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Part 5—4 Pages WASHINGTON, D. C, SPORTS SECTION The Sundiy Shap SUNDAY MORNING, APRIL 3, 1932. Bowling and Golf Griffs Eke Out Victory Over Lookouls : Baltimore Girl Breaks Duckpin Mark WEAVER BOX STAR OF 2701 VICTORY | ] Yields Only Two Hits in Six Innings—Friedrich Also Hurls Effectively. BY TOM DOERER. ELMA, Ala, Aprii 2—A steady piece of hurling on the part of the reformed professor, Monte Weaver, your Uncle Clark Griffith’s latest pitching pride, figured promi- nently in the Nationals’ victory in the opener of a three-game clash with Bert Niehaus’ Chatta- nooga Lookouts here this after- noon. The score was 2 to 1. Monte went after the Southern Asso- clation hitters from the tap of the g, and stayed under fire for six fimp. all but one of them smooth as a new car. He faltered to the extent of allowing a base on balls in the third, and then gave up a hit to Jim McLeod, the Lookouts’ shortstop, which account- ed for the farmhands’ lone tally. It was a well played ball game on both sides, the Lookouts’ opening hurl- er, Clyde Barfoot, skidding slightly in the third and fifth innings, but, never- theless, holding up strong enough to keep the new National attack from functioning in normal fashion. Two Hits in Six Innings. Monte turned over but two hits in six innings. Priedrich, the young | right-hand rook, gave up but one hit against him in his tenure upon the hill. ‘While the National attack was able to rap out eight hits off the combined defense of Barfoot and McCall, it failed to come through on several occa- sions when a runner needed a friend. Myer and Reynolds smacked out & of doubles for the only bits of itting brilliancy on the part of the Griffmen, but it was only Buddy's blow which meant a run. The opening run was scored by the Griffs in the third inning on an er- ratic play by Harley Boss, Chatta- nooga first baseman, who ran yards off the baz unnecessarily. ‘Weaver breezed through the first three rounds, permitting but one man to touch first base and that when Har- ley Boss caught one on the elbow. Other than that interruption in the opening, Monte was taking Bert Nie- faus’ mountaineers in order. When Bert's hitters caught the ball it went salling into left field, where Heinie Manush was under them. But the Lookout defense was backing up Clyde Barfoot’s hurling in neat fashion. Thompson, Chattanooga center- flelder, made a tumbling catch on Manush’s fly in the opening infing to prevent a scoring attack. A single by Bolton and an erratic play by Harley Boss on Myer's rap to- ward second ended in Bolton scoring cn Manush's single in the third. The first man to crack Monte's hit- less hurling came in the fourth when McLeod slapped a single to right. A base on balls to Thompson, issued pre- viously, resulted in the latter scoring to dent the ex-professor's smooth hurling. Myer and West Do It. Sir Walter's men showed power again in the fifth when Myer's double down | the first base line and West's long | single resulted in Buddy scoring, while Weaver's steady hurling. was_almost monotonous in its smoothness. Thomp- son registered a single against him in| the sixth when he beat out a scratch blow to Monte’s right. Bob Friedrich took over Monte's task | in the seventh and yielded only one | safety in the last three frames. Maple went behind the bat and Johnnie Kerr went out to third to replace Bluege. McCall took over the pitching burden for Chattanooga. Maple gave the customers a thrill when he nailed Bloxsom trying to steal u:fl-;d' following one of Priedrich’s two wi CUBS SELL LESTER BELL Vet Infielder With Pitcher Weleh Sent to Louisville. LOS ANGELES, April 2 (#).—The Chicago Cubs today sold Lester Bell veteran third baseman, to Louisville of the American Asscciation and sent Pitcher Johnny Welch to the same club on_option. Bell, who was a_member of the 1926 world champion St. Louis Cardinals, was purchased by the Cubs from the Boston Braves for the 1930 season. The sale of Bell indicates that Man- ager Rogers Hornsby is thoroughly sold on Young Stanley Hack WIN LATTING POLO CUP. PINEHURST, N. C., April 2 (®.— The Jack Latting Memorial Cup was won today by the White team of the Sandhill Polo Club, which defeated the Blue team of the same organization, 9 to 6. OPTIMIST FOUR WINS. start toward the national indoor open polo championship tonight by defeat- ing Yale, 10 to 7'z, in a remarkably fast game. TIGHT TWIRLING WASHINGTON. A P Myer,” 2b Manush. if West, cf.. . Cioain. 85 Reynolds, rf ahoe 3 o R onwand 4 » Friedrich, Totals CHATT. eoomomrmanmn » 2| menone ANOOGA. | comansoeti-ud %l covacn TR McCall,' p. Totals > Score by innings: | cossessssent u scoras wl cocccorsen-E e H .00101000 00010000 Runs batted in—Manush, West, Gill. Two- base hits—Myer, Reynolds. Sacrifice hit— Weaver. Stolen base—Thompson. Left on bases—Washington. Chattanooga, 4. Hit by piteher—By Weaver (Boss). Struck out— 4: by Friedrich, 1 . 1: off Priedrich, v & innings for 1 run: off -or 7 rups. Winning p.icher—Barfoot c.:4:n snd Arnette. and 45 minutes, s | ol sossossassst ol coccsscoscss™ On the Side Lines With the Sports Editor. LARK GRIFFITH, canny old codger that he is, sees in the added punch of the Nationals this year the chicf reason why they reasonably may be ex- pected to make a better show- ing than in 1931, despite a | pitching situation that leaves | considerable to be desired. It generally is agreed Walter | Johnson's troupe could make good use of another estab- lished boxman, in addition to a seasoned infielder to assist Johnny Kerr with the utility chores, but the need is less great than would be the case if the attack had not been bolstered. The boss man of the outfit | points out that while hurlers | of the caliber of Marberry, | Crowder and Brown are essen- tial for a contender, just as | Grove, Earnshaw and Walberg | are to the A’s, and Gomez, Ruf- | fing and Johnson to the Yanks, the chances of lesser lights for victory on the mound are in- creased in proportion to the batting ability of their mates. ||' BY DENMAN THOMPSON. ‘ | Hardest Hitting Local Team. HERE is no doubt that with | Carl Reynolds added to an | ensemble already boasting sticksmiths of the unques- tioned prowess of Myer, Man- ush, West and Cronin, and with such worthies as Bluege, Judge, Kuhel, Rice, Harris and Spencer also to be reckoned with, the Nationals possess the most potent punch of any out- {Xtt levex- to represent the Cap- al. With their flails functioning | at a normal gait it will not be | necessary for the team to be represented on the hill by a star in order that a gratifying percentage of victories be achieved. Such flingers as Carl Fischer, Monte Weaver and Bob Burke, although rated considerably below the top trio in effective- ness, frequently will be pitted against boxmen of no higher grade and it is then the prow- ess in batting of the men back- | ing them up will settle the issue. : Two Other Prime Factors. | HILE on the subject of | pitchers and their im- portance to a club Griff might have gone a bit further and mentioned the . part played by smart and speedy baserunning, coupled with the skill of the cast afield. Both are prime factors, for it is through speed on the paths that a maximum of results is attained from the bingles manufactured, and it is the ability of his supporters on defense that largely deter- mines the effectiveness of a pitcher. In both speed afoot on the lines and sheer fielding skill the Nationals have no superior in the American League, whether compared with rivals on the basis of its infield, its outfield, or as an aggregation. Everything considered Griff's view that his entry should prove a telling factor in the | pennant race seems fully justi- fied. Chicago (N.) | Thomas, PHILLIES BEAT A'S - AT SLUGEING GAME Win First of City Series on Four Homers by Hurst and Whitney. By the Associated Press. HILADELPHIA, April 2.— The Phillies and their old rivals, the American League champion Athletics, opened their annual Spring city series here today with a victory for the National Leaguers, 8 to 4. Ten thousand persons saw the local base ball season open, with heavy hit- ting upon the part of the Phils. Don Hurst, the heavy-muscled first- sacker of the Nationals, poled two home runs over the right-field wall, each time with a man on base, and Pinkey Whit- ney upheld his captain’s role with a pair of homers that sailed into the low- er left-field stand. Except for those long-distance shots, the Athletics outbatted the Phils, mak- ing 11 hits off Phil Collins and Ray Benge, to the 7 the Phillies got of Joe Bowman and “Sugar”, Cain. Score by innings— E Phillies ... R H s Athletics . ck Batteries—Thom ley, Price, Malay and At New Brooklyn Cleveland R 5 Batteries—Mungo, 'Quinn and Richi Lopez; Connally, Brown and Sewell At Memphis— New York (A .. Memphis (8. A Batteries—Ruffing, Beck, Kelly and Berger, Moss. At Mont 2 st Louts Ay . A Minneapolis (A7A Batteries—Gray, ot Sedaie L fnan “and " Youns, Bryant; Benton, Hensick and McMullen. » At Norfolk, Va.— R H. Boston (A) ... Newark (I. L. e kR ) 3 6 11 Batteries—Collings _and - Newkirk, Jenkins and K“LBQIIIE SyL Mo At Atlanta— 8t. Louis (N ...... Atlanta (8. A.) Batteries—Hallahan. Mancuso Williams. Joues s Whitney, Harper. Orleans. 3 ards, R. .6 e Ta e and Jorgens; H 13 R H E 7338 Dean "‘and_"Wilson, At Kansas City— e R S S T T S B e 1 | Batteries—Hogseit, ' Goidsteln ‘and Susc Hayworth; 9 Collins. m, Fette and Phillips, . At San Prancisco— New Yotk (N5 oo &Bfl.l’;"el:\tflufl (P.C. L.éh i Ties— Mooney, willoughby, Zinn, Salverson At Los Angeles— Bittsburgh (N, . R E v 10 13 1 5 °ahd Healey: and’ Penebsky. R HE He i Batteries—Brame. y ¥ Smith, Tinning: Malone and Tayior. "o* At Louisville— cincinnat (N.) vills (A, A.) eries—Johnson Berry, Marcum and S| At Richmond. Va.— R Baltimore (L N.T.) 1 Richmond (E) ....000 B Batteries—Richmond. Tauscher and Li K. Jones, Bohannon, McGee, Miller and U; At Greensboro, N. €. Williamsport (N ¥.-P.) Bat mmons Schrieber Veltman. At Fort Worth— Rochester (1. L.) Port Worth (T.L.) Batteries—Forem: RH E £ 6 1 Sie g il nd " Lombardi: a nd Barnest: and Suten. At Hot Springs— Montreal (L. Milwaukee (A A5l Batteries—Ciaset, Fi Hillin and Crouch. At Indisnapol Toronto 4I. L.) Indianapolis (A. A Batteries—8Smith 22 D32 30 3 sher and Head, Davis lis— Horne. Hall and Angley. At Fort Lauderdale, Fla.— Buffalo_ (1. L.) . | Coast “Guard Batteries—Brewer, Daniroth and’ Widener, Hathaway and Michot. KINGDON AGAIN LOOKOUT. ST. LOUIS, April 2 (#).—The St. Louis Browns today returned Infielder Weston Kingdon to the Chattanooga club of the Southern Association, from which they drafted him this season. Drawn by N BY CHARLES DUNKLEY, Associated Press Sports Writer. HICAGO, April 2.—Stalling in basket ball was stalled today. ‘The National Association of Basket Ball Coaches, after a | three-day discussion of means and | ways of speeding up the game, adopted a drastic rule whereby any team in possession of the ball in the back court must cross the center of the playing floor toward its target within 10 sec- onds. Under the rule. pronounced by Dr. | Forrest “Phog” Allen of the University f Kansas as the most revolutionary | change in the game since the dribble |1aw in 1906, a line would be drawn thtough the center of the floor. Thus if team A gets the tip-off in its back | court, it must advance the ball past the | center of the line within 10 seconds | after it gets possession of the ball | The penalty for violating the rule is ! loss of the ball at the nearest sideline The referee would call the violation, as sisted by the timekeeper. While the rule, suggested by Coach Harold Olsen of Ohio State University who was later named president of the associaticn, must be approved by the association's Rules Committee. there was no doubt but what it would be adopted. It was the unanimous opinion of the scores of coaches at today's meeting that something radical was | necessary to halt stalling and speed up | | the game. | “The new rule is the best thing that happened to basket ball since the | dribble rule was adopted way back in | 1906, said Dr. Allen. “It is revolu- | tionary and will give the spéctators the | thrills that come with a fast, hard and | well played game.” { “The rule will take the funeral march | out’cf basket ball,” said the spirited Dr. Walter Meanwel!, coach at the Uni- varsity of Wiscorsin. “Some.hirg radi- | | cal was nocessory. The game was get- ting sluggish, many of them looked like | funeral marches.” | ‘ Opinions such as those expressed by | Dr. Meanwell and Allen were given by | | several other radical suggestions, such | as making all free throws 2t the end of the half and at the end of the game | | by a system of cancellation. - Basket Ball Star By Drastic 10-Second Rule lling Hit ational Coaches In the election of officers, four vice | presidents were chosen. They were Roy Mondroff, Georgia Tech; Howard Ort- ner, Cornell University; A. C. Longbcrg, Northwestern, and H. V. Beresford, University of Colorado. Coach Olsen, one of Wisconsin's great stars of yes- terday,, succeeded A. C. Schabinger of Creighton Ccllege, Omal as head of the association. The board of directors elected con- sisted of Dr. Allen, H. C. Carlson, Uni- versity of Pittcburgh; E. P. Andrews, Syracuse, and A. C. Schabinger, Creighton. Sport Results College Base Ball. Princeton, 6; Vermont, 5. William and Mary, 12; Yorktown Ma- rines, 2. Columbia, 10; College of City of New York, 7. Yale, 8; Springfield, 3. ‘Wake Forest, 5;-North Carolina, 2 Michigan State, 8; Vanderbilt, 4. Bridgewater, 9; Drexel, 8. Florida, 6; Oglethorpe, 4. Roanoke, 23; Hampden-Sidney, 20. Track. 94: Lynchburg Col- z'll!mhmmd U, 98'2; Wake Forest, . Georgia, 105; Clemson, 29. ‘Tulane, 60; Alabama, 50. Virginia Poly, lege, 32. Lacrosse. Johns Hopkins, 14; Varsity Club. 3. Mount Washington, 9; Swarthmore, 2 Army, 11; Western Maryland, 0. Penn, 7; Penn A. C, 1. Princcton, 7; New York U, 3. Rutgers, 6; Alumni, 4. Canadian-American _League hockey Bases o0 | almost every coach. Dr. Meanwell had | play-off, at Boston—Providence Reds, 4; Botton Cubs, 2. International Hockey League off, at Fort Erie—Buffalo, 3; sor, 1. el Morrison, Garland and O'Connell, | i Barely Beats Mrs. Hill to Get HIVP 91 | cutt, Englewood, N. J., star, overcame WHAT HE EXPECTS e dn SR AL SN BLAMA ALA. | Toronto Hockey | Team in Finals 'ORONTO, Ontario, April 2 (#) — The Toronto Mapleleafs out- pointed the Montreal Maroons, 2, in a fast overtime National Hockey League Dl battle to- night to qualify for the Stanley Cup finals against the New York Rangers. MAUREEN ORCUTT 1-UP GOLF WINNER North-South Crown Second Time in Row. by the Associated Press. . INEHURST, N. C., April 2—Sink- ing putts of more than 20 feet to win the seventeenth and eighteenth holes, Maureen Or- a one-hole deficit to defeat Mrs. Opal Hill of Kansas City today for the North and South championship. Her 1l-up victory brought her the crown for the second successive year. Down from the start, Miss Orcutt forced the play with & chance-taking game all the way. Although she kept the match squared often, she was never | ahead until the final hole. Mrs. Hill's uncanny ability to sink | long putts enabled her to win nveu!‘ holes which it appeared Miss Orcutt would capture. Miss Orcutt's medal score was 82 and Mrs. Hill's 84. OLYMPIC RIFLE TRIALS Ngtion-Wide Tests Are Planned for U. 8. Small-Bore Team. Aspirants to the American small bore n{u team, which wml compeAu lnt 1:;1; Olympics in Los Angeles on August 13, i eight days'in which they may fire try-out scores under strictly com- petitive conditions. Three principals and three alternates are to be selected on the basis of the scores made in the try-out matches, which will be held by shooting organ- | izations in all parts of the country. The trial matches may be held May | 14, 15, 21, 22, 28 and 29 and June 4 and 5. MUNN MAKES LONG HEAVE, MINNEAPOLIS, Minn, April 2 (#). —Clarence Munn of Minnesota, West- ern Conference shot-put champion, broke the meet record for his specialty at the fourth annual Minnesota relays tonight. He heaved the 16-pound shot 48 feet 10% inches. TO TRAVEL O z%»— TOM DOERER 9(56 397 m; SEASATION™ OF THE CAMP Judge Forges Ahead of Kuhel VET NOW FAVORED OVER YOUNGSTER FOR FIRST BASE JOB. MAPLE, RAGLAND DUE TO BE KEPT. BY TOM DOERER. ELMA, Ala., April 2—1It is a S 10-to-1 wager on board the special carrying the Na- tionals northward from here tonight that Joe Judge, the vet ‘whom everybody but Clark Griffith wants to trade, will be out there on the first base bag when the Nationals clash with | Boston on April 11. Joe is play- | ing the sort of ball that baffles those who point to his age, and what time should be doing to his legs. | | | | | ‘Washington’s speed on the paths has ‘been a revelation to the players of the clubs which have encountered the Na- tionals in the grapefruit tilts. Pritz Maisel of the Baltimore club said that Griff’s present combination | is the fastest he ever has seen on the | paths. And Fritz, now manager of the | Baltimore Orioles, was a speed king | himself when he played with the Yanks years ago. Against Brooklyn, the Nationals were whirlwinds on the runways, with none other than supposedly bad slider, Carl Reynolds, fleeing and sliding into the bags in smart fash- ion. If there is anything wrong with the ex-White Sor flelder’s ability to go into a bag, none with this club has noticed it. ‘Walter Johnson summed up the sit- uation tonight in a statement to the it they dre out battling for jobs and not as vets who are sure of their berths. The Nationals left here immedi- ately after the victory over the Lookouts with the kid players hum- ming the “Chattancoga Blues.” Back there under the shadows of the famous Lookout Mountain a couple of pitchers will be handed Chattanooga sdits, while Johnnie Boyle, the Bay- onne, N. J., right-hander may be shipped elsewhere, in company With, possibly, Mike Delaney, the Chicago boy. Their spot is likely to be Youngs- town. That's the dope now as the Pan American Express speeds on toward the mountains. But the chances of Rags Ragland, the Paris, Miss., boy, whose mnon- chalant manner on the mound has | won javor in the eyes of Walter | Johnson and Clark Grifith, are | good for making the trip back to | Washington. | Rags’ chance comes in the news that Ad Liska, the ex-Griff with the ailing flipping fin, is none too sure of his arm, and that his work in drills here has proved he still can do no more than three rounds of hurling. That much pea flipping, Do mat- ater how good, is not going to help Uncle Clark Griffith win that flag when the season gets under way. Ad admitted that his arm still was By the Associated Press. EW YORK, April 2—The St. Louis Cardinals are a stronger choice to repeat last year's National League triumph than the Philadelphia Ath- letics are to win their fourth straight American Leegue pennant in the betllnfi flgum announced today by Jack , Broadway commissioner. Doyle, who handles most of the large wagers made on big sporting events here, quoted 6 to 5 against the Athletics to win, but held the ‘The odds are Cards Even Choice to Repeat Rated to Win National Flag Easier Than A’s Get American—b6 to 5 Quoted Against Macks. York Yankees will provide the chief opposition to the A's, with Wash- ington third choice and Cleveland bothering him and exuded no con- fidence in his ability to go up year, Further than that, to show just how much chance Ad has of checking Rags’ trip into Washington, is the informa- tion that Liska has been suffering from an attack of appendicitis, putting him ‘out of drills here for some time. Selma fans, who have watched the Ragman at work here, say he is an iron man. During a siege last sea- son Rags went into action in relief roles on siz comsecutive days for Bert Niehaus, the Lookouts’ manager. But there was another side to the stories on Rags from the Selma ob- servers. It showed that PFrank is a mighty poor starter, having been kicked for plenty of hits and runs every time he was assigned to open a ball game for the Chattanooga Club, While Bolton may mot be so warm on the matter, the Chat- tancoga men here have been telling the stocky little catcher how much they want him back with the club. It is the opinion among the camp followers that Clif will go back to the Lookouts and that Howard Maple, the | college backstop with a lot of latent | | hitting ability and plenty of confidence, may be carried back to Washington. Roy Spencer’s rounding into form after an attack of malaria has made Walter Johnson feel a lot better. A week ago a Biloxi physician told the catcher that he would be out of har- ness for several weeks. But Spencer's work against the Dodgers at Biloxi Friday proved that | effect that the players are acting as |he is going to fool the medico. SHINMARKIS ST BYLY.A.TEMN Record Hung Up in Medley Relay of A. A. U. Meet Won by Los Angeles. By the Assoclated Press. EW HAVEN, Conn., April 2—A crack trio of swimmers wear- ing the winged-foot symbol of New York Athletic Club posted a new world mark, its second of the day, to win the 300-yard medley relay race tonight in the National Senior A. A. U. championships. ‘The team of Leonard and Walter Spence, brothers, and George Kojac clipped a full second off its own world mark of 3 minutes 21-5 seconds, set in the preliminaries a few hours earlier. Clarence (Buster) Crabbe, Los An- geles A. C., mainstay, became the offi- cial individual champion of the four- day meet held in the Yale pool by adding the 500-yard free-style title to two championships anhexed earlier. Largely through his efforts the West Coast” club carried away team honors | with 45 points, Tonizht's summaries: 500-YARD FREE STYLE—Won by Clarence {Buster) Crabbe (Los Angeles A. C.); second, Ted Wiget (Athens A. C.); third. Maiola Ka- I (Los Angeles. A Time, 5:38%. HIGH BOARD DIVE—Won by Dick Dege- ner (Michigan), 166.4 points; second, Mickey les (Los An,filel A. C). . its: . Harold utch) Smith (Los 50 YARD MEDLEY BELA ANED Stohn, o 3d, Spence, Walter York c. 33 former record, 3:02%, set by same team today). ‘Winners of champlonships were: -YARD FREE STYLE—Clar (Los "Angele s A 130-YARD BACKSTROKE—Georse Kojac (New York ) 500-METER—Ciarence Crabbe. 300-YARD MEDLEY—*Clarence Crabbe. ALOW BOARD DIVING—Mickey Riley (Los REE STYLE—Malola Kallli ) BREASTSTROKE — *Leonard YARD BELAY*New York A . —sNew_York A. C. oG lpng"l‘»nmo—mnna ‘Degener 2 2% TARD MEDLEY RELAY—New Yorx “Retained Litls, Tornado Victims Aided by Griffs ELMA, Ala, April 2 (#)—Nick Altrock and Al Schacht, base ball comedians, carried their antics to the auctioneer's block to- day for the aid of Alabama tornado sufferers. The comedians, here with the ‘Washington Senators for an exhibi- tion game with Chattanooga of the Southern Association, auctioned off a hen and her ten chicks, hatched after their coop was blown away, for $240. Among the bidders was Manager Walter Johnson and other members of the team. . The money will go into & fund for the care of the four gzkkuxll-:dmchfldre:onf Mr. and Mrs. am, W] ere kille - m, ‘were led in | Makes “Grand Slam” by Winning in Singles, Doubles and Mixed Doubles. By the Associated Press. ROOKLINE, Mass., April 2—Na- | tional tennis championships came in bunches today for Marjorie Morrill of Dedham, Mass., the Nation’s sixth ranking wom- an player. She registered a ‘“grand slam” in the three finals of the wom- en’s indoor title play at the Longwood covered courts. She gained her first senior national championship by dethroning Marjorie Sachs of Cambridge, defending cham- pion in the singles competition, in an overtime match, 3—6, 6—2, 6—2. Then she ieamed. with Mrs. John Van Ryn of Philadelphia, who ranks eighth nationally, to turn back Mrs. George W. Wightman and Sarah | Palfrey, the Brookline players who have | held the national indoor doubles crowns ; én:athe past four years, by scores of Miss Morrill, after a brief rest, re- turned to the court with Dr. G. Colket Caner of Brookline as her partner and they gained the national mixed doubles titles by defeating Mrs. Van Ryn and Thomes A. Jansen of Winchester, 10—8, 6—2. The Dedham girl's “grand slam” is the second in the history of women's indoor tennis. Mrs. Wightman had similar success in 1927. [BATTAGLIA SPURNS BOUT Milwaukee Go With Shade 03} After Terms Are Refused. | MILWAUKEE, Wis., April 2 (@) Matchmaker Tom Andrews has nounced cancellation of the match | scheduled here April 11 between Prankie Battaglia, Winnipeg middleweight, and Dave Shade of California. Battaglia accepted terms for the bout, Andrews said, and later refused to take GETS 1082 TOTAL FOR ALL-EVENTS Also Equals Doubles Record, Silver Spring Team Sets Pace for D. C. Rollers. NOR!‘OLIL Va, April 2— all-events record of 1,051, Tournament here, team play. ington in 1930. doubles record with s mark of 693. By the Associated Pross. Naomia Zimmerman of Baltimore shattered the when she bowled 1052 today in the National Duckpin Congress 8he scored 301 in her singles match, 366 in doubles and 385 in The former record was estab- lished by Lorraine Gulli of Wash~ Miss Zimmerman teamed with Sue Miller of Baltimore, to tie the woman's FEET D. C. ROLLERS PLACE Score in Men’s, Women’s Bingles and Doubles in Tourney. BY FRANCIS E. STAN. NORFOLK, Va., April 2—The goose hung a little too high here today for all but five ot the 250 Washington bowlers rolling in the fifth national duckpin tournament. In onme of the greatest form upheavals in the history of United States competition, the Capitalites man« aged to take the lead in only one event —the men’s team competition. A _record-breaking _bowling _crowd (Continued on Fourth Page.) Davis Cup Tennis Dates Are Named HEVY CHASE CLUB, it has been announced by Lawrence Baker, chairman of the Tennis Committee, has received word from the national association that the Davis Cup match between the United States and Canada will be staged on April 28, 29 and 30. Neither team has been picked, but members of both aggregations are expected to come here ahead of time to put in practice licks. It is understood that the Canadians will spend a week at Chevy Chase prior to_the cup play. Baker says that playing the Davis Cup matches during the week in April will mean that the annual doubles tourney at Chevy Chase, a big feature of the tennis season here, will not be held until about the middle of May. attend the Davis Cup play, may be that a special price accorded them, less than 30 per cent of the gate. and gives you a ticket at once! Ask About Our 10-Pay Pelzman Plan Hed 12 % &E To the Opening Baseball Everyone pur- chasing a suit or topcoat will be Fred Pelsman's guest at the opening Baseball DOUBLEWEAR SUITS =24 low Rondo Topcoats as low as Tashion ahop 501 Ninth St. OPEN EVENINGS........BREE PARKING