Evening Star Newspaper, January 25, 1932, Page 11

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

SPORTS! THE EVENING S'I;AR WASHINGTON, . D. C.,, MOI 1932. Santini’s Victory Epic Bowling Drama : Martin, Hunting, Feels Base Ball Urge, TONY PROVES GAVE Beaver Dam Pla THREE TITLE FIGHTS =2 weustee | ARD HERD EAGER GARDED THIS WEEK T0BEGIN TRAINING Feather, Welter and Middle Pepper Dotes on Dogs, Gun, Weight Championship Duels but Would Prove He Is No Flash in Pan. ns Immediate f Larger and PACKS B WALEP et Sl Other Great Finishes Recalled by One-Pin Triumph in CASPAR, THERE'S A TRAMP AT THE DOOR. HE SAYS HE'LL WORK FOR HIS DINNER, YYOU TELL HIM IF HE'LL SHOVEL OFF THE WALKS WE'LL FEED the new one. Many of the members lost HiM BY W. R. McCALLUM. ; their entire golf kits, and there was no ROM the ruins of the old olub|ineurance on the golf equipment in the house of the Beaver Dam CoMn- | shop of Henry D. Miller, the club golf try Club, at Landover, Md,, v\-m‘profssinn:\l Not to be daunted by a Campbell Stakes. 4 Tere fire, however, many of the mem- arise a new and larger club|perg who came equipped for golf played house, with more ample porch space,!the course erday, while others stood lower and covering more ground. .. | Hardly had the firemen finished their HETHER Tony Santini’s| uijie task of pouring water on the ruins one-pin victory in the of the old club house yesterday when Howard Campbell| president E. S. Brashears announced Sweepstakes was, as|plans for an immediate call many bowling folk today are con- | board of governors to meet and consider tending, the most sensational and | plans for reconstruction. Fire, which is dramatic duckpin triumph seen | Supposed to have started from a short i 5 circult shortly before 5 o'clock yester- £ thet fonth ‘:mm'ch__ofl‘mT' '5| day morning, within the short spate open to conjecture. Brilliant as| c",ree nours burned the large struc- BY FRANCIS E. STAN, the feat was, that honor is doubt- | ture completely to the ground, defying | | the efforts of fire departments from Bladensburg, Hyattsville and nearby communities to check it. By the time ny early golfers were ready to start {neir Sunday morning round their club was a mass of ruins, completely ind, with the two brick either end of the club y marks above the smol- dering ruins. The club house was a frame structure, and once the fire got well underway, it burned quickly, even though the water supply was ample. HE fire definitely puts a stop to thought of Beaver Dam holding an invitation tourney lfi]ls Spring, | although _ President Brashears an- little of everything. Color? In large | pounced that construction will be start- splashes Saturday. Headwork? Santini|eq ymmediately. “We have a member- used it to combat the shivers and shakes | chin'of 450 persons, most of whom play a wild bowling crowd can impart t0 & | golf and we must get & club house bowler. for them at once,” he stated. Santini made two spares in his last| “rhe wooden structure which burned two boxes to win; he arose from thirty- | cost about $63,000, and insurance on it seventh to first in 10 games; he sal-|totaled in the neighborhood of $40,000. vaged for Washington its most coveted | Brashears estimated the members had honor in nosing out the Baltimorean. | several thousand dollars worth of golf Ed Blakeney. Santini’s first bowling | equipment and clothing in their lockers, victory is of the game’s most which were a complete loss. So fast did dramatic. the fire spread that C. D. Adamson, Bowling folk today are still atingle | caretaker, and two colored boys, had to with memories of Santini’s spurt. And | jump from windows to save themselves, many minds flash back to previous dra- | The fire is believed to have started from matic scenes. crossed wires in the southeastern corner of the clubhouse. A dance was held at the club Saturday night. ful. But none can deny its right to a place among great finishes. was one of the most sensatior triumphs of a sens One often hears b an inanimate sort of gar it except knocking pin: ting them up chance for headwork. If any one is warbling that tune to- day 1t was too bad he was not among the 2200 who watched Tony Santini add more proof that bowling packs a color, n. No one NLY last month Carroll Daly won The Star Tournament with a last- |~ One of the members who went to box spare and a 9-pin count. He | Beaver Dam early yesterday to play golf won with a vyelling, nerve-wracking |and found the club house burned to the crowd surrounding him. ground, bewailed the fact that Saturday A little over a year ago Jack Whalen | afternoon he had purchased a new golf won the United States Sweepstakes bag and had replaced his old bag with for the | sadly aro the ruins of their club house contemplating their losses. The board of governors is to meet to- | day to consider plans for immediate re- | construction. Fortunately the club rec- | ords were kept in duplicate, and al- though those records in the club house were destroyed, duplicate copies are ia | the office of the president. Tentative plans for the new club| house, according to Brashears, call for more porch ce, a building of two in- stead of three stories and more locker room space. The Beaver Dam Country Club is one of two golf clubs about Are on Program. By the Assoclated Press. EW YORK, January 25.—The boxing industry starts out an active week tonight by trying to fill the vacant middleweight throne, puts on a featherweight cham- pionship match on Wednesday and a welterweight title duel on Thursday, and then winds up by pairing two young heavyweights, King Levinsky and Max Baer, ‘Washington which has 27 holes. The main course is the longest and one of | the hardest golf layouts about the Capi- | tal, | IOMETHING by way of a new 1‘9(:-y ord for ing was set yesterday cn tl nine of the Indian course layed Spring in one-putt gr 36 for the 10 putts, with 8 consecutive He had a card of | which is exactly par, | although on few of the holes was he |on the green in par figures. Starting | at the tenth Moore had 2 putts, and | on the rest of the greens he had only |1 putt cach, winding up the nine by clouting two good wooden club shots to within 15 yards of the eighteenth | Since Mickey Walker elected to cast his lot among the heavyweights, the middleweight championship has 'been without an owner. Tonight at Milwau- kee, however, Gorilla Jones, Akron, ©Ohio, negro, and Oddone Piazza of Italy | will box 10 rounds, the winner to be recognized by the National Boxing Asso- ciation as 160-pound ruler of the world Bat Battalino of Hartford, Conn., still recognized by the N. B. A. as feather- weight champion, meets Freddy Miller of Cincinnati in a bout billed as for the title at Cincinnati Wednesday night. Battalino, stripped of his crown by the New York State Athletic Commission recently when he failed to make the class limit for a scheduled title defense against Lew Feldman, gave Miller a thorough trouncing when they first met several months ago. ‘The Chicago Stadium will play host M SORRY, BUT ALLI CAN AFFOPD TO PAY YOU 1S ONE SEVENTY FINE AN HOUR. OF COURSE WE'LLTHROW | | \ green and holing the putt for a 4 after | on Thursday night to the welterweight a good chip shot. His longest DUtt| championship mateh with Tou: Brotils | came on the par 3 seventeenth hole, |lard of Worcester, Mass., seeking to turn | where he rolled in a curving 25-footer | pack the challenge of Jackie Fields of | for @ 3. He birdied the thirteenth hole | Los Angeles, former holder of the title. tsogtetnb:\r:< w‘-hnapx?; ?n“glrse:tlc'f: ;?:'25 Levinsky and Baer will square off | al he tenth, 2 yed | agains 5 y |8 e e ar - Arbore heq | against one another Priday night in the |a reputation around Washington as the possessor of a fine short game. Not a long hitter from the tee, he still | is able to score with much longer hit- | ters because of his ability to chip and | putt. The annual meeting of the Middle Atlantic Professional Golfers’ Associa- |'tion will probably be held early in March, according to J. Monro Hunter of Indian Spring. president of the or- ganization, Ralph Beach of Baltimore is slated o succeed Hunter as presi- | dent of the Midatlantic pros Garden's weekly show, APPEL PUSHES REES Ingram Aces Average 110 in East Washington Sunday School League—Hughes Trails. EXCELS OLYMPIC SKi title on & pin wiggle. Bradley Mandley needed & spare to win and it appeared as though he was “in” when he cracked | a bread-basket break perfectly. But one of the maples only wiggled. Whalen won by three pins and Mandley lost | $600 in cash and the title. Let's go _back to 1928 for another JUMPERS IN CONTEST in the National Duckpin Bowling Con- | Fredheim, Minneapolis, Outleaps gress Tournament. A Best Distance of U. S. Team Jack Whalen just finished roll- | ing & sensationel 430 score in the sin- Member by Two Feet. gles. It looked as though Whalen had the United States singles crown locked |FAST FEATHER CLASH Rees and Appel, the two pinmen to whom much of the credit for Ingram No, I's first-place climb in the East Washington Church League s due, are waging a furious battle for individual average leadership. Rees has 110-25 | and his teammate 110-7. Hughes of Ninth No. 1 is third with | 109-36 Despite the much higher team aver- age of Ingram No. 1, the Douglas No. ON ALEXANDRIA CARD Antonelli and Cosden Matched for One of Four Eight-Round Bouts Tomorrow. feature 10-rounder of Madison Square | @ 1932 Ny TR BUNE, INC. S LONDOS WRESTLES | FORMIDABLE YOUTH 115,000 Expected to See Stein Try| for Title Tonight With ‘ | | | | Pointers on Golf Dewey Longworth, a California professional, who knows his golf from A to Z. explains why the hands are ahead of the clubhead when you play a pitch shot and why such a FREEMAN MENACES PNETZHTSBULDIP BY SHERMAN McNALLY, Associated Press Sports Writer. KLAHOMA CITY, Okla, January 25.—Out where the West begins John Leonard (Pepper) Martin of the St. Louis Cardinals, tramp- ing the game flelds with his dogs and gun, wonders if they will love him in April as they did in Oc- tober. Impatient now for the training barrier to lift is the gallant figure of the hawk-faced, black-haired kid with the rolling walk of a | cowpuncher and the tang of the Southwest in his speech. His 1932 {contract, calling for an increase, }is signed. In Pepper’s athletic life there have been only three real loves—base ball, foot ball and hunting. He'd rather tote a gun than a base ball bat. But it was the power of his bat that earned him the leisure to hunt this year, as he never has been free to before. Puts Affairs in Order. After collecting $15,000 for post-sea- son activities, including a stretch of vaudeville, Pepper put his affairs in or- der. He pald off the mortgage on his mother’s home, bought a house for his wife and youngster, hired a secretary to take care of hundreds and hundreds of fan letters, and then took to the woods. He went after deer in the Southwest, then quail and ducks closer to home. In his armory are guns of all kinds. But only two bird dogs, Jack and Joe, hold his affections as hunting com- pani When the Spring rolls around, the colorful kid will put away the firearms and step out to answer those who won- | der if his world serfes uprising was just | a flash in the pan. His base ball career never has been easy. He had to reverse Horace Greeley's adage and come East from Temple, to Crystal Spring, Miss., to get a start in the “Tomato” League. He was miscast in a half-dozen positions until he hit his first major league post, after hoboing his way to the Cards’ ‘truminz camp. His salary was $4,500 |a year when he turned a $1,000,000 world series inside out. | Speed Is Inherited. | Pepper’s ball playing ability—and the experts will bet you that he becomes | one of the great players of the game— just happened to him, but his speed on | the bases he can definitely trace. | His father, Gecrge Washington "Mm’twm. won the family's first home in 1a up. But Howard Campbell, then at his peak, made a gallant attempt. In his last box he needed a spare and a. fou pin count to tie 1e made his spare position does not cause the golfer to slice. Longworth can pitch with the best of them. And when he ad- dresses his ball for this shot you will see him press his hands slightly for- ward so that they are ahead of the bhead. This, of course, does ot |a foot'race, starting from scratch at the crack of the gun, for a mile dash acrogs the prairies to stake hs claim to several choice acres during one of Oklahoma’s land grants. His mother wanted him to be a law- yer or a doctor, Oklahoma City tried to make a shortstop of him, Greenville 2 team is only a game behind. TEAM STANDING. By the Associated Press. Nick Antonelli, Italian featherweight CANTON, S. Dak, January 25—A |boxer of the Mohawk Club, and Kid and on the roll-off cut out three sticks, | NeW local ski-jumping mark of 192 feet | Cosden, Cordova, Md,, battler, are ex- One, however, flew back, knocked over | was held today by Svere Fredheim of | pected to offer one of the best bouts on another, and’enabled Campbell to tie | the Norwegian-American Ski Club of |the fistic card tomorrow night at Port- Whaten, Minneapolis. | ner's Arena, in Alexandria. The match Flying Tackle. |Behemoth Being Groomed for Londos Faces His First Formidable Foe. TP, | T | 21| NEW YORK, January 25—If, say two years ago, some one had told 2| Sammy Stein that the first month of 1 i |c Ninth | Centennfal No. Ninth No. 2 FEloNETA Ja it won 1ha. opll of He made the leap at the annual tour- | AMPBELL also figured in another | nament of the Sioux Valley Club here | of the game's most dramatic fin- |Yesterday in competition with members | ishes. This was ih Baltimore in ' of the United States Olympic team and | 1927. Tt was the first N. D. B, C. tour- Others. The old mark was 183 feet. It | nament. Campbell won two national | Was broken seven times yesterday. | titles with a single ball |~ Roy Mikkelson, Chicago, of the Olym- Campbell, captain and anchor of the | pic team, jumped 190 feet, while Pedar | King Pin team, saw his four teammates | Falstad, Sioux Valley, also a_member | fail to get the mark they needed for Of the team, made 186 feet. Fredheim the team title. Rolling on a spare him- | s not on the team | self, Campbell came up for the last box | Caspar Ofmoen, Sioux Valley, nation- and felled nine pins with his first ball, | 2] champion and captain of the Olympic A single stick, meaning the United | Ski quartet selected here last week to States team championship and the | Compete in the Winter games at Lake United States all-events title (al- | Placid, N. ¥, next month, made one | though Howard wasn't aware the lat- | jump of 148 feet. Due to an injury ter crown was at stake) stood or fell |suffered last week, he did not exeri with that pin. The pin fell from a |himself | smack square on the nose In addition to Oimoen, the Olympic Glenn Wolstenholme, 1927 Campbell | members are Mikkelson, Falstad and‘\ Sweepstakes champion, furnished a | Leomoine Batson, Sioux Valley. The thriller in scoring his triumph. Glenn | alternates are John D. Steele, Estes | trailed the leaders during the first two | Perk, Colo, and Carl Holmstrom, jr., sets and then in the final game of the Iona Island, N. Y. final block, threw in one of those double-header strikes for which he was so famous. The double-header ac counted for 28 extra sticks and his| margin of victory was 25 pins. | Wilma Waite, Frank Walsh Un- HERE were many other equally 2 i G iFilling " nuiesis BG ir w1010 |0k EhAsTEE sEn CLUVDoHBIONT Mrs. George Isemann won the At-| PHOENIX, Ariz, January 25 (/) lantic Coast Bowling Association sin-| Frank Walsh, Chicago golf professional, | gles with 260, while Mrs. Louis Vogels- | and Miss Wilma Waite of Phoenix were | berger and Miss Anna Eckhardt fin-|injured slightly when the motor car in ished with 268 and 267, respectively. | which they were riding jumped an irri- Last year Ollie Webb won the Mary- | gation ditch last night. land-Virginia Suburban Swecpstakes | ° The machine was driven by Craig with & finish similar to Santini's. Webb | wood, professional golfer, of Deal, N. J. | nosed out Astor Clarke by a single pin. | He and Walsh had participated in the While lacking, or rather losing, the Arizona open golf tournament here. The dramatic angle because of the 1ongev- | gecident occurred as Wood was at- ity, a record probably unparalleled for | tempting to pass another car. closeness was made last year in the 4 A. G. O, Women’s League when Grace | Purdy was nosed out by Maude Landis | for high average, 94-9 to 94-8. Each| had rolled 81 games CROSS, BOWLING 779, OLD-TIMERS’ WINNER GIRL GOLF PRO HURT —| | | T the regular monthly meeting ot the Washington Chapter of the Izaak Walton League of America A at the Raleigh Hotel Wednes- Hyattsville Man Rallies to Get Top day, Joe Fletcher, well known A boatman and angler, spoke on the illegal Place in Event for Bowlers | catching of black bass in the Potomac, 50 or More. ‘amund and above Chain Bridge. Fletch- " er sald this practice usually begins about the middle of March. Dr. Magee, president of the chapter, placed the matter in the hands of the Bass Protection Committee, which im- mediately took steps to have this terri- tory policed by District, Maryland and Virginia authorities. Harry Johnson, game warden of Arlington County, has en notified of the violation and prom- s to see that his side of the river i5 taken care of. Carroll Waters, Mary- land game warden at Gaithersburg, says he has been watching this place for the last couple of years and will do all in his power to put a stop to it The harbor precinct, acting under the orde: of Lieut. Harney, will kave a man stationed up there in citizens clothes Rod HYATTSVILLE, Md, January 25 Dick Cross of Hyattsville from behind in the second block to win an Old-timers’ Duckpin Sweepstakes on the Arcade alleys here. His total for the six games was came b with nd ¢ s of h 661, was third last three games y the leader 0 stood sec- in and Stream does not want to angler arrested if he is not with the fishing laws, and thinks each should be warned after the first violation, but if caught again penalized to the law’s full extent. Not local | have completed Hyattsville Juniors duckpli: match their home-and-home with Bill Haskins, Richmond, Va. juniors, winning by 204 pins. In the final three-game block rolled at Rich- mond, Hyattsville won by 96 pins, after it had gained a 188-stick advantage in the first block rolled here several weeks £20. #or the block at Richmond Hyatts- ville rolled 1,725, against 1,629 for Rich- mond, Bob Temple of Hyattsville hav- ing high game and high set of 375 and 143. Colleglates will meet Company F in a match in section 1 of the Prince Georges County Duckpin Association tonight on | the Arcade alleys here, and a sweep for | the Soldiers would put them in a first- lace tie with Collegiates. Rolling will gin at 8 o'clock. Collegiates have won #3 and lost 15 to head the race. many weeks ago an angler was arrested and fined $351 for taking bass in a sein in Pohick Creek, and last week, James W. Rogers, deputy game warden of Prince Georges County started a drive on people who sein black bass in Piscataway Creek. Three men were placed under arrest for illegal taking of bass in this creek. One pald a fine of 825 in Hyattsville Police Court last Thursday. Just a few more such cases and fines will put a stop to this practice. FEMXNINE disciples of Izaak Walton are increasing so rapidly that no longer can fishing be called a ‘man’s sport.” ‘This increase is found especially in regions where excellent roads, comfort- | able Summer camps and fishing re- sorts are available, and the use of the small motor boats that make the life of & fair angler an enjojable and easy | is one of four eight-round encountes | scheduled, | In his latest appearance hereabout | Antonelli licked Jimmy Tramberiax at Portner's six weeks ago. Another eight-rounder expected to produce lively punching is that slated between Charlie (Stumpy) Jacobs of Hopewell, Va., who will make his bow to fans in this section when he engages Bobby Burns of Baltimore. Jacobs has shown class in Southern lightweight | ranks Burns outpointed Tommy Ba- shara of Norfolk at Portner's a couple of weeks ago. The order of bouts has not yet been announced. Encounters listed, in addi- tion to_the Antonelli-Cosden” and the Jacobs-Burns frays, are the Tommy Ba- shara and Charley Gomer tilt, and the Billy Strickler and Bob Lawson argu- ment, both carded for eight rounds, and the four-round curtain raiser between Bing Brodie and Young Perry. The lat- ter sérap will begin at 8:30 o'clock. | Women with escorts will be admitted | to the bout without charge, | | CHILE WALSH KEEPS JOB St. Lo U. Signs Gridiron Cuach} for Three ST. LOUIS, J F. “Chile” Wal letic_director ar at St. Louis Uniy years, Earl Painter university's Atk | today after a cc lasting several ho The announcement followed nearly | two months’ deliberations, More Years. () —Charles will re i foot ball coach y for three more chairman of the ard, announced ROD AND STREAM BY PERRY MILLER. one. Add to this situation the fact | that modern fishing tackle now includes | many artificial Jurcs instead of wiggly angle worms and slippery nnows and | it 13 easy to see why women have gone | in for fishing. | Mindful of this feminine invasion of | what was once a man's sport, as well | as the increasing number of boys and girls who are taking up fishing, a situa- tion which is requiring heavier stock- ing of lakes and strcams, the Walton League has been building hatcherles | | and’ distributing game fish in scores of | communities during the last year. ON'T be fooled by that cry, “I saw the first robin” which will soon | be heard in m; directions. | According to the Conservation De- | | partment of the I. W. L, A, practically all of the robin redbreasts which are seen at this time of the year by eager- yed bird fans are t harbingers of Spring which have come out of the South. On the contr: e birds are hardy Winter resid 7 have re- fused to migrate Southward. Choosing | to take a chance on food supplies, the redbreasts find suitable Winter quar- | | ters, station where | |a | Winter. A locate a feed: TRIP last week by Dr. M. D'Arcy Magee, president of the Maryland- District of Columbia Council of | the I"W. L. A., to chapters in Mary- land, from Baitimore to Gumberland, with Walsh | ¢ Keller ....... Anacostia M. E. Epworth . alvary Bapiist 2 Douglas No anaes. 28606 28,580 26,582 27,690 27.676 26.718 24,326 United Brethren Ingram No. 2 14 Con. Heighis No. 2 14 Higic SEASON RECORDS. igh individual av — High individi a :_‘mr’nlrwfigre]a 158. High individual set—Bark 4 :“1‘5.15215 individual strikes—Bruton and A High Individual spares—M. i High team set—Douglas No. 1, 1,696, Individual Averas 110-35 &5, Rees ... Appel Stephenson R. King. Gady:2 st Motyka '§r. .. Motyka Jr 1. /. ‘Reid . Snellings CONGRESS HEIGHTS NO. 25 113 n as ath- I NINTH NO. Charles Hughes. 54 Mayhugh 54 Ro: 104-12 104-7 Meader ... English ... k Hall Dicl 2 C. V. Jeffries. .. i A. C. Jeftries Barker Brown Robey Miller Lawrensor Smallwood McFall a L5 3 willard Perryman Wertman Holmes 0. Franklin H, Frankli Wardell 82 7 49 61 19 23 ANACOSTIA M. 57 2 0 n W. Koontz. a 8¢ 81 Hamby 39 Payne . 1 EPWORTH. Hawley Rohrm. Hummer Clyde I Harstin Bush 35 Dougias 4 CALVARY BAPTIST. Collier 126 Deuterman Oliver L. Porter Sievenson W. Porter W, snellings w1 Bruton 107 T. Hafl E. Hall | disclosed the fact that all chapters are | 3 working to obtain at the next of the Maryland Legislature mZ“Ei&'? sage of the black bass bill With the District of Columbia, Vir- ginia and Pennsylvania closing their markets to the sale of black bass, the State of Maryland is the fly in the oint- ment. The meeting of the local chapter of |the T W. LA lnst Wednesdry cigh | was devoted chiefly to tr | officers for 1932. When the nomina- | tions were placed in order Wallace McK. | Stowell paid a glowing tribute to the EASTERN | A. Hughes . C. King ... Holtzelaw ... Parlaman . Franks | Leache, """ | L4 | Do ‘R Griest H. Boswor {61 | Kauffman ..... 20 | work and character of Dr. Magee, who | | was re-elected by acclamation. The other officers elected were Dr. | W. B. Holton of the American - | sity, vice president; Prank D, Blz‘sx:;:l treasurer, and Robert L. Pyle, secretary. 93-16 6| 8, alter the plane of his club's face back of the ball. As a result, when he swings through he is bound to hit the ball P 1932 would find him mecting Jim Lon- dos for the heavyweight wrestling | championship at Madison Square Gar- | den before some 15,000 persons, young | Sammy probebly would have recom-, mended solitary confinement for such a | prophet. Yet, unbelievable as it might have seemed at one time, this really is golng to happen this evening, for Stein will wrestle Londos for the title, and | from the general outlook, there will be | at least a near capacity house on hand | to watch him assail the champion with | his now famous flying tackles. | Stein is one of the most vigorous of | the modern matmen, and it is his youth, speed and stamina which forces re- | spect in his role as challenger this eve- | | ning. To say that Stein' can throw |Londos on straight wrestling alone | would be little short of ludicrous, but | | taking his tackle into consideration is | an entirely different matter. Because of his skill with the tackle there are | many keen judges of wrestling who be- | lieve he has more than an even chance of winning the title. ! LONGWORTH'S ADDRESS — HANDS SLIGHTLY AHEAD CF CLUBHEAD Sl e — V-a3-3a on the downswing and, as the face of the club is on a plane at right angles to the hole, a slice cannot re- sult. That s one way of assuring yourself that you will hit your pitch shots on the downswing. Season Records. High average-Spitzer, 103. High game—Topley, 136. High set—Goff, 351 High team game—Jr. O. U. A. M. No. 1, 564, High team set—Jr. O. U. A. M. No. 1, 1,632 LUTHERAN LEAGUE. KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS LEAGUE. L. Genoa ... 19 5 Marquette 6 2 { Champiain | Nina San Domingo.. Colum| Ovand Pinta s 13°35: 2 31 - 3 Cortez Balboa . Trinidad | | De Bato .. 8t. Marks..... 3 Incarnation | Takoma Blues.. Georgetown 32 19 | 8t. John's No. '3 30 21 St. ‘Paul’s 3 St. John's No. 128 20 Trinity ........28 23 Season Records. High team set—St. Marks. 1,889. High team gam . Marks, 816, High individual set—Davis (St. Paul); 422. High individual game—Davis (8t. Paul), ce Takoma 'Greys. 2 Columbia. . Season Reeords. High team game—Amity No High team set--Amity No. High individual game High individual set Greatest strtkes— W Greatest soares High average—Charles Gr 2, 603. 1,749, N. Grofl, Groff, 39 PLAYS SPLIT SEASON. SOUTH BEND, Ind., January 25 (). —A 140-game split-season schedule, N CLARENDON COMMERCIAL LEAGU s 5, has been adopted for the 1932 sea- N son by officials of the reorganized Cen- Flosd & Georie 28 20 Dean tral Base Ball League, meeting here. Cl. Clean, Dyers 23 19 Rucker L. Co. | Season Records. High avera; High game oyd & Geore, 502. oyd & George, 1.696. | opening April 27 and closing September | the gigantic Lec ‘Thursday night at the Wash- ington Auditorium, can toss considerable of a monKey-wrench into the neatly Polish tower. Pinetzki, undefeated in this country, is being groomed for big title shots and an undefeated record will prove a big {ald in luring patrons to watch the 5 foot 8 inch Greek, Londos, grapple the 6 foot 8 inch Pole. But Freeman stands |in the path and Herbie, while not the world's best wrestler, represents the best man Pinetzki has had to tackle since he was captured and brought to this country. Freeman, who weighs 230 pounds, will give away 56 pounds to Pinetzki, but it is not so much the weight as the height and reach that will hurt Herbie. Pinet- zki will tower over Preeman and his wingspread is 8 feet. Longest Match Is Short. Pinetzki’s longest match, against Paul Jones, lasted 17 minutes. The others have been terminated in from 2 to 5 minutes. But Freeman is ranked a better grappler than Jones and is cer- tain to give the glant a long match at | least. The Pinetzkl-Freeman match is one of the two finish matches on the card. In the other final, Sandor Szabo, the | town’s newest hero, will engage a new- comer, Scotty McDougal, Canadian. Scotty is said to be quite an ear- scrambler, numbering among his vic- tims Dick Daviscourt and Paul Jones. ‘The usual preliminaries will round |out the bill. Fred Grubmeyer, the string bean who made such a hit last week, will meet another newcomer in Sailor Jack Lewis. Doc Wilson will meet Norton E. Jackson and Sammy Stein, Jewish champion, will tackle Cy Williams. As usual, women with escorts will be admitted free to orchestra and balcony seats. Tickets are available at the | Hotel Annapolis. laid plans for Pinetzki by tossing the | a second baseman and Branch Rickey an outfielder. He wanted to be a ERBIE FREEMAN, 7oly-poly | pitcher. The Athletics wish he'd stayed Jewish matman who will oppose | 1% Oklahoma. Pinetzki LONE SOCCER GOAL WINS | Wells’ Early Shot Gives Marlbore Victory Over Concord. A clever shot by Wells in the earls minutes produced the goal that gave Marlboro booters a 1-0 victory over ths pace-setting Concord team yesterday on the Monument grounds in the feature |game of the Capital City Soccer League | eard. The Prince Georges County, Md., team today as a result is within four points of Concord. | In other league matches Rockville downed Brandywine, 3 to 1, and British ' United drubbed Fort Myer, 7 to 0. League Standing. by | | | g Concord Columbla, Marlboro tish U Rockville Helihts' Gai I Brandrwine ... | Fort Myer S mes won *count es count 1 point | Ralph, Melyin and Everett Flanagan, brothers, 14, 15 and 16 years old, domi- nate outdoor swimming in Florida. They live in Miam!. 1 ‘w}%i éam 1| LS. JULLEEN, Inc. 1443 P St. N.W orth 8076 L 2 2 2 3 2 H 8 7 aroommouwalt 5 aons bl ¢ 2""points and gar No matter how painful, ltch- ing or uncomfortable any case of piles may be, Pazo Olatment will give reliel the moment it is ap- plied-—or money back. Handy tube with bor e A draatun, O 75 o€ “You can fool some of the people all of the time and all of the people some of the time, but you cannot fool all of the people all of the time.”” Ballston Market 33 1 Bluege A. C. 0 Clarendon Arnold Oper. 2 2 Cla. Hardw. Season Records, average —Johnson, 102. ame Berg. 141 et , 357, C.2 Co. 8 & High s 14 High team g Arnold Operated No. 4 “"High team set—Ballston Market, 1,531, CLARENDON BUSINESS LEAGUE NO. 1. Yk w. Havens Tce Coal M 17 Cla | Marceys Bros... 3¢ 17 Qi r Service. 33 18 A, Season Records. High average—McIntyre, 112, High game—McShea, 156, High set—Mclr 4 Spares—Talhott. 101, in a John Ruskin. scare you. That's because th ©Our poliey = never fool anyone at any time. From the first to the last puff you get a delightful taste-.- found only in John Ruskins. choicest Havana Tobacco grown, and plenty of it, is used in John Ruskins. Next time you want to smoke, invest a nickel At first you might think it’s too big —but don’t let the size After you've smoked it a bit, you'll say, “John Ruskin (J Save the coupon bands. They're redeem- able for useful arti- cles. Ask your dealer for premium catalogue. Buy a few John Ruskins Strikes—McShe High team ga: ens Ice Coal. High team set—Havens Ice Coal. 1 CLARENDON FRATERNAL LEAGUE. w. L. w. L 3313 ChJO.UAM.2320 75 30 15 Fraternal Dec . 15 27 2418 1. 0.0. F. 19318 20 124 21 Cap. Tr. Relief. 16 20 Coal. 619. al. 1,800 Jr. OUAM. 1 Jr. OUAM. 2 Monarch Club Fraters ..... 13 3 16 14 24 6 24 121 UNITED BRETHREN. 51 14 117 56 18 5 9 Merrick 306 L. Baum .. Campbell Marggraf | Mitchell . Adams Karon Oliver { Rhind today. You'll thanl us for being so frank in telling you about them. can’t come too big — it's won- derful,”and wish it was bigger. John Ruskin Cigars are displayed by dealers who want you to get the most for your money. 1. Lewis Cigar Mfg. Co., Newark, N. J. Largest independent cigar factory in the world. Washington Tobacco Co. Distributors Washington, D.C. John Ruskin % 8¢ AMERICA'S GREATEST VALUE ~VERY MILD = —

Other pages from this issue: