Evening Star Newspaper, October 6, 1930, Page 32

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c—-2 * - Cards Gamest Club in Game, Says Street : Dykes and Foxx Blamed by Co SPORTS. DARING SPRINT BY HAFEY TURNING POINT OF GAME ‘A’s Looked Less Danger Who Sent Chick Hom ous After That to Gabby, e—Haines and Gelbert Win High Praise From Manager. BY GABBY STREET, Mansger of the St. Louis Cardinals, T. LOUIS, October 6.—After the way we have come from behind to tie the Athletics in the 1930 world series, I don’t think any one will ever again doubt the gameness 91 my | club. I have always contended that it was the greatest fighting team in base ball— one able to overcome all sorts of ob- stacles—and I think the players have themselves ing from the American League champlons and evening the series at two games each. 1 admit some of my boys did not feel any too well after taking twoon the chin in Phila- delphia. But that that Haines could do it, and he cer- tainly rewarded me with one of the finest exhibitions I have seen a long time. Tre turning point of the game came in the fourth inning when, with the score tied, T chased Hafey home when Dykes made a wild throw on Blades' grounder. Chick of course scored. That Tun put us ahead, and we were never | headed after that. That was what | was there for, though. I think that | play upset the ‘Athletics considerably, as | after that they did not look as dan: gerous to me as they did in the early innings. Boss Lauds Gelbert. While passing around the bouquets for my players don't overlook Charley Gelbert. He has done everything that | could be expected of a player. There | never were two prettier stops than those he made against Miller in the first | inning and Simmons in the seventh. Had he missed either one it would prob- ably have caused Haines a lot of trou- ble. Not only did he shine on the | defense but aiso on the offense, inas- | much as he scored the tying run for us and then d:ove in the tally that put THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., MONDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1930. CUBS HOPE T0 COP CITY TITLE TODAY Move Nearer Chicago Cham- pionship as Malone De- feats White Sox. By the Associated Press. HICAGO, October 6.—The Cubs made a trip to Chicago's South Side today—a trip they hadn't expected to make—with large deas of finishing up the city series. After taking the second game at| Comiskey Park and winning the opener | in their own park Friday, the Cubs fig- ured to wind up the serles in Wrigley Field. But they reckoned without Tommy Thomas, who gave they six hits and an 8-to-2 beating Saturday. The National League entrant again went one up on the White Six yesterday | when Pat Malone outlasted five Sox | pitchers for a 6-to-4 victory. Ted | | | | Saturday, Notre Dame today turned its | touchdowns, and his line functioned in Big BY WILLIAM WEEKES, Associated Press Sports Writer, HICAGO, October 6.—Warfare in Big Ten foot ball will be- come general this week, and to stir the interest of the harder- to-please fan two intersectional games of national interest are on the bill. Notre Dame and Northwestern again will share the spotlight. Victorious over the Mustangs of Southern Methodist University in a sensational contest attention to sharpening up for Navy, which will collaborate with Rockne's men in the formal dedication of the ;r&ndd-new $700,000 stadium at South end. Southern Methodist gave Notre Dame as thorough a testing as ever Rockne could desire, staving off a 20-to-14 de- feat until the closing minutes of play. Northwestern will meet Ohio State in what stacks up as the most impor- tant Big Ten game. Northwestern made an impressive start Saturday in turn- ing back the Green Wave from Tulane, 14 to 0. Hank Bruder was the spark of the Wildcat offense, scoring both Lyons, who stopped the Cubs cold in the first game of the set, was not the pitcher to fool them yesterday, and he | was batted from the hill in the ffth | inning. | Hack Wilson s1so selected the day for | little trouble getting in motion against midseason fashion. Ohio State had a Indiana, but scored 20 points in the Ten Gridiron Warfare Becomes General This Week Purdue, the defending Big Ten champion, will cpen its conference schedule against Michigan at Ann Ar- bor. Unless Michigan discovers the scoring punch, so lacking in Saturday's 0—0 tie With Michigan State, the Boil- ermakers should win their straight over the Wolverines. Purdue did not operate as smoothly as expected, but trimmed Baylor, 20 to 7,’Saturday. Minnesota’s 33-to-7 defeat by Van- derbilt took some of the interest from the Gophers' battle with Stanford Sat- urday. Minnesota, however, was not at full strength, but will be in better shape this week. No time will be wasted by any one visiting Memorial Stadium at Minneapolis, for Pop Warner aparently has a Stanford team worth seeing, fol- lowing its 20-to-0 victory over Ganta Clara. ‘The other Big Ten contest wil' occur at Madison, Wis., where the Badgers will meet Chicago. Chicago used passes almost exclusively in defeating Ripon, 19 to 0, and Hillsdale, 7 to 6, Saturday, while Wisconsin presented a strong run- ning game in defeating Carleton and Lawrence, Carleton was beaten, 28 to 0, while Lawrence was submerged, 53 to Oklahoma Aggies, which scored som thing of an upsst in beating Iowa, 6 to 0, Saturday, will seek another Big Ten victim at Indiana this week. Iowa will meet Centenary College and Butler will be at Illinois. Illinois, green and in- experienced, pulled out with a 7-to-0 final-period for a 23-to-0 victory. victory over Icwa State Saturday. second | SALLER RINGHEN VIE WITH HEAVES Kid Berg . Friday Tackles Billy Petrolle in Feature Match of Week. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, October 6.—The little fellows of the' boxing business are due |to vie with heavyweights this week for what interest there is left for box- ing in the season of foot ball and the world serfes. Kid Berg, England’s whirlwind light- weight, is scheduled to meet one of the few American fighters who have been able to beat him—Blilly Petrolle of Fargo, N. Dak.—on the Friday program at Madison Square Garden. Petrolle gained a technical knockout over Berg in Chicago two years ago before the British battler had gone far toward his Present high position among the light- weights. Kid Chocolate tackles Roger Bernard, Flint, Mich,, featherweight, in Detroit the same evning. Primo Carnera is due for one of the real tests of his American career at the Boston Garden tomorrow night, when he meets Jimmy Maloney, who likes to show his home town fans the SPORTS. BY CONNIE MACK, ‘Winner of Eight Pennants with the Athletics. T. LOUIS, October 6.—The Cardinals have now done what the Athletics already | have done. | | They won two games in St. | Louis after the Athletics took two | games in Philadelphia and today | we will be starting all over again. Robert Moses Grove pitched better ball than he did when he beat Crimes |on the opening | day. It was a shame that such match- less pitching had to be ruined by the delinquency of our players who erred in & crisis to give the Cardinals two unearned runs and | victory. ‘This tragedy was set in the fourth e THIRD SACKER MUDDLE IN NOT TAGGING HA Accurate Throw in Crisis Also Might Have Saved t Day—~Grove Pitched Better Ball Than in Opening Contest. ) their stride. They did this all throuf the pennant race this year, as well in_1929. There's lots of life left in the At letics and they are going to prove w they can do when their backs against the wall. I predict tHat th will show some real base ball in ) remaining games of the serles, No matter what happens today series will go back to Philadelphia decision. That's a big advantage our favor and I expect the tea come back and play as it should. lost under heartrending ciroumstan yesterday, but we are not broken req and have lots of fight léft. Hal pitched remarkable ball and deser every credit, while Charléy Gelb who has played brillantly all throyl the series, even hit a higher plane bq with his timely hittipg and sensatior fielding. The A's did not play up to th usual standard and away went the bj game. Max Bishop must be poinf out as making the showiest defens| play of the game when he ran out right fleld and made a jumping "cat) of Douthit's bid for a hit. That derful catch by Bishop kept the C3 truth of the statement that the bigger | they are the harder they fall. Other leading heavyweight battles send Otto | | us two to the good. This young man | | is certainiy a great player, and a money player to b is all changed now. They have come from behind, and inning. After Frisch and Bot- |{dinals from scoring another run, 2| We will be back again at the Ci his first home of the series, a drh‘e‘ Celtics Dofujn Northerns Again over the right-fild screen with Cuyler o were Te- now it is the Ath- letics who are not such a cocky aggre- gation. We have shown them that we can play winning base ball. Not only that, but we are going to continue to do it. Even after two straight defeats, I said we were Gabby Street. going back to Philadelphia, and events | have shown that I was a good prophet. In giving us our second straight vic- tory, Jess Haines pitched one of his greatest games of the season. He was wild, but it was because he was putting | too much “stuff” on his pitches. Jess Got Better. Of course, I had a man warming up in the bull pen several times, but even in the early innings, when he was ng at his worst, I never had any, our way to Philadelphia tonight with a | dea of taking him out of the box. He became better as the game progressed. and he showed that even a right-hand pitcher can stop such sluggers as Sim. mons, Cochrane and Foxx. I knew Everybody asks me why Jim Bottom- v has not been hitting. That I cannot | answer. But this much I can say: Jim | has been hitting at nothing but gcod balls and he has driven out scme hard | smashes, but they have not gone safe. But he has dcne all that could be ex- {pected in the field and he is hustling all the way, just like my entire ball ciub. The two games here showed what | hustling would do. Depend on Grimes. In the fifth game today it will be Burleigh Grimes for us. He had tough | luck in the game he pitched at Shibe Park, when all the hits were for extra bases, But here we have shown that | long hits are not as easy to get and I | am sure that Grimes will send us on | lead of one game. Then we will keep right on hustling until we win the series and bring the title back to the National | League. (Copyright, 1930.) SERIES IS SQUARED BY SHINNG EFFORT (Continued From First Page.) tired Dykes and Cochrane. Simmons | followed with the only clean wallop o! the day on the Athletic side and tha blow ended the Athletic scoring. The Cardinals tied the count in the third on Gelbert's triple and Haines’ single. ‘The big blow-off came in the fourth. With two out, Hafey doubled and Blades rapped one to Dykes at third. Dykes threw low to Foxx and Hafey scored. Singles by Wilson and Gelbert did the Test, leaving the count at 3 to 1. ‘The vocal voleano at this point was beycnd all belief. It rolled across the Missouri plains and must have thun- dered against the wooded slopes of the Rockies. Grove, the great oak, was falling. The barrier was being dynamited and blown aside. The Cards had come from behind to tie up nnhhmc and carry the war along to a 3 ‘They played t ball back of their veteran, with a defense led by the it Gelbert, one of the best young base b all has known in many | Gelbert was all over the lot years. and his hitting was largely responsible | for two of the three runs. It was his triple which Bing Miller tried to chase | through the right-field wall that started the demage. It was his single that scored the final run. And he covered more ground around short than a pair of centipedes. He has the class and he looks the part with fine flash of speed and a great arm. Only Simmons Keeps Going. ABBY STREET sent Grimes and Rhem into action at Philadelphia and they were both hit hard. In these two games the Mackmen piled up 11 runs. Back home, Gabby called upon Hallahan and Haines and so far they have checked the Athletics to 1 Tun in 18 innings, Any pair of pitch- ers who can do this with a left and right arm have something up their sleeves beside a cuff. Hallahan and Haines have held the Athletics help- Jess and they will be ready again later on. They have finally cut off and sur- rounded all members of the big three except Al Simmons, who persists in hitting them all with an average around .500. ‘When you figure in the fact that the Cards have come up to an even count with Frisch end Bottomley, their main punch. far off form, you can estimate the job they have done. Sunny Jim Bottomley, the :lugging first baseman, has hit one single in 16 times at bat. Frank Prisch hasn't made a hit since he broke the world series reccrd in the first game. The Cards depend upon this pair and Hafey to carry them ealong and only Hafey has come through Frisch and gBottomley haven't. They have been sfopped abruptly, game after game, where a hit wou'd hat been worth money in the bank ‘The main answer is simply this—in the last two home games the Cardinais have run across great pitching. In Hallahan and Haines they found at least two men who could throw water in the Athletics' powder magazine, Haines pitched the best game of the series for all-around eff:ctiveness. He was cooler than the top of an iceberg and had the heart cf an iron ox when trouble threatened. The Mackmen now must ccme back with George Earnshaw in the fifth game and the Cards have Grimes with a long rest. If Grimes fails they have Halla- han and Haines waiting for another shot. Prom the bottom of a scmber grotto the Cards are back in the open again with a_great chance to win. (Copyriht. 1930 by Nort American News- aper Alliance.) Eagles’ lr?;irg 7Boy Growing Larger As a dietitian Coach Walter Young of American University is convinced he'd starve if that happened to be his means of earning his bread and butter. When the Eagle gridders began training & month ago, Milton Fol- ston, veteran lineman, sported a bay window and 265 pounds of avoirdu- is. Young thought there was a Fitle too much of each. so he sug- gested a diet and gave the big boy some “reducing” exercises. ‘Today, with the diet, special ex- training period and | CUBS TAKE LEAD WHITE SOX. 3 ... % AB. L] o e T | | | hooooosoraSratmmm, if b... Henry. Campbel ‘aber, al somessosortosssan 5l cooococorunownomnl 8l oo 37 24 | *Battod for Kaman § o n sixth i | ¥Batted for Henry in elehin Mmin. CUBS, . R. H. PO. | Brair. 3b.. s 5 | English, s5. | Cuvler,” 1f. Wnlson, cf m, | Bell. 5b. | Malone, | Totals | white sox. | cubs” .22 | enowmsnuns! 8l comrmamsms; o @l omooswmms! o & [ e [ 2 Runs batted in—Cuyler (2), Hartnett (2), Watwood, Reynolds, Wilson (2), Tate, Two-base glish, Hartnett (3), un—Wilson. Sacrifices one, Reynolds. Double piay— Left on_ by s on bal { | 1 Elaney. bs, 8. “ll o By Lyons, i: by Faber: ii by Malone: Hits—OR Lyons. 10 1n 45 Innines: off Bra ton, none in 15 inning: off Moore, 3 in 1 none_in 23 inning; of Hit by pitcher—By | - 'Losing pitcher—Lyons. | Umpires—Messrs. Ormsby, _ Quigley, ~Mc- Gowan and Magerkuerth, Time of game— Fhour and £8 minutes x- ¥ DAD LOYAL GRID FAN Frank Hooper Will Walk 300 | Miles to See Son Play for V. M. I. | | When Virginia Polytechnic Institute | and the Cadets of V. M. I. meet Thanks- | giving in their time-honored foot ball classic, the Hoopers, father and son, will get_plenty of exercise. | Bird Hooper, the son, is the 1930 | captain and quarterback of Virginia | Poly’s big maroon team. He will carry | a large part of the burden of the run: | ning attack. And when Bird runs his | father, Frank B. Hooper, walks, | Last year when Bird playec: against the Cadets his father took a 200-mile stroll from Richmond to Roanoke to see the fun. This year he expects to make a 300-mile hike from Newport News to the scene of the batjle. Balm for Title | Loss Faces .Cubs | CHICAGO, October 6 (#).—As balm for losing a chance at world series money, each member cf the Cubs had a chance to win himself $1,235.71 by defeating the White Sox today. | For the first four games of the series, the only ones in which players share the receipts, $59,716.09 will be split among the players, $35835.65 to the winner and $23,890.43 to the loser. If the Cubs win the series, each mem- ber of the White Sox will get $796.34, while victory for the Sox would mean 194.52 each and $823.80 for each Cub. n. The Sunday game drew the biggest crowd of the ‘series, 45,104 paid admis- | slons, almost as many as watched the | last Sunday game between the Cubs | and Giants, while the former were still candidates for the National League title. | Sherifl Fred Blake, who scored the first | | Cub victory, was to oppose Cecil Pat! ‘araway, White Sox southpaw, today. C | Ci | | FooT BALL TILTS | LISTED THIS WEEK (With scores when same teams met last year.) | LOCAL TEAMS. | | Georgetown (19) vs. West Virginia Wes- {leyan (0), Friday night, at Griffith Stadium. | 'Gallaudet vs. American, at Kendall Green. Catholic vs. Holy Cross, at Worcester, | g Ge0rse Washington vs. Delaware, at New- | ark, Der | Maryland (0) ys. North Cai O | Chapel Hill, N. C. o EAST. Albright (33) vs. Mount St. Mary's (8). Amberst vs_Union. Foyey Bates vs. Norwici, Bowdoin (6) vs. Willlams (27). Carnesie Tech vs. Georgla Tech, levan (0). Hampaen-Sidney (€). . Boston University. Dickinson 6) vs. Ursinus (6). Franklin-Marshell vs. . Joseph. Harvard vs, Springfield. Loyola vs. Washington C New River State (19) v N. Y. Aggie (6) vs. Long New ‘York Pennsylvania Penn State 2 | ege. Broaddus (0). siand U. (13). vs. Villanova. ¥s. Virginia 6) vs. Marshall (7). Princeton (12) vs. Brown (13). Providence (32) vs. Coast Guard Acad- y (0). Rider. utgers. Bucknell (13). Army vs. Swarthmore. o\Western’ Maryland U. (26) v. Bt. John's West Virginia U. (26) vs. Washington and e (6). Yale (0) vs. Georgia (13), SOUTH, Alabama (35) vs, Sewanee (1), Chattanoosa vs. Centre. Citadel (1) vs. V. M. Duke (12) vs. Davi Florida (19) “vs. Al Purman (19) v, e (6). Kentucky (40) vs. Maryville (0). North Carolina State 0) 'vs. Clemson (26) Qklahoma (1) vs. Nebraska (13). Loui A Mississippi (7). vard Payne s Aggies (10) vs. Tulane (13), exas Christian vs, Arkansas. Vanderbilt vs. V. P. I, Willlam and Mary vs. Woftord, MIDDLE WEST, Daston vs. Ohio idson B Oklahioma Aggie: oW, Vi 0o Chicass ® Du [ a cago (6) vs. Duquesne (7). Michigan (16) vs. Purdue (30). ) Michigan State vs. Cincinnati. Minnesota vs. Stanford. 1 North Dakota vs. Morningside. | o North Dakota Btate 6) va. South Dakota | ). Northwestern (18) v. Ohlo State (6). Nof 4) vs. Navy 7). - oWest Liberty’ (0. | zour! | vs, Pittsburgh. estminster (7) vs. Allegheny (6) tre Dame (1 Western Reserve Wisconsin (20) vs. Chicago 6). "' Witienberg " (0) 'vs. Washirigton-Jeffer- 15) FAR WEST. California (0) vs. St. Mary's (0). Denver (19) vs. Colorado Ageles (8). Nevada vs. Santa Clara. Oregon State (19) vs. Californis Ag- gies (0). | ..U of California, Los Anseles (20), va. | Pomona (0). Washington vs. Idaho. Utah Aggies vs. Colorado. Washington State (7) vs. Southern Cali- fornia (21), | GRIDMEN IN SILK PANTS | Chicago Backs and Ends Are Made Dudes of Squad. By the Assoctated Press. Chicago backs and ends wear silk | |pants and the linemen knitted ones, Coach A. A. Stagg found that backs and ends in jersey pants tired quicker than | when wearing silk “moleskins.” | Wisconsin wears white instead of |cardinal jerseys this year. Minnesota wears maroon headgears, GRID FANS SHELTERED | Most of Seats in Cleveland’s New | Stadium Will Be Roofed. Cleveland's lake-front stadium will be completed in time for the 1931 foot | ball season and efforts are now being | made to have Ohio State play Western | Reserve as the dedication game. | Cleveland’s stadium will be different, inasmuch as most of the seats will have a roof over them. ! E are trying to give 'em a break You know, there are few really bad boys. There will be even fewer, we believe, if they are given a chance to enjoy wholesome recrea tien. That's why we have organized the foot ball team at the National Training School for Boys.” It's Tom McCarthy, popular member {of the Training School’s faculty and former director of boys' activities at the Johnson-Powell playground, speak- ing McCarthy recently gave up the playground post because he was keen to lend a helping hand to the training schools boys, keen to help ’em get a break. He is all steamed up over the way the “experiment” is working out. This is the first time the institution has ever had a foot ball team. “All the 500 boys in school are crazy |about the team,” says McCarthy. Their |life is drab cnough at best. Tt gives | them something to look forward to and | he'ps their morale. | “The players make their own shoes and some of their other equipment. ‘They built their own fleld. “It is a cosmopolitan team. Many re represented and many na- including two Indians. “It 15 & real team, t00. Look at the 'National Training Scfiool l}oys ‘ Show Real Class as Gridders way they trimmed Alexandria High, 19 to 0, the other day and any eleven that can hold Emerson Institute to a 0-0 score as our club did must be plenty good.” McCarthy pays high tribute to the coaching of Ed Crandall, former George Washington and Missouri lienman, who has molded an eleven from a group of youngsters, three-fodirths of whom are playing the game this Fall for the first_time. : Officials who handled the contests in which the training school eleven has icipated have complimented the on their sportsmanship and clean playing. Referee Hobey O'Meara of the Central Board and Umpire Driefus of Tulane University observed that the Alexandria-Training School game was one of the cleanest played in which they ever have officiated. This was a compliment to both teams, especially to the supposedly “bad” boys | from the Institution, said McCarthy. | It also speaks well for the new admin- | istration at the training school. “You know,” said McCarthy, “boys are boys, anywhere, any time. All have pretty much the same aspirations, dreams the same dreams. We believe that by encouraging them in athletics we are giving them a boost in their battle to make good citizens. We be- lleve they deserve a We are trying to give # to them.' * | | | for their second straight triumph over | her entry because of illness. Most of | the entrants are from Baltimore, but | | Baltimore to start the 72-hole com- |through Thursday and Friday. | W. Schaefer 2 up. LEXANDRIA, Va, October 6.— The championship of the 1930 | District independent series rests on the Virginia side of the Po- tomac today. The struggle for its possession came to an end yesterday when the St. Mary's Celtics beat the Northern A. C. | of Washington, 6 to 4 before 1,500 fans | “Buck” Grier's team. Art Ludlow, who drove in two runs and scored as many on a triple and home run in three times at bat, and Lefty McIntire, who scattered the ma- jority of the losers’ 11 hits in admir- able fashion and struck out 8 batters, were the Green and Gold’s shining lights. Twice MclIntire was called upon to face his former manager, “Tots” Long with men on the bases after the dimin utive pilot entered the game in the seventh inning and on both occasions he fanned the Red Birds' leader. Long had an opportunity to turn the tide in |the ninth when he came to bat with the bases loaded. | Lefty Jewett for the Northerns al- lowed 10 hits and fanned § but timely To Win Independent Ball Title hitting by the Celtics, coupled with two errors by Mark Chaconas and Pick Hamel, gave McIntire the decision. Jack Mattingly and Hamel topped the Northerns’ sluggers, the former getting a pair of singles and a_double while Hamel produced a triple and single. Bill Rapp and Meclntire gave Ludlow considerable support on the attack, each geti'ng two hits while one of Mclntire's was good for two bases. The game closed the Celtics’ diamond activities for the year and Charley Corbett's lads will now turn their at- tention to foot ball, hoping that the gridiron sport will bring them as much glory as did the base ball grind. The Green and Gold cleven will open its schedule at Baggett's Park next Sunday and then play through a schedule which will be climaxed by battles with the Mohawks and Apaches of Washington for the sectional title. The Arrow A. C. or Ginther Parks of Richmond, will provide opposition for the Celtics in the inaugural. Both Richmond clubs are composed almost entire’y of former Virginia college stars. Getting off to an early start, Virginia White Sox easily defeated the Bethesda Warriors of Bethesda, Md., 10 to 4. STRAIGHT OFF THE TEE big time competitive golf about the Capital area is due to take | place this week, with two large tournaments scheduled, one club cham- plonship to be decided and another | event for professionals listed for today. While the leading women golfers Ofv the midatlantic area were competing ' today over the course of the Elkridge | Hunt Club of Baltimore in the quali- | fying round of the Middle Atlantic Golf Association women’s championship, professionals and amateurs from many Capital clubs were engaging in an amateur-pro event over the course of the Woodmont Country Club, near Bethesda, Md. Nearly 80 women play- ers, including nearly all the stars of Baltimore and Washington, are entered in the midatlantic affair. Notable among those who have not entered are Mrs. John Neal Hodges, the champion, and Mrs. Dorothy White Nicolson, former women's District champion. Mrs. Betty P. Meckley, holder of the District title, was entrant, but scratched the Washington entry is a strong one. | Next Thursday some two score pro- fessionals, including most of the men- tors from Washington clubs will gather at the Woodholme Country Club of petition for the Middle Atlantic open championship. This event will run Next Priday the final round in the championship tourney of the Washing- ton Golf and Country Club will be played, with Henry D. H. Nicholson de- fending his club title against Frank K. Roesch, whom he beat last year to win | the champlonship. The final was sched- uled for yesterday, but Nicholson was unable to play, and with the assent of Roesch the match was postponed to next Friday. It will be at 36 holes. Golf teams of the Columbia Country Club and the Indian Spring Golf Club | will meet next Sunday, probably over the course of the Congressional Country Club, in a match which will decide the team champlonship of the Maryland State Golf Assoclation. Victors in matches yesterday against Clifton Park and Rolling Road, Columbia and Indian Spring have won all, théir matches to date and will meet in the final over a neutral course. This is the first year the two local clubs have played in the team matches. The Columbia match was played at Columbia, while Indian Spring beat Rolling Road at Catonsville, Here are the results of yesterday's matches. Indian Spring (81%). Leroy Sasscer and Rolling _Road (61%). Harry _Wisotzkey and Dave Crook 2 Harris Jones and Howard E. Crook, Jr... Henry Mort and Dr. C. R. ery Y B, Miiler, nd Clarke Drew Daniel sr. E. A Pep ‘Charles Carroll. 3 oo 955 a C. C. (9). _ Public Parks (6). /inson ~ Ernest Caldwell et ‘and Les Smith Ohnrley” McConrt and_Tom Cole Joe Brown and Richard Arthur Charles A. Hook and James Waish ... Edward BF'6 ‘and It Rich- ardson ... Total.. Columbi M. B. and Everett Eynon . 3% ©. B. Asher and P. g nd Pl W Lauriek. 0 1 Total otal m‘;‘:n of the Manor Club, succeeding Herbert L. Lacey as club title holder. Miller yesterday downed E. M. McClelland in the final round of the title chase by a 5 and 3 margin, winning the first two holes with birdies and ending the match on the fifteenth green. Here are the winners in the other flighgs: Second flight—Edward Teague defeat- ed Fred W, Rade, 3 and 2. Third flight—J. R. Pattison defeated J, G. Taylor 1 up. Fourth flight—L. G. Pray defeated C. Biftn fight. D, M. McPherson de- feated C. L. Griesbauer, 3 and 2. Sixth flight—A. W. Hall defeated A. H. Prince 2 up. Over at the Washington club the third flight final was the only match completed yesterday in the ultimate round of the club championship m.d | low HE final flare of the season in | associated events. O. L. Veerhoff won | the Birney cup, defeated Dr. Alan J. Chenery by 3 and 2 in the final. Two matches were completed in the 12-17 handicap class, but they were play-offs of matches that had been halved last week. In these G. V. Simpson went 36 holes to beat H. E. Osborn, by 2 up, while in the other B. C. Brown and B. P. Garnett went 36 holes with Brown victorious by a three-hole margin. Jack Biggs and L. T, Harrison won their way yesterday to the final round in the Argyle Country Club champion- ship and will meet next Sunday for the title. Biggs beat P. W. Le Duce, 4 and 3, while Harrison beat Tom Pitt, 3 and 2. The finals in the second flight will | be played between E. L. Burch and Carl Noetzel, while the third flight semi annlhu are B, S. Beall and W. F. De- ney. ‘While the men players were ending the first round of match play for the club title, women golfers of Bannock- burn ended the qualifying round for the champlonship and were paired as fol- for the first match round this week: First flight—Mrs. R. C. Dunbar vs. Mrs, T. P. Hayden, Miss I. M. Havey | vs. Mrs. E. F. Burchard, Mrs. Middleton Beaman vs. Mrs. Frank J. Pickett, Miss Sue E. Gantt vs. Miss Florence Parker. Second flight—Mrs. A. H. Perley drew a bye, Miss Freda Kenyon vs. Mrs. H. J. Kane, Mrs. R, V. Haig drew a bye, Mrs, Henry G. Wood vs. Miss Elizabeth Harris. Here are the results in the men’s title chase: First flight— W. L. Pendergast defeated R. P. Gibson, 2 and 1; R. L. Burgdorf{ defeated E. C. Burgdorf, 3 and 2; C. B. Springith vs. J. B. Heron, postponed; Norman J. Hall defeated G. Emerson Moore, 3 and 2; W. Fred Byrne defeated Middleton Beaman, 6| and 4; Leo F. Pass vs. L. W. Moore, postponed; J. T. McCarthy defeated Henry G. Wood, 2 and 1. Class B, handicaps 14 and over.— | W. W. Marr defeated D. W. Alexander, 2 and 1; Mil>s Taylor defeated Russell | N. Low, 3 and 2; Dr. H. A. Smith de- feated J. W. Rees, 3 and 2; J. A. Mc- Keever defeated R. T. McCandlish, 5 and 4; Lee Moffitt defeated J. H. Mc- Cann, 1 up; R. N. Stockman defeated J. Kirschner, 2 up; Otto Thacker de- feated H. D. Whelan, 1 up, and R. V. N. Haig defeated L. T. Souder, 3 and 2. Max Weyl will meet Howard Nord- linger in one bracket, while Fulton Bry- lawski will clash with Dr. M. B. Fischer in the other pairing in the semi-final round of the Woodmont Country Club champlonship next Sunday. ‘ Weyl yes- tercay defeated Gilbert Hahn and Mau- rice Eiseman, while Nordlinger was beating Willard Goldheim and Ralph Goldsmith. Brylawski defeated Stanley Fischer and Henry D. Kaufman, and Dr. Fischer downed William G. Ilich. Semi-finalists in_the second flight are Jack Shulman, Jesse Miller, Phillip Peyser and Dr. Aubrey Fischer. CHINESE ELEVEN TO TOUR. A Chinese amateur foot ball eleven is planning a tour of the world. The team will consist of the best players from clubs in Shanghai, North China, Hongkong and Singapore. NO FLATTERY It's often said that imitationis flattery. But it's no fun if you want a real Bayuk Philadelphia Cigar and somebody palms off an imitation on you. There's only one Bayuk Phillie—be sure you see "Bayuk" on the label. "B.P." means Bayuk hillies—beware of , mitation. Von Porat, slugging Norwegian from Chicago, against Angus Snyder of Kan- sas City at the Chicago Coliseum Fri- day and Babe Hunt, big Ponca City, Okla, heavyweight, against Jack Re- nault of Canada at the Philadelphia Arena tonight. Jackie Fields former holder of the welterweight championship, meets Irish | 10-rounder at Indianapolis tomorrow night, RENDEZVOUS QUINT IS SOCKING HEADPIN ‘Ex-Convention Hall Bowlers Have a Clean Slate in Two Major Leagues. Almost unnoticed, the Rcndezvous quint in the District League has been fairly burning up that loop. No records, | 10thing startling, but the real consistent maple spilling that wins out in the end, | has been the way the Rendezvous boys | naye been rolling. | To date, the quint, which last year | sported the Convention Hall colors, has | won six out of six games in the Dis- trict League and three out of three in the National Capital League. A neat combination it js, too, com- posed of Mag Wood, Al Works, who for the first time in six years is bowling with other than a John Blick combina- tion; Carroll Daly, Phil Goodall, the boy who won sweepstakes Saturday at King Pin, and Reds Morgan, who rolled 402 last week on the Petworth alleys, the toughest in the city, according to many. LL'S quiet on the National Capital League front tonhight,- but the maples will fly in the District loop when Convention Hall and th» Hech® Co. rollers, featuring Whip Litchfleld, who has bowled two 173 games, oppose. RULE BARS NIGHT GAME Night base ball cannot be adopted by clubs in the major leagues until rule No. 22 on’the list governing organized base ball is changed. ‘The rule stipulates that every cham- plonship game must be commenced not { later than-two hours before sunset. Tommy Jordan of Jersey City in a | tomley tired, Hafey came | through with a |two-base hit | against the screen | in right. | Connle Mack. | Dykes Makes Mistake. | Blades hit a high bounding ball to| Dykes which should have been an easy | third out. Instead of turning and| touching Hafey, who wgs within a few | feet of him and could fasily have been | tagged at the time, Dvkes made the| | mistake of throwing to first. He quickly | realized it after the ball left his hand, for the throw was a bit wide and eluded Foxx, who batted it down in front of him. | Hafey kept on for the plate, and Foxx had a good chance to retire him by making ene of his usual swift| throws to Cochrane, but he did not put | his power in the heave and, moreover, | it was low, and Cochrane had no chancs | to retire Hafey, who scored. | Two_hits followed, one a scratch of | | Gelbert's that Grove broke down but | o field, and the second run | scored. These' two runs defeated Grove and put the Cardinals on even terms with us in the world series. In the third inning the Cardinals scored their first run on Miller's in- Lability to hold Gelbert's hit along the right-fleld line to a two-base hit, and | Haines came along with a single that scored him after he had taken third. Runs Weren't Clean. So I don't consider any of the scor- | | ing done by the Cardinals to have been | clean, but nevertheless the runs came in and beat us fairly. Haines pitched wonderful ball after the first inning, but we must not over- look the catch that Blades made off Cochrane in the third inning, as Sim- ‘mons wed with a hit and consid- erable ¢amage could have been done if Mickey's hit had gon: safe. The A's bats have becn idle in the last two days and wiil no doubt start working egain . and I'm hoping that this will take place in today’s game. | Such a galaxy cof hitters that we | have in the Athletic line-up can't be kept down. They are apt to cut loose any time. | A’s Still Confident. Don't let any one think for a minute | that two straight defeats here has | caused the Athletic players to lose any of their confidence. They will be back today with fire in their eyes. They have a habit that just when they look their worst they jump right out of it and get back in dinals today and I prediet we will playing the grade of ball that is in Yesterday's defeat was only & tet porary setback. (Copyright, MOTICO PRIX WINNER. LONGCHAMPS, France, October 6 (: —Viscount Max Derivaud's Motico Radames out of Margigues, won t] 600,000 francs Prix de L'Arc_de omphe, nosing out Edward Esmong Hot Weed and Count A. Guazzon Filarette. 1930.) FACTS Patronize Steuart Motor Company, as thousands ‘of others are doing. There is a reason— Location—Prompt Attention Steuart Motor Ca. (Center_of the City) 6th at K St. NNW. Never Closed Nat'l 3000 RACING LAUREL, MD. October 7 to November 1 Inclusive Twenty Minutes to Track by Special Baltimore & Ohio 5 R. R. Trains Leave Union Station, Wash- ington, at 12:15 P.M. and 12:45 P.M. General Admission, $1.50 First Race at 1:45 P.M. —AND STILL THEY COME insisting that we continue our special concessions ON NEW MARMON 8’5 When they found out we had the cars they wanted to drive at the prices they wanted to pay—THEY BOUGHT! We've had the biggest fall businéss in years —and they’re still coming in asking about our increased trade-in proposition and the important concessions we're making. We've ordered a new allotment to take care of the people we couldn’t satisfy the first time—the cars are here now! Come in and see them—and investigate our proposition. If you act quickly you, too, can effect the same tremendous savings your friends and neighbors have made. All new. 1930 Marmon Eights, fresh from the factory, with all the latest improve= ments recently adopted. NEUMEYER Sales Room 1517 Conn. Ave. N.W. Phone Dee. 1762 rmon Sales Coy Staunton-M: Staunton, Va. Estadlished 1917 Distributors MOTOR CO., Inc. Service Station Dealers Chase Motors Che 6700 8"{ onsin Ave. N.W. rincnciier. v 2021 17th St. N.W. Phone North 4010 3 Eomee

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