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« SPORTS. o THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., MONDAY, M 1922 SPORTS. ARCH 14, College Coaches Pointing Grid Squads : Blue Ribbons Picked to Win Pin Title SPRNG FOOT BALL B BUSINESS HERE Five of : 8ix Schools Hold Thorough Drills—Bright Outiook at C. U. Y M. C. BYRD. T'S more.or less a far cry to next Fall, depending on the point of 'view, but local college dthleti¢’ directors and foot ball coaches are looking ahead that far in taking Stock of the material they should have available for 1932 gridirop teams. As a matter of fact, aboyt, the biggest part of Spring athleties for the next three weeks, until after the opening of Spring schedules, is foot ball prac- tice. So far there has been little opportu- nity for the Spring gridiron squads to show their mettle. Just at the time| when it seemed they might get down to business in balmy Spring weather along comes the first real Winter, and back they go indoors to hang up uniforms | until ice and snow get ofl the ground. This week, some today, the squads expect to resume workouts. And so seri- ously do some-of the colleges get down to Spring practice that foot ball is tak- ing its place as a Spring sport in every- thing but a schedule. . Bergman Likes Prospect. Notwithstanding the lack of practice | 0 far, at least one coach, Dutch Berg- man of Catholic University, has seen enough of his men to express optimism for next Fall, it was said at the end of last season, so good was the record of Bergman's team, that C. U, would have a hard time holding the standard it set, but Bergman does not look at it that way. It is his feeling that, despite a more difficult schedule, he should have an eleven next Fall at least the equal of the 1931. “Really, I feel rather optimistic about next Falls schedule,” said Bergman. “We lose two or three good men, but we get some from -the freshman squad to take their places, and one or two sec- ond-string players on the 1931 varsity may show a-lot of improvement. We ought to be able to replace our losses fairly well,-and I know that a good of the varsity men due back should be a good deal more valuable.” Other coaches are not saying much about their squads. Most of them are more or less unlike Bergman, who says Jjust about what he thinks about his squad, be or bad. Bergman never tries make a secret of his thoughts al his prospects and there really is no why any coach should. 3 | Mach for Five Squads. 1 Five of L{:lx local colleges that support - foot 11 are to put their squads through a real course of sprouts between now and the first of ~May. Georgetown has done more work than any of the others so far, as it got out 10 days before the weather turned cold However, its workouts have been held up so that nearly all start. from scratch. Most of the squads are due Yo practice until around May 1, although it is un- likely that any continpe during the Easter l?:lldjys ' Washiligon, three colleges main- ite athletics in the is, and their whole varsity squads, 11 the men they should have available 4n the Fall, may take part. Practically all men, and many others of the varsity it "pming. sk, and. scvesal ot Tegular Spring se o those at Georgetowh are out either for. base ball or track. Gem'gebo:n J;gd Catholic !z;d;mlty carry on about the same type Spring . Hoth drill their men long and Maryland Needs Material. George Washington last year did not have very lopg nor very heavy workouts, but American University went through quite a thorough season. Maryland will pay special Jattention to its freshman squad, as itsimembers must fill big gaps left by the graduation' of 9§ of'the 11 ety A pass TURF. MEET PRETENTIOUS Entries Close Tomorrow for Big Races at Arlington Park. OCHICAGO, March 14 () —Entries| for Arlington Park’s rich racing stakes will close tomorrow, Otto W. , president of the Arlington Park Jockey Club, warned owners today. The list will be headed by the $70,000 classic, world’s richest 3-year-old race of the season, and will inelude the Stars and Stripes, Gold Cup and Arlington Handicap, for 3-year-olds and up, and the Oaks and Matron Handicaps, for fillies and mares, respectively. Columbia Heights One "Up in Cup Tie After Beating British. Columbia Heights booters today are one up in . » Washington and South- eastern District.Soccer Assoclation Cup | tie. They won the tourney opener yes- | terday, when il zed out a 3-2 victory over, British Unitéeds on the Monument G¥ounds. Ed Koennd scored the winning goal directly from.a.corner kick in the last five minutes. It was the first goal of FOUND I'D Been CARRNING AROUND #$2.85 INMY PoekE™ AND | PEALLY DON'T NEED MORE THAN 85 CENTS FOR LUNCH AND CARFARE., [VE"BEEN FEELING VERY GUILTY ABOUT HOARDING THIS WAY SO | WANT TO DEPOSIT $2°° L0SES 0 GANTS CAUS CUB FLURRY Hornsby Ffeady to Shake Up Club—Wallop by Wilson Helps Dodgers Win. By this Associated Press. OS ANGELES, March 14—Two beatings by the New York Giants over the week end promised to be one reason for drastic shake- | ups in the Chicago Cub line-up. Although they are only exhibition games, both clubs are taking the series | seriously, and Rogers Hornsby already is Jooking about for more batting punch. | The battering Burleigh Grimes received | yesterday also was a big disappoint- | ment, especially following the Giants’ treatment of Charlie Root and Pat Malone Saturday. Stripp and Cuccinello to the Brooklyn | mDodsem apparently have faded to noth- | ) Hopes for a fair infleld crew jumped, | however, with the arrival in camp of . Joe Morrissey, shortstop from the American Associdtion, and his accept- ance of a salary 40 per cent above that | he received in the minors last year, | ‘The Reds tackled the Dodgers in the exhibition cm”mrdfly, losing 3 to 5, chlenihm & wallop by Hack Wilson, making his first appearance in a Brook- lyn umiform. 'WATER, Fla, March 14—If Arthur Jones, young North Caro- linian, can keep up the good work he may simplify the problem facing Manager Max Carey of the Brooklyn Jones, & pitcher, turned in an im- pressive performance in yesterday's | game with the Cincinnati Reds. ST. PETERSBURG, Fla., March 14.— Manager Bill McKechnie of the Braves has learned his lesson. ‘There’ll be no Tookies in the line-up today when the Tribesmen. and the Cardinals meet. McAfee, Betts and Coleman have been chosen to do the hurling for the Boston team and Knothe will play second in place of Akers, laid up with a case of | charleyhorse. LOS ANGELES, March 14.—The 23- player limit has Manager John Mc- Graw_of the New York Giants per- turbed. “I am going to keep three catchers, nine pitchers, five outflelders and six infielders,” says John. “Some good men probably will get away no matter what happens.” i e LANDSLIDE HITS GRID. College of Puget Sound here found 2 part of its grid field missing recently. A landslide during a rainstorm swept out 50 feet of the floor of the horse- shoe Tacoma stadium, The liron is located on the side of a bluff over- looking Puget Sound. S Columbia and Princeton will meet in this kind tq jbe made hereabout this Beason. 5 Instant relief from Pazo Ointment is the guaranteed treatment for Piles —itching, blind, bleeding or protruding. Relief comes the moment Pazo is applied. Don't experiment while suffering continues. Your t money batk if Pazo fails. Handy tube with pile pipe, 75¢, or box, 60c. All druggists. PAZO foot ball October 8 in the first oficial game since 1905. Storti and McLaug For Job at Short With Browns By the Assoclated Press EST PALM BEACH, March 14—Jimmy Laughlin and Eia Storti are engaged in a ball duel at the St. Louls camp here as the training season advances. With each fighting his best for the posifion of shortstop, it appears a toss- up‘between themwo far. R Meanwhfle, it looks as though Jack Kloza, who was with Milwaukee last year, might give Ralph' Kress a tussle for the right field, should Kress even- tually decide to desert the-holdout ranks and join the Browns. Kloza is showing more than the Browns' omcfis expected. SAN ANTONIO, Tex., March 14— Bobby Poser, who joined the; Chicago White Sox from the University of Wis- consin, as a piteSer, probably will seek a place as an outfielder. » Poser, who played every position ex- cept behind the 'bat at Wiscensin, was used in left field during a practice con- test yesterday, and did well enough to catch Manager Lew Fonseca's eye. SAN FRANCISCO, Calif, March 14—Whitlow Wyatt, who was driven back to the minors temporarily last season by a sore arm, is a strong bid- der for the No. 1 pitching job with the Detroit Tigers this year. He held the Pacific’ Coast League Seals to one hit in five innipgs yes- terday morning. and the won, 4 to 1. Earl Whitehill dit look so good against the Missions in*the after- noon game, which tbe lost, 9 to 3. Fla,, Me- | ST. PETERSBURG, Fla., March 14— Pitching strength is what the New York Yankees need and perhaps it will You guessed it. Y The cigar isDutch ' -Masters—fresh and mild and fra- grant—the best-loved cigar in Amer- ica. Men and women, boys and Prizes will be given for the test Tumber of words made out of the let. ters in Dutch Masters. No word must contain & letter more times than appears in Dutch Masters. Use only sf no proper nhfiu‘“ our A3 W paper. * girls will all enjoy this interesting words ; under , the ‘one side of hlin Dueling be forthcoming from Walter Brown and Johnny Murphy. These two rookies held the Boston | Braves hitless over the last five innings of an exhibition game. Rookies also base | attended to most of the hitting. Frank Crosetti collécted two doubles and a triple and George Selkirk got a double, triple and single. S, La., March 14.—Al- | NEW ORLEAN: though, 20 Cleveland players got a chilly workout in yesterday's 5<to-5 tle with the New Orleans Pelicans, it was one of the Pels who got most of the interest of the Indians’ management. Steve Sundra, a sandlotter hurling for the Pels, but with a Cleveland string tied to him, allowed only two real hits and one of the scratch variety in three innings. It was his first profes- sional experience. SAVANNAH, Ga., March 14—Shano Collins, Red Sox manager, is making a sure-fire first baseman out of Johnny Reder of Fall River, Mass., who entered the training season with the pitchers. Since he has shifted him to first base he has become quite enthusiastic over the rookie’s chances for a regular berth. HORSELESS, TURF WINNER HAVANA, March 14 (#).—The lead- ing money winning owner of the Ori- ental Park racing season, which ended yesterday, was J. E. Smallman of Can- ada, whose ‘trainer, George Alexandra, came to Cuba with halters and cash, | but no horses. The Smallman thoroughbreds, claimed by- Alexandra, won $17,800. Alexandra claimed 19 horses during the season, but lost 17 of them when he ran them in_claimf Taces. . ‘Mrs. Denemark of Chicago was up in winnings, with s total Enter the Word Contest sponsored by The World’s Finest Ten Cent Cigar CONTEST RULES Mail your words with five Dutch Masters cigar bands, or reasonable facsimiles in colors, to Contest De- partment, Consolidated Cigar Corp., 730 Fifth Avenue, New York, the judges of the contest. E: ‘must be. irked before: April 14th, 1982, It two or more contestants are tied for a prize, the award will be made to the neatest entry. it nvelopes midnight, MEGAW AND PACINI |Gulli and Butler Stand Out| Among Girls in National | Tourney Next Week. BY FRANCIS E. STAN. ROF. GEORGE ISEMANN'S much-blown tin whistle will cough the signal for the gala opening of the ffth | National Duckpin Tournament a week from tomorrow down in Nor- folk, Va. Though the whistle's best twitters result in a volume audible from a distance of about 10 yards, the feeble tweet will be recorded here and in every other bowling-conscious hamlet by a general focusing of attention to- ward the seaport city. The Capital's colony, as per its four- year average, will send five defending national champs to Norfolk on “Wash- ington day,” April 2. About 250 other| ‘Washingtonians also will make the trip to watch the title holders return title | shorn—maybe. Past performances have sufficed to, give the title defenders, all eight of 'em, not a whole lot to be optimistic about, for the percentage of successful na- tional champlonship defenses is about as much the opposite of Jim Londos chances of winning & wrestling match as_anything could be. However, nobody else will have any- thing on the champs. Picking favorites | in the national tournament is like drawing four cards and hoping for a royal flush, But every bowling event must have its favorites. FOR the men’s team title, the Con- necticut Blue Ribbons should prove | s good a bet as any. The Ribbons were born 15 years or so too late.| ‘They should have met the old Wash- ington Royals. S In the men’s doubles, Red Megaw and Ollie Pacini look geod. All they've done this season is win the only two doubles sweepstakes of the campaign— Potomac and Atlantic Coast. If you liked the way Joe Priccl rolled ‘when he hung up that #79-score for three games, a couple of weeks ago. you could bet a lead nickel on him and hope for the best in the men’s singles. In the all-events for men, if you will string along with the season’s_outs standing achievements, Mr. Nick Tron- | sky of somewhere in Connecticut looks | good. All he's done is break two world 15-game records. His last score for 15 games was 2,003. 'HE women should be “easier” to pick. The King Pin girls looked | 80 good rolling that 621-game the other night that they should be favoré ities in the women's team bowling. | Lorraine Gulli and Billie Butler | (seriously) will go to the post favorites in | the women's doubles. They have broken | so many records together nobody keeps | track of the scores. Folks just wait | until the next time they bowl and de¥ | clare a new world record. And, just as seriously, Miss Gulli wil} be a favorite in the women's single§ and all-events. 'S 2 well known fact that & bowler, shooting in a sweepstakes, generally Tolls over his head but the showing | the duffers are making in Bill Wood's dub sweepstakes is rather unususl. | " Bill's stakes is open only to bowlery | with _league averages mot over 106 | which is a five-game average of 530. | Yet in the opening block last week |only 22 of the 74 contestants rolled| | under 530. dozen of these boast 106 averages. | Dubs? AUDY AND PEDEN LEAD ‘ , | Trailed by Grimm and Hill After | Six Hours of Bike Grind. PHILADELPHIA, March 14 (P).— Jules Audy, 18-year-old Montreal pedaler, and his teammate, William “Torchy” Peden of Vancouver, British Columbia, were holding first place at 7:30 am. today, the sixth hour of Philadelphia’s six-day bicycle race. Audy and Peden, with the team of | Norman Hill of San Jose, Calif, and Willie Grimm of Maplewood, N. J., had stolen five laps on the field since the. race started at 12:30 am. g The Bobby Walthour and Freddie Spencer team, t‘ro}n’x New Jersey, were contest—to find who can make the most words out of the letters in D-u-t-cch M- the words almost make themselves —Dram, Dream, Use, Utter, etc. Read the simple rules, get out your pencil, and enter the contest. First Prize . STRONG IN DOUBLES . And it is doubtful if ||, a-s-t-e-r-s. See how DUTCH MASTERS CIGARS lq;f:enh o Two for 25 cents ;;;VOIN‘I'..IIN‘I' 15 cents CONSOLIDATED CIGAR CORPORATION MAKES PRODIGIOUS LEAP Lymburne, With 269 Feet, Is Five Over World Ski Record. REVELSTOKE, B. C., March 14 (#). —Eclipsing the world official ski jump record by 5 feet, Bob Lymburne, Revel- stoke, Canada’s leading amateur jump- e« dlenped 269 feet in a meet here yes- erday. The world record is held by Sigmund | Ruud of Norway, with a jump of 264 feet. Last Wednesday Lymburne jumped z;rt kf'm for a new American cojnung:u roar) GODWIN TO CONCEDE WEIGHT TO LAWSON Will Enter Alexandria Ring for Bout Probably Six Pounds Lighter Than Foe. Eric Lawson will have a six-pound weight advantage on Bob Godwlnp:hen they go to the post tomorrow night at 5?::1‘3: ?r:gn gx Al;'xandfll in the -up of the Day Nursery's wi boxing ci:rd. oy Godwin stepped on the scales yester- day and tipped the beam at 162 p%unda. Lawson weighs approximately 168. A golden opportunity awaits blonde Eric. A victory over Godwin would establish him as the best light- heawvzcel\zm‘ in the South and bring recognition from promoters thr ‘hg‘i’n- oughout general opinion is that Eric's chances are bright against the Day- tona Beach flash. Many argue that Bobls terrific struggle against Reds Barry's welght last Tuesday has taken the snap out of his legs and his fists. Blly Schwartz is primed for his comeback attempt against Joe Finazzo mpth% se);]ni-;mnd-up reliminaries include Patsy Lewis (Baltimore) vs. Jack Qulgleyy(Wuh- ington); Marino Marini (Uniontcwn, Pz) Vs, George Esrick Baltimore); Bob Golsby ' (Camp Holabird) vs. Jesse Belt (Washington); Bob Portna (Bolling Field) vs. Harry Groves (Baltimore). BOWSER BOUNCERS - TAKE MAT TONIGHT |Two Finish Matches, Three | Prelims, Heat Promised at Bolling Field. | [ FFERING Paul Bowser's crowned champion,” Sherry, as the chief bait, QGoldie Ahern and his staff of | co-promoters tonight will present their | second wrestling show in the Bolling | Field hangar, starting at 8:30 o'clock. Women escorted will be admitted free. Sherry, who issues more challenges and gets less acceptances than any | other wrestler in the game (accordirg to Sherry) will appear in the main | bout against one Tony Bruceloo, an unknown here. It will be a two-hour- time-limit affair. Backing up the feature will be an- other two-hour limit match, the prin- Curley troupe, and Bool Martin, “crown quince” of the Bowser trust. Augmenting the two main matches will be the usual trio of preliminaries, to last 30 minutes or less. Joe Mon- tana, 1i'l brother of Bull, will oppose Tex Hamer, former college foot ball gl:yer. George Gemas, who gave up Xing as a bad trade, will turn to the mat against Mike Zangalavich. Dutch Green of the Mohawk A. C. here will | open the show with Tony Lasky. | Tonight's show, barring inclement weather, should afford a true line on the drawing power of the Bowser grap- plers. Last week's show undoubtedly was hurt by the exceptional cold. Better heating has been promised tonight for the benefit of those still thawing out from last week's cold-storage show. FLU ATTAGK PUTS * DEMPSEY 10 B ‘lnspired by Sentiment, Kept | Toledo Date Against \ Doctor’s Orders. By the Associated Press. OLEDO, Ohilo, March 14.—In the same city where he won the world heavyweight champion- ship, Jack Dempsey was suffer- ing today from influenza. | Leonard Sacks, the former cham- plon's manager, said, however, he be- | lieved Jack would be able to keep an “exmmmn engagement at Clarksburg, W. Va, Wednesday night. Dempsey's | barnstorming bout at Youngstown, ‘schedulzd for tonight, was canceled. A sentimental memory of the cham- plonship victory in Toledo, July 4, 1919, by & knockout over Jess Willard spurr | Dempsey to fight two opponents here Saturday night, although he was al- the | cipals being Billy Bartush, a former | ready suffering from a fever. local favorite while a member of the | | Jack Defies Doctor. | Mayor Addison Q. Thacher, former | fight promoter, said Dempsey went into | Saturday’s fights against a doctor's orders because “some of the folks who | saw him knock out Willard might want | to_see him again.” | ~ Despite the fever, the old tiger won | both of the fights. He floored Jack | O'Dowd of.Little Rock, Ark., four times | and then took a listless decision over | Tim Charles of Louisville, Ky. Both | bouts went two rounds. | Sacks attributed Dempsey’s illness to the uncertain hours and irregular meals of his barnstorming campaign, which | started last August 19. The former champion remained in his hotel room | yesterday, and had doctor’s orders to | stay in bed until sufficiently improved. THE HECHT CO. F Street at 7th Free Parking While You Shop Here vV 9 NAtional 5100 =134 Fits as though a tailor made it expressly for you That’s because there is a Worsted-tex Suit for every type of figure . . . and because Worsted-tex Suits are made by craftsmen who only know how to tailor fine clothes « . . the kind that fit you perfectly. Try on a Worsted-tex Suit and see if you can distinguish the exclusive Worsted-tex material from the fabrics used by the best custom tailors. The same suit formerly guaranteed nationally as America’s finest Two Seconds by Direct Elevators toithe Men’s Clothing Department—Second