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‘WITH SUNDAY MORN! @he Toen [ & ING EDITION ny Star. Radio and Classified WASHINGTON, D. C, THURSDAY, JANUARY 28, 1932. PAGE D-—1 Georgetown and Gallaudet Invade North : Chicago High School Boy Star of Stars Maple, Catcher, Bought by Griffs EACH FACES PAR OF TOUGH GAMES Hoyas to Play Caseys, Army. Blues Meet Temple Phar- macy, La Salle. ITH its first-string catcher, Roy Spencer, not_yet willing to ac- cept terms offered for 1932 the Washington base ball club has stepped out and purchased a young backstopper. The latest addition to the Na- als is Howard Maple, whose pur- ese from Bloomington of ~ the _eague was announced this morning by President Clark Griffith. rhe purchase price was not divulged. Maple, according to Griffith, is years old, stands 5 feet 10 and last season batted for He is a left-hand swinger. The recruit has not had much e: in the minors, but w commended to the Wash- y by Joe Dunn, manager gton and a veteran in minor league base ball. SEMI-PRO TOSSERS FACE STRONG FOES BY H. C. BYRD. EORGETOWN and Gallau- det this week end hit the trail North for basket 1 games. Both leave to- morrow, the former for a set-to with the Knights of Columbus five at Broc n, N. Y, and the latter to play Temple College of Pharmacy at F adelphia. Sat- urday night Georgetown plays Army at West Point and Gallaudet meets La Salle at Philadelphia Both schools probably will have their hands full. Georgetown to find the K. of C. five A Gallaudet trouble with face. Georget here last week played better tia previous cont N night, but ington and Ma is pretty s Vics Play New York Quint, Eagles Meet Passons in Sunday Games. as well as t likely to both the did not it Gallaudet probably fare so well EITHER of the District’s semi- pro basket ball quints is likely to be in a position to take life easy Sunday for Vic Sport ers and Skinker Eagles will be foes who figure, on the basis of past performances, to deliver trouncings to the home talent The Eagles, who were b} decisively AVY'S Saturday game is with Wil- liam and Mary. The Midshipmen been consistent T | { st Sunday, again will enter- tain these colorful youngsters in’a re- me at Bolling Field at 3 o'clock g a preliminary between two the Passon Brothers of Phil- | STUDY IARKS HIT - PUBLE HEH IS Central Loses Star Passer and Other Schools Have Talent Ousted. ILL BURKE, perhaps the best passer the Central High ad, will make his| arance in the public ket ball series tomorrow and White stacks up ional rival, Tech, on urt. learned yesterday, will zame for the remainder due to scholastic defi- 1. however, gained Jack | Forest Park, Md who was an all- imore as well as an before moving to on | last | high school when the Bl | against its trad the McKinle, Burke, it w be out of the of the seasor | ciencies. Cent | Mouiton, a f | High Schoo! high choice in | all-state Washingto! Western wi Bill McPhersor Leon Esentad ¢ rmer se Bernie Buscher and while Business will lose Bob Cooke, Milton Jacob- son and - Hohman. Neither East- | ern nor Tech has suffered. Central tomorrow will be out to | avenge an e to-15 defeat at the | hands of Tech, and in view of the im- | provement Columbia Heights tossers | | have shown lately, the Blue and White | | appears to have a good chance. | The other series game will bring to- | gether Eastern and Business. } \d Gonzaga, St. Albans d Eastern and the Na- | School were to oppose Business and Landc tional Tr today In schoolboy matches slated t orrow St. John's and p will meet at Garrett nzaga will go to Char- face the Charlottesville | siness and Gonzaga will clash to- | 8 o'clock on the Gonzaga court. | 1 and National Training_School | battle this afternoon at Eastern. | JUST A LITTLE INNOCENT FUN. are expe easy after ter basket agai Navy's possibly i at forw er members disparag of the Na cates the . ard, er s e will 1 May 6 in 1933 tion of the annual e is a pos- e schedule may ne d be made to shift Maryland is to tak: the d to Ge: Ice hockey ular sport in a a is proving Baltimore pop- Several re, Johns Hopkins a he University of Mary- 1 School make up the league. On the Ma ol team are several chaps who had a good deal of experience playing the game in Canada and New England and they are proving the best team in the d m y people regard ice hockey most exc g thing in the world in the way of sports, with the possible exceptic game played c Cuba and some of t and Central American cou: an KENDALL TEAMS INVADE. Kendall School sy terday, the girls 1 det Prepar the boys defeated the to 10 Summaries s yes- to the Gallau- 38 to 34, and Aloha Lites, ed their fourth e yesterday by sco iumph over Episcopal oval 3In TRAINING SCHOOL BOUTS Boxers Will Be Hosts to Christ | Child Team Tomorrow. National Training School and Christ Child boxers will clash tomorrow at 6:30 o'clock in the Training School gymnasium for the second time this season. ‘The National ringsters won the first encounter It will be the sixth match of the sca- son for the host battlers. They have lost only two. The line-up of the Training School will be as follows Harry Hicks, 80 pounds; Chris Albana, 85 pounds Johnny Pagano, 80 pounds; J. Malysko, 100 pounds: John White, 115 pounds; Floyd Collins, 117 Emil Bratu, 125 pounds: Carl Tschina. 150 pounds: Joe Sorentini, 140 pounds, and Gene | a| ment League teams, Census and Field Sport Shop, that was defeated the Broadway Theatricals a few weeks ago, will play host to the Co- lumbia Turners of New York, who re- cently downed the Broadway tossers. A preliminary featuring two more Government League outfits, Patent Of- fice and G. P. O. will augment the program starting at 2 o'clock at the Silver Spring Armory. ASHINGTON-LEE of Ballston, Va., could offer little competition to Sastern's strong outfit yesterday, and suffered a 48-to-13 licking Eastern used many substitutes after the regulars had piled up a 14-to-3 lead | at_half time. Line-ups: Eastern | Edi j¢ G.FPts 4 29; Alexandria Clements, .. Ball, g....... Via,'g... cossosomy Typewriter Grays, 21; Ross 203 onsumers, 34; Tremonts, 14. 40; Fort Meade, 33 Big_Five, 15; United Typewriter Bayiise Jewelers, B ® seex Zoia. & Totals 23 Totals ... 6 113 Holding Landon School to one ficld etown Prep scored & 40; Glen Echo, 10 esterday on the Gar- 88; St. Paul, 7 Y Flashes, 29; Congress Heights, 34 ware & Hudson, 53; Interior, 4 cs, 20; Boys Club, 16 Meridians, 25; Centennials, 38 Knights of Columbus, 45; Pan-Amer- ican, 14 , 29; Palace A. Z. A, 39; Marions, Kendall School, 22; Aloha Lites, > Molay, 24; Christ Church, 16. Club Celtics, 36; Atonement, 24. Scholastics, 40; Yellowjackets, 10 Company E, 33; Yellowjackets, 14. Dixiana, 21; Mount Rainier, 18. G. U. FOOT BALL LIST : CUT TO EIGHT GAMES | MEET ON SIX | Intercollegiates This Year to Be 10. Totals Georgetown Prep's Midgets scored | their fourth straight win yesterday, 17 |to 16, over Episcopal's Midgets on the latter’s court. 35 -LAP TRACK Five of Contests to Be Staged Here, | With Bucknell Being Met in Held in Larger Armory. NEW YORK, January 28 (#).—The Intercollegiate A. A. A. A. indoor track and field games March 5 will be con- tested on a new track, measuring six | 1aps to the mile | “After 10 years at the 102d Engineers’ | Armory, in Upper Manhattan, the meet | will be transferred to the 258th Field | Artillery Armory, in the Bronx. ‘The Bronx Armory will provide 6,000 floor seats and 3,500 balcony seats, as compared with 5000 seats in the 102d Armory. The et draws a capacity | crowd every year 'GOVERNMENT QUINTS RESUME TOMORROW Scheduled at Bolling Field—Census Team Leads League. Georgetown will play only eight foot ball games next Fall, five in Washing- ton and three on foreign gridirons | The list, as announced officially yes- terday by H. Gabriel Murphy, graduate | manager of athletics, shows three new- comers and the absence of five teams | that were met last year. Mount St. Mary’s, Canisius and West | virginia Wesleyan are the newcomers. | Duquense, Lebanon Valley, Boston Col- lege, Michigan State and Villanova, foes in the 1931 campaign, are missing from the 1932 card. The Hoyas' four major opponents are New York U., Western Maryland, West ginia and Bucknell, the latter com- | g here to help close the season on November 19. The card October 1, Mount St. Mary’s. October 8. Canisius College. October 15, New York University at | New York. | October 22, Western Maryland | October 28 (Friday night), Detroit | University at Detroit. November 5, West Virginia at Mor- gantown. November leyan November 19, Bucknell | Two Contests Are Government Bask Ball League games scheduled for yesterday and to- 12, Wi i Wes- % est Virginia scholastic examinations being taken by | many players in the circuit. ‘Tomorrow will see vestigation en- gage Interior and Bolling Field meet | Union Printers at Bolling Field, play | starting at 9 o'cloc unday after- noon Patent Office G. P. 0. will | mix at Silver Sprine Armory, with Censvs and Bolling Field engaging at 2 p.m. at Bolling Field. The standing: Varied Sports Basket Ball. Coast Guard Academy, 25. Hampden-Sidney, 19. Mercer, 25. ;19 22. Army, 3 Virginia, Georgia, Navy, Penn, 2 Case, 24: Kenyon, 18. St. John's (Brooklyn), 35; De Paul, Mount St. Mary's, 29: Gettysburg, Fort Hays State College, 35; College of Emporia, 16. Colorado ~ College, State, 23 University of Santa Clara, 25; versity of California, 15. Morehead _Teachers, College (W. Va.), 20 Pro Hockey. Philadelphia, 5: Boston, 1 Patent | Bolline 200 000 000 NAVY TOPPLES V. M. I. Bluefield | Rldin iAlwnys Leads in Basket Ball Game It Wins by 39 to 19. ANNAPOLIS, January 28. — Virginia Military Institute, trounced by Mary- Bronx Tigers.C - 3pringfield Indians, 2. | land Tuesday, was handed another set- | back yesterday when the Naval Acad- TRIBUTE TO WRIGLEY I AR | emy, always out in front, won, 39 to 19, Base Ball Heads to Hold Memorm} Summary Navy (JB) Service in Chicago Today. \Cmumdm 1 CHICAGO, January 28 (P).—Leaders | Randolph. - of organized base ball came to Chi-| Kankin. ... cago today to pay final tribute to Wil- | Kastels, liam Wrigley, ir, owner of the Cubs, | D€IEf; © who died at Phoenix, Ariz, Tuesday | Campbell, & morning. Memorial services, held_simultane- | ously with_the services at the Wrigley | home at Pasadena, Calif. were to be| conducted at the St. Chrysostom’s Epis- i 42; Western Uni- 47; < Smomsoomony onoosoow Totals 3 9 Total 7519 copal Church late in the day. Presi- LONDOS DRAWS THRONG. dents of both major leagues, John| CLEVELAND, January 28 ()—The Heydler of the National and Will Har- |largest crowd ever to watch an’ indoor ridge of the American, together with |sport event in Cleveland, 11,000 per- Commissioner Kenesaw M. Landis,<:§n5, l(gst_gl%\_t _sags.gxln Londos throw Cubs’ players, officials and friends were | Gino Garibaldi in with his usual expected, l&irpune spin and body slam | Former Violet Star Also Suc- “ ceeds His Father as night have been postponed because of | JUST A LITTLE (DEA OF MINE,JIM; LET EM BUILD \T-THEN GO T ONER.. R R \ OMOTE CANN IS APPOINTED | N.Y. . GRID COACH R. LEO PINETZKI, who has a reach from here over into Aunt Hattie’s apple orchard and back again to vour vest pocket, will do | something or another to Herb Freeman of New York tonight at Physical Director. [ Succeeds His Father. | For a decade, since he was the great- | est all-around athlete ever produced at | ‘1)’19 school, Cann has been associated | with the Violets in some capacity. His father, Frank H. Cann, has been therc for 37 years, the last 20 as physical director. He relinquishes the post now to_his son. | Under the university's new policy, it | will make no difference whether Cann | | succeeds in_turning out winning foot | ball teams, declared Prof. Philip Badger, | chairman of the Board of Athletic Con- | trol “We are confident he will make a fine | coach,” he said. “He knows foot ball from the ground up, has been an avid student of the game for a long time and he will get the best out of the available material. But it will make no difference | whether “his teams win. All we ask is that he give us his best, and, if he | should happen to produce some great | teams, that will be quite all right, t0o.” Job Likely Permanent. ‘The length of Cann's contract was | not announced, but Prof. Badger gave the impression that the job would be permanent. Cann has been head basket ball coach at N. Y. U, since 1923 and for two years before that was assistant to Ed Thorp. His varsity quintets have won 80 games and lost only 50. He also was assistant foot ball mentor until 1925, when Meehan came to the school. In his three years as a student at N. Y. U, Cann starred in almost every | major sport, including foot ball, basket | ball and track. | » Washington Auditorium. EW YORK, January 28—New conjecture. But something is sure gridiron, has reached into the neighborhood of 300 pounds barges |its avowed intention of de-emphasizing There will be no running out of the | appointed head foot ball coach and | push reaches out for his man the added title of assistant professor on|get that Herbie if he has to reach into (Chick) Meehan, who resigned six weeks | When this new wrestling tonsa- | more than that for, they tell me, ings from their hats, bellows his likely to find not only a wrestler be- half dozen customers and the man By the Associated Press. 4 =i Just what is going to happen to York University, in recent Herbie is more or less a matter of years one of the titans of the to take place because it usually does V] ! ranks of its alumni for & new head, mimborhons ot 308 gy are coach of foot ball as the first step in | around a little 24-foot ring in quest of & puny 200-pounder. thegEall snony : ring for little Herbie. From what I Howard G. (Jake) Cann, '20, Was| gather, when this pazzazo of pinch and i e Northwestern Mounted hides its collec- physical director yesterday, with thel o ®ho g sy shame, Litile Leo will the university faculty. | the box office, at the other end of the He succeeds the dynamic John P.| hall ago. tion eventually nabs his victim the | half of the match is over. Maybe Mr. Pinetzki intakes & breath which lifts the cash customers’ lin- chest to blow out the lights, and when the act is completed you are neath the ponderous form of Pine- tzki, but, maybe, the referee, & who runs the store down at the cor- ner. But just what the folks who sell you wrestling are trying to do with Leo is something else again. There is no doubt but what he could become the cham- As conference opponents agree, Dave McMillan, who came from far-off Idaho to teach the Minne- sota Gophers basket ball, has some mighty smart tricks up his sleeve. | REVIVE GRID. CLASSIC - [Notre Dame and Purdue to Resume | Big Game Next Year. | SOUTH BEND, Ind, January 28 (®). | After a decade’s lapse, Notre Dame and | Purdue will meet on the foot ball field again. Contracts have been signed for a home-and-home series of two games between the two powerhouse teams of Indiana. The first game will be played at Notre Dame Stadium on November 11, 1933, with the 1934 game at Ross- Ade Stadium, Lafayette. The Irish and Boilermakers have not met in foot ball since 1923. In 13 games played, Notre Dame won 8, lost 3 and tied 2. Purdue won the Big Ten title in 1929 and tied for it last season. One such play from the floor fol- lows: Guard (4) has the ball and passes to his left forward (2) as the latter is swinging out in a circle from his corner. No. 2 no sooner takes the pass than he reiays the ball to center (1) inside the foul line. No. 1 turns to his left and returns the pass to 2 as the latter passes him. As 2 gets the ball, 1 pivots to his right and breaks for the basket while 2 dribbles a few strides. No. 2 now fakes a one-handed shot for the basket, but instead passes high to 1 so that 1 may ao- tually bat the ball into the basket. SOopysishls 18329, | DANCE To FOLLOW GAME. | Heurich-Logan basketers, who have |chown strongly, will meet the fast Jewish Community Center unlimited class five in an attractive game Febru- ary 20 on the Tech High court. The tilt, starting at 8 pm., will be followed dancing. 5 , by, v Pinetzki’s Talons Unescapable pion of the floundering herd, merely | Little Room for Other Grapplers With Him in Ring. BY TOM DOERER having only to lie upon the canvas and kick his feet. There would not be room enough in that ring for Jim Londos' Japanese knockout hold to go into its back stroke. ‘Whether the wrestling customers would want to take the tall tower of Poland as a steady diet is doubt- ful. Al of those freak men of sports are good to satisfy curiosity, material to astound the boys back on the farm, and to gaze upon that full credit can again be lavished upon the real champions. Yet here's an old straw hat against to toss Jimmy Londos ing with or without a halter. 5 Londos is a pygmy. when leaning | against Little Leos shins. But Jeems would not do much leaning against the | Pole’s shins. Rather, he would scurry | hinter ‘and yon beneath this wrestling colossus. the latter rid- | doubt would not go yon before he got | one of those Japanese Lolds on Leo. | In no time at all James should be sit- ting on the man mountain's chest carv- ing his initials and inditing a warning to all supermen to come after | ,,4 | Just so much beef and size is needed in sports, even in wrestling, where the boys talk only in tonnage and whisper |in carload lots. Over a certain bulk, |a big man not only is being annoyed |by the skirmishing about of a lighter | rival, but he has fo hoist and tow his | overweight, causing him, after all, to | have to meet two men. | But Pinetzki will cause a furore for |a ‘while. Plenty of customers will be | willing to spend their frogskins to learn what happens to a little knuckle-twist- |er,” who finds himself in the wrong direction on a one-way street. Pinetzki, champion, but the progress and the | can become 1 welfare of the curled-ear industry | | of course, will suffer slightly. The boys in the bleachers still want their champs to pack most of their weight between the ears, north of the chin and south of the bald spot. THREE IN CUE TIE Kieckhefer Joins Pace-Setters by Beating Hall at Three Rails. CHICAGO, January 28 (®).—Two veteran players and the present cham- pion share the lead today in the world championship three-cushion billlard tournament. Thirty-six of the sixty-six games have been completed and Augie Kieckhefer of Chicago and Otto Reiselt of PLila- | delphia, former title holders, and Art | Thurnblad of Chicago, present king, set | the pace with four games won and one lost. Kieckhefer marched into a tie by de- feating Allen Hall of Chicago last night in another of his dazzling exhibitions of three-cushions, 50 to 39. MYSTERY IS SOLVED. MOUNT RAINIER, January 28— Hyattsville Question Marks, which caused Mount Rainier A. C. tossers so much perplexity prior to their appear- ance last night on the high school court here, are no longer a mystery. Follow- ing attempts to keep their identity un- known until game time, having hung up after booking their game by phone, Question Marks were trimmed, 41 to 19. } PLAY AT MOUNT RAINIER. MOUNT RAINIER, January 28.— Mount Rainier High School's basket ball teams, boys and girls, will engage the Damascus, Montgomery County, combi- nations _tomorrow afternoon on the Mount Rainier court. The girls game will be played first, starting at 2:30 o'clock. e —By TOM DOERER EARNS 14 LETTERS, HSINALLSTUDES |Haarlow Shines at Basket Ball, Fencing, Base Ball, Golf at Bowen. IN AND KNOCK BY PAUL MICKELSON, Associated Press Sports Writer. HICAGO, January 28.—An ideal athlete? Look no longer, Watson! Bill Haarlow, Chicago's star of stars in the high school athletic world, should fill the big assignment. | When Bill ended his athletic ‘carcer at Bowen High School this ;weck by scoring a staggering total |of 51 basket ball points all by | himself, he completed probably ‘the most versatile record in Chi- |cago prep history—a record he will attempt to match in college. Basket ball has been Bill's chief claim to fame, although he has soared to the heights in base ball, golf and fencing, while hanging up a scholastic record of straight A's throughout high school, winning 14 major letters and taking charge of almost all of his class’ ac- tivities. Coaches insist he would star at foot ball and track with equal ability, only he was forced to give those two sports up because of high school rules, which 1 athletic activities ist of Achievements. are some of Bill's athletic ts, which have made h one of the most sought after prep ath- letes in the Nation Basket ball—Although kept on the sidelines most of the time, Bill aver- Here achieve And Mr. | aged 1834 points for 34 games in 1 his first yvear; 19'; points for 39 games in 1930-31 and 23% points for 13 games this season. He was captain of the team twice and unanimous all- city prep cage captain two years in & Tow, Base ball—Captain, star pitcher and star first baseman for the team. He tched a no-hit, no-run game last sea- son, played almost errorzess ball at first and hammered out 16 home runs for good measure Golf—He captained the hi golf tea strokes | cago’s hardest layouts. CONGER AND SICKLE DISHAL FAILURES 1,000-Yard Champ Twelfth| in Newark Race—Sprint Ace Thrice Trails. By the Associated Press. EWARK, N. J, January 28— The first Western invasion of the 1932 indoor track season | in the East has resulted in & dismal failure for shortage of practice on the boards Ray Conger, the national 1,000-yard champion who has been kept busy with his teaching duties at Carleton College |in Minnesota, was able to finish no | better than twelfth last night ina 1,000- | yard handicap race won by Frank Nordell, New York University sopho- After he had flitted hinter he no|more who also started from scratch.| | Ralph Sickle, Kansas University sprint ace, did no better in a series of dashes, | finishing fourth at 50 yards and fifth in [the 67 and 70 vard sprints. Nordell and Ira Singer ran off with most of the honors of the twelfth an- | nual Newark A. C. games. Nordell not |only Beat Conger but he gave away | handicaps up to 30 yards then ran | around his field without visible effort | and finished in 2:1725. It was fast time |for the slow, flat track of the Newark Armory. Singer Thrice Victor. Singer made a clean_sweep in the sprint series, although Bill Bruder of the Home Club gave him a real tussle and 73-5 for the 50, 60 and 70 yards. Bruder, second in two races and third at 60 yards, took second place in the | series, ‘with Bernard Krosney of N. Y. U._third. Eddie Roll of the Newark A. C. scored finishing well ahead of Milton Sandler former intercollegiate hurdle champion, won the 70-yard hurdle race, the other big event on the program, beating out Joe Healy, another New York Univer- sity runner, in a close finish. pionship which was decided along with the club meet, went to Lincoln High School of Jersey City, which scored 111, points. EX-DODGER HURLER DEAD Apoplexy Fatal to Appleton, Who Is Stricken Near Texas Home. FORT WORTH, Tex., January 28 () —While training a bird dog in a field near his home in Arlington, Tex., former Brooklyn pitcher, died from apoplexy. Appleton played base ball with the Forth Worth club in 1913-14 and later pitched for Dallas and Wichita Falls. He went to the Brooklyn Robins in 1916. Alexandria Notes ALEXANDRIA, Va, January 28— Standing off the Columbia Engine Co. cagers in a last-half rally, Quantico Marines took the locals into camp, 29 to 28, in a benefit game last night at Armory Hall. The game scheduled here last night between Alexandria High and the Na- tional Training School was canceled. James G. Burton, billiard expert, gave an exhibition here last night at Lyle's. Fraters Five will play the Fredericks- burg Collegians at Fredericksburg, Va., tonjght, L the two invaders, | your's that Mr. Pinetzki is not able |both of whom displayed & considerable | student, an ide in the 50-yard dash. He won the longer | sprints easily with times of 54-5, 63-5 | an easy triumph in the Newark 500, | of N. Y. U., Eddie Blake of Boston and | Max Wakely of New York. Sol Furth, | The National Interscholastic cham- | yesterday Edward Samuel Appleton, 40, | Fencing—He was rated as one of the best prep fencers of world, leading the Bowen team as captain twice. Natrual-Born Athlete. Young Haarlow, the son of a former | University of Minnesota foot ball star, Dr. A. W. Haarlow, in a model in physique, too. Only 18 years old, he is | well developed, carrying 172 pounds on a 6 foot 11, inch frame. He professes | no secret for athletic excellency. He is |a natural-born athlete. On the basket | ball floor he seldom shoots from a dis- tance, measuring his shots usually from around the free-throw line and feeding |his teammates with brilliant passes. |~ Scores of college alumni have sought ‘] s enrollment at their alma maters, but young Haarlow is leaving the selec- :p to his father “Fortunately, I've got enough money to send my son to the college I think best,” Dr. Haarlow said. “Right now the ch between Michigan, Chi- n and Northwestern. I've d athletes most of my life— I played against Jim Thorpe in foot ball—and I think Bill will be just as good ge as he was i high school unspoiled, an excellent al athlete.” "TOWSON SURPRISES HYATTSVILLE QUINT 17-34 Defeat Worst Suffered at § Hands of County Team in H | Two Campaigns. HYATTSVILLE, January 28.—Hyatts- ville High School's basket ball team fell | easy prey to the Towson (Md.) High quint yesterday at Towson, 17 to 34. The defeat, an upset, was the worst suf- | fered by Blue and Gold tossers at the | hands of a Maryland rival in two sea- | sons. | “Hyattsville furnished Towson stout | battling for the first half. Summary: Towson (34) GFPts Hyattsville (17) | Dav | G | Gore. | Klin'h'it | Wheel Price McLg i Mo | aooooommums? 1 1 6 4 [ 3 Jory (P. A. L. 1 r. Totals Referee— | Company F basketers will figure in | two games tonight in the Armory here. | The Regulars will meet Anacostia Eagles {of Washington in the main attraction | and the Reserves will engage Richard's Colonials in a preliminary, starting at 1 7:30 o'clock. Games for the Guard teams for Sun- day afternoon also have been booked. The Regulars will encounter Aztecs of Washington and the second-stringers will take on Maryland City tossers. Maryland A. C. basketers of Hyatts- ville are after games with 130-pound teams having courts. Call John Cain, | Greenwood 2214, More than a score of Prince Georges County Duckpin Association rollers Lave entered the Suburban Sweep- stakes, which get under way Saturday at the Bethesda alleys. The list in- cludes the best performers of the league, nearly every team in Section 1, the | major loop of the league being repre- sented. Here are the entrants: Dixie Pig—Hugh Waldrop, Horace Snowe den, Harry Wolfe, Perc Wolf and McCall. Collegiates—Oscar Hiser and Bob Temble. ‘ompany F—Boots Halloran, Bert Sheehy and Bill Bailey. Tom Belt Indian Creek—Harry Hilllard, and Wallace Burton. Bankers—Rich Reeley and Bill Bowle. Washington 8. S. Districi—George _ Ise- mann, Charles Joyce, Al Parsons and Beau- ont. Chillum—Dick Cross and Ray Ward | Washington S. 8. D. S.—Patch Holst and | Douglas George TROUSERS To Match Your Odd Coats EISEMAN'’S, 7th & F, TR FEp p—"