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D-2 SPORTS THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., THURSDAY, APRIL 24, 1930. SPORTS., College Teams Here Will Figure in Biggest Week End of Sport of Season VARIETY OF EVENTS ONHEAVY PROGRAM Athletes Toil Tomorrow and Saturday—West Pointers’ Invasion Features. BY H. C. BYRD. OCAL college athletic teams between now and Sunday probably will go through their biggest week end of E the year. Not only are many con- | Tank School tests scheduled, but they embody |, all kinds of competition. important are the visits of four Army teams to Washington and |base hits—Lau. Patto: the trips of track squads to the Penn relays. Four Army teams come here tomor- | row for competitions Saturday. Maryland at College Park, the rifle teams to shoot against George Washing- ton, and the tennis team to meet Georgetown. In major sports, visits of base ball and lacrosse teams are the first that Army has made to Wash- ington. The future Army officers’ i‘mqun‘m will be at Wardman Park while ere. Georgetown and Maryland will be most h!avfl;’] represented in the Penn relays, which always attract nearly all the track and field athletes of the East and many from the Middle West and ‘West. The former is to have two relay teams, mile and two mile, the latter a one mile relay, and both several indi- vidual entrants. The best performances by individuals are exepected from Kjelstrom in the hurdles, Wildermuth in the sprint, and Sexton in the fleld events, all of Georgetown. Four intercollegiate contests are scheduled tomorrow, consisting of two ball games and two tennis matches. Boston College after meeting Catholic University this afternoon, remains over for a game with Georgetown, while ‘Washington and Lee makes a visit here for a setto with Maryland. If Boston College trims Catholic University today, considerable interest should center in its contest with the Blue and Gray, but if Catholic University is victor, the game tomorrow is not likely to mean very much. Washington and Lee also is to be represented here tomorrow by a tennis team in a match with George Washington. Western Maryland against University of Maryland in a tennis match is the fourth contest. Some competitions are to take place tomor- Tow in the Penn relays. Saturday the four Army teams will be here, and in addition to the contests in which they are to take part, Man- hattan College plays Catholic Uni- | versity in base ball, Shepherd College meets Gallaudet in the same sport and ‘Washington and Lee and Maryland face in a tennis match. And, of course, the relay teams will be at Penn for their races. Princeton and Boston College are here this afternoon for ball games with Georgetown and Catholic University. ‘The former does not seem to be making much headway, having lost to William | R2 and Mary in two games and to Virginia in one. Boston College has done very little so far this Spring in the way of games and not much is known of its strength. ‘The Tigers do not seem to be any too strong, and in fact, apparently are not playing as good ball as usual. Whether or not this has anything to do with the coachless system inaugurated this year is not known. Princeton adopted a policy of keeping its coach off the bench and away from the team during the games, and anybody who kncws anything about base ball knows that MID-WASHINGTON TIRE COMPANY, Inc. 1602 14th St. NW. Phones Decatur 3296 North 0366 Adams 1847 Most | Uke, Stapp. Black (2), Munday (2). The | det, 12 ‘West Point base ball and lacrosse teams | ghan, are scheduled to play University of | |of the freshman team there. Brown.ss. .. | Cock’tt.3b H under such a condition Princeton is not going to play as well as it could if it had the benefit of bench instruction. Possibly other benefits that offset this in value to the team and players may be gained, but the chances are that ad- ditional values of the same nature, without consideration of tactical per- formance, are being lost. Gallaudet yesterday went out to Camp Meade and took a 14-to-4 beating from the Tank Corps nine. The Kendall Greeners simply were not any match for their older and more ex- | perienced opponents. Gallaudet. AB.H.O.A. b 3L > » £ Tank Sch. Patton.ss. .. Millercf..." 0 > 3| pursooococn? BocosonEm sueBcooooo! [P 2 3 F s 3 3 3 myer,c. .. | commsooemmn Totals. L01000 oL A Runs—Lau, Hokanson, Cosgrove, Hoffmyer, atton (3), Miller (2), Keller (3), Bryner, Errors— Monaghan, Cosgrove. Brown, Crockett Uke. Stapp. Munday. Two- Keller. Three-bas hit—Keller. = Stolen bases—Hokanson, Me- | Multa | Totate.... | Gallaudet . | Lau, | 3)." Toftmye s n, Cosgrove, Hoffmyer, Barronton, Pat- | ton (2). Sacrifices—Katz, Monaghan. Brown, Miller, ' Bryner, Stapp. ' Double play—Uke Paiton to Stapp. Left on bi Tank School. 6. Hi : oft Hoki . Struck out—By Hok Losing pitcher—Monag | to Gallau- Monn- auson, 3 in nson, 2; by Um- Mu pire— ) The appointment of Orville Neal, es- the | sistant coach at Western Maryland last | year, as head foot ball coach at Vir- | ginia_Polytechnic Institute, comes as something of a surprise to those that | thought the Blacksburg school might | want the services of an older and more | experfenced man. However, it is true that Neal is far more experienced than the average man just out of college, and undoubtedly knows more foot ball. Neal played a year at York College, out in Kansas, before entering the Ma- rine Corps. He then played four years |on the Marine eleven, after which he went to Penn State and was a member He left | Penn State to enter Western Maryland College, where he played varsity foot | ball, and last year was assistant coach and did practically all the scouting. Neal is a fine chap and generally stan well with people wherever he goes. And there is not the least doubt that he was a great foot ball player. ‘This is not the first time that Virginia Polytechnic Institute has taken a man without much previous coaching ex- perience to handle its foot ball squad. Andy Gustafson, who was at Blacksburg for several years until he resigned at the end of the past season to become assist- ant coach at Pittsburgh, was just out of college when he took charge, and he made one of the best coaches Virginia Polytechnic Institute has had. AMATEUR BILLIARD STARS ARE RANKED By the Assoclated Press. CHICAGO, April 24.—Percy N. Col- lins of Chicago, national amateur 18.2 balkline billard player, and Joseph Hall of San Francisco, national Amateur three-cushion titleholder, are ranked by the National Billiard Association of America as the best in their respective divisions. At balkline, Collins is followed in the rating by Edgar T. Appleby, New York; y V. Fessenden, , Wis, Monard C. Waligren, Everett, Wash. Arie Schaap, St. Louls; H. T. Galey, Tulsa, Okla.; Hugh Foraker, Chicago; Robert Fouts, Angeles; James J. Peabody, Chicago, and Charles Murphy, Sen Francisco Following Hall in_the three-cushion ranking are Robert B. Harper, Denver; Max Shimon, Milwaukee; Frank I Fleming, Champaign, IIl.; Jerry White, Seattle, Wash.; Gene Deardorff, St. Louis; Dr. A. J. Harris, Chicago; R. 8. Hubbell, Cleveland; Lewis M. Vogler, Indianapolis, and Fred Goodman, De- Pitcher will invade College Park. TECH LINKSMEN DOWN MARYLAND PARK HIGH Tech squeezed out & 3-2 golf victory tomac. The Marylanders were handi- capped by the absence of their leading player, Cecil Whittington. The summaries: l Hurd (Tech) defeated Baden, 2 and | e 4; Brown (Maryland Park) defeated Mansfleld, 6 and 5 and Wilson (Mary- land Park) halfed with Clark, 6 and 5. Maryland Park High's ball team is in fine shape and hopeful of victory over | Upper Marlboro High in an opening game of the Prince Georges County scholastic championship series tomorrow at Upper Marlboro. Priend Hoar, Lee Suit and Nelson Ryan are Maryland Park pitchers troit. BRANCH STORE 4328 Georgia Ave. N.W. (IO Open 8:00 AM. to 6:00 P.M. BeEAUCHAMP- over Maryland Park High at East Po- |lege, 1 udet, 4. Ni 1; Nee (Tech) defeated Mullikin, 5 and | jnning on account of Snow. WILL LEAD ARMY TEAMS AGAINST MARYLAND SATURDAY OKEEFE- lst. Attacke O’Keefe and Kenny are joint leaders of the lacrosse {welve and Beauchamp is captain of the nine, both of which COLLEGE BASE BALL. Army, 9; Lehigh, 3. All-Marines, 6; Manhattan College, 1. Richmond, Delaware, 1. William and Mary, 2; Boston Col- POTOMAC CLUB TOSSERS Tank School (Fort Meade), 14; Gal- | ot PIeCCiel KOI0 Those to be honored are: avy, 6; Villanova, 5. Aman, Robey, Eshbaugh, Yale, 19; Wesleyan, 2 Virginia, 7; Princeton, 6. V. P. 1. 7; Washington and Lee, 2. | Kelso, Michigan, 3; Ohio, 3; called in ninth | Ernie Millar. Notre Dame, 3; Georgia Tech, 1, Z au georgll. Zé No;thpClrcMnls. 0. TA RA € orthwestern, 8; Purdue, 5. Columbia, 10: Colgate, 5. 13 N Y Ot i T80 %6, boors " trom 8 7; Bates, <809 GEM BLADES .. a change for the best GET REWARDS TONIGHT Members of the Potomac Boat Club basket ball team of the past season will be presented gold basket balls at the Lilly, ‘Timmons, Wiler, Cunningham, Canavin, Adkins, Charlie Millar and Manager School Athletes trict area are readying for a big week end. Base ball, track and tennis will vie for the old spotlight. On the diamond tomorrow afternoon Devitt and Business will face on the Monument grounds. Eastern’s public | high school champlonship track team will travel to College Park to engage the Maryland freshmen. A Central relay team will appear in the 440-yard event in Penn relays in Philadelphia, and on the tennis courts Devitt and Priends will meet at Friends and St. Albans and Gonzaga at St. Albans. Though plenty of action is on the books for the scholastics Saturday, all contests except a base ball game be- tween St. Albans and Forest Park High of Baltimore, which is slated for St. Albans, are to be played out of town. Base ball games will find Central en- gaging the Princeton freshmen at Princeton, Tech facing the Quantico Marines at Quantico and Emerson meet- | ing Navy Plebes at Annapolis. East- | ern and Tech will have teams in com- | petition in the Penn relays and ‘West- | ern’s strong_tennis team is to stack up against St."Joseph's College High School in Baltimore. In diamond engagements yesterday Tech defeated Devitt, 6 to 5, on the Monument grounds, Gonzaga fell before | Episcopal, in a 9-7 game, at Alexandria and Business Tome, 11 to 15, at Port Deposit, but made a better showing than expected Friends edged through to & 3-2 win over St. John's in a Prep School Ten- nis League match. Business and Devitt may offer an in- teresting game tomorrow. Each ap- parently has a better team than it was figured it would have. Eastern's crack track team is favored to score over the Maryland freshmen and Central is hope- ful of making a stout showing in the Penn relays. | Tech and Emerson’s nines are not expected to win over the Prince- | ton freshmen, Quantico Marines and | Navy Plebes on the diamond Saturday. but each is determined to put up it best battle Eastern and Tech have hopes of landing honors in the Penn relays. They will run in separate events. Tech and Emerson's nines were to meet_on the Monument Grounds in base ball and Western and Tome were to play off a postponed tennis match at Port Deposit in the only athletic tests listed today for District scholastics. A six-run rally in the seventh inning, the last session, enabled Tech to gain its victory over Devitt. Prior to that fateful frame the Gray had been unable to score and had managed to get just one hit. In fact, Pitcher Andy Gleeson of Devitt had allowed just one Techite SCHOOLBDY athletes of the Dis- lost its season’s opener to | & to get on the runways. Three hits, a Let Your to See Lots Of Action in Next Few Days couple of errors, a walk and a hit bats- man, however, gave the Gray its six runs and victory in the seventh. ‘The score: o =0 > P wauasmachel monoommano] - »lonsscssncsssoomni 2l ooommmmoommuamnid vl coassssssommosss® 349 31 10 for Noolard for Nelson 1 Totals. i N iBatted i deventh: Devitt . Tech ralo n MoKeever. mner, Brad- to ussel inning: athanson, _ Thomai Sacrifices—Davison, uble play—Thomas ' to . Hits—Of Gleeson, 4 in 7 Noolard. 9 in 7 inni Hit by pitcher—Bs Gleeson' (Thomas), Struck out—By son. 9. Winning pitcher—Noolard. Losing pitch- er—Gleeson. Time—3:05. An error by Jake Farrell and a hit by Fishburne enabled Episcopal to come from behind in the eighth inning and defeat Gonzaga. Until that inning the Purple was in the van. Al Farrell pitched excellent ball, fanning 12, but was handicapped by erratic support. > i = 0 > > CTpdegmm s > o ] O 000 ~wanl Figh'e,rs D'dridge.ab. @ : 2l sonanonsss; | gorrouomon: 2l moowarmsre! sevansans [ESETTRT rmooomoow’ 0500020 3000012 s—Barker, n, Dunn, Rice (2), Howell, Nalle (2), Carter (2), d (3), Maizell, Errors—Di dridge. Carter, Wright, A, Farrell, J. Far- rell. Dunn. Home run—Dunn. FPirst e on balls—Off A. Farrell. 8 oft Cleveland, 4. Hit by piiched ball—By A. Farrell (Fish: burne) Struck out—By _Cleveland, 4: by Farrell, 7. Umpire—Mr. Watt. Keen battling marked the Friends-St. Jobn's tennis encounter all the way. Friends got an even break in the two doubles matches and took two of the three singles tilts to triumph, ‘The summaries: Singles—Ruth (Priends) defeated O'H: lon. 9—7. 5—7. 6-4: Smith (St. John's) | defeated Carpenter. » Pair. hln‘ll (Priends) defeated Buchanan, 6—1. Doubles—Smith and O'Hanlon _(St.| John's) Ruth and _Fairba e (Friends ed iy Chrpenter and o gefcited uchanan . and Herbert, 13-10. Business, as expected, did not show much pitching = strength yesterday | ainst Tome, but the Sténogs exhibited | batting punch, and all in all gave a hot haif-bad pérformance. Jacobson, | Stenog stortstop, socked a homer and two singles while Schneider and Chase each garnered two hits. ‘The score: A > o o o > coFosossronsuasl Business. A Jacobson.ss 4 carmarwand cez52033030mmm 08 e AR S0 ] —— OO AD IO RTE for Arias in eighth. Runs—Cooney (2), Barr, (3), Pease, Tay- Buck Tritsch. (3), ' Wintersmith, sbury. Bson Dur; McEWAN WILL ATTEND DINNER HERE TONIGHT Capt. J. J. McEwan, newly appointed head foot ball coach at Holy Cross College and former Army star and mentor and recently at Oregon, is in town to attend the annual dinner of the South Atlantic Holy Cross Club, to be held at the University Club at 7 o'clock tonight. Capt. McEwan was the guest of the various Holy Cross Clubs en route to ‘Washington. Charles Bowman Strome, executive secretary of the Holy Cross Alumni As- sociation, will also be a guest at the dinner. Both Capt. McEwan and Strome will attend the national convention of the Federation of Catholic Alumni April 25-217, inclusive. o COLLEGE TENNIS. Navy, 8, Washington and Lee, 1. West Point, 9; Fordham, 0. o Glasgow Rangers to Tour. Glasgow Rangers, famous foot ball team, is to tour Canada this Summer, with a tilt against a New York team probable. 'RACESTODAY | || Havre de Grace SEVEN RACES DAILY FIRST RACE AT 2:30 PM. Special B. & O. train leaves Union Station 12:00 noon. Spe- Penna R. R. train leaves Union Station 12:05 P.M., East- ern Standard Time. ADMISSION: Grandstand and paddock, $1.50 FIRST RACE AT 2:30 PM. Appraisa Week April 23d—Apri Correcting An Impression We have sometimes found the impression prevailing that we will not accept anything but a used Ford car in trade for a new Ford. That is not a. fact. Many cars—in both high and low price classes— are being constantly traded in for the new Ford. VULCANIZING Today Come in and SEE What Remarkable TIRES You Can Buy at These Low Prices GOODSYEAR ROAD SERVICE INSPECTION Nearest Ford Dealer Golter: ““You can teach me a lot about golf, but you have a lot to learn about shaving.” Appraise Your Car During This Week Why — 429 of the purchasers of new pas- senger cars in Washington during the month of March buy new Ford automobiles? Because the new Ford car has value far above its price. Golt Pro: ““The trouble is I Im.vc a tough beard.” Golters “No! The trouble is you're using the wrong blade. Change to the Gem—and no matter how tough your beard is, you' Il get wonderful shaves every day.” We are glad to handle salable cars of all makes. Appraisal Week gives every owner an oppor- tunity of knowing the value of his present car and permits him te con- sider now the advisability of changing to Ford. Golf and shaving seem to be great games for alibis. It may take a2 man years to improve his golf, but Saturday Is simply changing to the Gem improves Demonstration Day Come in and let us show you the superiority of Goodyear Tires Trade In Your Old Tires —on new Goodyear Double Eagle or All-Weather tires. Get these great tires for Spring and Summer driving ~—at low cost. BRANCH STORE 4328 Georgia Ave. N.W. NOW OPEN Phone Adams 1847 his shaving 100%. If you're happy with your blades, we don’t want to make you dissatis- ANACOSTIA MOTOR CO. 1325 Good Hope Rd. DONOHOE MOTOR CO. 215 Penn. Ave. S.E. HANDLEY MOTOR CO. 3730 Ga. Ave. HILL & TIBBITTS 301 14th St. N.W. NORTHWEST MOTOR CO. 6720 Wis. Ave. NOLAN MOTOR CO. 1111 18th St. N.W. PARKWAY MOTOR CO. 3040 M St. N.W. “STEUART MOTOR CO. Sixth and K Sts. N.W. NORTHEAST MOTOR CO. TRIANGLE MOTOR CO. 920 Bladensburg Rd. N. Y. Ave.-N. Cap. St. WASHINGTON MOTOR CO. 633 Mass. Ave. N.W, fied. But if you're dissatisfied, Gem 30x3!, O. 29x4.40 . 30x4.50 28x4.75 30x5.00 31x5.00 30x5.25. $9.95 31x5.25.$10.25 29x5.50.$10.50 31x6.00.$13.45 32x6.00.$13.60 33x6.00.$13.75 Bladeswill certainly makeyou happy. 8 And remember the economy of genuine Gem Blades:—you get more shaves per blade. Product of American Safety Razor Corporation Guaranteed for Life No matter how many thousands of miles the guaran- defects holds good. 100% KEEN ‘ M