Evening Star Newspaper, August 20, 1931, Page 40

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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, NINE MADE FACTOR BY CLEVER HURLER If He Is “nght ” Team Will| Be in Thick of Fight for ; Week Day Honors. ‘ | BY FRANCIS E. STAN. | SK Mr. Average Fan what| A his choice is in the city| sandlot series, which |is scheduled to start on Au gust 31 on the South Elips and he probably will reply some- thing like this: “Well, the Con- structioneers, I guess, but if Riley's right——" Upon the shoulders who had a trial with rests the major portion burden in the serfes. Rated a club with only a mediocre infield and & capable but not outstanding outfield, | Commerce was not looked upon as the | team to seriously threaten District Re- pair Shop at the beginning of the De- | partmental League season Riley Turns Tide. But Leon Riley, one of the cleverest pitchers in this vicinity, was signed, and Commerce immediately made its presence felt. Riley started off the sea- son by pitching a no-hit, no-run game against Repair Shop. The momentum of this victory carried Commerce to the first-half championship without the Joss of a game, District Repair was too strong a club to curl up and play dead. Back came the Repairmen to win the second-half series, but in the play-off Commerce won two of the three games—and Riley was credited with both victories. Riley has a capable running-mate in “Shout” Taylor, but Leon probably will get_the call when the going gets rough. The nfield—composed of Povich, third base; Wells, second base; O'Donnell, first ' base, and Singman. shortstop— presents a fair defense, but is no great shucks at the tee. Outficld Is Capable. The outfield is strong enough for any | city series contender. In Heinie Go man, University of Maryland player, Commerce has a strong hitier. H flanked by Coay Shapiro and Doc H ler. Jakie Lewis, former Emerson and Business High backstop, is doing the catching, and doing it well The team, as a whole, is not the heaviest-hitting club to be in the series by far, according to this season's rec- of Leon Riley, the Griffmen, of Commerce's 37 Nations Seek Olympic Tickets | OS ANGELES, August 20 (®). —Applications for tickets to the 1932 Olygnpic games here have been roceived from 37 natfons, far exceeding expectations, despite the fact the tenth olympiad is a year away. This announcement was made to- day by John F. MacKenzie, manager of the ticket sale. The Olympic Stadium, where the major attractions will be held, seats 103,000 persons, The largest number of applica- tions have come from Germany, Japen, Austria, Spain, Canada and Mexico, although many have also been received from South American countries. With several large con- ventions expected to bs held in the Far West next Summer, MacKenzie said he anticipated mahy applica- tions from delegates. MacKenzie said he was unable to estimats the number of applications cived to date as reservations were being made independently in other nations. NEWPORT NETMEN PLAY SEMIFINALS Vines Meets Van Ryn, Wood Faces Perry in Casino Cup Tournament. Associated Press EWPORT, R. I, August 20— Ellsworth Vines, Californian, and John Van Ryn, Davis Cup veteran, meet in the New- By t N | port Casino Cup semi-finals today. Sidney Wood of New York, Wimble- don finalist and Davis Cup player, meets Prederick J. Perry, British inter- nationalist, in the other semi-final. Vines entered the semi-finals by de- feating Frank X. Shields of New York. Van Ryn beat Bryan Grant of At- lanta. Wood registered a straight set victory over Johnny Doeg. Perry upset George M. Lott, jr., one of his American Davis Cup opponents. Yesterday's summaries: Singles. Quarter-final round_Sidney B, Wood. New . ords, but the Clerks are bent on prov- g 1.’ ing that it will not be a team that pins back the ears of every pitcher to fa it and nothing else that will win the flag. Boiled down, it's renllv goes, so goes Commerce.” T was at a meeting of the week day lesgue presidents last night that it was decided to shift the date of the geries opening from August 25 to Au- gust 31, The change was made in order | to give the Government League entry plenty of time to decide its champion The schedule also wes arranged last night. Games will be plaved on every &'y except Saturdays and Sundays and Labor day. Two open dates also were named. The schedule follows: August 31—Eldbrocke vs. Government League champion. +—Commerce “As Riley vs. Con- 2—Open. 3—Eldbrooke Vs Com- Septe; 4—Government League champion vs. Constructioneers. September 7 (Labor day)—Open. September 8 — Constructioneers Eldbrooke. September 9—Commerce vs. Govern- ment League champion September 10—Ccmmerce Vs, brooke. Septemb-r Government September Commerce. September brooke Saptember September 17 structioneers September 13—Government champion vs. Commerce. D. C. PRINTERS SHARE TOP IN TITLE SERIES Have Won Three Games Along With Cincinnati in National Diamond Tourney vs. Eld- 1 Eldbrook= League HAMILTON, Ont:rio, August could \ineton teanm Wa scored c n Citles came with one ! seventh Washingt 1 eighth Another s made the score gton sewed up the game 1 ith with a four-run rally ree-rur rising by Twin the las! was un- Ry results Chicago. 9 New York Fiw- Fx-l’;ratvs Hltlmg (hcr 300 ERE are some better than .300 hitters. all former Pittshurgh Pirates, who would look good to & club which stands in sixth place in batting in the Natichal League Charlie Grimm, Chicago Cubs: Hazen (Kiki) Cuyler, Cubs; “Mule” Haas, Philadelphia = Athletics; Joe Cronin, Washington, and Dick Bar- tell, Philadclphia Nationals. Several one-time g the Pittsburgh livery bave been reatening right along to break into the select group. wearers | Washingt Tinning Wins Sixteen Straight With Des Moines Club. August 20 (#) ——Speaking of consecutive pitching vic- , Bud Tinning, right-handed star of the Des Moines Western League club, is compiling wn impressive col- lection Tinning yesterday held St. Joseph to | five hits and won his sixteenth triumph of tne season. He has been d-fnud only once, the setback occurring my BRITISH SQUAD CUT INTENNIS TOURNEY D. C., THURSDAY. | | Mat Crown Prmce Here GRAPPLER, SEEN AS LONDOS' SUCCESSOR, INVADES. |Chance of an Int an lnternational‘ Women’s Final Fades as Invaders Weaken. B the Associated Press. | FOREST HILLS, N. Y., August 20.— The chances for an international sin- gles final in the women’s national ten- nis championship appeared consider- ably slimmer today, as only four of | the seven British entries were left in the running and one of the four had to | stake her chances of survival 6h a sin- | gle set A sudden storm late yestérday after- noon cut short the program after three British stars had been eliminated and when a fourth, Mrs. Dorothy C. Shep- | berd-Berron, captain of the British Wightman Cup team, stcod all square | with her opponent, Mrs. Marion Zin- | derstein Jessup | set. Mrs. Jessup taking the first, 8—6, and Mrs. Shepherd-Barron the second, §—0. Each had won one | The completion of that match formed | one of the few high spots cn today's sch-dule. activities yesterday, washing out ‘he entire doubles program as well as three singles matches, it was decided thet only the third-round singles matches would be completed today, leaving most of tho time for dcubles The three matches which were to decide the makeup of the rest of the last eight brought togetber Sarah Pal- frey, young star from Sharon, Mass., and Phyllls Mudford of the British team; Betty Nuthall of England, the defending champion, and _Josephine Cruickshank of Santa Ana, Calif. Led by Mrs. Helen Wills Moody, four California stars and one British in- vader already were in the quarter- finals. Mrs. Eileen Bennett Whitting- stall carried the British colors a round ahead of her surviving countrywomen while Mrs. L. A, Harper of Oakland, Helen Jacobs of Berkeley and Dorothy Weisel of Sacramento. formed the main body of the California defense behind Queen Helen. Mrs. Moody had an easy triumph vesterday downing Joan Ridley of Eng- land, . Mrs, Harper, run- ner-un last year. was carried to thre: sets by Mrs. Elsle Goldsack Pittman another of the English invaders, before winning, 6—0, 5—7, 6—1. Miss Whi tingstall scored the lone British victory downing Alice Francis of Orange, N. J.. 6—1, 6—3. Miss Weisel turned in the third American victory in four inter- national matches, defeating Dorothy Round, 6—4, 6—3. PARK VIEW REPEATS - Takes Secand G.me From Hoover in Playground Series. Park View's Playground base ball nine yesterday won its second game in the five-game series with Hoover the Playground League championship 510 2 The winners scored all their runs in the last four frames to overcome & 2-run lead compiled by Hoover in the first inning. TO PLAY AT COLESVILLE. HYATTSVILLE, Md., August 20.— Hyattsville Southern Methodists have booked a game with the Colesville Car- dinals for Saturday at Colesville at 3 o'clock. Colesville defeated the Metho- d.ull‘ 13 to 10, htn reeenfl) on Racketers Stlll In Running in Muny Tourney B the Associated Press ETROIT, August 20.—Sig@Fs and doubles matches in toth men's and women's classes were on today's schedule in he National Public Parks Tennis Tour- nament much in the Tunning plonship. with the favorites still very for the cham- All seeded teams to survive yester- day's doubles play, both men nd wom- | en. George Jebnings and Gordon Braudt, Chicago; Docley L. Mitchell and Thomas Markey, Washington: Arnold Simons, Chicago, and Clay Mahcney. Los Angeles, seeded in- that order, and other unseeded teams play quarter matches today. the women’s-doubles, Mrs. Virginia and Mrs. Ann Lind=man, St and Mrs. Ruth Martinez and Frances Walker, Warhington, n’! second, were ready for semi- as were Mary Zita Mc- And Charlctte McQuision, Dallas while Lydia Kayser and or:n, Buffalo, ranked third, seeded | still | mateh. Four seeded men's singles stars were in the quarter-final brackets scheduled for play today: George Jennings, Chi- cago, seeded first; Fred Royer, Dallas, fourth; Arnold Simons, Louisville, fifth, andThomas Markey, Washington, sev- enth. Dooley L. Mitchell, Washington, ranked second, and George O'Connell, Chicako, seeded third, still had un- played third-round matches. faced a delayed second-round The first four seeded woman stars— | Mrs. Virginia Dueker, St. Louis; Mary Zita McHale, Dallas; Mrs. Ruth Mar- | tinez, Washington, and Helen Germaine, New York—ranked in that order, and Helen Schuman, Louisville, seeded sixth, were ready for their quarter-finals singles matches. Washington's doubles teams day were victorious. Dooley Mitchell and Bud Markey, in the men’s engagement, won a three-set thriller from Harold Bartel and John Dorr of Cleveland, 6—4, 7—5. 12—10. In the women's section Ruth Mar- tinez and Prances Walker easily downed Ann fimulak and Helen Szarek of | Hamtramek, Mich. 6—2, 6-—0. yester- Having Extra Shoes Rcudy Testifies as to How Mrs. Moody Has Become Great. By J. P. ALLEN. EW YORK, August 20— Those who seek an intimate picture of Mrs. Helen Wills Moody had an eyeful as she upon the courts at Forest for her third-round match st Joan Ridley. Shortly before had bsen a deluge of rain ns were not 21l to the liking f foremost play This queen of th: game, however, has had years of experience. Aside from an arm 1 of rackets, she carried a speci laced shoes equipped ble spil In s measure that tells the story of this woman player's greatness She is always prepared. Nothing is left to helter-skelter chance. Not even the extra pair of shoes which might be needed should the footing prove most insecure. No 0 happened that Miss Rid- ley gave the American a mighty SUMY battle. Apparently Mrs. Moody was expecting this. Possibly she knew that she was ia for seme rag: ged running. That is just what the English girl set hersélf to accom- plish. and the spiked shoes were as necessary to the game as the balls ard net, When not devoting her attention to tennis competition Miss Ridley amuses herself raising fancy rabbits. She’s quite up on rabbits, their hebits and all that one might ray. Possibly she and the rabbits run rm However that may be, the fl' gave the finest exhibi- tion of ball chasing that has been )vhng‘s:d at Forest Hills in many & o Tabbit chasing—excuse me— was not at all on the N came Hills program as Mrs. Moody had mapped it out. Prom Miss Ridley's side the ball everlastingly came back, ex- actly like the proverbial bad penny Quite naturally this called for severe measures. So Mrs. Moody proceeded to volley in most decisive fashion. She did it in a manner that was most convincing. She was not 50 fleet of foot as her rabbit chasing Miss Ridley, but the did get up t the net surprisingly fast, aided by the shoes, to score nine consecutive games for the match. Pew have ever seen Mrs. Moody work faster and more furionsly for the points than she did against Miss Ridley. She appeared to fear dis- aster in the spproaching storm. The foresight that brought two pairs of shoes to the court was taking n chances. With might and main and her walloping volley she waded into the second set. Four of its six games went to deuce points. She had the victory safely tucked away in less than half an hour, beating the r-ln lnd )lhl Rldley In Sealed Tin . . ** $1.00 for | After the weather had ended | RAY STEELE. OW that Rudy Dusek is checking in at Southern way stations and Promoter Joe Turner is hunting for & successor to groom for title shots and all that sort of thing, Tiny Roebuck will have a chance to step into Dusek’'s shoes, providing he gives the crowd at Criffith Stadium tomorrow & treat when he tackles Ray Steele, crown prince of rassle- dom and the alleged helr to King Jimmy's throne. Not since he was defeated by Jim McMillan last Winter at the audi- torium in a hectic match has Roe- buck met a real opponent. Because of this, Tiny has had to be careful not to sit down on an opponent for fear of squashing him, but he will have no fear of that tomorrow be- cause Crown Prince Steele doesn't mind a mere 250 pounds crashing on his chassis. Another top-notcher is on the Minor Leagues International League. Newark, 3-16; Montreal, 2-4. Torcnto, 1-1: Jersey City, 0-6. Baltimore, 10; Rochester, 1. Reading, 10; Buffalo, 5. Southern Association. Chattanooga, 5; Knoxville, 3 Little Rock, 5; Birmingham, 3 Second Little Rock-Birmingham game rained out Memphis, 9; Atlanta, 0. New Orleans, 11; Nashville, 5. Pacific Coast League. Sacramento, 5; Missions, 2. Hollywood, 4: Oakland, 1. Seattle, 5. San Francisco, 0. Portland, 13; Los Angeles, 1. American Association. St. Paul, 3; Indianapolis, 2. Eastern League. Albany. 6 Norfolk. 3 Second Albany-Ncrfolk game rained out Springfield, 3-1: Richmond, 2-4. Bridgeport, 9: Allentown, 3. New Haven-Hartford, rain. Piedmont League. Greensboro, 2. Henderson, 0. Ashevills, 6; Winston-Salem, 2 harlotte, 10: High Point, 6 Raleigh-Durham, rain Three Eye League. Terre Haute, 10; Quincy, 8 Danville. 6; Springfield. 2. Peoria, 10; Evansville, 8 Dec: 2-2; Blcomington, Texas League. Shreveport, 6; San Antonio, 1 Galveston, 8; Dalles, 2 Houston, 9; Fort Worth, 0. ‘Western League. Oklahoma City, 9-4; Omaha, 4-0 Des Moines, 13; St. Joseph, 0. Topeka, 11; Pueblo, 8. Wichita, 7; Denver, 5. New York-Pennsylvania League. Eimira, 1; Hazletcn, 5 DOES YOUR CAR SH]MMY? v SPRINGS NEED ATTENTION We can make them RIDE LIKE NEW Springs Manufactured and Repaired for All Makes of AUTOS, TRUCKS, BUSSES Quick Service BRAKE LINING SEEUS WASHINGTON SPRING WORKS 1410 Church St. N.W. DE. 0840 Between P ang @ Sts. 1-3 card in Dick Shikat, former cham- pion. Shikat, who is rated by some as the best grappler in the world, but not the best drawing card, wul tackle another Indian. Jim Clink- stock, in the semi-final, also a fall to a finish. The prize prelim promises to be the Chief White Feather-Tiger Nei- son affair. Local wrestling followers have been led to believe some plain and fancy socking will be the order. Other bouts follow: Doc Wilson vs. Mike Socke, Mike Romano Karl Pojello, Dutch Green George Romanofl. Women wilth escorts will be ad- mited free to all seats except those at the ringside. Tickets are availa- ble at Turner's Annapolis Hotel of- Vs, Vs, Ihé AMERICAN OIL COMPANY Producers of Amoco-Gas and Orange American Gas Washington Office: South Washington, Va. AMOCO MOTOR OILS SPORTS. Golfer Garners Five Pars On Two Holes to Get Even With Arch Enemy of LmksJ BY WALTER R. McCALLUM. AN a golfer make five pars in two holes? V. Calvert Dickey of the Washington Golf and Country ./ Club, known et the Virginia club as “the man without a slice” now will admit that job, difficult ms it seems, |can be done. And it was done, to the | detriment of Dickey’s pocketbook by | none other than his golfing arch-enemy | Dore €. Gruver. For several years Dickey and Gruver have been playing together, and in recent months they have started out, each with a contract of 10 par holes on the 18. Birdies count two pars, and cagles—well, no one ever gave any thought to eagles, for those rare birds |come so infrequently that they just | were not discussed. Gruver had been playing poorly yes- terday and at the end of the fourteenth hole Dickey had accumulated nine pars, | while Gruver had been able to pile up | only five, leaving him needing five pars |in the mext four holes to complete his contract and collect the bonus that is paid the successful one who geis 10 pars. P2While he was addressing his ball on the fifteenth tee, Gruver bethought himself of an old custom at Washing- ton and recalled it to Dickey in this ashion: “Calvert, do we count eagles as four pars? And Dickey, thinking an eagle was as remote as the moon, said, “Sure.” Gruver pounded out a lengthy tee t to the angle of the bend at_the fifteenth hole, knocked a spoon shot hole high on the gréen agd rolled in a 20- footer for the cagle. *Now do we count cagles as four pars?” he asked Dickey and Dickey’s only reply was a broad grin and a grunt. So Gruver, Instead of being hopelessly behind in his par count, had. picked up four of them on one hole. He quickly closed out his contract with a par 4 on the sixteenth and instead of being on the losing end he broke even with Dickey. who had won his par bet on the fiffeenth S0 you see it is possible to pick up five pars in two holes. All you have to do is to get an eagle and a par. But try and do it. R LESTER ROSE of Congressional .+ comes to bat with a yarn about the common folks in golf. The common folks, in Rose's story, are per- sonified in the person of one Joseph Nebel, one of those gents who considers he has had a field day if be breaks 100 on any golf course. Rose, Tom Moody and Nebel were playing at Columbia the other day and Nebel, after getting out in a crashing 63, managed to plant a well sliced spoon shot on the green at the thirteenth. He then ran down a 40-foot putt for a birdie 2. ‘Then he sliced another spoon shot | to the green at the sixteenth and again ran down the putt for another birdie 2 He had two birdies—both deuces—and his score for the round was weil above ! 100, which Rose claims is confderable golf for one who is of the common folk. O of Washington's three entrants in the national amateur champion- ship are pfann‘ng to leave pext week for the Beverly Country Club*on Chicago's south side, where the na- tional tourney will start on August 31. Tommy Bones, the star southpaw golfer of Columbia, has just bought himself |'a fast new automobile, and he is taking | his dad along on the motor trip to the ! |Windy City. Bones plans to leave either Tuesday or Wednesday, arriving | in Chicago the latter part of the week. | | _John C. Shorey, star of the Kenwood | Golf and Country Club, plans to leave Washington by train for Chicago & week from tomorrow. These two quali- fled for the tourney in the sectional trials held at Richmond on July 28. The other entrant from Washington—Roland R. MacKenzie—Iis to go to Chicago from California. - | 0 the ltclnlm of vociferous cheers from a gallery composed largely of caddies who had wagered nickels and dimes on ths contest, Milier B. Stevinson and Donald Woodward con- quered Maj. Earl H. Naiden and Rob- ert H. Gardner yesterday at Columbia in the initial competition for a cup put up by Andrew J. Cummings, the sage of Montgomery County. The con- test, which was the result of months of challenges hurled back and forth over the length and breadth of the | capacious locker room at Columbia, started off the series for the Cummings’ ‘Trophy in auspicious style, although the golf played in the initial joust was nothing to brag about. Stevinson and Woodward won by 3 and 2, largely because their opponents were in the grip of a strange malady known as “topping.” which they occasionally varied with other diseases known as “slicing” and “hooking.” Trapitis also played a leading part in the victory Stevinson and Woodward now are open to challenge by any other pair in the club, but the match may not be played until September, under the terms laid down by the donor of the trophy. “Red” Watkins, the Atlanta peach, who was supposed to captain the Naiden-Gardner team and give them his aid and support. ran out on the act and at last accounts was pre- paring a petition in bankruptcy. Wat- kins had gone down on the line on Naiden and Gardner for plenty, but he Was not present yesterday to see his fair-haired boys take it on the chin. Everett Eynon, men’s champion of the Columbia Country Club, and his wife, who hoids the women’s champton- ship, are the parents of a_bouncing baby boy, born last Sunday. Edward B. Eynon, father of Everett, and a former District golf champion, is passing out cigers and beaming all over his friendly countenance. Mrs. Ora Emge of Beaver Dam won the competition for the E. S. Kennedy trophy yesterday, steged by the Women's District_Golf Association at the Ken- wood Golf and Country Club. Mrs Emge turned in a card of 91—15—76. The low gross prize went to Mrs. Alma von Steinner, also of Beaver Dam, who scored an 88. Second low gross went to Mrs. Prank R. Keefer, president of the women's organization, with a card of 103. Second low net went to Mrs. Harrison Brand, jr, with 91—11—80. WILL REPEAT REGATTA Inspired by the success of last Sat- | urday's regatta on the Tidal Basin, offi- cials and speedboat drivers have decided to run another show Saturday, August 29, on the same course. Virtually the same line-up of drivers in last Saturday's events are expected to | be on hand to compete for the various trophies. Stanley Horner and Commodore Ed. ward Baltz will be timers, while J. How- ard Mitchell again will be the starter. | George Washington Memorial 20 YEARS AGO IN THE STAR. IMMY KERR, Post Office pitcher, who quit the mound early in the season because he could get noth- ing on the ball, surprised by hurling the Mailmen to a 4-0 win over Aloy- stus Club yesterday in the post-sea- son series. Bob and Bernie Krummer pitched for Aloysius. Drennan and Hurley were the nnly Aloysius play- ers to reach second base. In another serles glme Cornell beat Sherwood, 4 to 2, as Lefty Wooden for the winners outpitched Sam Hiett for the losers in a south- paws’ duel. Loveless starred a' shortstop for Sherwood. Car Department defeated Naval Medical School, 7 to 3; Andrews and American Security & Trust Co. tied 3-3, and Manhattan conquered Pet- worth, 6 to 4, in other series til<. Hughes pitched for Car Department against Navy Medicos. It was the first defeat of the series for the la ter. De Voto and Harley hurled for the losers. Jimmy Rice, Medicos right fielder, made the best catch of the day on a shoestring drive off Handy's bat. Boteler for A. 8. & T. and Chism for Andrews put on a pretty pitching battle. Pielding of Joe Mulvey, McLean and Hayes fea- tured. Bill Burley pitched Manha tan to its win over Petworth. Coun- try Morris, Jimmy Donnelly and Monk Walters starred. Walter Johnson took the mound in the tenth to check St. Louls and Washington triumphed, 8 to 7, to sweep the three-game series. Ger- many Schaefer and Clarence Walk- er each got three hits for th: Na- tionals. Washington has won 17 of the 24 games it has played since the ;:1?1 ball replaced the lively horse- e. sy NOVEL EVENTS MARK PADDLERS’ REGATTA 01d Dummmm Announce Program for Their Annual Inter-Club Water Carnival. ALEXANDRIA, Va., August 20—A program of novel canoe contests, in- cluding the tail end race, tilt, bailing, broom, sixes without paddles and gun- wale, has been arranged by the Regatta Committee of the Old Dominion Boat Club as one of th: features of that organization's annual interclub water carnival September 13. In addition a series of shell rades beiwesn repressntatives of the Old Do- minion and Potomac Boat Club of Washington is to be arranged, while"a duck chase and the club's champion- siip canoe and shell races will be in- cluded. The J. Sid Douglas trophy, lvn&d annually to the member winning the aquatic championship, will be nted. Parke Bell holds two legs on troph: having won the title in 1928 and 1930. Magnus W. Bales and Thomas A. Hulfish, jr., are the only other mem- bers who have won the trop The carnival will be held on the course, dedicated at the opening of the Middle States Regatta Associauon's shell raecs here_last_Labor_day. 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