Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Sports News - @he Zpening Star. - * WASHINGTON, D M INDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1930. PAGE C—1 Mack’s Career Parallels History of Base Ball: Yachis Go Again:Doeg on Top CONNIE CALLED “SLATS” WHEN HE ENTERED GAME Boss of A’s Made Big League Bow With Washington in 1886—SGetting Money for Playing Seemed “Too Good to Be True,” at Uirsi. BY ALAN GOULD (Associated Press Sports Editor) 1.—He Starts Qut as “Slats.” R. AND MRS. MICHAEL McGILLICUDDY christened him Cor- nelius. That was in the little shoe town of East Brookfield, Mass., on December 23, 1862. The boys in the factory and on the sandlot diamond near- by, where the lunch hour consisted of 10 minutes for lunch and 50 minutes for base ball, called him “Slats.” That was around 1880. For a half century and over he has been identified with Amer- {ca’s national game as Connie Mack, smart as a player, famous as a manager, strategist and maker of world championship teams, be- loved on and off the field as a leader and counselor. The career of this lean and upright, soft-spoken and Irish blue- eyed man parallels the history of base ball, throbs with its ups and downs, sparkles with its triumphs. In his keen glance, irm hand- clasp and spontaneous enthusiasm in 1930 there is the flash of spirit that you know was manifest by “Slats” McGillicuddy in 1880. WRASE BaLL s bax ben sl E0OT BAIL STARTS thing I liked to do best as a boy. It| ON PAchIc COAST “I played it because it was the seemed too good to be true when I| discovereq they were willing to pay me for it and offer me steady work. I was very fortunate. | i And 50 base ball became the life work | Small Army of Aspirants Due to of the slim young Irishman, to whom i 25 he neared threescore and ten years | Answer Call for Practice for it was still “a great game" and the i ; thing he “liked to do best.” | Trojans and Bruins. 3 When Connie Mack broke into the ig leagues, in 1886, with the Washing- ton club of the National League, Adrian | BY the Associated Press. C. (Pop) Anson was in his prime, the| LOS ANGELES, September 15— slugger of sluggers and the Babe Ruth | Coaches expected a small army of as- of his day. Seven balls entitled a batsman to[Pirants to answer the official gridiron first base then and it was legal for the | call of the Pacific Coast Conference to- bat to be flat on one side. day at the University of Southern Call- The Baltimore Orloles, greatest of | fornia and the University of California old-time teams, ruled the roost when | at Los Angeles. Mack had his first engagement as a| Coach Howard Jones anticipated 100 major league manager with Pittsburgh | varsity candidates, including 12 letter in midseason of 1894, |men from the squad which last Fall Hans Wagner was then only a boy|tied for the conference title and which playing on the sandlots. Hugh Dufly gave the Southern California Trojans ©of the Bostons was batting king, with | the rating of having scored the most the record major league percentage of | points of any eleven during the 1929 438, | season. John McGraw, later Mack's great world | At th§ Bruin camp, Coach Bill series Tival, was jusi taking over the | Spaulding estimated his call would be helm of the Giants when Connie Won |answered by more than 50 candidates, his first American League champion- | including Jeight members of last sea- Ship in 1902 with the Philadeiphin | son's squAd, " THE OLD MASTER HIMSELF, AS HE LOOKS TODAY MR. CORNELIUS McGILLICUDD | SPECTATORFLEET AT CLASSC FADES Shamrock’s Poor Showing in Opening Race Dampens Interest in Series. BY TOM HORGA Associated Press Staff Writer. EWPORT, R. I, September 15.—The saucy Enterprise, Harold S. Vanderbilt's de- fender of the America's Cup, and Shamrock V, Sir Thomas Lipton's green-hulled | challenger, had another engage-| ment today. | FEnterprise’s victory in the initial race of the series Saturday did much to lessen interest in the international yachting classic. The spectator fleet had noticeably dwindled today from the | armada which followed the racing| yachts on Saturday. Many of Satur-| spectators were those who were not fortunate enough to be able to ignore the claims of trade and industry —a week day and a forced return to shop and office. Sails Unfilled. Mary who watched Shamrock’s hope- less chase of Enterprise Saturday were forced to revise estimations of her form- ed on reports that had filtered over | ahead of her from British waters that she was a virtual water sprite in light air. Her canvas seemed too heavy, as | compared to the gossamer wings of the | American defender. Often during the race Shamrock’s head sails futtered | emptily, while those of Enterprise bil- | lowed out smoothly. | Saturday's conditions were supposed to have represented Shamrock’s own choice in weather. She had ghosted | around local waters in the faintest of rephyrs before the series opened. | Breeze Was Flukey. Saturday the boats ran 15 miles to leeward and returned, today they had | to race around a 30-mile triangular | course, beginning at 10:40 am. (ES.T.). | Shamrock V today remained essen- | tially an unknown quantity. Saturday's race was sailed in a flukey breeze and it is impossible to state which reaped the greater advantage from the wind's | N tutor” became permanently identified | » in the formation of the second major circuit. ACK led another championship | Club into the first offict-} world Series, in 1905, the year that Ty | Cobb broke' into the big leagues with Athletics, the club with which the “tall | Twenty-three years later Cnbbdp!a"';d‘ A Great Match. is last major league scason under the }‘ndmhlp T At who. has stamped | J T Will be a long time before any the Georgian with his unqualified gathering will see a finer piece of choice as the greatest all-around player competition than the battie at Forest Hills, Long Island, between the game has ever known. <+ Babe Ruth bounded into the ‘ Show as a southpaw pitcher in 1914, | Johnny Doeg and Frank Shields for | when Mack was leading his fifth | the tennis championship of the United championship machine. That was the | States. feam that brcught him h's greatest| Shields, the New Yorker, isn't quite 20, fame as well as his worst world series | and Doeg, the Californian, isn't yet 22, ‘defeat; the combination with the $100,- | but few veterans could have presented | 000 infield that he startled the base ball | as much courage and nerve control | world by wrecking in 1915. | under such heavy and continued pres- | sure as this pair did, especially through HE old master has known the the grueling stages of that last 16—14 depths as well eos the sunlit| set. heights. He has heard the raucous | It was here that Doeg proved himself ery for his scalp from the bleachers, as | a thorough champion, and it was here | well as the frenzied cheers. that Shields proved he has the skill| He has seen his ciub finish last cver | and the heart that belongs in the title- stretch cf seven straight years of | holding class. | ost-war depression and struggle. He| It isn't often that a big crowd gets as known the glory that goes with | as many thrills from any sport, for they | eight pennant-winning clubs, four or | were thrills that lasted well over two them over a span of five years, and the | hours and that led finally to one of thrill of world championship triumph | the most stirring climaxes of the year. | with his 1929 team after a lapse of 16| Shields, 6 feet 2 inches; Doeg, 6 feet | years. 1 inch, looked the part before a service n 1915 Mack asked waivers on three | was delivered. And while here and of the greatest pitchers of all time— | there certain technical flaws came up Chief Bender, Eddie Plank and Jack the play ch, these flaws were Coombs, mainstays of the four-time | wi otten in the speed, champions. Fifteen years later he en- power and the spirit of the play | “SJoyed the satisfaction of having de- | that moved along at a dizzy clip il Yeloped another trio almest as brilliant | afternoon. 4n Bob Grove, Rube Walberg and| They showed they belonged in the | George Earnshaw, aces of the cham- final match of the championship, and pionship clubs, 1929-1930. | it took everything Doeg had in the | 1way of skill and courage to prove he ONNIE MACK Was a great manager. | was just a trific more experienced than | manipulating his men and the | his younger rival. It was Doeg’s margin plays with his famous score card in experience and resulting steadiness | “3n the days when the squeeze play was | that just carried him over the breakers 3n vogue and a home run was & inlo port, sensation. A EEIR -~ He was still a great pilot when the ! post-war _slugging era_ dawned _and SN May Wenk &G | altered the game's course, with Babe OU may read a lot about many #» Ruth rising in mastodonic vehemence goal line stands” this season in to demand an $80,000 salary by the foot ball, but there will be nothing sheer power of his ability to propel the | t0 surpass the four “set point stands” Jivelier ball farther than any one else in |0f Doeg, when Shields, aitacking with history. everything he had in stock, could not Looking backward after he had re- | quite break through a defense that | gained the peak in 1929, Mack confessed | Would not yield an inch %o me that he had “underestimated This was different tennis from the the rapidity with which the game would |0ld meetings of Tilden and Johnston. | come back after the war.” here were fewer rallies, for Doeg and “L'll have to admit T was two or three | Shields were out to pick up a point on years late in catching up with the every stroke. Two unusually hard hit- parade again.” he said. “I figured we | tng services were mixed up with fore- Were due to win again as early as 1925, | hands and backhands down the line, but the pace was fast &nd then there |played with no thought of safety— was Ruth and that wonderful team the | played only to score. Yate Miller Huggins rebuilt, At their | All the way through the action was | best they were unbeatable.” crisp, fast and full of power. And it | (Copyright, 1930, by the Associated Press) Might be stated here that Johnny | 4 o G Doeg has greatly improved on the | carlier form he showed this season. No | ordinarily good player could have stop- | ped Bill Tilden and Prank Shields on successive days, for Shields had all the stuff a champion needs from start to fin Tomorrow—A Home-Town Champion " GLENS FALLS OPEN ATTRACTS ARMOUR nish, Shields had a shade in brilliancy sver Doeg, but it was the latter’s greater | steadiness that finally turned the trick. | And he always was at his best just when he had to be—just when the slightest faltering would have cost him | the fourth set and possibly the match. | At those highly crucial moments, | Doeg not only failed to slip, but rose to something above his best previous play. €arazen, H. Smith and Other Stars Vie With New Pro Champ BY GRANTLAND RICE. | who have won both the United States | shows base ball ever for Purse of $3,500. By the Associated Press. GLENS FALLS, N. Y., September 15., —The $3,500 Glens Falls Open. starting foday over the course of the Glens Falls Country Club, has drawn a crack field. jncluding the new Professional Golfers’ ‘Association champion, Tommy Armour troit D{'xl'?fz Glens Falls Open is a T2-hole medal play tournament, 36 holes today MOTToW. “%h:: taela includes Gene Sarazen, beaten by Armour for the B, G. A. title on Saturday: Horton Smith, Willie Mac farlane, Johnny Farrell, Johnny Golden, Bobby Cruickshank, Charles Lacey, Joe Turnesa and Craig Wood. RAKES IN THE CASH September 15 (#.—The CHICAGO, e it lnnexcess of haif a million dollars -day meeting this season. ;“ - ‘rzeeigu were $1,688,164 and the et profit was $520,475. * Arlington Park LR back to the track in F::vywmu“(or next year: Park race track earned a| fit-making track, and the Enterprise and Shamrock V. HE big burden of proof now is upon | the veteran shoulders of Sir Thomas Lipton and his Shamrock V. The | entire world may be pulling for him to win, but that won't be enough to pull | him’ through if Saturday's race was a fair test of the comparative merits of the two yachts. Enterprise won by 1,000 yards and it was evident this {1,000 yards might have been a trifiz greater distance if there had been any need for the same. Possibly 1,000 yards isn't as long as | it seems when it comes to a matter of yacht races, but it looks to be fair proof that if Shamrock V wins a race or two it will have to be in generally different_ weather. And, as & rule, Sep- | tember generally can be counted on to | make good in this respect. Armour’s Vietory. l NY one good enough to stop Gene Sarazen over Fresh Meadow, or any other course, at 36 holes, has to have the shots and the competitive RTLIGHT both wood and iron is one of the out- standing features of golf. Known as one of the greatest iron players of all time, Armour also is one of the finest wooden players—not only in the way of accuracy but also in the way of length. When he decides to lean against a drive there are few | longer, although, like Bobby Jones, he only extends himself when he has to— when the length of the hole requires | extra distance to get one home in 2. Armour now is one of the few pros open and the P. G. A. crown. The others are Hagen, Barnes and Sarazen. To | win these two titles is final proof of strength in both medal and match | play, for at Fresh Meadow last week any ‘one who went above 72 or 73 was | facing certain trouble. Armour now is playing the best golf | of his career. His amazing rounds in | the Canadian open, which he won, and | his play at Fresh Meadow, are two of | the season’s finest contributions to the art and skill of the game. There prob- ably is no one else in golf who can lay | s many long irons close to the pins, | played to suit the wind with a fade or | a pull, and this is the proof of shot- making science. Sarazen also has had one of the best years he ever has known, and the fact that the’matter of a single putt was all that barred his way to another big title shows his place in the fast pace of the modern game. | That Pennant Race. | HEN a situation gets as taut as the National League pennant race is today something is bound to bend, if not to break. The season closes a week from next Sunday, £o there isn't much time left, | In that brief space the Cardinals | must face the Braves, Dodgers, Phillies | and Pirates. | The Dodgers must tackle the Reds. Cardinals, Pirates, Giants, Phillies an Braves. | The Cubs face Phillies, Giants, Braves and Reds. The Dodgers close their season with | the Braves, the Cubs with the Reds and the Cardinals with the Pirates. The | Cubs have a slightly softer schedule left but there is nothing soft when every | | | base hit may mean the pennant and | every error may mean the pennant for some one else. With two weeks to go, this stretch | running should provide one of the best | has known, and | the decisive break might not come until | Dodgers and Cardinals hook up in | Brooklyn this week. If Brooklyn can't stop the wild rush of this Western club no one else can. Owner Wrigley says he likes to see his Cubs ir & close race. If he hasn't gotten his wish there is no use in wish- ing. Apvarently you can keep California just so leng out of a tennis crown, | Proving again how strong the force of habit. is. (Copyright, 1930, by North Amerie = Daper Alllance) ot News TITLE SERIES SQUARED IN THREE-EYE LEAGUE Niggeling of Evansville Puzzles Danville Batsmen and Triples in Pinch. | By the Associated Press. EVANSVILLE, Ind, Septembe —The arm and_bat 'of Johnny Nig. | geling boosted Evansville to a° 5-to-0 victory over Danville and to even terms | in the play-off series for the Three-I | | League champlonship. | | Niggeling held the veterans to six| | extremly well scattered hits and in the | | second ‘inning blazed out a triple with | bases loaded to chase over what proved | to be the winning tallies, | The triumph gave Evansville two| victories on their own fleld, to square up with the pair won by their oppo- nents at Danville. The fifth game of | the serfes will be played at Evansville today. Danville ....000000000-0 6 0| |Evansville ..08010010x—5 71| heart. Sarazen has his share of both, !but Armour’s continued contr{f over Batteries—Rogers and Seimer; Nig- geling and Hamby. o | back and Roland Seven Independent Eiévens Are Drilling at Alexandria LEXANDRIA, Va,, September 15. —King Foot Ball gave the first intimation of his intention to again crowd the sandlot dia- mond pastime out of the sports picture yesterday, wWhen seven clevens went through hard workouts here. ‘The St. Mary’s Celtics and Virginia A. C. unlimited elevens, Del Ray A. C., Alpha D:lta Omega fraternity and | Iroquois A. C. 145-pound clubs and the Virginia Juniors and Midgets were put through hard sessions ““JJATS” BUDNICK, stellar guard of the St. Mary's Celtics last Fall, took charge of a squad of 15 Green and Gold candidates at Baggett's Park #nd directed their entire attention upon punting, forward passing light work. “Rube” Hayman, former University of Virginia tackle, who will coach the Cel- | tics again this season, was called to Baltimore and could not direct his charges. Another session has been listed by Hayman for Baggett's Park tomorrow night at 8 p.m. under arc lights, with drills to follow on Thursday night and Sunday morning. EL RAY A. C. has the strongest squad in its history, and Coach “Doggy” Hamilton, veteran center, is expecting his team to great deeds. Hamilton's proteges get their Arst taste of battle in & scrim- mage with Episcopal High at Hoxton Field Saturday afternoon. Harmon Francis, former George Wash- ington_University sub; Babe Clarke, who played last year for Willlam and Mary College freshmen; Jack McCul- lough, Del Ray captain last season; | Kelly Williams and Tom Wood are bat- tling for the wing berths Smerle Douglas, Washington police- | man; Dawson and Ike Fordham aspire to tackle berths. Logan and Eddington are standing out at guard, while cthers showing up well are Pat Bennett, cen- ter; Claude Nixon and Dick Perry, quarterbacks; Dave Shapiro, Bob Utter- Frinks, halfbacks, and Marshall Frinks, fullback Shapiro played two seasons ago with Alexandria Fire Department Preps and is regarded as one of the best run- ning backs in the city. George Mason is represented on the squad by nine of its former stars in Francis, Clarke, McCullough, Williams, Wood, Fordham, | Bddington, Nixon and Utterback. OACH “Buck” Beach and Manager Pat Gorman looked over a snappy squad of Virginia A. C. candidates on Shipyard Field yesterday morning The Virginias will open their season on October 5, it is thought. LPHA DELTA OMEGA will enter the Capital City League 150-pound section with a strong line-up com- posed almost entirely of former Alex- Standings in Major Leagues American League. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS. Chicago, 2; Washington, 1 (10 innings). New York, 10; Detroit, 3 Philadeiphia, 7; Cleveiand, 1. Boston-St. Louis, rain. STANDING OF THE CLUBS. 20 vigdppeud puvrAD New Yorl Clevell Detr independent | and other | accomplish | will | ficklene British yachtmen, too, are known to | be very agreeable to sailing in a good | stout breeze and what they regard as| light air may be considered a very fair sailing breeze by American skippers. FRAME AUTO WINNER andria High School stars. Twenty-two ;;’)gmen have been selected by Coach)Drives 25 Miles in 18.57 to Set e Goldman and Mangger Leslie De- vers and the atiention of the two pilots| Becord at Woodbridge, N. J. will be devoted exclusively to whipping| WOODBRIDGE, N. J., September 15| those men _into shape for league play. | (#).—Fred Frame of Los Angeles won | Rdlph - Scrivener, Jimmy _Luckett, [the 25-mile Woodbridge Automobile | Jimmy Jones, Dave Bayliss, Haywood, | Racing Sweepstakes from a field of | | Tom Vernon, Wilson Davis, Devers, nine yesterday, covering the course in| | Garland _Sisk, Casey Dennis, Beverly |18 minutes 57 seconds, to better the | Turner, Sidney Hancock, Benny Bag- | track record set by the late Bob Robin- | | gett, Lee Newman, Ellett Cabell, Bot- |son. Robinson’s record had been 19| tles West, Pete Willlams, Rector Green, | minutes and 28 seconds. | Jake Sperling, Martin Cohen, Carr and | Billy Arnold, champion of the Ameri- Wickey Whalen are playing for Alpha |can Automobile Association _tracks, Delta Omega. | failed to qualify in his heat of the fea- | ture event. Only four of the field fin- | ished the grind. | OB BROOKINGS, former Episcopal High School star, has enrolled this | term at Exeter Preparatery School and will play foot ball and track. Brookings is a power in the line and a promising dash star. He'll enter Yale after Excter bestows its sheepskin upon im. Dave Henderson, a star at Alexan- dria High the past two seasons and a member of the Alexandria eleven which won the State championship in 1928, is a_candidate for a line position on the Emerson Institute eleven of Wash- ington. Harry Fiddesop, St. Mary's Celtics' base ball trainer, has been signed to doctor the Green and Gold basket ball and foot ball clubs’this Fall and Win= ter. “Fiddy” kept the Celtic stars on their toes in those two sports last year. Dick Allen, St. Ma Celtics quar- terback, is laid up with a severe attack of boils and will be out of action for two weeks. The Celtics basket ball team will have a roster including Lester Mc- Menamin, Doc Dreifus, Buddy Zim- merman, Wilbur Cohan, Frenchy Cohan, Ellett Cabell, Joe Hamilton, Jack Allen, Earl Cronin, Bussy Brenner and Eddie Gorman_this Winter. The Celtic Buddies also will make their bow. The team will be composed mainly of girl players with the Knight's Store Buddies last season. MEMPHIS WINS FLAG - atiin: Vietor Battle Texas Champion. MEMPHIS, Tenn., September 15 (#). ‘The 1930 Southern Association season ended yesterday, with the Memphis Chickasaws winner of the pennant by a margin of six and a half games over | New Orleans. | Memphis will meet the pennant win- ners of the Texas League in the Dixie | series, to start Wednesday, for the class ' championship of the South. Birmingham finished the season in third place, Atlanta, fourth: Little Rock, | fifth; ~ Chattanooga, sixth; Nashville, seventh, and Mobile, eighth, Southern Association to Coin Mark Looms For Jamestown EW YORK, September 15.— George D. Widener's crack 2- year-old Jamestown, has made a fine start toward breaking the all- time money winning record. Jamestown clinched the juvenile championship on Saturday by de- feating Equipois> by a nose in the Futurity at Belmont Park. The triumph was worth $99,600 to the winner and boosted his winnings to date to $151,926, with the rich 3- year-old classics still ahead of him. Gallant _Fox, which now has earned $317.000, won only $20,000 as a 2-year-old. D.C. GROCERS FORM TWO GRID SOUADS 135-Pound Team Organized. Lighted Tennis Courts Aid Sandlotters. ISTRICT GROCERS, who have just closed a successful dia- mond campaign and who are busy on the bowlnig alleys, are going in for foot ball in a big way. The Grocers already have thrown their hats into the 150-pound class, but not satisfied with this, they are organizing a 135-pound grid team, which will enter the Sport Mart League. The lighter eleven will drill tomor- row night at 7:30 at Seventeenth ard B streets. The Sport Mart League will hold an important meeting_tomorrow night at 7:30 at the Sport Shop. of teams are requested to attend this confab. These lighted tennis courts at Seven- | in right | ‘The Aztec | teenth and B streets come handy for sandlot gridders. 125 and 135 pounders will also hold a drili tomorrow on the field adjoining the courts, which affords them ample | light with which to follow the ball. The following candidates for the Ar- cadia foot ball team are to report at 609 Kenyon street at 7:30 o'clock Wed- | nesday night: Andrusia, Asero, B. Glorious, H. Glorious, Hall, Johnson, King, Bowman, Flinn, Saphos, Senge, Dean, Galler, Levinson, Nau, Roceati, Mastromarino, Harris, Welsh, Prentiss, Shorr, Murphy, Moore, Gatti Tamagni and Baker, Bill Gates, former Mohawk Prep coach, will guide the destinies of the | Brookland A. C. gridmen, who begin | activities tomorrow and Thursday on | Rumson, N. J., and also plans an early the practice field at Michigan avenue and Perry street. The Brooklanders, who intend to enter the unlimited section of the Capi- | tal City League, want all candidates to report. Palisades A. C. unlimiteds are anxious team. Manager Leon Hager can be reached at 5040 Dana place northwest. Comet A. C. will hold a meeting to- morrow night at the home of Manager SPECIAL SALE or e e All managers | DEFEAT OF TILDEN SHAKES NET DOPE :Youngster's Victory Likely | to Cause Shuffle of i National Rankings. BY HERBERT W. BARKER, Associated Press Sports Writer. EW YORK, September 15. N —A 21-year-old Califor- nian, John Hope Doeg, sat | on top of the tennis heap today, while experts spent their spare time predicting a whole- sale shift in this country’s rank- ing list. Doeg won the national singles title |t a spectacular duel with Frank | Shields, 19-year-old *<ew Yorker, on ow Saturday, and thus became the young- | est player to capture the crown since | Billy Johnston first reached the heights in 1915. Eliminates Tilden. But more to the point, where the question of a new ranking list is in- volved, is the fact that Doeg, in his | marcn'to the finals, eliminated Big Bill Tilden, for 10 straight years this coun- try'’s No. 1 player, and Francis T. Hunter, who has been rated just be- hind Big Bill for some years. On theb asis of 1930 performances there is a strong po:sibility that at least three youngsters, Shields, Sidney B. Wood of New York and Ellsworth Vines of Pasadena, Calif, may crash their way into the first 10. Whether Tilden will lose his place at the top of the list to Doeg is ‘a moot point, for the tall Philadelphian played marvelous | tennis in Europe this season. Hunter is virtually certain to-be dropped sev- eral pegs from the No. 2 spot he now occupies. Doeg, ranked No. 3 last year, hardly can be denied a higher place. George Lott, present No. 4, has chown little this year, and may take a tumble. Three Sensations, The ‘Texans, Wilmer Allison and Berkeley Bell. may be ranked higher than the No. 7 and No. 9 positions they now hold, for both have played spec- tacularly this season. John Van Ryn is the present No. 5; Fritz Mercur, de- | clared ‘ineligible for' amateur competi- tion on Saturday, is No, 6; Wilbur F. Coen No. 8, and Gregory Mangin No. 10. Wood, Shields and Vines have been | the sensations of the current campaign, along with Cliff Sutter of New Orleans. Shields now is ranked No. 12, but Wood and Sutter were not ranked at all Jast | year, while Vines was No. 2 on the | junior list. Doeg, incidentally, has decided that he will confine his tenfis next vear to the big tournaments in the metropolitan area. The husky n soon is | to be married to Do Scudder of | entrance into business in New York. He will not be a candidate for the Davis | Cup team. | May, 143¢ North Carolina avenue | northeast, at 7 o'clock. All members and newcomers are in- |to bock a game with an out-of-town | vited to attend. | The Vim gridders, 95-pounders, are {on the lookout for players. All'boys wishing to join the Vims should call Cleveland 4224. rand New Marmon 8's Never such an opportunity to drive home one of these famous, modern straight-eights at such a saving. Special increased trade-in allowance on your present car. Time pay= ments scheduled to suit the way you want to pay the balance. Everything done to make it possible for you to own a Marmon at the least cost and most satisfaction to you. Come in today and investigate our astonishing proposition. These are 1930 Marmons, current pro- duction models. They incorporate many important improvements National League. YESTERDAY'S RESUL Pittsburgh, 8-7; New York, 6-3 (lst 10_innings: 2nd game, 7 innings, dark; Brookiyn, 8: Cincinnati, 3. St. Louis. 9-4: Boston, 2-7 (Ind game, & innings, Sunday law) Other clubs not scheduled STANDING OF THE usmasuig GAMES TODAY. wWash, at Chicago. New York at Detroit Boston st Bt L. (2) Wash. N, | GAMES TODAY. Pittabg. GAMES TOMORROW. t New York. Pittsburgh at Phila. Cincin. at Brooklyn. Cincin at Boston. Caicago at Phila (3) Chicago at N. York. Othert net scheduled.St. Leuis at Brooklyn Values in all Four Marmon Straight-Eights for Every Purse recently adopted and cannot be obsoleted for years to come. We're having this sale because we're overstocked. So we're taking a loss to cut down our inve the savings on to yo ntory—and passing u. Come in today— look them over—they can’t last long at these prices. NEUMEYER MOTOR CO., Inc. Salesroom 1517 Conn. Av Phone Dec. Staunton Marmon Staunton, Winchester, V Va. @. B. Guthridge Established 1917 Distributors N.W. . 1 Dealers: Sales Co. Chevy Chase Motors 6700 Wisconsin Ave. N.W. 7. T. Campbell Luray, Va. Service Staiion 2021 17th S Phone North W. 0