Evening Star Newspaper, January 6, 1930, Page 28

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VOIGT HELD SURE TOG0-T0 ENGLAND Johnston, Von Elm, Ouimet and Sweetser Also to Make Journey. BY FRANCIS J. POWERS. the quadrennial invasion of Great Britain by the American be one of the important matters for the United States Golf Association te con- HICAGO, January 6.—Plans for C Walker Cup team in May will sider at its annual meeting next Satur- day. It 1s a foregone conclusion that Bobby Jones again will be named captain of the United States squad, but there likely will be some chiange in the personnel of | the 1930 team from the squad that so| d!clalvely defeated the British at the ‘hicago Golf Club two years ago. The customary method of selecting | the Walker Cup team is for the U. S. G. A, first, to circularize some 20 of the | country’s leading amateurs to learn if | they will be available for the matches. | From the group whose responses are favorable the committee then selects a squad of 10 players. Among those whom Capt. Jones most | likely will circularize are Jesse Sweet- ser, Francis Ouimet, George Von Elm, Harrison Johnston, Roland MacKenzie, Watts Gunn, Bugene Homnm Maurice McCarthy, Chandler Egan, O. F. Willing, Don Moe, Frank Dulp “Phillips Findlay, John Dawson, Dave Martin, Eddie Held and several others. Chick Evans’ Decline. ‘That group includes all of the 1928 team with the exception of Chick Evans, whose decline as a golfer during the last two Summers rather automatically drops him from consideration as a team member. Chick was the only member of the 1928 team to lose his match to a Briton, although he played mighty fine golf against Bill Torrance. | Francis Ouimet and Jess Sweetser, | who have played in every Walker Cup match since the international event was started in 1922, again will be members. Ouimet and Sweetser are in| Ol greatly improved physical condition and certain to play their usual fine ‘oll against the British. Sweetser is ularly keen to make the trip, ce lt would give him another chance at the British amateur championship, which he won in 1926, | Harrison Johnston, the amateur | champion, of course is a certainty for the team and so is George Von Elm. Both Johnston and Von Elm are vet-| erans in international ml'.ch!s and with | | Jones, Ouimet and Sweetser give the SCHOLASTIC SPORTS PROGRAM FOR WEEK Basket Ball Today. Potomac Boat Club vs. Eastern, at Eastern, 3:30 o'clock. ‘Tomorrow. Cent,#1 vs. Eastern, Tech vs. Busi- school e ness public high m‘% ¥p series games), Tech fy\n. game, Central vs. mm. 130 odnk. ‘Western vs. oeor(e Wake Forest game) om. Woodward vs. Landon, owz‘m Strayer vs. Predericksburg ‘Woodward Junl.orl V8. !wekvme High, Central Y. M. C. A. ‘Wednesday. Business vs. Gonaaga, at Eastern vs. Catholic_ Ui iversity men (pnhmlnlry to Vlnlta -Mount SL Mary’s game). Hyattsville Hhh vs. Cllon.!"llle High, at Catonsville, Md. (both boy and girl teams play). ‘Thursday. Strayer vs. Eastern, at Eastern. Central vs. University of Maryland | Preshmen. at College Park. 'oodward Juniors vs. St. Alban’s Ll(htweuhu at St. Alban. Ben Franklin vs. Emerson. Friday. Central vs. Business, Eastern vs. West- | ern (public high school | series games), Tech gym. First game, Central vs. Business, 3:30 o'clock. Tech vs. Catholic Unlvenlty Fresh- men (preliminary to ¢ the C. arsity- Villanova game), YS& Alban vs. Woodnrd, at Central . M. C. A. Devitt vs. Hyattsville High, at Hyatts- ville Armory. Emerson vs. St. John's College Junior Varsity, at Annapolis. Landon vs. Charlotte Hall Military Academy, at Charlotte Hall. Saturday. George wuhlncton PFresh- men wreumlnn to ‘W. Varsity- Villanova game), G. gym ‘Woodward vs. Alennarh High, at Alexandria Armory, 8 Central vs. Maury m(h at Nor- folk, Va. “snnemn vs. Navy Plebes, at Annap- Strayer vs. Bliss, at Silver Spring Ar- ory. Swimming. Friday. Central vs. Baltimore Poly, at Central. KIRKWOOD. DUTRA THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, MONDAY, JANUARY 0 6, 1930. SPORTS. ies Cynics in Buying Jolley JOHNSTON, GOLF CHAMP, KEEPS FIT BY BOXING| By the Associated Press. ‘When the Winter's blasts keep Har- rison R. Johnston of St. Paul away tmm the golf links, on which he is na- amateur champion, he takes to boxlng and hmd ball to keep in trim. Johnston is more than a novice at the leather-pushing as he trained sev- eral years under Tommy Gibbons, a fellow townsman. GOOCH AND BOLTON SENT T0L0OKOUTS Infielder Is Sold Outright, but Nats Keep String on Young Catcher. RESIDENT Clark Grifith of the ‘Washington base ball club today cut his squad of players to 30 with the release to the Chat- tanooga club of the Southern Asso” .« tion of Chs- Gooc h. inflen.cs, and Bolton, Geoch d to the Lookouts outright, but Bolton was sent to them under ceived for uooch' contract was not - regard- rley Gooch. ed as nn gxcel!:éfl. y ‘Washington presldan{ eom(den it better to have the yu\lnlsler see active service with a minor club for another season rather than warm the bench as_a member of the muonu- Bolton, in his twenty-seco: year, was bought from High Point ol the Piedmont League by Washington in 1928 and was farmed m New Haven of the Eastern League after reporting late at the training camp ll.lt Sp#ing. He hit above 400 In the Pledmont League and did well at bat in the East- ll'n League unm he suffered a broken rm during & game. He fully recov- ered from the injury before !.he season ended, however, and again showed good form in attack. Gooch, who h 24 years old, was drafted by the unnul from Little Rock at the end of the 1 SCOUTS PASSED UP FRISGO GARDENER Ivory Hunters Overlooked Him While Doting Over Averill and Johnson, BY GEORGE MORIARTY, Big League Umpire, ONIE BUSH, new manager ol the Chicago White Sox, hurled & direct challenge at the base ball cynics when he put his sanction upon the deal which landed Outfielder Smead Jolley of the San Francisco Club with the Comiskey forces. For three years Jolley has gazed hope- fully across the Rockies toward the East, 'llllinl for & big league club to grab Till the first week of last No- vember it appeared that the die was cast inst Jolley, one of the greatest minor league hitsmiths of all time. If Jolley makes in a big way with the Sox in 1930, it will prove the con- tention that he should have been in the najor league last season. It will also verify that about 95 per cent of the guesses regarding his ability were wrong. In 1929 Jolley for San Francisco punched out base hits to the tune of .387. That is something for his home town to rave about, s the game is now dominated by the lellowl with the flail, it is difficult to understand why there been no mad scramble for .volley’n services. They All Saw Him. During the Summer of 1928 virtually all the m-’or league scouts were in Coast League grandstands taking an official peek lt Jolley. However, his teammates, Averill and Johnson, pur- chased by Cleveland and Detroit, re- spectively, commanded the spotlight. Nearly everybody was ballyhooing those t\w As you know, they made good in ilfiy in’ the majors. t now seems that unintentional layed a big part in the )’ r leagues to take it slugging demon Jolley has been the victim of eircumstances. His two ball- hawking ex-teammates, Averill and Johnson, seemed to dim his true luster. We know that a new automobile is doubly attractive when it is put on exhibition apart from others of its class. On this theory, Jolley as & mem- ber of any other Coast “League team would have been boosted to the skies, which would have resulted in his sale to a big league outfit long before. Therefore it is plain that Jolley's camoufiage reluctance of a chance on thl.l of the minors. 18 camj | He served as utility infielder lu sea- | son, but was little used and was not ‘pamcuurly impressive at bat. handicap was the one of playing beside two flashier stars than himself and he was compelled to hide his light under United States a nucleus for an almost unbeatable team. Voigt Certain to Go. Among the certain members of the | team also is George Voigt of New York. Since the last Walker cup match Voigt has developed into one of Amer- | ica’s best amateurs. He was a semi- finalist in the 1929 amateur tourney and also won many it inter- sectional events. It is lkely that Dr. Willing, the Oregonian who went to the finals in the 1929 amateur, also will be a team mem- ber. Dr. Willing was a member of one team that invaded England some years | ago and his stubborn and at ‘times sensational play resulted in a slender- margined victory for the Americans. | John Dawson of Chicago—if he is again in the good graces of the U. G. A—Phil Finlay and Roland Mas Kenzie are the three other fine players ' who would be assets to the team. Mac- Kenzie was one of the stars in both the 1926 and 1928 matches and seemed to be hitting his stride again last Sum- mer. Dawson went to the semi-finals of the 1929 British amateur and prob- ably would have been shortage of capable and ksmmlflntlflmmln' ay. St. George Course Picked. All previous Walker Cup matches | played in Great Britain were staged at | St. Andrews, but since the British ama- teur will be played ovef this famous Scottish course this year, the interna- tional matches have been moved to the Royal St. George at Sanwich. St. George's course is located on the Eng- | lish Channel and is one of the windiest | links in all Britain. A gale at St. George's is a twin brother to a Kansas cyclone and if the | pro, Americans should happen to encounter | stormy weather during the matches the result may not be pleasant. The United States has never lost a W&lktr Cup match, but the Royal and Ancient started the Americans several down when they picked the Sanwich | course as thn v:nue for the duel. SARAZEN GARNERS MIAMI OPEN AGAIN Plays 72 Holes of Golf in 300 to Get Title Fourth Time in Row. By the Associated Press. IAMI, Fla, January 6.—The crown of the Miami open golf tournament rested today for the fourth consecutive time upon the brow of Gene Sarazen. He finished 72 holes yesterday with a score of 300 to lead the field of 155 golfers who en- tered the $2,500 in- augural of the Florida 1930 golf- ing season. A stroke behind him was _ Bill Leach, Gverbrook, Pa; in the third notch was Cyril Walker, Saddle River, N. J,, with 302. Sarazen’s rounds Gene Sarazen. holes with 150 to Sarazen's 155 finished with 310. Sarazen had a trio of eagles in his Sunday round of 69 on the Wmd—mpt Miami Country Club course. Today he was on the way to the Pacific Coast the Agua Callente A] Heron, mmmg, Pa, fourth with 3 The bud:rs ‘in the money awards 'npanlclpt in came were: Sarazen $750, Leach $500, Wal- | ker $300, Heron $200, Dave Spitail, Torento, 307, $175; Cherles Rice, Sum- mitt, N. J., 309, $125; Vincent Eldred, Bradenton, Fia, 309, $125; Emmett French, 309, Southern Pines, N. C, $125, and Mike Brady, 310, $75. FLOOR OFFICIALS MEET. d o:‘n',}”"‘:".a"’i'.'.’i’f;"' e Shnarn wi wmnwunm-cm ) |Joe’s Fine Finish IN GOLF MEET TIE in Rain Matches. Olin’s 216 at Long Beach. By the Associated Press. ONG BEACH, Calif, January 6.— Olin Dutra of Santa Monica and Joe Kirkwood of Philadelphia todsy held jointly the cham- | pionship honors of the fifth annual Long Beach $3,500 open golf tourna- ment. The two pro- fessionals scored 216 the Joe Kirkwood money. D.rk horse mudders found the pud- dles and soaked greens to their liking, and Clarence Clark, young Tulsa, Okla., ploughed into second-prize money with & 69—76—73 for a total of 218. Dutra’s card for the 54 holes was 67—76—173—216, and Kirkwood's 68— 78—70—216. Henry Ciuci of Bridge- port, Conn., took third place with a 219, and Johnny Rogers, Denver, Colo., fourth with a total of 220. Ymm‘ Charles Seaver, 17-year-old Los Angeles prep school amateur, who led the qualifiers Saturday with a 66, George Von Elm, Detroit, for the amateur prize. He tied vl".h Johnny Farrell of St. Augustine, Fla.; Charlss Guest of Hollywood, Calif., and W. H. Cox of Brooklyn, for flllh place in the medal play with a 221. Rain Stops the Gmu. The rain not only blasted the hopes of potential leaders of the field, but drove many to give up the battle early. Among these were Wild Bill Mehlhorn of New York and Cralg Wood of Bloomfleld, N. Horton Smith, Joplin, Mo., another hvcrlu also met his waterloo in the morning’s rain, when he piled up an 81 for a card of 232, en- tirely out of his running. The tournament, to most minds, was | Dutra’s when he turned in his 216 a half hour before Kirkwood was around the course. The latter, with shoes squishing soggily at every step, sur- prised most of the field as he dropped a 3-foot putt into the cup at the eighteenth hole for his final round of 70, three under Dutra’s mark for the 18 holes. ‘Walter Hagen, last year's winner of the Long Beach evtnfq and Leo quel of Agua Caliente, were forced scratch because of an engagement lc Alm a golf comedy in Hollywood. \COLLEGIATE SPORTS " SCHEDULE FOR WEEK | ‘Tomorrow Night. Georgetown vs. Wake Forest, at Tech High. ‘Wednesday. CaLhcllc vs. Mount St. Mary’s, at Brooklan mmm vs. Johns Hopkins, at Bal- timore. Thursday. Maryland vs. Duke, at College Park. Friday. George Washington vs. American, at George Washington. Catholic vs. Villanova, at Brookland. Gellaudet vs. Blue Ridge, at Kendall Green. Georgetown vs. West Virginia, at Morgantown, W. Va. Saturday. o-uwuc vs. Maryland, at College Baltimore (afternoon) Georue ‘Washington vs. Villanovs, at uwi ashington. laudet vs. Baltimore University, at one short of the course record, beat | got read: Pym'enlbfih“é‘lfill‘mdyou had a chance to play in'a world championship series would you take that chance if you knew that you might easily put a sudden end to your career? This is the story of g young star who answered these questions tively. As he saw it, his first.duty ‘was to his Jub. 4 “When Tony Lazzeri®slid back into first base that afternoon in the game against Detroit,” sald Earl Combs, great g center fielder of the New York Yankees, who told me the story, “we never sus- pected that he had injured himself so adly that it might knock us out of the 1928 pennant. “But_the next morning Tony told Miller Huggins that his arm was hurt- ing him so badly that he didn’t think he'd be able to play that afternoon. “Just how did you hurt it?” asked ns. “‘Well,’ said Tony, ‘it was like this: After I made my single, you remember, Holloway—the Detroit pitcher—threw Lhree or four times to pick me off first revent me from stealing second. fmg he wouldn't throw again, I y to go. But he waited longer than I dld and fooled me. When he threw again, I had -to make a quick dive tor the bag. “‘I hit it so suddenly with my right hand that my head jammed down on my thoulders I felt something !e!! loose, and I knew I had injured my Two Good Ways To Play Approach BY SOL METZGER. There are two ways of reaching a grean with an iron. You can pitch and hold it, which is an American method, or you can play the run-up, as do the British in order to cheat winds. The latter method is out of the question when there is an inter- venm‘ trap. e main difference is in the way thg club meets the ball. In the run-up shot yo :hy the ball off the left lhmllder and pick it clean off the turf, the face of your club meet- clubhead through the turf to insure a follow throug! "H Unless you understand the pivot you canr.ot hop. tn shoot filood golf. 8ol Me lehhc'fllnndu:lny .Mlnem- 3’?" Eopie TALBERT- Lightweight— THE GAMEST ACT I EVER SAW - As Told by ‘EARL COMBS To J. P. Glass. LAZZERI ASKS TO PLAY IN WORLD SERIES THOUGH | Tee Second-Division, onbs IT MAY END HIS CAREER. shoulder and arm, but as the only effect was a numb feeling I wasn't greatly alarmed. ‘Woods gave me a good rub after the game. When I went to bed I felt all right. But about 2 o'clock in the morning I woke up. I was in such I couldn’t sleep. I had to get out of bed. It hurts like toothache right now.’ “Huggins told Tony to take things easy. He imagined the arm would be all right soon. “But just about then the club began to slip. The Athletics kept gaining on us. We not only missed Tony's hitting; Herb Pennock’s arm went bad and that crlppled the pluhin’ stafl. We all be- gan to “Tony went without & wink of sleep for five days and nights. However, he accompanied the club to St. Louis, where an X-ray showed fluld in his shoulder. Huggins sent him to a hospital for elec- trical treatment. It seemed to help a lot. Anyway Tony was able to sleep once more. “He joined the club in Boston. ‘My arm seems all right,’ he said. But !he moment he tried to use it he found it was just as bad as ever. 'k in New York, another X-ray confirmed the St. Louis diagnosis. But di oses did no good without remedies. ‘how, by now, we had managed to infthe pennant. But the world serles still" was ahead of us, and we didn't feel any too easy about meeting the St. Louis Cardinals, pennant winners in the Na- tional ul‘ue. ‘without our full strength. “It was at this zeri showed himself one of the gamest fellows in base ball, and one of the big- gest sports in the game. He went to Huggins, *‘Boss,’ he said, ‘I want to play in the world series.” **How about your arm?” asked Hug- gins, ‘is it better? “‘No,’ admitted ‘Tony, “it isn't. “‘I don’t think, then, that you ought to play,’ said the manager. ‘T want to Wwin the series, but not at your sacrifice. Il you piay you may put your arm out commission permanently. Have you ‘hml(hl, of that?" “‘Yes, I have’ said Tony, ‘but I want to play.’ "Ho wn Ni:’ penment. that Huggins "Addflbnll hjury to that nm mi h! mean oblivion, but Tony staked his ture lnlnn '.\u welhre of the club md played. “Every throw he made in the series gave him a spasm of pain. ‘My arm feels as if it would drop off,’ he said. ““Well, ay everybody knows, matters turned out all right. When Tony went home to San PFrancisco after the series he looked up Denny Carroll, trainer of the Frisco Coast team, with which Tony used to play. “‘Carroll stretched the injured arm, heated it and massa it. A game fel- low got his rewlrd and Tony was as 8ood as ever in 1929." (Copyright, 1930.) e FOUR WRESTLING BOUTS BOOKED FOR THURSDAY An enu wrect.un; match has been added to mnln- weekly wrestling show at the Strand Theater. There- lm!mmulr.mdotthmwmbe presented Thursday night. Joe Turner mem “Cnluu" Copley, & native of Waco, Tex m Lhe featured go. Geome Taylor an artin will how in a Pu:hl ldded ntn fon while Gme Spiller Romanoft along with Tom Mlmkll and Dick Gravely are to perform. HANSON FIGHTS CHASTIAN. CHICAGO, January 6 (#).—Haakon Hanson, Chicago middleweight, Clyde Chastian of Dallas, Tex., Mtnmouht-rwndflnflmtnr the Whm"aty Arenl tonight. Dl LL Qun NN - u’/é’/ferwe/yéf— int that Tony Laz- | Both show a. | but HEYDLER FORESEES PHILS AS FEATURE Likely to Come Forward in National League. This s fourth of series of stories written for the Associated Press by leaders in the world of sports, based o, 1930 prosgects. BY JOHN A. HEYDLER, (President, National League.) EW YORK, January 6.—1It is too | early in the year to review the | teams in our league for the‘s 1930 pennant race, and it is too early to predict what kind of a season we may expect. But judging from the growth and progress of the game th past three years, and the general strong trend of the public to all sports, I am impelled to predict that 1930 will prove another great year for base ball in gen- eral and the National League in par-|' ticular. 8 It is & fact that the attendance in our league championship games the past three years totaled 15,000,000. During the three years prior to this period our attendance was about 12,000,000. Phils Developed Late. Now last season for the first time in about a decade our race was over by about September 1. I do not anticipate such & runaway by any club this year. the Boston and Cincinnati clubs will present a much-stronger front at the start of the next race. Both teams will have new managers who have proved their capacity to develop and lead first-division teams. Then the Philadelphia team only developed its real strength toward the end of last sea- son. This club should prove a feature of | the 1930 pennant race. So here are three second-division teams upon which we can count to put up a real battle with the contenders from the start. A better balanced league means a closer race, keener competition and as a natural result greater interest and at- tendance all over the circuit. It looks to me now as though we should have the best balanced league for 1930 in major league history, and therefore we have every reason to look forward with confidence to moum x great year. ALL BIG NINE QUINTS IN ACTION THIS WEEK By the Assoclated Press. CHICAGO, January 6.—Michigan, half-owner of the 1929 Western Con- ference basket ball championship, will invade Minnesota tonight in quest of a flying start toward another title. ‘The conference season officially was at Evanston Mv;dly it the top, by %pen its campaign at Champaign with Ohio State as its opposition, HOCKEY PLAYERS EXCHANGED OTTAWA, Ontario, January 6 ()= A hockey player exchange whereby Frank lehbor. veteran Ottawa center, is transferred to the Maple at: 'b'[gdln bld in iu GORDON E)oucuEn L/jéf //eav)/ufexy /.~ ‘ Gooch's ~departure leaves the Na- tionals with only seven Inflemn, among them James McLeod, ter pur- | chased last season fmm ume k. Ac- cording to Griffith, McLeod will be re- tained, Lho present policy of the Wash- ington club bem' to dpvalop all young material it has at han THE SPO By GRANTLAND RIC WO of the main spomn' events ‘attached to the month of And both take place on the West The first will be the $10,000 Los Angeles open, over the -| course of the Riviera Country Club, running from the 8th to the 12th. The next will be the $25,000 Agua Caliente open, near Tia Juana, running from January 14 through January 17. Thirty-five thousand dollars is a somewhat larger January belong to golf. Coast: wandering pros have had & chan c bined. g the four and five footers. These two big tournaments b.t Mac the scramble for all this cash will It will be interesting to follow the bs)fle of the Smiths at Los Angeles in first of the two big shows. Mac th, the Lakeville veteran, has now the last two Los Angeles compe- ns, collecting $3,500 for each per- ance. Horton Smith will make his both wurnnme.nu and be the man to beat in each ‘event, “The younger Smith has now won 11 mn competitions against strong fields he climbed into the headlines a Been g 'n phenomenal. i 1 ago, and his recent g has #1t will be quite a strain on some of the hoys with a chance to win, as they hit the head of the stretch and start wmg over putts of 4, 5 and 6 feet. en _from $3,500 to $10,000 rides on & single putt it is no simple matter to maress the pulses and keep the quiv- nerves from doing a flip-flop. Nlneuen thirty should be golf’s mn,m {“nr of comnelmon and the West Coast s done its part in opening the cam- paign with a rush. The Hardest Schedule. WW/ITH the announcement of foot ball schedules for 1930, there il no. pa- rade offered yet that carries &s many knotty lpou as Notre Dame has taken ‘The opening with Southern Method- lst.onooftasv.ronxmmsolme Southwest, is a tip-off. Ray Morrison will have a better team next Fall than he had last year, where he ran into a snarl of four ule games. He had to plug up a number of open gaps in 1920, but he will have a stronger nucleus back. The Army and Navy, Southern Cali- fornia and Pittsburgh would be con- sidered a ranking schedule, but in ad- dition to these, Notre Dame has South- ern Methodist, Indlana, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, Carnegle Tech, Drake and Northwestern. One can nevzr tell in advance, but this looks e the hardest schedule any team ever tackled, with the chance that at least eigbt of the 10 games will be hard to win. Notre Dame’s biggest loss will come in the middle of the line, where Moyna- han, Cannon and Law will be missing. These three were about as fine & center and guard trio as foot ball has ever known. There may have been others as - good, but probably no others that were bette: Stricter Handling. TTHERE is one point that has to be considered in the fight game if n;g? is to be any lmprovement through Thh poi.nt is that boxlnf carries more chiselers, cheaters, connivers, imposed are slipped through Only the most rugged of all games could have stood up under the barrage thrown against ge l_bny at least a majority of those con- ed. The abllity of the clients to soak up ishment ‘where most of the leading ghters refuse to do any such thing i’ one of the wonders of sport. ‘The Hon. Frank Ci luh player will club at the end of the current the Ottaws club retains an vptlon purchase of Cox, A (wun in John Golden's g the vnnn champlonships, ‘The new Agua Calien its $25,000 award, and this will mean some extra concentration ofessionals in golf—Hagen, Horton Smif mith, Golden, Diegel and more than l hundred others—where RILIGHT t than the to shoot at, even with two shots layout topped all past. offerings will bring mg‘ther most of the Armour, Farrell, be terrifi hopping from St. Andrews to Pebble Beach. Next Spring and Summer he | will be called upon to jog only from | St. Andrews to Minneapolis. the lmporun changes that in sport recently is Goldberg from a rllht-hlnded lfllf!r his first outdoor test at uu Arum ’ tournament at Palm Beu:h later this month, where he expecu to break 100 or one of Cup PI.AY TILT WON BY CONGORD SOCCERS Soccer players of the District area are resting today following some stfenuous battling yest"dlyA In National Cup tournament phy Concord eliminated British Uniteds in a 2-1 struggle at Silver flvnnl. and-Fash- ion Shop bowed the Locust - Point Rangers in a 4-0 game at Baltimore. Marlboro downed D. C. Kickers, 4 to 1, and Rosedale and Gaithersburg fought to & 3-3 tie in Clpl'-l.l City League :\;:f;ul h-::eled kville md ‘!flve; g scheduled game was postpone because the field was not in condition. YEAR-ROUND FOOT BALL? SANDLOTTERS WILLING! If some of the sandlotters here have their way, they will play foot ball throughout the it appears. Three grid games were played yesterday, and at least one of the winners announced that it was ready to keep on playing clean through until next Fall if oppo- sition is offered. -Wolverines defeated a players who held lor?.h City League, 19 to 0. Southern Preps took the measure of the Shamrocks, 25 to 20, and are ready to meet other opponents. They are handling challenges at Lincoln 2868 or at Atlantic 3506-J after 6 p.m. icked teem of the Capital CANADIENS LOSE STAR. TORONTO, Ontario, January 6 (#).— Martin Burke, aggressive defense star of the Montreal Canadiens, suffered a broken collorbone in Saturday night's hockey game with the Toronto Maple Leafs. He will not be able to return the bushel, or, rather, two bushels— Averill and Johnson. It has remained for Donie Bush to dig him out of his predicament. Likes Coast Players, Bush has a strong leaning toward Coast League material, probably be- cause the walloping Waner brothers captured their first flies in the sun- kissed regions before they pulled miracles for the Pittsburgh Pirates under Bush. ‘The surprising status is that a .!llm minority of Coast In:ue players and officials continually harbored the conviction that Jolley was equal to or better than either Averill or Johnson. If this is true, Bush has whanged a managerial home run on his first trip to the plate. Bush realizes the need of blnlnl punch for the White Sox. They lost too many games by slight margins last season. Joliey's 210 pounds, distributed :‘ver & hplxhc of 6 !ul mh‘m shmchu. ve him a tes wallop W) e cow= ufll the ash on a connect level. White supporters are hoping Jolley the ]oltlt will set the eéntire team aflame at the plate. 1 (Copyright, 1930, by North American News ¥ Alliance.) TRIO OF UNBEATEN QUINTS GET TESTS C. U., Gallaudet, Maryland Face ‘Fast Foes in Big Basket Ball Week. HREE unbeaten members of the varsity basket ball team group of the Washington area will strive to keep ‘their slates unspotted during this week of intensive floor game competition. Catholic University, Gallaudet and University of Maryland fives are to see much action against quints of high caliber and probably will have to put forth their best efforts to avold lickings. The Cardinals have the heaviest as- signment of the trio. Catholic U is to face Mount St. Mary's Wedn and Villanova Friday at Brookland, and Maryland at Collegs Park Saturday. Before meeting the Cardinals, the Old Liners will encounter Duke at College Park ay. Gallaudet has a game with Blue Ridge at Kendall Green Pri- day and another with Baltimore U at Baltimore Saturday. Georgetown has one game at home and two on foreign floors during the week, while American U plays three games and George Washington two. In all, quints of the Washington area will stage during the week nine games at home and four on !ore!gn floors. Del Cosgrove, Gallaudet forward, con- tinues to lead the local college basket ball fleld at scoring. He shows to date a total of 86 points and has counted from scrimmage 39 times. John Ringle, another Gallaudet star, is second in the list with 54 points. Don Dutton of Gorgetown is third with 53. Catholic University's fist fiingers have resumed practice in preparation for their clashes with Army representatives at West Point Saturday. The Cardinal team will be the first of college group here to swing into action this season. ito the Canadiens’ line-up for several 'weu.h Pennsy Starts After Another Basket Title NEW YORK, January 6 () .—It appears that aspirants for the East- ern intercollegiate basket ball cham- pionship will have to stop Penn- sylvania. s began defense on the title they won in 1928 and 1929 on Satur- it won in 1928 and 1929 on Satur- Three other members will make their - st mm of the season MAT STARS SHOW TONIGHT. CHICAGO, JmuAry 6 (). —Gus Son- Pat McGill also ar on the card. Radiators for all makes. Dam tors repaired, WI’I‘I‘!TAATI'I IADIATDI. FENDER 319 18th St. N 800 luAnn an 14th_8t.. % Doors from . St N.W had no Xuek with ames, g’inn at Pnnoatom ‘The fifth league unm. Columbia, will. not_begin until January 15. Prlnce'an will be met here, A TROUSERS To Match Your Odd Coats EISEMAN’S, 7th & F part of the Jolley -

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