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e SPORTS. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, TUESDAY, APRIL 8 1930. Naval Academy Arranges Elaborate Program for Dedication of New Boat House SPORTS. Stella Walsh Would Become U. S. Citizen WOODWARD TO OPEN |PUPPY TRIALS SLATED AFFAR WILL TAKE PLACE ON APRIL 13 Large Number of Guests to Be Invited to Witness Fine Sport Card. BY H. C. BYRD. N elaborate program, cover- | ing the whole afternoon, ! has been worked out by the Naval Academy for the dedication of its new boat house next week, April 19. Many col- leges and universities have been invited to send representatives, and it is likely that one of the largest gatherings of the kind ever held in the East will take|m lace. Plans are being made to ake care of an exceptionally comprehensive guest list. The program is to begin at 12 o'clock with a F incheon in the omcers‘ Club for special guests. At 1 o'clock the dedi- cation exercises proper are to be held, with all the customary formalities. At 1:15 pm. will begin a series | magta, of athletic events, the feature of which should be the boat races. Columbia University, with four crews, and Massa- chusetts Institute of Technology, with three crews, are to test their prowess as oarsmen against the Midshipmen. Georgia Tech is to be Navy's opponent in lacrosse, Um\ets\ly of Virginia in track, Lehigh in base ball and Columbia in_tennis. Navy's new training quarters for its crew will fill a long-felt need. For yurs since the beginning of rowing, the crews have been housed in a more Fess ramshackle wooden structure, lnd Comdr. Jonas Ingram, who left the Naval Academy in February, after four years as athletic director, may look upon the new structure as one of the greatest achievements of his successful regime. The boat house also is to provide dress- ing rooms for the base ball teams, be- mx located adjacent to the varsity diamond. Local colleges are to engage in three games today, two here and one away. Georgetown meets Yale in what was to have been & second game, the first hav- ing been canceled yesterday on account of wet grounds. ~Catholic University entertains Lafayette College at Brook- land, while the University of Maryland plays North Carolina at Chapel Hil Maryland started with a big lead against North Carolina State )esurdny at Raleigh, but was not able to hold i In the fifth inning the Old Line unm had the score standing at 5 to 1, but| North Carolina State tied 1t up in the ninth and neither team was able to| score in the tenth, the game winding | up in a 5-to-5 tie. ‘Gaylor and Chal- mers, at third and short, fielded bril- liantiy for Maryland, handling a total of 16 chances without a slip, each man having _eight. Maryland man to hit for more than one base, and he connected for a double and a single. North Carolina State con- siderably outbatted Maryland, making | 13 hits against 7. Marsiand. ABHOA N.C. State ABH.O.A Turner.3b. .. Hargrove.if: roc) Wilkle.ds. .. Averette,p.. 5l wurcousoummar’ i3 03 113 ] 05 13 12 00 00 10 730 adice. _Hetsel, Tani Elank, Brake: Enipes (2 2 nex, ace, ‘Turner, Gerocl Thomase it Brake. Gronin, - Three-base t . Berger, Brake. " Stolen bases™ hits—Plank, l« Brake. es— By A E%ii:'élbl.k‘_r 1pnmm.-1c- km.dh°£ ; Catholic University and Gallaudet lay ball on their home fields tomorrow, f Brooklanders having Delaware Uni- vermy as their opponent and the Ken- dall Greeners being booked to entertain the Tank Corps nine. Maryland con- tinues on its trip through Carolina, moving over to Durham to play Duke University. Dr. Robert Moran and Dr. John Lyons, Georgetown alumai, last night entertained the Blue and Gray boxing team at dinner at the Occidental Hotel. Successes attained during the last sea- gon and prospects for next constituted the major part of the conversation dur- ing the evening. The opinion was voiced in this col- umn last week, said opinion being based the showing made here, that the Oxrord-CImbrldge lacrosse team had very little chance to take back to Eng» land the Flannery Cup, a trophy pro- vided many years ago for competition be"'u:“ England and the United However, it begins to seem that the run up enough points in es to give them a margin the l'.ron'er schools never will be able to overcome. The cup awarded on a total point score. In other words, if the Englishmen score 70 points mlml all American colleges they play and the American colleges score only 62 points, then the cup goes bl Right pow the visitors are 80 l.l' in the lead by virtue of their scores against two very weak twelves that it 15 doubtful if their lead will be overcome. The chances are it will not be. Eighteen points against Washing- ton College against & zero and 9 yes- terday against Virginia with another zero for the American college is run- ning up a lead with a vengeance. So far the Englishmen have scored a total of 34 points, while the points scored against them total only 11, This means that in the remaining 11 games !.he teams in this country muat win games by an avauge of 2 polnu P-r game and 1 game by & points. And if the showi ol the visitors against Navy is a ue cri- terion, that is not likely to be accom- plished. 2 Another rather interesting angle to | sec the surprising performances of the Eng- lish lacrosse twelve in its three games since it made such a aoor showing here ngllml 8t. John's is given :i’ 3 man who has followed it closely. Here is his statement: “The greater strength shown by the English lacrosse team since it did such poor work here in the opening game f its trip may be accounted for by its .wlwh from the lish style ot game to the American. iglish teams have Almly six men 1: the attack, dlhl - ican o 5 th Wash- lulllluacu turned le and were suc- Anolhfl polnt utg eonnecfion with is making h'.hltalnoouu th:ymvn lnuu Korn. American rdem.hlsbeen 1bl¢t m'fi‘fizmnuufi' sible for if the P{uwm words, .ou lbrond 1% wfll not be for any re because an Amerlm 15 tuter- uu vlsMn team in '.he much mere effective American -m- Dlly G. U. ADDS A BALL GAME. ginia_for a ball c here April 26. Itis flim e mm by the Hoyas for the currmt 4 Cronin was the only| CLEVELAND, Ohio, April 8 (#)— Stella M. Walaslewcs, 19, wants to change her citizenship from Poland to the United States. She 15 better known as Stella Walsh, who a month ago set a new world record for women of 26.1 sec- onds in the 220-yard dash. Miss Walsh in applying for nat. uralization papers explained that she hopes to become an American citisen in time to represent this country in the 1932 Olympic games at Los Anselu. 'SCHOOLBOY EVENTS LISTED THIS WEEK BASE BALL. Today, 'merson vs. Eastern at Eastern. cmnom H-u vs, Devitt on Monu- ment Grounds. Laurel High vs. St. Albans at St. Albans. Tomorrow. George Muon High vs. Woodward. ‘Thursday, Central vs. Georgetown Freshmen. ‘Western vs. Emerson. Georgetown Prep vs, Eastern at ™. Friday. Georgeton Prep vs. St. Albans at St. Albans. Woodward vs. Hyattsville High at Hyattsville. Silver Spring vs. Rockville High at ckville. Saturday. Geuyshur( High vs. Central at Cen- Tech vs. Catholic University Fresh- men at Brookland. Emerson vs. Episcopal at Alexandria Western vs. Georgetown Freshmen. TRACK. Friday. Central High Interclass meet. Tech vs. Episcopal at Alexandria. ‘TENNIS. Friday. St. Albans vs. Friends at St. Albans. (Prep School Tennis League.) CONTESTS SCHEDULED FOR COLLEGE TEAMS — Today. Base ball—Georgetown vs. Yale at ‘Washington Barracks. Base ball—Catholic vs. Lafayette at Brookland Stadium. Base ball—Maryland vs. North Caro- lina U. at Chapel Hill, N. C. Tomorrow. Base ball—Gallaudet vs. Tank School (Fort Meade) at Kendall Green. Base ball—Catholic vs. Delaware at Brookland Stadium. Base ball—Maryland vs. Duke at Dur- ham, N. C. Tennis—Georgetown vs, Johns Hop- kins at Hilltop. Thursday. Base ball—Georgtown vs. Harvard at ‘Washingtoi. Barri acks. Base hll)—eryllnd vs. Virginia at Charlottesville, Va. Friday. Base ball—Catholic vs. Harvard at Brookland Stadium. Base ball—Maryland vs. North Caro- lina U. at CoUege Park. ‘Ten rge Washington vs. Amer- ican U. at American University. Saturday. Lacrosse—Maryland vs. Weoum Mary- land at College Park. ‘Track—Catholic vs. w-.ke Forrest at Brookland Stadium. ‘Track—Maryland !ruhme'n vs. Bal- timore Polj M College M—SIlhuul. tnmnlul meet at Kendall Green. TIED CHURCH QUINTS WILL PLAY THURSDAY Plans for the play-off between Mount Vernon and Calvary Methodist teams for Sunday School Basket Ball League title 'x‘hursdly night at the Central Y. M. will made tonight at a meeun nf the league there at 8 o'clock. The teams finished the season each with 19 wins in 23 starts. Calvary drew a tie with Mount Vernons when the former defeated the latter, 28 to 26, Saturday night. Mount Vernon was the winner last season. Pratt Whirlwinds, ds, 145-pound District A. A U. court clumriou. want to meet Montrose A. crowned unlimit- ed title halder. Jnkle Lewis, manager, can be reached at ‘North 1813. The proposed nfles becwm\ District and Baltimore A. A. champions is off because of the mt\nuul Trwilling- ness of Arundel Boat Club, Baltimore unlimited champion, to play. Takoma Tigers and Brentwood Hawks, champions of the Montgomery and Prince Georges Count ot Blll u:guu. r spectively. meet ton! Sehool at §:30 o'c! n the sec- ond ng:’ of thpir three-game series for the lnmcfilm 'y laurels. The Tigers won the first game VIRGINIA NINES GATHER TO FORM LEAGUE GROUP A meeting to organize irginia section of Lhe unlimited divmnn of the Capital City Base Ball Leuue will be held tonight at 7:30 o'clock in the Post sports department. Plans for insect and pewee divisions of the league were made at meetings last night. Eight insects and seven ewee teams applied for franchises in ?}:e first two sections to be organized. It was agreed that ouur teams would be given until Masy 1 to join either lon. while Amer- Establishied 18903 Suit or Topcoat TAILORED TO ORDER $27.50 Can’t Be Duplicated Under $45 Made to Yeur Individual Measurement Mertz & Mertz 405 11th St. Nu.r ‘ H. J. Ff¥ehlich, Tech High Short of Seasoned Material for Its Track Team E'LL get a good workout.” This is what Hap Har- dell, Tech track coach, shot back at us when we asked him today how he thought his boys would fare against Episcopal in their annual dual meet over in Alex- andria Friday afternoon at 3:30 o'clock. The clash, along with the Central High interclass meet, will mark the formal opening of the outdoor track cam- paign among achoolboys of the Dis- trict. group. “I've got & lot of boys running around in running suits. But that doesn't mean they're runners,” Hap went _on. Hap is short on seasoned material. There’s no question about that, He has not had a whole lot of class on his teams for the past few years, during which the sensational Jake Edwards has been about the whole show. But Jake 18 now pursuing his studies in the cloistered hails of Penn. And Hap is trying to carry on without him with only a handful of boys upon whom he can really count. Capt. Al Reichman, half-miler; Efldl: Quinn, sprinter; Wil- lard Piggo , high and low hurdler; Lawrence Pope, miler, and Hipsley, high jumper, just ut make up Tech's list of potential point scorers. And Hap is not banking too much on all of them delivering. Hipsley won't compete in the Epis- copal meet because Hardell does not believe him to be in A-1 shape, but he expects to have him ready for subse- quent competition. While the Tech athletes are work- ing in the Catholic University Stadium, the Eastern Stadium or some other place (they are forever turning up at a different place, it seems), Central High students are drilling hard for the in- terclass meet at the Columbia Heights school Friday. Bill Foley, veteran and pular Central coach, will be watch- g closely for likely material for his [ -squad. There is unusual interest in the meet, which is being sponsored by the Parent-Teacher Association. But just one more thing about those Tech boys. They probably will get beat and plenty by Episcopal, but, ac- cording to past perfermances, this will mean nothing so far as judging how McKinley may be expected to stack up against its public high rivals in the title meet. r the past few years the boys in F‘In have been g higl { artistic gs from the Episcopn young men, but last {‘ll' they were barely beaten for the title by Eastern in the public high meet and the year before came through to win. ‘Tech has invariabl lntun a “good workout,” though, IIM%H This apparently has been prnc\uly what the McKinley younnun needed. Gonzaga will problbly meet every Dub' lic high foot ball team next Fall. Purple is slated to en ua oent.ul Sev tember 326 in the lndlum. Business October 10 m Gonzaga Stadium, Western Novemblr 21 on whatever field Western elects, Eastern Thanksgiving day, November 27, in the Eastern Stadium, and Tech December 5 on the Gonzaga field. Tech was uu };&fidt. of the public high group to With _the bonklng of Swavely for a ame Thank: day at Manassas, u 'rech pub rh school champlan, added its final opwnenl for the ball season, accord to Coach Hg Hardell. onzaga, Handley Huh of Winches- ter, Va., and Episcopal will be the only teams other than public high elevens to be engaged by the Tech !rldlnmen. Hardell has announced. John' which has been meeting Tech on the grid for the past few years, instead will engage Central this Autumn, the date October 10. Tech’s new stadium will, it is ex- pected, be ready for use for the foot ball season this Fall, but the McKinley team is to play no games there. “I do not figure to have a team good enough to play in the stadium.” sald Hardell. ‘ech has got to develop an eleven this Fall, and I would rather see the stadium used for the first time in foot ball by a good Tech team. The team in 1981 should be much improved over this Fall's team and Tech prob- ably will use the stadium then for go games.” With Gonzaga, John Marshall High of Richmond and 8t. John's lined up, | Central needs now only to schedule an | opponent for the annu; to complete its 1930 gridiron ecard. fooc METHODIST CHURCH NINE MAKES PLANS THURSDAY HYATTSVILLE, Md., April 8.—A re- organization meeting of the base ball team of the Hyattsville Methodist Epis- copal Church South has been called for Thursday night at 8 o'clock at the home of Manager Carl Frey, at Beltsville. With most members of last season’s team at hand, along with a number of new candidates, proipecu for a success- ful season are bright. The following are invited to attend the meeting, along with any others | the university, set the date for a meet- | Soiatried jon wishing to try for the team: Charlie Cannon, Bill Luman, Walter Burdick, Esdras Gruver, Ardley Hart, Bob James, Frank Carr, Walton Arnold, | Ralph Jarrell, Leonard Smith, Tom (Mocker) Belt, Morris Flory and How- ard (Curley) Smith. 'MOTOR BOAT DISPLAY DRAWS BIG CROWDS -yom enthusiasts last night floeked to the opening of the South At- lantic Motor Boat Exposition at the new Water Street Terminal Building, at the foot of Fourteenth street southwest. All types of craft, from motor-equip- | ped rowboats to huge 563-horsepower engines are on display. Chief interest centered cn the new models of speed- boats designed for river use. One. of the largest crafts in the ex- | ition is the new motor lifeboat of United States Coast Guard. Self- bailing and non-sinkable, this lifeboat, designed for use in the Great Lakes, is far more powerful than any motor lifeboat ever before manufactured. It attains a speed of more than 10 knots, has 100 per cent reserve power and can take care of 35 passengers. The Coast Guard exhibit also includes a breeches buoy. by which passengers are taken from sinking vessels. The Motor Boat Exposition will con- | tinue all week, afternoon and evening through Sunday. As an added attraction talking mov- | ing pictures of the world flight of the | Graf Zeppelin will be shown beginning today. re bar; {BIG SCHOOL EVENTS By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, April 8—The fate of the University of Chicago’s two national nu;jl b“tk“khludu;iumlmem and_the | outdoor track and field champlonships, iy et oy AmplonHpA, | | " Prederic Woodward, vice preaident of‘ | Ing of the board of physical culture and | {;lhlleucs the decision of which will be | nal Continuance of the events has bee; n‘ threatened by action by the North Cen- tral Conference of Colleges and Sec- ondary Schools, which last month passed and referred to its committee on ath- letics a resolution proposing that any | college or university sponsoring inter- | state tournaments or meets be black- | listed by the conference. Such action | would cause withdrawal of credit transe | fers, gifts from educational foundations and places in honorary socleties from institutions involved. Loyola University, sponsor of a na- tional Catholic high school basket ball championship tournament for the seven years, also is considering whe! | it will drop the event. The recent Uni- versity of Chicago basket ball tourna- ment was its twelfth, while the track | and field meet was lnluluu'bd in 1901. LA SALLE FIVE UNABLE TO PLAY ATHENS TEAM CHICAGO, April 8 (#).~There will be no national championship basket Athens, Tex., High, two-time winner of the University of Chicago prep tournament, and De La Salle Institute !of Chicago, twice victor in the Loyola University National Catholic High | Sehool event. De La Salle officials decided it woulc be unwise to permit its team to meet the Athen: Giants, without more time for preparation. ‘The De La Salle five has been in- | active since winning the Loyola tour- nament two weeks ago. al iy T ————— FORD Model A Coach, perfect con- new tires; R“-“' afteed .... dition, refinished, renlckeleg 928 Buick Spt. Rdstr.. . . .927 Chrysler 70 Brougham, $55¢ 1927 Pontiac Sedan. . .... $19° 1928 Olds Coach. ...... 1928 Qakland Coach. . . .. .$525 C. Terms — Small Down Payments — Balancea Vew Dollars per Month. «o qur Daly Bargaine | n the Classified Yon of onts §625 .§525 1928 Studebaker Comdr. ...$550 L. P. STEUART, Inc. ~ 1325 14th St. N™. OPEN EVELINGS bavicaor 803 'C" Club game H HANGING IN BALANCE * DIAMOND CAMPAIGN ‘Woodward School's base ball team will open its season tomorrow afternoon, | to be entertaining Msson High of Alexandria on Mounment diamond No. 4 at 3:30 o'clock. The Y. M, C. A. School, with a flock of youngsters who have shown ability on its squad, is hopeful of a successful season and will be striving to open its campaign with a victory. Either Bill Myers or Vic DeMott is :xpe‘c'ed to start in ths box for Wood- ward. ‘Three ball games involving schoolboy uines of the District group were carded hereabout today. Devitt, under its new coach, Johnny Hannigan, Georgetown University ath- lete, was slated to entertain Charlotte +all on the East Ellipse at 3:30 o'clock, £astern was to play host to Emerson in the Lincoln Parkers’ &tadium at the same time, and St. Albans was to have Laurel High tossers as their guests op the Cathedral School diamond. TO BE HELD THURSDAY Entries are coming in from the Dis- trict, Maryland, Virginia md Deuwnu for the ninth annual Spring of the National Capit: Held 1) Club, held ursday on the Cooke Hutchison farm, near Chantilly, Fair- fax County, Va. Several of the Great Alexander point- ers from Richmond will strive to mal tain the supremacy they have shown this year in other trials. The judges will be J. W. Dorsey Cooke of Potomac Beach, Va, and H, B. Mitchell of Herndon, Vi ¥ BEAVERS AND TARESKY WIN DUCKPIN TOURNEY A. Beavers and Taresky, with a 734 total, won first lsurels in the Recrea- tion Duckpin League high and low :?urnnment last night at the Recrea- on. Joe Harrison and B. Mitchell wese second, with 693, Kolodin and Christian third, with 683, and Hurley and Roberts Jfourth, with 667. Walson Averages 120 to Lead North of sthington Bowlers| FRANK L. lern' 8 13 193 | Boyd Ht R ] WOLPE MARKET. [l 15 366 TRIANGLE GARAGE high school athletic classics, the an- Al smm "MANHATTAN. 149 348 Shen M Mosley Atchison vrum. e hitehe Brown . Deck 1, Housl M O Hou Mulligan Bier'® tzgeraid ohnson. ball contest tomorrow night between | A" | ! Beach . | Viers WYNNEWOOD. 78 133 336 57 139 401 138 358 78 143 352 60 124 320 OLD COLONY. Proctor “‘t i i f! Deffenbaugh Paravano 50 118 62 132 362 TRIANGLE MOTORS. .74 136 358 D3l 133 36 133 339 188 38 . 50 1;( lgl 147 377 i & 63 132 3 53 120 3¢ ELECTRICAL. Ronnett,’ Lindburg o i3 3 MARYLAHD NEWS. McLaren Fristoe | Leasure Thompson Ir. Barrett Studds Mehring Kidwell . Aronald Jones . MONTGOMERY POLICE. 13 108 347 135 336 10 128 330 138 328 13 335 METROPOLITAN. n 8 82| ] n 123 3% DIPLOMAT. 143 198 ue 16 333 5¢ 127 332 llu.l.l!l\ LACEY. 33 E 308 MOTOR. us Chips From the Mapleways BY R. D. THOMAS. BITTER struggle for the NIHOMH Capital League pennant comes | to & climax tonight. The Grand Palace Valet and King Pin teams, warm rivals all season, will meet at the Lucky Strike in their last Tegu- larly scheduled match, The Valetmen are one game to the good. | The match may not decide the pen- nant, because each team has two post- poned sets to shoot. ‘Tomorrow night the Arcadia the feature battle of the Ladies’ District | League will be fought. It will be be-| tween the Recreation and John Blick teams, which are tied for first place. \ ‘The Recs are the defending champions. | However, the most generally interest- | ing encounter of the week will be be- fueen the King Pin and Northetst Temple teams in the District League. | Thia will defnitely decide the peanant. | which can be won by the Temples only with & clean sweep. ‘Washington has long prided itself on having the best duckpin bowlers in the country. But has it? Certainly the Connect:cut All-Stars looked plenty good by comparison with one of our finest teams—Grand Palace Valet. The New by winning teams, doubles and singles from an all-star Washington outfit. In- 7| cidentally, the Connecticut bowlers are popular here. Although they appeared earlier in the season at the Coliseum, the fans flocked back at a dollar apiece to see them perform at Convention Hall. There was a capacity gallery. Somehow & slow-ball bowler takes some ot the snap out of a big-team crack of the speedball and the attend- ant flybacks. Without flybacks duck- pins would be a much duller game. ished a big season on the mapleways, but will gather en masse once more. On April 26 the girls will hold a dance at Meridian Mansions, at which league prizes will be presented. The league lots of enterprize all season. i Jenkins is the president, Gladys Mills vice president and Maude Youmans secretary-treasurer and scorer. Al Work was his old self for one game | the other night, and walked off with | |first money in the King Pin No. 1 sweepstakes. His big string was 146. | Al's joints are getting creaky. but not if he lived to be a hundred would the | famous southpaw grow old in spirit. Ollie Pacini made two desperate at-|: | tempts to clean up the wood in an |early box of the final game between the Grand Palace Valet and Connecti- cut teams, and both times he shot through a hole. There was a groan from the gallery, for the match was tight, and Ollie’s five-box hurt. No- body thought to criticize, however; for| every bowler knows that the difference | ometimes between an effective shot and a desultory one is a small fraction of an | inch. Pacini was hair-breadth close | | both time. With only a few pins needed |to win a game, Glenn Wolstenholme, when he was king of duckpinners, once fired three ball straight through the middle for a useless deuce. Looking back over the intercity series !a feat of Howard Campbell stands out | sharply. This was his triple-header | strike to finish the third game. It was most timely, for Washington had gotten ‘wo far behind for comfort. Campbell made a similar finish in one of his singles games with Jack White at ‘Waterbury. For concentration in a \mnch give us Howard in preference to | | any ether pin shooter. Charley w:llon. who carried an av- | erage of 124 for weeks in the North of ‘Wash'nnton League, has dropped to a mere 120. Clarendon bowling fans are talking little else bosides the closh tomorrov. night between Clarendon and Bethesda Both unn-uw sparkle. Bethesda wo: [ To Match Your Odd Coats ¥ EISEMAN’S, 7th & F Englanders achieved the unprecedented |match. The spectators like the vicious p, The Eastern Star girls have just fin- | Ea No. 2 has re-elected its officers, who shdwed & Mabel | 5 the national team chlmp(omh!p and | Clarendon was secon: “Dummies” may be rolled in the Washington City Duckpin Association tournament. The dummy scores a C]axon A, 100; B, 95; C, 90; D, 85, and Should the rl&y tournament draw 400 fans, an increase in pay for Secretary Ebersole would be in or ‘The more teams the tougher Ebby's job. For the amount of work he does, the associa- tion secretary has always been under- paid. Ebersole has never spared him- self when he saw a chance to help either the association or the game ft- self. If the goal of 400 teams is reached, it will be a personal triumph for Ebersole. ON THE DRIVES TONIGHT District League—open dat Natfonal “‘Capital Leagie-King Pin va Pi i Ak gk Blrtks, E 8- s, ll ;lnrlhelA::r‘Tn“" c." Masonic Lesue Whit 1gJoppa Vs Potomac. La Pavette vi A Pike B DBavia &s N.nnmL Hiram v at Sonvention, Hall ing Pin~ Business bure & Bro NeS Givmpians at Kine Pin of “Washington Ladier Woman's Improvement Club N gomery Players, st Silver S North of ‘Washington Men's éague—Tri. angle Motor vs. Bialy Rond B iick Motgr ve Gary-Johnson. Maryl Cales lie Tice o v ndry At Silter ‘Soiing oid” cle ot Office Leazue—Brighiwaod ve 5 nmrnmam-- V& You 'Street. Stells \! mklun Church League—Ingram worth., First Bret| W 3 Second Blnl\\' VA, lnn»’m e T Den —York Auto vs. Cor 2, en NI I 2 Bolieiay No."T'i" Fifth’ o o n Hall _Georgetown Nc n vs. Grace. St 0. 3 ue_Besques s, Commereiats. "sillis seum. mn"m' U AN umu4.|mr| t7 Bell s 2, Reno 'No. 2 vs, nmn‘wn old glory 20 3" Rend No's W o No. 3 %s. John L. fomne Vaties Fo b gion W i’ 'meorial. Petworth tist Me: First Reformed. Solurbia Hel - Ton-Tempie, &% King Fin No. f° ** G- | BonghyCortms Eh-mmm s COLLEGE BASE BALL. Maryland, 5; North Carolina State, § 10 innings, darkness). Michigan State, 14; Cincinnaty, 3, Indiana, 13; Mississ| Juaniata, 4; Bridgewate: COLLEGE LACROSSE. Oxford-Cambridge, 9; Virginia, 0. BOWIE RACES April 1st to April 12th Special trains on W. B. A, 'eave hite House Station 12:30, 12:55, 1:18, 1.385 p.m. Dzred to Grandstand i I YSICIOHS! Metallurgists ENGINEERS avo CHEMISTS ~—IT IS SIGNIFICANT THAT MEN IN THESE PROFESSIONAL GROUPS .+« .. PREFERTHE NEW VALET AutoStrop BLADEI If you appreciate quality FP:RrHAPS yo a ten cent cigar can’t be as good as you require a cigar to he—well here’s the best way to tell. If you appre- ciate for 10c. Other sizes in the new Cortes, CaEital Cigar & Tobacco Co., ality try a new Cortez 9The Cortez cigar u think BITTHT makers, famous for more than half a century, have combined in baccos. The this new ci- gar the world’s finest to- result is a mild, fragrant, even burn- ing clgar, heretofore unobtain- ablein the 10c cigar field. Try a Cortez today. Your nearest tobacco dealer has them. 2 for 25¢, 15¢ and 3 for 50c Washington Distributors