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SPORTS., THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. ¢, FRIDAY, MAY 21, 1926. SPORTS. \» Georgetown Only Local College With Several Big Contests Yet to Be Decided 'HILLTOP NINE TO LEAVE TONIGHT FOR TRIP NORTH « Track Team Also Has Meet With Navy Tomorrow and Is in Collegiates Next Saturday—Maryland Battles Hopkins in Lacross: BY H. C. BYRD. EORGETOWN'S base ball team leaves tonight on a trip that will not wind up until a week from today, and its track squad goes to Annapolis tomorrow for a dual meet with the Na trip wintls up the schedule in that sport, but the track team has dnother c to go, being scheduled to take part in the intercollegiates at I G next Friday and Szturday. Holy Cross is the first team to be met in base ball. And any college nine that goes against the Worcester collegians may rest have plenty to do. The game played for Holy Cross. hope of avenging that After playing loly Cr tomor- row, the Blue and Gray team jumps 1> Boston for a meeting with Boston College on Monday. sday it has « layoff, but Wedn plays Army 1t West Point, Thu ‘s contest is‘ with Yordham at Friday | s another off day an day @ | same is scheduled at ¥ 'he I3 nd Gray is likely to have a battle | in each of these ¢ ts, with tho ] exception of the Army, W hich seems 10 b The track s difficulty glving a sound beating to the Navy. nnapolis school has o track athletes to compare with 1se that wear Georgetown's colors. (ieorgetown probably will not win by 13 big & margin it might if it nrew all its st in every event, s it is not likely that the coaches will desire to run the risk of over- working any of the u Georgetown’s ball team vesterday | tell before the onslaught of the Mount St. Mary's nine, 1 to 4. Woodgie, who, it said, pitched professional Lase ball last vear, was too good on ho slab and the Blue and Gray bat- ars could not solve his delivery con- <istently enough to get rums. One in in the first innin; v Tlilltop efforts. M made 12 safeties off hurlers, John O'Reilly, coach nd track at Georgetown > Lase b base ball 10 make same with Yale next he will join the track ton. Father McDonough is to be In harge of the track squad at Annapo-| iis tomorrow. University of Maryland winds up its lacrosse seuson tomorrow at Bal- | timore in a game with Hopkins. All| pre-game dope seems to indicate a margin for Hopkius, but Maryland | never figures a zame lost until after it is virtually lost, not in any spc Both Hopkins und Maryland i teams, teams that stand out nong the best that have represented he two schools. Hopkins, on com- parison of scores, has a_little better ecord than the College Park School, but such indicated margins do not amount to much when-it comes to Such a game as Hovkins and Mary- land will i Hopkins has a heavier, mol perienced and stronger team physic v than Maryland. but in handling ks, passing and speed Maryland, perhaps, is a little supe: The defer been tested to attacks having opposing te: such an extent the was in pl has their t the team the ball most al- und the other has had its than Hopkins, full half in each and has had at its goal. in their line-ups re good lacrosse d in other s composed hall play- und bas- Margland numerous &b Both teams have almost exclusively <, while several bull men are in the lucrosse game tomorrow will | wind up Maryland’ co- | am, with the exc iteh next Wednesd Caval Academy, at “Zeke” Bailey, former JMaryland catcher, now holding down that posi- tion on the Quantico Marines nine, hit a double and homer against Dart- outh yesterday. Marines won, 9 Crepe Sole . . ‘The upper is tan vents scuffing the leather lined. Gorgetown probably will send Pete Burch LONE CHANGE MADE | | the coaches of ba A Spalding Golf Shoe with the famous Rajah saddle. The sole is unvulcanized—will not glaze. Itis attached by the two-unit proc- ess—permanently. This is a true athletic shoe of the ' vy. The diamond Roston assured it will carlier in the year here resulted in a defeat. Inside Golf y Chester Horton, Keep down as the clubhead goes | through the ball. In the sketch today | you see a_finish of & swing i of the body comtfionly ob served at any golf course. lere the dplayer has straightened up at l the finish. Sup- pose vou straight- ened up that way in the back swing? There is really no difference between the two — you might as well stralghten up in (he one as in the other. It would seem that straightening up this way could have no effect on the ball after the bail is hit, but the trouble is that this body action really starts before the bail is hit and con- | tinues afterward. It robs you of all | solidity In the hit and of the staying with the ball—the follow-through. It is physically impossible to straighten up thé bedy this way and follow through, too. with a IN NAVY COACHING *Phere will be but one change in the coaching staff for Spring sports at the Naval Academy. Bob Butler, for- merly of the University of Washing- ton coaching staff, is now the chief | coach of rowing, succeeding Richard J. Glendon. However, Butler has been doing fine work, and those in touch with Navy rowing are confident that there wiil be no lowering of the standards. The | crews had a good row Wednes but have been kept indoors hy bad weather most of the week. Coaches of three other Spring sports have been eminently successful, judg- ing by the one great test of the Navy, ability to develop a team that will win from the Army. Tt happens that @ ball, lacrosse and tennis have won all their contests, two in number in each case, from the Army. Albert (Chief)y Bender Findlayson and Prof. Harry Sturdy handling, respeetively, base ball, 17 crosse and tennis, are the three men- tors who have always produced teams which won from West Point. All three will handle the same brancles this year, Louis H. Mang. who has been coaching the gymnastic team, is ready to start with the fleld ahd track candidates, < George HURLS NO-HIT GAME MINNEAPOLIS, Minn, May 21 (). Al Redding, Minnesota’s right- hander with an underslung delivery turned in the first no-hit, no-run v tory in the Western Conference this season by repulsing the lowa nine, 11 to 0, Fountain Pens Repaired Keys Duplicated, 25¢ | Adams News Depot, 902 G N.W. “The DOUGLE” $10 calf, with a brown A leather tip pre- sole. The shoe is | practice tomorre YALE AND HARVARD TO CLASH ON WATER By the Associated Press, NEW YORK, May 21— Those ancient and honorable rivals of ‘the college rowing world, Yale and Har- vard, face Dl:ofi]](.‘cl.‘l of strenuous races tomorrow in efforts to keep their varsity slates clean. Yale, now in its fourth straight sea- son without defeat, encounters Cor- nell and Princeton In the eighth an- nual Carnegie cup regatta on Lake Cayuga, Ithaca, N. Y., while Harvard meets Pennsylvania and Massachu- setts Institute of Technology on the Charles River at Boston. The Blue and Crimson varsity eights will enter these tests as favorites, but by none too wide a margin. Pennsylvania lost by less than half a length to Yale two weeks ago. Penn’s performance tomorrow will of- fer a basts of comparison between Harvard and Yale, which meet on the Thames at New London, Conn., in thelr four-mile classic on June 25. ILLINOIS WILL AID GRID GAME CROWDS Ioot. hall authorities of the Uni- versity of Illinois have developed an up-to-the-minute ambition in the matter of accessories for the Autumn game, First a contract was signed for the purchase of a sectional gridiron covering which would protect the turf from rain and snow, insuring the players against uncertain footing and conditions generally slimy, such as chcaracterized so many games last year at Urbana and elsewhere. And now the Illinols directors are to invest in a loud speaker, by which the crowd at foot ball games will be kept in touch with all phases of the countest, yards gained, penalties, sub- stitutions, progress of games at other colleges and the llke. It will be a very fine thing if the ioud speaker proves to be sufliciently vociferous to dominate the organized uproar at an important intercol legiate foot ball game. But the chances seem to be that, no matter how greatly it amplifies the an- nouncer’s information, it will be a still small voice in a domain of vari- gated and raucous sound. No one yet hds evolved an effactive method of enabling spectators to fol- low all the ins and outs and quirks and turns of a foot ball game, and the funny thing is that no one seems to care g0 long as the movement of the ball can be followed. In this re- spect foot ball is unique among all major games wherein intelligent in- terest in all minute detafls of play and arbitration is one of the domi- nating characteristics, GETS ILLINOIS MEDAL. URBANA, IiL, May 21 (P).—Johnny Mauer of Batavia, 11L., has been named to receive the Untversity of lllinols Couference medal award, given each vear by Big Ten schools to the gradu ating athlete most proficient in ath letics and scholarships. Mauer was n of the basket ball team in . and a mainstay on the wuintet fhres y SHOOTERS Washington 1 for TO PRACTICE. un Club marksmen at Benning range for the sixteenth annual champion- ship of Maryland and the District, to be shot here on June 4 and 5. e e IRISH HURLERS ARRIVE. IW YORK, May 2t (#). bers of the Tipperary A champion hurling team have arrived lf(u" a serfes of international games here. P * SPANISH NETMEN SCORE. “DUBLIN, May 21 (P).—Spain, took the first singles match in the Davis Cup lawn tennis play with_Ireland. S, Sindreau defeated E. A. McGuire, Always Style“and lue Leadin @b} OEhminrgv rfitarr BOYS CLUB Conducted by ROBERT C. McCLELLA OYS, 20 years ago, or maybe it was 30, or 40, a youngster B who might today be taken for your twin brother, was getting along as best he could without The Evening Star Boys Club, for The Evening Star Boys Club hadn’t made its appearance as yet. Ask your dad who the little fel- low was. He'll know, for he and the little fellow are one and the same. Just how young is your dad toda: Does he help you i1 your athletics, as well as with your ? Does he show vou how ‘“‘they play the game” when he was a boy? After supper tonight ask him wbout the games they played when he was a boy. What sporg did he excel in What did he play on the base ball team? How much did he bat” Did he play foot hall and d make any long runs like urange’ Was a sprinter? hesdo the 50 or 100 in? How far could Re jump He probably was & good wrestler. How many matches did he win Was he e beaten by a boy his own size? Did he keep 2 serap hook when he was a boy? 1If he did he probably wouldn't gell it for its we today. Get him to tell you ubout hig greatest adventure. Does dad_coach you in your games? Do vou play catch with him in the Spring? And does he think he e kick that old foot ball farther higher than you? a great swimmer, too. tell you all about it. Bo chummy with dad and your mother friends you have. Boy Builders. Stand erect with hands on shoul- ders and elbows back. Raise right arm straight up and at same time bend so that left hand touches floor. Straight- 1 he Red What er nd Get him to our dad. Your are the best UILD up your health and tren.'th with this wonder. tising brew. Full old time siringth and flavor guaranteed. in hotels, restaurants, grocery stores, drug stores, etc. Order a bottle at next meal. Or ha case sent Yome. 1€ Dot satished after trying aix bottles return the case with the waused and used bottles, and get all ‘money back. Having sold mil Trome of bortles of beverages. we know will like Utica Club_Pilsener. ext %nd Bryr, Co.. Uticn N. V- WHISTLE BOTTLING WORKS <. Farber, ¥ N. Capitol St., Washington, Bt And for fine Ginder Ale,, ‘or Wartzburger order ‘'Utica Club " Uliza (b PILSENER. Ask To Ses 93617 As Swagger a model and as peppy lines as you'd ask to see in the New Rich Tan Shade with its Diamond chaped Eyelets, Fancy Stitehing Effects and Broad Oollegiate Toe; Teather Soles, Rubber Hesle $3.50 couta Ho probably was | en up and reverse with left arm in air and right hand to tloor. This ¥ strengthens the muscles of side and has a stimulating effect on the liver. (Copyright, 1926 ITALY LIKES BASKET BALL. By the Associated Press. Basket ball, unknown in Italy he- fore the war, bids fair to become the natlonal game of the countr: Samuel Ybargoyen, physical ¢ o of the Turin Y. M. C. A, on leave in this country. A national 1 OLYMPICS OF 1928 | Officials in Holland have ann that the Olympic games of as competition s con | ction, and will close on July and gymna the formal ceremonies prec actual opening through June 19, Reports from Amsterdam indicate 5. that great progress is being made in | the preliminary p the officials b been taken care of+through the offer of a loan case funds now required, but it of thorough stability that is bound to have an effect on the number of en tries to be received. had been thought it would not he i) TO START JUNE 20 on June 20, with soccer in swimming, boxing It is expected that ding the of the festival will 18 and continue | on June ns. announced, All finances, ve have from the government in are needed. As things ke shape that loan will not he gives s background Yor a time it | for Holland to ge the games, the report that the govern- ment was opposed to them having gained wide publicity, but all that has been changed and the executive com- mittee assures all that everything | will move along without delay of any ki . "he northern countries are taking a keener interest in the games now than ever before and have sent dele- gates and obsrvers to some of the meetings. In one of the recent ses- sions, held In Parls, six representa- tives' were present from Norway, Sweden, Denmark and Finland. Al though they did not tak ry ac- tive part in the discussions, "they |viays tn IRL GOLFER STRIVES FOR 250-YARD DRIVES By the Associated Pre: CHICAGO, May 21.—Virginia Var Wie, 17-year-old Chicago golfer, wh climaxed sensational Winter playing in Florida by defeating Glenna Col lett, is working to get 230 or more yards with her wood clubs before she the women's national this made several suggestions and fm- | Summe sed the others with thelr friendly t.» land, according to reports from that country, Is going to make the strongest bid in its history for honors in horsemanship. Italy and France also have taken a keener in terest in this divi - games, nd it is expected that the 1928 co petition will be of a higher vorviety than in the last few games, “h affected by the war, ards she averaged from the tee last ear don't satisfy the juvenile star. Just back from the Nouth, she began this week on strenuous program which she hopes will give her the desired distance. ’ That 250 vards she is after may he | the factor which will enable Miss Van iy this tim.e | he national, rather than for the | championship vhich she won a six-foot put The with 8 Upen Tomorrow From The Newest Taubman Store The fifteenth in the fastest-growing, most progressive chain of retail auto supply stores in the country opened May 15th in Boston at 165 Massachusetts avenue! Here are the sort of values that have made TAUBMAN'S phenomenal growth possible! Boyc-ite 39¢ box of 3 cans Adds pep and power to ever: motor. Each cus- tomer Umited to one box of 3 gnition that works lers Luggage 89 Carrier, C Can hold several trunks or grips. Of fine black enameled steel. Collapsible ivpe. Fits any runnimg board. Automatic Windshield Wiper, ¢ installed fn any car. at safety device is the type used on most of the ex- pensive cars. SPECIAL Clean Up Specials! 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