Evening Star Newspaper, February 7, 1929, Page 37

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1 COLLEGE TOSSERS INTRIO OF GAMES Maryland and Gallaudet in Home Frays, Georgetown Invades New York. OLLEGE basket ball teams of the ( District group will idle tonight for their only off night of the week, but three quints are to see action tomorrow night, two on home floors and the other away. Maryland will entertain University of North Carolina at College Park, Gallau- det will play host to Old Dominion Boat Club of Alexandria at Kendall Green, while Georgetown will travel to New York to engage New York A.C. and will remain over to play New York Univer- sity Saturday. In games last night Georgetown de- feated Gallaudet, 42 to 29, in the Amer- ican University gymnasium, Catholic University fell a 47-20 victim to Ford- ham and Maryland vanquished Virginia Military Institute, 30 to 27, at Lexington. All three of the games tomorrow night likely will prove lively. North Carolina appears to again have a good team and Maryland probably will find the Tar- heels tough nuts to crack. 0Old Dominion Boat Club is apt to of- fer Gallaudet stout competition, while Georgetown likely will find New York A. C. a tough opponent. Gallaudet offered Georgetown more opposition last night than was general- 1y expected. At one fleeting stage the Kendall Greeners were leading the Hoyas, and they contrived to keep not far behind all the way. It was about midway of the first half that Gallau- det went to the front, 10 to 9. Here Meenan was substituted for Dunn, and the Hoyas took the lead to keep it, Georgetown had a 23-14 edge st _the, half. Mestner, Dutton and Shea were lead- ers of the Georgetown drive on the cords. Ringle and Cosgrove did most of Gallaudet's scoring. n (42). Gallaudet (29); s, % G.F.P. 0070 cossrove, 1.3 1 7 317 Dyer f 3068 259 000 il 104 0 Ag 02 ; 0 4 gt3i s 000 .6 012 . Eberts (Catholic U.). Fordham toyed with Catholic Uni- Versity in scoring its nineteenth straight win last night at Brookland. With all the regulars, Landers, Adams, Sweet- man, Reardon and Capt. Daugherty finding the scoring range consistently the visitors early rang up a command- ing lead, which they maintained to the end. Daugherty led Fordham scorers with 11 points. Walsh and O'Brien with 7 and 6 points, respectively, did the bulk of the C. U. counting. Score: . (47, Catholic U. (20). Fordham U. Py, 3 Ky, 1.9 T 1 Reillv, 1t $5% biansky, 1. 0 1 eilly, r:ndaen.lf. .3 06 011 o0 000 39 000 0 4 113 Swestman, ©.2 3 2 000 fnglim, 1¢.... 0 0 0 193 ardon, Ig...3 1 7 337 anion, 75... 0 0 0 o 11 ugherty, T¢ 4 3 11 000 Totals......17 13 47 Totals...... 6 8 2 Referee—Mr. Sumner. Umplre—Mr. Simp- fon. Time of halves—320 minutes. Goals by Radice and Gaylor in the s, ‘SPORTS.” ;District Collegiate a TARHEEL BASKETERS ON NORTHERN JAUNT CHAPEL HILL, N. C, February 7 (#).—University of North Carolina’s basket ball squad left on a three-game invasion of the Middle Atlantic States carded for games with Virginia, Mary- land and Princeton on successive days. This is the third long jaunt for the Tarheels this season, topping earlier invasions of the Middle West and South. North Carolina opens the road sched- ule with Virginia in Charlottesville to- night, follows with Maryland at Col- lege Park tomorrow night and then meets the Tigers at Princeton Satur- day afternoon. After the Princeton battle the Caro- lina quintet returns home to stay until the conference tournament opens. The only other ag:f away from home is with North lina State, in Raleigh, February 13. Coach Jim Ashmore took only eight men, these. being Capt. Hackney, Sat- terfleld, Cathey and Neiman, forwards; Harper and eron, centers, and nal minute swept Maryland to victory s\'er V. M. I last night at Lexington. t was a thrilling, close game all the ay. At the half the home team was the van, 19 to 16. Radice and Evans played particularly lvell for Maryland, both on offense and £ 3 deBeu“;:es. Scott and Hewlett turned in trong exhibitions for V. M. I, Scott Leing the game's high scorer with 11 Ppoints. Scores: 4 Maryland (30). Gayion, 1E:278 1 8 Hetzel, 1.0, 0,1 1 Madigan, %1 an, 3th- Radice, 1§, 08 630 George Washington will play a much fess dlm‘:ult foot ball schedule next Fall. ordham, Lafayette and Penn State have been dropped by the Colonials, and In their stead Dickinson, Juniata and Bt. Joseph's will be met. In arranging an easier card it is felt, pccording to H. Watson Crum, G. W. diirector of athletics, that it is useless {qr the Colonials to continue meeting eams out of hteir class if they desire victories on the gridiron. The feature attraction of the seven- ame card is the annual battle with atholic University to be staged ‘rhanksgiving day. This year it will be layed at Clark Griffith Stadium in- tead of at Brookland. . The opening game of the schedule will be with American University on October 12. The schedule: October 12—American University. October 19—Dickinson at Carlisle. October 26—City College of New York # New York. ¢ November 2—Willlam and Mary at wWilliamsburg. November 8—S8t. Joseph’s, November 16—Juniata. November 28—Catholic University at Clark Griffith Stadium. Georgetown's boxing team will be Eundlcapped in its meet with Navy aturday at Annapolis through the ab- ence of Charley Fish, 145-pound bat- ler. Fish suffered a broken hand in practice yesterday. b RICHMOND U. REPORTS TO WAKE FOREST HEAD , RICHMOND, Va. February 7 (®).— Coach Frank M. Dobson, director of athleties at the University of Rich- mond, said he had forwarded a letter | to Dr. Francis P. Gaines, president of Wake Forest College, informing him of what was described as unsportsmanlike conduct of members of the Wake Forest basket ball team following a game with Richmond here Tuesday. ‘Wake Forest players are charged with attempting to attack the referee, James R. Holladay. No definite steps, Coach Dobson said, will be taken toward severing athletic relations with Wake Forest by the Rich- mond institution until an answer is re- ceived from Wake Forest authorities. SWIMMERS REINSTATED. NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J., February 7 (#).—Rutgers has reinstated George Kojac, Olympic backstroke swimming champion, and John D. Dreyfuss, short- distance swimming star. The students, both sophomores, were barred from the team when they competed for outside organization. PROFESSIONAL HOCKEY. 2; Philadelphfa, 1. St Pa 2; St. Louis, 1. Doston, Brown and t, guards. FIELD TRIAL BODY ELECTS C. R. KINGLA Charles R. Kingla of this city was elected president of the Northern Vir- ginia Amateur Field Trial Association at its annual meeting held Tuesday night at Fairfax, Va. Other officers chosen were H. B. Mitchell, Herndon, Va., first vice presi- dent; Thomas B. Baldwin, Washington, second vice president; Judge Willlam 8. Snow, Alexandria, third vice president, and G. W. Williams, Herndon, secretary and treasurer. April 10 next was set tentatively for the running of the puppy trials at Cen- terville, Va., and October 14 as the tentative date for the Fall field trials at the same place. made up of Charles R. A delegation Kingla, Liamond Ballou, H. B. Mitchell and J. Willlam Tomlinson will represent the association at the Virginia amateur fleld trials to be held Monday at Peters- burg, Va. PRI AL ESPINOSA MAY LAND GOLF JOB IN THE EAST CHICAGO, February 7 (#).—Al Espi- nosa, one of Chicago’s leading profes- sional golfers, may locate with an East- ern club this year. His former club, the Illinois Golf Club, has signed Bill Hartshorn of Chicago to take Al's place. Espinosa has been in the money at levert:l Western and Southern tourna- ‘ment . MORRISON CONSIDERING VIRGINIA U. GRID OFFER DALLAS, Tex., February 7 (#).— Coach Ray Morrison of Southern Methodist University has admitted that he is “considering seriously” an offer to become head coach at the University of Virginia. After a long-distance conversation with officials of the school, Morrison said his change depended on the outcome of a conference, adding that certain requirements must be met before he would be interested. + Morrison said a definite answer was not possible by telephone because the matter had to be taken up with the Vlrfll’tla athletic committee. Morrison said if the committee acts favorably, he would go before the Southern Methodist Athletic Council and ask to be released from his contract, which has one more year to run. By the Associated Press. EW YORK, February 7.—On the same flat track where his rival from Finland, Paavo Nurmi, won his first handicap race at two miles a week ago, Edvin ‘Wide of Sweden, holder of the world’s two-mile record outdoors, will attempt to defeat almost the same fleld in the feature event of the Newark A. C. games at the 113th Regiment Armory, Newark, tonight. Sweden’s fastest student of education will allow handicaps up to 130 yards in the two-mile event. The strongest com- petition is expected to come from F. C. Bayley of the New York A. C., who finished second to Nurmi, and Irving Win: London, 1. Tu'sa, 0; Duluth, 0. Kitchener, 3: Toronto Millionaires, 2. uffalo, 2; Hamilton, 0. . Niagara Falls, 4; Detroit Olympics, 1y Totten of the Millrose A. A, who, took third in the same race. The race should furnish a lot of advance pe on the prospective i3 Wide and Williams in Events In Newark Track Meet Tonight | ing base ball players— which this column heart- ily indorses—the proposal of John Heydler to permit pinch hitters for pitchers has been received with a notable lack of enthusiasm by major moguls. But nothing conclusive on the merits of the idea is reflected by that fact. It simply fur- nishes additional evidence that the diamond magnates are an ultra-conservative group and that any suggestion for a re- vision of the rules gives them an aggravated case of the shivers. } IKE the plan for number- ek o Probably the most effective argument against the sugges- tion is the appeal to sentiment made in the assertion that base ball having been a nine-man game sisce its inception, any change designed to make it a ten-man sport would complete- ly alter its character and strike a fatal blow at its popularity. That such tommyrot as per- mitting the son to enjoy the national pastime just as it was played by the father should prove a powerful factor in moulding opinion on the sub- ject is as unfathomable to us as Mr. Einstein’s profundities on the face of the returns which show from year to year a steadily increasing number of athletes employed in’ games. * % k X% ‘There was a time, of course, when big league clubs carried only 11 or 12 players through- out a season and when the nine men who started a contest went through to the finish re- ardless of what transpired in he course of the combat. In fact we are told that it was some time after 1891 when the rules first permitted player substitutions that the man- agers took advantage of them. But nowadays a big league battle in which only 18 players rmlclpnte is rare indeed and t is a matter of record that as many as 35 performers have fotun their names into a nine- nning box score with nothin, in the rules to prevent the total being made 50 if sufficient bench warmers are available. * k¥ * It is our personal view that the attractiveness of a ball game is not enhanced by a veritable parade of relief pitch- ers, pincii hitters and substi« tute runners which tend to slow up action and lengthen the total playing time, and it seems to have been rather widely overlooked that the plan of the National League boss would not infrequently result in decreas- ing the number of performers employed, rather than the re- verse. el [ ON THE SIDE LINES With the Sports Editor By DENMAN THOMPSON Jones being sidetracked to per- mit Smith to hit for him, for instance. Under Heydler’s plan Jones could resume his place on the mound and carry on and if that happened to be the only substitution made but 10 men would appear in the line-up, whereas under the present pro- cedure 2 minimum of 11 players would see action as a new box- man has to be used whenever a pitcher gives way to a pinch hitter. R fact that man; satisfactory hurler is yanked by a manager gambling for runs via the pinch-hitter route with a resultant succession of twirl- And when a pitcher does bat for himself and happen to get on base time invariably is lost through the necessity, fanciful or otherwise, of protecting his mpgmg wing with a sweater or coal Heydler plan would have de- prived the greatest hitters —the mighty Babe Ruth among them, not to mention Goose Goslin and Sam Rice of the local array—who broke in as flingers, that would indeed be a calamity, if true. good hitters are born, not made, and that natural aptitude for batting is one of the first things that asserts itself in a player, ;iegardleu of his position on the e! Goslin, Rice and every other glnyer Wi out as a pitc! ‘was assigned to some other job. announced his advocacy of the so-called 10-man team that some one obtained an interview with Charles Albert Bender in which the famous finger of the celebrated old Athletics pointed out this alleged weakness of the seem he had the impression that the Heydler idea called for a substitute always to be in- jected whenever a pitcher was due at the discussion with persons of no fame in the game but keenly interested in the capacity of fans has developed that many hlave the same misapprehen- sion. would not prevent a pitcher doing his own hitting. It mere- I tXxe manager to use a pinch hitter in place of the mounds- man without the latter thereby automatically becoming eligible for further would seem to solely on the promise that it would reduce substitutions and if this resulted in widening the fleld for exercise of managerial skill so much the better. Left to right, front row—Margaret Olney, Natalie Weed (captain), Marjorie Blumenfeld and Lucille Miller. Back, row—Georgella Hefty, Jane Harveycutter, Villette Sullivan, Virginia Sellars and Shirley Mae Frazer. Take the case of Pitcher x ok kK It is a fairly well-established an otherwise s less effective by comparison. toted from the bench. * K Ok K As for the contention that the ame of many of its The fact 1s, however, that 1d. This was true of Ruth, gra.ctlcally o started er and eventually * % X X 1t .was shortly after Heydler lan. Bender’s comments made it plate and general The Heydler plan, of course, would make it optional with in- lay. Heydler’s merit resident plan a trial the national championships, or at some other time later in the season. Second only to Wide as an attraction at the meet is Percy Willlams of Can- ada, double winner in the Olympic games. The 19-year-old sprinting sen- sation will give handicaps up to two yards in a special 50-yard dash. In a 1,000-yard race, Ray Conger of Chicago, National 1,500-meter chame pion, will match strides with Phil Ed- wards, New York University ace; Jimmy Kennedy of Georgetown, who holds one decision over Edwards this year, and Sam Martin and Harold Cutbill of the Boston A. A, LOYOLA ELECTS GALLE. NEW ORLEANS, February 7 (#).— Clarence (Brute) Galle, big tackle, Hawkins NASH Still “conveniently located on 1l4th street” and the same set slogan of “Satisfaction Plus” from smiling sales and service men. 1529 14th St. N.W. Decatur 3320 ALEXANDRIA TEAMS OPEN COURT SERIES ALEXANDRIA, Va.,, February 7.— The first of a series of three games between the Hoffman Clothiers and Columbia Engine Company will be played tonight at 8:30 in Armory HRIL Hoffman Buddies and Lee-Jackson High School girls will meet in a pre- liminary at 7:30. St. Mary's Celtics have booked the Skinker Eagles of Washington for an appearance here March 2 in Armory Hall. The Celtics will play the Skinker Eagles in Washington Sunday in the first clash between the teams. Staunton Military Academy, coached by Frank Summers, former Alexandria High School and Virginia Military In- stitute star, will oppose Episcopal High School Saturday afternoon at 3:30, in Stewart Memorial gymnasium. . No. 5 Engine Company of the Alex- andria Fire Department will give a dance in Elks’ Hall tonight from 9 to 12 to raise funds to finance a base ball team. Hoffman Clothiers had little trouble downing Headquarters Battery of the 16th Field Artillery last night at Fort Myer, Va., 49 to 26. A benefit card party will be held in Lyceum Hall February 12 for the St. Mary’s Celtic Juniors’ basket ball team. {DRISSEL IS PICKED FOR TECH QUARTET Homer Drissel has been selected as the fourth member of the Tech High one-mile relay team that will compete next Tuesday in the Meadowbrook games in Philadelphia. Drissel will be the only newcomer on the combination, the other three, Capt. | Emerson Jack Edwards, Alfred Reichmann and Frank Nebel, having been members of last season's stellar quartet. What teams the Tech four will face have not been announced. . NORTHWESTERN TO TAKE LONG SWIMMING JAUNT CHICAGO, February 7 (#).—North- western University’s swimming team to-.| night starts its invasion of the West, where it will compete against eight uni- versity and athletic club teams. The team will cover 7,000 miles be- fore returning on February 23. Eight men are on the team. ‘The Oregon Aggies will furnish the first opposition at Corvallis, Oreg, February 11. COLLEGE BASKET BALL. Georgetown, 42; Gallaudet, 29. Fordham, 47; Catholic University, 20. Maryland, 30; V. M. I, 27. 4 sGmgetnwn Freshmen, 22; Tech High, Catholic University Freshmen, 26; Central High, 21. New York University, 33; Navy, 31 North Carolina Freshmen, 34; Wash- ington and Lee Freshmen, 30. Hampden-Sidney, 36; Bridgewater, 25, Duke, 44; South Carolina, 39. Dartmouth, 41; Columbia, 34. High Point College, 48; Medical Col- lege of Virginia, 30. Catawba College, 36; Guilford, 28. . alacnalr-l{hym, 36; Marshall College, Cornell, 40; Hobart, 15. Harvard, 33; Holy Cross, 25. Army, 43; St. Stephen’s, 29. Connecticut Aggies, 35; Providence College, 33. St. Joseph's College, 28; Penn Mili- tary Col 24, Dickinson, 34; Mount St. Mary’s, 2 FROZEN aw CRACKED AUTO ENGINES - Welded in the Car WELDIT CO. 1st and F Sts. N.W. THE ‘EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. €. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 17, -1929." nd Scholastic Basket Ball Teams to Be Busy Tomorrow FAIR REPRESENTATIVES OF WESTERN HIGH: SCHOOL ON RIFLE RANGE SCHOOLBOY QUINTS | IN SEVEN GLASHES Six of Games to Be Staged on Courts Here—Central Visits Portsmouth. EVEN games are booked for scholastic basket ball teams of the District group tomorrow, making it one of the biggest days of the campaign for the school- boys. Gonzaga defeated St. John's, 33 to 21, and Devitt overcame Emerson, 27 to 20, in Prep School League matches in the Boys' Club gym, that featured the scholastic floor card here yesterday. In other matches Central bowed to Catholic University Freshmen in a 26- 21 game played as a preliminary to the C. U.-Fordham game in the C. U. gym; Eastern defeated Alexandria High, 28 to 14, at Alexandria, and Tech Reserves scored over Woodward basketers, 43 to 19, in the Tech gym. In games here tomorrow afternoon Western will entertain Georgetown Prep in the Western gym, St. Alban’s will play host to Forest Park at St. Alban’s, Gonzaga and Eastern will face at Eastern, Hyattsville and Devitt will meet and Tech will engage University of Maryland Freshmen at College Park. ,Night matches here will find Emerson entertaining Staunton Military Acad- emy quint at 8:30 o'clock in the St. John's gym and Bliss playing host to Cresap’s Rifles of Frederick in the ar- mory at Silver Spring, Md. Central is to travel to Portsmouth, Va., to engage Portsmouth High. Two scholastic floor games were card- ed here today. Devitt lightweight team was to entertain St. Alban’s at Devitt and Georgetown Prep was to play host to Mount St. Mary’s Prep of Emmits- burg, Md., at Garrett Park. Just abdut all the games listed to- morrow_should provide keen competi- tlon. Western and Georgetown Prep, Gonzaga and Eastern and Tech and Maryland Freshmen probably will offer particularly lively matches. Emerson will be meeting Staunton tomorrow night for the second time this season, having defeated the Vir- ginia boys on a recent trip in Virginia. Calvin Robinson Griffith, adopted son of Clark C. Grifith, president of the Washington base ball team, is one of the Staunton dependables. bility to come from behind carried bOiAh G%nznga and Devitt to victory yesterday in their Prep School League matches with St. John's and Emerson, respectively. Gp:nzaga now is heading the league race with three wins against as many defeats. Devitt is second with two Victorious and one loss, followed by Emerson and St. John's, which have yet to win and have dropped one and three matches, respectively. Gonzaga was behind, 5 to 6, at the efd of the first period, but got its at- tack functioning in the second quarter and at the half was in the van, 19 to 9. Thereafter the Purple held a safe lead. Emerson was heading Devitt also by 6 to 5 at the end of the first period, but the latter came back to gain the edge at 18-12 at the half. Bussink and Pyne for Gonzaga and Schlegel for St. John's were top scorers in the first game of the double-header. Gleason led Devitt on attack with Gor- don proving most consistent for Emer- Scores @), t. Johns (21), Gonzaga (), St Johns (A1), 00 ¢ Gallagher, £. 1 0 2 3 0 6 Augustfef, .1 1 3 3 410 Bchlegel, ¢ 339 0 00 Morris, 35 0 0 0 Hudson, 0 2 2 3 6 Quigley, 00 Bussink, $ 34 ussink, S I Totals. 2 933 fPotals.....7 731 Referee—Mr. Fyfe, Devitt (21). Emerson (20). (232 G.F.P. Gleason, 39 Kennedy, £..2 0 4 Galotta, 1. 4 0 8 Davidson, f. 13 Bernard, 0 0 0 De Canio, f o0 Tangora, 10 2 Colley, c 18 Clarke, 3 2 8 Gordon, 38 8y, 00 Baker, 00 Totals.....11 537 Totals 20 Referee—Mr. J. Mitchell. SERIES STATISTICS. Team Standings. B N A Gonzaga 0 1.000 Devitt 1 et ‘1 000 3 000 SCORES OF GAMES. Gonzaga, 28: St. John's 17. Gonzaga, ‘26; Devitt, 3L Devitt, 23; St. John's, 1 Gonzaga, 33; Si. John's. Devitt, 37; Emerson, 20. Central High led Catholic University Freshmen by 7 points early in the second half when the scholastics lost Romig and Lampson by the foul route and the Cardinal Yearlings came with & rush to gain the lead. Tibbets and Cllelmom led the C. U. victory-producing rally. Cross, with 7 points, was the lead- ing scorer of the Central team, which gmwed unusual accuracy in foul shoot- g. Led by McCullough and Capelli, who scored 10 and 8 points, respectively, Eastern gained an early lead which it held in its game with Alexandria High. Ensor and Cassassa were big guns for Tech Reserves in that team’s easy win over Woodward. Groff was high scorer for the losers with 7 points. LEADS MISSOURI TEAM. COLUMBIA, Mo., February 7 (#).— Irving Epstein of Brooklyn, N. Y., has been elected captain of the 1929 track squad at University of Missouri. 9 15th. 14 Block Below Ave. TROUSERS To Match Your Odd Coats SPORTS.’ . 37 'HEN two undefeated teams clash a spirited battle may be expected. Such a meet- ing is scheduled for Silver Spring armory Sunday aft- ernocon, where Silver Spring Service Company basketers will make a stand against the unbeaten Jewish Community Center unlimiteds. Brook Grubb’s Service Company cagers have an unbroken run of nine victories while their rivals have not lost a game this season. Miami A. C. of Miami, Fla, holds a victory over Grubb’s team, but no local quint has turned the trick. Stanley, Passaic, Woodside A. C. and Blair Red flves are to engage local teams in preliminary contests. Anacostia Eagles, who are booked to battle Tremont’s in K. of C. gym to- night at 8 o'clock, are without a foe for tomorrow night due to cancellation of a game hooked with University A. C. Manager Bus Scanlon will make ar- rangements at his home to meet any fast unlimited team. Kennedy Red Stars, who last night downed Company C, D. C. N. G., 28 to 20, in Central High gym, have scratched the contest booked with Peck Memcrial tossers for tonight. Kennedy have list- ed Metropolitan Preps for Monday night in Central High gym at 7 o'clock. Y. M. C. A. and Woltz Photographer quints are listed to play a Wikhington City League game in ¥ Gym tonight, starting at 8:30 o'clock. United Typewriter Grays, formerly Washington ~Grays, are to battle Pet- worth Mets in a Washington City League game tomorrow night in Mac- Farland Junior High gym at 9 o'clock. Games and players are sought by Clark Griffith 100-pounders. A foe is sought for Saturday night at Macfar- land Junior High gym. Two_capable players are wanted. Call Manager Hunter at Adams 25 Saks Trojans will book 130-pound foes at Main 3050. Brentwood Hawks would like to hear from local unlimited teams at Hyattsville 1279. Newly or- hear from 145-pound foes at National 5670. Getting but two goals from scrim- mage, W. H. West Co. courtmen took a 5-to-17 setback from Skinker Eagles last night. Two victories were added to the Monroe A. C. string last night. gLionels took a 19-to-47 drubbing and K Mount Vernon Juniors bowed, 23 to 30. By defeating West Washington five last night, Kendall tossers tied with Second Baptist for the lead in B. Y. P. U. League. Kendalls ran up a 40- t0-22 count. Kreh and De Moll starred for their respective_teams, as Blair Reds spurted to down Remsens at Silver Spring last night, 23 to 22. In Boys Club League contests last night Gdod Shepherd cagers downed Colonials, 17 to 15; Corinthians Dunlop Balloon. EISEMAN'S, 7th & F Undefeated Quints to Battle In Silver Spring Game Sunday trounced Times B. C. 21 to 19, and Speakers won over Terrors, 19 to 13. Schuman and Lewis were prominent in J. C. C. Arrows’ twin victory yester- day. Griffiths bowed, 24 to 39, and Crescents lost, 15 to 23. Led by Mason, St. Paul's B. C. fivs won over Brookiand B. C. tossers in Central gym last night, 23 to 22 St. Stephen’s and Aztec Juniors won over Y. M. C. A. Juniors in a double bill last night. The former got a 21- to-17 verdict and Aztecs ran up a 48- to-32 advantage. After trouncing Capital A. C., 45 to 29, last night, Mardfeldts are seeking new fields to conquer. Call North 9563 for games. Lightning A. C. quint, which last night downed Moseans, 22 to 15, will clash with Fire Jacks tonight at 7 o'clock in Central gy n. Renroc Scholastics took another re- verse last night, bowing to American Expressmen, 20 to 18. With Archino, Young and Hurley scoring at will, Twin Oaks five routed McLean A. C, last night at McLean, Va., 54 to 31. W. Miller and Van Vleck scored enough points for St. Andrews to down St. Thomas last night, 21 to 14. Good team work cnabled Murdock to win over American A. C. last night, 19 to 12. % By downing Fort Washington last night, 27 to 17, Naval Airmen recorded their fifth straight win. Hadley Wonders were no match for Hyattsville Cards last night, taking a 54-to-14 drubbing. An_individual scoring duel between Sanders and C. Essex featured Tivoli Whirlwinds’ 29-t0-22 win over Metro- politan A. C. Lovechick accounted for 32 points last night as Army Headquarters' tossers ran rough-shod over Red Cross, 66 ganized Printers A. C. five wants to|to 23. Tionel A. C. has called off the game b(im}l::d with Crescent Juniors tomorrow night. CELTIC FIVE HERE SUNDAY. Bernie Peacock’s Skinker Eagles will entertain St. Mary's Celtics Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock in the main at- traction of ‘the usual Sabbath floor pro- gram at Congress Heights Auditorium. There will be a preliminary at 2 o’clock between teams to be announced. Your OLD HAT % MADE NEW Again \Cleaning, Blocking Remodeling by Ex Vienna Hat Co. 425 11th Street GRIP ON WET ROADS L A L SURE-FOOTED IN MUD AFETY? Yes! More than that, added mileage. More miles because the cleated treads are an addition to the regular long wearing Dunlop tread. These cleats grip and hold. They make driving safer. They mean extra wear, because beneath them is the long-wearing tread of a standard Come in and inspect these new UNLOP CLEATED TIRES They grip the road like a cleated shoe. See for yourself how they mean extra comfort, extra safety. LEETH BROS. 1220 13th St. N.W. . to 11 P.M,, Sunday 9 A.M. to 5 P.M. Open Daily 8 EASY PAYMENTS CLADLY ARRANCED Fr. 764

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