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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., THURSDAY, APRIL 2, 1925. SPORTS. SPORTS. 31 3 Gibbons May Find Tartar in Tunney : Big Ten Alumni Deplore Commercialism TOMMY SURELY REALIZES [S-A GAMESWILLGE |MARYLAND U. NINE SLATED |SWTHSETTINGPACE |COMMITTEE FINDS “GATE” HE HAS DANGEROUS RIVAL "2 HERE JUNES) TO OPEN PLAY TOMORROW | N N-S. BOLFEVENT) ™y ppyNG OVERSTRESSED SR Senfor track and field champion- PINEHURST, N. C., April 2.—Mac- 2 <hips of the South Atlantic A. A. U. Donald Smith of Lakeville, Great cenits - . . , Gene’s Light-Heavyweight Will Not Be at Stake. [J Creates a “Vicious” Tendency in Arranging Games, petitive campaign tomorrow at College Park, with the University - 3 of Richmond offering the opposition. Play will start about 3.45. It Is Declared—Sees Great Harm to Sport for 1925 were awarded to Washing- Neck, L, I, with rounds of 68 and 70 | ton by the championship committee, for the opening day's play in the which met in Baltimore last night, North and South open champlonship, IS and will be run off at Central High Igads the field of stars who teed off Stadium on Saturday, June 6. e ; i s . o[ Jesterday morning In quest of the Maryland will play again on Sat-) It is probable that if Stevens is use S IS ? urday, having b game bookUl with |t first, Troxell may play, second and Unless Practice Is Curbed. i ¢t Kendall G These | MOTRN g0 to the outficld in place S AR ot green. ®¢| of Remsberg. Others available for —_— two contests should offer the Old|reserve duty are Wright. an out- BY LAWRENCE PERRY. Liners plenty of opposition at the RE 3 EW YORK, April 2—In the report of the alumni committee o Western Conference foot ball schedules occurs a paragraph whict Juni championships will be held title, & in Baltimore May 30 at Carlin's Park The southern California champion fielder with the yearlings last season: outset. Richmond yesterday took the Gardner, infleld utility man last year, scalp of Navy at Annapolis, and Gal- seems to have been ignored by commentators. We feel,” says the report in the course of its consideration of ways The Aloysius Club will act as host had a pair of 34s, four under par. In and a great fielder but light hitter; laudet gave Catholic University a and means whereby all conference elevens may have equal opportunity in in the coming meet, and will have a the afternoon, after going out in 36, large number of track and field men he produced the third 34 for the day. Beachley, a nifty little infielder; Lang sy a1 Saturday before | 274 Baker, catchers, and Barber and losing by a one-run margin. the matter of schedules, “that there is a vicious tendency in foot ball “We refer to the importance given to the amount of the ‘gate’ There entered in the various events. His card is considered phenomenal ot i wolf, as the extreme back tees were Lyons, gardeners. Richmond did some impressive| Burroushs can play short or the stick work against the Midshipmen, is no denying that this is to some extent responsible for existing foot ball schedules, and the fact that it supports other sports is no justifica- in use and quite a strong breeze was TO SEE BIG MATCH i A — getting 12 safetles, 2 of which were tion for it. blowing. His first day's score of 138 ton, who is a good hitter, fielder and doubles. Invitations have been sent to all “Thi; is the Lest ever made in the cham- thrower, also is available for out- Maryland's line-up probably will be the golf clubs about Washington o % no pi | | | NIVERSITY OF MARYLAND'S base ball team, which has been Both Boxers Are Irish-Americans and Have Made Notable Careers in Ring. BY FAIR PLAY. EW YORK, April 2—Tommy Gibbons is a pretty cagey boxer and so it is probable that he knows just what sort of a contract he is undertaking in meeting Gene Tunney, June 12, at the Polo Grounds. This is to v that the writer believes Tommy knows full well that # when he faces the ex-marine next June he will be facing a very danger- ' ous man. Tunney's light-heavyweight title will not be at stake and the consid- eration under which Gibbons goes into the ring will be that he gets 50 per cent of the receipts, Tunney receiving 20. wnine 1o vesmen e sene e an| COLES OF D. C. GAINS two strokes behind him follows Wal- ter Hagen, the present champion Cyril Walker of Englewood, the pres ent national open champion and run- ner-up for the North and South title last year, is in fourth place with 145 strokes. Fred McLeod of Washington is well pionship on the No, 2 course. Leo Diegel of Glen Oaks, eat flald duty. Brayton's stickwork is & Tk such that he may be called upon to asking members to witness the ex-| Stevens or Troxell, first base. hibition match on Sunday at the Neck, L. I, with rounds of 69 and 73 do some pinch-hitting. Murray, third base. Washington Golf and Country Club, in for a total of 142, Is next in line, and is Eesley, shortsto which three professional stars and a > Robert Gormley, substitute quarter- back last vear and a local product, won the all-around foot ball plaver it has to the disadvantage of other teams, that dates with attractive non-con- ference teams interfere with contests tendency is deplorable: in intercollegiate athletics hurt ginning to ballyhoo figh which will decide the the s an S : Burgee, center field T Bewry- fn it w foot ball world this of the never take *weight championship But the public will m seriously The nlmost daily arrival of foreign fighters is a sure sign of Spri With the number of capable boxers all over the country it is surprising to see how the outsider gets work while the talent is compelled to stand | aside One wonders if the United long to retain its supremacy ring when Cubans, Panama Americans and the like are match- ed up with the best here, while #00d hoys from other sections of the United es languish when they come to New York The clink of the silver dollar is the answer, of course. A Vineintini, a Romero-Rojas, a Lombardo makes an attractive drawing card irrespective of his real ability, while a clean-cut lad like Jack Silver of California, who s knocking at the Eastern gate last mer, gets no chance at all n future champions have to| onto a New York manager be- > they get their chance. This bo Silver, by the way, lost his only de cision bout in three years of fighting to Joe Benjamin on the west coast a few. weeks ago. He is now heading East, and hopes to do better than last year, when | he managed to get one bout only. tes is in the . South By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, April the Polo Grounds A. heavyweight match between Gene | Tunney and Tom Gibbons, effected yesterday, will bring together on June %12 in an open-air battle at h| weights two men who have attained puglistic distinction along much the | same lines, Both boxers are Irish-Americans, have demonstrated cleverness, topped by a finishing punch, and have been consistently successful against the foremost men of thelr divisions, ibbons is the older and more ex- perienced of the two fighters and earned unparalleled distinction two years ago of being the first man to go the 15-round limit with Jack Dempsey Gibbons is now 36 years old, and has fought 97 ring battles, scoring 42 knockouts, winning 9 by decision, drawing in 1, losing 3 and appearing in 42 no-decision encounters. One of his matches was declared no con- test —Clinching by C. of a light-| Tunney, who is 27, has faced 56 op- ponents, scored 26 knockouts and captured 15 battles by decision. He has lost 1 bout and has taken part in 13 no-decision affairs. He also has seen one engagement declared no contest EDDIE BOWEN TAKES BOUT WITH SHARKEY A card full of good hard battling, featured by three knockouts, was presented to the fight fans last night at Washington Barracks. The best fight of the night was be- tween Eddie Bowen, vounger brother of Andy, and Jack Sharkey of Balti- more. The boys went at it hammer and tongs and whaled away at each other to their hearts’ content. Bowen took the first two, but in the third Sharkey caught his man on the point of the chin with a long left and Yowen took the count of six. He weathered the storm and battled on even terms in the fourth. Sharkey gain forged to the front in the fifth. The sixth was even, but from then on it was all Bowen. He changed his aethod of attack, which had the Bal- 1 on the receiving end of a left. bth boys finished cked “The Wild Bull of nth Street,” was no match for Jackie Turner of the barracks. At the opening gong Turner went right after his man and soon had the Ital- fan lad in a bad way. Renzo took the count three times in the first round and twice in the second, the bell com- ing to his rescue in this stanza. Tur- ner dished out more punishment in the third and had his opponent on the floor taking the count when the towel put a stop to further hostilities. Andy Bowen of Washington did not respond for the seventh round in his bout with Al Foreman, the fighting musician from /Fort Myer. Bowen had absorbed terrible punishment from the soldier lad, but gamely took his medicine and was fighting back all he knew how. His left eye was closed tight and his face cut consid- erably by Foreman’s left jab. The referee stated that Bowen had in- jured his hand badly. It was Fore- man's fight all the w The curtain-raiser saw Jack Cafoni, Young Renzo, FAME AT SWIMMING Mark written Coles of his name Washington has in the swimming annals of Brown Unliversity on the same page with that of the great Davy Jones. | This slim, light-haired youngster, | who was a star in Central High | School at Washington before going | to Brown, has been in the scason just closed the most consistent point winner a Brown swimming team ever has had, not excluding Jones. Coles” won the 50 and 100 yard free-style events in every dual meet in which he participated, with the xception of the Annapolis contest. He showed the way home in the dashes against Syracuse, Yale, Penn- sylvania, Dartmouth, M. L T. and Wesleyan. Moreover, he won the 100 in the New collegiates at Hanover. He was the first double winner for a visiting team to swim in the Yale pool in many yea inst Syracuse he swam the 50- yard free style in 24 2-5 seconds, the | fastest time ever made in the Brown pool. This record, however, was un- official. In the Weslevan contest Coles went the same distance in 24 3-5 seconds, equaling the New England record. He has consistently made the century under 58 seconds. His best time has been around 55 both the 50 and England inter- WISCONSIN WILL SEND CREWS TO POUGHKEEPSIE Wis., April 2—Wiscon- and freshman crews will ent to the Poughkeepsie regatta, the university athletic council has an- nounced. Formal sanction of the trip has been voted. JACK FORRESTER TELLS: Paddy Doyle’s Miraculous Play at Pinehurst. VERYBODY will recall the greaf l 3 in the Summer of 1924 when To: the course record with a 65, only to have the score duplicated by Mike Brady and Leo Diegel, who, wit with Boyd. Tom had been at Fox Hills a long time and had held the previous record of 66. His 65 was a great gl fuckily by the performances of Brady and Diegel. Inside Golf By Chester Horton. The flat swing, which is the method the fat golfer should adopt and al- ways use, is not a substitute or make- shift method of hitting ball. Some of the best of tourna- ment golfers use it by cholce. A very hard ball can be hit with it be- cause the body weight falls into the swing at the moment of im- FLAT SWING Waiter Reed Hospital, win by a tech- nical K. O. in the sixth round over Whitey Michaels of the Mohawk Ath- letic Club. Although considerably outweighed, Cafoni kept on top of his | man right from the start, and during the third, fourth and fifth rounds had the Mohawk boy tottering all over the ring, but just couldn’t land the old haymaker. ~Michaels did not come out of his corner for the sixth round. Harry Sheehy (Kid Sullivan) kept | the boys stepping in the first three | bouts, while Col. Ericson was in charge of the Bowen-Sharkey go. The show was staged outdoors and nearly 4,000 fans attended. " SMALL TOWN QUINT IS TITLE CONTENDER| CHICAGO, April 2—Competition had narrowed considerably when 16 survivors of the 42 entrants in the mnational interscholastic basket ball tournament of the University of Chi- cago went into the third round today. The Far West had been eliminated, and the East was represented by only two teams—Medford, Mass., and Tor- rington, Conn.—while the North and South appeared likely to continue some representatives to the finals. The Mid-West was strongly In evi- dence, One of the South's strongest con- tenders was Wheeler, Miss., a cross- roads post village. Large cities had gradually been downed until only Chicago, St. Paul, pact more nat- urally, 1 think, than with other swings, and the more naturally any particalar part of any swing ix naccomplished the more rhythm one ix likely to have. The flat swinger uses this method with his irons the same as with the woods. The only necessary precaution regard- ing Irous ix to see to it that the binde starts slowly and evenly away from the ball and then ix kept low to the ground until the pivoting of the body has turned the shoulders well around to the right. Then you break the biade upward smnappily with the wrists. & START OLUB LP WILL COACH MIDDLEBURY. Marshal M. Klevinow of Milwaukee, a Middlebury College senior, who was captain of the foot ball team last Fall, has been named gridiron and base ball cqach, succeeding. David B. Morey, resigned. Klevinow will re- celve his college diploma in June. e GOULLET HAS RECOVERED. Alf Goullet, veteran six-day bicycle rider, has fully recovered from a long period of iliness and will resume rid- ing. Goullet's initial appearance of the outdoor season will be made in two special races. = TURNER TO MEET KETONEN. Joe Turner meets Waino Ketonen Mien.; Louisville, Ky, and Wichita, Kans, were ia the running. in the Mutual Theater's weekly wrestling match tonight. & | golt every | tories. the golf | ranking amateur will pla John Farrell of New York and Jock Hutchison of Chicago, stars of the professional world for many vears, will be opposed to Roland R. Mac Kenzle, District of Colymbia amateur | champion, and Dave Thomson, pro- | fessional at the Washington Golf and | Country Club. Thirty-six holes will be played, with | the morning round starting at 9:30 | o'clock and the afternoon round be- | ginning at 1:30 The course of the Washington Golf and Country Club has been carefully groomed for the match and is in first- class shape. Fairways and greens have been rolled within the last three | days and everything is in readiness for what club officials belleve will be a great match. The golf committee of the club, headed by Fred D. Pazton, has put up a purse of $50 for the professional who breaks 70 over the course. Last year the same purse was put up, but Farrell's 72, made over the afternoon stretch, was the lowest. This is par and has only been equaled once under normal playing conditions. Mel Shorey scored a 70 at Wash- | ington three weeks ago, but Winter | rules permitting him to improve his | lie on the fairway, were in effect. | Sunday, the Winter rules, which | are still in effect, will be suspended | and the players will be required to play the ball where it lies. Hutchison and Farrell have been campaigning in the South all Winter, while MacKenzie hus been playing afternoon he could find time. Thomson is in fine form, hav- ing had several scores below 75 over the Washington course recently. MacKenzie and Thomson are play- ing this afternoon in a practice match | against Robert T. Barnett, the pro at | | the Chevy and W. R. McCallum. Chase Club, o U. OF M. TITLE GOES TO KAPPA XI SEXTET Although held to a 14-to-14 tie in their final game of the University of Maryland Intersorority Basket Ball League, the Kappa X! tossers last night were proclaimed champions of the circuit, with a record of five vic- The non-sorority team battled the champions in the closing double- header, and went into last place in the league standing without having won a game. A 19-to-14 victory over the Alpha Omicron Pi six brought the Sigma Delta girls into second place, which they share with their opponents of last night, each team having won thres and loss three games. The line-up of the championship sextet includes Olive Seltzer and Irene Meade, forwards; Maxine Heiss, center; Mary Harbaugh, side center; Margaret Wolfe and Louise Har- baugh, guards. The standing: Won. Lost. Kappa Xi* 3 Alpha Omicron Sigma_Delta Nonsorority® *Played tie game. B t match at the Fox Hill m Boyd, the professional there, broke h Johnny Farrel, were in a foursome ory for him, but it was dimmed un- I once witnessed Tom's discom- fiture on another occasion after he seemingly had outplayed another man. And T and the others who were present still kid him about it. Boyd was competing in the Pine- | hurst open championship of 1924. His | playing partner was the well known Paddy Doyle. Just to make the play a little more exciting, they put up a neat side bet. Both of them were going good, but as they ended the seventy-first hole of the tournament—the seventeenth of the course—Tom had one stroke the better of Paddy. It looked very much as though he would cop the side bet. This appeared even more likely after the tee shots on the eighteenth hole. Tom got a beautiful drive right down ths center, while Paddy sliced his ball well ot the right and into a clump of trees. It happened that Bobby Cruick- shank and I had finished just ahead of Tom and Pat. We were standing in a_group about the eighteenth green, talking about our scores, when some one said: “Look where Paddy Doy We gleamed down the line and dis- covered Paddy almost lost in the grove of trees. These latter were of all descriptions, Some were 50 feet high, others not more than 10 or 15. But, the way they grew in relation to each other, everybody thought Paddy would do well if he got back on the fairway on his next shot. He lay a full 150 yards from the green. Doyle, making a close examination, discovered a line to the green, how- ever, and decided to try -for it. To do so he was compelled to shoot un- der one tree and over another. These trees were fairly well apart, but in order to get over the second one he had to play pretty close to the lower branches of the first one. In other words, extreme accuracy was requir- ed. astounded when Paddy's ball sailed out from that jungle, dropped neatly near the edge of the green and roll- ed straight into the cup for an eagle two. But you should have seen Tom Boyd. He was completely flabbergast- ed. He needed three putts to down in five, Paddy winning the side bet easily. “Talk about luck,” Tom said, “I | vear. We folks up around the green were get Snyder, right fleld Remsberg, left field. Moran, second base. Spinner or Coghill, catcher. Nihiser, Mills and Brayton. pitchers. Troxell, Besley and Remsberg were regulars last vear, Spinney was re- serve backstop, while Murray, Burgee, Synder and Coghlll were on the 1924 freshm combination. Moran re- turned to school after being out a He was a regular in 1923, play- ing thira Murray Has Great Arm. Murray without doubt is one of the greatest throwers in college base ball, being likened in that respect to Bluege of the Washington Americans, and he also is a fair hitter. Burgee, a clouter, has a good deal to learn about fielding. Snyder is a capable all-around performer and Coghlll should develop into a clever receiver. of the Lafayette Athletic Club At 1 o'clock the Iroquois A will be met at Fairlawn. The Lafayettes have the following | players in line for the campaign: Bailey, Bradbury, Cheseldine, Craw- ford, Davis, Dunning, Dove, Hines, | Hopkins, Henderson, Hays, Parker, Tompkins, Smith and Leverone. Bangs, a former Lehigh tosser; Brooks of the Smith Co. team, E. Edinger and W. Edinger of the Hill- tops, Hays of Eastern High, McCor- mack of the Apache Athletic Club team and Bud Timmons of the Win- |tons also have been added to the |roster. Joe Hines will captain the |team this season, succeeding Capt. Cheseldine. Senior and unlimited teams want- ing games with the Lafayettes should communicate with Melvin Henderson at Lincoln 392. Practice will be held today, tomorrow and Saturday on the Fairlawn field at 5 o'clock. Manager Codella of the Wintons wishes to book some senior team of the city for a Sunday game. Prac- tically the same team that carried Winton colors last season is back on the diamond again this year. For games call Codella at Lincoln 1426, Members of the Modoc nine are re- quested to report to the Modoc field for practice this afternoon at & o'clock. On Saturday at 3 o'clock the Modocs meet the Liberty Athletic Club team on Friends Field. J. Gilbert Markham is booking games with se- nior teams at Cleveland 2125. All members of the Cherrydale Ath- letic Association and candldates for the base ball team are meeting to- night at the home of Mickey Johnson. Practice will be held on the Lyon Vil- lage Field Sunday at 2:30. Corinthian Juniors, who were forced to cancel their game scheduled for last Sunday because of wet grounds, will open their season this Sunday, when the Hess Junlor team is met on the Monument Grounds. Co- rinthian Midgets, winners in their season opener, play their second game on Sunday with the fast Peerless Midgets as their opponents. The Midgets have won 95 victorles since their organization and were winners of their section of the Washington Base Ball and Athletic Association last season. Members of both the junior and midget nines are meeting at Immaculate Conception gymnasium tomorrow night at 7:30 o'clock. Hess Juniors will practice at Fifth and L streets southeast this evening at 5 o'clock and will hold a business meeting tonight at the home of Fran- cis Hoffman, 720 Seventh street south- east. Manager Kidwell of the Penrose Juniors, who encounter the Trinity Juniors Sunday at 2 o'clock on the Penrose field, is booking games at Clarendon 233-W-1. Members of the Junior and Senior teams of the Crescent Athletic Club are meeting tonight at the Wilson Normal School. Manager Grande of the Seniors, Adams 1740, wishes to book a game for Sunday afternoon for Diamond No. 2, Monument Grounds. Cardinal Juniors will encounter the Agricultural Juniors on Saturday afternoon. Games may be arranged with the Cardinals at Columbia 7920. St. Joseph's Midgets defeated the Eagle Insects, 6 to 4, at the Plaza playground. Manager Sam Cherry of the Tinley Athletic Club is booking games with unlimited teams at Adams 6071. Herzls and Northerns are scheduled play the hole better than Paddy and yet he heats me. And that is why we are lding him about his.lo LAFAYETTES TO BATTLE TWO RIVALS IN ONE DAY DOUBLE-HEADER for Sunday afternoon appears on the schedule the Congress Heights field and at 3 o’clock the Clover Athletic Club nine championshlp at Georgetown and gained possession of the Roy M. Waldron cup. Gormley just beat out George Vuckmamnic, former star at Kiskio, having a margin of only two | points. In addition to possession of the cup for a year Gormley will get a gold foot ball. 1 t Delta Chi won the interfraternity | basket ball champlonship at George- | town when it defeated the Psl Omega | quint by the score of 23 to 13. Phil| Loucks was mainly responsible for the Delta Chi victory. He caged the ball five times from scrimmage and played a clever all-around game. Quantico Marines easily disposed of the Temple University nine for the second successive time yesterday, the | count being 14 to 5. The Devil Dogs | registered six runs in the sixth in-|¢ ning. ' base ball team. Athletic Club will be encountered at to meet at the Monument grounds | next Sunday morning at 11 o'clock. Lou Baker, Lincoln 5678, is arrang- | ing the season's schedule for the | Powhatan Athletic Club team. | George T. MacMillen, 503 North Fulton street, Baltimore, is arranging games for the Paymaster unlimited team. Members of the Rosslyn base ball team, that meets the Naval Medical | Schoot on Sunday, are meeting tonight | at the home of R. Brown BORG IS GOING AFTER TANK RECORD TONIGHT | CHICAGO, April 2.—Arne Borg, Sweden's Olympic star and European free-style swimming champion, will| attempt to shatter the record for the half-mile event In the Illinois A. C. paol tonight in connection with the Central A. A. U. championships. Two title events, the women'’s plunge and men's event, will also be com- peted, each with a heavy entry list. BY WILL early May several years ago the a famous tarpon point along th I There had been no wind for days and the gulf was clear as crystal Along the jetties the heaving ground swells were breaking in a white foam. It was useless to fish - for tarpon, as there were countless thou- sands of Atlantic amberjack in the pass and the instant a bait touched the water it was seized. Now, a “jack” is no contemptible | fighter, but everything is compara- | tive, and why battle for a fish having | strength and speed enough, to be | sure, but which will not break and | show itself? We were after the mightiest jumpers of the ocean and decided to try out luck along St. Josephs Island, less than a mile away. At Aransas Pass one does not fish from a launch, as at Long Key and at most of the Florida fishing re- sorts. We were trolling along in 20 feet of water with 150 feet of No. 9 line out. Finding no tarpon, how- ever, we were about to give up, when my bait was seized fiercely and in a manner not characteristic of the tarpon. I struck, and with unbelievable quickness a strange fish sprang into the air, no sooner touching the water than it was out again. Then it made the longest and fastest straightaway run 1 have ever experfenced. The reel drag was set at three pounds and it fairly screeched as that wild fish took line. The writer is con- vinced that that first run was close | t0 700 feet and the fish seemed a mile away when it next broke water. In five minutes that fish was every- | where and any place. It would show itself abreast of the boat and then ahead of it. The human hand could not possibly reel in fast enough to keep a tight line. A dozen times we thought we had lost it. Perhaps the fight lasted five minutes, or it may have been ten. but every second was Presents an ideal in llar styling~It fits g:ck%fio?ge‘rfedily Cluetz, Peabody & Co.Inc zMahers hole which birdies from where 4, and on the h hit second was over the green and he noon, eighth, trapped for a 6. until another 6 |2 jout.. 4 4 4 3 | Crrit w Johnr Joe Turnesa, | ¥Frea THE CALL OF THE OUTDOORS President Izaak Walton League of America. President Harding recuperated after his campaign, and where he hooked and landed his first silver king. down the list with 152, Smith started with a 5 at the first in the afternoon and then fol- owed this with seven 4s and a 3. He hen started some brilliant putting, brought him under the | After two pars at the eleventh holes he dropped 30-footers on the next two for and laid an approach 4 feet the cup on the fourteenth for he third 3 and birdie in a row. His ynly errors were on the short fifteenth, he was bunkered and needed a me hole, where a well FIRST ROUND. 35433435434 3454348434 SECOND ROUND. 54444434438 443334535 3470138 Diegel Hax a 36. Diegel was out in 36 in the after- having only one bad hole, the where his strong third was All went well then the eleventh, where his second pushed into the woods. In to drive the ball past a zel connected with it, the ball yming back to him and spelling He missed several short putts, but played the last four holes in two under 4s His cards FIRST ROUND. 44444 Tora b 3 D ROUND. 4368 437 46444205 3 43573142 Smith, Great Neck, Dt n ing D 534 404 4 33 4 s 6 In 5 MucDonald B I Leo Dicgel, ¢ Walter Hagen Iker Alex Ross, De ho Golden, I bert Asheroft om w York...... Quaker Ridge kron, Ohio. e b 1 k&3 70 Horne, A ¥ w.J Bob Machi Thomas Ha Jack Lowden, Shamokin, Pa Pasadena, Fla French, Youngstown, Ohl Clarence Hacknes. Atlantic City.. 7 Mcleod, Columbia, Was Henry Miller, Bklyn. Forest Park Chas. Betscher, Marsland C. C. Jock Hutehinson, Glenview, Pat Doyle, Take Champlain, N. Y. Jack Forrester, Hollywood. N. J.. Wm. Kline, Garden City, L I.... 1y Kerrigan, Siwanoy. ichols, New York s d_Vinton, Plymouth, Mass... Nabholtz, Cleveland Winged Foot.. Rochester... e, EREERE] e Sats ERPERFRPERRRER B Brookline, Mass.. Tom Boyd, Fox Hills.... Cleveland. H. Woodman, Marion, oza, R H. DILG, writer was fishing at Aransas Pass, e Texas coast and close to where burning with excitement. Then, without a sign of warning, It gave up flghting, evidently having ex- hausted its strength in that tre- mendous display of speed. We recled a thoroughly spent fish to the boat, and one neither of us had ever seen before. At Tarpon Inn it was as much of a mystery to the guests and to pro- fessional boatmen as it was to us. It had a long round body, somewhat like a barracuda, and weighed close to 30 pouhds. Unfortunately it was spoiled by a taxidermist in the mounting. The next Winter I de- scribed this peculiar fish to Zane Grey, in New York, and learned its name to be the washoo. . INDIANS PREPARING FOR NURMI CONTEST LOS ANGELES, Calif,, April 2.—A little squad of Indian long-distance runners of the Sherman Indian School, near Riverside, are training with an intensity and enthusiasfm that perhaps they never have equaled before. They have a stiff assignment—the defeat of Paavo Nurmi—and if they do not accomplish their goal, it will not be because of lack of preparation. Charles Paddock and Loren Murchi- son, star sprinters, prior to their de- parture on a trip around the world, spent much time training the Indians. The red skins hope Nurmi will consent to run about five miles. The race will be held here April 25. As EBONITE “Strings" to a Stick, SoltWin v/ Around the Gears MR. MOTORIST The manufacturer of your car will tell you mot to m grease in the Transmiss on rear axles, because grease cannot flow over the moving goars, and that the gears simply cut a clean path through the grease and run practically unlubricated. The transmission and rear axles are best insured with EBONITE, and it is in- dorsed by Automiotive Engi- neers. Buy with your mind made up. Demand EBONITE. Take no substitute. At dealers in five-pound cans, and at servics stations from the EBONITE . checkerboard pump only. (1IT's SHREDDED o0IL) FOR TRANSMISSIONS AND REAR-AXLE amateur basis or it will games must not play if persisted badly “To speak plainly, the athletic de- | partments must be operated an |among Big Ten teams, eto. agraphs quoted in the fo be to|the gaudy covering f s who play the [ment put forward for profits ‘t‘\»‘rv.n(rt:n!!.g Chis tendency toward commercial- | ceipts. No n ism is not confined to any one mem- |intelligence, ber, and our criticism is made only |sense, because we belleve it is time for the |lege athletic authoritie conferente to meet the issue openly.” |is not commercial, be. sums derived from Method Is Representative. DiEl usa A L6 ahtray This alumni committee on fo tile the maintain that the bo e or, in faet, any ihi ball | productive sports.” But schedules is made up of graduates of in and near Chicago. At the meeting |loon at which the resolutions were adopt-| It will be ed were representatives of all the reaction ference members except Illinois, Ohio |alumni to the State and Northwestern | erenaum Among the findings is to be findings has been requested. nothing that every one has known, viz, that conference n are not now upon an equal scheduling games, that coaches winning teams can select opponents of Western report will be. found mbers | in| — Asis Kentucky Derby. CNENONON NN NS NIN NI NN NANT Try this delightful old ginger ale THERE is health and happiness and good fellowship in it, for it is a real ginger ale —mage from real Jamaica ginger. Famous for years across the border— served in the Houses of Parliament in Ottawa, the Royal Canadian Yacht Club and at smart functions everywhere— “Canada Dry” is indeed a ginger ale with a distinguished and an historic past. It is so utterly different from the ordi- nary ginger ale that it might almost be called by another name. No phrase suits it quite so well as this—“The Champagne of Ginger Ales.” It is a delicious treat at dinner—when entertaining—for every occasion. Look for the neme REGARDING IMITATIONS For your own protection, remem- ber that every ginger ale sold in a green bottle is not “Canada Dry.” It pays to be particular. INISI ST NI NI SIST ST I NI NI NININTSNTINI ST ST STNT ST ST SINT ST ST ST SININTIN, 7 Reg. U. S. Pat. Off. Bottled in the U.S.A. by Canada Dry Ginger Ale, Incorporated, 25 W. 43rd 8t., New York. In Canada, J. J. McLaughlin Limited. Esr. 1890 © 1925 Belling Agent, Southern Sales, Limited, 1731 L t. N.W., Washington, D. C. BAYERSON DILWORK SINT SISINTNTSTAT ST ST ST T ST ST ST ST ST NTNINT ST ST ST STNT ST T STST ST ST ST ST ST TSI ST ST T T, DNPN NN AN AN AN NN NP N o\ o\ o . 4 YRIRIZIRT 2T 2T I AI XTI LI 2T 2 ZI XY I ZI AT &I &I <F 4V 2P What is interesting is that the par- going strip argu- to bulwark passion for gate re- san of ordinary business common pts the statements of col-. t foot ball ause the large the game are in expenses of non- this is the st time college men have come, out the various Big Ten colleges who live |boldly and pricked the sophistic bal- the interesting to_sefe what Conference A retf- of Big Ten alumniyon the Sir Banton ix the only 'Norxe that of | ever won both the Preaknkss and the VAT AT LT RTRI BT BT 4 TSI INIST ST ~,