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R [J SPORTS. THE l<,‘\'l<)1\'11\'(:i STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, FRIDAY, JANUARY 15, 1926. SPORTS. G. U. Trackmen Start Competition Tomorrow : Thorpe Decides to Quit Athletics PALACE QUINTLOSES [FAMOUS INDIAN ATHLETE IS HEEDING CALL OF AGE FOU: 1y N WILL CONTEST IN GAMES AT FORDHAN ]’lullsk}'. R?'r!l‘ss, Aschier and Dosszault Going, But e Only First Named to Run in More Than One Race—Maryland Five S ts Pace. BY H. C. BYRD. G Burges Fordham U O'Reilly mor Pla These on the versity 1 enterc wult in the one s cnde rea While th tra Swinburne e the team of the only chamj last ¥ track t awarded to the rel n Athletes’ As: Swinburne, e univ ¥, will be tor Lou Little” and ¥ Grath, captain of the foot ball team. m two-mile wr, will be repre am to receive the lay team by the sciation of Phil- repre- Athletic one of the four local basket ed last night that A vietory. It took t nd Lee with It i Gk o 1t in all th 1l scorin Washington by ‘atholic Univers wn featured the game i The former was the chiel factor in his team's success, and de < that John O'Rielly sent various times to cover stopped. Nork threw - Blue and Gray. ‘Washington rd contes: the bet not r ntage of Lafayette and George h, b s missed a goal from the Had that goal been made but as it was the game went an extra period, from which the merged with vietory. ly one regular Lee, but had lead and hold nd Troxell Old Liners, ym the floor year that ashington v having been before the holi- Only one game is to be plaved to- night by a local quint, Catholic Uni- sity beil scheduled for that at Manhattan College, New York. Ma and is away, but does not play toda Georgetown's basket ball team goes to West Point tonight for a game with the Army tomorrow. The Blue and iray five expects to give the Soldiers P he the olina fc . in one way rprise, but in ar er told the write: he expected soon to ball and at the end son made known his It was not be. t he would do <o ention has been ¢ Universit last five something other i a vear ago that get out of foot of the last se ntention to res eved, thot Towe h Tust who will succeed Fetzer is not an, but the chances are that Boh will 1 o one dire vear sriene never d In eriti uth. In years of ex ge athletics the wr eard any man say one we cism of anvthing that Fetzer ever has done. Nothing more than that need be said of him. It is the highest compli- ment that could be paid Livery man who has anything to do with foot ball in the South will be sorry that he will not again have the pleasure of the gridiron association with Bill Fetzer. Coach Jack Haas has just about de- ! the varsity line-up he will u; in Gallaudet’s game during the r wainder of the year. It is: Reneau and 11, forwards; Wallace and Miller and Byouk, center. Haas team is coming along in and that he wiil surprise quints it is to face. od shai me of the DISTRICT LOG SHOW LISTED APRIL 19-20 Washington Kennel Club, at its an- nual meeting, decided o hold fts twelfth annual dog show on April 19 and 20 Frank P. Leach, one of the leading fanclers and _exhibitors, will act as Fifteen hundred dollar: 2sh money e offered b s voted to be distributed the winne; Otficers clected as Dr. Williar the ensuing year were Coliins, president dent; trea ingham was club as Kennel rer. zain elected to repr delegate to the Am n hington of the 4 exhibit, an unusually arge entry is expected from that cit Arrangements are now under way for the benching and feeding of the dogs, and it is likely that George F. Toley of Ardmore, Pa., will act as superintendent. SORGETOWN makes its first of t i . Bd appearance of the season in an indoor track meet tomorrow night, when four of its athletes, Ascher, , Plansky and Dussault, go to New York to compete in the men, accompanied by Coach John t train, and will return Sunday d in more than one event. Ascher is entered in the 220-yar 820. Burgess, who suffered able to compete in the inte if he suffers no recurrence of not d d 1 running. BASKET BALL GAMES. | At George Washington—Lafayette, 24; George Washington, 22. At Georgetown — Bucknell, Georgetown, 18. At Brooklyn — Crescent A. C., 33; Catholic University, 32. At Lexington—Maryland, 33; Wash. ington and Lee, 20 At Chapel Hill—North Carolina, 41 Wofford, 23 te, ‘Wake Forest, 33. At Ashland—Randolph Macon, Mary At Lafayette < Southwestern, Louisiana Normal, At Lawrence—Kansas, 28; Gronnel 20. BY CORIN. INAL heats of the Central Higl held this afternoon, beginning final heat of the 100-; were scheduled, was won yesterda Whaler second, and Betty Rice thirc two finishing in each hea qualified for the tinals. The Mow wecond heat, Stimson and Rice. (tied): second heat. second heat, meon’ (tied) . 100-yard crawl (final) —Won by Brunner, E. Whaler, hird Meet offiex udke of finish, P naebel nner: timer, leman Jones. Cathren Ludlum Ganoe: won the N. R. A Central High School members Wedne: nd Thurs Miss Ludlum turned shooting prone and 1y of this w a score of 196, offhand. ances Ehlers, a junior, won the medal for high gun in the novice group. Miss Ehlers totaled 192 points, competing in her first match. Miss Louise Hart, faculty adviser to the rifle club, states that the match with the University of Maryland fresh- men scheduled for tomorrow will be postponed until next month, probably February 20. The postponement is necessary beciuse the Central range will not be a-ailable tomorrow after- noon. A sturdy brown-eyed healthy glow in her cheeks put there by nature’s paint pot, breezed into Washington last night from Santa Fe, N. Mex., from whence she had t cled via pedes or “Shank’s mare,” to rse a well worn phras, Mrs, Be Tyler Pettingill, star swimn tol Athletic Club, left S on October 1 , and hiked across the map to Washington alone, stopping along the way to visit caves and scale difficult mountain peaks that chal- lenged her skill as a climber. One of the most difficult climbs made by the voung hiker was Pilot Knob, an over- hanging cliff in the Ozarks of south- n_Missouri. he visited the cave at Cape Girar- u, Mo., in the depths of which re- t s been discovered a “hidden rl with a Tyler is one of half a dozen untry hikers belonging to the ry Six.” a hiking club of Santa The other five are en Washington over different r of ming from San the three from auintet started fortk Mrs. Tyler, the president of the and are expected to arrive in Wi ington any day if they don’t “weaken,"” cording to their leader. Mrs. Tyler will stay in Washington for hike back to New Mexico, taking in Yellowstone Park on the journey. stern ™gh School opened their in- traclass schedule this week with a ader. The Pandoras defeated 12 to 0, in the first game enators nosed out the Daisles, 12 to 11, in the other fracas. | Team captains have been elected as follows: _Pandoras, Ethel Alexander; Marion Ficl Elizabeth Stull The Freshmen's weekly games will | be played on Monday in the future in- The Seniors will the Tuesday Next Monday the Senators in a game which, though not a world series contest, Is expected to produce some thrills for the par- ticipants. ta | The Pandoras will play with the in the | Daisies, quite appropriately, other contest scheduled Monday. At the regular meeting of the Wash- | ington Recreation League held yester- i day afternoon at the Y. W. C. A. it | was decided that, starting January 18, managers will not be permitted to postpone scheduled games. This action is made necessary as a shortage of | E¥mnasium facilities in the District | m | arrange new dates when games are postponed, as many minor re The mass planned for February 2 | Tuesday, March 2, instead. The W. R. L. will meet {o transact A, at 5:45 pm When the District committee meet | on the Hill to discuss the advisability | of_indorsing_the recommendation of | T EEE—————e—e——— Clip this blank application, fill it out, and mail it today addressed : Chief, Boys Club, Evening Star, Washington, D.C. Mrs. Susie Root Rhodes for an ad- |dnmmu appropriation to allow the playground department to keep the Brounds open 12 months in the year He is to 1e country’s fastest quarter-milers Burgess has done the distance in 23; t Wake Forest — North Carolina ;| mark of 13 feet 1 inch. ies, 38; At Durham—Duke, 16; Clemson, 12. WOMEN IN SPORT and the plunge for distance, the othe o | placed before it in the recent awl—First heat. Ganoe. Parsons Brunner ons medal for the experienced high gun . which was shot on the school | route to| two weeks and then expects to return Freshman basket ball teams of Daisies, Mildred | kes it difficult, i fnot impossible, to have been for BILL FETZER QUITS l CHAPEI [ ye HILL, N m P MaK Fet s assoclate director letics and coach of foot ball ball at North Carolina resignation. - He will enter the at Brevard, N. tensive holdings. Fetzer was under a five-vera con- ract, two years of which were yet to expire, but university authorities | placed no obstacle in his way when they learned of his desire to quit the couching fleld. Robert A. (Bob) Fetzer, a brother, will_continue as director of athlytics at_the university. Bill Fetzer recently sold his boys' | camp near Brevard for $125,000, mak ing a profit of $85,000. of tate busi n where he has \|LITTLEFORD, 1923 HEAD | OF SHAMROCK NINE, DIES Members of the Shamrock base bail club are mourning the death of John W. (Willie) Littleford. who died | Wednesday at Sibley Hospital after | a short iliness He was ma tion during the season _and through his active interest helped the team to become one of the best known sandlot nines in the city. POLE VAULTER AT YALE DOES 13 FEET 1 INCH NEW HAVEN, Conn., January 15 (#).—Sabine W. Carr of Dubuque, Iowa, Yale sophomore, bettered the world _indoor pole vault record here in | the Yale-Wilisbrook tr with a The record, 13 feet, is held by H. R. Sherrill of welfth Street the preliminary the | feated & Boy Scout five, AS CAROLINA COACH | E2B0YS CLUB { ping Tie € BY SPIKE WEBB, Boxing Coach U. S. Naval Academy and 1920-24 Olympics. IKE the works of a Swiss L watch, boxing has its delicate- ly balanced qualities—accu- rate timing and a sense of rhythm. Time your punches. Time your attack or retreat. Yoy go even fur- her than that; there is a time for | sportsmanship They don’t do that in professional boxing, but you fel regain his poise lows are amateurs, and amateurs al ways are good sportsmen. You find rhythm in anim: cat family. The tiger or leopard is graceful, lithe and yet powerful These members of the cat family have is termed co-ordination. They always are, it seems, ready to leap upon an oppponent in a fraction of a second. They're never off b So it must be with a good boxer. vancing or retreating, the mind must | be keen and the muscie ned to| obey the mind perfectly ; ed co-ordination. A big word, but of the Conducted by ROBERT a time when an op- | ponent should be given a chance to | |-upward rise to vour | | | | | bening Star ‘ McCLELLAN today. T be tomorrow. with you here agaln f you had followed the suggestion lust week's paper you now havi ket in your back yard, or some. where about the place, to practice basket ball shots on. Every boy should be a foul shooter in this day of basket ball, for every player on the team gets a chance to shoot a foul. The first movement is to stand *hind the foul line, feet side by hout 10 inches apart; second, all so thumbs are in contact cam; third, forget the feet and hands and docate the basket; fourth, squat_and get iy to shool; fifth, 1y lift, arm lift, and as vou stretch toes and let go with , follow through ack arms can pronounce it (ko-ord-in-a-shun) Boxing develops Keen-minc It requires keen-mindedness It develops that great mor ity—cour: And it deve another great quality oolness under 1t 1 had yo I saw you we the a would stop you vou. I can’t be have to stop ing. ledness 1 qus stil five tack E right th with il warn- | fle ire—if you have NE FRAZIER: h School swim for leaders were to be at 3 o'clock. Preliminaries were run off esterday in four of the seven events carded. ard crawl, in which event no preliminar: y by Betty Brunner, with Elizabeth 1 be decided following back: 130-yard ove ninal heats and 50- he las « |t | concrete her arge ed body argument cities will a0, e tha t le indorsemen ction ocia of the Park View tion. At the last meeting of the associa tion, over which C. W. Walker pre sided, it was vated to draw from the treasury sufficient funds to keep the Park View playground open during January and February and to pay the - |salary ‘of Martha Dunham, director, *| during these two months when the playground headquarters have o funds with which to maintain oper playgrounds. The action came as the resuit of ¢ dis ion in which it the children of ths were in constaht danger w to run loose on the streets, when they traffic-filled highwas What applies to the Park View sec- tion applies o every .other section ¢ the city, as the large number of sled ding and traffic accidents would indi- cate. The citizenls’ associations are not supposed to use their funds for such a purpose as this one has been forced to do. The money for the up- keep of playgrounds should come from the department budget. It 13 hoped by all who are interested in the weifare of Washington's juve- ! nile population that the congressiona committee will supply the de the present playeraund fund the Capital will not I another year as the on city o size which cannot efford to give children the benefit of plaverounds the vear around. Citizens’ Sioux Athletic Club and Calvary | Church tossers will meet tonight | the Calvary couit in the only sched- uled game of the Washington Recrea- tion League. CLARENDON BAPTISTS TO PLAY TOMORROW Clarendon Baptist Sunday school tossers get back into action tomorrow night, when they meet the Columb feights Christian five in the Sunday hool League double-header at ¢ tral Y. M. . A. Peck and Epiphany ms furnish the other tilt The game will be the first f endon since the start of the O holid: but the . several good workouts during the pas few days, the players expect to put up a good game. Outside teams wishing to book Clar endon should call J. J. Hughes at Clarendon, 155-W-2. —_— Shiloh and L’Overture basket ball | quints will furnish tonight's court game at the Twelfth Street Y. M. C. A. Play starts at 8 o'clock. Clay hr > ha self to: lay fair. Be a modest winner and respect officials. Follow the activities of Evening Star. Never neglect either home duties or school classes. T am—years old; attend———— —school, T would like to have a Membership Certificate and The Evening Star Boys Club button, which I will wear. will be held The Evening Star Boys ! Club Pledge WANT to be a member of The Evening Star Boys Club, and if accepted to membership, I pledge my- Keep myself always in good physical condition. Abide by the rules of all sports I engage in and up’ an opponent. rn boxing that way. Boxing is not and should not be sport. You win when you outpoint an _opp: It is the cleverness of boxing that I wish you to learn. | Well, boys, that's enough one—to You won't le » learn | | teur floor; and in the { net. Tomorrow Coach Webb will tell you Eddie Eagan, the prince of ama- bosers. Eddie fought his way to top honors in school at the same time he was attaining a like station in the ranks amateur borers. Read to- morrow’s column, boys. Yowl be in- terested in Eddie vhere on the page will be found ation blank for membership Tub. Fill it out and Chief, Boys Club, Washington, D. Evening Star GOLDEN RULE A good sport has self-control, which is 2 vi n itself. Every 4 Eligilr)l(: For Evening become really active T ance which it was organized stands for the furthe str r and fair-playing boys. It is the desive of the chief to enlist every eligible hoy in the movement. | and every member is asked once again to use his influence to have his friends enroll now. The only requirement tc joinin t the cant fill_out he pled ion, w appeir ¥ irprises in s the members, which will he - red club affairs, of course, and members will be allowed to par ate, so line up your friends and have them send in their applications and be in line for whatever is coming. Today Spike Webb writes for the Boys Club column once more. The advice today is very well given and comes from a man who stands fore most in his line of effort. Tomorrow we'll have the story of Eddie Eazan the greatest amateur boxer of all times. Eddie zchieved about every oal is possible for an amate \tiain while he was en ing off hizh honc it ho There is a from the story Car bhoys, and ¢ v member & club would do well .to read iwhat Spike Webb has to say about him to- | morrow i Applications Received Today. | to be idie I real lesson A list of the mames of new appli- cants for membership follow: Jos Herbert, 1121 Buchanan | street; Carl Trometre, jr.; 1423 Girad | iordon,” 751 Fourth H. Creighton, jr.; 4201 | Jenifer street, Chevy Cl ack Me- | Intyre, 1724 Seventcenth street; Don- | Smith, Box 31, Oakton, V ubbs, 100 Curtis place, Claren Trubbs, 100 Curtis plaee Clarendon, V Herbert Anderson Connec 1t nue; 1 i Sixteenth street: Omer 102 Cedar street, | Donald T. Barker, 102 C | Cherrydale, Va.; Norfleet Pope, 30, 1407 W street; Robert Bened J 121 Thirteenth street northeast; Brun-| er E. Lundy, jr.; 1129 New Hamp- shire avenue; Ralph White, 327 Lau- rel avenue, Laurel, Md.; Richard E. S. Boss, 3019 Twenty-fifth street northeast. | an uncomplaining loser. the Club through The | regular business on February 2 in the Y. W. | | | { Name of Boy | | Address L(ui Sbught Star Boys Club Star Boys CI t 1,000, and accepted as members when the organization will h all of the purposes for all those who are interested know, activities and for building better, have been day accomp BASKET BALL SECRETS By Sol Metzger ON ATTACK. Lecome in bask essential to any team's success. As example. take the players on wk at A and B in the uppe ration. Thev are covered by the defensive ers at C and D. It is obvious t € will cove and that D wil] cover B. method of combatting this defense is for A to dash across toward D and ap- parently for the basket. Really he runs right at D. C, naturally, fol- lows him. B immediately start around the position where A has been standing, and invariably he will be free 1o receive a toss from a teammate and in a good P tion to shoot for the basket both A and C prevent D, assigned to cover B. from covering him. In the lower illustration A and B are going straight down the floor. AS the picture shows, both are covered by their opponents. COBB SCORES 19 POINTS. HILL. N. C., January ~—C'obb, lanky and agile forward on the North Carolina basket ball team. scored 19 points as the Tarheels were most important facior ball and is mos A trimming Wofford last night, 41 to 23. He got nine baskets from the court and one from the foul line. MEDICS TO PLAY SOCCER. The Army Medical Center soccer eleven will engage the British Em- bassy reserve ieam, recently organ- 1zed by J. Crawford, tomorrow at 3:30 o'clock on the soldiers’ field. 15.| GAME TO HOOSIERS Washington's Palace club flve ap- parently broke down under the strain of playing a continuous series of exhibition games last night when they tackled the tail-end Fort Wayne Knights of Columbus five in an American Basket Ball League game on the Hooslers’ court and went away with the short end of a 16-to-9 count The defeat at the hnads of Homer Stonebreaker and his mates shoved the District five out of first place. Chicago trimmed Buffalo, 19 to 7, an: came in for runner-up honors to Cleveland in the league standings, forcing the Palace tossers into third position again. ‘Washington is not likely to reach the helghts again within the next few days, as the Windy City five as two chances to better its rec- ord, playing tomorrow and Sunday, while the locals play their next league game on the Sabbath when encounter the Detroit five on home floor. Tean 7 Detroit. ... 714 Fort Wayne 3 6 700 Buffalo.... 4 § 692 Boston. 38 Concludes Earning Days in Sports Are Over—Says By the Associated Press. S “One must quit some time,” said really pl Aol batk with my people.” Today he is preparing to satisfy at Yale, Okla., there amid his people Thorpe, now 40, has been active | the world of sport for 20 year |ing to Carlisle Indian School in 1905, He immediately attracted attention In 1812 he won the individual cham. com- 400 Night's Result. Fort Wayne, 16: Washingtoo. 9. Chicago, 19: Buftalo, 17. 105 GOLFERS START IN THE TEXAS OPEN| SAN ANTONIO, Texas, January 15 P).—Amateur and professfonal golfers to the number of 105 teed off today in the opening round of the £8,000 Texas open tournament B ours. yers 1o London and climes 4 were on the entry list for th hole tournament. | Joe Kirkwood and Joe Turn: winne of previous Texus opens, attempt win the event fi Smith of | a of Chicago , howev the latter be- | s’ scores 56 and 69 | nd Thursday. respec-| Cooper, the young Dillas | professional, who won the Los Am:nlesi open was relied upon by enthusiastic | Texans to keep the title in the State | for the first time. | In the amateur-pro event yesterday | three teams with scores of 68 tied| for best ball. They were: Phil Hester | of Tulsa and Ross Young., San 3| will { Guse Wednesday and Al of san| being | Lewis, San Antonfs M. Post i1 .men John Ro: with ing con- rage of Mehlhorn and 1 points and E drive. Bill was second Espinosa third. TENNIS STARS TO WED. SAN FRANCISCO, January 15 (#). | —Charlotte Hosmer of San Francisco nd Alfred H. Chapin of Springtield, | have been partners in tennis | tches for some time, playing in | parts of the country. Next | M m many A they will begin playing ““doubles” | life. They plan a tennis honey- on which will be spent on the ourts of Jamaica and Florida i l to | ball as a member of the Monday, the couple announced vester- | o plonship in the Olympic games at Stockholm, Sweden, but later was -harged with professionalism and re- ‘[urned his medals, presented by the | King of Sweden. professional sports, entering bas: Giants, later being associated with | teams in the American A and the International Le { Foot ball, however, claimed Thorpe's attention each Fall since he entered T. PETERSBURG, Fla, January 15- athlete, has heard the call of age. His announcement of retirement came yesterday after he hLa led the St. Petersburg professional foot ball team through a scorele battle with the Winter Haven Club for which less than 300 paid admissic “My earn in athletics arc at an end, and while sports have been my livelihood After the Olympic games he turned | im Thorpe, Thorpe last night his year to hunt Carlisle. started w | profe: comi |to fos . Thorps rs on his He Played for Love of Competition—Is Going Back With His People. colorfu! T ha ayed for the love of competition. Now I have a yearning to hu g and return to his hc he said was b had two forme team, as in s—Little Twig at end an fullback terday b er brillfance, New York | off two punts for 5 yards and an at 3 drop-kick refation | missed the cross bar by inches. i just before ent tempted 50-yard Thorpe turn the clubhouse to w At tmes Thorpe show getting which ering ve a farewell to the few fans lingering to applaud hin FORT MYER BASKETERS DOWN HUMPHREYS FIVE UT. BARKSDALE'S 1 paign for the District over the Fort Hi The Cavalrymen started of the final period, when Dy baskets to knot the coun 31 D the Myer team forged ad to the v his quint and accounted for a total ‘Top honors in b to Southern of the winners. for a game between Washington Bar- the game for Fort Myer with his ex- | pert tossing in the last quart A revamped sches teans DeMolay basketers play 1 basket > Mayflowe: town comes h on February 10 Lall a re i Bethesda tossers took the measure of the Cortez Club of Washington on | the Bethesda High School floor, 34 to | 27. Long and Rabbitt led the win-| attack. For games with Be-| ! Bethesda 264. The 140-pound class. plays in Buffalo and Tiger fives won CENTRAL AND ( :l TRAL shouid score a secon series tomorrow morning at t the long end of the count. The above is the dope on the thir pinoship games to be played on the 10:30 o'clock. The championship Cent adelphia High today opening encount the closing Figurir chool the Quaker Ci while the Man: out the probable contests is an i husiness, but with Tach having d such whirlwind attack ay when the team came from behind to hand the University of | Maryland freshmen their first defeat | f the season by a count of 27 to 21,! it is only natural to expect the Maroon and Gray to play up to form against the Georgetowners. Werber and Councilor again_were the big scorers for the Manual Train- ers when the Marylanders were out- pointed. Each of them accounted for a dozen points, most of which wer: scored in the second half, which start- ed with the college five in the van, 17 to 13. Defensively, also, the Tech | quint w nents in second half of the contest. and the College Parkers were uble fo break through for only one hasket during *li of the last two periods. Western's green combination al- has taken two defeats in the school series and will be fighting hard 10 get among the winners. The tean showed great improvement yesterddy in taking the St. Alban's five into camp, 35 to 18, and probably will give the Manual Trainers plenty of trouble when they clash tomorrow, Coach Ahearn shifted his line-up for the clash with the Saints, placing Wilson at forward instead of center and sending Sam Coombs into the game at the pivot position. The re- | sults indicate that the new combina- | tion is & smooth-working quint. winners is unc ispl a yesterd THIRTY-FIVE DEALS MADE AT MINORS By the Associated Press. I sociation of Professional Base terday, was the most represen: tion was fonuded 24 years ago. It als Following are some of the more im- portant results of the three-day session: Unanimous rejection of the major league proposal to extend player- options from two to three years; re- duction in the cash consideration on player-options from Class B, C and D clubs, slicing $200 from the original required payment of $300; selection of M. H. Sexton as president of the association and John D. Mastin as| vice president for flve-year terms;| selection of Asheville, N. C., for the 1926 convention city; indorsement of the objects and purposes of the Asso- clation of Professional Base Ball Players of America, a source of aid for sick and disabled players, and the dropping of a recommendation for a boost in the salary of President Se: ton from $5,000 to $7,500 when a com- mittee reported that he would not accept more than his present compen- sation. Approximately 85 deals, sales and OS ANGELES, January 15—The convention of the National As- CONVENTION| Ball Leagues, which closed here yes- tative and peaceful since the associa- o was the first ever held in the West. were completed. But four of the tran- sactions involved major leagues. Realignment of teams in the Pacific Coast League also was consummated | here last night when club owners and directors arzanged for the the Vernon Club to San Francisco the Salt Lake City Club 1o Los An geles. This will give San Francisco and Los Angeles base ball six days a week. RADIATORS, FENDERS BODIES MADI R e AL R o AS PSP ATRED |WITTSTATTS R. & F. WKS. | 319 13th ST. N.W. 1423 P. REAR ‘'TROUSERS To Match Your Odd Coats 'EISEMAN’S, 7th,& F lnnd won from the Georgetown | clash. transfer of | |f trades, involving abeut 100 players, | TECH FIVES SCHOOL GAME FAVORITES | victory in the high school basket ball he Arcade, and Tech, after suffering two straight defeats, should emerge from its third title clash o s center, scored a pair o ng the remaining minutes, howeve ictory of seven basket Martin’s dded another to Dyson was leading scorer fo t shooting went | night in the opening games He regis-| Y. M. C. A Court League unlimited Northwestern Seniors, their fir: Center, unlimited Eymnasium: Adams 6346 the Holman play the Compan ead of nnounced Roamers won their seventh <t Company F Regulars of Guard while Park V ville Nations View, 40 won from 2Stona9! to 17, the Memorial Club last n dereate basketers bowed : | the Comets ut Eastern High court, d double-header of the annual cham- | Fourteenth street court starting at | ral five, which is mecting W Phil- | the tern enjoys a lay- chool games tomorr ored victories o [ tos show their class ning from the Catholic Un freshman quint by a score of 35 to 19, and were hoping to add to their| Aving today with a triumph over Gon- | zaga on George Washington Univer- | sity court. Eastern had piled up x| 14-to-4 lead on the Brookland frosh | at the half, and at the end of the| third session was in the van, 29 to 8. | on's Gonzaga also saw action yesterc = 3, in the pre to the Buc Bozek continued points for his individual ord hy and a_ trio of st versity freshmen, .5 to liminary nell-Hilltop | ¥ uj Business, Devitt Prep, Ge srep and the Catholic University vear lings arc other teams that t the urt today. Business plays on th home floor of the Staunton Militury Academy five, Devitt battles at Hyatts ville, the Garrett Park quint enter- tains Briarly Hall and the Brookland ers play hosts to Leonard Hall. Swimming teams at Central and Devitt are listed for thelr second tank dates tomorrow. The Central perform- ers, who bowed to Baltimore Athletic Club in their opening engagement, en- tertain the Baltimore Polytechnic team, beaten yesterday by Wilmington High. Devitt engages Baltimore City College in Baltimore. Swavely Prep basketers vesterday won from Warrenton High, 28 to 17. |iors to 31. Boys' Club Celtics score on the Agg 8. J. Meeks' Winton Dribbiers, Governme Columb 34 AlexandriaTigers ack by the Imm: Second Baptists' reka tive, 39 o 9 A 13 the tory raight Juniors won ran up a 1 om tl were culates, 9 win over the McLean Ju: Aces their twelfti GE IS SUED. January 15 P foot ball sta C. Yvle, ar ers were named defendants > in led in Supe Lazo. 1 tract Los Angeles MOTOR CO. Conveniently Located on Fourteenth Street 1333-37 14th St. Main 5780 pecialists in the Care of Automobiles %& SIMONIZING ¢ Once again enjoy the tarill of riding in a clean car. Not merely a polishing job, but the thorough cleaning of all painted and exposed leather surfaces—then the application of a paint preserving and last- ing polish. Then, too, the ‘'nterior is thoroughly vacuum-cleaned. Sheridan Garage, Inc. A. A. A. Service Station 2516 ( Q St. N.W. ge)