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18 SPORTS. THE EVENING' STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. SATURDAY, MARCH 10, 1923. SPORTS. r, Totes Much Weight : Benton Barred From National League |SUZANNE AND BRITAI| ‘ LEADER N TENNIS HNM% St g | the ball when the club is at the i rs MENTONE. March 10.—Suzanne | '0P Of the stroke. It may be new Explains Why Newcomer Fails to Impress on First Lenglen, the Freneh tennis stur and| © You. So if you find you nre : = {Kathleen McKane, ranking player of | ®wkward with it that way. re- Appearance—Two-Squad Plan of Practice {Gteat Britain, will meet in the finni! Member that all changex find you = BY ROBER | n good celebrator. He has pleked [of the singles of the Mentone tourney | @t #rst to be awkward when you Is Proving Highly Successful. YOKOHAMA, New Year up modern ldean fast. Now he |toda | try them. but with practice > Happy New Year to you &ets drunk and raises n row in Yesterday in the semi-finals, .i > " = the bext el faxhion. zanne defeated Mrs. Satterthwaite of I&_mvi that when jou rea it :.I:r;l -‘.‘.fl |r-;r-':-:! | Enzland, 6--0. 6—1. and Mi McKane | will be March—but the wen wever, the feeling of n happy beth Ryan. formerly ! still goes. sear come to @ —6, 6— | Kade mathn wa glen and Miss McKone had | been picked by the experts to become | muny things All- debts munt Ithe finalists. Suzanne Is the favorite ' | today. { College Briefs dixenses cured and the geinha muxt have new kimounos 7 I By the Associated Press OXFORD, March 10.—Oxford before midnight U hegan the mew year right in Cambridge in the inter-varsity | ing contests last night, 1 to the Grand Hotel. It wan the usual New Vork evening—without the F. an of Denver University New College, Oxford. won both vyweight and light heavyweight ! contests. In the bantamweight mateh {1 W. Harrold of Georgia Univ and Hertford College. Oxford, beaten Conroy, New Infielde JUST WHAT ROOKIE NEEDS, | CLARK GRIFFITH ASSERTS “NOT TYPE OF PLAYER” WANTED, SAYS HEYDLER- "INSIDE GOLF Head of Senior Organization Wires Herrmann That €= ' Will Carry Out Determination to Rule Who Shall Play on Its Clubs. AS AWKWARDN AS A GIRL AT HER FIRST 'WEDDING ! .BY DENMAN THOMPSON, AMPA, Fla., March 10.—At first glance Bill Conroy, who is ranked T high in the pre-season dope as a candidate for the vacancy at| third base with the Nationals, fails to impress. The reason prob- ! ably is that he is fat. but in his partciular case this is an encouraging | sign, according to C. C. Griffith. This calls for an explanation, and Griff | supplies it. When he was doing a little scouting on his own hook last | summer the boss heard fine reports of Conroy's ability and camped on | the trail of the Minnea club for quite awhile, with the result that he and his teammates, Wade and Hollingsworth, now are on the Wash- ington roster, At that time Conroy was in a rundown condition duc to an affection on the head which necessitated a serious oreration. Although in poor health and under weight as a result, Conroy showed so many unmistakable indications of class that Griff grabbed him, in the firm belief that if he regained his strength he would have a prize. The operation was emi- nently successful. Conroy now is the picture of health and strong as a bull, the fact that he has packed on the pounds being evidence of this. “wing Lut a youngster. who only re- | be made against the National League | matly underwent a severe physical | teams booked for games. ordeal.” the surplus avoirdpols {8 re- | “Schadt and Russeil probably have tarded a< a hopeful indication. Being | taken greater strides toward getting sound again, the excess welght can|ready than any of the others Ther De melted away gradually by hard | have been using hooks for two or! word as soon as he gets Lls legs and | three days now, while Hanhine | wind in shape. Tt will be tough sled- | Warmoth and Brillheart are getting ding for a time, involving plenty of |a lot of zip on the ball, althoush road work. but the net rosult wiil be | curves still are taboo for them. well worth the effort, for it is ex-| Reach and McGrew are making the pected to provide a worthy revival slowest progress toward rounding for Joey Evans, now the leading can- | Into shape, the former becuuse of didate for the far corner mssignment. |a sore arm he developed tha firet ws He Can Flel. | couple of days out and the latter he- Syt " . | cause his convalescence trom influen- In his firat work-out. [Canroy, BAt- ey ine eenitates” moderation o oo wrally far from fleet. was even | work, the siim one still being quite heavier of hoof than usual, but he [ Weak. demonstrated that he is famillar with { H::Ilfkswor\h also has received a thisl meaasite G0 Bciding anders | T41D3CK on account of the condition and displa; a sturdy whip, al- 1 | uf, D= throat. In an operation he sub- ed a | mitted to about a year ago for the ‘k:ufiwhe Wisely made no effort toremoval of his tonsils pnr‘! of them speed in getting the ba!l! were look g use e { overlovked and were causin a;,tnnfi:':h‘;di‘:‘m«o’ns:.mn With tha stich i Bim trouble, until a local P! ,\slcinfi his swings missed fire {requenfl}. as | Nae et e it Wieln e ot not donned & uniform since, but i3 oustomary with an athlete Jump- | fo Peopt c . ing into the business after & winter P Ao andiwill e o€ idleness but his clusn as & hitter (0 TOF L0l again Monda OS ANGELES. Calif., March 10.-J. ¢ American Association base ball pitcher, may be cligible 10 p organized base ball. as decided by K. M. Landis, 1 sioner, but he is “not the type ai charadter or playe National League, according to John A new . (Rube) Benton ¢ ball ¢ wante CPeanstation.) At every door The pine trees stand: Heydler, now here, who telegraphed to Garry, Herrmann, president of nati club, an order barring Benton from the leaguc 5 it 1 Heydle {D. C. RELAY FOURS RACE L./ TONIGHT IN PHILLY MEET nized relay teamw of this president of that eir nwkwardness would " awkward wears make me feel a at eawe If 1 tried to mnke in toward my right knee when | renched the top of my wtroke. Becnuswe jou are aecus- omed to owing the left knee 100 much freedom ix the wole ren- wom It xeemn proper f. to do it—not at an wune ix the way it should be done. When you K€t the pivot right the knee will naturally f; ut toward the ba (Copyright. John F. Dille Ca. —_— WALKERIS NAWED RO AT BANNOCKBUR CLUB Lionel G. Walker, nected with the | Club, has been olfer at the Ha ding Ric gone to Walker was sclected a Lton hi pitcher dcfin the 1 Howeve {tional i policy o should A that elig v tely by Commi announced Ber e i i | i e hid bt At the zero hour the the usual riot horns, hurrahs, and When the m again we buried | lad i settled d beat | b, ¥ wnd | the | But 1 have todny excep passengers. ~oothing xan. hooting, every thing b valer stated. the arms wo Why ¢ ax crying about her n New Vork. mile affalr, Geor iversity will he repres Jimmy Connolly. Walter Gegan and Ale Washingion Cunoe orx Wil he xported by a including Juck Norton, unx, Karl Knight and Ray Howie Wler, anot ler, may start in the 660-y even e races will end the indoor n for the Washington track- he: ing the top o' th’ Bon | not everything in ~ight. NEW nof Pr OF the Yale bl rting basis s base hall self-supporting track were by f The ation Leeipts of $718 is . leaving BLOOMINGTON, 1Ind. March 10, | Ohio State wrestlers maintained their ! elean slate in western conference r: by defeating the Indiana matmen. | Ty sl 14 to 11. The defeat broke Indianas | °f he beard of governc uninterrupted string of conference | He is abour forty years of | victories ‘T'wll 'lr‘?llnr-l m\1 golf in England. HAMILTOY. ag held se Posts as profession- | Miss Mayme NEW YORE March 10.—Yale's | 1 » W ) b T > 3 jal_golfer in Pennsylvania | Wik, won th fencing team kept its season record ;" \.jier i« a good player. having | his championship, ¢ clean Ly defeating Columbia’s SWOrds- | fished third in the ennsylvania | Hutchin bouts to 4 iopen championship. won last year| Int by W. C. | vine - - He wiil ties , Fred . 2 Wisconsin in a Western | 1 . duties e i3 pretty well established. and If he Smith Alds In Coaching. i et _‘jw .'mm. d’-m meet. 29 labout April | Tawrenee wonceives to beat out Evans at third | Billy Smith. who has had a wide| { ent_ehampion 't undoubtedly will be beomuse of | eIperience as a minor league man- A SRAW TRINGE WiTH PRAYER DECLINES TO HALT FIRPO their m superfor punching proclivities. AI | 8*r and will scout for the Nationals time was called though far from well. Conroy, in!this summer after attending to his PAPERS ARE STRUNG ABOVE THE DOORWAYS NEW YORK, Murch T pli- 5 cation of the ne €. to prevent AT NEW YEAR TiME compiling & .297 average in eight-six | duties as secretary of the club dur- | Luis Firpo, the outh Ane an | —~Japan's favorite kohday & HAVEN March 10 twenty activittes supervised by | Athletie Association n entirely self-sup-! the other i ie closest to he | while the crew and the most expensive reported total re and cxpenses of @ net of $68, Con a only | is on (5 majo formerly Fittsburgh Country amed professional noekburn Golf Club rd B who has ornia i con- DECORATION STANDS 18 FRONT OF EVERY HOUSE n on Way Seuth. a meeting | S TOGRLFRON PAGRE . Bermuda, M M at furt nton sident from it wnes ke jr. up Towa, March 10.—lowa State AT CHICAGO. March 10.—Purdue easily | won the western conference indoor track meet from Northwest 381 to 221, points, 32 WOMEN IN TOURNEY. BOSTON, Mar w gnnected for 95 safeties for a tocal |®dded to the coaching Staff of the| e i of 145 bases, his wallops including |team for the time being. Since Clarl nan at Madison Souarc on |defended his 23 doubles, § triples and 3 homers. | Grifith has foresworn wearing any | “was d by (220 vards 12 In addition his bat propelled 47 of | kind of uniform, except golf togs, the | the | Kruger, | squad hus only one man proficient at | the business of hitting ‘em out for| wil i g S s NASH WAS NEAR-GREAT AMONG THIRD BASEMEN spact for two men and Smith, who is for service. Mike Martin dug up a uniform only a few sizes too large WILLIAM M. (BILLY ) NASH'SIMAJOR LEA . W CHICAGO. March 16— Wisconsin swimmers defeated Chicago natators, 40 points to 2%, in a western confer- ence meet here. 'HAUGHTON WILL COACH COLUMBIA GRIDIRONERS NEW YORK, March 10— Percy D. Haughton, former foot ball coach at Harvard, has signed a contract to coach Co- lumbia, the New York Tribune says today. vesterd, anger in ames with the Millers last season, |In€ the exhibition games, has been Lieavyweight. from hoxing Rill Hren- iis mates plateward. The split-squad system of practice | 10 date has proved an unquulified suc- vess. Tt cnables Bush and Gibson to rersonally supervise practically | everything that is done on the diu- mond from the time the eurly birds zet in action at 9:30 until the last of It;aomlnu arrivals gets through at for him, so Billy is now getting con- siderable more exercise daily than he | bargained for. { Prosident Ebbets of the Brooklyn| club has arranged for a banguet in honor of Commissioner Landis, at Clearwater, the evening of Thursday March 15, when the Dodgers open thelr series of exhibitions by enter- talning the Braves. Clark Grifith and a delegation of the scribes here will attend to represent the Washing- ton club. REACH FINAL AT PINEHURST, Merrin " spri GOLF. Batters Have Troables. Y ; With several of the pitchers pretty well advanced in conditioning the stick wielders are having consider- able difficulty in connecting with iheir offerings, but this is as it should be, for the opening of the exhibition schedule now is but one week dis- tant, and the batters will have to be ready if a creditable showing is to BABE RUTH STRIKES OUT ON FIRST TRIP TO PLATE EW YORK. March ‘10.—On his first day in uniform at the Yankee - N camp at New Orleans Babe Ruth, out to regain the home-run BY FREDERICK G. LIEB. crown he lost last year, failed to lift the ball over the fence, but THIRD BASEMAN, whose did send one of his typically hard drives near the wooden wall. He fanned A memory still evokes pleasant |y, Gag regarded as one of the real top- the first time up. recollgctions in Boston, was |notch infielders of the game. Cri}l]ics ‘:xho saw t”he B?e{ in hish firat 192k3 x}e[f%rmance k}f‘legr:pheg | Billy Nash. an aggressive, dashing| (Copyright. 1928 i Him when he was_ getting into condition at Hot Spriags Ark. At hig |PIayer of the late 80s and 90s. Nah| spyy pTNATS ARE REACHED. was the predecessor of Jimmy Col-| “ic o Cl T, Fa.. March 10— Ohio, lin the ampions |will me; ING RECORD. T.B. ANKEL for three vears independent basket ball ¢ of the District, will have to triumph tonight ii they would remain | in the running for a fourth consecutive title. They are to c:a-] lcounter the Aloysians, who, with the American Legion quint and the present titleholders, are involved in the struggle for city laurels, and should the Yankees suffer their third straight defeat in the series they | may just as well count themselves among the one-time champions. Both | pii- the Aloysians and the Legionaires have handed wallopings to Nate RuL At Sauber’s aggregation. The game is to be held in Central Coliseum follow- | 1411475 1 ing one between the Epiphany Juniors and Linworths starting 8 o'clock An Aloysius victery would give ~ that quint a record of three straight and all but clinch the title for it. The championship series probably will be concluded next week with the Legion-Yankee game Tuesday and, the Legion-Aloysius match Thursday. | GUE BATT! t Boeston | YALE NATATORS BREAK TWOWORLD RECORDS NEW HAVEN. Conn., March 10—/ Two world records and one intercol- legiate records were broken here last | night by the Yale swimming team in |a meet against Pennsylvania which | the Blue won. 45 to 9. In the 250-yard relay, the Blue five- man team established a new world | record, swimming the distance in | 2.04, their_own previous record be- ing 2.04 3-5. A second world record was broken when the Yale six-man team swam | the 300-vard relay in 2.30 25, break- ing their own previous record of le31 2-5. F.ddie Bench of Yale. made a new | Roston Boston Boxton Roxton Boston Philadelphia Philadelphin Tot: ars took t from the Ma League ma zpin_alleys. The at Eames o ONILYTOCINETE N PACE AT RAY they drubbed the Western Athletic, PHILADELPHIA, March 10 —More Club auint. 18 to 14 in the final|than eight hundred athletes. men and |§ames from It . match of the tournament at Central | . s : e and 410 et Coliseum. The Eagles had disposed [OMeN. Including many of the lead-| (1, nigh gan of the Congress Heights Cyclones, 24 |ing college and university stars, are ! to 11, and the Westerns had dvr_flgwr} entered in the track and field meet of | the Yosemites. to 19, in semi-final | e S ik sames earlier in the evening. the Meadowbrook Clubitonight During the first half of the final Joie Ray of Chicago will he the Westerns outplayed their oppo- |the contestants. He nents and gained a 14-to-8 advantage, | invitation mile event. Amoug his op- | and best sama of Then the Eagles rallfed and held the [ponents will be Jimmy Connolly of Westerns pointlesg in the second half. |Georgelown, Walter Higgins of ( Mader. Lusby, Clark, Blake, H. lumbia, Sayman Kerr and Abel Kiviat Meyers, M. Meyers and James plaved [The program contains thirty-nin for the Eagles. The Western squad |events. included J. Gollan, W. , 15 years. ... 1,076 2297 City i morning it | Recreation alley ]«.p. n to all bowler a big turnout is ]m.» coming spri Post Oflice Department of the Wasi ngton Ladi won all three games from punts o As 10 The in th | taken on by the Bostons in 1585, and in | the following season he was promoted to a regular position. From 1886 to | 1888, when his legs began to slow up, mectin Distri 4 o pl ournament. Anacostia Eagles last night the 135-140 pound or senior class! ! of the Bailroad Y Won (two out of thres among VH.hl' e is entered in the|two pins. Cross /Tris Speaker Smacks Ome. CLEVELAND, Ohlo, March 10.— Manager Tris Speaker has the distinc.- tlon of being the first member of the tleveland Indians to knock a ball over the training camp wall at Lake- land, Fla. During yesterday's work- tirst few times at bat he lifted pop-ups. . = e old'R Mike McNally, who was il with & lins at third base for the ol oston | . " p B, Hawk of Philadelphia, na- Beaneaters, and, though he never (nal veterans’ champion. will play G., intercollegiate record in the 200-yard s EH o & breast stroke. swimming the dis- | i reached the prominence of Collins one over the fenc ! Vi ¢ of greatest third ReRvasope ol cies The five-man team consisted of Col- Fla.. in the semi-finals in the singles of | gate. Sullivan. Banks, Gelliffe and! the southeastern Players' League champions of 1830 and | erg won handily vesterday. dition of Stewart. Frank Selee’s Nationaj league ;.mmmnl cold at Hot rings, also got into Carlton fer of Philadelphia and 8. !1ance in 2.57 2-5, breaking his own baseman of his day. H e for four suc- tennis championship | Arost. while the six-man team con- | tournament today > S winners of 1891, 1892 lund 1883, Other Sy vractice, as did Bob Meusel. who has Howard Voshell of Boston will be pitted | previous record of 2.38 2-5. Nash played third ba [ members of that old Boston infield were ot signed a contract. Meusel lifted against Douglas Watters of Mulberry, "' cessive Boston cha ship teams, the ch of these play- | sisted of the same men with the ad- | Tom Tucker at first, Joe Quinn at sec- SCORES IN DOG DERBY. Verne ———— = Sakatchewr Knickerbooker Juniors, who en- ‘Hart and Povich. out Speaker caught hold of one of dmondsen’s fast ones and lifted it ver the right fleld wall, a distance of approximately 400 feet. With the arrival of Joe Sewell, all ©f the regulars were in camp except Pitcher Edwards, who {s coaching & university team, and Bedgood. They are expected next week. Pratt Goes to Join Tygers. DETROIT, Mieh., March 10.—Derrill | Pratt. one of the last of the Deétroit cans to start for the Augusta iraining camp, left here for the south 10day. The Tyger second baseman has heen assisting Coach Ray Fisher in training the Michigan nine. Word from the Augusta camp is that Manager Ty Cobb is elated with the showing of several youngsters in <amp, Manush, Kerr and Brady com- ing in for praise by the “Peach.” Flarry Heilmann and Bob Fothergill reported yesterday. Next week two sets of inflelders will 1 on hand and will be put to work in the usual group practice. Browns to Play Game “Today. ST. LOUIS, Mo., March 10.—The first exhibition game of the season was on the program today for the St. Louis Americans, who were scheduled 10 oppose the Mobile Southern Asso- ciation team at the Browns' training camp at Mobile, Ala. Cold weather struck the St. Louis Joyed a successful diamond career last year, have begun preparations are booking games with seventeen- eighteen-year teams. Eddie Newton, the manager, may be telephoned at Franklin 8794. Willlams-Webb Company is to or- ganize 3 nine and wants a berth in one of the sandlot leagues, preferably the Commercial. The management may be telephoned at Columbla 3997 after 7 p.m. Arlington Athletic Club is to hold its initial practice tomorrow after- noon at 2 o'clock at Fort Berry, Va. Manager Dube expects all candidates for the nine to report. WISCONSIN MAN WOULD BUY BROOKLYN DODGERS NEW YORK, March 10—A second proposition for the purchase of the Brooklyn Nationals has been made to President Charles H. Ebbets according to the Brooklyn Eagle's |correspondent, by Maurice Straus. a {Brookiyn real estate operator. Ib- bets holds & half interest in the club. Straus said he was acting in behalf of a millionaire resident of Fond du s. Nationals' training camp at Braden- (Tae, Wi MUTT AND JEFF—Wanted, at Once, a Derrick. town, Fla., yesterday, and Manager Branch Rickey called off the after- noon practice. Dedger Regulars Blank Rivals BROOKLYN, N. Y., March 10.—The Brooklyn Regulars beat the Yan; in a practice session at Clearwater, Fla., yesterday, 4 to 0. Red Sox Fielder Hits 'Em. HOT SPRINGS, Ark., March 10.—A wicked club, wielded in midseason form, was displayed here by Frank O'Doul. fielder for the Boston Red Sox. During batting practice O'Doul drove three balls over the oenter- fleld fence, which is high and far away. Babe Adams Is Injured. PITTSBURGH, Pa., March 10. Babe Adams, the veteran Pirate pitcher, was nursing an injured jaw at_ the Hot Springs training camp today. Adams had been on the fleld only fifteen minutes when he was struck by a batted ball. The talk of the camp {8 the show- ing made by Spencer Adams, recruit second sacker, who halls from Seattle. Adams held down the key- stone sack during several snappy practice sessions. More Reds Start Sowth. CINCINNATI, Ohio, March Seven members of the Cincinnati Nationals are leaving Cincinnat] to- day to join Manager Pat Moran and the players already at Orlando, Fla. Leaving with today’'s party is Larry Kopf, former Cinclnnati in- flelder, who goes to St. Petersburg W join the Boston Braves. 10— SO BAD T CAN'T HANDLE MY BAGSAGE: HeLP 13 SO SCARCE THAT T'LL | GAVE You TWo Bucks I¥ You GET 1T over Billy never who h: He w Jects series. lected only rising to . bases on time batting or_present. organization. when agair It the 't Virginians. pitcher. he ting avcrage son's work. enough fielding abilit able, but seldom a Yet at the fi reer in the majo fair sticking in any base ball era, Nash was a member of the only big league team that ever made a bid for | the Richmond patronage. Washington team left the old American Associ#tion for the and the Virginia took Washington's place in the former Billy Nash and his fellow members of the Virginia team got their first taste of blg league ball on August 5, Virginias t the Athletics of Philadelphia. debut for either Nash or blanked score of 14 to 0, get a hit in fou up one of eight c Nash didn’t show much ican Association pitching that year, s awarded the rather humble bat- | ond and Herman Long at shortstop. wrrnoed o | Tips on Playing Basket Ball; for & new base ball campalgn, and |cOmpared with some of the other sub- | been treated in this | ngerous and:depend- )0 hitter. He col- 0 batting averages, 7. the vear in which re scored as hits. h of a fifteen-year ca- ash rec of . Correct Rule BY ED WO-LID five-man defense. When this defense is used [ by a team of smart players it has the advantage of holding three men out in the front line who are spread across the floor. As they allow one or two opponents to slip through they are in an ideal posi- tion to intercept any passes at- tempted by their teammates to the two opponents who have gone s through. And when they intercept s or the | such a pass, a fast drive can be Mathews, the Amlmiclnmdc for the goal with but three the Jemromers (b 4 | opponents to cover them. e pnsh fuiled 191 Such a defense permits the three ttempts and mussed nces at third base. | men spread across the floor to gainst Amer- break up dribbles as well. But its s | great advantages rests in the lahfl that it allows these three men, the of .200 for his first s of Lt hisffcat mes | ones used mostly on attack, to rest and dash to be | more than is otherwise the case. average . wh In 1584 the Union Associaution, team of Richmond | 1584, were stacked up particularly H THERE 1T 1S~ THAT Bok: T's A RGLIC T'™ A TAKING BACk Home WITH ME FROM Interpretations THORP. out the V. M. C Q. If a personal foul has beenj |called against the man with the ball {when he has been straight-arming an opponent, do opponents get two free trials? A. If the foul was committed by an offensive player in his goal zone the opponents receive but one shot. Q. Can umpire call time out for an injury? | A. No. He may stop game, referce must call time out. Q. Who makes special floor rules? A. The two captains and the offi- cials in charge of the game. Q. Is a blackboard score the offi- cial score of the game? A. No. The wcore of the score- kepeers in the officinl ncore. Q. Suppose something comes up during a game not covered by the rules. Who makes a decision cov- ering it? A. The referee has full power tfo but | scored their Goodrich, Chacon: Yankees and Washington Colle- glans are to clash tomorrow after- noon at 4 o'clock the Congress Helghts Auditorium. The Yanks r cently were beaten by the Hagers- town Elks, 47 to 38 Y. M. C. A. Day s tin th in hool bovs nosed irsts in a 1 Junior Sunday The winners out- opponents from the their free tosser. 12 engagemen School Leaguc. court and Begg. sunk all of his three shots from the | charity line, Triangle basketers overcame the Good Shepherd Mlidgets, 43 to Barry and Kline of the winners each tossed ten scrimmage goals. Manhattan and Kuights of Columbus tossers are to be opponents tonight in Noel House gymnasium in District League game. Play will start at 8:30 o'clock. The' Caseys are to play the American Legion five tomorrow. Nationnl Guard tossers pointed the way to the Fort Humphreys five in a 25-to-24 struggle. Coansbo and Caltibiano starred for the winning combination. Washington Orioles went to Ale andria and_vanquished the St. Mary reserves, 15 to 14. in an extra five-minute period decided act in all such cases. OOE - WHAT T 1S 1T NAILED the issue. (Copyright. 1928, by H. O. Fischer, Trade Mark reg. U. 8. Pat. off.) KEGEP (T UNDER YoUR HAT 19. | | Lydon's free toss | | CONTINUES DISCUSSIONS & derby her ond lap of t ring the tot when he > 150-mile distance nished th ourse. cov in 20 hours AMERICANS CAN CLINCH ¢ POLO TROPHY TONIGHT! d 21 minutes, Br the Associated Press. NEW YORK, March 10.—The I States will meet the British trio the third of the international inc polo matches for the John R. Tow ed ! night. The Americans games with ease. scoring of six to one in the second, and 1 they win_tonight they will hold the cup, the first time it has been offered e in international competition Associated Pr W YORK, March 10 0,000 has offered by te of Winnipeg business men bout between Canadian heavyweight, Wills, negro challenger champion Jack npsey. A purs GRID RULES COMMITTEE Harry of world YORK. March March P e Godfre the Fweigh L proteg eleventl ercolleg % heing 1 . in day. No radical changes were proposed, it was understood, and none was contemplated. be made, particularly of the new onex introduced last season, and others relating to when the ball iy dend.” —_— Dominican American R fin the Distric —By BUD FISHER. [nuic: ) regulation teams tied it defented 1 INpress, 30 to 2 An'extra fine cessary, 1 ending with' the Radiators and Fenders ANY KIND MADE OR REPAIRED. Cores installed in any make. 10 DIFFERENT MAKES RADIATORS. WITTSTATT'S R. and F. WORKS _ 319 13th. _F. 6410. 1425 P M. 7 “OLD MAN WOOD HIMSELE"' OFFERS 30x31 FIRESTONE OR GOODYEAR TIRES $8.50 1502 14th St. N.W. Distributor EMPIRE TIRES "FOR LUMBER SEE I. S. TUROVER 13th and Water Sts. S.W. ; A full line of framing, siding, floo shingles, latbs, white piso and hardw QUIRIES SOLICITED PHONE MAIN 6706 -