack are covered first. When you rush to such a defense and find your man alrcady covered by a teammate, your duty is to find tfi'il teammate’s individual-opponent wnd-cover hin, Q. If held ball occurs near basket, has the referee the right to hold the jump out in the court about ten feet? A. In amateur basket ball if ball is held anywhere in the foul lane it is put in play Jump ball on foul line. Q. If a ball strikes the edge of the backboard and bounds back Into court is it in play or is it out of bounds In amateur game? A. As_the backboard is two feet inside the end line, according to this Jear's rule such a ball would be in play. Q. The ball was rolling on floor in. side end line. I recovered it. Was referee right when he called it out o!“bo%nau? iy, T¢ o + Very likely, a’l depends wpon whether any part of your parson was or over the end line. Q. Is jt'a foul if one of the men fails to jump on held ball play? A. In amateur game it is not com- pulsory to jump, It is compulsery in profesxional game. Q. In & game our school played our opponents asked for time out when the ball was out of bounds. When lay resumed referes made players jump for ball. Was he correct? A. He was not., Ball should have been put in play as out of bounds, | . WASHINGTON, KESSLER- Piotos By Caru THONERS, EASTERN HIGH BASKETERS DRILLING FOR BALTIMORE ASTERN HIGH SCHOOL is busy moving into its new building to- day, but the boys of the ba E Coach_Guyon is putting his charges through a strenuous drill this after- noon in preparation for their tilt in Baltimore Saturday with Baltimore City College, champion of Maryland. The Eastern-Baltimore City Col- lege game, which is to be staged in the Richmond Market Armory, may be part of a triple-header. Two serv- fce teams have been matched for a preliminary contest and Baltimore authorities would like to add to the program a battle between girls’ teams of Washington and Baltimore. TILDEN AND ONE OF HIS PROTEGES WIN MATCHES PHILADELPIHIA, March 1—~Wil- llam T. Tilden, 2d, national ten- nis champion, easily won his way to the second round of the middle states indoor tourney, defeating Dr. Central High School will have a S. Hunlock, Philadelphia, 6— team in the South Atlantic scholastic meet in Baltimore compete gainst Baltimore City College, Polytechnic Institute School. The Central entr ey, Pete mputation of part of one of fingers, on his racquet hand, iy 1tly did not hamper his play- ends’ o folow: d » surprise of the first round was Wiener's over Charles | Kel P Weiner, Til den's” firte Id protege, play | inz his first senior tournament, out- classed his older and more expe- rienced opponent, 6—3, 6—1. Another of the champion's proteges, Donald Straham, fourteen years ol holder of the boys national _cla: court champlonship, lost a hard- fought r;mu:h to sSamuel P, Giipin, 6—3, 9—T. ictory Stolley, Stone and Ch back—RBonnet _and W yard breast—Parker, Satterfield Gann. Plunge—Wil stield McNeil. Diving—Lyman, Hunter Chester. Relay (three teams)—Stolley, Peter, Farrell, Parsons, Walsmith, Taylor, Stone, Bonnet, Walsmith, Noyes, Chester and Kronheimer. Tech’s lightweight team vanquished Western's yesterday, 17 to 12, Tate threw five field goals for the winners. YALE NATATORS SCQRE. NEW HAVEN, Conn, March 1— The Yale swimming team-last night defeated Brown, 38 to 15 Business High girls were defeated by the Marjorie Webster School sex- tet, 32 to 7. Miss Fenn starred for the winning aggregation || HAIR STAYS COMBED, GLOSSY Millions Using this Greaseless --c{)mbing Cream— Few Cents Buys Jar any Drugstore—Not Sticky, Smelly Even stubborn, unruly or shampooed | Greaseless, stainless “Hair-Groom™ hair stays combed all day in any style [ does not show on the hair because it is you like. “Halr-Groom" I8 a dignified | absorbed by the scalp, therefore your combing cream which gives the natural | hair remains 8o soft and pliable and loss and .njwmed effect to your [so natural that no one can possibly touch to good dress|tell you used it, both andon soclal ettt i o e et ball team that won the South Atlan- | tic and city high school championships are not too busy to practice. | D. 0., THURSDAY, WILL SEEK YALE GAME. MINNEAPOLIS, Minn, March 1.— Fred W. Luehring, director of ath- letics at the University of Minnesota, announced today he would open ne- gotlations with Yale for an inter- hockey contest next year. At the Sign of the Moon Open Until 6 P. M, at once for the supply of mew woolens arriving daily, Henee this extraordinary value. SPECIAL " Suit or Overcoat Mertz & Mertz Co., Inc. MARCH 1, 1923. N tion the constricted indicated by tl As regards the regulation veloper of team, wh ‘znin-d in ( trouble these crack outdoor players have been having in selves to the inside competition. Townsend cup they undoubted cas of an armory walls, to the softer footing and indoor and outdoor borne in mind that thi | ons could meet any team that it | played indoors to datc outdoor o open, where s who.have beaten them nd play outdoors not | 1d often ot ws in- | game. door pol outdoor | Hopping, one of our gre: { a substitute on our last in was so greatl is'a product « SPORTS. 2 4 Difficult STAR PLAYERS OUTDOORS, BUT HAVE FAILED INSIDE Probably Will Adapt Themselves to Restricted Area Before Series of Matches for International up Is Staged Later in Month. EW YORK, March 1.—Quite the most interesting point about the games of indoor polo which the British team is plz for the ng in prepara- ‘month is the R adapting them- By the time they go into action for the will have acconmodated their game to to the possibility of caroms off the divergences from the outdoor variety d softer ball. between [ indoor game. Other players now de t should be| velonine ir o 8 o Brir. | veloping into outdoor stars also has Tas | their start within wails. up | BULit s not too certain that after -+ with | man has gained prestige outdoor mental | that indoor play helps his ga ny of | fact. our great polo play, pe- | all our internationalists, w indoors, holding that it intcrnational championship later thi 1 wipe field re s not p! hurts thef | Jndoor polo, however, has come t de-|Stay. It i growing by leaps and Kar] | bounds all over the country wher there is a rink or. arr facilities for play exist and adva tage is being tuken of this fact. plave est pla erna 'MRS. MALLORY DESTINED - TO LOSE NET TITLE SOO are ess. Indeed, M | number ¢ B1LL ROUDABUSH- ity foreshadows holder. MOLLA AND MISS RYAN SCORE AT MONTE CARLO By the Assoclated Press. MONTE CARLO, March Molla Bjurstedt Mallory lizabeth Ryan, the only Americans entered in the Monte Carlo tennis tournament, both won yesterday. Mrs. Mallory, who as vet is far from top playing form, had very | rough going in the first set of her match in the women's singles with Miss May Green of England, but im- proved as the match went on and took the second set rather easily. The score was 6—3, 6—0. Miss Ryan breezed through twelve games against Mrs. Rayner, England, without losing one. Mre. Mallory, palred with Wallis Myers, and Miss Ryan playing with Lord Rocksavage, survived the first round of the mixed doubles. The former pair by default and the latter by winning, 6—1, 6—1. | ticipate at st |don. But this definite. 1.—Mrs. and Mise | Lol BOON may be stung will go in s tennis abroad, one more cra French girl that she has it enter at Miss rate croft is rated be as Mre. her strides that there may do in All that ma in certain play s that the time for failing form on the has been playing a long stamina ot vouth and the She has announced she will not par- , stood t Cloud the sidelin an champ Ung over inferior pl to a point however, in her to de zanne, at least not in Burope. One American girl who surely will Cloud and Wi Bancroft . 2 for this v Beamish, Miss Mile. Lenglen. but so rapid past telling the no rope. now be said s that she will supply a lot of color to the tour- naments in_which she to be popular BY LAWRENCE PERRY. 1—While Mrs. Molla Bjusstedt Mallory he Riveria may be due to poor health, th has come when we must begin to los! champion. Mrs, is a,game in which and cf-ordination ther on part of o vomen's me and tc and power now 1is th ial to championship proficiency Mallory vears, and the time is not remote, i1 when she must vield her laurels to some the background there lurks the acco the appro has led our women piayers in sooth it is not at har ounger piayer. Already i Helen W whose abi ent of the present tith ching dcthronen the indefatiga | Sears will be her de and to Le with at Wimble- Der ken as | 0Cf inne | g,y bdfrey s had no wor he therme Mrs. Mallory where she for tournament idea being to have At the Few, temperamental eve <.7| WOMAN’S TENNIS LEAGUE EETS TOMORROW NIGHT will be a 14 Tennis Le £t >tchers tomorrow evenir McLean and | f Miss °F e been | Secretary o organizatio. few ve irtment Wardman what tel, Officers be cted a: ans for the season made Applica fron tea will be re- 1 all fair sex who are in- y the circuit are invited to nt. ibledon is nd is | tere nder- | be enters, It is Upside Down to Prove Its Strength We make this test at our store to show the strong, rigid body construc- tion of the Hudson and Essex Coaches. In this position it is supporting a crushing load of 2700 pounds. Come, see it. Test the doors and windows, which operate with ease, showing total absence of body strain. ‘There is also on display a stripped Coach body showing the design and type of construction. High cost of closed bodies has been due to uneconomical design, limited production and fancy fittings. The design of the Coach reduced manufacturing costs. Its sales volume, the largest enjoyed by any closed car of its price, and the elimination of non-essential fittings makesits cost but little above the open car price. s —OPEN EVENINGS— : LAMBERT-HUDSON MOTORS COMPANY Salesroom 1100 Connecticut Ave. Telephone Franklin 7700 Service Station 633 Massachusetts Ave. DEALERS MARYLAND Annapelix—Winterson Auto Co. Belair—F. Bond IJoarman, Brooklyn—Brooklyn Garage. Cambridge—Phillips Hardware Co. Cockeyaville—The Village Cumberland—Maryland G: Easton—Faston Motor Sales Company. Ellicott City—Kerger Motor Company. Frederick—Harbaugh Auto Sales Company. Galena—People’s Garage. Hagerstown—Louis Myers & Brothers Highlandtown—Auld Auto Company. Hanocock—Central Garage. Hyattesville—White House Service Station. La Plata—Robert V, Norri: Leonardtown—Dillow & Hayden, Oakland—Garrett Motor Op. Principlp Furnnce—Hillslde Garage. Reisterntown—W. A. Caltrider Garage. Rockville—Hudson-Essex Garage. Salisbury—D. W. Purdue Auto Sales Com- pany. Sparks—E. Thomas Matthews. Towson—C, W. Chenoweth. Westminster—Palace Garage. White Marsh—Smith Motor Company. Woodbine—Woodbine Motor Repair Com- vany. VIRGINIA Alexandria—Lyons Service Station. ‘olumbia—Baker & Cosby. Charlottesville—The Fry Motor Co. Culpeper—Union Motor Co. ericksburg—Virginia - Motors Com- pany. Luray—J. T. Campbell and T. R. Beahm. Occoquan—Fred M. Lyn Orange—RBates Brothers, Quantico Junction—Ashley Motor Come pany. Went Point—Hargrave & Lewis. Winchester—Mid-City Garage. WEST VIRGINIA Charles Town—Central Garage Company. Hawpers Ferry—Shenandoah Garage. Moorfield—H, M, Be: Martinuburg—L. E. Hedges. LAMBERT—BALTIMORE, The Coac Hudson $1525 6173-507 Freight and Tax Extra Essex - $1145 HUDSON-ESSEX

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