Evening Star Newspaper, January 28, 1926, Page 34

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H SPORTS. THE EVENING BTAR, WASHINGTON, D. 0., THURSDAY, JANUARY 28, 1926. SPORTS. Chicago to “Dig” for Army-Navy Grid Game : Helen Wills Wins Again in France AMERICAN GIRL REACHES NO TROUBLE IS EXPECTED SCHOLASTIC TOSSERS IN FINANCING THE “SHOW” Well Known Citizen States That City Will Rais ceded to Get What It Wants. Amount Figured Mainly BY LAWR EW YORK, Navy the Ja game, v ways and athletic rtant rom 1 the city—the cost * states @ well known cif show which it at the term est to have no illusions | nificanc the city | reater to the | and sporting s tha produce ior grade More Seats Ne | ted Chi-| accom not in the cond that th wll 1 tors be lay- | s must s the + such sh i rain will not cause s, n e at next Fall the | tu Chi there and WOMEN 1 P BY CORINN. OR the henefit of th who still Chicago 24, is ©A) TE tional A Americ n of the > Fed on the spirit_of and works fo ctivity f portion of per-| in forms suit- ind capaciti imder d_er mmen conditions ith. phy e development for | this ideal ies from ex- enjoyment of the letic x»x-m ition Station tator commer tution or (3) To and the n ze the emphasis accomplishment i championshps. elminate types and systems 'n which put the empha- ceomplishment \ upon stress- sport and the smanship among placed on individ and the “(4) T mpeti upon and winn ing the development of sis for ath- which the ognition - intr = our nal pub- pu long educa- lines and to stress through it than the individual tite well trained and proper: in immediate nd other physical weing the the im physical | v and | is of well trained | alified women adequate medical ex- lical follow-up ad participation in d ) iy Vice as @ w physica i “(16) To provi quate envi aull physic (1) time all properly To ade- for sanitary and cilit for such edequate ment for u physical educa- im as shall meet the needs rious age groups for growth, pment and maintenance of tness To avoid countenancing the rifice of an individual's health for the sake of her participation in ath- ietic_competitiof “(13) To pr appropriate co athletic activities “(14) To eliminate “115) To discouriase petition which involv Grace Keefe, executive chairman, Jas announced the membership of the Following committees, which were ap- pointed at the me lust Monday night at the Marjorie Webste —Maude Parker, ct Tiorothy Greene, Ramsay Griffith, adoption of the varlous mote the mmes for e receipts. (thletic com- travel This committee of making a ¥ of all facilities for the District. Aembership—Ruth man; Ann ‘I Seibold Constitution—>Marjorie chairman; Ruth Oberli rief, Imogene Stockett Hlopkins Resolutions—Elsie Sanders, chair- Katherine Knaebel, V. Huens pecreation An Mis Bw:ml~ nd Virginia Although the Metropolitan Athletic Club combination proved much too strong for the Acacias last night, they did not have walkover by any nicans. Every point was pluckily con- tested from the tip-off to the basket. The Mets triumphed. 39 to 17. The zume was plaved in the Epiphany Church After holding the Washington Ath- letic Club sextet to i 11-11 tie in the first period of the game played at Webster School last night, the Strayer's Business College defense crumbled in the closing period and the Maroon and Gray left them trail- ing the short end of a 39-to-22 score. The Strayer combination played brifantly in the opening period, but were swept off their feet by a whirl- wind attack which was launched by their opponents after the intermission at_half-time. Helen Schult the winners. M Yor Strayer's counted for Casey for 10. M-lbersfl the Acac Acacia Athletic Club Basket ball eguad are requesied b! cored 24 points for s Berger netted 19. Miss Carmichael s es and Miss ML NCE PERRY. 28.—Now horiti topics in the big town on Lake Michigan. of transporting the corps of midshipmen and polis and West Point lash between the Na | raised. in's branch of the 1e platform as adopted at the given below: | Departs e Any s Spectacle. that Chicago has sceured the 1926 means of meeting the conditions set es of the two service institutions is and housing and feeding imated at $200.000—no0 concern is felt. tizen, “can and will raise any amount wants. 1 how™ is employed. So Chicago re- tion's embryo admirals and generals. sending them home again will be met probubly by subscription on the part of clubs and other organizations, and by citizens. As to the last, there some doubt how to proceed. Obviously would not be fair to ask subscrip- ms of ens who will have no chance of seeing the game. But this 15 a mere detail. There is not the slightest doubt that the money needed will easily quickly be cems to be n and Costly Proposition Statisticinns in Annapolis figure that icont it $30,000 for railroad and Pullman berths for the 1,800 will make the trip and and subsistence will cost it fare middies wh that lodsi an additional $30.000. The distance between and Ch o is greate than $50,000 probably to defray traveling cadets, All in all, Ch grand o What much for a “show" Point | ) more required of the West and il be expenses go's & ity ever as Chi ure | which TAKING “TIME OUT” The high school sports program for the remainder of the week is a slim one, only one basket ball game _being carded for today, a single tilt being listed for tomrrw and the Feg- duble-header between teams of stage alone on Saturday. Rusiness was to play this after- noon with the fast Georgetown Prep the scholastic league holding the five on the latter's court at Garrett Park. The Prep cagers did some fancy shooting yesterday, when they downed Leon to 18, and should prove evenly matched with the Stenographers. St. Alban’s School tossers, defeated yesterday by a combination of East- ern High substitutes and regulars, 43 to 23, will figure In the only game scheduled for a District court to- morrow. They are entertaining the team representing Donaldson School of_Baltimore. The Saturday morning twin bill at the Arcade will bring together Tech and Central and pit n. Business the afternoon, en Prep at Mana: untering Swaveley Va. Central defeated Alexandria High, 23 to 15, after a nip-and-tuck battle tle that was not decided until the final period. The scholastic cham- pions led at the half.13 to 9, and held the opponents scoreless in the third session, but were hard pushed soon after the start of the final 10 minutes. Capt. Mickey Macdonald veglstered tive haskets for the win- ne Gonzaga left town today for a two- day stay in New York after handing a 341017 sethack to Hyattsvi High. The Marylanders presented a Stiff front during the ended with the Purple in 11 to 9, but could not main. the pace after intermission Bozek again took scoring honors, seven buskeis being credited to him. Tonight the 1 Streeters play tinst Regis iz in the Metropols front, ing to pay N SPORT E FRAZIER- lack an understanding of the stand- ational Amateur annual meeting their coach, Clarence at the armory at 6 evening for a pract of Inter o report K tomorrow e game with the or passers. BASKET BALL SECRETS By Sol Metzger NIT THIS =4 o, & As stated in a previous article when a player receives a pass he should pivor rapidly from the oppo- nent cha < hiim in order to place that_opponent far_away from ball as possible. This me s shown in the upper fllustrat Some players instead of pivoting closely guarded use a ight-arm to push off the oppo- nent coming in. That is all very well in foot ball, but it constitutes a foul in basket ball. This foul is l)m( happens in practica me. Attention is called to it here so- players will avoid committing this foul in the future. and tomorrow they end their stay in h with the St. Francis Xavier defeated here during the mas holidays, 20 to 18. BASKET BALL GAMES. At Annapolis—Lehigh, 2: = At Annapolis—Loyola, \! West l‘nlnl—-\fln), 26; Fordham, (Two extra pe ods). quint, Chris resbyterian, At Clinton, Mi: sissippi College, 28, TOMORROW" Fort Wayne at Buffalo. CHANGES ARE MADE IN GENERALS’ QUINT LEXINGTON, Va., January 28. Having downed their first “Big Four’ opponent in V. P. I, Washington and Lee's basketers will wind-up their training today for the coming of the University of Richmond quint Satur- day. Capt. Wilson, who has been playing the guard position for the past two years on the Blue and White aggrega- tions, has been shifted to a forward in order to strengthen the offensive power of the quint. With Wilson ing forward and having Lane as his running mate, it was necessary to develop a fast yet ressive and powerful guard. Urmey was drafted for the relief squad and played an exceptionally fine zame last week end. The locals will most lkely start their rejuvenated line-up against Rich mond SOCCERISTS 'IO GATHER. A meeting of British embassy soccer- ists for a reorganization of the team has been called for tonight at & o'clock hy J. Crawford, secretary of the club. The following are requested to attend: J. H. Thompson, J. C. Thompson, Williams, Mills, Mannion, Burke, Birch, Hughes, Kruse and Green. GOLF BALL PRICE RISE DUE TO COST OF RUBBER By the Associated Press. C of 500 per cent, HICAGO, January 28.—While the cost of the refined rubber to make a dozen golf balls used to be 51 cents, it is $3.06 today, an increase said Douglas Tweedie, Western manager of Spald- ing & Brothers, in explaining the recent advance in the price of balls. The price of crude rubber has fal made irom material bought while the only 19.44 ounces, llen, but the 1926 golf balls had to be price was high. A dozen balls ‘weigh so_that if they could be manuiactured of raw rubber the cost of the material would be only $1.21 a box. The garden variety of gutta percha no longer fills the bill for the best balls, and the caoutchous that is used must be refined and made into the purest elastic yarn, which is wound under tension until the pellet is bullt up. Then a fancy brand of latex must be used to form the cover, which is vuleanized to a nicety to make it resilient and yet tough as rawhide. This selection of the fittest and its refinement run up the cost of the ma terial to almost three times the value of an equal amount of commercial crude rubber. The manufacture is a tedious process, and all imperfect pellets must be thrown out before the globules go through three coats of enameling. The balls are then wrapped in waxed paper and cured for a long period. They are “unmade” more rapidly and carelessly, for the expert will not play more than nine holes with the same ball, while the duffer soon cuts the “pill” to worthlessness by topping or slices it into the woods or hooks it into a pond, These misuses really make any high cost attached to golf balls, Tweedle. *“A good ball is fit to play many rounds if not abused or lost. The experts only imagine they must take a fresh pellet every few holes, and if the mediocre golfer cuts up or loses his ball, the expense cannot be charged to the makers. “On olden times, when balls were made of leather stuffed with feathers, or later were hammered out by hand from Impure gutta percha, golfers were more careful to conserve the one or two balls they possessed. A man wears out four $50 automobile tires, the price of which have gone up more than 50 per cent in the last year, in running 10,000 miles and thinks nothing about it, S Why com- plain about golf balls, which are cheaper than they were a few years ago, when one can play as many miles of golf at the same cost with proper care.” Inside Golf y Chester Horton Because the brassie is Hke tho driver, the average golfer gets so he feels rather familiar with it, yet this club is one of the surest deceivers in 5 the bag. If the golfer will watch the work of his brasiie he may be surprised to observe that of his attempted shots with all clubs, those off the brassie go bad oftenest. This is because the lle for the brassie shot can be deceliving. The player should watch the lies in the turf. For a brassie shot the | ball should be | fairly teed up in the grass—that s, there should be a nice cushion of grass underneath the ball, because the brassie really takes & divot of grass. If the grass is very short and thin, abandon the brassie and pull an iron unless you know exactly how to take the bnll from such a thin lie with the we The iron is safest and most of nnmmmmn‘ The Ehening Star BOYS CLUB Conducted by ROBERT C. McCLELLAN Boxing Coach United States Naval Academy boxing is the greatest of all and hiking as I am for boxing. In running. And cross-country run- BY SPIKE WEB, and 1920-1924 Olympics. l AM a boxing coach and believe sports, but I'm just about as strong for cross-country running fact, a fellow to make good in box- ing needs cross-country hiking and ning and hiking is, therefore, a part of my course of instruction. This is just the time of the year to get keen enjoyment from traveling over hill and dale. From a view- point of health alone there is no better sport than running or hiking through the great open spaces with codles of pure, fresh air ot breathe, with & clear, blue sky overhead. A great thing for students and workers who must spend many hours indoors. Three of these u week will Keep any one fit. Even one a week will help a lot. You fellows who are members of The Eveninz Star Boys Club and are busy in many sports don’t need three a week. But try to get out once a week, at least. t Cross-country running and hiking may be harmful if not properly super- vised. I'd suggest no hard running at all. Just strike out with a bunch of your chums and jog along—jog awhile and walk awhile. Stay to- gether. If you have a lot of enerzy and “wind" left near the finish it's all right to sprint in for 50 yards or s0. But don’t run hard at any other time. Don’t “loll” around and cool off out- doors after you've finished your hike or run. The place to cool off is in- doors. A shower bath, if there is one avallable, and a brisk rub to follow, is the thing. Then dress up warmly if you're going outdoors again. You may wonder where all this fits into boxing. It strengthens the leg: wnd it strengthens the wind. It makes you more fit in every way. When a champion is training for a ring bout you'll read in the sports pages about the road work he does. Well, that road work is nothing more nor less than Cross-COUntry running and walking. Once a world champion refused to do road work and he was badly beaten. His legs were gor and his wind was bad. Elsewhere on th page will be found an application for membership. Fill it in today and mail it, addressed, Chief, Boys Club, The Evening Star, Washington, D. C. GOLDEN RULES. A good sport is a team worker willing to sacrifice his desire for glory for the success of his side. (Consright. 1926.) Work Is Progressing Rapidly On Boys Club Certificates T will permit. HE work of preparing the certificates of membership in The Even Star Boys Club is progressing as rapidly as the ilities and time It was hoped to have the certificates and buttons in the hands of the menibers before this. but the size of the undertaking was misjudged a bit, due in a measure to the fact that the club During this period of inactivity the members should continue reading their column and ping the dail Instructions, pending the formation of the real organization. Early indic: tions show the club destined to be the largest athletic club in the Dis- trict. Many of the Distr known younger athletes have enrolle and the club functions promise to be renl affairs. Splke Webb, in his talk today, dwells on the importance of cross- country hiking and running, better known as road work. Without a sin- gle exception, road work Is the best of all athletic endeavors as far as the health is concerned. It is a real exercise, with a minimum of danger from injury. Road work is essential to very form of athletics, but, just as Coach Webb says, it should not be pverdone, espectally by the younger oys. There will be some basket ball to- morrow, followed by other things of interest. Belng as this is sort of an T I( | mos lof @ all the son in athletic ng that k popular of m ress wiil be p and ke £ in condition The pledges continue to come in and the time is not far off when the or- ganization will be a leading factor in boys' activities hereabouts. A list of new applicants follows Ansel Talbert, 1 Monroe street Thomas Kline, 4501 Seventh street; Robert Brown, 1115 Nineteenth street rick Ickes. 1118 Monroe street Thomas Lynch, 1118 Monroe street Edward Gowen, 908 Eleventh street northeast: Frank Gearing, Box 277. Woodstock, Va.. John Page Smith 222 C street Harry Hetzler, 1201 Sixth street northeast; Jack W. Garrison, 1039 Lawrence street northeast; Herbert Crittenden, 514 B street southeast Thomas A. Cannon, 3rd, 13556 Ingra ham street: John Meehan, 433 Fourth street nrotheast: Francis Webb, 1517 Good Hope road, Anacostia, D. C.: Claud Thiel, jr., 2111 First street. is growi se time. competition, all is not as. the lot on conditioning i FORT MYER FIVE PROVES EASY PREY FOR YANKEES F ORT MYER'S entry in the Service Basket Ball League, scheduled for a game with the Army Medical Center five tonight at 6:45 at Walter Reed, proved no match for the fast-traveling Yankee quint last night in the first contest of a three-game series. The Yanks ran up a 78-to-42 score on the Soldier tossers, who made numerous shifts in their line-up in a vain effort to break down the sure- fire marksmanship of their conquerors. Tonight and tomorrow the Yankee five takes on other teams in the serv- ice loop, Washington Barracks furnish- ing one contest and Fort Humphreys the other. Fort Washington, winner of the league title last season, met defeat last night at the hands of the Fort Humphreys passers. The final tally was 32 to 31. A 71t09 score In favor of the Aloysius five was the result chalked up in the I Streeters’ clash with the N&‘i;i:.l Receiving Station quint last night. Calvary Methodist basketers added to thelr victories with a 33-to-21 win over the Royals. Frisby and Scrivener led the winners in scoring, with seven and five baskets, respectively. Fourth Assistants dropped a Post Office League game to the Sixth Floor tGaner'a.l Accounting Office team, 71 0 20. Epiphany Juniors continued to add to their streak last night by trimming the Columbias, 33 to 15. Northern Virginia Collegians were handed a setback by the Knight Store five at Alexandria, 54 to 20. The Evening Mount Vernon Midgets, led by Bur- nett and Burges ent the St. Peter's quint down to d 34 10 22, Peckk Memorial basketers won from Silver Spring, 43 to 24. Remsen tossers won from the Pen- nant Athletic Club, 30 to 28. Ottawas annexed a game with the Palace five, 33 to 26. Rosedale Preps took the measure of the Dodgers, 60 to 17. National Preps showed the way- to the Mount Vernon Juniors, 27 to 16. Capital Preps outclassed the Rovers by the count of 21 to 12. Epiphany Insects chalked up their ninth straight at the expense of the Merrimacs, 88 to 16. SKATERS ARE TIED. ST. JOHNS, N. B., January 28 (#).— O’'Nelll Farrell of Chicago and Charley Gorman of St. Johns, with 80 points each, are tled for first place in the world speed skating championship méet. The meet ends today. Club Pledge IWANTtobonmanber self to: of The Evening Star Boys Club, and if accepted to membership, I pledge my- l;:myflahlnmpodphy-nleonfim fair. Be a modert winner and an loser. uncomplaining Abiblvydnml.of.llmlmmnd Follow the activities of the Club through The Evening Star. Nmughctd&ck:m.dnfin-a&odehsm I am———years old; attend: school, 1 would like to have a Membership Certificate and The Evenig Star Boys Club button, which I will wear. tlns blnk npplmuon, frll it out, -nd ma\l it today. ad- MMME‘WSQ&W_M&B- PALACE HAS CHANCE TO TIE FOR THE TOP Sunday's American Basket Ball League game at the Arcade holds out two alluring possibilities for the ‘Washington Palace club five, which s sharing second-place honors with Cleveland after winning from Chi- cago last night, 21 to 156. A victory over the Rosenblum's will at least give the local quint un disputed possesslon of the runner-up position, and should Brooklyn, the league leader, drop a Sunday game to Fort Wayne, Washington will be n even footing with the Trolley as the fi alf of the initlal league series comes to a clo; The Clevel club will be mak- gin its first appearance here when it takes the floor with the Px to after a_preliminary bringing together the Yankees and Comets, two of the city’s leading independent floor teams. Washington has an old settle with the Rosenblum’s. the Forest City five that took measure of the Capital haskete dislodged them from their place the top of the circuit three we ago. Both the preliminary and th league game will be played in the Arcade net cage. The opener i lsted (ur 7'15 (mlmk BOCESTEB BEATS CELTICS ROCH January 2% —The fourth place team in the American Busket Ball League, continued their rapid I last night and defeated th original Celtf Cullen w the leading scorer f hwster with 3 field goals and 3 fouls. VIRGINIA BASKETERS T0 GET SEVERE TEST | CHARLOTTESVILLE, Vi, January 28 —Virginia's hasket ball squad EeLNg ready for 4 Strenuous week of action starting next day night when the Cavalier quint goes to Lex. ington to play Virginia Military Insti tut Thursd: North Carolina comes here to play in the Memorial gymnasium, and on Saturday night Maryland will be met These three games in one week w o he harde test of Virgink ngth that will come uring the ider of the season before the ade to Atlanta for e S nee tournument wd M h 1 ¢ In the six victori w scored a total of 300 points. This is the ing record made by any Vir in years and {dered nl in that two of the teams defeated org and Vir, i Polvte: Tnstitote, both Southern Confer ence members core 1o It was the 1 Virginia has nd Maryland @ two confer. m the Orange Virginia's five than at this whether the it enough to win rivals remains to ence quints tk and Bluc looks somewt time a Cavalie from th be seen. “Pop” rginia’s head coach. continues 1o be contined to the hospital where his condition is far from satisfactory. Bill Brown, assist- ant coach, is working hard with the court squad, but the illness of Coach Lanigan has thrown a damper over the squad. Capt. Holland leads the scoring with 79 points in s imes, with Tyler, center, only one point behind. Wrenn forward, scored 64 points, and LIBERTY FIVE UPSETS CALVARY METHODISTS; Pop Kreb's Liberty Athletic Club| basket bull crew handed a setback to the reserve five of the Calvary Meth- | odist_squad last nicht on the latter team's court, 37 to 33 Buddy Cline, Billy Ball and Jack Jas. per gave the outstanding performances for the winning quint Tomorrow night at % o'clock the| Libertys tackle the Army Medical Cen- ter combination In the gymnasium at Walter Reed MEHLHORN MAY RETURN TO SAN ANTONIO EVENT SAN ANTONIO, Tex., January 28 UP).—William Mehlhorn, Chicago golf professional, who shouted at Bobby Cruickshank on the final green at the Texas open tournament here when the latter was losing his lead for the title to MacDonald Smith, will be wel- comed back to San Antonio next year. L. B. Clogg, president of the San Antonio Golf Association, and Jack O’Brien, tournament manager, statement sald that Mehlhorn been sufficiently punished” and tl the matter would be treated as a| closed incident, . OPEN GOLF TOURNEY TO BE HELD IN JULY By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, January 28.—The Na- tional open_ golf championship held last year at Worcester, Mass., the first week in June, will be plaved more than| a month later this season over the g:l‘fl of the Scioto Club, Columbus, 0. Selection of the three-day period| from July 8 to 10 by George Sargent, president of the Professional Golfers’ Association, has been announced. Change in the date of the fixture will make it convenient for participa- tion of professionals from this coun- try in the British open, the final round of which has been fixed for June 21. } Jim Barnes, who won the British | title last year, expects to go over again, along with Gene Sarazen, ‘Walter Hagen, Leo Diegel, MacDonald Smith and Johnny Farrell. . m?:n:ae;: an;ia u;urse; for the qualifying en or the American have not been chosen. ESPINOSA TAKES GOLF TOURNEY AT TEXARKANA | TEXARKANA, Tex., January 28 (#). hospital, where his cnnd]tlon is far! Texarkana County Club's first annual gu;::r golf tournament with a score | Joe Kirkwood, Australfan champion, finished second with 149 and Will | Leach of Philadelphia, third, with 150. Bobby Cruickshank, Chicago, with a | 170, three strokes under par, won the ‘f;\:'i‘slng rounld. B.n‘d Ed Murphy, St. was low in the _h s the afternoon, HAIR LOSS is absolutely needless. Thousands have escaped baldness h {ingtons, deadlocked in third place THIRD ROUND AT CANNES Allows Opponent Only Two Games—Criticized for Writing of Tourney in Which She Plays. Chaperoned by Suzanne. By the Asso C ANN! January over the ter str, d Press France, all opponents in Helen Wills, American champi ht sets, 60, 62, Miss Wills thus advanced to the tournament. Rosine Vlasto is a player in France and finalist agains! ment The American champion later tod land, who defeated Molla Mallory in s Having 4 v off ut th 111 ur- nament lay, Helen Wills went over to nd inspected the courts »f the Imperial Club, where she sibly may meet Suzanne Leng + match which her heart is for pos Suzanne Is Chaperon. And the € eroned on the than champ: wa hampion racquet inother rds health )f them a tenni lar pains of the club, Mr=. Molla Ma The welcom: from Miss Len whole. ted athy me but neither for the its manners Kiki which e I(;u old," r to cover up the ot > b andeay biness shown by the not_like vou ext Saturday nimal people.” Suzanne is to let it 28 —Conti cou M uing | march nis tournaments on, today deicated Rosine Vlasto in °r triumph long th nt e Riviera gles of the Gallia ranking No. 2 Metropole tourna- third set in the of Didi VI ss Wills in the lay was to p Miss Cadle of Eng- straight sct A in 1 is som t wrot er the publicity she is getti e Riviera derstand betora opportunity ta inst Tilde an in his not be tolerates be admitted Bill from - Heler With the T last the promoters of special i ht. first rank Al Work be the l.n’gl\ of repeat iks he ¢ have a ¢ m.nxuh be scheduled come a matter o ord step toward this, pro e matches have agreed to us_engagements for and stage a general provide an opponent d expectad ror in_an in- ) Glen Wolsten- through Bill Wood had challenge to McPhilomy, sent into a_three.cornered 9 which Perce Ellett, eratwhile doubles partner of the Stanford star, will be the third participant. planned to have these men games in hlocks of five, - in is will hp;:m at 2 o he five-game blocks will “be staged the Coliseum, King Pin and Con- t Hall drives. The order Lon John alley: and ment. The winner of the match will be de termined by total pinfall. As each of the contestants is 2 high average man some ¢ be expected. In fact, the bowiing r ing for much better scoring than was done in the McPhilomy-Work en- counter, And the victor certainly will be qual- ified to give McPhilomy a red-hot time when they meet late next month. Joseph Phillips team, runner-up in the National Capital Leaxue, has found an opponent tor a special en- gagement. The saze Makers will bowl against the leading Lafavette Lodge team of the Masonic Associa- tion in a 10-zame tilt. The match will be started on the King Pin drives, with five games on February 12. The Phillips management may draw i team from KEarl McPhilomy, Jack Whalen, Joe Mulroe, Al Work, Harry McCarthy and Earle Lewis. The Ma- sonic squad includes Glen Wolsten- holme, Red Megaw, Harry Armiger, Arthur Urban, Jack Willlams and Jobn Evans. Lafayette bowlers bettered their Ma- sonic Association high-game record by 10 pins when they counted in the final clash of their set with Dawson. Hansford led the Lafayettes, with a game of 139, while Neff was low, with 115. Rolling off a postponement in the Washington Ladies’ League last night, the Washingtons took the measire of the strong Hilltoppers in three straight | games. Marie I'rere and Gladys Lowd | hit for heavy counts to bring victory to the Washingto The defeat of the Hilltoppers put them four gimes behind the league-leading Columbi:ns and left them but a game ahead of the Commercials, Beeques and Wash- The match brought the schedule of the Washington Ladies’ League up to date. John Evans, please note. Al Gard- ner, bowling for Trinity in the Ma- sonic Association, had games of 78, and 104, for an average of 91 John suffers a form reve ng within the next few day he will enter his special match with | Gardner a top-heavy favorite. Personal Audit team is stepping | along in front of the others in the Internal Revenue circuit. It has a three-game lead over the second-place Annex. No. 1. quint. T.atest statistics RADIATORS, FENDERS m' IADfiMn AIIKII WII"I'STATI‘S R. & F. WKS“ 319 18th BT. 1423 P. REAR TROUSERS To Match Your Odd Coats {EISEMAN'’S, 7th & F | | ASH MOTOR CO. Newbro’s Herpicide *“The Quality Hair Tonk" on Fourteenth Street Conveniently Located i > Bowlers singles bowl No longer will F in Wa ' Harville fine fettle Pins was in team bowled i Brooks, H American Le. first two game In the Prince Gec but the Le in the third a game of 1.5 N.Y.A.C. FiNAN(:lALLY 0. K., IT IS DECLARED the New | denied t difficulties “It is club is in clal condit “We are and future ¢ as our eq close to $2 00 in the New Y¢ and the clubhouse med by re ced finaneial there was int 1 over plans adequate clubh, 10,000, rather ,000,000, an = HAGEN LEADS GOLFERS; COURSE RECORD BROKEN SANFORD, Fla., J: naud Massey of each turned in a 70—in the 72-hole me ship of c ford Cou Medalist with 142 Johnny 1 copped honor. France, card of €9—par is fternoon round of play for the cha al Fiorida over the Club course. the day was 36 holes. of Tampa with a morning low-scors try of Hagen, fe Farr the Special Tire SALE 30x3}, $15.25 29x4.40, $17.90 32x4, $26.90 The Above Are Dayton Cords Your Rims put in con- dition. Tires mounted— no charge. Herriman “Your Tire Man” 1524 L Street N.W. DISTRIBUTOR Dayton Thorobred Tires

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