Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
INFERS SHE MIGHT TEN YEARS HENGE Critics Think Her Service| Stronger, Court Covering Better Than Ever. | e | BY HERBERT W. BARKER, Associated Press Sports Writer. EW YORK, April 26 (®).—| Helen Wills Moody may | consider retirement from | tennis competition in 10| years. Then again she may not.‘ The undisputed queen of world | tennis, here for only a brief visit before she sails on the Aquitania | for another invasion of Europe, smilingly denied she was ready to quit the gamé, as reports have had it at intervals during the past Yyear or two. | “I should say that perhaps after 10 years more I shall relire,” Mrs. Moody | said when reporters put the question. | Only a few hours after her arrival | here she was cn the courts for a prac- tice sescion against Harry C. Brunie of | New York, a capable player indoors. But the national womans champion beat him, 6—2, 10—9, play being in- terrupted before a decision was reached in the second set. RITICS thought Mrs. Moody's hit- ting was more severe than ever and that she was much faster covering court. Brunie ran into a 5—1 Jead in the second set, but Helen turned on steam and won five games in & Tow. Mrs. Mcody's European invasion again thas three major objectives, the French and British championships and the ‘Wightman Cup matches. Both the French and British singles titles appear as good as won, for no woman player in the world seems likely to take a set | from her, much less beat her. Victory | in the Wightman Cup matches may be | further away, although Mrs. Moody will | be expected to win both her singles matches. | She will sail tomorrow night. Unless she changes her present plans her first play will be in the French hard court | championships at Auteuil May 22 to| June 5. Then will follow the Wight- man Cup matches June 10 and 11 and the British championships, starting June 20. She then will return to this country to defend her national title at Forest Hills. Her Wightman Cup teammate and fellow-Californian, Helen Jacobs, sails for Europe on the Leviathan tonight. CHIPS FROM THE MAPLEWAYS ROF. GEORGE ISEMANN, more noted for his promotorial activities than for his bowling, stepped out last night in the first annual Maryland | State Tournament at Bethesda to show | the boys how. | George took the lead in singles with & 376 total; paired with Hugh Ashcroft | to take the double’s lead with 705, and then aided the College Park team to roll | into second place. Collegiates of Hyattsville lead with 1,711. | UNLD{R in the men's city tourna- ment, there was nothing backward about the womeh last night as the ‘Washington Women’s Duckpin Tourna- | ment opened at the Columbia. | Elsie Fischer grabbed the lead in the class A singles with a 346 total, while Annette Matthew and Margaret Bru- nelle placed second and third, re- spectively, with 334 and 333. Audrey Costello took the lead in class B singles with 314. Deal Service rolled 1,512 to lead the class A teams. Polly Gerlach, with 285, is topping the class C singles while Thelma Fisher is heading class D with 274. 'OM DAVIDSON of the Automotive Leaguz took the lead in the class A all-events in the Washington City Tournament at Convention Hall ‘with a 1068 score. A new leader ap- peared in class C when the Jefferson | Spring Service outfit shot 1,678. | Sidney Eisenberg of the Arcade-Sun- | shine League rolled 359 to take the lead in class D singles and W. F. Orr, Ma- rine Corps League, shot to the top in class E with 347. o= ~00mm e TENNIS STARS CARDED. | CHICAGO, April 26 (#).—The United State Cup tennis squad of Ellsworth Vines, Frank Van Ryn, Wilmer Alli- | son, Prank Shields and possibly George Lott will appear at the Chicago Town and Tennis Club exhibition matches May 7. Tonight’s Cards ; In Pin Tourneys Class D D Westby. Farrel Lyles... Heil Qe Ferguson. Mitchell. Compton. Bacen....... McMahon. Rawson.. stor; ¢ Mulfican. Burneston. ot OmERNEEOOEOHMO=> O 53t U102 o e e > Tranutanat>oouEmmD BLIC_ BUILDINGS AND COLUMBIA HEIGHTS TEAMS—8 P.M NIGHT. Class. Holy Name eaveren olumbia Heig] Columbia Helghts , Columbia Heights DOUBLES—10:15 P.M Class. e D e Meson Becker and Koenig Burmeister und Brittain Balducei and Jones and Be Mooney and Sartwell Cardwell and Sherwood.. Hetl and Lyles Rawson and O'Neil McManon and Story Myers end Eou Mullican and A WOMEN. TEAME--T7:30 PM. QUETYCTOTM MM O! tullican 2 Comm. Juniors 17 Columbia 5 4 Recreation . 19 Interdivision 5 Accounts ...l 20 Live Stock DOUBLES—920 P.M. ¢ B r and V. an and x and E. Minson G. Purdy Eigeias cnd |G | H. B> >UsUNaOMUETME 0 THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, Bowling Results In City Tourneys Matthew Brunelle P. Ford oodall . E. Pisher Moyer. . ello Cost, N. Mason. Gerlach .... Chase Anne Smith. Fredericks ... E. Carr T. Fisher.. Songer. . N Ryan....] 8 179 174 183 5 G.Th'pson Latu: 8 93 87 00 1 119334 100333 90291 100287 120346 | 88212 95314 | 88270 | | 120285 88255 102 81265 | 84—266 | 87274 | 99 81 81 88| 164 180 169 | Totals 16! . 413 Grand total | | | YOUNG SCRAPPERS | BATTLE FOR TITLES Honors Will Be Decided in| Eight Classes of Junior Tourney at Boys’ Club. ‘OUTHFUL boxers will wage balflei tonight in the finals of the Golden Gloves' Junior Tournament being held at the Washington Boys' Club un- der direction of the District A. A. U. The strife will begin at & o'clock, with titles to be decided in eight classes, from 60 to 130 pounds. Winners in last night's semi-finals will square off with Noel House, Boys' Club, Nye House, Goodacre A. C., Na- tional Training School, Jewish Com- munity Center and Friendship House being represented. Plenty of fast milling marked the semi-finals. 60 pounds—Pletro (Goodacre) defeated H D. (., TUESDAY, APRIL 1932. 26, 84 79 i Galvinl ( 7 155 162 .. 494 Miller Keith Totals Grand total 2 90 King Pin 98 120 ! 119106 102 83 L 101 110 511 499 451 - 1461 Deal's Service. 21 total T. Davidson Bailey Cannick . H. Palmateer Hopkins .. E w. B. g bl el MCcElroy . Bromley Ferrall Conklin Painter P. Beack ... Holbrook . Weldman Whitford SHEQENETNY Howard ! 3 F. M. Plercy . o ...... Huggins Burch Goldstein Robertson Romanek Sandifur McKay Venesky Hurleban Bracey . C. € B s w. ¥. H i 8 0. E H. B | A 3 L. C. Henry w. G. M. Wash. L. wild.. Wilcox_ Sch'haut. Osborne. ying Totals Grand Wash. L. McPh'n.. 1 Palmer. wild 1 1 110 Howard Light. Totals Grand Painter.. 104 Smith. Rousseau. 94 mer ... 108 Ruppert.. 101 Totals. . Grand Hevener Dixon Totals. . Meek Meaney Yerkes McC'ridge Totals Grand " tot Adjutants Bush Richards White Higgins Matthews Totals Grand ' total Grain N Conkiin H'tecker Jones Totals Grand total 118 Venezky 94 Totals Grand total Schroft's Truck Co. | grimn 90 8¢ 5 Schroff Crist Bromley O'Neill Totals Pot. Sav. Bank. 107 106 91 15 92 a1 93104 117 499 498 505 novan. . Totals Grand tatal. lle; Class, Allev. Class. 1% | Becker {l Gomm. Comets. G 18 Wash. Cen, 51 Bl R 163 156 166 Ellwanger . 526 515 5 total.. Horticulture. 88118 496 482 479 total 1 1111061 531 559 492 Grand total Federal-Ameri Callan... 103 90 90 101106 88 99 101 97 93 9 90 100 102 7 8 124 115 496 468 483 No. 2 102100 84 86104 81 83 83101 96 103 100 103 111 102 460 541 96 100 113 176 530 521 519 85 115 102 101 120 95 121105 99 481 515 501 Grand total.. 1497 CLASS D. 92 86 Fisher 64 B0 Fredericks 91 88 90 8 79 92 177 167 182 526 88 7 Marimak feated M Totals . 485 Grand total... TEAMS. CLASS A 'CBHVQHUDIE)BH;H =1 iy ) : are 132108173 | deteate Purdy Mathews. 90 85102 | o 130 vo e 85100 124 | Russell > rounds 87 87100 (RS T. 8.) White (N 120 pounds—H Merryman _(Sterling) d P Ki 130 pounds. 85 36 81 9 89 Gude ... 95 94 Brunelie.. 475 476 520 1477 Totals.. . Grand total. Bill Wood. . 83 100 105 99 83 Vl‘ 70 84 90 101 88102 105 100 95 15865 130 | 1413 | Miltner. Totals Grand total. . MEN SINGLES. CLASS A " 12 ‘ 110_pounds—Donis. N Keyser (Nve): Riley " (Goodacre) defeated Noel) defeated Collins defeated Brew (Nye). round. (Nye) defeated Cecchini K. of ds—Katello ( {B. C.) -Albi N._T. 8) os (Sterjing) urphy (Noel) , C) kni ) Kemp (Merrick) (Noel) defeated Molesko Hewitt (Priendship) defeated T. 8.) ocked out deteated Gevinson_(B, C.) defeated Kastinas (B. C.) Vermiilion C) defeated knockout. three defeated Hawks eyser (Nve) Sterling) Holtzclaw technic (Noel) CANDY KITCHEN TEAM | TAKES BOWLING FLAG Athey's 109 Average Gives Him Top Honors in Georgetown Commercial League. EORGETOWN CANDY KITCHEN won the flag in the Georgetown Commercial Duckpin League and Athey. ace of the team, grabbed off the individual hénors with an average of 109-74 Athey for 99 games. was pressad by Freeman of the runner-up Jefferson Spring Service Co., who av Gochenour highest only 42 Tsaacs ... Mclpnerson' e High Kitchen, High t High 200) 9129 118304 | veraged 109-63 for 77 games of Georgetown had the pace with 112-1, but he rolled games. Final Team Standing. Inc Season Records. same—Georgetown Candy team 652. § eam set—Jefferson Spring Co.. 1.742 individual game—Freeman (Jeffer- 1 High individus] set—Athey (Candy). 400. 5 ; Preeman (Jeffers Individual Averages. (10 games or more.) GEORGETOWN CANDY KITCHEN. Gochenour Athey Greer . G 66 154 G H .42 50 b | Moore i 47 | Chkconas ™ 341 | Perkins | Proctor eeman Brom Saylo Roliison ley. 3 108—285 | Swartwout 81251 100—304 | Groves | McKeave: 99 96 97 114 101 103 96 109 108 105 103 92 539 525 503 total 1,567 CLASS C. Geo. Candy Greer Moore. Athey Perkins Gochen'r Totals Grand Kitchen. 96134 00 95115 507 527 468 | Golden total...1,502 | 19 1,560 | 85 106 76 87 92 91110 5 5 | Cornwell total...1,678 | H. Horner. 1457 98 5 20 5 97 11 11598 98 | SPTRLOR, 92 94 847 T 125 103 84 | & "Kres 9997122 |5, 116123 126 | walker . Miller Thompson - Carper. r Blackman . 121 CROWN FUEL CO. % 360 35 s defeated | M. Kaitela (Nye) de- | NOwW, rememaee! DON'T You DARE GET THAT NEW BASEBALL SUIT DIRTY! NO SLIDING To Bas€s! UNDER- STAND * Popular Price; ‘Will Prevailw For Davis Cup Tennis Clashes Between Yanks and Canadians ASHINGTON'S sports enthu- siasts will be the benefactors Thursday, Friday and Sat- urday of a new low admis- sion fee for Davis Cup tie match play. | An announcement today frim the I‘Chu}' Chase Club, which wil be the i scene of the United States-Canada ten- nis duel, revealed the welcome news "1, that an unlimited supply of seats will |80 on sale at $1, a slash of exactly | one-half of what they brought a year | ago. | The new rate, it is believed, will as- sist mightily in booming the net game here and packing the stands during the | three days America's net forces—Wil- mer Allison, Ellsworth Vines, Frank Shields and Jchn Van Ryn—attempt to | hurdle the invaders. S, T'HE Canadians were to convene at 129 129 13¢ 143 126 122 FORRESTVILLE, .99 92 o | 98 18 &1 5 S mer Kreamer Kreamer... POTOMAC SAVINGS 547 515 514 total " 1,578 Hil .. 1.572 Briles ican Hodges 98 9 Higes 0 Freeburg B 90 477 1,457 Totals e Sweeney | 3. Sulliv CLASS D. Cavanau; Skinker Motors. Duke . 113783 94 96 94 82 83103 95102 93 114 136 102 510 492 1.501 H. Tuck H. Gray 108 Walsh F. Sullivan . 97 Ryon Totals . 4 Grand total Trucks Lascola Berryma Ellis Sherwin 31A C.C By Wright DI McClary 1447 Am. Loan Smith Clark TIrvin Biglow Dorsett... 101108 97 Totals. . 508 531 481 Grand total.. 1,520 War College. nith 102" 99 103 insey 98 89110 Mel 117100 §1 Duncan 88 108 140 Holcomb. 96102 83 Totals. . 501 498 532 Grand total.. 1,531 Temple Scrocca. .. 102 90 Osman Brawner 142 [ 120 | 105 | Totals . 515 435 359 Grand total.. 4,509 91 ‘o1 b Perris 1.570 89 98 88 109 1.497 CLASS D, Saturd; 90 93 Earp Fitts Boak Barber. "] 9 Rohrman'. 11110 94 Totals. .. 516 1502 Grand fotal CLASS E Dist. RoDlst Nat. Bank Open axs 82 A. Scheele. L. Scheele VERY Donovan . e 118 C. Bauckman.. 47 Gates ... 88 $|H Bauckman . rdi . 106-31 an..... igh er . Tolson .. n awson ISTRICT GR <y I3 O'Donneli. .. 2 55 Leukhart STOHLMAN CHEVROLET. 71 122 315 321 323 3 351 203 301 | Rubinstein ays, Sundays and Holidays, 95¢ Let Us ‘ PQI;_ISH SIMONIZE Your Car REASONABLE RATES BODY AND FENDER WORK 7 AM. to 10 P.M. Suns. to 8 P.M. Super Auto Laundry, Inc. 2 BLOCKS NORTH OF BALL PARK Parking, 25¢ By the Month, $3.00 2312-20 GEORGIA AVENUE 103-16 | E match, 6—3, 6—4, noon today at the White House, | where President Hoover was to make the draw for the opening round. With the exception of Frank Shields, who was scheduled to arrive today, the American team is complete. Bernon S. | Prentice, non-playing captain of the | United States team, put in appearance | yesterday, along with George Meldrum, president of the Canadian Tennis Asso- clation. The Americans idled yesterday as far | as tennis was concerned. In shape after | six weeks of hard campaigning, Van % |Ryn and Allison shot a round of golf and Vines took in a movie Prentice is thought to have decided on his singles and doubles choices, but no official announcement has been made. Van Ryn and Allison are certain to compose the United States doubles | team and Vines is certain to play in the singles. play doubt is entertained. Allison's | singles post. | HE Canadians went ahead yesterday, despite intermittent showers, and contested for places on the team. | Marcel Rainville, who is favored to play singles along with Dr. Jack Wright, defeated Gilbert Nunns, former junior champion of Canada, in a hard-fought 6—4, to further establish his right | walter Martin, | sensation, singles. _—— the latest Canadian Reduced Fare' to the - DERBY 52610 Round Trip Air-Cq.oled City Ticket Office 714 14th St. N.W. Phone Nat'l 0748 CHesaPEAKE md QHIO - | George As to the other singles | recent tournament work has been so | impressive that he may be given Shields’ | | . This morning Rainville was to oppose | Wright is a fixture in the | | JN compliance with Davis Cup rule: the contending teams will announce their players tomorrow Interest in the impending event hes been mounting and with the price slash something of a record net gallery for Washington may be expected. Both reservations and general admissions may be had at Spalding’s, the Chevy Chase Club and the Junior Club room, Connecticut avenue and Q street. MAY JOIN SILENT TEAM | Several Gallaudet Players Consid- ering Barnstorming Trip. Several Gallaudet students are in |touch with Gerald R. Wear of Los Angeles, who is organizing an All-Silent base ball team for barnstorming. Gallaudet has not had a ball team for two seasons but some of its students have been getting in much diamond work during the Summer vacations Among the Kendall Greeners ‘n touch with Wear are Rudolph Gamblin, right- {hand pitcher of Amarillo, Tex.; Seth Crockett, third baseman, also from Texas: Si Katz, second baseman, and Brown from Ohio, and Bilbo | Monaghan, who can pitch, catch play first base. Johnny Wurdemann, who withdrew from Gallaudet last year and is work- ing in a print shop ‘at Manassas, Va., is a good outfielder. START BREEDING FARM. | RICHMOND, Va, April 26 (#.—The | Maryland Park sale of Curles Neck Farm, James River 20 YEARS AGO IN THE STAR. ASHINGTON lott the final game of its series to Boston. The score was 3 to 2. Tom Hughes, making his mound debut of the season, did better than the s-ore indicated. Eddie Foster got of the four hits Washington aned off Big Charley Hall. Play in the Railroad Y. M. C. A. ague will open tomorrow with the r Department and Southern Rail- nines clashing. loysins tossers defeated . Na- tional A. C, 5 to 2, in the Inde- pendence League. Brummer, losing pitcher, did well but received poor support, Maryland Agricultural College nine has been hurt by the loss of Shipley, who has left school. Packey McFarland of Chicago and Matt Wells of England are preparing for their boxing match in Madison Square Garden, New York. Joe Turner and Walt Evans are to wrestle at the Gayety. Among contestants in the city championship bowling tourney are Kane, Crowell, Morris, Dolan, Bros- nan, Huat, Curtis, Barton, Rodgers, Beuchert, Barrick, McClure, Howard, ersel, Gulli, Mann, Roberts, Brian, Levy, Miles, Reed, Jones, Donohue, Land, Hardie, Milovitch, Stanford, Price, Green, Lurd, Helmerichs, A. and E Thomas, Mullen, Malcolm, C. Miller, Brown, Robison, Seaton, yells, Kenzig, Armstrong, Heindell and Delauter. ST GIRLS START VOLLEY BALL Play was to open this afternoon in the Prince Georges County high school girls' volley ball series with four games. Hyattsville and Laurel were to meet Hyattsville, Mount Rainier and at Maryland Park, randywine, defending champion, and at | estate, to a syndicate of capitalists and | Oxon Hill at Oxon Hill. and Surratts- isporlsm?n who will breed race horses and polo ponies, has been announced. The estate was sold for a sum said to be in excess of a half million dollars. MOST POPULAR ATHLETE, most popular athlete on the University | of Texas campus. TO BUY ... WHILE U. S. TIRES ARE PRICED RIDICULOUSLY LOW 1234 144ST.N.W, 624 PA.AVE.SE. Unconditionally 12 to 24 Months “Dutch” Baumgarten, foot ball and | piy® base ball player, recently wes voted the | Matinaro. ville and Baden at Baden. Other dates ar . April 28—Hyattsville at Bowle, Rainier at Laurel. Brandywine at rattsville, Upper Mariboro at Oxon Hill May 3—Laurel at Maryland Park, Bowie at Mount Rainier. Upper Marlboro at Brandywine, Oxon Hill at Baden. Maryland Park at Bowie. Mount al _Hyattsville, Baden at Upper 1 Hill at Surrattsville. n May 12 the upper and lower section winners will fight out for county SUDremacy. 1 A\ U. S. TIRES M’Leod Has 68 on Golf Llnks, A Then Shatters Par at Dinner In Honor of His 50th Birthda_v REDDIE MCLEOD can play his golf shots by the clock in the future. The little mentor of the Columbia Country Club, one of | the oldest professionals in point of service in the United States, a master | of the art of stroking a goif ball, looks | back today on the events of his 50th | birthday yesterday and contemplates | the surprise party given him at Col- | umbia last night by some 25 of his | close friends among the members. | Furthermore, Freddie had a real field | day on his reaching the half-century imark. First he shot a 68 on the golf | course, and then he proceeded to shoot the banquet course in a half dozen strokes better than par as he replied to the eulogies of Andrew J. (Cy) Cum- | mings and the cthers. No one knew that Freddie was such an after dinner speaker.- But he didn't miss a chip shot as the little Scot, over- | whelmed with the sincerity of the | greeting tendered him by the men who | have been his pals for many, many years, expressed his gratitude for the ovation he received and the handsome wrist watch given him by the group. The party was entirely impromptu |and few at Columbia knew it was | Freddie’s 50th birthday. But alter | P. Skinker and Lynch Younger of |it and all day yesterday they were | quietly circulating through the club | gathering candidates from among Fred- | die’s old friends to pay the little Scot the honor he deserves. Twenty-five of them gathered at the banquet table and | there were nearly 25 speeches. Scme of them were short, to be sure, but if Freddie McLeod could gather them all together in a scrap book they would sum up in a small way the depth of the feeling which the members of Co- lumbia have for him. Freddie has been with Columbia for just about 20 years. He came to Co- lumbia from St. Louis, and in those days, back in 1912, McLeod was just about as hot a piece of golfing machin- ery as you could find in many a day's travel. He still is, but Preddie does not take the interest in national com- petition he once took. HEN a golfer shoots a par 70 course in 68 on his 50ih birthd: versary, as Freddle did yesterds and then tops it off by playing the after-dinner course in better than par, he is quite a fellow, isn't he? That's what Freddie, the young-old Columbia pro, did. Here are the men who gath- ered gt Columbia to do Preddie honor: Andrew J. Cummings, Walter P. | Skinker, William W. Jones, Albert R. | MacKenzie, G. H. Chasmar, Earl Mack- intcsh, Prank Fouche, Carl Quentell, | “Set” Collins, Billy Malloy, “Red' Banagan, Norman B. Frost, James Johnston, W. Cariton Evans, John J. McInerney, Everett Eynon, Ben Skinker, | Robert B. Cummings, Hugh MacKen- | zie, Miller B. Stevinson, J. B. Murphy, | Prank S. Appleman, Lynch Younger, | H. King, Cornwell, James W. Beller, A. S. Golden and W. R. McCallum. | To top it all off, Mrs. Walter Skinker had baked Freddie a birthday cake. And what a cake! Festooned with a flock of candles and colored a delicate pink and white to match Preddie's sun-bronzed complexion, that cake stood high in the center of the banquet ta- ble. Freddie was the first to bite into it. Andrew Cummings was the toast- master, and you haven't seen a bit of toastmastering until you've seen “Cy” doing his stuff. He almest brought tears to dozens of dry eyes as he told how the little lad from North Berwick had made good in the big city. Preceding the banquet an informal handicap tournament was run off. In| this event Albert R. MacKenzie and cames W. Beller shot a pair of fine scores. MacKenzie had a 72 and Bel- ler registered a 79. They tied for first | low net with net scores of 76. John J. | McInerney won the blind bogey com- petition, his first prize in a dozen years, with a score of 87—14—73. Low gross | went to Miller B. Stevinson with 71. | But one of the big features of the day | was the 68 registered by “Red” Bana- | gan, the popular Columbia assistant | |pro. “Red" took three putts on the | eighteenth green when he had two putts for a 67, and some of the boys were kind enough to say that Banagan took those three putts because he didn't want to steal Freddie McLeod'’s thunder on his birthday by outscoring him on the golf course We still insist that a fellow who can shoot a 68 on such a tough course at Columbla on his fiftieth birthday anni- versary is quite a golfer. LAYING thro the same sort of drizzle that greeted them on the opening day of the 36-hole com- petition, women golfers today completed play in the toun for the Keefer Trophy at the Che h Club. Two days of drizzling rain failed to dampen the spirits of the »men players, for vesterday, even tho rained hard t intervals single default was registered. Although not all the scores were turned in. all the entrants started. Winifred Faunce of Manor and Mrs, Alma Von Steinner of Congressional were tied at the end of the first 18 holes yesterday for t not he lead, both with Tes of 80 for the rain-soaked ase layout. Miss Faunce won the low gross prize for the first day, with a card of 86, one stroke in front of the 87 made bv Mrs. J Marvin Haynes. Miss Faunce played with a of six strokes. Mrs. Von read 91-11—80, those who turned in cards of than 105 a consolation tourney was played today. A liberal assortment of prizes for both low gross and low net scores for both s put up by the Women's Distri Association. of vhich Mrs. Frank R. Keefer, donor of the trophy. is the president A few of the other ieading gross score on the opening d: lcws: Mrs. Everett Eynor Mrs. Y. E. Booker, Ch Mrs. C. K. Osborne, y Mrs. Ora Emge, Beaver Dam, 97; Miss Susan Hacker, Chevy Chase, 99. The championship tourney of the Interdepartmental Golf League will be played at the Kenwood Golf and Coun- try Club on June 6 and 7, it was decided iast night at a meeting of the Executive Committee of the league. Five matches have been played in he competition senior golfers of the Chevy Ci Club for the Per- kins trophy, with tie following results: D. Gillmore (13) defeated Admiral J. D. Beuret (6), 6 and 4: F. L Lewis (13) defeated G. H Powell (30), 4 and Gen. H. P McCain (6) defated C. V. Wheeler (§). 7 and Dr. L. B. T. Johnson (5) defeated E. M. Talcott (4), 2 up: Walter G. Peter (2) defeated Gen. Hanson E. Ely (7), 4 and 2. College Sports Base Ball. Maryland. 4: West Virginia, 8. Boston College, 4; Syracuse, 2. Tennis. Chicago, Western State Teach- ers, 'RACES TODAY | Havre de Grace SEVEN RACES DAILY Penna. R. R. train leaves 5 P.M., direct to tme).. 3 Special ck (Eastern Standard ADMISST Grandstand and Ps FIRST RACE AT NG 4 {" Cleaning and Blocking By Modern and Scientifie Factory Methods Vienna Hat Co. 435 11th St. nr '~ “44” pleased millions of smokers for years asone of the better-grade cigars, selling at more than Now that the price is reduced to a nickel with quality un- changed, why wouldn’t it be the fastest-growing cigar in America?...Itis Olé Time Quality— Old Time Price 4 cents. Actual Size CONSOLIDATED CIGAR CORPORATION