Evening Star Newspaper, May 31, 1931, Page 60

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Derby Wednesday Intrigues All England : Carnera Boxing’s Bigges TWOU. S, OWNERS POSSILE WINNERS Woodward’s Sir Andrew and Field’s Jacopo Conceded a Chance in Turf Classic. By a Staff Correspondent of The Star. ONDON, May 30.—American interests are strongly repre- sented in this year's Derby, . England’s race, which is to be decided on Epsom Downs next Wednesday, and numerous English authorities are seriously considering the pos- sibility of the race being won by an American owner. There seems keener interest in the race than ever, and King George, whote birthday 'falls on Derby day, postponed the annual pageant of the trooping of the cclors so he and his army cclld see the thrilling race round the famous Tattenham corner, most dangerous cownhill bend on any race course in the world, The King is represented by Ash- ridge, but the calt kas only a third- rate chance, and all the big betting money has been divided emong Cam- eronian, Jaccpo, Govescas, Sir Andrew, Doctor Doolittle and Link Boy. The Derby, established more than 150 years ago, has been won by owners 2and horses from all parts of the world, notab'e American succesces having been Mr. Lorillard’s Iroquois in 1881, and W. C. Whitney's V-lodyovski in 1901. In recent years the race has become increasingly popular with sport-loving Americans. Visitors from the United States have been pouring into England, end titere will be more than ever at Epsom Wednezday. Four Probable U. S. Runners. The four probable American runners are: Willam Woodward's Sir Andre Marshall Field's Jacopo, J:ck Whif ney's Jericho and Mrs. Corlette Glor- ney’s Codict'. The first two have been very seri- ously backed in the ante-post market by some of the mo:t knowledgeable bettors and by the moct astute of Eng- lish racing experts. The -success of Mr. Wo:dward's colt would be hailed with real delight. Last ar Mr. Woodward was Lord Derby's ieast when he won the Kentucky Derby with Gallant Fox. Sir Andrew has excellent claims to be considered a potential Derby winner, as in the Newmarket, stakes, a publi Derby trial at English turf headquarters, he was an easy winner, and defeated, among others, the French colt Goyeces, which previously had demorstrated = Derby -ssibilities by finishing second in the ,000 guineas. . Marshall Field, who married Mrs. Dudley Coats last year, is a frequent Visitor to the leading English race courses. Mr. Field’s colt Jacopo was ths best 2-year-old in England last yeer, and all through the Winter was ihe favorite for the Derby. Unfortu- nately, however, Jacopo hes proved difficult to train, having received drastie treatment for an internal irreg- ularity early this year. he seems to lack strength and vitality. Jericho Has Slim Chance. Mr. Whitney owns the Grand Ni ticnal ces, Easter 'Hero and S Lindsay. but Jericho has only an out- side chance of success in the Derby. Codicil's owner, Mrs. Glorney, has been rasing on the English turf since 1926. She has met reasonable success, and last year she won the valuable Goodvrood stakes with joyous gresting. Codic', perheps, has hardly class sugh to win a Derby. So it appear that if America is to take tho spoi's be with Sir Andrew, which is smash- Ing good colt over a distan nd which will be ridden by the Irish jockey, Pat Beasley. Oneezl the big contributing factors to the increacing world interest in the Derby is the volums of money which | changes hends, through the big Irish, | Calcutta, Baltic, Stock Exchange and! other sweepstakes. | ‘As soon 23 the winning numbers of | the various draws become known there is a big market for them, and syndi- cates of bookmakers are always willing to purchase a ticket, or a shore of one, which has drawn a fancied candidate, thus enabiing the lucky purchaser to| sure. of winning somathing, | ther the horse he has drawn wins 585, Leads All Races in Betting. Despite all the restrictive laws in) England to make -betting illegal, the | growth of wagering upon horse 1acing is one of the most surprising features of twentieth century development, ndi upon no race in the world is there such | a huge turnover of capital as the Derby. Although the zctual valus of the rae 1s oniy some $60,000, a rezconable esii- | mate of the total which changss hancs | as the winner paszes the judges’ box i3 certainly not less than $100,000,000. Nearly half of is included in sweepstakes, which flourish in every office and workshop in the country. | Betting on the race begins weeis and months -before it is decided, the odds being covered by public demand, the rices -fluctuating as canida‘es col nto favor or disappoint ti i mak: Derby day & I X course is on “commeon groung, thus no charge can bz extracted from these Wwho co not paironize,the stands and paddock. ’ Trek Begins Bzfore Dawn. ‘The trei: from Londcn dawn, and the gypsies mongers are ready at an early hour to cater to visitors h anything, includ- ding-th methods of extracting money seeking enjoyment and relaxation. Thousands upon thourands of ham sandwiches znd bottles of b sumed by the vast ecrowds which flock to ths vantage points on Epsom Hill, and yet not a quarter of the visitérs cen hope to see the race, so great is the concourse. Electric trains run at three- minute ‘intsrvals curing th: forenoon, and all roads from London are crammed with automobiles and moior coaches, while ponies and traps end other cle fashioned and slmcct pre-historiz means of conveyance are press:d into -service for the occasion. To the English people, partisularly Londoners, the Derby is one of the great holidays cf the year, cnd for wieks before rhee the merits end demerits of the leading public fancies are dis- e 3 Thousands of p-ople who have a utter” @m the Derby have no o her interest iy racinz and make only cne bet a year. This prcbobly is besause the race i filll of thrills and is ons big | tear-away gallop from bsginning to end. How Donoghue Views It. The famous English jockey, Ste Donoghue, who won the race tiree su cessive years on Humorist, Captain Cut- , and who probabiy e lade of grass on Epzom @escribing how he has done so well in the race, says: “If a jockey does not use his horse’s spced to get well Downs, premier classic | | il Adams in the third. I8 Homer Standing By tha Associated Press. Home Runs Yesterday. Klein, Phillles, 2; Watkins, Cardinals, | 2; Bissonette, Robins, Slade, Fobins, 1; Prederick, Robins, 1; Berger, Bri Cubs, 1; Cullop, Red: Yankees, 1; Lazzeri, Yankees, | nin, Senators, 1; Kuhel Hi ‘Mhleuu. i Mahaftey, Ath- The Leaders. ° : Klein, Phillies, 11; Arlett, Phillies, 10, Simmons, Athletics, 9; Cochrane, Athletics, 9; Ruth, Yankees, 8; Foxx, Athletics, 8;" Gehrig, Yankees, 8. League Totals. American . | National . venseses 384 YALE' CREW WINS ANERICAN HENLEY Pennsylvania and Navy Fin- ish Close Behind, With Harvard Last. By the Assoclated Press. HILADELPHIA, May 30.—More than 10,000 rowing followers saw Yale's varsity 150-pound crew keep its season’s Tecord clean by winning ons of the feature events in the twenty-seventh annual American Henley regatta on the Schuylkill today. The - Elis, stroked by Jay B. L. Re:ves, defeated Pennsylvenia by half a length in the final heat with the Navy only a few feet back of the Red and Blue and Hzrvard last. Yale cov- ered the mile and five-sixtesnths in | 7:3¢35. In the heats held in the morn- ing Columbia, Cornell end Princeton light-weight crews were eliminated. The Harvard third varsity crew, which is going sbroad to the British | Royal Henley, defeated Princeton by | two lengths with Penn ldst, the Crim- son being timed in 7:25. junior varsity race was wen by the | Penn A. C. of Philadelphia, which fin- ished seven lengths ahe:d of Prince- ton, with Pennsylvania again in_the rezr. The Stewards Cup went to Penn A. C., which lifted the international trophy in Belgium last August. Prince- ton, by beating Penn Jayvees, won the new England Chzllenge Cup. Big Bill Miller of the Bachelor's Barge Club, Philadelphis, 1930 national sculling champlon, defeated Joe Wright, jr., of Tcronto, 1928 diamond sculls sell S., Codman, jr. of Beston, Mass, a good third and Al Vcgt, Penn A. C. last. Miller later paired with Emanuel J. McGreal to win in double sculls. S ey MIDDIES DEDICATE THOMPSON STADIUM ’:Ohio State Men Plant Buckeye | Tree of Frendship as Part of June Week Program. | Special Dispatch to The Star. ANNAPOLIS, Md., May 30.—In ad- |dition to the athletic contasts, ihree | special events tzok place at the Naval | Academy today as part of the June this year it will have to | week program. This morning the foot ball field was | Jedicated a3 the “Robert Means Thomp- | son Stadium” in honor of Col. Robert M. Thompson, a life-long friend of the Navy, the Naval Academy and its stu- dent body. Addresses were made by | Rear Admiral William L. Rodgers (re- tired) and Rear Admiral Thoma2s C.J Hart, superintendent of the Naval Academy. Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Pell of New York, son-in-law and daughter of Col. Thompson, repre-ented the femily. | Shortly bafore the base bell and track contests tegan, renreventatives cf Ohlo Sicte planted a buckeye tres at the edge of Farragut Field s a mark of the friendlv re’ations existing bstween the institutions. | Athletic Director Lynn W. St. John reprecented the officials of Ohio State | and Albert Ke'so cf the Scerlet Key Soclety, through whom the tree was | presented, epoke the students. The | acceptance was dslivered by Midship- man Robert M. Bowstrom, capiain of the foot ball tcem. Tonight with Rear Admiral Leigh C. Palmer as toasimesier, the graduates had their annual dini Epacial ef- forts were made to assemble the m-m- bers of cla-ses graduating 50, 25, 20 and 10 ycars ago. ROAMERS NOSED OUT Finish on the Short End of 7-to-6 Sccre at Frent Royal. FRO! ROYAL, Vi cial)—Ths Front Royal Al'-Stars de- ted the Roamers A. C. of Washing- ton, D. C., here this afternoon by the s of 7 to 6. The visitors held the lead until the ninth. Lecey McFall's long drive let in the tieing and wining runs. Wood it-hed a nice gams afier ving Toamers, F.CA AR All-Sters. 3 3 Nesh\';rl. 412 grflei . ning. i B%oripre e Riddiel Fastham.1b. Johnson., impsen. *Rudacille Totals ...34 S0 wism LT I e BS 2| o839050awms! 5| woumsoowsown! 2! ooorwsnoono! | o2 Scove by innines: Roamers B [ All-Siars 2 18 " Thomi 2), Lyl Johnse 010 2—1 (3), Yo Riddick (), Ditvs—Laces Me- a5 o x'm:nc;x, % shnings: o deick. 3 in o Messrs. Safiell ard Thomp: me—1 hour and 53 minutes. ANOTHER -‘WHATAMAN. Quits a few collcg> boys have p'ayed baceba!l and compsted ~on track tam the sam» Sprirg but Meyer of Maristta Co'lege probably is the only athl who ever stroked ths var- 'ty crow and ren the mile in the same Sp He sclccted hard jobs to double scending the hill approaching Tat ham Cornér, he can never be got smoothly round that sharp bend. He placed, h: runs gren risk of bsing crowded out, cut off and of getting into . every kind of tangle. ;. “Unless the horse steers clear trouble’ and s perfectly balanced de- must ‘go’ all the way, and that is why the hors: that wins must be able to go faster and stay befter than any other.” The combined Stewards Cup and| title holder, by four lengths, with R\ls-l |rhead of the record for the matches M2y 30 (Spe-|Ti ABH,O A | Hall D ;| EX-G Turner Offers $500 to Mat Tyro | JAMESTOWN EASY VICTOR IN WITHERS Ladder Comes In 5 Lengths Behind as ‘Winner Lays Base for 3-Year Title. N himself as real contender for the 3-year-old title as George D. Widener's Jamestown easily outran a fleld of seven crack colts in the fifty- sixth running of the Withers mile at Belmont Park today. Speeding over the flower-bordered Belmont racing strip in the fast time of 1.36 3-5, the long-striding son 6f St. James, winner of six of his seven starts as a 2-year-old, sent out a mighty chal- lenge to Twenty Grand, Kentucky Derby victor. The pair will settle the 3-year-old battle two weeks hence, when they meet in the Belmont Stakes at 11, miles. < Earnings Reach $180,235. Five lengths of daylight separated Jamestown Walter J. Salmon's Ladder, which ran third in the Preak- ness, as he flashed past the judges’ stand, winner of $27,300. The purse sent his total earnings for nine races | soaring to $180,235. Another three lengths back of Ladder trailed Morton L. Schwartz's Clock Tower, a nose in front of Surf Board from the Green- ‘tne Stable. Then followed Benjamin Block’s Morstone, the Greentree Stable's Anchors Aweigh, K. E. Hitt's Sun | Meadow and Fly Horse's Comruter. | A crowd of 30,000, which crammed its way into every nook and corner of the ;:I;:)O s “Newmarket” of America, cl :‘l'f;l; ‘Clock ‘Tower the second choice at while the remainder were held at odds | varying from 10 to 1 to 50 to 1. | | In the manner he won, Jamestown | might es well have been 1 to 100, for once “Pony” MeAtee swung him into BY ORLO ROBERTSON. EW YORK, May 30 ().—A great juvenile champion stamped | the final ouicome. A crack of the whip and the St. James offspring left his | fleld es if it was standing still. The | tance from the second horse. At the end he was just lloping, his ears perked and McAtee sitting - perfectly £till. Ladder cicsed fast to take sec- ond, while Clock Tower came up from | the middle of the pack t» nose out | Surf Board, which also finished fast on | the rail. Morstone Sets Pace. the Widener colt down to 2 to 5, | W: Ladder was quoted at 10 to 1, st farther he went the farther the dis- |8t G moves from the Washington Auditorium to Griffith Stadium for the re- mainder of the Summer next Thursday, when a five-bout card, headed by the Jim Londos-Rudy Dusek match, and including Sandor ‘Szabo, Dick Daviscourt, Prank Brunowits and Tiger Nelson, is presented by Promoter Joe Turner. Londos, who probably has as good & claim on the world title as any one else, will come hers celebrating his first anniversary as ted champ. The Greek won the title from Dick Shikat last June in Philadelphia. Washington’s wrestling colony has never s-en Dusek pinned, and mbsbly will witness the lure for first time Thursday, but Rudy is to give Londos a better battle other fo: to meet the Greek star here, for Dusek is one of the real top-notch: ers. He intends to make the “champ’ first anniversary a merry one. Another first-class grappler comes here in Sandor Szabo, the Hungarian, who recently dropped a hot one to Lon- dos, but who has beaten fl:}ullly every cther foe. Szabo, however,” is not ex- pected to be extended to any great ex- tent by his opponent Thursday, Tiger Nelson, but he 18 sure to be on the recelving end of a couple of stiff elbow smacks ere the finish. ‘Turner has booked Dick Daviscourt, the rough-and-tumble Californian, and American. CLUB BATTING. 2B h‘{l i. 12 i w3 % 181 7 rl, CLUB FIELDING. LR 211 2 183 156 Club. meveland ington Bogton Detroit Club. | the stretch, there was no doubt as to | Ke: | ork . Washington Detroit ... Bosion Chicego Louts Cleve.and 38 Triple play—St. Louls. BASEMEN. Player and Club. 285 ‘True to expectations, Morstone set the | pace for es far as he went. For 6 fur- | he was out in front, reeling off He hit the thre enty Crand in the Kentucky | he took ths lead &3 the field | | run homs, and Twenty Jamestown broke fast, and under Mc Atee’s expert reinmansiip neier was in | trouble. Together with Commuter, he | trailed first in second end then in third | place 25 Morstone opensd several | lengths of daylight. Tae sprinting con or Morvich could not keep tae pace, | | falling back as le2ders drove for home. Jzmestown finished siill full of | | run, indicating a real batils when | tangles with the Kentu | ner in the rich Belmont Sf PR OHIO STATE VICTOR | IN NAVY FIELD MEET Midshipmen Show finperiority Only in Distznce Events and Shotrutting. ANNAFOLIS, Md., May 30 (Special). ' —Superior fa t2 sprints and hurdles | and most of the field events, Ohid S ate | won frem the Naval Academy here this afternoon by 7173 to 54'3. Only in the | stane events and shotput did the Navy show superiori! Jack Keller, an aspirant for world | kevno honors in the high hurdles, with a per- formance of 14 120-yard distance, knocked eight-ienths of a second from the local figure. Hardman, Navy. was the only other double winner. He bettered the local figure for the mile by three ssconds, covering the distance in 4 minutes and 18 s2conds. He also wen the half mile with Ohlo State by one and a tenth sec- onds. The summaries: 100-vARD DASH—Won hy Fazekas (Ohio): Mackengie (Navy). second: Richards (Ohio). econds. MILE_ RUN—Won by Herdman (Navy) . “second: Fallon (Ohio). third. 4 minutes 18 seconds. 220.VARD = DASHW_Won by Richards Fazekes (Ohin). second: McCracken third. Time, 724 seconds. o’ by Gihson (Nevy): second: Blonin (Navy), third, utes 87 saronds HURDLE " (HIGI)—Won, 0): Black _(Ohin). second H man (OMm. third i seconds. ARD ~FURDLES Frezier (N hir me. 253, se 7on hv Hardman (Navy): o Scond; Warner (Ohio). third. nite SRS, recon: PISOTR THROW——Wnn by Corliss (Navs): (Ohin). “second: Wrieht (Navy). third. <tance. 130 feet 114 inches. Won hv Wite (Ohio): vy), third. va A "~ Tie for f=xt m fiewart (Nave) a~d Man:s ¢ taird_betwecn O t Tiles (Navy) and B Files (N&v)and Bandy oo '—Won hy Smith (Qhjo): third. od (Nave): ng (Navy). Hafent. N THE ) i (Navy). nderwo g Bk e by 10% inches. RID STARS DEFIED Who Can T:es Jim McNamara. a cleated shoe, can b2 called & bona fide wrestler unless he has at leest six And in hopes of proving this. Turner is offering $500 to any ex-gridder who can {h-ow non~ other then Jim Mc- amara, poouler boxing coah end direc- tor of athletics at the Jewish xunity. to Jce Savold!, fomer Notre Dame backfield star end Len Macaluso, All- en,ler!':an choice while foot balling at olga’e. hes be:n treining earnest'y lately, is gbout ready to make his debut in the mat game, anyway. Turner has been tutoring Ji nd plans to Fut him in a preliminary bout at one of the coming Grifith Stadium mat shows. McNa- ‘Turner says. has been such ara, matmen as Mario itch Green and gl | Gr it Jolley, Chicago “simmons, ton % Vosmik, Cieveland | New -10 seccnds over the | o) No man, no mattér if he was the 1I~‘°'| grestect foot ball nlayer ever fo pull on o w months’ experi*nce in the ring, thinks | Wal t | Promoter Joe Turner. 5 The challengs particularly is directed | Jon As a mafter of fact, McNamara, who | Cars and ving Tiny Roebuck great S ] i Blue Foxx, Phi Sweeney (3 PRRCRDRL ool eelBRIENESSN SECOND BASEMEN. 8 E38s O 8 sysuzang Cleyeland w York Failadelphia K. BOSION ..... er, Deiroit 111l 270 - T B! R PN St S8 aaalBe! Bort 00 Hayes,” Washingion a B 5 ] w 2 % Pickering. Boston .. Biucge, Wasaington .. e a £t 54 e 0B BoBETEE § calenEuaRSu! 2 10 2 8 H 4 15 7 SHORTSTOFS. ame. Ma Dus Cronin, Washington Lar,, sew XO:ix .. aacd Ehilacelph Owens, ' Decroil Rbsne, Levey, vetiries, ioents: . ppling, 3 Boiey, Philadeiphia jarstler, Ebston Akers, Detroit Goidman, Cleveiand ouvosrcumatucal Detrot Cnical osgReReessay Failadeiphi Wasningion New Yors rgill, Calcan crill, Cley samieson. jan Goslin, St. Louis Cooie, New York . 7, Cleveland Wes:, Washingion . Webb, Bos! SoeswSet T 0 S EESSR L A woa e York 0 LR BRNSETRL8222S orounoransBusacioanasiaterElyarSrEsnuSe wowy tt e 2 EBe et s EENEaEE! i SRA8SNISAL! PR S BLE8882.LE: ork . Do Detroit Eittencourt, Bi. Loui Cramer, Philadelphi H. Rice, hingt MeNeely, St. Louis Wingett, Boston, . Seeds, Oleveland O [PURR- st PR S S E SR e 3 CATCHERS. 33 4 OO OO O OO BOOOH OO IIHONHOOA D ONNANRAR-RSNS Ruel, B Hargrave, Speneer, ‘W Dicke: Berry, Boston . Hayworth, Det ‘ate, Chicago ... Schang, Detroit Connolly, Bosion oBERBRRREREN [ROTa 1 S~ ~EREES%e588.3 rillhesrt, Boston .. line, 8 Sston Moore, - Ghi Ferrell, Cleveiand et Niw Sork fierid, wart, St Louis AR £ OB L0 3 AR O 1 0 B8 OB LS n0 o, o Crowder, " V/aslii] Gaston, ‘Bosion I3 Cn! troit . Philadeiphia . Chicago S b S RS e SRR EEEEE 4Bk O B BRI LD DI DI DA RSO AS B b STt L == 3 BETRLSRL BRSNS L 13 =53 a 8 & e (- PR U e PP R T 0001 00 A ARSI B SIS 1 e 33005 . Eazemgasusssussesicaasseye: _. o ) INDIVIDUAL BATTING. (Arranged Accordine to Posi'ions) FIRST 28.38 ] 10 s e oradoacanmans Londoes-Dusek Match Will Open Summer Mat Season at Stadium Frank Brunowitz, the Russian giant, for the third scrap of the evening, and will add two more early this week. Tickets will be METHODISTS TRIM DOR-A Burdick and Arnold Lead Attack, * Bringing 15-7 Victory. HYATTSVILLE, Md, May 30— Hyattsville Southern Methodist handsd the Dor-A nine, a'so of Hyattsville, a 15-7 trimming this afternoon on the Magruder Park dlamond. Walter Burdick and Walton Arnold led tie winners' 19-hit attack, the former getting a homer, two doubles and a single and the latier & pair of triples and a couple of one-basers, Vernon Clarke, pitching for the vic- tors, yielded eight hits. SERIES CONTINUES TODAY. MOUNT RAINIER, Md., May 30.— Mount Rainjer and Bladensburg un- limited ball teams will hook up in the second game of a best two-out-of-thres tomorrow afternoon on the Mount Rainier diamond at 3 o'clock. The %oum: won the first game last Sunday, (Including Games of Thursday) PR ] L] 28] 220832880 .4..- §5858 S332282L0 Philedelphia | 8t. Louts ... Brockl:n .11l 38838285m [rreT— Terrs, New Yoi Bottomiey, . Sheel. ston | Grimm. Chicago | Hendriex.” Bxin.-Cin. | Heath ‘nnatl . | Bielr."chicees | eun, ‘Boston . | Igus nex Yor canitsa il A aenebucaneseld SOt wonsl worBassansSa Soovu—roonSun rumsracassmac L vy ecomornuamace 8. Louis ailadeipiia Pittsburgh Bell. Chicago Stripp. Cincinnaty . Chicsgo . 3! EETRSEIE - nkev. Pittsburgh o _a [ S S coomommuwsuw— cooroncomtonm 552 kson, New York . s rooorroucmoue = m. Philad phi Cinei onobarwieaal! Mosolf, Pittsburgh Eiephenson. Giicago P e U8Vata 3858 SRRty bbbt bbbk Watkins, §t it New ork Allen. New Douthit. £:. T~ Heathcote, EEEEE a8 UL, e ! S e S OOHOOONOONIN O OO A 1 I DSOS NS =D o ornwseruesBBasEoBREEERSE! i Bogton sier, Brool e Poston .- Philacelp' 8" “Touis B favior, ‘Eilcaso hsisiisisiois 328: £ 28! S8 Lombardi, Brooklyn M eCurds, Davis, Philadelphia . , "New York . OO OON OO OO O ONPOHONIHORASILEEDS BOOOOIm— WA BOOOh O OO OO BB O DD 1D 2 23! by SRZSR it 5 Plttsburgh iladelphia in~inanti Chicago Suwlilald 0080000000500000200000000950HO00C0S OHOOOHSNEIHO Rens: Styles, Crace, Sctlessler, Bfame: Bits Baecht, Chicaso French, Pittsbusgh Dadley, Prvisdgip #anton, Cincinnati . Brooklyn .. u;vhbv. Pittsbury cobommnso~won P on 555 NN RO ONIE U AL AN A UEEOON NAORG! isistaial £kt S T bbb S i hi innati . Bhils EBenge. Fhiladelohia Bihibhb R B2LRERHI22IRRESE Pitcher. Ol Pretilknd, [ it AR B DI BRI rOr = x : ? PO . | sEE3EEy ell, Poiledelphia . e cinnati Arlett. Philadelphia ... . Waner, Pittsburgh | York 4 “Cincinnati’ ourgh. Philadelphia Philadelphia urgh On TOMORROW. CLARENCE SLOAT. Fight Card MEETS SAILOR McKENNA AT FORT WASHINGTON RING CARD AT FORT PROMISES ACTION Winner of Portney-Raymond Match to Get Chance at Joe Glick. CRACK at Joe Glick, outstand- ing contender for the junior lightweight crown now held by Benny Bass, awaits the winner of the Jack Portney-Phil Raymond scrap tomorrow night in the ovening amnmoflr boxing card at Fort Wash. gton. This bout, 10 rounds or less, head- lines a five-bout card which includes three 10-rounders and two 4-round battles. ‘The main bout, Portney vs. Raymond, promises plenty of action as both boys, Baltimoreans, are ranked the best lightweights in the South and the sec- tional title will be at stake. ‘Wants Return Match. ALL-STARS ARE HOSTS. HYATTSVILLE, Md, tomae Food May 30.— Hyat'sville All-Stars will entertain Po- Distributors of Washington tomorro on the diamond at Riverdale afternoon at 3 o'clock. MAJOR LEAGUE STATISTICS National. CLUB BATTING. SN2 38m 3 " susseruc INDIVIDUAL BATTING. (Arranged According to Positions) FIRST BASEMEN. H i1 8w supuE0 NS BB B rma U 2352508282 I T P wme e | 2 2 385 823383 —erPheBnaREs ruassmacwnSuE eoso—onssNmOm E] E] By 8 w > 2 28,8508, B warila . u800: P e worSmav—ad e anreacacass SEOBERRLERS [UPUP—— 9 a == 'S. 5 - naags SRR e REE! 35 288 eamcs, O L nans [EPRRROREI s 88 ooommorHoNuas 3223 S53! B SO ORNO B & P BAANBANE B IIPBADIBA-S P ] R S 5 & 22535 SEBS S ek 8 38! LR 8 ARSNR ARS8 SUSEARIRSY. PSR S et 2R2LBSRIREES2R3 i e e T ) eReraaNaBEENEny ¥ITR8R.REST R a 5 3 a B D P N e B .oNERIIISRENETAZCS o OO s I S D aESIERERRELBENEEE e B wonummonaronsitane 090000 ooHRRHOoO 3 | e - e ot s e g noaeal § ww-ooo SR TR AT SR 5 S edbblsskanirslagbbositinsnceas soonsibes -3 3 R AL N S T 1T L R SR SR : PRI = g £ e S N 5 R B TR @30000000NOOHAA00N BHIHOOOONOHOIDHNE B INHINONIEE B INHIONHLHOS 0000 20000000000000000000000000053000 8IS SR ] e baseuseiul BaBe e awanall [FPPPII -~ = L anBaned neS—ousamnN - anars ave i apeiaiastarisass BoB o a-mEtuaSak BEESREEEERGY BOOOEHOONOONOH O O DU—NODNID 4y AAB i OB O cuarusstadhon! BensSoums [UETDIVEPS R SOmrrooA-uS COmONOESOSMUN . 20000000000000000090000050000000 099300000 was | he tackles shut- | Reed in 190 | 308 i 303 292 284 an LR e A 38553 ©2r0000-or0ooNo00m The semi.wind-up will bring together Reds Barry and Joe Finazzo, the for- mer from Washington and the latter from Baltimore. Both boys are slug- gers and willing mixers’ Finazzo dropped s decision to Baker Boy Billy Schwartz last Winter and plans to use Barry as a stepping stone to a return match. Sallor McKenna and Clarence Sloat, Washington and Baltimore, respectively, will clash in the main preliminary, 10 rounds, and unless all signs fail, this scrap promises to give the feature and semi-final & run for fop honors. Vance to Make Debut. Prank Vance, Georgetown University student, will make his pro debut when Soldier Burke of Walter the 6-round preliminary. From what he has shown in local amateur circles, Vance is & clever ring- {man, while Burke pleased the Fort Washington patrons last year with his willingness to mix. The opener will bring together a pair of soldiers, Clark and Marchini, for 4 rounds or less. Tickets for tomorrow’s show will be on sale until 5:30 o'clock at Joe Tur- ner's office in the Annapolis Hotel, Vic Guazza's sport store and Cornell’s 5 | Lunch. Free boat transportation will be ready for those who do not intend to motor to the fort. The boat, which will accommodate 700, will leave at 7 o'clock frem the Washington Barracks. i! 11 GALLAUDET MEN #| 70 RE GIVEN LETTERS | 744 |Ringle, Hokanson, Monaghan and Dobson to Get Honors for Two Sports. 723 | Seven members of the 1930-31 Gal- ‘;‘E.‘lludfl College basket ball team and six -334 | membors of the track aggregation have 220 been nominated to recei The 208 manager of each team also will get the | insignia. | " Jimmy Rayhill of the prep class. 333 | leading individual scor>r cf the, track ':;l | team, and Bob Travis have b2-n named 23 | to receive honorable mention. the form- er becauze his class status makes him 5 | ineligible for a letter and the latter be- cause of insuffi~lent points. | Those slated to receive It follo Basket ball—Capt. Delmar Cosgro: ¥onrad Hokanson, Johnny Ringle, Wurdemann, Bilbo Mcnaghan. Jol s | Bradley, George Brown and Manager Chester Dobson. Track—Capt. Johnny Ringle, Chester | Dobeon, Bilbo Monaghan, John O'Brien. Arlie Gray, Konrad Hokanson and Manager Keple Greenberg. POTOMACS WIN 2 GAMES 72 | Beat Reisterstown All-Stars, 8 to 1 34 and 13 to 5. 9 | Potomac Food Distributors defeated 385 | Retcterstown, Md., All Stars yesterday |in both ends of a diamond double- header at Reistorstown, winning the | first game, 3 to 1, and the second, 13 to 5. Polly Hayes held Reisterstown to five hits and fanned 13 in pitching Po. tomacs to victory in the opening | match. Bernie Jackson also allowed only five | bingles in hurling the District nine to their win in the second encounter and struck out seven. Bill Tonker, Harry Divver and Joe Robey did some nifty fielding for Potomacs in this game. Potomacs are to gather this after- noon at.1:15 o'clock at Twelfth and Water streets southwest to go to River- dale to face Hyattsville All Stars at 3. Young or Hayes will pitch for Po- tomacs. D. C. RIFLEMEN BEAT NAVY. ANNAPOLIS, May 30.—The rifie team of the District of Columbia Na- tional Guard defeated the Naval Academy here today. 2.291 points to 2,211, It was the only defeat a Naval Académy incoor or outdoor rifie team has received this season. —————— PIN TOURNEY FOR GIRLS. A tournament will be held by the ladies' bowling team of Takoma Lutheran Church on the Silver Spring alleys, starting Tuesd2y night at 8 Jock. SYSTEM AUTO 1822 M St. N.W. ‘OPEN OIS b CHOREIRIAIR Dbt ! t Attfaction OVERSHADOWS ALL CURRENT RINGMEN Primo Must Wait Till Fall to Meet Strib-Max Go Victor for Next Big Bout. BY SPARROW McGANN, EW YORK, May 30.—Primo Carnera can take it on the chin. That is, a legal blow. Ruled out by a Federal judge, the collossus of the ring continues to overshadow anything and everything in the game today. There's a reason. The big fellow is an attraction anywhere he shows and you cannot blame the first flight heavies for pushing each other out of the way for the first crack at the Italian. A match with Carnera means big money. Victories bring the fighters a certain meed of consolation. Purses do more than that. They mean money to ride around in limousines and otherwise live the life of a gentleman. Carnera is drawing a princely sum to stage his exhibitions for a realty de- velopment company. He packs them in at theaters and increases the revenue at boxing shows by just showing his form in a tight-fitting gym suit. Oh, yes, the Primo is a veritable gold mine to_promoters of all sorts. Now that Madison Square Garden has Primo tied up it goss without say- ing that the far-seeing directorate of that body will, not have him lying around idle. That would never do. Why Primo Is Balking. Carnera claims he does not want to fight for the Garden crowd because he is prohibited from meeting a good man until he fights the winner of the Schmeling-Stribling fight in the Fall. | Primo is not afraid of losing form. His boxing didoes to_date have been little more than exhibitions. What the (Italian hates to lose is the easy money | he could:be collecting during the hot | months of the Summer. Victorio Compolo is under contract to the Garden. What is more logical [than that Campolo be pitted against | Carnera? It would be a battle of giants and a good drawing card in any man's town. Vic tops Primo by 2 inches, but | the latter makes it up in weight and | bulging muscles Campolo proved in his fight against | Tommy Loughran that he is capable of | giving any heavyweight a warm eve- ning. The Gangling Caucho of the Pampas was clearly outboxed by the | Philadelphian. but he was eternelly | trying, and that, after all, is som | thing. Every time Camnclo turned | swing loose” the fans gasped. landed in the ninth round and it came | mightv cl-se to spelling curtain for the | flashy boxer. After that fight, his first in over a year, the Argentine battler erved notice that he means to have something to say about the heavyweight situation before the year draws to ¢ close. | Campolo Eager for Bout. Campolo is eager to fight Carnera. | Vic wants to fight any one who can | draw a big gate. That seems to be | his main purpose in his chase after the goiden fleece. Money comes first with Vic. The caliber of his opponents are 2 secondary consideration. Campolo is now uncer the management cf Luis | Guiterrez. If any one knows a harder | mén to d> business with than the | Cubzn, who first flashed on the horizon with the sensational Kid Chocolate, the writer ‘would be pleased to make his acquaintance. Jimmy Johnston is not discouraged by his falure to put on a Sharkey- Carnera fight. Jimmy knows he can- not use Sharkey except against a werth- while opponent, and these being as scarce as a bunch of orchids in a poor man's house, Johnston is seeking to pit big Pat Redmond against Carnera. There is no likelihood that the Gar- den directors will object to this. Red- mend is on the “safe list” and does not figure to annoy Primo any more than those who furnished the string of knockouts listed by the Italian. Redmcnd hes been showing at the smell clubs. To date he has not pro- gresead to the extent that he would be considered cther than a big fellow try- ing to got along in the hard game of give and take. And so goes the merry-go-round. Every one is trying to use Carnera. The fans are fed up on seeing Carnera bowling over a relic of better days or & misguided fighter. It wants to see him against a real fighter. MACK LAUDS GAME Base Ball Greatest Mass Entertain- ment in World, Says A's Boss. Connie Mack, discussing the success of base ball end its future, says: ase ball has become the greatest mass entertainment in the world. It has kept price faith with the public while other forms of amusement have doubled and trebled. Bace ball prices have changsd but little in 30 years and probably never will change. Twenty years ago double-deck stands and 80,000 crowds were undreamed of. “Perraps in the future we may have flelds on immense skyscrapers, With dom>d roofs to make the game playable 2t all times cespite the weath YOUR CAR 0 SATURDAYS, SUNDAYS, HOLIDAYS Modern Barber Shop on Premises SWAN, MANAGER $ LAUNDRIES, Inc. THE ORIGINAL $ WASH 1227 R St. N.W. Daily 8 AM. to 6 P.M. Sundays 8'AM. to 2 P.M.

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