Evening Star Newspaper, April 10, 1925, Page 31

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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., FRIDAY, APRIL 10, 1925. SPORTS. 3 Ruth May Be in Condition to Play Against Griffs in Opening Game of Season BABE’S DOCTOR BELIEVES [DEMPSEY IS THROUGH SMITH TEAM TO TACKLE |JONES USES RANGE lMISS COLLETT TO TAKE SWATTER WILL BE READY SAYS COAST PAPER) RFEDERAL-AMERICAN BANK| TOTRAINFORGOLF| [UCKY DIME TO ENGLAND LOS ANGELES, April 10— e e s o e ATLANTA, Ga., April 10.—Robert Los Angel mes toduy ~aid thnt Home Run King Taken to Hospital on Arrival in| daex b itx to Tix intl- | T RESH from a victory over the Metropolitan National Bank. the F. H o i amdtuRRa B mpion BY GLENNA COLLETT, Pin{cRfEicant ciatiinclikns fratiss 8 Smith Co. base ball ninc.meets the Federal-American National Bank |07 tP7 United States wnd | forme American's Greatest Woman Golfer Y v and mever will enter the prize / ; s champlon, Is doing much of his New York—Hot Dogs Declared 1o Have Been o e ataenti T | ek itomorrow ailecacon L2 M8 olclockiat dismandiNGL 4 Mora: In sporting | ment Grounds Leading Factor in His Hiness. emisist Do 3 Crawford is booked to take the mound for the Smith tossers and (Written on the eve of her departure for Troon, Scatland. where sis will appesr s Spring training for the two big tour- | America’s only contsnder for the British woman's golf championship naments this year on the militury il 10—The lucl hn D. Rockeic target range at Fort McPherson r Bangs or Smith will do the recciving. 'm:_ Dl t along t Other members of the team are| Temple elubmen of Alexandria will c " 3 pions. 1 Scotland the Associated Pres o Burroughs, Shook. Foley, Brooks, Lee- | meet the Friends' ‘nine tomorrow | Bobby has joined the National Rif« 3 4 g soclation, and been shooting R i bt LT T i s 5 man, Jones and Perkins. morning at 10 o'clock at the Cardinal [ As: i g EW YORK giant_batter of base balls, lie et 2.1 Foley, manager of the Smith | park with considerable effect at the rifi Because iy English gir powerless to ilospital—far from dead, yet far He stai s N nine booKing games with unlimited and pistol targets Cecil Leitch—is c of the 1 tain to con his reputati rringe, ¢ nd wishes fo include bank | Anacostin Eagle Juniors defeuted| Joncs has displayed a remarkable ! ; 1ain o continue his reputation . oy sgrobus | the Riverside Junlors, 10 to 6 proficlency at the pistol targets, | forward’ to playii England with 0 . Call Main 6464 | plcking up scores of 90 _or better oUt |\ hen 4 trip has appealed to me sc Ruth left New Yc 1hy heclitiace forilat Sy confident he & | Joe Diehl has been numed to man-|0f 4 possihle 100, at 75 fect. with " 08 € O Id arrive 4 Sic tness which would guarantee his supremacy lafayette Athletic Club tossers, who | uge (he Anacostin. Eagle Senfors, |SUrbfising frequency, friends ¥ e e T Jtters the coming vear. Yesterday, with | DENCIO TO MEET MOLIMO | ratticd the Naval Air Service team to | while ~Chick~ Busher® has been| “IUs @ great game.” sald the golr | Bel&ian open ) y while I'm over el T, Sidgieiamay. Lt camet o | & 2-to-2 deadlock, will meet the Navy | chosen to direct the unlimited nine. [champion today. “At first the target| (AUE 170 OV FE TRere feel e pochingof . e back te New |y CONGRESSIONAL RING | 3irt > Marines tomorrow afternoon at looked 50 small and far away that (Shall. The weloek at Bleventh and O streets | Aletie Club and the Post|at 200 yards on the rific range I feit |™Y 1 ) SN ; ullman Athle ub und the Post | 4! y the | " Fm sorry I'm the only American ] g Dencio in the main | southeast | Ofice team were scheduled to playI'd much rather have w No. 1 fron| I sorry hwm ihe onls American e L o NEW YORK GETS TwO ut of the ing card arcanged for | s ST 1 Kenil. | this afternoon ut the Unfon Station "'fld a golf ball fo nlc L, But hel 5ol iave a £00d time, 4nd becausé Greenville, S, Tucsday “ongressional Country, Cl uonday | Wennimx Athietie Club and Kenil-| pize” The Pullman mine s booked [Fifle "does pretty well. ‘It doesnt|iotld have « £ood time, und because | Soo L fainted in t \\“ l night, mectin Molino over a | : +Lh -";" ‘\" ”"0" e ‘]‘v“l V"“" ('I‘" | for # game with the Knickerbockers d:‘:".‘)”‘x” :“' or pull ']"”’ ':”"‘“{’: 1 can|, oo much better opportunity to show | be windb & Pullman tra Iy ha six-round route. Molino is a new- | Eame Sunday QL | on Sunday a s et far enough w even| he Iinglish, who don it e ur before he arrived home BIG BOUTS FOR jUNE“m in local circles, but Manager Al|former's field. ‘The Benning schedule | ©" Sunday agalnst the wind !l_,'","‘;‘”‘),'_( Fhosdont b b ol oLt s . 4 e Bay of the oluk Reliavas A4 by cond U DEDE SCERUESE B 0, D- TRESn 3| waite Maalus ses musilng st e |70t course, I'm as fit a t that ~Babe fecls 1 e R R L iy : ! home of Raymond Brittain Saturda been practicing with o . 1 vetter.” He 2ie VORK, April 10.—Harry Wills, | (00 S8t of € O e and | Plerce Athletle Club of Hyattsville [ evening at 6:30 o'clock to elect | Southern courses i ' w York neffro. and Tommy- Gib- | Youns Hancock for N seheduled to meet the Mohawk | treasurer, playi T think, a bett Around d. i Sid Taylor of the navy yard is i [ DISREI (BT ons and abrasic ! St Paul light-heavyweight, wi - i etic Club team at the Seaman ever 1 playec ore in New York door T A ficld Sunduy afternoon at| Nhamreck Midgets have called off | to_count yc on my wrist ra believe in lucky finest sport ational g the great one collapsed. The | | was | eneir Sat wnd Sunday games, ux By Chester Horton. 1 tool s had f several members of the team will be | Westche ad been far | 3 ¥ sibbon opponent’ will be h Tremonts and Mount Vernons will | out of town over the a5 The medium upright swing, as out- .4 he savs ward Kin . i iney, R WAl talea -y yelock on the Monument Ggounds.| Calvary M. E. temsers were to h unatons, and which is by long odds |, (a srk Americat i Polo Grounds, June 1 f For games with the Tremonts call | their first work-out on the Monument | the best method for the average type | qence, but f r . el e SAYS BOBBY JONES i Grounds this aftevnoon of business man | had picked me ring to encounter Charley - | = & Ix powni- | improved m of Newark, N. J » r Wilsol © Cardinal| St Pateick's WMidgets defeated | af nccom- | Loin n Wills #nd] Wilnerk have co e ub is challenging junior | the Immaculate Conception Midgets, | plish by s nd Weinert ha VTLANTA | By Foss ms-at Columbla. 7920 9% 4 . him because 1t i i ment South | amateur golf champion ‘and former 6 0o aved Spalding R s AnEellGpen title holder, has declared that e e A e . the Lido course on Lov Tsland place. By draw- | close together, but | p Gl T (L ional championship £ ez no sratent | WHITTEMORE, 2 AND 1 ,YA’]:Y‘Y to_satiaf ‘v:v}-' o 1 qualify, is the most difficult a6 N Eeoh ’ who demanded that the «ev ayed p Ere . ! an S alatant | (chulc| Soutie HoiiasieXer ltyed. B On the 18th Green at St. Andrew’s nin nnd lecting Their s d " he said, “and ther e son evenly on the | PINEHURST “hempsey LR AR ik L most important putt 1, would be a tle, as no extra holes | o | 1 urpone HECRE Bl for. On he fiv er at|would be play y winning the las box before Lab R t ive-foot t| would be plaved by winning the last no opponent for h e Bt thusly bty T feet at the start | Iiimination of the back | o n 1913, which allowed me | hole || crus aT vop [ wwing the golf- | pones Vavdon and Ray for the na-| Under the circumstances a halved [ | 1S HORZONTAL | ©F EO(® nfh 80602 piteshurgh . en championship, which 1| match would amount to a vietory. | | AND PARALLEL matic we nd roune e ling equipment ROSS WHIPS COULON. could - 5 hte play-of. | But after we had both reached the | |10 LINE OF Eccoins Rl ateur ] elp you | NGS. Ark.. April 10—| H & T er ¥t occasion was ! green in 2, Wethered abou! feet T e fad veste 0 sirt et as } does the “big Syracuse, N. Y., won a | reco n’ the course. the re ¢ & than the finish | from the cup and I sbout 1 T - A R s . i e Bostoniar leagu=" players. decision last ht at the | champion s that he uld try Seloliiards o e Wethered ¢ & atymue on his frat putt | the right your welght wi e A 5 o 10-round bout with Bddie ay for another effort to e - or the o usually putt very quickly, but I|gq cent to the right leg, E p t :ing Uniforms i OrENiwr Oricnos: Theriare it t « ok # bit of time in studying this | correct. You will note, too, tha |qualifying rounc - cial discounts to team station a wbulance await- | goiien i : i _remembered that t ay. There was a suspicion of & roll | jere heel stayn fal close % but physici t 2 & TN = United States team,|!in the green, which, if I could catch| ground, which alxo Is correct. f Brook f : ding Gloves work o all . ) the buse bull variety. have | playing over the St. Andrew’s course, | It, might curry my ball around Weth- | {he top of the back swing in the me- |the links. in one f th Oc.. $1:0 88 arly an hou T 4| Crides whe have followed the inter- | formed a New York organization. it i sreat rally on the second and | ered’s. Could 1 make {t? The gallery | dium P Will be Jus legiate - basket ball games are |is learned, and will band together o | coneludis - 2 jsiam mpright she ANAft wHE Be Juit tretcher. On t B cd that the season now nearing [aid the Giants and Yankees to vie- | iopy I Ruth fs oihan ose has been the most flourish- | tory this Summer. Colors have not | he sport has ever known. been selected. e & day that pulied us to vic-}of 10,000, which had been thrilled up!ubove and just slightly inside the a sing! int, 61 to 5% to this point by an unusual number | poimt of the right shoulder. The |Frinceton, W best 1 could do against th- | of sensational putts in which both my | yer should not go xo far up with | o - the was to tie him. But so far as|opponent and I had shared, fairii‘ ke wrist break of the shaft that it B. Woo ¢ Spalding Shoes, Masks, etc. r , the ¢ | concerned, the whole struggle | held its collective breath. &oea beyond the horizontal across the [ Who had bee e ts 7 a4 to be on the verge of dis My ball started as though bound|shoulders. Stop just short of pulnnxi“”l"‘“”" < f \W B, o be L attendea: ix n ~ S aster for us after the fourteenth hole | straight for a colllsion with Wether- At yourself up there. If you |2nd 3 1 7 M‘/% atior s = I'HE (AALL OF THE OUTDOORb f the afternoon round ed’s. K.\ huge sigh went up from the| make the swing asx T have outlined | Yates defeatéd Hoxie of Bos- e rived ‘on J:fl(}v)lhr-r train . | cthered had beaten me in the|spectators. Then it sneaked off to the | you will find it wonderfully free of [ton. by il ¥ _won| 1338 G Street N.W., Washington quard, old friend of the ¥ Spalding Bats mi-finals of the British amateur|side, drifted around the stymie snd|exertion. from P. Sieaeumed by the plivars By BY WILL H. DILG, champlonship, at Deal, 2 up and|fairly crawled into the hole for a (Copyright, 192 Judith thelr sorrow to the stricken R o 5 |1 to go. And during most of the|birdie 3. e | President Izaak Walton League of America. | Walker cup setto he seemed to have| I never will forget the applause my BY 3 the edge on me agan. Atter the | good British friends gave me. Tt was NEW YORK Saat 8 P e T 5 p teetn|WOTHINg round he was up, and|a tribute to international good sports- have been an impor ibuting | mat popular belief, the shark is a[and he wi y n near | W 'l"";""t’:‘"‘rfll 1;‘1 ]l:vllnz up the manship. factor in the illr Babe Rut monster of the seas that roves around | Guaten ; i oL il Ralalin e ariers S R ool g oS the Seafide haanisiamaniloolingilor e & We halved the thirteentn, | KEARNS STILL ON JOB. seen Ruth eat n | But ma a fishermen, scientists|out into the water among [haiuit on the fourceenth he holed dichini| s ¢ Rl NGTEBN MADFIV 10 Apiopos furter = i 1 and sailors tell us that the shark is! big barracuda rushey at b L pk | Shot for a making him 2 up. of various and sundry reports in cir- ping off the h w Jint of solu- Fabout as harmless a fisl. as swims: In|a large chunk of his ti The man an't describe my feelings as I|culation to the effect that he and tion of bicarbonat da and then the farther inland you get the!ran s ming tc J 10 Wi d that chip-shot go down. And | Jack Kearns, his manager, had part- &0 out to the ball field and pla e the reputation of the shark e t t er- | when we halved the fifteenth, T knew | ed company, Jack Dempsey has again Ruth has always been a big feeder|as a maneater. 3 a s might have been |1 had a fight ahead of me almost im- | taken occasion to refterate and bring the table, but it bly what| E. H. Ross, associate editor of Out-,blamed | possible of a successful conclusion. |up to date his several previous as- he has caten between meuls that hus |door America, formerly a deep-sea| I asked Ross about the motion pie-| On the sixteenth T pltehed my sec- | surances that Kearns has been my done him the most harm. Hot dogs|diver, a sailor of the warm seas and | tures and stories of underwater fights | ond dead to the cup and with a birdie | fight' manager for years and that is have been his particular weakness|a naval officer, has some interesting HStyesmeel el = A0V Banned s citk Wethered's lead ~to one|what he still is. fwlhenever there was a “pup empo- | things to say about the shark. only with a small knife lole. But we halved the seventeenth rium®” in sight e “The shark,” he said, “is about as| “Ha! ha was his reaponse. 5o the very best T Gould hone o Other Sports on Page 29. No human being can disre rd the| ferocious as the carp. I mean all rules of conditioning as Babe has|kinds of sharks. The shark is a scav- done without paving the penalty. cnger, and has no time for meat that Florida he would hang ar has been dead less than a week 1 hound derby to late | have caught a great many of them. night when he h ha ut [ never have been able to catch bed getting 1 ix weight has |one on fresh meat. Throw a piece of T 1 meat among a bunch of sharks nd they'll ignore it. It must be car on before they're interested.” All Our Stores Open Ruth's spe indout i th about the shark does not Haysenitme f | S e Later Tomorrow sters will swim around in a the and & whole school of the worst kind of \ h L el il e | s QR e e o 7 to Choose Your or. avate an a ) hejo myth to the extent of declaring Jmight have incu 1 e white o e W was | that the shark would eat only taking h men! springs for Florida 3 ip,m»mu the warmer waters / 5 should have taken great £ where sharks abound,” continued =elf, especially as the rows and 1 made it a hobby to find warm and langqrous. out whether anybody ever had known (o onditions really were of the best|of a shark even nibbling at unybody PP . 9 or training tuth had only re-| I never found anybody who had. You 2 F' garded his health a litt and| can jump in among a school of sharks l h m Pampered his appetite a Tittle losc. | nd 1t vou. met 1 orsheims near enough to any About a vear the writer sug-|of them you can pet them. They'll T sted that Ruth had the fight of his|cat out of your hand, but not of it.” 10 3 athletic existe ahead him. Na are some very fierce fishes Z 4 3 Men! Tomorrow our windows 18 il Haen to show that 1t msantl| o i g | will be filled with them— to put flesh on him. and plenty of it - the classiest, snappiest array usceptible to attacks of the g opt o =i . 1 once saw a man badly bitten by a| / | Py . iX) ¥ of Easter and Spring styles we el e Sndute st Bty g Rt A % 1 rl_Wears M ever preseated—duplicates of e e styles shown in windows clse Hts tolfiehtity andnlant toith: where at $6, $8 and $10! They LR o b clnee ) $7 50 will amaze vou—You never saw L] S : shoes at $3.50 so thoroughly inter an s re Ui | RO US R Try On Ne.9460 = well made--so exceptionally ap- e 3 | Patent Leather e e ey s fet. T Sprin e | “H h S o l 9 Zotet Iatim NEWARK this Spring. Buy winued to r and the ba ch Y \ =) French T o e omorrow. E: n or your- feld tike a bos. with an overwelgnted | _ 1_-" AM“'“" ‘.‘:“' 0dd Coats 2 ) | = ann pecla S st h :’:l‘;‘mw!h.t over sb;g;]ril:n c:vefurer] of e A o o e | EISENMANES 7th W& o = = 4 e 2 493 NEWARK Shoes in the United States Thole sy | $5 95. : know to be & fact—that NEWARK shoes . J i § | at $3.50 give all the ratisfaction of shoes costing dollars more. “WHY Not Smoke the Finest?” —Dunhill Cigarettes. | ByHQ‘pfioiPn_tmen? 1 to H.R.H. Prince o s \?c(’/a[es—alnd at that, ‘ Why 'l'lOt == they’reonlyaQuarter I . for Twenty! 7 /1 SmOke the 4(:104" 97:]-{’I gtK i Sport Oxtord | ‘ _ A “City Club Sho$” 1914-16 Pa. Ave. Sew Perforations, 1318 G S¢. 933 Pa. Ave. S.E Try On 9361T 3 ( New Tan Oxford o ; ) $ g Latest Style Stitching and E-287 (P'CW'CJ) A e N\ Perforations; Leather i g ¥ 3 bber Heels' “Hahn Special” Toney Tan e e or Black Calf, on new Balloon last - 35 95 Special, Men’s Socks Sfi e s “Onyx” Pure Silk Seocks, in ’ | & wanted colors — and Snappy 400 Branches Throughout the United State: ey Novelty Two-tone Socks! A e e 3 m REAL Easter Special. ... §5¢ 913 Pa. Ave. NW el 711 H $t. N.E. 3 3 Pairs, $1.50 ; Open Evenings Until After Easter . All Newsek Stores Open Seturdey Eveniags to Accommodate Castomers _

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