Evening Star Newspaper, March 10, 1930, Page 23

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SP Colleges Likely to Cut Spring Sports : 400 Teams Goal for ACTIVITYIN SPRING FOR ALL FORESEEN Only Bodily Contact Games; Lure Many Students as Spectators. BY H. C. BYRD. ORTS. COLLEGE BASKETERS IN STIRRING FINISH By the Associated Pre; NEW YORK, March 10 —An exciting finish to the Eastern Intercollegiate Basket Ball League’s 1930 campaign looms this week. Tonight Dartmouth plays Columbia at New York, on Wednesday Columbia battles Penn in Philadelphia and on Saturday the season ends with the Princeton-P-nn fray at Philadelphia. Columbia Ic>ds the league with seven victories in eigi:t starts, but Penn has hopes of winning its third successive championship. ‘The standing: L. 'HE time probably is not far distant when Spring sports | schedules in the colleges will come in for drastic| cuts. A strong tendency seems to ! be developing in that direction, and it may not be so many years| before the colleges and schools | devote almost their entire efforts| in the Spring toward a program of athletics for all, in which pro-| gram intercollegiate competition | will play a much smaller part than it now does. | The majority of the colleges now are | yepresented in so many branches of w. Columbia Y Penn .. A | Dartmoui 4 COLLETT LINES UP DETROIT’S GOLF ACE By the Associated Press. ST. AUGUSTINE, Fla., March 10 Mrs. Stewart Hanley of Detroit, Mich., several times rolf district woman golf champion and Michigan State title- holder. has accepted the invitation of Miss Gilenna Collett, national champion, to go abroad with a team of American (I Prineeion i 2 5 Cornell THE EV. NG _STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, MONDAY, MARCH- 10, 1930. SPORTS City Pin FANS FAVOR SHIFT - OF G. U. RING SHOW at Silver Spring—Byrd Considers Mitt Game. - OLLEGE boxing fans en- thused over two bits of news today. Georgetown may shift its show with | Bucknell, ~scheduled Saturday night in Ryan gym, to the Silver Spring Armory, where 2,500 in- |stead of 500 could see it, and |its varsity curriculum. | "1t Tom Mills, sports director, obtains | permission of Father O'Brien, faculty | advisor, he will attempt some time to- ! day to obtain the Silver Spring Armory for_the bouts. Curley Byrd, the Maryland sports chief, has put it up to the students whether boxing and wrestling should be sports and have so many different teams | goman golfers for & serles of interna- | introduced next season as a varsity that none receives much special atten- tion from the great body of students. | And if the students generally are not | sufficiently interested to watch games | and derive therefrom whatever value | attaches to the spectator's seat, then the amount of money. expended on in- | tercollegiate schedules could better be used in some other way. Changes Due Soon. If the writer is not looking just a | little bit too far ahead, then inter-| collegiate ‘athletics in the colleges are | due for considerable changes in the | next few years. The time is fast ap- | proaching, it seems, when the inter- | collegiate schedules will be confined | largely to those sports that come at least fairly close to rlyln{ for them- selves, so that virtually all taxes now assessed against students to help sup- intercollegiate competition may be expended on a program of phyncn} education and recreation in which the | great majority of students will take | art and from which the gencral genent.s in health will be far greater. At present nearly all colleges levy a fee on their students for the support of intercollegiate athletics. There is not_the least doubt that this has been productive of great value, but it is «aoubtful if the expenditures being made for intercollegiate schedules in Spring | sports will much longer b: justified. | Fall and Winter sports are in'a_much | different category than the Spring games, a time of the year when every- body thinks of getting outdoors and ought to think of participating person- ally in some branch of sport. In the Spring many of the benefits that col- | Ileges derive from sports in other sea- | sons are not attained, Spring sports, for | instance, being largely lacking in help- | ing to maintain a high morale, such as | foot ball and basket ball do. H Want Bodily Contact. Another rather marked tendency | which is working against Spring sports | 4s the apparent lessening of interest in | sports in which are lacking the physical | contact elements. For the average col- Jege student, and apparently for that part of the gencral public that follows | college games, any sport in which there 4s no physical contact holds not a great |tional matches with English players, | Bame. The squad will sail on the S. S. Beren- garia on April 22. Miss Collett already has recruited a very formidable team of American woman golfers, including, besides her- self, Misses Virginia Vi ‘Wie, re- cent winner of the Florida East Coast championship; Helen Hicks, semi-final- ist in that tournament; Bernice Wall. semi-finalist last year in the national championship; Peggy Wattles of Buf- falo, Virginia Holsederber, Maryland State champion, and Mrs. Hanley. Miss Collett asked Mrs. Hanley to assist in the managerial duties of the invasion abroad. Mrs. Hanley ac- cepted. CUP TIE SOCCER PLAY REACHES THIRD ROUND Concord, Marlboro and British Uniteds have reached the third round in cup tie soccer play here. matches yesterday. Concord defeated the older Wash- ington Soccer Club, 3 to 1; Marlboro overcame Silver Spring, 3 to 1, and British United triumphed over Gaelic- Americans, 4 to 1. All the encounters were stubbornly fought. In a game outside the cup tie com- | petition, Rosedale Club turned back North Point booters of Baltimore, 3 to 1, on the Rosedale playground. Fred Wilson, Rosedale player, was injured. Drawings for the third round of cup tie play will be made tomorrow night. All won their cup | The boys at College Park are slinging mitts and grappling intra- | murally, with Bill whifp the ring tutor, | and Tom Clayton handling the wrestlers. | —_— Del Cosgrove of Gallaudet, again is the top scorer among Washington’s col- | 85, iegiate basketers, with a total of 213 | points. Despite the record of his team |of only three victories in 22 games. | Capt. Joe Walsh of Catholic University, | gained second place with 179 points. Bob Gaylor of Maryland, was third with 154 and Johnny Ringle of Gallaudet fourth with 149. ‘;gg;nta and Maryland was second with Swimming ordinarily attracts few college spo: | meet at Brookland between | Washington d C. U. likely will have a sizeable gallary for no other reason [than that it's a battle between the | Colonials and Cards. son Square Garden, New York, will be |sought by three Georgetown athletes. ! Leo Sexton will put the shot and high jump, Artie Briggs will compete in the 1.000-yard event. Sexton and the mile relay—Brij Burke, Carlin and Ricca will enter University of Virginia meet March 22. favorite to win day night. the C. U. meet Wednes- STRAIGHT OFF THE TEE BY WALTER R. McCALLUM. \HE Washington Golf and Coun- try Club, always an early starter in the matter of arrang- ing its golf season and its 2vents, will start earlier than usual this year, Chairman Fred D. Paxton of the golf committee has notified the commit- tee members of the annual meeting of ington yesterday because the flag on the | seventh green was being blown b’! the shot se | wind in such a way it it | ball out of the hole. His with a mashie was perf ly hit, and | the ball rolled up to the cup, strikin e flagstaff and remaining out o! | hole. | Tonight's annual meeting of the Dis- | trict Golf Association, to be held at the | Racquet Club at 8 o'clock, is expected | to develop a heap of discussion on the | !May Stage Bucknell Bouts| Maryland may add the sport '.o“ Georgetown led the teams with 1760 | rt fans but tomorrow night's | Geol Titles in_the national senior amateur | track and field meet March 18 in Madi- | 300-yard race and Jim Kelly in the . Maryland, with about 30 entries, is a | g | f the Boys' | pound_ cla; | am__sel Georgetown No. 1, 1,500. his | Reds District A. A. U. Is to Get Unde IGHT of the 85 teams entered in the District A. A, U. basket bali championship tournament are to get action tonight as the big show opens in the Tech High gym. The first game will get under way at 7 o'clock and the last at 10 o'clock. Montrose and Remsens will battle in the tourney opener. The ball officially starting play will be tossed out by Representative Fred A. Hartley, jr., of New Jersey. Headlining wm?m's card will be the battle between Woltz Photographers and St. Martin’s, in the unlimited class, at 10 o'clock. The Woltz team, defending champion. will face a quint of proved worth in St. Martin’s. It is an unusually attractive game for so early in the tourney. The tourney schedule for today and tomorrow: TONIGHT. Tech Hish Gym. Montrose vs. Remsens (unlimited class). 7 g'elock; J. C. C. Flashes vs. Arcadiansu (130-pound class). 8 o'clock Waliace Memorial pognd clags). 9 o'clo Wolts Photographers vs. St. Martinjs (un- limited class), 10 o'clock. TOMORROW. George Washington Gym. (135.-SnS; Spartans ve St John's Easles - . 4 o'clock, St [Paul’s vs. Firates (115-pound class). 5 “Weeh High Gy Club , Optimists ‘Wilsons (130- 58). 7 o'cl lock. g ‘Cosmopolitais (130-pound antico Marines vs. Potomac Boat Club (unlimited_clags). 9 o'c o'clogk, . W. Freshmen vs. Trinity M. E. (un- limited class). 10 o'clock. Skinker Eagles are even for the sea- son with the East Arlington basketers | of Baltimore. The Birds yesterday, in | the Silver Spring Armory, hung a 42-20 | pasting on the outfit from the Oriole | City. . Stephen's vs. %)- 8 0'clock: WITH THE LUTHERAN LEAGUE. Team Standing. w. L. 153 16 . 4425 . John' 8. 4 X ma | 8t. John's No.3 37 32 G'setown No. 3 18 51 | High__individual o sames—Koblentz, 146; B oA ndividual sets—Barnara, 387; nu.; 48, High team games—St. John's No. 3. §86: d_Georgetown No. 1. 889, ' | e "team sets—St. “Jonn's No. 3, 1,894: | GENERAL COUNSEL MEN'S LEAGUE. Team Standing. Braves 33 38 Red Sox. 33 33 Yankees Phillies . Cubs . Giants Pirates Browns . . 568; White High, Red: 1,543 Tigers, Basket Tourney Way Tonight only other ulm'; which has taken the les this Winter. nl!td by Duke Allen and Ralph Bennle, who scored 14 and 10 points, respec- tively, the Birds got off to an early sizeable lead and always held the whip hand yesterday. Stewart Photographers had little trouble defeating Eastern Preps, 25 to 15, in the preliminary to the Eagles- East Arlington game. Harris led the winners on attack with 11 points. Ambassador A. C. today boasts the junior loop title of the Jewish Commu- nity Center Court League. Ambassa- dors yesterday took the measure of the Spartans, 26 to 18. French besketers will engage Wood- | lawn dribblers tomorrow night in the Silver Spring Armory in an Independ- ent League game, starting at 9 o'clock. ‘The French outfit, which is leading the league, is favored to win. Silver Spring Giants will take on a neighborhood rival in a preliminary at 8 o'clock. In other Independent League games this week on the Silver Spring floor United Typewriter Grays will face Skinker Eagles Wednesday night and St. Mary's Celtics Priday night. The Grays also will play tonight, meeting Woodlawn A. C. in the Central High iym at 8 o'clock. It will be an ex- ibition game. Al's A, C. fair dribblers will entertain the B. & O. girls’ sextet tomorrow night at 8 o'clock in the Wilson Normal School gym. Jewish Community Center Flashes, | 145-pound title holders in the Boys' Club Court League, conquered Westerns, 35 to 33. Company C, District Guards, squeezed through to a 24-23 triumph over Walter Whirlwinds yesterday on the National Guard Armory court at Laurel. Montrose A. C., tossers handily de- East Ariington defeated the | feated Brentwood Hawks, 37 to 19, yes- | W, rge | O et at the start of the cam. | terday on the National GUAFd AFmOry | “hit s Wearor ot Bt | paign. French A. C. of this city is the | floor at Hyattsville. BOWLERS INSURANCE LEAGUE. Team Standins. %1 Eautas 38 33 Virsinia "Lt WESTERN UNION GIRLS' LEAGUE. Team Standing. Golds Vil suver s s iver Six Reds 3 Orehids 33 o 3 - GENERAL COUNSEL LADIES' LEAGUE. Administrativ Injunctions Mail ... TRANSPORTATION BLDG. MEN'S LEAGUE. Team Standing. PR urec ., Ly 3129 Sun Life Records. High team set—Burec, 1,628, High team game—Burec. 590. High individual set—Preeburs, 397. High individ mes—Bergholiz d ed, 149 each. - 'SCHOOL TRACKMEN END INDOOR WORK Meet at Catholic U. Wednes- day Marks Close of the Season Hereabout. | | | | | performers hereabout will close their indoor competi- | =7 tive campaign Wednesday | night in the Catholic University |games at Brookland. For Eastern, Tech and Devitt it will Dbe the second meet of the Winter, these | schools having been represented in the | University of Virginia scholastics last | month in Charlottesville. Western and St. John's will be making their first | and final appearance of the indoor season. Eastern was an easy winner in the | Virginia meet, and is a decided favorite | to again top the scholastics in-the C. | U. affair. The Light Blue, winner last | year of the annual Spring meet, the public high championship affair, for the first time in the annal e Lin- coln Park institution, has a formidable, weil balanced team, stronger than a campaign ago without a doubt. ‘Tech, which was beaten by Eastern by only two points in the 1929 title meet, has lost the sensational Jake wards, all-around performer, who for | the t few years has been almost the whole McKinley team. The Gray also has lost other boys capable of dragging down points. ‘Western, once a power on the cinder- path, is making a strong effort to come back in this sport. The Red, however, | does not expect to do much for a sea- ison or two. Coach Dan Ahern is most | interested just now in putting track on | a firm basis at the Georgetown school. | Devitt has a small squad, but one tried worth. | . Little is known of St. John's, but it | is reasonable to figure that the Cadets | will do well if they have any real ma- | terial. Paully Byrne has brought the | St. John's boys along in foot ball and basket ball. Maybe he also will do it in track. A bright schedule is bein for the Western High base Manager Joe Little. Five games so far have been listed in addition to the pub- lic high title contests. Several others will be added. Here's the way the card now looks: = Arfll 4—Georgetown Prep, at Garrett ark. April 29—Tech. May ga. May 9—Business. May 14—Episcopal, at Alexandria. l{’l! 16—Catholic U. Freshmen, at ‘May 20—Central, May 22—Devitt. May 30—Eastern. |BILL TILDEN VICTORIOUS IN POORLY PLAYED FINAL MENTONE, Prance, March 10 (#).— | In one of the poorest finals ever seen on the Riveira, Big Bill Tilden of | g _arranged team by C. CHOOLBOY track and field| \RECORDS PROMISED ON MIDWEST TRACK | By the Associated Press. | CHICAGO, March 10.—The Middle- | western indoor track season will reac] | its peak this week end at Champaign, | IlL, where stars of the Big Ten will battle leading performers from the Mis- sourl Valley, Southwest, East and Southeast in the annual renewal of the Illinois. relay carnival. Record-smashing promises to be plen- tiful, following the performances of ‘Western Conference athletes in the an- nual indoor championships at the Uni- versity of Minnesota Saturday night. Seldom without a great hurdler, the Big Ten this season has Lee Sentman of Illinois, who in his last two appear- ances, has tied and broken a world record. In the Big Ten meet Sentman | hurdle event, and is favored to with- stand the best competition other sec- tions of the country can offer in the relay event. George Simpson, the flyer from Ohio State, and Eddie Tolan, Michigan Negro flash, will renew their struggle for su- premacy. but will encounter big trouble in Hubert Meier of Iowa State. Henry Canby of Iowa and Verne Mc- Dermott, Illinois captain, will be primed to try to even up for their defeat in the pole vault Saturday night by Tommy Warne of Northwestern. Barney Berliriger of the Universit” of Pennsylvania will be back to defend his all-around title, and unless some new star appears is expected to repeat his vic- of last year, when he set a new | carnival mark for the iron-man event. SHUFFLE STANDINGS IN TENPIN TOURNEY By the Assoctated Press. CLEVELAND, Ohio, March 10. — Standings of the American Bowl Congress world championship tourn: ment went through a general upheaval over the week end. Jess Pritchet, veteran Indianapolis pinster, proved the .outstanding indi- vidual star. He paired with Pred Schleimer to gain second place in the doubles with 1,210, went it alone for a 623 for twelfth position in the sin- gles and landed at the top of the all- e\‘rex;r..sa:mlp through a nine-game total of 1,834. W. Hosbach and Freddy Gardella of Detroit scored 1,218 to carry them into first place in the two-man event. Henry Mucek of Toledo took first Elu;e in the singles with 681, followed y_Al Hiltenbrandt, Nyack, N. J., with 657. The best showing in the singles yesterday was made by Al Larson of Chicago, his 643 placing him fifth, The J. W. Thorsen team of Chicago’ remains at the head of competition with 2,940. ve lon of the alleys unf ‘Thursday night. the five-man HOCKEY RACES NARROW TO TRIO IN EACH LOOP NEW YORK, March 10 (#).—The | National Hockey League race was re- ; duced to three contenders in each group through last week’s games. Montreal's Maroons practically clinched set a new mark for the 70-yard high | Philadelphia, won the singles title of | first place in the international group by B Tourney W.C.D. A CONTROL OF GAME WIDENED New Constitution Adopted. Tournament at Hall Opens April 21. 7 BY R. D. THOMAS. RVILLE EBERSOLE, dynamo of the Washington City Duckpin Association, start- ed the wheels turning to- |day to manufacture an entry of 400 teams for the annual city | tournament, to be held at Con- |vention Hall. Entries for this |event, which drew 350 teams last | season, will close April 5 and play will open April 21. |, All officers were re-elected and the | tournament dates were set in a meeting | yesterday at the Raleigh Hotel attended | by the representatives of 41 leagues and various others interested in the game's promotion. Harry Z. Greer again will lead the 01 ization as president, with Perce E‘l;ett. vice president; - Ebersole, secre- tary, and Wesley Miltner, treasurer. A new constitution and set of by- laws, drawn by Ebersole and Earle D. Stocking, former president, was adopted and from now on the association will have a_stronger grip on bowling af- fairs. Its autonomy has been extended to include spec: mum'allnmu and tion. No records made in leagues without the association’s foul- line provision will be recognized. ’ Any bowler proved guilty of collusion with a pinboy or any other attempt to gain unfair advantage will be barred thenceforth from all competition within the association’s jurisdiction. An oc- curence or two of this nature was suspected this season, but no definite proof was obtainable. ‘The long discussed question of whether dummy scores should be counted in the total of pins for the purpose of determ- ining pennants when the teams are tied in games won and lost was settled. The new cmllnt is that dummies should count. During midseason the ‘bowlers put on a hot argument over whether a &n knocked down and‘returning into the field of play to’ restand should be counted as dead. The association’s ruling is that the stubborn maple re- mains alive. Game Is Growing. In the Cam sweetstakes no sub- stitution may be made without the con- sent of two-thirds of the participants. No bowler will mme to shoot in the money cl with shoes that leave any mark on the runway. A by-law was to make bowling :lhoea comp , but this was talked lown. Eversole's carefully kept data re- vealed an increase of 18 over last season, there being 111 in the field {now. They include a total of 1210 |teams, or 244 more than a year ago. |In the last year, including the Camp- bell sweepstakes, the association has the Mentone tennis tournament from .h?ques Brugnon, veteran French inter- na eeps . spent $5,229.99 in prizes, but is in a healthy financial state, which/ brin; the thought that an winning two of their three games. To lose the place they must lose both of lonalist, in five sets. The scores were 5, 3—86, 4—86, 6—1 their remaining games, while the Mon- three .the other side | deal of interest, and on the other e :&ell Canadiens win all they have of the question the physical contact |the committee for the purpose of dis- eports attract ever increasing numbers. | cussing the eventsof the coming season, That seems to be the only apparent |, pe held at the club house Thursday reason for the almost phenomenal | night at 7:30 o'clock. owth of boxing in the colleges in the 'V, jpor guest wili be John I. Power, st four cr five years. chairman of the house committee, who Anyway, Spring sports are presenting i "\, jeave Washington within a fort- quite a problem to the colleges, in that | b, ‘¢ "priladelphia, where he is to High individual '-vm.“e—.cuum:. 107-24; | H . 106-45; Hussey, 106-! 35. His individual sei—Charest, 409; Staubly | matter of rotation of invitation golf | Robb, 109; Free- | | tournaments. Indian Spring may de-| cide to abandon its Spring évent, Manor definitely has decided to forego its Fail | tourney this year and the Congressional | board of governors will decide this | | afternoon whether that club will hold an invitation tourney this year. The matter of too many tournaments has trikes—Froeburg, pares—Robb. 136, gh_individual avera urg, 106: Burns, 106. INTERNAL REVENUE MEN'S LEAGUE. Team Standing. wl‘l h& for the last and iven for the year the coming term. a heap more work than the last, & of it . created by his o'r:“ ent:‘mrpfl.em er, ltllllh “"igh individual game—Charest, 181; Dowd 162: Manning. 185. ; Manning, 138; Jones. t. In the American grou Chie and Wilbur p. icago broke a deadlock to become second to Boston. Abe and Carl Aeschliman, 6—3, 6—3, 1—6, 6—3. 5. 185. (oSpares—Staubly, 1 Strikes—Cox, 38; Horner, 34; Plerson, 30. 31" consel 4227 Gener NTS' E MERCHANTS' LEAGUE. 42 27 General Co Team Standing. = good deal of money is expended on | them, virtually no money is taken in | as receipts, and that the aims which | formerly made such expenditures worth | while are being less and less attained. | Spring sports schedules are almost tra- | ditional, so much so that any chang made in them may have to come by degrees, but that change is due in onc way or another, North Carolina State College and Vir- | ginia Polytechnic Institute have no foot ball coaches for next year. The Raleigh | iustitution has been thrown in with the | Blacksburg school by the resignation of | Gus Tebell to go to Virginia, and prob- | ably will have just as much difficulty | citing a good man as V. P. L seema‘ to be having. The kind of foot ball| ccaches these schools want, and are| looking for, simply are not available, eucept at salaries that neither is in position to pay. Linzey and McDonald, Maryland ath- 1ctos who got first places in the South- ern Conference indoor meet at Chapel | Hill Saturday night, came through with | 1airly good performances. Linzey won | th> half mile on a three-and-a-half-lap track in 2 minutes and 2 seconds, and McDonald took the shot t with al heave of just a little more t 42 feet. | Outdoors, it seems that Linzey ought to stand a good chance to drop consider- take up new duties with a chain grocery store organization. Power has been chairman of the house committee for several years and has been one of the members of the locally famous golf com- bination of McClenahan and Power, who hav m% duo for quite a while, aided somewhat by _judicious handicapping and shrewd placing of .agers, At the meeting Thursday night will discussed the forthcoming club vitation golf tournament, to be held April 29, 30, May 1 and 2, and all matters pertaining to the complete club golf schedule for the year. mittee will remain the sai year with Paxton as chairman and R. J. Morman as vice chairman. J. M. Willis was thwarted of a holed approach shot 140 yards long at Wash- com- me as last | come up for more extended thought by | golf committees this year than ever be- | fore, and from the way the wind is blowing it may be forecast with some de:ree of certainty that even though 1930 may find most of the tournaments being run through in the time-honored way, another year will find one or two of the clubs turning toward the scheme every two years. | | first time on Saturday, was crowded all day yesterday with golfers who were glad to play again despite the high More | wind which® swept the layout. | than 800 tickets were sold | Potomac. | been open all Winter, | with golfers. was crowded West Washington Baptisi Near GeorgetownA Church Loop Title P by below 2 minutes and McDonald to | Pac reach a distance of 45 feet. Alexandria Notes i ALEXANDRIA, Va, March 10.—St. | Mary's Celtics outclassed one of Balti- | more’s leading cage outfits in their | Sabbath attraction at Schuler’s Hall in | defeating St. Andrew's Shamrocks, 53 | 10 23, before a capacity galery. Wilbur Wright, the Celtics’ high- | scoring guard, led the onslaught with n 12 points, while he held his two oppo- | nents, Toney and Anton, to a lone foul shot, which was caged by Toney.| Rodger was the '-ading light of the visiting combin-~tion, scoring 17 points on 17 field £--is and a trio of charity baskets. In p. _iiminaries the Alexandria Col- | trimmed the Denny Tag Co. of s timore, 35 to 13, and Jimmy Brad- | B R ley's Collegians defeated the Clover | A.C, 28 to 19. { The most important game yet played | in the Alexandria Gazette Basket Ball | League will be stage: ‘when the Knight's Store five and the | St. Mary's Celtics meet for the second | d tomorrow night, | ¢ Grace Episcopal _... 34 32 Congress Street M. P, 31 35 Christ Episcopal 26 40 Calvary Drakes Crivary Kinnear 23 43 5 Georgetown Presoy.. 21 45 546 1. Individual Averages. WEST WASHINGTON BAPTIST. G. St. Sp. HG. HS. H. Hodges..... 56 28 119 133 Cleary .. Wheeler Z. C. Hody McDaniel . bean .. 90 B4 8 348 05 318 A% 108-1: 17 11 5 19 107-47 1633 17 102 10 PECK CHAPEL No. 2. R. J. Stocl E. Saul Walker Powell Helleuback cKnee .. Proctor . Miller ........ Lindamood 3 Varren 80 artin Gannaway Smith Torney Huntt Crawlord B. Huntt Predrich Austin 4 | Waldrop CALVARY KINNEAR. \PRINCE GEORGES COUNTY " _CLASS B SWEEPSTAKES | Eoen biock, | g;mm Eaton. L1 lt.;::g’ 123 Fidd. 105 94570 98488 Iri 68 Gullickson ‘98 155 Lanhardt | Gude . Crandaii doy .. * | WASHINGTON A. B. C. WINS INTERCITY PIN CONTEST Coming from behind in th the American Business Clus o5 ach: jpgton, defeated the A. B. C. of Read- g, Pa. in a duckpin batile at the of holding their big affairs only once | East Potomac Park, opened for the| at East| Rock Creek Park, which has | | | 29 | High _indi 114-36; Rice 3 | 108-28. | Barber & Ross. 54 13 South. Dairies. 50 18 n Elec. .. 43 24 Skinless Franks 38 28 Thompson's D. 34 32 W. R. Winslow. 29 37 Records. High team game—Southern Dairles, High team set—Southern Dairles. 167! High individual ga: joblieh individual set—F. Veinmeyer (8! F w;fl;h individual average—Houck (B. & R, B me—Harvey (Penn), s ) EAST WASHINGTON CHURCH LEAGUE. Team Standing. Douglas No. Ninth No. 2 i 54 ist. 20 58 Eastern Presby. 12 63 Records. High Individual average—Mertz, 110-23 High individual game—Rudy Jarman. 163. High individual set—Rudy Jarman. 434. High individual Spares—W. Koontz (Ana- costia). 112, High' individual strikes— High team same—Do High team set—Dou Epworth ZREsEzeEed Baptist. . Kendall No. 2 Petworth High team gam High team set—West D, Strange, 160. High individual Most strikes—Ol Most set—H. Hodges, 442. leary. 30, ares—Rice (Pifth), 189. vidual avera, (Fifth), 111-41; B. Y. P. U. GIRLS' LEAGUE. Team Standing. W, advas) Y 3 Metropolitan .. ville wor K:;d-‘fl High] First Bethany Fitth No. illll PLUMBING INDUSTRY LEAGUE. Team Standing. W. L. Grane Co % 1i E. G. Schater Clnning 26 Edear Morri SHnninensm s %% Masters No. 2. 18 38 utact, g ers No. 2.’ Masters No. 1. 34 32 Noland: Co. 27 31 O'Hanlon. Co... WESTERN UNION MEN'S LEAGUE. Team Standins. W.L . 3828 Jinxs ard 623, | Mt 1 ‘Washington No. 1, ‘High individual games—H. Hodses, 161:| Eastern 5ol Hodges, | © Moyer (Fifth), Wash. Centen. Ruth %6 L3 | Joppa Lodse . | Hign 'sames—Owen ( nial), 141; Ackman (R 28 39 30 Rules & Re Q. M. CORPS LADIES' LEAGUE. Team Stan A1 M & 40 13 eo:nzrm:,t'm.r“ ta 32 31 Personnel Team Standing. 2525 Purc -8 AGRICULTURE INT! Tea UREAU LEAGUE. Standing. 1,608; ts—Lyons, 411; Palmer, ; Harris, 397. | High individual games—Lyons, 183; Hev- ener, 156; Palmer, ODD FELLOWS' LEAGUE. Team Standing. SECTION B. " Washington Mt. Nebo . Phoenix Canton_ . 2 F. D. 8t Potomac 26 Columbian "En." 28 4 Federal Ci Friendship. 3 Falls Church FASTERN STAR LEAGUE. Team Standing. " Acacta Bethiehem 17 " Pieas Mizpah Bmklnni" Lebancn No. zS2asLAsRNEE EeeSENeEERNey Martha ") Record; Hish team sames—wo nial, §70; i al $70; Rud Rog e Washington Centen- uth), 136; Fayeite), 135, PR e O Plant, | | SOUTHERN RAILWAY CLERKS' LEAGUE. | “BONT SHOOT! cried the willowy Winona “And why not, my gal?” demanded Wellington Threeves, thrusting his classic chin against her heaving bosom. “Because,” replied Winona, ‘‘you will not be annoyed at bridge by his huskiness any longer. He has promised Deuces. Five iRh_ sets—Gree: beck ¢ Ruth) L3723 Washington ' 331 time in titular play. The contest at| X g\:m.:rmory Hall will start at 8:15 h ‘;umef”‘""“" 3 eed ... A victory for the league-leading } B. Ander. Celtics would clinch the league title |foiterton - for them, while a triumph for the Store- | Crowley men would toss the series into a dead- Jock between the Celtics and Knight's. Episcopal High School basket ball per- formers were guests of Principal Archi- bold Hoxton Saturday night at the annual banquet of the cagers. The | g pery election of a captain for next season | Bean wes deferred, due to the absence of | Dousl Billy ‘Cleveland, & letter man. The | Whit- 37 Ackman & (Bethany), 346: ntenaial, 337 King Pin No. 1 by a margin of 19| sticks. Washington also | 62 | bles. The scores: o Menus | READING. that, if spared, he will change to OLD GOLDS, made from queen-leaf tobacco. Not a throat scratch in a trillion.” OLD GOLD A G. ADI Team Standis awBEEE B EEE A 1 (‘x"‘aml.nnvxlixix & velop. Brch. (e “Blanters: 3 33 Liht Arttliery 34 38 mbard. 3726 Casual Detach. 24 39 - 3726 Labor Batallion 24 38 joon CO. ... ;3331 Milicary Pouce: 21 42 NORTH WASHINGTON CHURCH LEAGUE. Team Standing. W. L W.L 43 28 Columbia Hts, 34 3 40 26 First Reformed 32 3% 39 27 ry M. E.. 30 36 35 31 Gunton-Temple 11 55 INTERIOR DEPARTMENT LEAGUE. Team Standing. shington Centen- Goodwin ith), 90. Lampert (Washisigton centen- n Centennial), 17, = 0 mens EPISCOPAL. i zame—Paxson (Washington Cen- Hart rsen Hart tennial), NAUTICAL DUCKPIN LEAGUE. Team Standing. 466 WASHINGTY - 108 84 | P. | La N. 8aul ... 50: | Cozzens ON. 91— 202 - | 89— t 338 | Retwortn Bapt. Central B Wallace Men W. L. Potomac B. C.. 45 18 Drifters’ Can. £l Dorade No. Tate" Bonzat \election probably will: be held some | Croesen /time this week. Alexandria High School basketeers o are at Charlottesville, Va., where they | Jordon .- are to play tonight in the final game for | Bary LUo%F - 4he class B high school championship | Stusrt’" ©f Virginia. il BRONZE MEDAL CONTEST. W. L. fters’ Can. 2 13 11 Pot. W, Br'fieraas™s 13 11 Eoloniat Canes: Wash. Canoe'$ 11 13 | deLashmute X | Dorsey 7 Disbursing Wotn i 16 1} Land Office Ty 0 : Pension Officé. 15 12 Indian Office .. AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS LEAGUE. Team Standing. W. L. . 46 23 Pinance & Est. 41 Bt | Grals l: 34 Color Laboral BUREAU OF STANDARDS LEAGUE. Team Standing. W% sicists i B . L. 618 . 319 274 316 Records. High team game—Drifters' Canoe No. 1. '%iieh team set—Drifters' Cance No. 1, h_individual game—Prench (Wash. Canas, Noialviatiai set—Rice (Wash. Canoe Saigr “individual average—Rice (Wash. n.',‘?.';";'.":;%. Tumper of strikes—Crown (El Greatest number of spares—PFristoe (An- chor Canoe), 146. 100— 101 e A [ %R M. Ries TOLEDO WINS BASKET TITLE, | Johuson ' DAYTON, Ohlo, March 10 (#)— |Milstead *Toledo won the National Professional | Bowime? League basket ball championship here | today by defe Dayton, 24 to 19.| 1 g ‘Toledo won the first half of the season |H. Hi #nd Dayton the second half, Toledo|E Hushes won the deciding game today. [§ o Frults e st Standar FASTEST GROWING CIGARETTE IN HISTORY. . .NOT A COUGH IN A CARLOAD Listenin ... OLD GOLD—PAUL WHITEMAN HOUR, every Tuesday, 9 P. M., Eastern Time REEEEs § SRE T SEBNSER ¥puEsE gums Dan Koloff has been matched inst Y, ull Martin will meet ‘Waiter Keenan n m‘ on the weekly card trand Thursday night, GEORGETOWN PRESBY. 12 43 126 330 13 8 s 33 N Cera o ists . n;i%u. ; P

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