Evening Star Newspaper, May 23, 1930, Page 44

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D—4 SPORTS. THE KEVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., FRIDAY, MAY 23, 1930. SPORTS. Sharkey Is Called Best Heavyweight Boxer Produced Since Days of Johnson and. find hout which was the better. . REA“_Y IS BLEVER’ Pick-Ups From the Sandlots ||Scout Second, szllant Fox’s T:";o;‘}':%““;‘:’:‘_,g:l ROD AND STREAM Brother, English Derby Threat sz i o v e sl BY PERRY MILLER u BY FRANCIS E. STAN. - ¢ |y ISHING the first of this week was held b '_EDNARD ASSERIS FEW forlorn hopes were more forlorn than those of the Union e A L 16 T F and west winds which caused low tides bo‘gu‘;ycfi:‘eb:;fl: e Printers when they left the South Ellipse field yesterday after owned Americans, have won the tributaries. When the tide does not brin taking two beatings, neither of which was expected. 4 et i B e o 3 the fish g0 out where the wates Is deep. Thos same Lorys water e last one, at the hands of the league-leading Govern- N import Sir Gailahad III from France.| _But no matter what hiappens at Epsom | {n from almost all places in salt water, except from the Eastern However, He Finds That Jack | ment Printing Office nine, came about in the conventlonal style, but | EW YORK, May 23.—There'll be | In 1928 Woodward won one race with| Downs June 4, there atill will be only | §hore and at Solomans Island. ’ the first one broke upon the ranks of the Typos with a bombshell much joy but little surprise|his stable and his winnings totaled | one real horse in the aflections of | “cupt. George Bowen at Solomons re- Following the recent rains th . N effect. around the stables of Willism | $700- is year Gallant Fox alone | Fitzsimmons—and that's Gallant Fox, thab flabing good down | mac around Washingto s Throws Science to Wind |®T*t, 1., printers were beaten before , this season on local sandiots and came e fvard At \the ‘Moout: 3d| 185, won=§110600 1n-pursen, ' fhvored || wlunes ofi balls rthe Freakness il e | PFHE (-Ia0-SEEINE TS ety Cloudy. "It is possible Tor the- water-a they even started the game, for it was|about in the third inning, when Joe | to win the $60,000 Belmont Stakes June| KePrueky, Boty. o, bis way. be too clear for good fishing. Now the When He Gets Sore. Teamed that the 14-tocl victory they | Gahan singled and Willls Fisher walked. | blood brother of Gallant Fox, gallops|7, and has a couple more $50,000 prizes s a grand horse,” the smiling | Capt. Dan P. Ball wires in from the | condition s just right bug i pounded out over the G. P. O. on May | Shurgue then lined to Shortstop|home on British turf with the same at his mercy if no accidents befall him. ?7-ye‘;r~rld Vekrlr: sald. “There's very | gastern Shore that fishing 15 holding its | tively few fish are being c..,:;’,'{mg;; e 8 was thrown out of the league stand- | Hatcher at short, who touched second tive honors that have come this | F1VIng Gal. the crack 3-year-old fllly, | few that ever coul d have beaten him. | own, The best fishing is on the first of | run of herring has still failed to make s siolation o & Byclaw | and oomyleted the: Ly il ot ‘o | COmperative ho whose daddy also was Sir Gallahad III, | Before the Summer is over wo may find | the flood tide and that will be at noon | their appearance this a BY BENNY LEONARD. of the Government League. first, nailing Fisher before he could get |Season to his famous American rela- %«ms cerula ;.’n nth,:r in some t]:‘t the 8‘::1 h;' l“u ll,l'lnt -‘:, lmm o' w'.lr ':.., tomorrow. few stragglers h:ve m;‘m p :r‘n“;m: - (Retired undefeated lightweight champion | ' 1 HOH T T S e Government | back to the base. tive. ne purses Gallant Fox won't seek. ly Harry Payne ney's Whichone | The northwest winds of the last few | in' the river oo wone) League which forbjds any player o par- | CArl Wahler threw the ball game| ‘The racing world had almost forgot-| el be mighty happy, but we won't | g5 in his way in the Belmont, days have badly interfered with fishing | snagged. | C CUt DOt enough o be RANGEBURG, N. Y., May 23.— | Rt Bn oy other week-day league, |away in the ninth, when with a runner h & 3-year-old as Lo ‘He's a knowing horse, an inquisitive | u¢ Senside Park, formerly Chesapeake |* Anglers wh T have boxed with Jack Sharkey | SCIPAte 11 B0y O esents i in Both | on. third and. two’ down, he threw e | o St s, aifed by Sir. GAANAG, | ovemrbe o 1 e e through | horse—too darned knowing at times. | Beach. There is shallow water all T ATy o g iN ‘ml.h‘ and now 1 know why he is |leagues. ball against the backstop, allowing the | 33° s Gallant Fox was, and racing in | Pitzsimmons sajd. “All the Woodward | L6, Cts sometimes as though he figures | along ‘our side of the bay, and when | from 30 to 60 pounds, will find plenty of called an “in-and-outer.” Jimmy Dewhurst, Typo rightfielder, | tylng run to score. England. Yet the Scout came {rom | horses are stayers who like the route, | cuce Tielf, the best way to win his |the wind keeps the tde back it also | them at Oregon Inlet, N. C. has been playing with the Judd & Det- behind in the Newmarket Stakes a few | and the distance is a mile and a quar- 3 mows how much work he |geeps the fish off shore. From Wachapreague, Va., comes word Sharkey is one of the 01“"5“,:;" weller team in the Industrial League days ago to win the $5,000 prize and| ter, :?'m:fl% D*:o -;;g. dffi-’ ;:é':';n%zh:" Mg:nug From Herring 1znyrcomfle:il t“I:eE ;‘r:; that the biuefish or taylors are taking e Aok b Dl et pewe | | Pivot Is Aveided foin the possible winners of the famoUs | .y pyyent kept much track of the | War yet, but you cant te | O |%ind of report. Very few some of the glory away from the trout, an English Derby at som Downs, June ‘caught. ‘which heretofore ha: .. one thing that impressed me more than | for 8ctiot, SO0 In Bt TS 8 NS g D eaiately dropped on the | Scout and ‘the other vearlings Mr. A arty of Washingtonians visited | Tne bay down there 1 ney Surieme. anything else in my setto with him was | NS0 n Run-Up Shet e full of these Woodward sent abroad in_the Fall of e th ut from 33 to 1 to 16 to 1. Benedict yesterday and caught three |gamesters . the fact that he did not fall for a feint. | “Because Manager Ed Lowe i not Even Sunny Jim Fitzsimmons had 2 ;g""—he;h"fngl“";;":y";";‘; b oo g GIGLIO TOSSES TURNER. hardheads. = Usually Befll:t;gg:t furnishes The test of & Teally good boxer is 19 | recsive & copy OF MO (M O S rinters BY SOL METZGER. most forgotten that the Scout stlll etist | (o pritisn trainers on the other aide.| Mario Glglio overcame Joe Turner,| the g o ettiss: warditiat feint him and see how he responds, If | Eue SRR SYGY 200 immy to pla y e T 80 | But they can run and I don't see why | Veteran District grappler, in two straight | From LeonafCtorn JUCT Lol “are |Ing in Congress for several years—pro- e falls for it and theows 1 Expected OBhY o S, Peing Shop. | But after | rou don't want to do any BoHng | ey Woodwand horse abroud entered | the, Scout or Fair Game can't win falls in the weekly wrestiing program Bty o e it that the 7od | Yiding a five-year construction program otect himsel inst s e . when playing a run-up shot, says other Derby. n! at the Gayety. y Main- | 0% . failed. for the United States Bureau of Fish- good boxer. | Dewhurst had participated in two in the Derby, a 3-year-old colt named nd reel anglers have failed., u of low vou know he i ot & @t to,tell | games for this team, Lowery finally got | Abe Mitchell. And you want to keep | air Game. 'This horse, too, was sired| “t would be nice to have the win- JLort aefeated George Southall in the | 817, U’ conditions exisfing in the | erles—was signed by President Hoover i is the best - ¢ shoulders from -sawing. o y Ir allal , and may ingle | ners of e Kentucky an 22 - lower Potomac are 3 o it Bierkey ‘of the by-iaws and read the thg shoulders from see-sawing. Re-|by Sir Gailahad, 3d, and may tangl { both the Kentucky and British R ‘Potor o be found at Rock | Wednesday. This bill carries an sp. T et ‘boxer the. Ting has seen [FUlDE. oo eve up play. | Mmember that straight left arm tip of |With the Scout I pursult of the high- | Derbys in the sme stable It looks| Ea Foint. T place ofters two rivers to | propriation of 31800000 for new fah o ew! m i s jonors of T urfdom. e e world championship sure woul larence ar, veteran Mel: lers, the lcomice w g - ""jfbfi,"‘ R oxt ing with Judd & Detweiler, but Pop | Roger Wethered's and the hinge sWing | “piizcimmons is trainer of the horses! rest between them, but it would be im- | runner, recently won his seventh Boston | Reporté state that nothing is being|almost exclusively to the propagation boxing with Sharkey, 3 gu'}:"mmo‘::fnce myself, I|Shomo, G. O. P. manager, protested | from the left shoulder? Abe has much | of william Woodward, New York bank- possible to put them in the same race | marathon victory in 10 years. caught. of game fish for the anglers. 3 two circuits and | the same idea. boxed & round with King Solomon, and Dewhurst’s playing in s e e o — I discovered that the King could be | through thi ‘G(I.ll’ylea.the discoun! Devty ik wgelu“htr R is fooled by my feinting, whereas Sharkey ln{mmthle! gdl?epg:-m!m ‘of the loop, | open’ stance. ~The open stance keeps could not. of the loop, realize, 1 did, that Jack | declared that the Printers 14-t0-! S ot "teving t0 hurt me |tory over G. P. O, Would be taken off when we boxed. We agreed, however, | the books and the two teams T:! ¢! Defore we started that if he saw an |uled to meet June 10 in a replay. opening he should take advantage of it 4 . The Typos, following this announce: S shouldh(‘lo ";e 1‘:(? v early in_our | ment, seemed to lose interest, and in a Jack caught m Sody with®a straight left jab which | listless game G. P. O. took & com de plenty of force. I had evaded lns in the race, winning, 5 ':v'v'on several of these similar punches, but . P. 0., who until ymymh:a e this one came with a quick, stiff ‘i;r four games and lost two, g =3 which I don't believe anybody could |its rivals, and today has five wins a have gotten away from. only one loss. f his sparring partners - -fio"n'.“a"%fie:'fia to take it easy, He| Here's a mark for the boys to shoot cled West h, st sacker, has e oo sandiots. .In o records ever made on san % Ghink T discovered in my boxing |three vears Beach has taken '366 i otk g B RO | S S T 0o e o e T handied 164 chances with- ¥ Jong | out & bobble and this season - us:‘:'u{mmk" 8 e e et "The | cepted the only 19 chances he has had. | tenhis Shic Tatdt that he has is that e sliows h is largely rem::olme for, the his temper to control his actions in the | wide swath West Was m is cutting E: v 5 in the Georgetown Church League. It you can't wntm’lu "!z“ he happens to get hit a stiff punc] Holmes Bakery made a double and a | shots Metager's free illustrated leaflet that hurts, or even that causes the e e e, game with W. B, | on “Long Iron Shots” will undoubtedly ot S Soms % Pt RS i a T, e i e o oo S e B e Skioe e e a u).(-lsduued' stamped envelope. e he triple piay was the first made (Copyright, 1930.) The White bill, which has been pend- has lnlu'ned h‘;‘ ‘:muudnwn to & trading , thus putting him- o sef on a &“fl‘nm the vgnu'z novice ANGLERS’ GUIDE. a - gauinle 42 o which AND TID] 'TURDAY AND SUNDAY, MAY 34 AND 35, #ets over the first telling punch. IO A e SR e EARE BAY AND LOWER POTOMAG RIVER POINTS. % High tide. RACING AT HAGERSTOWN | Washington ........Saturday &:f9am. Difg D WILL START ON TUESDAY |Annapolis ..........Eaturday J:27am. O HAGERSTOWN, Md., May 23.—The five-day racing meet of the &.fimn Fair Association, opening here Tuesday, May 27, Xll break all records for high- class performance and attendance, in the opinion of officials. Feature races have been booked for an lowed by the Antietam, BlEERST T aSaaii | OPENS ANOTHER SERVICE STATION AL “Hit-and-Run” Plays i Roilc and Redls 1 Washington - Baltimore ‘The “hit-and-run” play is really 8 “run-and-hit” play. The object of 670 o o oot eat 1 Blvd. and Madison Ave a prearranged sign lween e batier and the baserunner, the bai- at 333% to 50% off 3 hext base as the pieher delivers the ahortstop must cover second 10 try RIVERDALE, MD 'y g it v the position thus e & Saturday, May 24,1930 'O meet the fast growing demand for Gulf Service . . . we are opening A remarkable offering of famous Abbey & a Service Station at the above location. Imbrie tackle for fresh and salt water fis! The usual prompt and efficient Gulf ing at tly reduced prices. All d il :‘;tqn‘-ll::yfiy FoCuCoCiprces KA imewixt Service will be offered to motorists by courteous attendants. Salt Water Rods Formerly $3.50 to 815 bl Now $1.95 ¢ #6.85 f We cordially solicit the patronage of all Motorists L BATTER Fly and Baitcasting Rods PLaTe- Formerly $5 to $15 Now $2.85 t0 %6.85 TAPPING Reels—Fresh and salt water “hole”; when he is reasonably sure that the pitcher must throw ‘lfl 3 Formerly $3.50 to $10 ball. However, no matter where good the ball is thrown, he must make every effort to L1t i6 and protect the Now $1.95 t0 #5.85 baserunner once he has flashed his intention. e o n a one. 3 the “hit-and-run” is in force Come in today. These rods and reels won't SO by thebstter touehing his last long at these prices. Wonderful values! called of a c st long at these prices. Wonde cap and tapping the plate with his ‘ P L bat before each pitch. ‘Some major league batters like to “hit and run” with & runner on sec- ond base. When the runner starts for third, the third baseman must ' cover the bag, and this gives the = /‘ Q.1 a7 batter a chance to hit through his % wvacated position. O 44 \ 4 Save A!nh:hflk'“lf‘l:ue B_‘nux Ball | . series. er appear Tuesday. 1 T 1338 G Street N.W. & : has prepared a free fllustrated leaflet on “Batting,” which will improve any boy's percentage. Send for it. Address Al Demaree, in iy il * O (Copyright, 10000

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