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MANY OF LEAGUES LIST ALL ROLLERS ‘About 1,250 Teams Eligible for Event—Single Pin Experts in Test. ASHINGTON has approxi- mately 1,250 bowling teams and 10,000 indi- viduals who take part in competition, according to the latest figures of the City Duckpin Assoclation, which is preparing for its twenty-first an- “gual championships, to be held at | the Lucky Strike, starting April 20. Entries will close April 4. Entry blanks have been sent to the -captains of all teams and early re- turns are gratifying to Arville Ebersole, association secretary, Who hopes to equal last year's record entry of 377 ‘teams, with doubles and singles in pro- “portion. pported the Mn:h s "o "the Buburban of Petworth, it would be about three times as large. It h“h’:" beene-m;uu %&‘: %n year, will ‘be entered in & king | Bill Wood Dub Sweepstakes with 8 |gar ashington and Wi mnlflmvhlchwmunp- Tesented by its 10 teaxs. Eleven of the 14 teams of the King Pin Business Men's League have signed up and the other three are ex- . i " 7The Knights of Columbus League will solid and delegations are > mmugluunkmdodd tournament will be divided :I'Bld'] into five classes, according to * averages, thus giving every entrant chance. 2nd when the sharp- ed most of them WASHINGTON ‘Y’ GETS < EVEN SPORTS BREAK & Defeats Richmond in Volley Ball, 8 to 2, but Loses Wrestling Matek by 2 to 6. and Richmond Y. M. C. A athletic honors yesterday at g two, gn.: ln:au at wrestling, two “ In volley ball the Washington team, comprising Lansfc E lord, Hunter, Hunt. | , and the first two tests, but then out to win the nmext three. It second win this season for the over the Richmond “boys in volley ball. The other engage- ment took piece recently in Richmond. ‘ Washington won only two eight in wrestling, Two matches won by full two minutes the to. take just one | < Washington, 15; Richmond, 13. ‘Wrestling. 15-POUND _CLASS—Shockle Tobrss Mitchell by fall n 3 minutes 5 *125-POUND CLASS—Roberson (R de. Teated Hayward by fall in 6 minutes 50 “"136-POUND CLASS—Wilkinson (R.) de- {-‘u“;u.«u (W, Awarded bout en e scvantage of 3 mivuies 6 seconds, full y D e 3 orioien 56 getonds. t ‘minutes : P OUND* CLASS—Williams (R de- Jested Miller by fall in S minutes 20 conds. #HS-FOUND _ CLASS—Boggers (R) de- . J. Whitworth. Awarded bout on ttme, advantage of 30 seconds, full 10 minites, FOUND CLASS—Black (R.) defeates euscikel, ' Awarded bout on " time ad- ‘minutes. Y ONIRMITED " CLASS—Cardwell (W) de- (R) de- . “Awarded bout on time ad- | ‘minu ~Capital Bowlers Bow to Orioles, Blowing Four-Pin Lead. Unable to maintain their 4-pin lead over Wesley Askew and Ray Barnes of “Baltimore, Jack Whalen and Bradley Mandley dropped a 10-game home-and- home match last night at the Columbla .alleys by 10 pins. The scores of the block were 1,187 for Bal- 5-game , 10 1,173 for Washington. © BALTIMORE. U s e e 126 1 135 103 138— WASHINGTON. Fo ] 1187 it s - WESTERN RIFLEMEN WIN ‘Outshoot Tech High School Boys in Prone Match, 481 to 474. School’s rifie team yesterday st the . The match was d | & score of 582-599—1,177. W. Hayes of stouter foes than | Cr Bowls Set Over; Gets Same Score Us of the Chevy Chase Club, who gives par a battle in golf and is a tennis Elnylrr of no mean skill, has been rnil out as a star bowler. on the does most of his bowling hevy Chase Club drives and has an average of 117 in the club league. He seldom is sensational, but his ods of medlocrity are rarer. His th game in the league is 141. However, for consistency his recent performance in the Chevy Chase tournament was a masterpiece. Gus shot a five-game score of 582 to take the lead, but there was some tech- nical hitch, and on Frailey's sugges- tion, it was thrown out by Willlam J. Flather, chairman of the Bowling Committee. Gus took a second turn and dupli- cated to a stick his previous score. DAVIS TAKES LEAD IN'WOOD TOURNEY Averages 118 for First Ten Strings of “Dub” Event. Darling Is Second. F Navy Yard, East Washington Church and Capitol Hill circuits, went to the front last night in the IFTEEN points above his league total of 1,180 for 10 games. His score in the first five-game block was 598, to which he added 582 last night. Three sticks behind him was Arthur Darling of the Suburban League, with Electrical League was third, with 572-577—1,149; fourth, E. Barber, Agri- culture Interbureau, 601-528—1,130, and 1s. icky Strike next Tues- finish at the King list as follows: First, $265; second, $165; third, $125; fourth, $100; Aifth, $75; sixth, $45, and seventh, $20. Last night's scores: 2nd. Gr'nd N - 14 9 ¥, 32 g LRI : I BESEREanaTeaLs ELTTERECELEL S8eESsssitaniak i i 2223538 a5E! SSsssasneienitin SesateiasRtingts es B 81 25 08 04 95 92 35 5 383 F582558: 3333332338888 SR 235 SnsiEEaEEs S L L1 o 3 2 5 3=2588! 5 (Sl hopppetetury P 2sEensssenstedaipesasie 3 FEEEESes 3 ! o % SRR EEE R $E8 i i cindiver. 85 & SEasEEs T 328883335382 ! £3 : 35 5 i i 323328282828533228 Leg = T pessas s ! f oo == 3255823388853 3 8 PR PR siE ff NS RE28308382885388380ss! 22253238 ssgaaess T =5 S2028E8 T £ " < EEPHAPAITTR FH i e 2gesEpseiss s SE2=2tedaniH FE RS Ee e e L SenSRa2ERR2T e .. 28533888 cteistetericiet o & 540 © 484 101 509 105 526 GExgates 101 94— 564—1.073 100 102—508—1,031 118 105—551—1,023 7 121 109—542—1.05 RERISSR25R 4 1 SeS82! 91 8847 © 554 89122 89 113 123—536—1,090 521104 98 84 91111486 1,007 521 88 114 123 106 105—536—1,057 e Spaimadad | WINS SWIMMING TITLE. DETROIT, Mich.,, March 21 (#).— | 1#nora Knight of Homestead Library Club, Pittsburgh, won the Naticnal A. A. juniors’ 220-vard free-style swimming title here tonfght. The t'me was 2:4945. May Cutnell of the same club was sec- ond and Sue Wittwer of Detroit third. | Garner 11l e REGAINS CUE LEAD. | NEW YORK, March 21 (#)—Percy N. Collins cf Chicago regained the na- tional amateur 18.2 balkline billiard champlonship tonight by defeating the title holder, Edgar T. Appleby of New York, 300 to 290, in 24 innings. 1932 GYM MEET AWARDED. PHILADELPHIA, March 21 () —At the I{In':l.l XX?:;‘&:!‘\: today of the East- ern Intercol Gymnastic League it was voled to hold the 1932 cham- plonshih meet at New York University provided its new nasium is com- pleted in time. therwise, the title meet will be held at Annapolis. St COACHES WILL TEACH. BLUEFIELD, W. Va., March 21 (#).— Wallace Wade, former Alabama grid mentor and now coach at Duke, and Cam Henderson of Davis and Eilkins College. basket ball coach, have been as instructors for the first annual coaching school to be held at Bluefield College next Summer. e WILL COACH AT CHICAGO. DENVER, March 21 (#).—Tom Kassis, ineman, average, Arthur Davis of the |5 W 22y 4 gwai 'fleld of 159 have 9 bel 3 | are 060 | preparations for the season made. 2| Averages 109 to Outclass Field in 988 | Church League. 043 | with & pace of 105-41, was runner-up. 4103 82—479—1,019 108 102—547—1,031 | Phade THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, &ARCH 22, 1931—PART FIVE. — ~ City Pin Tourney Outlook Brightens : Bethany Wins Eastern DOWN THE LINE FRESCHI RETAINS PIN STAKES LEAD Rolls 584 to Boost Total to 1,196 in Suburban. Rivals Hang On. OE FRESCHI, who shot 612 to lead the 40 bowlers in the Suburban Sweepstakes in the first five- game set, continued in front last night when he added 584 sticks for a grand total of 1,196. The field was divided between the Boulevard and Hiser's Bethesda establishment. Brud Kessler rolled 578 to remain in second place with a total of 1,187, and Astor Clarke clung to third position with 573 last night and a m’m score Th Furr led of 1,181. Thurston up to fourth with 583—1,170. Henry Hiser was high man of the night with 611, and his total of 1,154 put him in a contending position. The tournament will be finished next Satur- day night at Rosslyn. Hiser also h: the best game, 154, which he finished with a strike and a dismal count of our. 2885E5 S etattes 5833285853388 SRRALERIRRBEICACRSRV=ES Lindstr'm Huffman. iller 561 2831 R3853R385 ! 03 =t o ESEEEEEE, 25853 109—531—1.¢ 82—531—1,075 35—1.063 118—541—1.063 105—541—1.053 112—545—1,049 LI R ) e tin e SiS< I R R 298sztes! REEEH 1 ¥ 107—474—1.026 92—526—1,023 MARYLAND RIFLEMEN WIN 3D CORPS TITLE Earn Trophy and Right to Shoot in National Event—Totals 3,634 Out of 4,000. University of Maryland's Reserve Officers Training Corps unit rifle team has just been notified that it has won the championship of the 3d Corps This area takes in Pennsylvania, Mary. land, Virginia and the District of Co- lumbia. The Old Line team of 10 men. coached 3 registered a . 0. T. C. chnmgln:a“mp %hfium Area was won last year by Carnegle now is on its way to College Park. It must be won three times for permanent n. The lcorfi-o of the winning Maryland BANKERS TO PLAN TENNIS Meeting of Organization Is C:lled‘ for Friday Night. An organization meeting of the Bankers’ Tennis League will be held | next Friday night at 8 o'clock at the Federal-American Bank & Trust Co., Fifteenth and H streets. Banks wishing to secure franchises required to have at least two representatives in attendance. Officers will be elected and other SHERBAHN PIN CHAMP AN Takoma Church League. Sherbahn, with an average of 109-7, won the_championship of the Takoma Heffner, who finished 2 ® 13 Sherbahn Hefiner . BANIRRZRINNIS TSR IR 388INIAVBEG2y [ TRy PPt PRSP PY it Ryerson Nye ... | Kephari looper Collinson R e Ground 222388828 DEFEATS TEAMMATE. SOUTHERN PINES, N. C. March {21 (@) —In a battle of University of North Carolina linksmen, Alexander Brown defeated Paul Carter, fellow golfer, 3 to 1 today to win in the Southern Pines Country Club cham- plofship for the second time. BAER TO FIGHT LOMSKI. PORTLAND, Ore, March 21 (#).— Max Baer, light heayyweight boxer from Livermore, Calif, has been matched with Leo Lomski, Aberdeen, in a 10- round bout here March 31. e rted Wmied GRAND HAVEN VICTOR. EAST LANSING, Mich, March 21 (#)—Grand Haven won Class A Michigan High School Basket Ball Champlonship tonight by defeating Lan- sing Central, 31 to 15. Champions in other classes are: Class B, St. Joseph; Class C, St. A tine of Kalamazoo, and Class D, B n. A L WINS BASKET TITLE. COL Ohlo, March 21 (#).— UMBUS, Benton gave St. J its first State high school et ball championship %6 | the 7| dollar gate for a prizefight.” Some Outlines of Sport. HE fight racket was an unpro- ductive business while Jack Johnson held the heavyweight championship. The Negro be- came a fugitive from justice or—as somebody put it—from injustice. He was wandering around through France and Spain and the heavyweight title was bringing neither Johnson nor any- body else any income whatever. It was not Tex Rickard who solved this problem, but a theatrical producer, who hired Jack Curley, the wrestling pro- moter, as his front man. The treatri- cal man formed a little syndicate and induced Jack Johnson to fight Jess Wil- lard, a Kansas farmer, at Havana. Johnson afterward confessed that he “laid” down to Willard after being given practically all of the gate receipts and a promise that his case would be “squared.” Willard got the title and no money. In addition the new cham- ion owned only about 25 mwnt of 1f. He had to buy hi 1t loose from the syndicate. Tex Rickard then started to come to the front. He staged the Willard- Moran bout, the most expensive show that was ever seen at Madison Square ad | Garden, the old one. Then Jack Demp- sey, who lost to a second-rate Nej fighter on his first appearance in New York, started to come into his own. All of this time Rickard was con- vinced that Jess Willard was unbeat- able. The dull-witted Willard was of same opinion, _ When Rickard signed Willard and Dempsey for th bout at Toledo on July 4, 1919, he was sure that it would turn out much after the manner of the Willard-Moran bout. Only One Dramatic Success. Dempsey-Willard bout was dramatic, but not a financial suc- cess. The gate receipts exceeded any ever taken in before in the couli- flower business, but I have a notion that the gross was eaten into by poltical ex- But it was the start of the highly exaggerated purses. ‘While we were hanging around Toledo during the period Joe Mul- vihill, called the Mad Hatter of Dan- bury, Conn., spoke up on the porch of 7 | the Secor Hotel and observed, “One of these days there is going to be a million- But no- body paid much attention to this pre- diction. The experts felt that Joe Mulvihill merely was a trifle_madder than most of the hatters of Danbury, Conn. But the prediction came to pass very shortly. Rickard signed George Car- pentier of France to fight Dempsey. By this time the promoter had hit his stride. It is time to look over the manner of his financing of these ven- tures. The moment Rickard signed this card, the advance orders started to pour in. He would take nothing but cash or cer- tifled checks and the customers were thrusting their money upon him. With- out advancing one cent Tex Rickard re- ceived enough to pay for the construc- tion of his arena at Boyles Thirty Acres, in Jersey City, and to pay his princi- pals their guarantees at least & week before the date set for the fight. ©Of course if anything had happened to either of the fighters before the bout, the promotor would have been forced to Area. | take the first boat to South America. But he took that chance and nothing at all happened. The thing went off on schedule and the gate receipts were more than $1,600,000. FTER that the caulifiower boom was on. Rickard annexed Luis Angel Firpo, called the Wild Bull of the Pampas. With Pirpo and Demp- sey what turned out to be the most melodramic heavyweight championship 5 | fght, of all time was staged at the Polo - | Groun: ds in New York. The results financially were just a bit disappointing. ‘The gate receipts were only a trifle more than a million dollars. In the meantime, Rickard, backed by p_of financlers, had built the big exchange and Rickard could not 60 | converse without talking in millions. Gene Tunney, a clerk, who had come back from the A. E, F. to find no job, started to take up prizefighting with the set intention of making a fortune out of this new and lucrative cauli- flower industry. He set about it cold- bloodedly and in determined fashion. His destiny pointed the way. By this time Dempsey and Rickard were partners in fact, if not by law. Opposition to a Dempsey-Tunney fight drove this one to Philadelphia. turned out to be a break for Rickard, for the bout drew close to $2,000,000. But to the astonishment of Rickard, Gene Tunney won. Rickard thought that he had no more chance than Carpentier. He told me so. This was awkward. Rickard had. in Tunney, a different type of prizefighter with which to deal, a young man who was level-headed, a good business man and with no illusions whatever concerning the fight racket. This was somewhat disconcerting to the frenzied financier of the Gilded Age of Prizefighting. The Climax Is Reached. seems strange now to recall that the result of the first Tunney-Demp- sey fight caused nothing but in- credulity. These thousands had seen Tunney outgeneral and outfight Demp- . | sey, beating him thoroughly. But they ROD AND STREAM BY PERRY MILLER HE General Assembly of Virginia, at its last session, placed in the hands of its Commission on Game and Inland Fisheries full authority in that State. Acting under power, the commission placed a ban on net fishermen in the creeks and coves on the Virginia side of the Potomac from Hallowings Point to District of Col- umbia waters. This action of the com- mission was protested by commercial fishermen of Accotink and other places, who claimed that the placing of the ban would deprive them of a livelihood. Last week the Virginia commission met in Alexandria, Va. to allow the fishermen to present their views. These men were represented by Representative- elect Smith of Virginia. In addressing the commission he told of the hardships that would result if the ban was not men in seines and nets, boats and other paraphernalia, which would be a loss to them, and then called on many of the ‘flllhumln:n and :evenl members of the Irgin! uflh ure, ‘The members of the Legislature spoke of the confidence they had in the com- mission when the authority was placed They said they the authority, and still had the con- fidence that the commission would do the right thing. thing f voted to hands and who would in all be in the next ture. M”m say these men spoke for the commercial Mr.')"?tg' the fact that Deputy Com 23] act y - missioner Radcliffe of the Bureau of Pisherles figures before the com- that the entire fish- by maintainiig an early lead to defeat its Northwest neighbor, the tiny Notre Dame I last year, today coach of the 1931 Uni- foot ball team. His the ment here tonight. Missol A hamilet of New Point, to 18, in mummmmgumm- 1 BY W. 0. McGHEEHAN. would not believe what they saw. Half of them thought that there must have been some crooked about it. ‘This leemm up & natural bally- hoo for the return bout. This was the most expensive was sporting event that ever staged. They filled the sta- dium on the shores of Lake Michigan and the gate receipts were close to three millions. Naturally, Rickard was a little touched by the wild success of his ven- tures. He continued to babble about millions and was predic! a five-mil- lion dollar gate. He would take over all of the cummenmlw of the world. He would have on Square Garden chains all around the world. He would corner all of the fighters and all of the professional sports. He would operate gambling houses and race tracks. There was more money to be had out of the sports of the coun- try than out of all of the industries. He went in for a yacht. He announced that he was a millionaire in fact and that sports would bring him many more millions. But the fight at Chicago for the gate of almost three million was the peak of the rise in the caulifiower industry. Rickard and his financial associal ht it was only a beginning, which showed that these financiers knew just as little as financlers in other lines of endeavor. . CHIGAGD TEAM GOES TOVAN INTOURNEY " Thorsons, With 2,938, Set Pace by Compilfg 1,088 in Their Closing Game. By the Assoclated Press. UFFALO, N. Y., March 21.—The J° Willlam Thorsons, Chicago, the American Bowling Congress tenpin tourney tonight. each game. After an 890 start the vis- itors piled up 960 in the second set and with an avalanche of strikes high single count of the tourney wind-up session, 1,088. The_ team’s ast year where they to for 10 days. The leaders: Five-Man Events. J. Willlam Thorsons. Chicago, 2.938. Phil_Smidt & Son. Hammond. 2.892. Lembo. Brothers. Rochester, 3,860. oubles. 3 Wemper-M. Schonacker, Indianapolis, sser-W. Pritcher, Detroit, 1,375. Brandt, Locki Ri Oates-G. Clack, Erie. " Daw, Milwaukee, 71 Strouse, Chicago. All Even 1 port, 1,260, 189! d. Chicagg, 1. . Pork, 1. . _Kai . Falcaro, New Yor CRIMSON BEATS TIGERS Wins at Polo in First Dual Event Since Break in 1926. PRINCETON, N. J., March 21 (®).— Harvard's indoor polo team outpointed Princeton in every chukker today to de- feat the Tigers, 131 to 8%, in the first independently scheduled game of any kind between the two rivals since their ll’lznwl break in athletic relations in 1926. Relations between the universities in all sports except foot ball were last month. v pog ww caps. R L U. S. WILL SEND NETMEN French Event in May. NEW YORK, March 21 (#).—The United States Lawn Tennis Association, returning the courtesy France did this tian Boussus and Plerre Landry to compete in the American indoor cham- plonships, today announced it was sending John Van Ryn and French championships in May. Louls Carruthers, newly president of the announcement. elected T Liifiiguacs o SUAREZ SCORES K. 0. MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay, March 21 (#).—Justo Suarez Argentine lightweight contender, technically knocked out Juan Carlos Casala, champlon of Uruguay, in the third round of their 10-round bout at the Parque Central tonight. GOLF PRO MARRIES. ROCK, Ark., March 21 (P). of Whil Plains, N. Y., and Joan Har- ris of married here ite Little Rock were today. family for the fish taken from the creeks and coves, and, te the fact over brackish and fresh water streams | ing destroy the bass nests, and the many bass he had seen in the fyke nets, two and three hundred at a time, and de- spite the fact that Talbott Denmead of reports he had received of the taking of bass from the creeks and coves of the Lower Potomac River, the commission, after a closed said that they would allow the com- mercial fishermen to use nets ex- cept during the months of May, June, July, August and to September 15, but mfi&emumums-ouflb.pm- nets on shore di rescinded, of the money invested by the [ the crashed through to the lead in | Wash, Mizpah The Windy City quintet was better Z sted fothe | ok . s 2,038 total is only two | Jreat pins short of thelr record at Cleveland | icsd pped the tourney ey The game was played without handi- | Bower Van Ryn and Lott Will Play in | Dixo: country in sending Jean Borotra, Chris- | Cope George Lott, jr., both of Philadelphia, to the Gui U. 8. L. T. A, made the | M: LITTLE E. —Paul Scott Runyan, golf professional Biological Survey told of the many | Dve session, returned and | Ellen PENNANT DECIDED || Standings in Duckpin Loops IN'FINAL MATCHES Centennial Girls Finish One Game Behind—Tourney Starts Tomorrow. in a pennant victor by one game in the 22-team East- ern Star League, when it won two of three games from Unity, while its rival, Washing- ton Centennial No. 1, was handing 2 like defeat to Miriam. Bethany’s successful quest of the title was marked by consistent pinning. The runner-up, Washington Centennial No. 1, finished with a total of 962 more BITHANY CHAPTER flashed Lucy Owen led all gir! with an average of 104-13, while Jen- nie Malcoln and Bess Ackman tied for second with 98-14. Tournament Next. ‘With the regular league scason over, the annual tournament will start to- morrow at the Lucky Strike. The event will continue Tuesday and be resumed again Monday, March 30, and ;nlem-y. March 31. A sweepstakes will follow. prize, the highest award to be given and the thers on to the next in line. | Pellin The e will hold a dance at 2400 ghlxr'::nul street Saturday, March 28. erages, season records and the sche: ule for the first two nights of the o tournament, follow: Team Standing. L HG. 13 ] 3 EE H R EEH 8BS 38! Bl H 33858 SUB2LL282088E 888 ANRREENENREREEEEE a6 NRRRESRS SEEEEE i Lot 8 §5sstee 583 ., 38" reatest number sp “'1"_4.‘7':.“ 12 T spare i beck, 110; Ackman, 108, o test number strikes—Youmans, Majeolm, 30; Owen, 18. igh flat same—M 495 A agn2ae Cununnd S5 susol wxSoad BRhsZ SReCsy 2558E=S2 [P -Teerey e SaeB28d 558808 82838 323328 2p2ag =288 a8 2388 §§§§§E sgze? Lipd Vosel Almost every angler knows that the commercial fishermen have their fyke | Rufter these iths, . sauses EEERN 25858 eeesF oy 22238 L38828 25! 3! : S TH 5 22822 EHES § “gEEE g 38 SEsES 2 suasee Sl agasd s¥sss uusess 83338 a2z 38358 o g P s33g88 segseR = : ros. e Bar. Bhop DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE LEAGUE. Mines No. 1. Patents No. Standards ?.&D. Com. Censea Records. Tieh team €ame—Ofice of the Secretary. Jen team set—Bureau of Mines No. 1, ' High indivi i l.u‘h ':;v‘fi:_-& wame—Hargett (Buresu of . = "‘;.’“,,'1:,,"',“ set—Hargett (Buresu of eUEh Individual average—Patrick (Patents TAKOMA DUCKPIN ASSOCIATION. 33 ailler-Lacey Go. 33 Sou. Blde. Sup. 38 Takoma Journal AGRICULTURE INTERBUREAU LEAGUE. g&‘g B team igh team arna Rermation 3 . John's 3 5 Tohns 1 . John's 3. Luther Place. Records for the Week. High feam sets—Georgetown, 1861 St i sames—Georgetown, 543; St. mmhm«-n sets—Steinmeyer, 388; Eun"g;mviauu sames—Steinmeyer, 146; High NAUTICAL DUCKPIN LEAGUE. usr sssaser High team set—Drifter: 1, 171 B foa a D Gunos. 1. 830 b ‘individus (Washing 28888 = High team set—So-Kems, High team game—Accounts, 613. High individual sets—De Glants, High individual SANICO LEAGUE. Team Standing. High individusl averags—D. X Hith ‘ndividus ‘samest. Tomes, 101 High individual set—Prati. 413. High team game—Dieh A High team set—Diehls, 1,724. BANKERS' LEAGUE. Team Standing. [SSSa2BEIBRREIT ance 1). 383. Bigh Individual same—(McGolriek), Drift- Eanoe 3. of strikes—Jenkins reafest number (Drifters Canoe 1), 38. Greatest spares—Melntyre number (Drifters Cance 1), 177, EAST WASHINGTON CHURCH LEAGUE. Team Standing. W, Douslas 2. Bouelas i & &I'Il. Breth, itennial 1 Ingram An’costia ME 49 . Heights £ sespssuser s3goeesaer § sseee High individua] High individual High individual G High team g ited Breth High team set—Ingram No. 1, 1. BLECTRICAL BOWLING LEAGUE. Team Standing. 3 ] o SEeEEEETEREREREE] EEEEEEE R 5 L PR 2THELLERRELYNLS | h individusl average—J. Wolstenholme, High weekly game—L. Siemon, 131. LTI TTELLLERLL" vaasagassued 288882838Ter Preil, 56: Dewhirts, Team Standing. T3 18 Busters. Biites... 31 18 Navye: ! Season Records. High individusl game—Chipouras (Hill- High' individusl set—\ oesen . z:;n'.‘ diviau mv.n He n.,mn High feam game_Little Pota 3 Hieh team Ser=pin Busters, 1,885, ungesnteg ssguaugs. susssasd sty test spares—P. Ellett, 162 Tiat ‘same_n. A Tien averaser. Eietr. Tiet TAKOMA CHURCH LEAGUE. Team Standing. 28 n Season Records. set—Riitenhouse, 372. game—] . ner, 164, rian Se: 88883 team s 3 Individs R ingividual averase—Goebel (Bousal | ton . No. 2), 383. o—Wilcox (Washing- & Trust Co. No. 1), 155. i strikes—8c) iweinhart (Washington & Trust Co_No. 1), 38, i Bank), 162, el R ividual sverages_Brooks (Rises National Bank), 108-10; Meany (Pederal- American National )y xu-a.' s INTERIOR DEPARTMENT LEAGUE. High team set—Secretary, 1.664. High team same—Survey, 631 B AT i e W High indivi l':unll-"' ry, 110-26. WARDMAN REAL ESTATE LEAGUE. (Vista. 5 AN set—Understein (Vista gh team set—Reges m:l;:h llndl"‘ld\lll average—Understein _'uu& individual game—Canter (A. High individual ub), 383. 558580 SRERERIREEL p 8 R ] i RngeLREREr B Lincolns Ben's Tire Shop.. 19 1oligh individusl averase—B. Womersles, High individual game—Auth, 1 R individuel serms. ome High e former stars of boxing, are both blind now. ¢ TRIANGLE MOTOR COMPANY SPECIAL OFFER $9 Value for Only 45 L i : i gi (1 i i i ; ; | 2 z 3; 13 £ »»appe mes . §