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TWO ISSUES SEEN *AS SLUGGERS M Over Fighter Who Gave Canzoneri Whipping. By the Assoclated Press. 'EW YORK, November 21.— When slugger meets slug- ger one of two things can happen —a “waltz” in which each shows tremendous respect for the other’s punch, or a slam-bang battle in which each gambles on landing the first de- cisive blow. These are the two possibilities when Jimmy MecLarnin and Bi'ly Petrolle clazh in a 10-round bout in Madison Square Garden tonight. A large crowd is expected at the Garden in hopes of both boys forget about defens> and concentrate on attack. That was the finml expectation the night Mc- Larnin fought Ray Miller, southpaw Emcher. but one of the tamest bouts the Garden's history was the result McLarnin has been virtually unbeat- able since’ he accepted a lacing from Sammy Mandell, then lightweight champion, two years ago. He has waded through all sorts of opposition since then and in his last New York appear- ance knocked out Al Singer, successor to Mandell, in three rounds in an over- The smiling Irishman rules a 3-to-1 favorite over Petrolle. The latter, however, is a mark for no ht or junior welterweight in He whipped Tony Can- before Tony knocked lightweight title, and lost & decision to Jackie Kid Berg, the English whirlwind, in a great fight. Petrolle can hit with either hand, and Taitt Littman, Milwaukee middle- zuhfi meets Harry Smith, 1 , Polish ight, with Pee Wee Jarrell of Grand Mich,, in the opening 10. —_— ATHLETIC PROGRAM NOT HIT AT CHICAGO Chance for Quick Degrees Unlikely to Affect Sports—Teams ‘Will Be Checked. Rapids, - By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, November 21.—The Uni- expected by Midway offi- clals to radically alter 'u{- institution’s t:rle)rm any wn%;;zdvoh 3 ac- cording . Frederic lward, vice it of the university. There will no.difficulty in complying with them, Says. ‘The rule requiring a year of resi- dence- on the campus will cause difeulty, while the problem of eligibili- from season to season automatically cares for itself. Dr. Woodward said the o must be eligible standards of the institution he_attends. 7 _ Dr. Woodward admitted, however, that a big turnover in material would result, with exceptionally bril- lant students being able to take de- grees in less than four years. Dtnw:r Amos Alonzo Stagg’s only comment was: “Any fellow who can get his degree in a year or two is too smart for us, e WESTERN SHOTS THIRD i Have 494 Score in National Asso- ciation Junior Match. 4904 hits out of a score of 870 toward the cup arded in the final to be held ‘With a score of 739 out of a possible 1,000, the 1s’ rifie team of Central High rt divi- sion junior matches. The ing both the prone and standing posi- GRID BOARD TO MEET December 1 fiet for Next Parley of - District Officials. Another meeting of the newly organ- ized Washington District Foot.Ball Offi- general December 1 at a place to be named later. Paul Magoffin, president of the asso- ciation, has named an executive com- T * COLUMBUS PICKS SQUAD Dozen Players Chosen for Varsity Basket Ball Team. N/ Personnel of - the Columbus Uni- vm basket bail squad has been se- le: after several weeks, during which a flock of candidates were tested. Silver drives. will | A m <pper was injected into ke | Of the fact that Thanksgiving day is King Pins and Temples Clash Tonight in Torrid Pin Tils NE of the outstanding bowling battles of the year will take place tonight on the Northeast Temple drives when the cham- pion King Pin team meets the Temple's colorful aggregation in the final match of the first series of the District League. They'll be battling for the league lead. Deadly bowling rivals for years, the King Pin-Temple match is regarded as a triennial classic. The Temples have made a plucky fight since Maxie Rosenberg was taken sick early in the campaign. George Honey, who tosses the ball off the wrong toot, filled in nicely for Capt. Maxie, and the Temples now are only three games behind the leaders. ‘Tonight, however, Rosenberg will as- sume his old place at anchor for the Northeast quint, with the rest of the line-up including Joe and Paul Harri- son, Red Megaw and Georgie Friend. ‘The Temples have a chance to finish up the first series with a dramatic climax. However, the calculating Howard Campbell and his mates, Dutch Weid- man, Bernie Frye and Jack and Glenn Wolstenholme, are eager for the fray. ‘The standing of the leaders at pres- ent: King Pin. Temple .. IXTY-ONE youthful bowlers tomor- row will be eliminated, and 22 will remain when the smoke of the grand finale for individual champion- ships of 11 bowling alleys clears away in Washington's semi-finals of the United States boy and junior tourna- ment. Forty-three boys and forty juniors will rsl their second and final three- game blocks- for the championship of their neighborhood alleys and the right to shoot in the city eliminations to be held Saturday, November 29, on the o | the sidelines while talking man, Helen Whitbeck and Elsie Fischer in the fleld, Miss Gulll will find plenty of opposition. e Greeks and Italians tomorrow at the Rendezvous will finish tg.mr v- roll for the Greeks. N order to accommodate several en- tries, the John Blick 100-game mara- thon been moved up to Priday, November 28. It originally was sched- uled for Saturday, November 29. The starting also has been changed, start- mz1 nfi 12 o'clock noon instead of 9:30 o'clock. 'ATIONAL PALE DRY JUNIORS, formerly the Original Washington Juniors, tomorrow will entertain George Lang’s Bowling Center crew of Baltimore at the Lucky Strike alleys in the first block of & home-and-home | '8 match. The Pale Dry line-up will include Eddie Espey, Tim Dunworth, Hokie Smith, Jack Wolstenholme and Paul Harrison, and is one of best bowl- ing teams in the city. BILL HANNA, EMINENT SPORTS WRITER, DIES Dean of New York Critics Was Recognized Base Ball, Foot Ball Authority. NEWFOUNDLAND, N. J., November 21—Willam B. Hanna, for 30 years an eminent reporter and sports critic, and since 1916 a member of the staff of Th: New York Herald and the New York Herald Tribune, died yesterday at Idylease Sanatorium, where he had been {ll of paralysis for five months. Hanna went to West Point on May 24 to cover the Army-Dartmouth base ball game and was stricken there on to _friends. He was taken to the cadet hospital, where he remained three weeks before recovering sufficiently to be taken to Idy- lease, where he had wished to be re- moved. He had lost ths use of the fingers of his right hand and had said he might never again use a pencil, ou n., but until a few days ago he had con- juniors at 7:30 o'clock. Total pins of tomor- row’s games will be added to the set of last Saturday and the alley winners of both classes announced. ORE than half & hundred of ‘Washington’s star feminine bowl- ers, featuring Lorraine Gulli, will roll the first three-gams block in the annual girls’ classic, the Meyer Davis Swee) es. One of Lorraine Gulli's toughest ob- stacles in her battle to retain her two- year crown was removed when Margaret Leaman, ht star of the Rendezvous and Columbian quints, was forced out of the array with a sore L Ho'ev;:.n""h Billie Butler, Lucille is ), Willie Hoppe finally has won a block Preble, Levy, Catherin A Irene Bcott, Peggy Babeock, neegg" ot is going to be great havoc among the domestic brand of of turkeys over the week end. Scores of golfers, armed with Queer-looking instruments for bagging turkeys, will abandon the sporteman- like gesture of shooting the birds out of the air and will take their golf clubs in hand in the hope of bagging a few birdies on the ground. Not for them the shotguns of more experienced hunts- men. But for them the weapons which golf alone has brought into the world @5 a medium for tantalizing human beings. Which is by way of saying that two local golf clubs are taking cognizance just arcund the corner and that, while their members have chased the elusive birdle with little success throughout most of the season, their successes on the links tomorrow and Sunday will be followed by concrete rewards for vic- tory in the person of plump and tooth- some turkeys. fidently expected to recover. Hanna was concededly one of the best informed of the country’s sports writers, and on matters of ‘base ball and foot ball his word, Amo't# players, coaches, managers, other iters and the public, was accepted as almost final on technical points. One of the oldest sports writers in New York—he was 68 years old—Hanna grad Lafayette College. He finished there in . | 1878 and a few months after got his Kansds first job as a sport writer on the fil:g Star. He went to New York in HOPPE FINALLY WINS Beats Cochran in Eighth Block of 18.1 Balkline Battle. NEW YORK, November 21 E his world championship 18.1 balkline billiards match »:Lh ‘Welker Cochran, b;nm'ohlnnmeornoc:chnm o th last night, 350 to 300, but Cochran leads the champion, 2,400 to 1,439, with only four more blocks to do. Cochran won the seventh block, 300 to 205, closing out the block with an unfinished cluster of 51. He went to the table last ht and ran 76 more before missing, giving him a high run of 127 for the inning. After that he did not do so well, as Hoppe left him one bad lie after another. Hoppe himself showed his best form of the match in the fifth inning, running 103 before he miscued on what s] ld have been an easy shot for him. Cochran’s grand average so far is 33 24-72, Hoppe's 19 71-72. Second flight winner, E. F. Teague; runner-up, Fred W. Rade. flight winner, J. R. Pattison; runner-up, J. G. Taylor. Fourth flight winner, Dr. L. G. Pray; runner-up, C. W. Schafer. Fifth flight winner, D. M. McPherson; runner-up, C. L. Griesbauer. Sixth flight winner, A. W. Hall; run- ner-up, J. H. Prince. Medalist, Herbert L. Lacey. Presicent’s Cup winner, E. L. Norris; mgl;er-up, J. 1. Donahue. '0-man team tournament winners, Winship 1. Green and E. M. McClel- land; runners-up, Fred W. Rade and E. F. Wesley. Ringer tournament winner, J. C. Put- nam; runner-up, Harry G. Pitt. In addition to two tournaments, the le Country Club also has scheduled & turkey event. 'UST in time to catch the best of the A(ut:’a:n ‘weather, the greens force of Country Club practically has completed '.heuyjoh of construction work on the new tenth green, the only new green that will be built during the reconstruction work on the second nine. The tenth green and the (wo new holes that will follow are e to for play in the Spring, the rearrangement plan the tenth hole—the longest around Under "ashe —will be abandoned llmout.:.n- tirely, and the present tenth green will become the green for the eleventh hole. The new tenth hole will be a two- shot hole of about 450 yards amcross Evans, D. C. Butcher vs. oeorfe A Fuller No. 2, Lake Stone vs. Rudolph & West, Columbia Sand & Gravel vs. Southern Asbestos, Standard Art Mar- ble vs. Charles H. Tompkins, A. W. Lee vs. P, T. McDermott. Temple. District League—Temple vs. King Pin. Lucky Strike. National Capital League—King’s Pal- ace vs. Lucky Strike. e—Big Print Shop vs. Craftsmen, American Electrotype Co. vs. Central Printing Co., National En- graving Co. vs. Gibson Bros., George A. Simonds vs. Charles H. Potter, Maxwell Jones vs. Standard Engraving Co., ‘Typothetae vs. Lew Thayer, Fellowship Forum vs. Columbian Printing Co., On Time All Time vs. Washington Typog- raphers, National Publishing Co. vs. Judd & Detweiler, H-K Advertising vs. Natios 3 1 Gun Factory League—Radio vs. Gun, Breech Mechanism vs. Broadside Mount, Tube vs. Erecting, Drawing vs. tht. Department of Commerce League — Secretary’s Office vs. Coast Survey, Patents No. 2 vs. Standards, Light Houses vs. Foreign and Domestic Com- merce, Mines vs. Patents No. 1. City Post Office. City Post Office League—Typographers vs. Local 140. Y. M. C. A Terminal Y. M. C. A-B. & O. vs. ‘Wcodpeckers. Mount Rainier. Mount Rainier League, Section A— Riverdale Confectionery vs. Columbia. Mount Rainier Ladies’ League—Cot- tage City vs. Crickets. Hyattsville Arcade. Prince Georges League, Section A— de vs. Collegiates. Dt;nnl;‘ League, Seotion B— C. & P. Telephcne vs. Eagles, C. & P. Oomucflmq:l. W'S. 8. D. TOMORROW. Rendezvous. Special match—Ahepa Greeks vs. All- Italians, 8 p.m. Northeast Temple. .m. DistieE g Netional 'Capiial League bowlers barred. . King Pin No. 1. Weekly sweepstakes—8 p.m. Arcadia. Mixed doubles blind pig sweepstakes— 8 pm. Convention Hall. Capitol Wall Paper vs. De Molay, Columbus University No. 1 vs. Na- tionals, Downtown Parking Garage vs. Racketeers, Columbus University No. 2 vs. Palisade and Saturday Nighters vs. Book of Washington. GRAYS WILL DEFEND BASKET BALL TITLE United Typewriter Players Start Practice Next Tuesday in Central Gym. United Typewriter G , District A. . .unumuuumn,!zmmm- Wally Wolowitz to report at 7:30 o'clock: WESTERN TRAINING MAY AID PITCHERS Harris Believes New Camp Will Help Charges More Than Florida Did. BY JOHN B. FOSTER. EW YORK, November 21.— Detroit is to go to Call- fornia to train next year because the club was dis- appointed with what it got at Tampa last Spring. Stanley Harris, manager of the Tigers, who had been in Tampa before as manager of the Washington club, had an idea that Tampa would sit up and notice the Tigers, Somehow the city failed to cotton {o them as it was expected it would. Across Tampa Bay on the base ball ground at St. Petersburg there was a capital attendance all of last training season and some base ball men decided that Tampa had soured on base ball. Any club that goes to Spring training quarters primarily for cash income is foolish. - Yet when some manager boasts that his team made expenses in the presence of three or four other man- agers whose teams did not overcome expenses it makes for gab, and some of it isn't pleasant. Scheme Not So Good. 1In Florida part of the training condi- tions give the permission of the visiting FIRST A. A. U. SWIM Events for Men, Women Next Fri- day in Ambassador Pool. gram. Jim Birthright, Bruce Kessler, Lee the Pield, Warren Hayes, Earle Moser, Mickey Macdonald, Tom Peck and Dick ‘Watkins. Calvary M. conquered Calvary Drakes, 24 to 21; Wallace 1 tri- ‘Memorial um over United Brethren, 21 to 16, and Eldbrooke took Trinitys to camp, | tionals. 22 to 16, in the Sunday School g.nx;hnnl:mnmmnmy. St. Mary's Lyceum quint scored over Monroe A. C., 42 to 23. Gensmere, with 19 points, led the victors' attack. Joe Canavin was elected manager of the Clover team ‘l! a meeting last night. Joe Robey, former Eastern High basketer, is the latest tion to the squad, which also incls , in addition to Canavin, Wiler, Adkins, Lilley and ‘Timmons. Bob Lilley is booking games at Lincoln 5845. Job Room defeated Hand Section and Mono overcame Documents in G. P. O. League matches last night. The score in both games was 25-232. Premo basketers of Baltimore, who last season won 35 of 39 games, are after matches with District teams in the 145-pound class. Write Bernard A. Goldbloom, 913 St. Charles street, Baltimore. ‘Wilson Avenue Baptist Church tossers downed Cottage City basketers, 32 to 17, in the National Guard armory at Hyattsville. T0 SHOOT FOR TURKEYS “Birds” Are Prizes for Tourney at Benning Range Tomorrow. A trapshoot with turkeys for will be held by the Washi the Benning traps tom afternoon, starting at 1 o’clock. ‘There will be taur.edvdeex:iu. hl(!: wnuzh gun at 25 targets, target handi- cap at 25 targets, distance handicap .zpza and 12 pairs of double targets cks and ea hens will also be at stake as 3 FORMS AFTERNOON LOOP Bell, Convention Hall Manager, Has Franchises Open. An afternoon bowling league is be- ing formed by Chll'lkm Bell, mapager of the Convention . have asked that rolling terrain to the new green located An, nt eleventh green, holes, have slowed up to -egeu:;e- . No longer will the men out a lfllc-ml.lfi:gghu get BN B along baked a November 27th (Thanksgiving) who around and to end $4.30 Round Trip M. | ence Red Entries are received by Flor- Smlnlm of the :\{H SOUTHERN CARD IS LEAN Two Conference Matches Tomorrow Do Not Bear on Title. ATLANTA, November 21 (#):— The best the South can offer tomorrow in a foot ball way will be two Conference clashes, neither of which will have any bearing on the group onship. Vanderbilt will meet Auburn, a team which has not won a ice en- gagement since 1926, and North Caro- lina State will South Carolina. Duke, seeking a State championship, will do battle against Wake FPorest. Duke is favored. Sewanee and Mary- land see action outside the Conference, meeting Southwestern of Memphis and Navy, respectively. CARNERA BOUT DELAYED Strike Causes Postponement of Fight With Uzeudun. BARCELONA, in, November 31 (#)—The hnvyw'epl:ht bout between Faulino Uzcudun of Spain and Primo Carnera of Italy, scheduled for Sun- g:"-"ag“ been postponed until Novem- The provincial governor ordered post- ponement of the match be- cause of strike wwtmm’ SPECIALS For Saturday & Monday Genuine G. P. A. Radi- ator Glycerine. 1-gal. sealed can.sl'98 EVEREADY gal. sealed can.. GENUINE ‘‘ST AND- ARD” Motor Oil, Medium or heavy459c Bring your own can. gu’ar:.nte:i ll. lllp .39c ARMFNTROUT’S Reliable Automobile Supplies 10th & Eye Sts. N.W. 1710 14th St. NW. _BY SOL METZGER. follow 1 HANDS ANO ARMS FOLLOW AFTRR BALL ) Wefiq v~ [ The right strokes the club to the ball, a wrist stroke and one without . Then the arms flow with the wrists and clubhead after the ball and on the same line. . This is ac- pointed the in the be- or flows with the stroke. There is no rigidity, no when Bobby Jones putts. Even his shoulders flow with the stroke to insure the rhythm that solidity of body makes an art of fine putting. Par golfers make their approaches stick. r's printed and illus- . Metage: trated leaflet, explains in detall to Sol un:e«d' in and ask for it. h s all im - mmmmtmmb “The Art of Pitching, how to do this. addressed envelope care of this paper SPORTS. LOUGHRAN FAVORED OVER LEVINSKY, 2-1 Appears to Be by K. 0. Bout Is Popular. By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, November 21.—T Loughran of Philadelphia, former world light heavyweight champion, was a 2-to-1 favorite to defeat King Levinsky, the ex-fish peddler, in their 10-round engagement at the Chicago Stadium to- night. Loughran figures to defeat convinc- ingly the terrific-hitting Chicagoan be- yond any dispute by plastering Levin- sky’s wel flattened nose with left-hand jabs. Levinsky's only chances of win- ning appear to rest solely on his ability to score a knockout. The former cham- plon expects to scale around 181 pounds regards this as his ideal weight. He has been at this for his last C: tpointed Bobby - ) outpoin Los geles (10). NEW YORK.—Antal Kocsis, Hungary, outpointed Black Bill, Cuba (10); Miki » | Geld, Hungary, outpointed Maxie Leiner, New York (10). LAKEWORTH, Fla.—Elmer Bezenah, Cincinnati, knocked out Chuck Fergu- son, Los Angeles (3. “Kingfish’s” Only Chance to Win expected to draw with gate receipts at Barmney Ross, newest lightweight vorite of Cl oan will meet An:h.; Chicago rival, Harry Dublinski, in an eight-round semi-final, n'c."'h Jack Gross, hea Wlluztr “w?-‘;e n rounder. N Swedish heavyweight, meets Bud Doran of cago il: six rounds and another six- land of Pueblo, Colo., and Joe I"QOM of Boston. They are middleweights. LANDON ELEVEN VICTOR Scores Its Fourth Straight in Beat- ing Severn “B” Team. Landon School's foot ball team downed Severn School “B” squad, 13 to 0, yesterday on the Marylanders’ grid- irin. It was the fourth straight vie- tory without having its goal crossed for the 13-player Landon eleven. The Severn eleven, ono of the leading teams in its class in Maryland, never threatened to score. Al Seccombe and Bill Baker scored Landon’s touchdowns. The ';LI‘O' one of the tallies was paved by Bride, playing his first game, who intercepted a pass. Landon has booked a m Gonzaga for next Tuesday on the Tidal Basin fleld at 3:15 o'clock. ‘The contest will be Landon’s last this BEason. It’s one of those things that are hard to believe, that’s all! One man It happens' eve icks up one of those huge “‘pile” overcoats with that “million dollar look’” and asks, “How much is this one?”’. Somebody picks up a wonderful suit of an imported fab- ric and says, “This isn’t $17.50, is it?” Yet $17.50 is the onl Every Suit Every Topcoat Every Overcoat $1 750 rice we have! Soall da have to keep on explaining to pleas- uzzled visitors that no matter how