Evening Star Newspaper, November 15, 1927, Page 39

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SPORTS German Teacher-Athletic Coming to U.S. DR. PELTZER, NOTED STAR, BUE TO SAIL TOMORROW World Record Holder Is to Invade America to Study Methods of Training and to Prime for 1928 Olympic Games. By the Associated Press. TETTIN. Germany, November 15. —America’s climate and its methods of teaching and train- ing are attractions for Dr. Otto Peltzer, famous German athlete, pose an athlete’s participating in events unless he is in topnotch form, in order to save him for but a few all- star events. “It is, of cours», impossible through- out the year to be in lest form,” Pelt. Peltzer, holder of the world's rec.|Zer says, “but one ought genstantly to ords for numerous track event: in- [ remain in the vicinity of eme's best cluding the 1.500-meter dash, will' sail [achievements, hecause only then for New York November 16 on the|one develop beyond onesell. Ever: Dresden. He will be accompanied |time when I failed for a time to take by a German specialist in athletes’ dis. | Dart in events I found that lahd gone eases, Dr. Brustmann, back and only through hard training The German runner has had and dificult contests was I able again man has_ b to climb into first place.” B The outstanding event in Peltzer's buls B hie detise e« ‘toacher of | Cerver wan.hls delet of boih Biurm) Bilatory. ‘civics iand, aHtilstior: at’ithe | 21 Wide In September, 1020, Whan e | Dublic. achool (67 Wickarsdort. in Tu.| etablished & new world recorfef 3:51 ringia. His purpose in going to tha |MNULCS (o1 o ard Y Biates 1015 muty wetisaninemots | | Teltmrwanborn March 4. 1300, [ He of teaching and training and to train | fStudied medicine at 1he TR LECEHO8 0 | A i Y Munich and Jena, but later changed | In_a warmer climate {or the 1928 AN | qver to political seience and sociologs, He took up sports in 1920 in the hope After visiting New York, Detroit, |of jmproving his health, with little or Chicago and San Francisco, spending | no jdea of making a world success Christmas with friends in the latter | ¢ity, Peltzer intends to go to Australia to take part in-several events. 1850000 from an American film con- Peltzer has taken issue with the Ger. [cern, as he wants to rapresent Ger- main Athletic Commissiona, which op- ' many at the Olympic games. the of it. He has turned down an offer of Canton won two out of three from Team Sludln(i. Columbia, the latter ing the night- . Pet.| (3 with ease, turning in a game of ureau of San A151530. Creglow’s game of 132 and hler's consistent rolling featured for | Columbia, while 8. Chamberlain was | the big gun for the Soldiers. | | GENERAL ACCOUNTING OFFICE LEAGUE. [/ Team Standine. W, DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE l.n\GLr;.] « i m reau of Standard Hich team guma—} Burean of Sta h md 2 L indfan N nd Bureau Indian No. of 3 140, C ns b u- | Ao T N 0.2 atson. 1 and Travel, Fanda'fl- : Fugett. Bureau of Mines. | Bookkeeping 05-24 “ierans Bure Z | Comutrolter Standards gained a firm hold on| first place by taking three games | from Secretary’s Office, who are dis-| 5 TEE placed in second position by the Min~s | ““Hizh set—Warfield (Post Office) team through its triple from Bu-| W game—Stone (Claime). 346 forCom No. 1. Patents No. 2 remain | old. &8¢ in fourth place, with Patents No. 1, Coast Survey, BuforCom No. 2 and|!! BuforCom No. 1 trailing in the order | w; named. H DISTRICT GOVERNMENT LEAGUE. Team Standing.. 4 373, Purcaasng on. 10221, R, i S BOWLERS ARE TIED IN WOMAN’S LEAGUE With Records No. 8 and Clearing No. 2 teams tied for first honors, In- come Tax Ladies’ Bowling League is having a heated race. Clearing No. 1 team is one game behind the leaders. Records No. 3 is conceded the first p position by a slight pin margin. Nicholson of Records No. 3 has high game with 116, and Viner, a P ros tenmimate, holds high set with 287. ncan Sec, &1 ‘uom | Nicholson also boasts the hest aver- anhvn savin ‘it | age, 91,8. Fox of Clearing No. 1. has e ey | e gl % 553|16 spares, and Nicholson holds five strikes to lead in these departments. é‘"’ o . i Team Standing and Records. un' team - Fame—Bernbardt, 141: igh'individual®’ set—Bernhardt. Guethler. 3 iz jndividual averase—H, Steele. 100: Bernhardt 106, Hizh strikes—H. Steele. 13: Swagrart, Reiahard. 40; H. Steele. BANKERS' LEAGUE. Team Standing. ational Bank of Washiion b Wi meri ark Savings Ban) strict National Banl Records No. 1.0 el Audit Rev'w 4 11 3 Individual Standing, RECORDS No. 3 P indivijual game—Mary, 158, ‘M“‘(Id“‘ll‘("l:l-ls"“l{k 391, trikes—McCleTlan. *averages—Clark. 21; Sheeb. | Wannee BT | Ahmey’ Hiigh spares—Clark. 60. | EbRdy Perpetual by taking one game from | . B. Hibbs & Co. enabled National | Arsencau Bank of Washington to go into first | Hicks place by 143 pins. | amn There is also an ner | Gerant interesting race | Drew . between Clark of W. B. Hibbs & Co. | Giibert - and Sheehy of National Bank of Washington for individual leadership | Clark, sporting an average of 112.21, [FoX - while Sheeby is close behird with 1 Washington Loan & Trust 2, won three games from Savings Bank. and Riggs b Bank, rolling a double-header, won | three games from Harriman & (o, and the odd game from National Sav. ines & Trust Co. District National Bank, National |S: Metropolitan Bank, Perpetual and | Murphy & Co. won odd games from | their opponents. 0DD FELLOWS' emmrzuesl % [ROTRR GUE. ause | Burns | st ARBRRENEE D DS, pant Coumbia Prightwood No HOCKEYITES T0 OPE PRO SEASON TONIGHT| | By SREREREREESSanas: en. ks rage—P. Eliett. 113.14: Har alen. 108.11 o ¥ Groff. 11, ieh a wille. 110-% Siriken—. Epares—P. Ellett, 49 Golden Rule and Langdon are still Amoclated Press. % deadlocked for the lead. the former | NEW YORK, November 18—Win { holding on to first position by virtue | (°F Will arrive officially in the Nwl of total pins. These two feams. moe; | YOrk sporting world and four other | this week. Langdon’s victim this time | {1e% of the National ;'"‘““?'“""“‘;‘:I was Fred D. Stuart, th t v onight wi e opening of the pro-; T, the latter having) fousional circuit for the season of 1928, to be content one victor. Prightwood No. 2 succumbed 1o G, (Both the international and Amer e 1o of e Toed 40 ol [can divisions of the circuit will swing Cordell of Golden Rule, Lu {into action that will carry through Brightwood Stanton of Lang. | into March, when the winners of first don and Harviile of Fred D. Stuart|?nd second places in the two sections were the leading pin spillers in the | P2!tle for the Stanley cup, emblem of Bors Sijtohes. | the world professional hockey cham- Armiger staged a sensational nmshil"‘_’"!hm Ten teams make up the for Central to give his quint the odd | circuit that invaded New York for game over Brightwood No. 1. Best ('h¢ first time three years ago. bowling of the set, however, was pro-| , I games tonight the New York duced by Barrett of Brightwood, who Americans will entertain the Montreal rolled games of 116, 102 and 123 for a [ g‘h';;;‘hgl'- at ”delmfi Sg:lre Gardent, otal of 340, easily the best three- o e New Yorl ngers mee ey ¥ the best three-game | 1oronto Maple Leafs at Toronto. The remainder of the schedule consists of Both Loyalty and Washington were THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTO! —————— " On the Side Lines | | | ‘ With the Sports Editor | By DENMAN THOMPSON: ARTY GALLAGHER, | of Washington, in the fifth round promising young heavy- of the opener. weight battler, proved to a crowd of some 2,000 Altogether, the card proved ring fans at the 104th Medical highly attractive from an arti: tic standpoint, and in view of the Regiment Armory, at Baltimore, last night, that he is just that. fact that he got no worse than an cven break at the gate, Blick After appearing greatly out- classed by the experienced Joe may be expected to extend his Lohman in the early sessions of promotional activities in the Maryland metropo'is. the 10-round main go of the card arranged by Matchmaker Frankie Mann for Promoter John S. Blick, the youthful Gallagher got his bearings, and with an exhib as notable for courage as stamina fairly earned a draw. During the first three frames it scemed that Gallagher would get nothing more than a good lesson in the art of swapping punches from his scasoned opponent, but as the milling progressed the Capital Irishman grew more u'w'r‘l- n the Bowie Has Fine Plant. URF devotees to the num- her of some 20,000 glimpsed the spiffiest racing plant in this section at Bowie yes- terday, when they turned out for the opening of the Southern Maryland Agricultural Associa- tion's Fall meeting. In getting the plant ready in the short time since fire destroyed the old stands Jim O'Hara and his staff accomplished a notable feat and nothing but commendation was heard for the lines on which the structure has been erected. Plenty of space between the rows | of scats, wide aisles, facilitics for tributed more to his grecnness laying and collecting wagers that than anything else. From midway could hardiy be improved on and of the bout to its close there was an enormous steel and concrete not a single round in which he pile that provides shelter for a failed to sting Lohman, but al- larger number of persons than ways when the spectators were any track in Maryland, in addi- worked to a pitch where they ex» tion to a commodious clubhouse pected a kill, Marty wou'd apply reservation, made a distinct hit the brakes and merely coast. with the racegoers. It was this failure to follow up In addition there is employed a his advantages that euchered Gal- | svstem of amplifiers that added lagher out of the dscision and much to the enjoyment of the lost him his chance to put over a spectators. In addition to trans. haymaker. Having celebrated his | mitting music in the off periods twentieth birthday less than two | the loud-speakers furnished up- weeks ago, the product of Wash- to-the-minute information regard- ington's Foggy Bottom cannot be ing scratches and weights, as well expected to display the ring as accounts of the races as they fincese that can be acquired only were being run, and manning the with long service, but that he is mike was an announcer who :"nmin along nicely was the ;ver. could be understood. ict of bundreds of Cavital fans who made the trip to the Monu- o REmsle Wener ke e Not only has the comfort of mental City. ; patrons been looked after in more Considerable improvement in | {125 adequate manner, the racing both speed and defensive ability, | girip jtself has been vastly im especially in the matter of protect proved over the deep, sandy going ing himself at close quarters, was that used to prevail i Y going observed by the rinzworms, who A thorough Yevamping of th also saw Gallagher in his profes- | iriy \With 3 new top dressing his sional debut against Henry Lamar | peeded it up to Shch. an cxtent at Silver Spring a couple of | (hat four track records went by months ago, and those of his ad- | the board in the first of the 12. mirers who motored over for the dav session yesterday [haln bout last night feel that he has But one criticism can be voiced something besides strength and | of 4}, |||adc‘ng\rr Bow‘: ‘ol‘CE willingness with which to seek | 2nd that ic the I DIEnY t s poor condition of progress along the trail to fame | the inadequate stretch of some and fortune in fhe ring. two miles of road leading from Despite the size of principals— the pike to the inclosure. This Gallagher weighing 191 and Loh- | no doubt, will he attended to in man 8 pounds less—there was time. Then Bowic will be a model plenty of action in the main event, plant., and this was true in even greater S measure of the semi-final, in 15,000 MORE SEATS FOR YANK STADIUM | which Eddie Buell, who makes his home here, outfought Joe Belmont, Baltimore bantam, to earn the unanimous decisiop of By the Associated Press. { NEW YORK, November 15.—The Yankee Stadium will come a bit closer | .the judges. ¥ Handicapped as he is by loss next year to seating the hundreds of | | thousands who applied this Fall for of vision in his left eye, and con- ceding 5 pounds to his opponent, Buell put up a whale of a scrap. He displayed ring generalship of a high order and a snappy right, o A Rth plenty of steam in it, and ’A"r"‘:‘” o h;m‘:r;m]\r';l-w ey ool hed strong against a willing s, i : v The business office of the American | mixer to obtain a well earned ver- | Loague Club announced foday that dacl:l. 5 i stands ari.;im: 15,000 to the seating b e secon ut of e eve= |capacity of the park would be ready ning Sailer McKenna of the Naval |for the Fall rush of 1928. Air Station, Washington, earned The new tiers, to be added to the a decision over Andy Kelley of !:;l‘l'"".'_?in""d"l;: ’h"M"‘r“e:“ 'S""l‘)":fi Baltimore, largely through his ag- Soang 0 D, nore, largest in the East with the exception gressiveness, and Ray Bowen, one | of “the Sesquicentennial stadium at Philadelphia, and exceeded in the West only by Soldier Field in Chicago. ninth had the crowd on clamoring for a K. O. 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Groff brothers were very much in evidence as their team, Mount Pleas- ant, swept the set from Covenant, Charles turning in a total of 333 and Chalmers a total of 335, Sislen the only member of Covenant over the 300 mark, his total being 319. Mount Nebo continued to climb at the expense of llarmony. The latter was unfortunate in losing the second contest by a single pin, a spare by Strobel in the last frame deciding. of Mount Nebo rolled well, Montreal Maroons and the champion Ottawa Senators at Ottawa, Chicago Black Hawks and Boston Bruins at Boston, and Detroit Cougars and Pitt: burgh Pirates at Pittsburgh. Feain g e g RECORD FOR BOHNE. A new record for the American Association was set last season by Sammy Bohne, Minneapolis third baseman, who played through 34 con- secutive games without an error, L m;{mlnlm: foot ball has l:ovelopod o the mos ulacgport stris aince the '.'.nop 5 A“ Standard - 635 Loulsiana MELLOW On the RADIO Cigar & Tobacco Co. 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