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4 THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. MAY 12.- 1929—~PART 5. Sandlot Nines Here to Have a Big Day: : Middleweight Fight Class Is Lagging I Here PlENW OF GAMES | OF NOTE ON CARD MINOR LEAGUE RESULTS SOUTHERN ASSOCIATION. b .3 1 (11 mnings). Tems l)ue for Iluch Action in Washmgton and on Nearby Fields. ANDLOT base ball teams here- about are looking to a big day -~ of the eity and on many di nearby Maryland and Virginia. Sandlotters are chafing under th: ys so nines will be hln in various son, y R‘M’m i treatment the weather man has beeu | giving' them so far, contests having been halted by adverse weather th: past three Sabbaths. Bill ‘Jenkins'’ Washington Red Sox, ‘who Chevy Chase Grays, 6 to 0, yesterday, will meet Seat Pleasant. Md., tossers on the latter's field at 3 Jenkins led his team at bat | yesterday, coming through with four hits in as many t At Wheaton, Md., P‘!Sfll‘lhlp A. C. | and the Kensington Firemen will bat- tle at 3 o'clock. Skinner and Burdetis will form the battery for the PFriend- ship team, which is to gather at Wis- consin avenue and Grand road at 1:30 o'clock. ‘Washington Red Birds will meet Ana- costia Eagles on the Anacostia fleld at 3 o'cloc! Bird players are to t repor at 1406 B street northeast at 1 o'cloek. | Willle Andrews will take his National Circles to Martinsburg, W. Va. for a | game with a leading nine there, He| il pick his startng pitcher from Foley, Manj and Batson, while Ed- | inger and Christian will do the receiv- | ing. Circle players are to report at 8 o'clock this morning. Circies alzo have booked games with teams at Hagerstown. Williamsport. Fernwood. Berwyn, Indian Head. B:y- antown, Lanham, Rockville, Leesl Richmond, Warrenton and Lancaster. Avenue Valet Shop and Army Head- | quarters meet on the West Ellipse dia- | mond. this morning at 11 o'clock. | | Vie's swrt Shop op Juniors and Mary- k Juniors :ut at noon on the between Moose lnd St. Peter’s nines at | 1 o'clock on Fairlawn field. Langley Juniors, s, who are mmmx in | the Capital City League, l!‘ Lionels oh the North A senior class game has been carded | | at 3 o'clock on Monument diamond No. 7. Players who have failed to sign | at 2:15 o'clock | St Foxhall dia- m:nuwmmdn J. the measure of mmtmt yesterday on the | Connecticut Cll‘d\nlls squeezed out a 13-11 victory over Johnson’s Insects yesterday. At Cabin John, Md., the Junior Order nlneo!thltphcewlll play host to| Plansky A. C. at 3 o' 3 o'clock. ‘Triangle A< C. nh!!!l Fifteenth and ts northeast at 12:30- o'clock iol tlalr double header 'thnhnnch on the Bladensburg, Ml‘ltoodflx A. C. will visit Scaggsville, Md., this afternoon to engage the team there in a double header. Donald Tracey, new Monroe manager, wants his players to meet at Seventeenth and Honr:e streets northeast at 11:30| o'clocl Monroe A. rwood A. C. and Bolling Field nines will meet at Bolling Field at 2:30 o'clock. Next Sunday Isherwoods will meet Mount Rainier on the latter's fleld. Del Ray. Va.,, A. C. will entertain Pet- | worth Yorkes at 3 o'clock on Edward Duncan Field at_Potomac. Phoenix A. C. fossers will meet Fern- wood A. C. in Baltimore and Phoenix pl.lfiu re to gather at their clubhouse | at m. CARDS DOWN ROBINS AS LATE RALLY FAILS, By the Associated Press BROOKLYN, May 11.—A ninth- inning rally bv lhe Robins petered out one run shy today, and the Cardinals won their second straight vietory in Flatbush, the fifth successive defeat for the lut -place flock. The score Wwas 3to2 After Brooklyn had scored twice in the final round, Haines ended the nm, with the tieing run on third, by fan- ning Rhiel and Bissonette, the latter pinéh batsmen. 8t. Louis. ABHOA, Deuthit.c Hieh rmsaoemms? Heaines.p Totels... 31 +Batted for Henline in ninth inning ®. Louis... Brookiyn. Batted in—Frisch. Frederick. Tuwo-base Sacrifice—Prederick. Snd Herman. Delker end Bot uis. ‘Brookly ‘ by Clark, 7. Umipres— Ftesers. McCormick, .Prman and Reardon. Time of game—} hour and 32 minutess If the weather is favor- | i are to repart | Barrett 1| second with 32%; . 12-2 Macon. 6-2:" Au; T | A Spartanburg, 71-3; Greenville, 3-2. SOU" TllIlw uwcuflow EASTERN I:z.mu. Hartford. 3: Bridgeport, }. seld, 4. 3, 8 Allentown. 5. SOUTHERN LEAGUE. Pensacola. & Columbus. 1. ‘ampa, 1. Selm: | JaR o e Montaomery, rain PIEDMONT LEAGUE. Durham. 4-1; Winsten, 0-3. High Point, 10-10; Henderson. 2-8. Greensboro, 3-1; Selisbury, 2-8. WESTERN LEAGUE. Omaha. 2: Wichita. Des Moines, 6; Oklahoma City, 2. Other games postponcd, n. TEXAS LEAGUI Dallas. 6: Shreveport, 4 §en Anionio. 7: Beatmont, 3. Waco, 4: Hous | ForiwWorthe 1 SWihita Falls, 5. PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE. Los Angeles. 7: Qakland. 3; Hol San Francisco, 13 Missions, 14; Sac AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. St Paul o: Indisnapolis, 4, Waukee 6 BENTON GIVES UBS FIRST SHUTOUT, 60 Carlson Is V|ct|m of Terry’s Circuit Drive, With Men on Sacks. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, May 11.—Larry Benton and Bill Terry ed forces at the Polo Grounds today to turn back the | Cubs by 6 to Obelmeffimhnsinlhe‘ seeond game of the series, which ¢ became even. iton doled out .hut‘ two hits to McCarthy’s murderers and | Terry capped a busy afterneon by hit- fim; a home run in the eighth with the bases filled. Hal Carlson. who relieved Sheriff Blake, was the vietim. | The Giants got after Blake for two | runs in the first round when Ten'Ys( single drove one mn home,. and this deficit caused Sheriff to step down for a pinch batsman in the elghm ‘Terry's big blow off Carison then placed the game bevond any Cub threat. This was the first ah\l'nut for the Mccnrthy clan and, the first o0 5 o > eoroacor s suuosy @amrSron PRSP Orrm S I apiesmssansl | 2413 Totals . *Batted for Biake in eighth innins. ""‘“%‘L- mbhh) mmh'l!a.vun et nin” Time . of Game -l d M 45 minutes. RED SOX BIG INNING BEY the Assaciated Press. ST. LOUTS, May 11.—The Boston Red Sox bunched four doubles with three bases on balls to score an 8-to-2 victory over the St. Louis Browns today and | even the series. e Boston rally was staged in the (ounh inning and it netted six runs | and sent Alvin Crowder to the showers. | Ed Morris, Boston pitching ace, held | '.he Browns to four scattered hits. on. (ABHOA Rothrockct 3 Rbyne.ss. . oussunsSuy 5 3 . 2 2 3 POVOIRBOT S nao3080 Bl sssrannusnussss? ( Totals:...32 93114 tted for Melillo in b for Blaeh ll seventh. | Etm for Ceflm:n'; ainih: s A =1 i ‘z ‘!Iu Errol batte an 3. cfim . Heving. (3: rre ‘wo-base hits—] < tevine. Rayme. Searrict, Bacrifces— Double Dlay—Kress 1o on I balle_Off Morgls, T: 5: ,off Blasholder. “ ck t—By Morris. 3; by Blsehol : -‘.’h ’ ‘Il "- Ifllll P ' \nnings. Losing -u'c'% Um !”—m "Qlll'l ofi Sowaer. Crow nolly snd | 19our"and 58 minu : TOPPING OF LOYOLA TIES {WORLD RECORD FOR “100” NEW ORLEANS, La., May 11 (®).— A new record of 9 3-5 'seconds was set. in the 100-yard dash at the annual \!rlck and fleld senior championships !of the Southern Association Amateur AAlhlehc Union here today by E. Topping of Loyola, New Orleans. It tied | the world record. Topping was backed by a mild wind and there was doubt whether the time would be recognized because only two of the stop watches registered the three-fifths fraction. The meet was held in the rain, which made the track slow and c: post- ponement of several of the field events until tomorrow. Toppino also captured the 220-yard dash in 21 ¢-5 seconds, two-fifths over the senior regional record. |W. & M. STARS BREAK ! SIX CONFERENCE MARKS WILLIAMSBURG, Va., May 11 (). —Six Virginia Conlerence records were | smashed by the track stars of William and Mary this afternoon in winning by vietory | st. Mary’s Celtics at 3 o'clock in Bag-' BEATS BROWNS, 8-2“’ | Herndon, Avers, Scott, Light. Heberlig, AT MOUNT RAINIER " nior Order Visiting Bal Club—Double-header On at Bladensburg. YATTSVILLE, ld May 11— the Junior Order nine of Ca | Heights. Play will start st 3 o'clock. or Waters will hurl for ml Rainier, with Gates or Hutchinson pitching for the visitors. A double-header has been arranged | for tomarrow afternoon at 1:30 o'clock | on the Bladensburg between Johnny A. ©. and Triangle A. C. The first game will start at 1:30 o'clack. Anderson and Gasch will pitch for !h‘ | Johnny team. Bill Walton's Piercs A. . nine will | travel to Alexandria, Va., temorrow to cross bats with Columbia Engine Co. tossers. - Plerce players are asked to meet Walton at 15 Meple avenue at | 12:30 o'clock. | Arrangements for the play-off nmun Hyattsville, Upper Mariboro and La nines, which are tied for first plu.-e m \ the race for the Prince Georges Cou ngh School base hall chlmphmhlp | probably will be made early next week. ‘ Lanham's nine will play host lc‘ Liberty A. C. of Washin; on the Lanham diamond at 3 o'clock. ‘ lD{t:rilsPP"gi:n.lmn victor in | of the ice Georges County Duckpin | Association, defeated the Mount Rainier | Recreation’ team. pennant winner in | the Mount Rainier kpin League, by |120 pins in the first five games of & | 10-game series last night on the Arcade alleys here. Dixie Pigs totaled 2,860 pins to 2,780 for Mount Rainier. The final five games wil be rolled next| Friday night at Hyattsville. [ Brentwood Mawks and Maryland A. ©. nines will meet tomorrow llmr-‘ noon at Marylnnd Park at 3 o'clock. Henry Hiser's Hyaltsville All-Stars | Wil eniertain Union Printers tomorra w | fternoon at 3 o'clock at Riverdale Park. 1t Will b the fourth Sunday the All- | Stars have scheduled their openlng game. Rain has halted activities other three times. ST. MARY’S CELTICS HAVE A TOUGH FOE e | | ALEXANDRIA, Va, May 11—Tke Kelley's Bethlehem Steel Corporation | nine, ene of Baltimare's best semi-pro- fessional teams, will appear in the fea- ture game here tomorrow, meeting the gett's Park. Columbia Engine Com) and the Plerce A. C. of Hyltf:vml';y Md., are listed for a combat on Haydon Field tomorrow at 3 o'clock. Del Ray A. C. and the Petworth A. C. 3 o'clock on Edward Duncan Field. Ol.ndflb for the Sare| , No. wd:ut Ml' Odd t tamorrow m xn(nl uuomuouu«um Alell.ldfllmdw h Schools will ules to a close in ':‘w High leh’ul "fl" Club games in Emory Wilson Stadium at Washington, Saturday. Clover A. C. will open its season to- MOrTow, op{cnn( the North Capitol Savings Bank in a game at Washington. and the Jef- No. 5 Engine ferson District qfi.:mn’wment will clash tomorrow at 3 o'clock at Virginia ighlands. Episcopal High School's base ball | | team will play tvm emes_next week, " | meeting Central th, n, ‘Tuesday. and Wood rest, Satur- day. ;:Lh games will be played on Hox- ton Episcopal racket weilders will e Gl here Saturday. An 18-hole putting tournament will | be staged at the Belle Haven Country Club next s-wruy at 1:30. Virginia Public “Berviee Co. has the following players: Capt. Eddie rett, Brenner, Kidwell, Sweets mmfl efl . Patton, Nowland and | 8| Suthard. The newly organized vxmnp\:u: C. open mon ::mow at 3 ‘L&’“‘ on the lou‘t'lilmmnl Street diamo & game Tremont A. C. of Wuhnmn 8t Mary's Juniors will make their debut tomorrow at 1:30 on "ll Boudl Royal Street diamond, opposing the lonfal Juniors. Fletcher, White Sox defeated Times-Herald | Station No. 15, of this city, 11 to 5, to- | day. Duke Street Yankees nosed out the National Pee Wees by a 1-to-0 count. 60 STATIONS TO TELL OF KENTUCKY DERBY | Br the Associated Press. LOUISVILLE, Ky, May 11.—Sixty SEASON TO START Section | 4 of Washington will play tomorrow at | Prin radio stations in the country will broad- cast the full progun of the fAfty-Afth | renewal of the Kentucky Derby here | Saturday, May 18, it has been an- nounced. | Porty-five stations associated with | the National Broadeasting Co. and 11| units of the Columbia Bromeutm Co. | will handle the Derby program. Four | muiellwmu stations will be on the | hooku) 'nuau;h its_main tnrummfl, WGY, L Schenectady, N. Y., will the | race and also will use its zwo luuom | W2XAF and W2XAD, to rebrosdcast event to South Americs, mth Africa and Australia through short-wave ummmm to WHAS, WOY mc! atd stations listed in- Tisde WEAP Wiz, WhEL, WTIC, WIkR, "WTAG, 'WOSH, WFI, WRC, WOR, wcuP WTAM, KED, ug‘lv%v, , Louisville, nd KOMO, KHQ- SKL, WKY, WSMB, WAPIL Other units of both the CBO lnd NBC are expected to be included hzlore the classic be(ln la decisive score the second annual | conference track meet. | The Indians scored 82'; points, while University of Richmond wus a distant Hampden | Sidney was third wil 24'/. points and | Lynchburg College was fourth with 12 | points. Roanoke College, the fifth en- J!ry falled to place 1n a single event, DAVIS CUP STARS EVEN. | PHILADELPHIA, May 11 (#).—John Hennessey, No. ¢ in national tennis| ranking, and John Van Rynm, No. 6,/ desa their n.vu Cup workouts to- dly. the first set, 6—0, and Vlu l!yn uk!nl the second, 16— COLLEGE BASE BALL. Holy Oress, 13; Yale, 5. Cornell, 5; Princeton, 4. Ohio State, 3; Purdue, 1. Drexel, 6; Willlam and Mary, §. Penn State, 10; Navy, 4. Swarthmore, 5; Army, 4 (10 innings). Dartmouth, 4; Columbia, 1. Chicago, 4; Indiana, 3 (5 innings, rain). Notre Dame, 11: Northwestern, 5. Michigan, 5; Illinois, 1. Dartmouth, 4; Columbia, 1 Harvard, 7; Princeton, 3. N. Y. U., 5 Haverford, 4. Fordham, 6: St. Bonaventure, 1. Colgate, 4; Syracuse, 3. Providence, 5; Brown, 4. Stevens, 4; Rutgers, 2. Temple, 16; Dickinson, 4. Rensselaer, 8; Pratt, 7. C. C. N. Y., 16;: Manhattan, 4. Vermont, 8; Willlams, 4. Lafayette, 7: Lehigh, 2. Bates, 12; Bowdoln, 10. St. Lawrence, 1: Unien, 0. Springfield, 8; Besten U., 6. Q\mn[lco 12; West Vlnlnll, 4. COLLEGE LACROSSE Maryland, 6; Arm; Navy Plebes, 8; ulryllnd Presh- men, 0. St. John's, 16; Randolph-Macon, 1 Navy, 7: Penn State, 4. ;1‘; ;vmhmx. 1 te, 3. City College, 0. Guarthmare, 3. Harvard, 0. -» COLLEGE THACK Georgetown, 68; Navy, 58. Georgetown Preshmen, 71; Plebes, 46. Maryland, 75% ; Hopklm, 505 Michigan, Washington and Lee, 78; Duil‘ Indiana, 78%; Chicago, 67ls; Pur- due, 24¢ Notre Dllfi. 84!5; Michigan State, 12 Xlllnais. 77, Iows, 58. Army, 82l; New York University, | 801,; Haverford, 11. C-lgolic University, 84; Gallau- Virginis, 57. 35 hwel Col St. Stephens, Lehigh, 4; Syracuse, Navy VIRGINlA TRACKMEN BOW TO PRINCETON CHARLOTTESVILLE, Princeton’s track team came frem hind and won all places in two :Iuln events to overcome a lead and defeal | Virginia 69 to 57 today. A clean sweep in !he half mile, the | final track event, put the Tigers in | front for the first time and victory was clinched in the pole vault. Capt. Flippin of V\rllnh was high scorer with 14 points. He won both hurdles, placed seeond in the broad jump ant lhtrd in the century dash. Frank er of Cavaliers was on)y one point behind, wlnn\u the fur- long and the broad jump and placing second in the shorter dash. Cavallers and Tigers were tied 18 points all at the end of the Mt four events. Then a clean sweep the discus threw and two out of three places in the javelin, shot put. broad jump and furlong dash sent Virginia into the lead. Pine performances by Hedges of ceton in high jump and pole vsult aided in bflnflng victory. Summaries. 100-yard dnh—won by Thompson, Wlnlf, Virginia; Time, 10 2-5. Won by FIi , Prince- Time, lenhnu Virginia. ] 229-; rd high hurdlu—'nn by Flip- &:, Vrflnh second, Lincoln, Prince- hird, Wissiger, Princeton. Time, run—Won, by 8 Vi |25 fllt, ‘Two-mile . Princeton; second, Knight, n.h;r’d. “Huu:henn. Virginia. ginia; second, Thompson, Princeton Beasley, V! tnh Time, 22 2 ufl-y-rd Tun—Won by _Garland, Princeton; second, Gore, ceton ; third, McConnell, Princeton. Time, 2:1 8-5. Javelin throw—Won by n; second, Paxton, Virginia, yminer, Virginia. Distance, 181 !m § inches. Discus thxow—Wun by Motley, Vir- | second, Paxton, is: third, | Vlr‘inil. Distance, 127 feet 52 shoz ut—Won by Dar, second, an% Virginia: nnru, | Princeton, tance, 41 feet 213 inches. Broad jllmdp;“Wanm b{lu"l‘lgln‘fl, Vh‘- ia; second, P! "g\n:y, T Thistanee, 33 fect | 2%; inghes. High jump—Won by Hi wn‘:eon tie between Weebon, Vir- { d Hitehcock, Princeton. Height, leet lh inches. t—Tie between Hedges and | xul, Pflmwn ‘ihird, Flowers, Prince- | ton. Height, 1 lflt HYATTSVILLE IS VICTOR ia; S )llyll—‘ ANDERSON SHOWS ~ CARDINALS REPEAT SKILL WITH []ISBUS DEFEAT OF G.W. 1. ‘Cornolloan May Check Coast Eight Records Are Broken in Athletes, Who Have Been | Interschelastic Competition Making a Sweep. at Brookland. By the Associated Press. (Continued From First Page.) P John Anderson, the big Cornell NP P S foot ball and track star, continues the sensational development he has shown so far in discus throw- ing, the East may yet check the Far Western rush that has given it a clean sweep in this event ever since it bovume a part of the intercollegiate “n . A. championship program in Anderson threw the platter 150 feet 3 inches, to break the Penn relay rec- | ¢ ord; a week later, at the Ohio relavs, D CSreiNT DI “ registered 157 feet 5% inches, for anoth- k SATHOLIC RIGH er meet record. This mark is only a half ‘"‘g‘",‘,,’_,?l“m, (L L (L foot short of the world listed record nd. St Jam and represents the best performance | 5t T m Sny Sesiesp ollagy siax ever s WImail| meac dmL"m Sl record, '3 minutes 284 | n. | seconds) | Eric Krens, the Stanford ace, may | ,,BROAD JUMP Wen by Fetro find Anderson his chief stumbling 3 block to retaining the I. C. A. A. A. A. | discus title which he won last year at | with a new meel record | 154 feet 11 inches. This| g Krenz has eclipsed the world | record with & remarkable toss of 163 feet, 83, inches, but at Presno, later, Eric was unable to do better than 148 (';l"b losing to Corson of the Olympic | Old record, § ul { ihens 12 the presnt roreentaie |00 4% BAEF G .G*;;»gy.l'fh-:.‘a of the unbroken line of Pacific Coast 2 en (Catholic U.). ‘Time, 53 fia %fi'::-n??.::g Bm ;" b!rin(' gl;’l;" ‘ ge:nfl.l‘\al:l‘ college record. Old record, | man_of - ford, Bud Houser of Southern Cnlflomm | and Bl Neufeld of California. 'TRIPLE TIE RECORDED IN CHEVY CHASE GOLF ‘The prize in the Chevy Chase Club sweepsiakes golf yesterdsy was split | by three players, who entered a tie for | first place. G. B. Bherwood, with & 6 handicap, | shot an 80. J. Richards, with a 10| handicap, had a round of 84, and T. Y. it Milburn, with 88 for the 18 holes and | fR4erson "~ a 14 handicap, equaled the mark. wm“ TWO-MI! three vrl-: offered in the event, the | W, “C,‘m - three winners split thfl re‘/lrds evenly. | MAX SCHMELING SIGNS TO BOX PAULINO JUNE 27| MONTREAL, Quebec, May 11 (®).— Max Schmeling, German heavyweight, } | signed articles today for his June 27 match with Paulino Uzcudun on_the milk fund eard at the New York Yankee Stadium. ‘The boxer arrived here from Germany | yesterday for a conference with Madi- | | son Square Garden officials. He will | recelve 20 per cent of the gate re- ceipts. rm-‘ meet record) Ol record, 132 feet 7 LE VAULT Won by Cowan (La Salle | Mliltary Aeademyry 36 oot 3 Tnenes. second. tle between Burt ahd McEadden (West cam- Teet 6 inches (Burt won on Cwer Catholicr, 10 xm Old 1record, 10 feet '$—Won by Petrosei (La cadems); a echnd. Peol " (tount B Becker (La Salle. Phila- [ A0 Lo eot. "(New meet ELAY RGO on by | oy. Sall cond‘ (Finnegan nng won Tecord. Old | ) feet 3 inches) P UMP-Tie beiween Camphell (West | cu holic) and Ricketis (81 ). 5 feet Campoeil won ‘an- o 0f Soin; e (Hent . Catholle) % Feer o1 ; fourth, Connolly (La Salle, Cumber- | 5 feet’d inches (New meet record. et ;, TRershes An (G sectnds (New record, 4 min- c. U): cGuigan oe “rime, 4 minutes 348 stadium collzu record. ola i |l £50° fon by L!onh oy W.): second. )i lhllfl “tlfifll‘. ' (C. Ui Dis: ll;l;: 195 reet (G W, MeGrath od (G. 5 il Won by Che ® panman (G, W) o, Time 10 misutcs ;f;‘_ ! Gerth u: b): second, Zeno (€ u), mm’ ond,, ¢ T secon b RUN=Won by second, Mamilton (C. U.); mlm. Yickey & ) e 3 minyies 5t seconds. BRO: —Won by (c. 1) sosond. Champa (C. b)Y iird, Robertson i ). Distance. 10 feet 11's inches. i 3O Wen by Krick o, U nd. . Matey Che ©. "o, feient,'s sec- tied. inches.” ELEVENV P. |. RECORDS BLACKSBURG, Va., May 11 (®).— | Eleven track and fleld records of Vir- ginia Polytechnic Institute were shat- | tered today as the track men of V. P. 1. nosed out a 64!5-to-61'; over Virginia Military Institute. Linbrook, middle distance star of V. P. I, won the meet in the final event, the half mile, by h!nlkmf the a stride ahead of Mitchell, in & new V. P. 1. record time M .|. [CHISOX FARM SWANSON TO INDIANAPOLIS TEAM CHICAGO, May 11 (#).—Karl Swan- | son, an infielder, has been released on | ‘l" option by the White Sox to the Indian- | apol!s club of the American Associa- | tion. Swanson's release reduced the | e Box roster to 27—iwe more than the' Fred Hyde, Minnesota, and Robert | | number permitted after June 15. Hickman, Illinois, two Big Ten foot ball Swanson was obtained from Moline | pieyers, xuve been elected to Rhodes of the Mississippi Valley League. scholarsl IN CHUHCH LEAGUE GAME» TTSVILLE, Md, Mu 'h-l cuy mny Bchool League filfi’-f“mm Laurel, 23 scored nver Century | Laurel, 10 to 5. Wonder what Mertz will say today: At the Sign of the Moon The Tailoring You Want At the Price You Want It. fits right and flmm lesting Merta tailo: Jooks right an satisfaction. ALL PATTERNS ALL WEAVES ALL COLORS Including Blue Serge SUITINGS $27.50 Can’t Duplicate Under $40 'nunr-nm by flcntrl nnfl ul.m MERTZ & MERTZ 405 11th St. NW. H. J. Froehlich nmmt de- orski (La Salle, Phila- | YARD | HIGH = HUBDLES won by. | d. Zeno (C. v,hlnl‘n victory | [McCARTHY IS DEFEATED | AS HILLTOP TEAM WINS ( NEW HAVEN, May 11 (®.— Princeton defeated Holy Cross, 9 to 0, and Harvard, 7% to 115, to lead the Intercollegiate League golf teams competing at the Yale course today. Princeton’s two victories and no defeats was the best showing made today in the four matches played. Pennsylvania won one | match, defeating Holy Cross, 7 to 2, | and Georgetown did likewise, down- ing Harvard. 6'2 to !3. Every team | entered in the competition won at least one match with the exception | of Holy Cross, which lost four,‘two | yesterday and two today. | ‘Three nationally known amateur golf stars came together todsy when George Dunlap of Princeton met | and defeated Maurice McCarthy of Georgetown, and Phil Finley of Harvard, both 1 up. By the Associated Press. NOTHING IN SIGHT -~ TOSTIR INTEREST Walker’s Idleness Is Mainly Responsible for Poor State of Affairs. | | | | | BY JOHN J. ROMANO. HE middleweight class is devoid of interest for the very resson that no matches gre in the restore the con- leader of i.ln cll.su 15 lflllln‘ time 'hlle his | manager, Jack Kearns, is trying to | get all the money he can for a pm- posed contest with Ace Hudkins. One cannot very well blame Kearns, who is & business man first and last. He wants to make sure Mickey is well pro- vided for before he enters the ring s SECOND HOCKEY TEAM, IN CHICAGO PLANNED| | CHICAGO, May 11.—Hockey will be |and if & promoter | played at Chicago Stadium next season, | t:; l:ull:lol: he will cx‘::?. fi .pl:ay'nll | in spite of the refusal of the National | | Hockey League to grant a second fran- | | % Paddy Harmon, | tadium Corporation, | o chise for Chicago, \presldenl of the said today. Harmon’s petition for a second fran- chise here was turned down at the Na- ional Hockey League Spring meeting | |at Toronto today, when Maj. Fudencw | McLaughlin, president of the Chicago | 1 t | Black Hawks, refused his consent. Harmon said he was considering two One was the organization of | !a eity league, and the other, participa- tion in the organization of a new loop | which would include Windsor and the | the | | Canadian Pro_League last season, and | | teams from Buffalo, Cleveland, Cin- He said the Stadium Corporation has under' con- tract enough material for four teams. | | plans. Detroit Olympics, members of cinnati and Chicago. 'nouns SIGNED TO MEET b BERNARD FRIDAY NIGHT UP) .- —Andre | Routis, world featherweight champion, | as signed to meet Roger Ber- o-mund CHICAGO, May 11 d, Flint, Mich., in the main event st Olympia Arena, Detroit, Fride: night. They and Routis’ title will not be at stake. clrd at 133 pounds. TREASURY PLAYS AGGIES ‘Treasury will meet Agriculture in tomorrow afternoon on the West BEATEN IN DUAL MEET ide. | conclusions in R Government game on the North Ellipse. Al contests will nhrt at 5:15 o'clock. TWO TECH RUNNERS WIN PRINCETO! Reichman and Capt. Jack Edwards g:smxuwn Tech High tri today. Rel | minutes, 2 7-10 b svecey 'a:lund the 440 in 40 9-10 y were the only 'beh entrants. will meet at 130 pounal Stanislaus Loayza, Chile, and Johnny Q'keefe, Columbus, Ohio. were signed 10-round semi wind-up on the | IN DEPARTMENT TILT - Deparimental Base Ball League gume IN MEET AT PRINCETON N, N. 3. May 11 —Albert e MM o ichman won the 880-yard run in 2 econds, and Edwards seconds. Tom Kennedy stirred no_little fuss when he tried to place Las Vegas, Nevada, on the map with a 20-round ttle between the pair of game cocks. | Bo far nothing has come olll. of it | hen there is Harry Pollock, publieity man extra for Jim Coffroth et the Tia Juana race track, who wants the pair for s 45-round battle below the Mexican border line. Hlldlilu ll willing, but Kearns wants the placed on the line before hl tll.kl business. Ren: Devos, the Belgian Pox, is making a trip to the old folks back home before he returns to the wars and George Courtney, having despair- ed of ever getting a titular fight, has transferred his activities to tl higher class. Joe Anderson has not been going |so well after a good start. | Rosenbloom has deserted the | pounders and is now umm | with better success among the light- i heavies. And so it goes. Theclmhl!l sumwl and thnle who lnohd for- | ward to s ong the once popular mldalnel;hc c|lll are marking time until some promoter comes and makes it wrth while for the top-notchers to come out of their safety-first shells. New York fans will get & to witness the effect of @ trip-] lon'a bum-saw when and Louis Kid Kapla: i *' CENTRAL DEFEATS TECH EASILY IN GOLF BATTLE CUsnS MilpgsT ¥\ LLER Imported cigars are luscious— but smokers can get import flavor and fragrance outside costly brands in Robt. Burns Perfecto Grandes. Test them by taste, and know the ingratiating mildness and matchless mellowness of their pedigreed Havana Filler. Double up on smoking enjoymeut with a pair of Perfecto Grandes. . Burns et ".I"UNE IN WirH THE ROBT. BURNS PANATELA PAGEANT EVERY MONDAY EVENING, 9:00-9:30 P.M,, STATION WMAL