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SPORTS -+ NEETSOROLEACE| | Campbell and Frye Oppose Lang and Blakney at Lucky Strike. BY FRANCIS E. STAN. ACK WOLSTENHOLME, who J right now could be ranked Washington's best bowler, will meet a worthy foe to- night in Wesley Askew, Baltimore ace. They battle it out on the Lucky Strike drives at 8 o'clock, with a flock of iron men waiting for the victor. Wesley Askew and young Jack have a feud to settle. It came about when Howard Campbell took his King Pin quint to Balti- more to roll George Lang’s team recently. After the regular match, Lang and Askew took on Frye and Wolstenholme IM flll ‘Washington shooters came out kew then up and challenged Jack hA: five-game pmluzh right then for @ sizable purse and the youn(er of the Wolstenholmes snapped it uj The first game went to t.he orlole but Jack came back to teke the second. ‘The third never was rolled as the b4 came b ok to town and heard u:k from Askew until the aohmn:. when Cveor‘: nc called “Wes wants to mu ‘Wolstenholme for & real wne 10 five each n Balti- Hoore and ‘Washington and total pins % b him,” answered Howard. “Andu“nct only that,” came back uwrg;"'bm Ed Blakney and myuu will 1 you and Bernle Frye for the same amount.” "Ohy ‘was Howard's prompt reply. Tml‘l gonna be nothing cool about tches tonight except the pile The mm\me-Mew match looks to be about & toss-up anyway you re- As ‘!“flr W Lang-Blakney, Clmpbell- 1l be just as tough to gl winner, Lang whanged out & 13 set for five games early this uuon new world's record, but t Campbell, Il more than Lang. N the two-man team tournament at the Capital City Chess Club, Byler and Walker both won their games and Bimmons and took the lead. In the third round, both Bettinger and Bishop wen their games from y | Knapp and Simmons, respectively, and are in second place. The Bettinger- Knapp game went about 30 moves, and was a pretty contest. Simmons got himself into trouble early in his session - | with Bishop, and on his sixteenth turn Bishop announced mate in four moves. The games between Byler and A. Y. Hesse and Walker and C. A. Hesse were postponed. The team standing to date is as fol- L % lows: X w o H i yler-Walker . ‘nn.lnlfl' ishop their | A. ¥. -C. A. Heste . 3 ‘The lilndhl of the xndmd\ul play- ers: this: Happy Pive, , Zeiler and von ? Knlnn i g 1 five-man__ tes tournament, fostered W tlu Wuhlns’hm Chess League, G. E. Bishop, chess direc- will get under way at the Oapital Chess Club, 917 Fifteenth street weet, next Thursday evening at 8 first round will be played be- nting Falls Church tural Department, Sub- be played at the ‘Thursday eve- same hour. There will be ting, as follows: Chase, Mount Hall where up agsinst the Big Print Mfiovl- st 8 chimes. PINNERS TO COMPETE IN THREE BIG STAKES o King Pin and Arcadia to Stage Weekly Events—Ban Stars Each team will play one each other team, or five » champion of to fill the engagements made for . A. Alekhine, world champion, and the fourth round of the hAndlup tournament of the Capital City kly 'stakes, af Chess Club, Gleason won from flock of O‘Ilnmn. Roberts from Mainhall, Mor- Tonight. } Northeast Temple. a sweepstakes| Men's Weekly Sweepstakes. District mixed doubles| and National Capital League bowlers hird | barred. Arcadia. Coliseum. Intercity match—Fountain Ham vs. le’s Happy Five, BOWLING LEAD CHANGES |Ray von Lucky Strike. Georgetown Recreation Goes to :t’:ks‘n-uhn.v.fikmw‘amm vs. oW, Front in Intercity League. Douyblu muwn—flu';m Cmpfieg vs, George Lang an mwh'..hm ld !hkn'y. B:l!-lme ity Lesgue last King Pin No, 1, the “"""“ Men's Weekly Sweepstakes, Convention Hall. Night League—Saturday t De uflw Downtown Park- va. hu No. 1, Colum- "Palisade record. league mfl“ D‘Ib—-l‘l ENOULGH To wiN in the second round from Knapp |3 THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTO: | WOLSTRNAOLN | (o o e GALLANT Fox’ WAS SMART — HE RAN JUST FAST / HE CERTAINLY HAS. EARNED ENOUGH TO RETIRE ON / IN CHESS CIRCLES BY FRANK B. WALKER. Whitaker lost to Simmons and Parsons won from Smith. The present score: Simmons (C} 2 Mainhan (03 The championship of France has been won by A. Gibaud of Rouen. A. Gromer was runner-up. A tournament to decide the cham. plonship of Belgium, held recently at Verviers, was won by G. Koltanowski, M. Engelmann, second. H. H. Ball of Grand Rapids, Mich., was a visitor at the caplur City Club this week, The following end-game ition oceurred in the game between hdan and Micses, contested at Prankfurt, Germany, recently: White (Kashdan)— K on KB4, R on QR7, Ps on KKt5 and K3—four pleces. Black—K on KKt2, Kt on KR2, Ps on KKt3 and KB2—four pleces. How can white win? In re word has come from I. S, Turover that he gave lengthy consideration to the . | move 25 * * * BxP, and discarded ft. , appears to win | Seh: BxP, in lieu of QxQ, pawn and give black the advantage. He says further that he had an o] ly earlier in t.he mfl;ec an advan which prol would have won. his twenty-nu{l turn he played mQ This was not his best play. The posi- tion was as follows: whlbe (Alekhme)—— K on KKt, Q on K5, Rs on Q and Kt on QKt3, Bl nn KKB and Ps on KR2, Qs, Qlu—u piem Black ('.nlnwver)— on KK, Q on KRARJonKBIndQBBIIfl KKt3 and K2, Kt on K5, Ps on KR2, KKt2, KB2, K3, QKt3—12 pleces. What was the move by which he would have gained a decided advantage? Last July The Star published what u , | 5aid to be Dr. E. Lasker’s best game, in which he won from Harry N. Pillsbury. Below is a game in which Lasker was Slearly outplayed by the great Pllisbury. occurred in Nuremburg in ma ‘and was tmten as a test of the dependability of the Prench defense. French Defense. Piilsbury. . Pillsbury. c} White. ; 957 b PR DA g HowsEy B0 £ 2 KixQ game was continued up to 50 moves, When Lasker resigned. Had he attempted to save his queen he would have been mated in a few moves. Pills- bury's brilliant series of moves benn with his twenty-first move. For this game he was awarded the brilliancy prize offered by Bnron Rothschild. NORTHERNS ]JB.II.L TONIGHT. Northern Redbirds, who Rich- mond Arrows tomorrow in a foot ball game at Richmond, will nncuu tonight on the Silver Spring fleld at 7:30 o'clock. FER the Alekhine-Turover game, | Good MORTIMER GRID STAR FOR WASHINGTON-LEE Scores All Points of His Team's 13-0 Win Over Warrenton at Ballston. BALLSTON, Va., November -8.— Maintaining the brilliant pace he has been setting all season, Stanley Morti- mer, sparkling quarterback of the Washington-Lee High School eleven, led his team to & 13-to-0 victory over Warrenton High School in & Third Ath- letic District game here yesterday. ‘The mite fleld general scored all of his team's one on a 38-yard triple pass in the sec- ond quarter and the other on a 15-yard run in the final chapter of the game, and a placement kick after his first 6- pointer. Line-yp and Summary. Washington- Lee (13) Positions. Warzenton (0). Left end... .T. Boud judduth Washington-Lee ernn nn . lowns-— Mo 3). _Poln Tog e T per tgx-umnm kick), jubstitutions—Warrenton, Carey for Arm- rong, Voss for, Cockerell: Washinston-Le it after for ton for Trner. “Bweeney " (ieorse Wi e \GT. Richardson (Wiliam. am ead linesman—Mr. Bruner (War- renton) McKENNA TO FIGHT. Sailor McKenna, Washington boxer, will face lobw umnwood n( Norfolk, t| Va., tonight af Salisbury, M . | By the Associated Press. DETROIT.—Mickey Walker, middleweight champion, outpointed d&h’m’ Risko, Cleveland (10), nome le. BOSTON.—Jack _Dorval, Quincy, Mass., outpointed Babe Hunt, Ponca City, Okla. (10). ~—Billy _ Petrolle, WLUTB. Minn. Pargo, D., outpointed Spug Meyers, Pouteuo. Idaho (6); Charley Retzlaff Duluth, knocked out Mike Paul (2). GIODX CITY, Iowa—Tommy Gro- fl.n Nebr., knocked out Urban berty, Minneapolis (2). EAU CLAIRE, Wis.—Jackie Sharkey, Minneapoiis, outpointed -Johnny Ryan, | Hi Milwaukee (10). LANSING, Mich.—George Philadelphia, knocked out Seal Harris, Chicago (4). NORFOLK, Va-—Dick Welsh, Phila~ delphia, knocked out Rotler Parra, fiyweight champion of Chile (1). Names of Great By the Associated Press. LAWRENCE, destination when he ci Lawrence, Kans. foot ball field. To the Onddo weighs only 150 Position Paleface Name l% L.Johnlfll (i KANS.—The Great White 8 hristened two athletes at %nukeu !natuuce here of White Spirit Lived Up to by Haskell Stars eye to pre- Wilson “Buster” Charles, national decathlon champion, is known to his Oneida tribesmen as “Deerfoot,” and he lives up to the name on the Indians, Louis Weller, fleet, elusive halfback and cap- tain of the Rambling Redskins the last two years, is “Little Rabbit." He pounds. Both are candidates for pmmmmtmmmmdm uflmzummnmunmduwmmm xm-mm.mxmmmmmmm Indian Name Hunting Dog Iron_ Moccasin Muskie Knocks Off Two Em“ with two touchdowns, | sary. andell, St. | Jesse Godfrey, bt WALKER IS VICTOR IN GO WITH RISKO Concedes 29 Pounds to Foe, but Heavier Man Barely Survives Attack. ETROIT, November 8 (#).—That & good little man can beat a good big man was clearly dem~ 3 onstrated last night, when Mickey Walker, middleweight cham- plon, made his bid for a third title by winning a clear-cut 10-round decision over Johnny Risko, Oleveland heavy- weight, Before 10,000 fans, the largest crowd to ever jam its way into an indoor arena in Detrolt, Walker overcame a 29-pound weight advantage to punch out a decisive victory in his first heavyweight battle. The same courage that lifted Walker from the floor on Derby eve and car- ried him to victory over Paul Swiderski at Louisville won the fight for him last nt;hl He needed it, too, for on sev- occasions his larger gpenent M him to the -.nd showered lefts and rights to hting spirit BT B in the unable to overcome. In a flerce ex- change in midring Walker shot a stiff left hook to Risko's jaw and sent him down for a nine count. Mickey med hard for a knockout, but Risko fot mbu:k savagely and staved off r‘ It was Eastern je. Risko tried hard in the next three | o rounds to even the but each time ran into Mickey's left hook and was sent back on his heels. Walker weighed 166, Risko 194%. THREE ELEVENS TIE FOR GRIDIRON TITLE Defeat of Fredericksburg Tear by Alexandria Knots Race in Virginia. ALEXANDRIA, Va., November 8.— The Third Athletic District champion- ship series is tightly locked in a triple tle, as the result of & crushing blow dealt the hopes of Fredericksburg High School by the Maroon and gridiron warriors of Aleundflla!‘;:; yesterday afternoon at w- Park. Alexandria snapped out of the medio- cre manner of play that had character- ized its work in the majority of its | tou previous games and delivered the most astounding upset of the Virginia scho- lastic title by trimming races the Yel- low Jackets, 6 to 0. Victory in the encounur, which was | score Third to have brought the District series to a close, would have clinched the chamj lmnhlp for Predericl for the time in its athletic history, bucuunumm.!mmm. three-cornored tle Wi - ln HI.h School of B-ll.ston and le 8,000 fans saw Frede: beaten Travers in the third quarter after A Jimmy Luckett had set the stage for the marker on the 25-yard advance. A meeting of Thir will be called early next week to make plans for the play-off games now neces» Line-Up and Summary. \l Alex, | pie (holat after touch- Herman xandria) '3 | man—3ar. Tulloch SOCCER PLAYERS PUT ON OFFICIAL ROSTER nd | Approximately 140 of District Register—Washington Club to Be Listed. Approximately 140 soccer players of the District area luve registered with the Washington and Southeastern Dis- t:llaz‘ Soccer Amc‘tag‘:x;. in accordance regulations of organizal ln;fib:en mnl:unl(:d tion, it complete list, with the exception of Washington Soccer Club, wmcph 18 playing lndependant of the la-suu this season, but will be registered, follows: WASHINGTON SOCCER LEAGUE. lel&o « pne vin uck, !rlnx Eenmond 3. -n Dnlted John Francis, Mas Ry 7, ’a tter, George Boyd, A. Lye and Pouun; inhold d , l\lr\an. Knl m. nmnxilffigumm nl zuceh t. ers_Geory i K\lhnnr..‘ , Altred Hori Lurg, Rich Henr; tig S Mndden, Pev Carro and Jobn Holehan. CAPITAL CITY LEAGUE. lllv]t:r Spring—Olin_L. ith, Ernest Ta: 1or, Ralbh Clarie, Aubr' N Finchum, Har- old Coleman, Bern; weil, John Meyer, Gorneltus de Vries Nad Tesier’ Pincham lle—Clifford Heim, Isadore J. Btein- ufluml- gafil B, Becker, am H. Coleman. ir.: A. ¥ mh"&umb Tt )l."fl ert Ho: ‘t':md:. Ben Cole: Herman. lliam Eader, oThEL M atkins, Ulysses Griffith, beray Gandy. farshall H. G Army—] udtrlck Hoov-r ley, Wlllllm &h ua‘u k. arles Jack- 3 Wlllllm O'Connell, trie. Arnold E. Mon- Carlson Gardiner and Jmn 5‘° District officials | Hato: man for Yanage tor 515. -r-.'.' tling. several the unamy ginians to 0y ley. ints (placement), Now Only Grid Team Tech Must Hurdle for Title T'S all up to Eastern. Baylor_shoved over two touchdowns mmmmamcmwm en BATTING, FIELOING MARKS TOPHEAY d|Veterans of Game Scoff Figures, While Pitchers Are Complaining. BY JOHN B. FOSTER. EW YORK, November ( Scoring in the maj leagues and some lower class minor leagues is on the carpet again. It is alieged that 7| batting records are far too high and fielding records too good be- cause scorers have not exercised "':? sensible judgment in recording 8t. Albans n Christo- Eher lmred in the nm perlod. but the ichmond boyl '.hm shoved one touch- down each in second, third and eKinley | t. 3 coanion | bwigicie o, Kt gty St i T R d fake reverse vers and including no aerial the boys in red in a daze for the ‘The Gray and around the West ease. 3 suuuluutlumd Hatos, Hn) rmiey, m’;v maneitr. Bavier Central, 24; Business, 0. Tech, 33; Western, 0, St. John's vi Prep came “«;"u{yuumm Line-up and Summary. - | 8t. John's (1), Qu‘lfhl Le oy ol ng, L Planie, 0 llltlnnhlnvb not only half ising lfll but enal the Vir- d.rlvbol:" under way. agains i 1t tack ‘Woodward's eleven m-fimehfl! llmt?hl’ back in the final Score by period: rolling ;un lin dn-v T bina lvrlnkl the ; n‘l 1 STRESSES EXTRA POINTS By the Associated Press. Not Mum has lofi: Dame & foot ball A move like this is made to lure the secondary off to its to stop the threatened ment, your own price. games owing to their lack of actual base ball experience and ~ | knowledge. It sounds odd to hear that fielding can be made better and batting records records be increased by W that not efficient. X"et it is \mam‘ 3 nof wi nnxmmolflup&;«:hmm'u been penalized the presen oy of recording fly snd ground g i i g § Y NOT A NAGGER Uses Mild Language in Confr With Slipping Pitchers. of u:un nn}zhuunmnvhu 1830 1930 PIHUCO AUTUMN MEETING November 4 to 1§ Inc. SALES AND SERVICE Williams & Baker, Inc. 1507 14th St. N.W. Pot. 6140 ¢ Going Out =i of Business All used cars in stock must be sold at once No reasonable offer refused. This is your chance to buy a good car at Terms Can Be Arranged Wallace Motor Co.