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THINK LORRAINE SHOULD PASS UP LEAGUES HERE Duckpin Queen, Fed Up on Published Praise, Paid Unusual Tribute by Playmates. Georgie Friend Qozes Confidence. BY R. D. HEN Lorraine Gulli had overhear the following . v male: there’s one bit of consolation. We THOMAS. a bad night in The Washington Star’s bowling tournament, her kid sister was amused to comment by an upsympathetic “I had tough going in this tournament myself, but won't have to see that Gulli girl's name glaring at us out of tomorrow's newspapers.” But he was disappointed and at the same time may have learned a kindergarten lesson in news values, to wit, if a dog bites a man it isn't hot news, but if a man sink: more than passing interest. Had Lorraine performed bril- liantly, as usual, the bowling| scriveners would have mentioned the fact merely in recording the tournament’s high scorers. But Miss Gulli was a flop, and as such was worth a fat paragraph in all the chronicles. Enough has been published about the | queen of duckpin bowlers to fill a fat volume and she appears to have become uncommonly callous to printed praise. But & compliment is being paid her now by woman bowlers that should stir even a jaded vanity. Would Ostracize Queen. Personally she is popular, but the girls would be pleased to have Miss | Gulli barred from all leaguss. They say s0. but not right out in public nor to her. They simply admit Lorraine 1s i a class | by herself and want no more proof of | the fact. Most of them are reluctant to compete against her, knowing defeat to be inevitable in the end. They fear that a concerted move to bring about her disbarment would be misconstrued and injure Miss Gulli's feelings or in some way place her in an unfavorable | light before the public. It is contended that now Miss Guili is earning livelihood in the game as exhibition bowler and assistant secre- | tary of the National Duck Pin Bowling | Congress ske should forego the “small- time.” i ‘Wherever she appears n an exhi- bition the best girl bowler obtainable is matched with her, making victory worth while as a rule, and, she is made much of generally. There should be enough kick in all that, as the girls see it without her caring to bother with the | The comparatively insignificant pleces of Jaurel she could harvest in ordinary league play, laure! that means so much to others. Has Another Twist. Perhaps Miss Gulli has given the matter thought and views it from a similer slant. But it is not for her to tell the world she is just too good for her old playmates. Then there's another, and what seems to be a mighty important side of the question. It might be a dangerous pre- ‘would presuppose no one Wol rise to hkepher present place. In the event another Gulli appeared, would she, too, be barred because she stood out above the mob? Maybe somebody’ll propose a ban on Georgle Friend if he makes the field look ill in the Campbell sweepstakes when the classic is finished next Satur- day night at the Big King Pin. Cer- tainly Georgie has made himself TIMI- lar as measles lately with those bowling against him. It is not improbable that Friend already has arranged to invest the $600 that goes with first place in the & takes and to sock the $171 medal. He's that confident. Georgle warned everybody he'd beat 650 in the second set of the money tournament and made good, with several pins to spare. Watch Out for Brad! One of the most respected among the 11 who enter the final skirmish with total of 1,200 or better is Bradley Mand- ley, the defending champion. Mandley has an even 1200 for 10 games. He proved his class by winning the event last vear and he’s an easy bet to take part of this year's cash. Colorless, cool, mechanically almost perfect—that’s ‘Mandley. It would be something to live long in duckpin history if the Harrison boys, Paul and Joe, ran onc-two. They're now second and third. Joe has been | overshadowed hy the record-smashing Prul this season. so much so that little attention was given him when he en- tered the sweepstakes. He made Paul take a back seat by shooting 665 at Con- vention Hall for a tournament record and if the pins break well for him next Saturday night he may keep his tall brother there for another evening. Joe is great only in spots and it would be surprising if he came through with an- other whopper. Lindstrom Fools "Em. Nobody gave Chester A. Lindstrom of Bethesda a tumble when heputs his $28 on the line. but he'll have lots of atten- tion henceforth. Lindstrom is. fourth #»nd only nine pins bzhind the leading Priend, having rolled 611 at the Coli- seum and 617 at Convention Hall. Lindstrom piles up his scores with strikes. e made a trivle-header in one of the sweepstekes games. The famous Red Megaw is having a terrible time this season. “Mr. McGrew” hasn’t been able to get out of a zallop in any sort of competition and is hope- Tessly sunk in the sweepstakes, an event | he won two years ago. £00D RACES STASED BY BOYS’ CLUB FIVES Keen championshin races are in proeress in all six of the lnons meking | "D the Bove' Club Rasket Ball League. | Team standings of the sections follow: | UNLIMITED. nalties hirlwing ot Wond s P} 145-POUND CLASS, Flashes lex ot Fenators Nerthierns PR nawaan 130-POUND CLAS: S, .- eurunand 115-POUND CLASS. Arcadians s PGS PO Ny e Ja i85 Neighborhood ‘House Arcadians Noel House' SW. Boys' CI Tobawk .. 3 Nelghborhood ‘House PRy Former members of the Ty Cobh base b tesm will meet tonight ot the r Even a dog wou ver Sprij a | P | Roek Creeks, ‘at P | Lnchs s his molars into a hound it’s of 1d take notice. Tenpin Team Has 1 ,20;1 Game to Set a Record NEW YORK, January 21 (#).— The Nyack Roofing Co. team has established a new all-time five-man tenpin record for one game in the American National Bowling Tourna- ment, which was inaugurated in 1891, Rolling here last night the Nyack team toppled over 1,204 pins in their last game to beat the New York Mineralites in three straight games and clinch the tournament. The tournament record previously had been 1,174. The individual scores for the rec- ord game were: Andy Hiltenbrand, 297; Joe Koster, 222; Al Turk, 248; ;l:amey Spinella, 224; Mike Shirghio, Hiltenbrand incidentally rolléd a total of 731 for his three games, get- ting 233 and 201 in addition to his 297 on the last game. ‘The world five-man record for one game is 1,255 set in 1926 by the Democrat and Chronicle team of Rochester, N. Y. BARBER & ROSS WINS THREE IN MERCHANTS Barber & Ross took all three games ;.‘:.’; thenilfimrcg. in the Merchants’ ue. , of the winners, game, 124, and set, 330. e Southern Dairies took all three from lompson's Dairy, McProuty was hi wusrel' with .lei game lndyall ut.“h unshine Yeast won th game Il’u}l'n‘g;h}le.g Franks. SR % af . iscuit Co. took all three from E. W. Minte Co. ¥ = o Hoffman's 333 Thompson Bros. Furniture took the odd game from W. R. Winslow. E. Hazel led the winners with a 117 game and 310 set, while Snee, of the losers, garnered 322 sticks for his set and a 125 game in his team's winning effort. Co. took two from Hugh Penn. Electric Rellly, Gray of the losers getting high set of 332, The Standings. Barber & Ross 37 fouth. Dairies 34 11 Nat, Bis: Penn. E. Co... hine Skiniess Fraiiks 27 18 Thomp B Thomp. Dairy. 24 W.ORY Winsiow 23 33 The'd Yeast ros. b High team game—Ba HiEh team SetSouthern b Hieh individu High individu wa; High individual av ON THE ALLEYS TONIGHT AND TOMORROW TONIGHT. ue—C. W. cg Valet, ‘Lutk;"mrl‘x!:‘uh e l"l;““hsm gworth's vs. Mutual apitol League—Mother" é~New Jerusalem vs. Gom- , Harmony. Brightwood Vi 5. Fed- Acacta, tion Hall, . La Fayette vs. nt, at Conven ague—Lel N s vs. Mt. Pleasa stern Star Le lope. Josenh H. Mi- Fayette vs. Mirtam, ue—Plumbers v 4" Bireats. ve Alled R 5. Curb Cate va. Olize Cate, Temple Southpans 3 . g5 8 funich. at Northens!” Tempie. at: s, d Will, La e. s.. Burk- Princess oenix i Women's Improveme; lumbia Heights, .:Ilsllll'.“slgb “n ri North of ‘Washington Men' tion’ 1, Triangle Garare. vs. on, Stott’s Dixie’ . Maryiand News ang Spring Dyeing and Cleaning trical School, at Silver Sprin King Pin 'Business Men's ford Vs. Bank No. 2. ow ma No t oma No. a American Le. V8, Virginians; Section le Motor, Silver vs. Bliss Elec League—Hart- of Commerce, at King Pin East Washington Church League—Sec Baptist vs. Anacostia, Ninth Noo 1 ve. Gen tennial, Keller vs. Ninth No. 2, Ingram No. 1 vs. Epworth, Wangh vs. Ingram No. 2. Fifth Baptist United " Brethren, First Brethren vs_ Eastern, Douglss No. 1 vs. Douglas No. 2. Broogland vs. Lincoln Road, at_Convention' Hall. North Washington Church League—Wal- lace Memorial vs. Pirst Reformed, Asbury M. E. vs. Gunton-Temple. Colum vs. Petworth Baptist, Emory tral Presbterian. at'King Pin No. 1 ashington Ladies' League—Commerc vs. Billies: Duuehters, of Isabeiis vr. Shams rocks. Beeques vs. Hilltoppers. Columbians vs_ Nationals, at Coliseum. Lutheran League—Georgetown No. 1 vs. Trinity, Tal 2 vs Bt John's No. 3. Zion Vi, Ti 1. Incarnation No. 1 va. St M Reformation vs. St. Matthes Ghrist va. Grace. Geargetown No. 3 vi. '8 = No. ohn's No. 1 vs. 5 tion No. 2. at Arcadi R ey J 0o Ui A M. Laswue_ Liberts nnt . 3§ 0. 1 v, 2. Reno Ne. 2 vs, W, &0 J. M Read No_2 3 No. T vs. .1 v, John TOMORROW NIGHT. District League—Hyattsville v: tion Hall, at Hyattsville Natfonal Capital ' League—Xing Pazkway Filline Station. at Lucky Strike. King Pin Business Men's Lengue— Gar- rison King Pin North of Washington Men's League—Sec- tion 1. Kensington Fire Department vs. Serv- ice Motor, Clayton Laboratories va. n Oaks vs. Diplomat y vs. Glen Ross, ring. North of Washi Electrical School Insurance Leagué_ Ladies’ League_Bliss sk, at Silver Spring. -Metropolitan vs. Pru- quitable, D. C., at King York Auto Supply vs. etworth e—Creel E ington vs. Bl entf in Suburban Leagy ial, Peoples vs No. 2. Electrical "Leagu Bros. vs. en. Exid N_E. 8. Co inance, Boss ndal Shannon & s Vi National Mortsese & Investment, rea. of Columbus League—Santa Maria 7. Pinta vs. Chriztopner. Colum- Vs, De” Sota, , Nina vs. Trinidad, at a) Neutical Leagie—Fl Dorado Nos 1 vs. El Dorado Np. 2, Washington Canoe No. 2 vs. Poto Woodchoppers, Drifters No.' 1 v Boat Club. Colonial vs. Bee Hive. vs. Washington Canoe No. 3. Bonzai vs. Potowac Cange, Washington Canoe No. 1 1ot Convention Hall, elie & Phelps’ vs at_Aj K Clib v: Regents vs. Arors, Iris Vi Geoy zetown Chureh No. 2 vs. Christ Episcopal Bapiist_vs. Patk View M E S vs Baptist, Kinne iscob: n- Street M. P. vs. Calvary Baptist : Peck Chapel No. 1 vs. Georgetown Presisterian, at Aresdin Ladies’ ict Leatiue—Quéen' Pin_v: t Silyer Epring: Meser D: hborhood House, 470 N street, at 8 W Temple, rike, st Kng Pin N s | @athered 38 pins in the last two boxes to Conven- | Pin vs. | Jov Shop vs. Sterby Rent-A-Car, at | t Sil- | 4 a l_y at King Pin No. 2: Arcadia at Arc-dln:. K:Inl Bin' vi: Tacky DUDLEY DEFENDING MEAGER GOLF LEAD Heads Field of Stars by Stroke Only in $25,000 “Coast Tourney. By the Associated Press. GUA CALIENTE, Lower Califor- nia, January 21.—Clinging to a one-stroke lead, Ed Dudley,? Wilmington, Del, professional, today looked to the second round of the Agua Caliente $25,000 open tourna- ment with an array of 107 other chosen golfers trailing at his heels, the $10,000 first prize money their objective. The stern knowledge that only ap- proximately half their number will be eligible to continue in the quest for 20 money prizes, which range from “ten grand” on down to $200, con- fronted the field as it prepared to swing through the second 18 holes over the stubborn course. journey on through the remaining 36 holes with the concluding 18 on Thurs- | - | day. fiualey was the only one of the 115 | starters who could equal par on the tedious course. He shot a 71 to lead MacDonald Smith, Long Island, N. Y., by a stroke. Within two shots of his mark were Harold Long, Denver, and Al Watrous, Detroit, strategically sit- uated. The Long Isiander, one of the pre-tournament favorites, was looked to as one of the most formidable threats in the tourney. Stars in 74 Group. Closely clustered in the foreground, tied for fourth place, were nine others with cards of 74. This group included Harzy Cooper, Buffalo, N. Y.; Charles Guest, Los Angeles; Horton Smith, Jop- lin, Mo : Al Espinosa, Chicago; Bobbie Cruickshank, New York; Ed Stokes, Denver; Olin Dutra, Santa Monica, Calif, and a pair of amateurs, Fay Coleman of Culver City, Calif, and| George Von Elm, Detroit. The course was soggy from intermit- tent rains. It kept such players as two former open champions, Johnny Farrell and Gene Sarazen, the P. G. A title hoider, Leo Diegel; Denny Shute, winner of the Los Angeles open, and the British open champion, Walter Ha- gen, well down on the list, Sarazen had a 75, while Diegel, Farrell and Shute finished yesterday's round with 76. Hagen was even farther down on the list with a 78. Six of the original starters were eliminated, while three others dropped out. Cooper was absent from the starting list today. The young Buffalo pro returned to Los Angeles last night and was to be married today to Miss Emma ?_;lcgn;'mn. l/.)':‘ %flztlishllrl. He played oles yesterday, 100t couple with his 'l:. e mn Tomorrow he will return to the scene :‘s the mmy ldlcuin M"t‘ch‘ 27-hole ignmen order to cal the field. L s Prominent Threesomes. Today's prominent threesomes in- lacDonald Smith, Craig Wood of Bloomfield, N. J, and Henry Cuici, Bridgeport, Conn. Johnny Farrell, St. Augustine, Fla., ;:ficolemln and Tom Kerrigan, New Horton Smith, Joe Turnesa, New %orkfi and Mortie Dutra, icoma, ash. ; Leo Dicgel, Agua Callente; Fred Me- Leod of Washington, D. C., and Al B & e Sarazen, New York; Neil Chris- tian, Portland, Oreg., and Denny Shuts Coltimbus, Ohlo, £ Walter Hagen, Detroit; Billy Burke, New York, and Ed Dudley. TIGERS BUY NELSON, COAST LOOP HURLER By the Associated Press. , OAKLAND, Calif., January 21.—Di- rectors of the Pacific Coast’ Base Ball League, meeting here, announced the sale of Merton Nelson, Missions club right- handed pitcher, to Detroit of the Amer- ican League, and heard discussions of a proposal to support ‘a Utah-Idaho League. Several of the directors were asked to consider proposals to back teams for Teatlon in St Lae 1ty Opten, Foens ation, in Sal e City, Ogden, - tello and Twin Falls. BT e Wade Killefer, president of the San Francisco Missions, announced the sale of Nelson to Detroit for an unan- nounced cash consideration and two players, who will be sent to the Mis- sions by Detroit this Spring, Carl Mays, former New York Giant pitcher, now a free agent, was on hand seeking to hook up with a coast team for the forthcoming season. Sammy Bohns, former Cincinnati Red infielder, now with Minneapolis in the American _ Association, attended ‘the {:fi:gntgéd It‘ was reported that he was ested in efforts to Seattle Club. i e BETHANY GIRLS ASSUME LEAD WITHOUT ROLLING | _ Bethany Chapter idled in the Eastern | Star League, but slid into first place when Centennial lost a game to Leb- anon No. 1. Anne Seibert, lead-off for Lebanon, | win the game by 13 pins. | Milans was also idle. | three from Bethlehem, while Columbia took three from St. John's. Acacia and Lebanion No. 2 aiso won three, Capt. Bert Eaton of Mizpah rolled | high game for the week with 124. Those | rolling better than 300 were: Owens, 314, and Rogers, 309. Joseph H. Ruth won all w. Unity ...~ La Paystte. Mizpah 7] ] 5 6 5 7 7 8 1 1 5 a Beihlehem Martha High team ga _Washington-Centen- [ miad S0, itn, S0 Bettany. S8, o " any, on-Centennial, . 1412, Owen, 100-9; 133; Andor- 1 e 18 Danforth and |, Hieh spare lias s—Owen, 61; Eaton, 5¢; Bog- High flat game—Paxson, §4. MACK TAKES VACATION. PHILADELPHIA, January 21 (®).— Connie Mack, 67-year-old manager of the world champion Philadelphia Ath- letics, has gone Scuth for his annual vacation before preparing to lead his team in another campaign for the base ball championship. He will spend most of ‘his time at Plymouth, Fla., golfing and resting. ALEX SIGNS WITH PHILS. PHILADELPHIA, January 21 (Spe- clal) —Grover Cleveland Alexandcr's signed contract has been received by the Phillies. The veteran pitcher, who returned to th~ club when a trade was completed with the St. Louls Cardinals last December, is understood to be the These low 50 scorers and tis will{pat, Hornsby isn't getting any younger or any better. But he is still a winning ball player. He has slowed up more than a stride in covering ground around second or in stepping down to first. But he is still a fine hitter, a cool, trade. He is a good man to have on the field through a long season's stretch. The combination of McCarthy and Hornsby is a fine one, for both are qualified to keep a club hustling all along the route, where there are so many_temptations to ease away and start loafing through Summer heat and the daily grind. The Cubs and 1930. 'HE Cubs will again be favored to win another National League pen- nant. They are fairly well fixed back of the They still have a first-class pitch- ing staff with Malone, Root, Bush, Blake, Carlson and others. They have |a good infield and a hard-hitting out- fleld with Stephenson, Wilson and Cuy- ler. This is one of the best outfields in base ball, a winning combination that can go out and get runs &nd back up pitching with good defensive play. ‘This goes in spite of a few sun bolts that blew into Hack Wilson’s eyes in Philadelphia. ‘The Cubs last season had the flag them out this season? Giants, Cardinals and Pirates were picked #s their main opponents last year, but none of the three even fin- ished close. In what respect have they added enough additional strength. to close up a 10 or. 12 game gap? They might if the Cubs lost two or three valuable players through injuries. But. granted an ever break in this respect, the Cubs are still several games better than any National League rival through THE SPORTLIGHT BY GRANTLAND RICE. CHAMPIONS AND THEIR CHANCES FOR 1930 NO. 5—The Cubs. EN the Cardinals, the Giants and the Braves decided they ‘did not want Rogers Hornsby they combined with great effectievness to make the Cubs champions of the National League, with several laps to spare. Hornsby was just exactly what Joe McCarthy needed to round out a winning ball club. The Giants could have kept Hornsby and Grimes and run away with the pennant race, but perhaps they had no open space left in which to plant another pennant pole. hustling_ workman, and he knows his | won around Labor day—or at least| practically won., What team is to beat | a full season. They are a better ball club than they looked to be in the last world series—a much better ball club. That_trimming will help more than it will hurt. It will take away some of the overconfidence that a pennant win- ner often absorbs. They always have been a game club, and that world series beating won't in any way break their spirit.- They want another shot at the Athletics, and 1t looks now as if they will get it, since both winners from 1929 should win again in 1930, as far as one can travel with the ever valuable dope. Today's Golf Lesson. HAT does stance mean? In run- ning it means a starting position that gives the runner a chance to get away with the greatest amount of speed and ease. _In golf it means a starting position from which one is best able to let the body weight shift nat- urally as it has to shift—from left to right and back again from right to left. A fixed stance that finds the feet gripping the ground is the surest road to trouble and fault making. It gives no opportunity to organize a correct swing. The simplest form of stance should have the majority of the weight on the left foot at the address, so that one naturally lets it move to the right foot through the back swing. The next move is back to the left foot and the left leg for the down swing. The right sort of weight shifting can never take place from a fixed, set stance. There must be a feeling of life and move- ment and lightness in the feet—not the feeling that said feet are planted like a pair of oaks in the ground. It is in the lighter stance that one can at least | start breaking up the tension which runs through body and wrists. Any detail that will help to break up tension and permit greater smoothness in the swing is a big step in the right direction. Again “Cleans NOTE—As @ partial answer to the question, “What are the conspicuous fioures in sports of other davs doing now?” the Associated Press presents here- with another of a series, on Joe Walcott, one of the few championship survivors of bozing’s mauve decade. BY EDWARD J. NEIL, Associated Press Sports Writer, EW YORK, January 21.—Madi- £on Square Garden is a dim, cool place in the afternoon, full of shadows that blot the outlines of the battle ring and fuse the endless rows of empty seats into banks of dusk. Footsteps echo loudly, folks usually talk in whispers in the amphi- theater that by night blazes with light and rocks to the roars of fight-crazed multitudes. ‘There are dim figures, too, in the cor- ridors, mostly twisted old fellows with mops and pails of suds, washing floors for a meager hourly wage. There are others dusting the walls, wiping the glasses in huge pictures that shqw the likenesses of the late Tex Rickard, John L. Sullivan, Dempsey, Fitzsimmons, Cor- bett, Jack Johnson, Joe Gans and hosts of almost-forgotten warriors of the ring. Only one of the charmen hums to himself, whistles occasionally, chuckles at his work. He's a short, chunky, happy Negro with arms that stretch down to his knees. His shoes are almost with- out form, his trousers baggy, misshapen. A gray checkered coat sweater, fitting his arms all right, stretches down to his knees in incongruous fashion. Diligent- 1y he wipes pictures and woodwork with a bit of cloth, a shapeless cap on the back of his black, hairless head, a grin on his wide, flat features. - Fought in Five Classes. years old and glad of the chance to work at menial tasks, is Joe Walcott, the Barbadoes Demon, perhaps the greatest fighter that ever lived. He once weighed 129 pounds' for an epic battle with Kid Lavigne, and as the welter- weight champion of 35 years ago he never scaled over 142 pounds. But he knocked out great fighters in five classes —lightweight, welterweight, middle- weight, light-heavyweight and heavy- weight. His most amazing victory was a seven-round knockout of Joe Choynski, a crack heavyweight, when Walcott welghed 140. Today he polishes the pictures of men who qualled before him decades ago, ring heroes now dead, whose shades might tremble a bit even now at the touch of Walcott’s hands, now harm- less. He fought when a lifetime’s earn- ings in the ring did not equal the purses g:h‘é ordinary fighters today for a single ut. Furthermore, he doesn't think that the entire crop of fighters in the small- George Lavigne, the Saginaw Kid, with ON THE CHIN! . BL AL SINGER. ONY CANZONERI, a former world champion, hit me the deadliest_sock I ever met. It was_on December 14, 1928, in my first ten-rounder, in Madi son Square Garden, New York. I felt swkward. You really don't get used to the Garden until you've fought there five or six times. After every round the lights blaze up and you get @ view of an immense sea of faces. I felt embarrassed when the place was flooded with light after the first round, and it came over me that all those thousands of people wers watching me. In the fourth round Tony had me on What-a_wallop! It caught me smack on the button and dazed me. But I was in fine condition and a few sec- onds Iater I snapped out of it. Canzoneri wouldn't stop for a decep breath and kept throwing punches from both sides. I weaved right with him, wondering how in the world I'd manage to last six rounds more. The pace was 0t. ‘Tony kept right on coming and I had to back up or go to either side faster. I returned to my corner after the fifth discouraged. “Only five rounds and I have to go five more: I'm tired,” I complained to Hymie Kaplan, my manager. “Come on, AlL” he snapped. “Tony's tired too, but he isn't showing it. From now on you'll get your second wind and you'll be O. K. ‘That's what happened. In the sixth I was myself, and in the seventh I sprinted into the lead. I improved with every bell and the fight was called a draw. I think I did pretty well in my first ten-round go against an ex- perienced fighter who had won a title. firct momber of $he Phils to fall in line B (Next: Johnny Risko.) (Copyrizht, 1930, by N. A. N. A) W alcott, Once Wonder of Ring, Up” Big Boxers Yet this happy, harmless Negro, 58 | g er classes today could have furnished | Le the ropes and he let fly with a right. ¥ me; an interesting night’s work. Joe has a tremendous respect for Lavigne, as well as Tommy West, who had a discon- | certing habit of biting chunks from his scalp in the bloody battles they fought decades . The old-timers, Joe says, were tougher, stronger, were just as good boxers and took the game more seri- ously than do the gladiators of the present era. To his mind, the easiest men to brihg down were the big fellows, despite his own scanty 5 feet of height. “Ah liked to play with them big boys,” Joe grinned as he swabbed away at the’ woodwork. “Ah, just punched away at their tummies 'till they begin to bend. Then fust thing you know their jaws is down where their tum- mies was, an’ then ’s easy.” Joe ambled off down a corridor, past & picture of Tex Rickard, past the like- nesses of heroes of his times, and Sou. Ry dabbed at a painting of Ruby Bob Fitz- | Bi* simmons. “Ah ain’t got mo kick, “AR’s alive and they's dead. Ah's get- tin’ plenty good poke chops, too.” INTERDIVISION TEAM LEADS GIRL AGGIES Interdivision has a slim lead in the | Ladies' Agricultural League, with Live Stock the runner-up. McQuinn of Live Stock is the leading individual with a 95 average. The figures for all who have rolled at least nine games follow: Team Stan: Name. Interdivision . Live Stock Sokums Soil Survey High team sel ock, 1,355; High “team Fruits and Vegetables, Information, 48 High individual games—Cunningham '( ), 126; Viehmann (Information), kell (Extension), 133, individual ~seis—McQuinn (Live 311 Cunningham__(Co-operation), 306; Fieharty (Extension), 303. High_ flat games—Cunningham ( fon). 95: Romero (Information), 94. High individual averages—McQuinn (Live ock). 93-31; Fleharty (Extension), 90-18: Cunningham (Co-operation), 90-1. joriEn, strike 9 each. ; McQuinn (Interdivision). gh spares——Cunningham (Co-operation), 46; McQuinn (Live Stock), 44. Individual Records. INTER-DIVISION. terdivision. (Live Stock) and MacKinnon HS. Sts. 284 35 Romero Viehmann Hine . Connolly Cunningham Mann . Montgomery Shellhamer Payne Broome Johnson Norris ' Hawkins’ Culbert 4-12 39 L 32-19 26 521 9 MecLeod Ties With Hagen' But Is Low in Tourney Pred McLeod, Columbia Country Club golf professional, scored a 78 in the opening round of the $25,000 Agua Callente tourney yesterday to put him far back in the running for first money, although in & tie with Walter Hagen. If McLeod scores well today he may be in the select 50 and ties who will play tomorrow and Thursday for the title. ‘Tony Penna, who was assistant pro_at Congressional part of last Interdivision, 1,397; leb«tr ation, 1,350, aas: | 1 Co-opera-~ by R s—Cunningham _(Co-operation).‘| J¢ BEZDEK GIVES UP COACHIG BERTHS Penn State Mentor to Lead School of Education “in Athletics. By the Associated Press. ARRISBURG, Pa, January 21. —Rstirement of Hugo Bezdek from active coaching of Penn State’s foot ball and base ball teams to assume directorship of a new school of education in'athletics at the college has been approved by the col- lege board of trustees. Bezdek's dropping out of the coach- ing position was voluntary, the board announced. The grizzled Veteran with two more years to his coaching con- tract stepped out in order to be better able to perform his duties. Both changes are effective July 1, 1930. In his new position Bezdek will have a voice in the selection of his successor as coach, giving him power to pick some one who may retain the system in vogue at Penn State for the last 12 years. Creation of the new school is in line with a program begun three years ago at the college for the betterment of athletics, one of which was the elimi- nation of scholarships and subsidies to athletes. Under the new system all members of the new school staff, including Di- rector Bozdek, will be answerable to the. trustees, the same as any other member of the faculty. It was decided to promote interest in athletics by teaching physical edu- cation to the undeveloped. Bezdek will be charged with the organization of the school. {TEXAS LEAGUE TO HELP | FORM A SMALLER LOOP| DALLAS, Tex., January 21 (#).—Club owners of the Texas League have been asked to attend a special meeting here Saturday to discuss and formulate plans for a proposed co-operative league to be known as the East Texas or Lone Star Base Ball League. Fred McJunkin of Hte Dallas club said it is proposed to reorganize either the East Texas or Lone Star class D League, with clubs in the Texas League working with business men in the cities interested. MULLINEAUX LEADER IN TERMINAL LEAGUE With average of 109, Mullineaux of P. R. R. won the individual champion- ship of the first section in the Terminal R. . M. C. A. Evening Bowling League. The C. T. Co. quint led the teams. The figures, including averages | of all who have rolled nine games or more, follow: Team Standing. Cubs oee B.&O. P.&T. Of. ‘Woodchoppers . Arrow. 15 Auditors . Ry. EX. A 16 Baggage . Recor High team game—P. R. pins—Woodchoppe R., 5¢ 5" Y6405 South. lway. 19,186. iaf g ‘iz ”zilm individual game—Williams (Station), High strikes—Miller (B. & 0.), 15. High spares—Mullineaux (P. R. R.), 33. C. T. cO. G. T.P. HG.HS.S! 34 3526 132 349 . 27 2.801 135 27 2,727 116 9 895 119 10 980 20 1935 24 2345 18 1717 9 859 t. S House .. 8 6 S. Lawhorn. 10 5 Lawhe 34 Wiifte 31 Cooper 211 43 9 3 i STATION. williams . 38 343 163 Paravano 121 121 138 5 123 122 108 0 101 MAIN RODS. Tho Brows - Neider . £335328 % Lawrenson Johnston 94-16 | 92-26 | kt 3 . 36 3,315 112 AUDITORS. Phelps, Big Sandlotter, Signs With Nationals Another sandlotter has been picked up by the Nationals. The latest to sell his services to the Washington base ball club is Gordon Phelps, a catcher, who played with the Bowie, Md., nine and had a brief tryout at Griffith Stadium last Fall. He signed a Washington contract this morning. Phelps is a 20-year-old Odenton husky, over six feet tall and weigh- ing 200 pounds. He throws right handed, but bats from the left side. He stung the ball on the sandlots. RISKO, IN COMEBACK, BEATS BERTAZZOLO By the Associated Press. Cleveland, January 21—The varying fortunes of Johnny Risko, the Cleveland baker boy, had a more rosy hue today with his decisive victory over Ricardo | Bertazzolo, Italian heavyweight cham- pion, in a 10-round bout here last night. Risko battered the game Bertazzolo dizzy and floored him in the seventh round. The Italian glant fought doggedly on but the Clevelander easily had the better of him in every round. Bertazzolo landed no more than a dozen solid hits and every one of them was a signal for Risko to cut loose again. Two lefts to the body and jaw put Bertazzolo down for a count of nine in the seventh. A few minutes later he sagged to his knees, but came up with~ out a count and managed to last the full way. Tommy Freeman of Erie, Pa, and Paul Pirrone of Cleveland, weiterweights, drew in the 10-round semi-final and the same verdict was given Frankie Simms of Cleveland, and Jack Gagnon, Boston heavyweight, in another 10-rounder. Jack Evans, California_lightweight, won from Mike Payan, Cleveland In- dian, in six, and Benny Gershe, Cleve- land featherweight, knocked out Art Wander of Buffalo, after I minute and 36 seconds of fighting in the first of the scheduled six rounds. The card drew a capacity crowd of | | more than 10,000 to the Public Hall and receipts brought approximately $11,000 for the family of the late Ray Campbell, Cleveland News boxing expert. Fights Last Night By the Assoclated Press. NEW YORK — Tommy _ Gtogan, Omaha, Nebr., outpointed Billy Mc- Mahon, New York (10); Joey Harrison, Garfleld, N. J, stopped Billy Drano, Germany (3). § PHILADELPHIA.—Lew Massey, Phil- adelphia, out pointed Battling Battalino (10); Young Terry, Trenton, N. J., stopped Stuffy McInnes, Scotland (5). CLEVELAND.—Johnny Risko, Cleve- land, outpointed Ricardo Bertazzalo, Italy (10);. Paul. Pirrone,. Cleveland, and Tom Freeman, Erie, Pa., drew (10). ROCHESTER, N. Y.—Tommy Paul, Buffalo, knocked out Eddie O'Dowd, Cclumbus, Ohio (1). NEW ORLEANS.—Ray Kiser, Tulsa, Okla., outpointed Eddie Wolfe, Memphis 10). SIOUX CITY, Iowa—Jack McCann, Minneapolis, outpointed Louie Z: Sioux City (10). PHILLIPSBURG, N. J. — Jimmie Britt, Phillipsburg, knocked out Tex Hamer (4). BAXTER ROLLS 421 SET, JUST SHY OF D. C. MARK Turning in a set of 421 Norman Bax- ter of Petworths failed by two pins to set a new high District League record for the season in the match between his team and Cornell Lunch last night. Clem Weidman of King Pins holds the record so far at 422. Pets took two of the three games. Central High bowlers will take part in a tournament at the Arcadia, which will get under way during the week be- ginning next Monday. A cup will go to the winning team, all the members of which will be awarded medals. Wrists Lift Club To Half-Way Mark BY SOL METZGER. As the chip from sand requires the most exact of swings, else the shot goes wrong, you'll find Jones and Hagen glueing their eyes on the spot where the face of their niblick is to strike. Therefore, one's head must stay down. Jones takes his club back half way. In most of his other shots the straight left arm does this trick. No wrist is used until the end of the backswing. In this one Bobby de- pends almost entirely upon his wrists to lift the club to the half-way back mark. That brings it up more rap- idly and causes him to hit down and through the ball at a greater angle than in his normal iron shots. But remember that the wrists JONES CHIPS OFF SAND ~ HALF WAY BACK AT T0P- HEAD KEPT STILL~ WRISTS 00 THE. Jod Bl W] must be kept firm, even though they are the big factor in executing this shot. Just another case of firmness without rigidity in the playing of golf that we have to overcome by practice and cannot by play. Next let us look at Jones finishing the shot with the idea sticking in the back of our minds that the down- swing starts from the half-way back position shown above. Unless you understand the pivot you cannot hope to shoot good golf. Sol Metzger has a new illustrated leaflet which he will send to any one wishing it. Address Sol Metzger, in care of this paper, and inclose a 37 3.702 118 3752 138 157 3530 133 37 3,525 122 19 1811 12} 0 9 '822 103 293 18 1,592 95 278 Hunsaker """ WOODCHOPPERS. Ballard Klein g Fairbanks .\ Rexrode year, registered a 70 over the first round. McLeod is expected to return to ‘Washington shortly after the close ©f the Agua Cclisats event. Knights of Columbus boxers, coachei \;j‘ Zube Sullivan, will entertain Young | len's Hebrew Association glovemen of Baltimore Friday night in the K. of C. Hall here, starting at 8 o'clock., BIG ITALIAN MAKES U. . DEBUT FRIDAY Primo’s Record Is a “Bust,” Except for Blow That Floored Stribling. N but in an American ring next Friday evening with Big Boy Peterson as his opponent. The contest is billed for 10 rounds, but it is hardly likely that the Minneapolis swinger will answer the bell for the scheduled tenth round. Experts have watched the big fellow in training here very eclosely, and a week has passed without one coming out point blank with & declaration that Carnera has something besides his huge frame to recommend him to local fans. His record has been scrutinized care- fully. Nothing of a startling nature has been disclosed, other than a willingness on the part of the Italian giant to claim BY SPARROW McGANN, EW YORK, January 21.—When Carnera makes his official de- | a foul when hit in the tummy. Carnera has had two fights with Young Stribling. Both ended in fouls. Strib lost when English judges decided one of the Georgian's blows struck be= low the waist line. In a return meet- ing at Paris Carnera failed to hear the gong ending the round and Strib was declared the victor. Hurt by Stribling. In both of these fights Carnera showed that he could be hurt by an opponent 9 inches smaller than himself and outweighed 88 pounds, Strib, in fact, scored a knockdown over his mas- sive foe. Carnera returned the compli~ ment. One of Primo’s downward slams caught Stribling on top of the head and dazed the Georgian so that the latter had to go down and regain his senses, Outside of that Carnera proved a bust. The local boxing commission promul- gated a rule which works in favor of the huge Italian. No one will be con- sidered a fit opponent for Carnera who does not measure 6 feet 2 inches and weigh at least 210 pounds. An exami- nation of ring records discloses very few heavies coming up to those require- ments, and those that do have not as yet earned the right to be considered seriously. If other States adopt this ruling, Carnera will lack opponents, and will be accepted as chaimpion of & new class, probably dubbed *“gross heavy- weights.” This writer had a long chat with Carnera, and was permitted to measure the size of the mastodon. Hand Like a Ham. In shaking hands with Primo the ham-like mitt covered the writer's en- tire hand, and _two fingers of the giant fitted around the wrist. An attempt to encircle Carnera’s neck with both hands left a gap 2 inches short. Primo’s box- ing shoes, made to special oraer, were then brought in, and this observer was able to put his feet, shoes and all, in arnera’s shoes and lace them up. Primo Carnera is a big fellow. His hands, feet and neck strike one as being the biggest things he has ever seen on a human being. -There is still another {cature about the giant which will cause no end of discussion—Carnera's legs. ‘The veins stand out like whipcords, and if examined it will be found that the Italian is tied up with varicose veins. This s borne out by the fact that around the ankles and calves the marks of a scalpel are plainly visible. This proves that the weight of Car- nera's body is far too. heavy for even his strong legs to carry. It would indi- cate that Primo will not be around the fight racket very long. Once a fighter's legs go, his life in the ring is short. As to Carnera's hobbies, music and drawing take first place. All day long a portable radio set drones out music for him, and Primo’s taste is for Amer- ican jazz. He is not a surly fellow, and has a broad sense of humor. A famous French cartoonist is a member of Car- nera’s group, and Primo has developed rare skill in caricature. His sketches are just as funny as his bulk is for- midable. ROOT SIGNS WITH CUBS FOR NEXT TWO SEASONS CHICAGO, January 21 (#).—Charlle Root, one of the National League cham- pion Chicago Cubs’' star right-handed ?nc?ers, has signed a two-year con- ract. Root signed the document yesterday, President William_ L. Veeck announced from Avalon, Catalina Island, where the Cubs, as usual, will train. Root's salary was not disclosed, but it was sald he received a substantial boost. Radiators repaired . Model A Fords a V) guaranteed freezeproof radiators.$9.95 Wholesale and Retail WITTSTATT’S Radiators, Fenders & Bodi 1809 14th St— & 319 13th St— i} ___Phone Adams 1612 TROUSERS To Match Your Odd Coats EISEMAN’S, 7th & F INE OUT OF TEN RESEARCH MEN IN THE DETROIT TESTING LABORATORY & use THE = ® surerior N EW stamped, addressed envelope. (Copyright, 1930.) Sure Way to Get There is one sure way that never fails to remove dandruff completely and that is to dissolve it. 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