Evening Star Newspaper, May 23, 1932, Page 12

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THE EVENING 8 AR, WASHINGTON D. C, MONDAY, MAY 23, 1932. SPORTS. Johnson to Point Hurlers for Big Sets : Yanks Victims of Grove’s 6th in Row PLANS SLAB I]RILLS ON GAMELESS IJAYS | Griff Pilot Hopes to Have Full E: Corps Fit—Weaver Hum- bles Red Sox. BY JOHN B. KELLER. EHABILITATION of the tionals’ pitching staff is the big business now getti Manager Walter Johnson Tull attention. The pilot wanits all his huriing hands, battered se badly in New York last week. the peak of conditon for the string of seven tilts soon to come with Although the no games tomo 1 Wednes- day, Johnson will have his charge: g0 through their paces noon drills _in Grifit and particul rooming given the pite The Wasnin that a l\rv (rl ]n will be ng wilt when the for morni a day with their That's som ‘Washington manage hill corps certainly sturdy enough to way of double Now that a pitcher has gone a fu um\‘ in nine da president of in confere g i dxrc«m ed sources reg ‘Washington ¢ Danny MacFa for there American Le seasoned slab: But C Quinn on “We talked a ing. As I said L 1 v Nationals 7 to 1. Johns spell of defeat tha w x osses that h: one of four vic In turning ba treated ti dose he ¢ Red Sox, Weaver b enabled thc Red Sox to esc out. ASHINGTON nmed ,:.o victory, collecting 14 I 3 e of the wallop to righ Scoring started rig when Jack Russell wa was driven from the s with the Nationals fi good and I Along came Michaels to pitch to three throw one for a douk more runs a action. The the frame southpaw. innings of toi 1 John out Moore finished Socking the Hose coo. cossouELLLme =0 N 4 for Moore 1 ASHINGTON. 1<) PN PSP 8l eneRuevn o np! pitcher e of ‘ramemi Tour dad Eh E;m.. | St. Louis at Detroit. Records of Griffs ouwsomtorecs ‘000 009 coosostonnesbusoasSuto! Gossoctasokasisniesustal P L LT Sy cososomooo PITCHING. | curwoans! o Q orvawang HOPE KIESELS W WILL SPUR HIM ON b', Track Fans Look for Change of Heart Over Olympics After Great Sprint. By the As AN ) dash victory over Frank Wykoff has convinced many track followers the University of Cali- fornia sophomore will become a can- didate for the Olympic games team de- otk spite his earlier announcement to thc" contrary ‘The eat of the Southern Cali- fornia star, unofficial world record of 9.4 seconds, was the| of the third annual Cali-| ate Track and Field t muscle, entered the event dvice of his coach and the e who think it a change of 1 ord in it if he runs.” K IESEL lmd said he did not intend it for the Olympics be- e “I don't like track.” honors with Kl(‘b?l in the Ben Eastman of Stanford, for wor 1'1 records in 'hz\ 440- E. al time of 46.6. enter the half mile. thern California won the meet for third successive time with 851-6 He dld Foxx, Athletics, 1: Simmons, White Sox, 1; Collins, Cardi- . 1. Orsatti, FISHING ey R Dok “Broiling Trout.” NE of the most interesting and satisfactory methods of cooking trout to “broil him on a stick.” Clean him, removing gills and en- Now e head to a s‘ender (Birch preferred.) the cther end of the the grcund at such an is RoLinG (TRouT | A o Deckeq sa3m angle that the fish will hang just in front of the fire where it will get the most heat. Put a piece of fat bacon the head so that the fat will run down and baste the fish as it cooks, Turn occasionally so that the fish will be cooked evenls When you can’t stand trke delicicus odor any longer. lay him on a piece of birch bark and “let your hunger be your guide.” What are your fishing and camp- ing problems? Write them to “Fish- ing.” in care of this paper, inclosing a stamped, self-addressed’ envelope. Tomorrow—Selecting Your Trout MONDAY, MAY American League. - YESTERDAY'S RES[L"'S *sinoT g |4 Berkeley Saturday.' | Portland | Hazleton lAGUSTE RETURNS T[] T[NNIS ACTION Singles “to Amuse Self.” Not on Cup Team. ‘091 -00) | By the Associated Press. UTEUIL, France, May 23.—Af- ter three years’ absence, the once great Rene Lacoste is coming back to Roland Gar- ros Stadium in his old role as master of mechanical tennis. Announcement that he would ap- pear in the French hard-court cham- | pionships, which opened yesterday, gave I rise to reports that he would again be cn the French Davis Cup team, but La- | coste hastened to say he intended to remain on the sidelines for the big matches. “If T have time,” he said, “I want to get through two or three rounds of the (l‘:}mpmn:hlps My business keeps o tied up and I do not have time to lmm for an intensive match. I am | playing the singles to amuse myself. 1 do not intend to play in either doubles | or mixed doubles™ |~ Lacoste has not appeared in a cham- | pi ip match since he was forced by | 11 health to retire in 1929. | Only 2 scattered few doubles ma | were played in the championships terady. The American pair, Sidney B, Wood, New York, and Gregory 8. Man gin, New won their match, beaing Bernie Berthet and Jean Couiteas of France, 7T—S5, 6—1. Doubles were to b2 played this week and singies next. Helen Wills Mcody and Henri Cochet were outstanding favorites to win the women's and men's | singles titles, respectively. PIRATE HOLDOUT SIGNS holder of the Compromise Reached With Pitcher Meine, Greatly Needed. PITTSBURGH, May 23 (#).—Heinie Meine, ace pitcher of the 1931 Pitts- STILL FOOLING THE KIDS. burgh Pirates, is bick in the fold. He signed a contract yesterday in St. | Louis after long negotiations in which he demanded a large increase in pay and the club officials stood firm at a lower figure than he asked. Meine kad been dissatisfied off the ball field and the Pirates have bcen gcing badly, with pitching weak. Yes- terday a compromise was reached. Offi- refused to divulge what conces- were made by either side. ger Cecrge Gibson = id Meine | on the market, deals | to trade him to another cub are “off. GERMANY SENDS TANKERS LEIPZIG, Germany, May 23 () — The German Swimming Association has voted to send a team of 16 to the Olym- pics games at Los Angeles. | BOZEMAN BUI.GE]{ DEAD. | NEW YORK, May 23 (#).--Bozeman Bulger, nationally famous bzse ball writer, died suddenly of a heart attack at his home in Lynbrook, Long today. He was 54 years old. INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE. Rochester, 6-7; Buffalo, 5-4 (first game 11» . 3-6: Toronto. 1-5. City. 9-3. Baitimore. Buffalo.... 3 13 ‘808 Toronto 595 Jersey City. 20 14 588 Reading AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. Kansas City. 6-5 (first St. Paul, 1-0 (second called | Columbus. 2. Toledo. 2-1 w. 36 Kans. City. 1 539 Louisville.. 1 Toledo B 1u 595 3 | Miiwaukee 813 38 SR SOUTHERN ASSOCIATION. Enoxville 8-13; Atlant Chattanoog: Memphis. 1 Orleans. Little 8 Birmineia anding of the Clubs. W. L Pet | Ghatnooka 2611 103 Little Rock. 13 683 Atlanta N. Orleans! Knoxville. . 9 1 5 122333 0 i i 1 | | Rashvilie 15 26 CIH PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE. Los Angeles, 5-5: San Frangisco, 1-2. | Sn:ra -1, | 12 10 56 Port 5-1: Pty wrosc. 52> Riitsions. 2-3. Standing of the Clubs. W. L. Pet. L. Angeles. 2918 617 Hollywood. 28 21 (571 8. Fran'sco 26 22 542 . 26 23 531 TEXAS 6: Houston, 4 ek FoTL Worth. 0. Loneview. 4: Tyler. 3 San“Antonio, 3; Galveston, 2 (18 innings) Standing of the Clubs. Missions LEAGUE. Beaumont. 11 UHNERT WASHINGTON S EMINPRO WHO HAS BEEN TosSsinG To HITTERS FOR 22 YEARS , SEES LESS FERVOR AND WEAKER. HITTERS IN AMATEUR, ~ AND SEMI-PRD BALL TODAY.. ‘and semi-pro batters. DIPFI(ULT Kuhnert Cunning a Bit Late Decides He'll Use Lhange of Pace After Smoking 'Em Over the Plate BY TOM R. CLARENCE LEFTY KUHNERT is thinking. For 22 years Lefty has been zipping a fast ball to | hundreds of Washington amateur He has | pitched to granddad and junior. | And he is planning to stick around i Pyle, Disclaiming Hard Times, Is Out to Out-Barnum Barnum BY PAUL MICKELSON, Associated Press Sports er. HICAGO, May 2 and Carry” Pyle pounded a heavy fist on the table. An ink well jumped out of its stand. ms audience jumped to attention, ‘Hard times? Bah!” barked the w57 JUDD MEETS CHAMP IN TENNIS TOURNEY Third Round Match With Mitchell in City Event on at 5§ P.M. Star Doubles Clash. | DOOLY MITCHELL, defending cham- pion and seeded No. 1, was to face Dean Judd, Frank Shore and Bob Considine were.to meet, and Tony Latona and Hugh Trigg were to have it out, in attractive third-round matches this evening in the City of Washington tennis tourney on the Rock | Creek courts. The Mitchell-Judd and Shore-Considine encounters were slated for 5 o'clock, and the Latona-Trigg tilt was listed for 4. Play also was to continue in the men’s doubles and women’s singles. In the nearest approaches to upsets yesterday, 4| Considine, 1930 singles champ, a Tous- 1818500 Tyler NEW YORK-PENNSYLV. Elmira. 8 Harrisburg, 2. Hazleton, 3: Binghamton, 1. York. 8: Wilkes-Barre. 1 Williamsport, 11; Scranton, 10. %umx. n( the Clubs. W.L P Wt s Binghamton 710 P | 519333 12 6667 Elmir Harr'bure.. 12 PR 513278 8536 wnlmsnnn Whs-Barre 11 .33 Scranton.: EASTERN LEAGUE. Springfieid. ord, Richmond. 5-3; Bridseport. 2-9. Standing of the Clubs. 23, 19 National League. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS. Brooklyn, 2; New York. 1. ', Philadelphia X hicag Bitishurh, 5:3- Bt % & ks, 1.5, “uAry00I wjuapeyd ysangsnid z L " 8 " neuupuy | Clevetana St. Louis | Chicasgo, GAMES TODAY. GAMES TOMORROW. ¢ | Boston at Wasli.. 3:00. Phila. at N. York. Phila at New York. Cleycland af Chicage. Cleyeland at Chicago. St s at Detroit. Others not scheduled. GAMES TODAY. Brogklyn at_Bostor N °Pork st Bhiladel, ‘GAMES TOMORROW Brooklyn at Boston. Chicago at 8t Louid. Others not scheduled. New York at Phila. s Pittsburzh at Cincin, . ing fight before succumbing in 6—4, T—5_ battling, handily defeated Joe Oldhousen, former Philadelphia luminary, 6—2, 6—3. Shore and Latona lost by default to | Hoffecker and Dreschler when the for- mer pair appeared more than an hour | late for their scheduled match. The boys stopped to take a swim. Referee Louis I. Doyle ruled them out. Today's schedule and yesferday's sum- | maries: SCHEDULE. Men's singles (third round)—4 o'clock, La- tona vs. Trigg; 5 o'clock, Mitchell vs. judd, Considine vs. Shore, Yen vs. Rutley, Staub- Iy vs. Mason Men's coubles (second round)—6 o'clock. Considine and Olhausen_vs. Hofecker and Dreschler. Mitchell and Buchanan vs. Noell 0! | and Women's sincles—12 oclock. Reba Kirson vs. Mrs. E. K. Morris, Alice Davis vs. Marion Bitler: 4 o'clock, Bera’ Moore va: Kay Jonn: son. . SUMMARIES. Men’s Singles. nd round_shore defeated Edwards by Considine defeated Grant, 6—4. unt defeated “Yeomans. 6ot 6—2: Gariett Getenten Sonmoen 64, S *Yeon defeated Martinez, 6—1. 6—0: Rutley de- feated Ruckman, 6—2, 6—2; Freshman de- feated Attwood, 6—4, 6-—0: Smith defeated Dorst, 75, & Sntenein defeated Hill, O3, Judd deteated Baker, 6—1. 61 Saason dejeatod Zore, boot. ! Latona de- Teated Ritzenbers, 62, 15-9. Trie ge- feated Buchanan, 6—3. 6—3: Hermann de- feated Burns, 60, 6—1; Olhausen defeated S naentt Yunt o 3 rd round “Hunt defeated Gamnett. 63 6—1; Smith defeated Freshman, 6—0. Hermann defeated Olbausens 2. 603, Women's Singles. First (TOundy Frances Walker defeated 6—3; Margaret Graham defeated Elinor Totten. 61 6ods San Moore defeated Elinor Finckel: 4-8. 2; Kay Johngon defeated Edith Mc- 10—8; Mrs. les Stone de- Teated Miss MeNaty, S, Reba_ Kirson defeated Mattie Pinnette, 61, 6—0: E. K. Morris defeated Alice Rose, 2—8, Siids Alice Davis, Miss Ruth Martines ‘and O and Found—_Darette . Ml defeated cond _ round—Dory ler defeat Dorothy Kingshury, 2—, 7—5. Men’s Doubles. First Tound—Deck and Seidel. bye: Att- wood and partner, bye; Hermann and Yen and O'Neill and Hill. byes. Consigine and Ihgusen defeated Freshman and Yoemans, 631 Henry and Shoemaker defeated Cyr’and C; 4 Dorst snd"Smith defeated Johnsen and *Tr TIgE. 6—2: Neyearden and Groves defegted Reypolds 7—5. 63 gnd_ Lad Secor gefault; n d te o u o} STt and Mason won by detuuit: Hoffecker ‘and Dreschler defeated Shore and Latons by default. Addison Grant furnished | and Gene Hermann | 'With Mammoth Oriental Show modern-day Barnum, who caught the fancy of the headline writers and the —Charlie “Cash courts with his transcontinental “bun- ion derpies” several years ago. “People in this country don't know what hard times are. All this country needs is a big wide grin. Say—" He clapped his hands. His pale blue eyes danced. Like the C. C. Pyle of the | “bunion” days, he thusiastically | waved his audience to draw a little | closer. AVE I got an idea or haven't I? Il ten. You know what we're going to do in the Chicago Wurlds Fair next year? I've got a | syndicate and we're going to knock 'em dead. We're going to promote the big- | gest Oriental show in the history of the world. “We're going to have merchants frem | Irdia, Egypt, China, Japan, Java—all over the world—come to the fair to dis- play their wares. They'll make and se'l | their stuff right before your eyes. | They'll show you confidence and how to | smile. And not cnly that. Listen, We're going to out-Barnum Barnum! “We're going to get the biggest col- lection of freaks the world ever had together ynder one roof. Spike walkers | from lnd‘fa swerd swallowers, the two- | headed man, all of em. I'm going to| Europe in January to get them together. | | | **QAY, you ain't seen nothing yet. | | “In our space we're going to| have enough room for five thea- | | ters, five exhibition halls, 300 booths | and an nmph.\thea!er seating 3,500 peo- | ple. And—" ‘The breaks of sports promotion— mostly bad breaks—have weighed heav- ily on “Cash and Carry” Pyles, but he's | the same dynamic maestro cf stunts, | His head seethes ideas, hundreds of others still stream to him through the | mails. “And he is bounding around, as | usual, from the crack of dawn and far into the wee hours of morning. He's in the radio trflnscl'lpuon busi- ness, successfully directing hundreds of salesmen and traveling about the Nation in such a tireless clip that he has jour- | neyed 30,000 miles by automobile in the | last six months. b , I've had my hard times, but they came two years ahead of the present foolish wailing,” | | Charlie reflected. “I took an_awful | crack on the chin with those ‘Bunion Derbies.” Lost 200,000 on that one in | 1928 and $160,000 on the 1929 heat. But | I'm coming back strong. “People have just forgotten how m‘ take it on the chin and how to come up smiling. That's the trouble today. People are negative. Sales clerks are negative. How can a negative person sell anything? “T'll tell you how I keep my chin up. “Every morning go to my mirror and | ‘Charlie. you're a day older to- day. You've had another day’s experi: You're a better man than yes- terday. This is your day.’ “And it’s a great tonic.” CENTRAL, EA.STERN MEET Play First Game Today in Series for Base Ball Title. Central and Eastern nines were to face teday at 3:30 in the Eastern Sta- dium in the t game of a hi series of three for the public school base ball championship. Elst' erll_l1 beat Central, 6 to 3, in the regular series. Central and Western will face Thurs- day and Eastern and Western May 31 in other games of the play-off. TIE CINCHES TITLE. PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia, May 23 (®).—Austria’s soccer fcot ball team | Reed, 6. | Hose Co., 7-0. to snap his fast ball over to some ior granddad’s grandchildren. That's what is making Lefty think. He is beginning to feel that if he is going to serve up that zip shoot cf his to a lot of grandpap’s grandchildren he will have to learn a change of pace. “I've becn giving the batters that fast bail of mine for 22 years.” says Lefty, “and the next thing I know they are going to get a hold onto it, and there I'll be.” “Yes, sir, Lejty is going to give the sem:i-pros around Washington something else to lcok at, other than his zip shoot. Major, minor and the best of semi-pro talent have taken whacks at Kuhnert's jast ball since back in 1910, when he hurled his first game for the Fairlauns of Ana- costia. For a duet of decades the 38- year-old semi-pro southpaw has been fiinging up the ball for one team or another, until he has to jostle his memory to tell you of just half the teams jor which he has played. Lefty's prepnralmn for his twenty- recond year into base ball consists of donning a uniform and stepping up on the hill. He rarely warms up and he is ready to grab his fire hat at a moment’s notice. “I only tried to take care of my arm once—and it didn't work,” says Clarence. “I soaked it with liniment and a lot of other stuff and I couldn't get the ball over the plate. Now I just go in there and pitch and forget it when I'm through.” Batters of today, according to Lefty, are inferior to the hitters of Sandlot Base Ball Scores INDEPENDENT. St. hgrys Celtics, 8; Griffith-Blue | | Coals, 3. | St. Mary's Celtics, 11; Campbell Shoe, 0. | Hyattsville, 7; Skinker Eagles, 3. Front Royal, 8; Howitzer Giants, 1. | Washington Police, 19; Alexandria Firemen, 1. Washington Red Sox, 16; Army War College, Mark Blum, 5. Anacostia Eagles, 8; Bethesda, 7. Hawks, 5; Notre Dame Preps, 2. | Caplto! Heights, 4; Virginia wmu‘ Kenslngtnn 5: Cherrydale, 4. | Holy Rosary, 5; St. Stephen’s, 2. Dixie Pigs, 16; Locust Point, 2 Eastern All-Stars, 11; Aztecs, 10. | Rockville, 7; Northern Kennedy& 3. Wocdley A. C., 11; Virginia Cava- | liers, 10. ‘Weaver Insects, 12; Sacred Heart, 9. Maryland Mac, Landover, 6. Burroughs A. C. Stansbury A. C., Stansbury, 21; Comets, Congress Heights, 13; Whlte Oaks, 6. Federal Storage, 22; Del Ray, 4. | Majestic Radio, 9-3; Martinsburg | Auth’s, 10; Orange Ramblers, 4. Berwyn, 11; East Riverdale, 8. R 2B.ust‘en. 9°7; Columbia Engine Co., | Mount Rainier, 14; Fort Myer, 11. Washington A. 12; Damascus. 10. Wilkins Press, 6; Cliftcn A. C, 2. Nation-Wide, 7; Palisade A. C, 6. Sanico, 7; Vimni.. 4. Buddy Myer Insects, 12; Whippets, 5. Department Store League. Lansburgh's, 19; Kann's, 2. Palais Royal, 8; Hecht's, 1. ‘Walter Efll‘t‘!u Rg’ll Hecht's Kann's HOWARD A. FRENCH LEAGUE. Midgets. shepherd Park 7; Petworth, 6. Sears, rry, 9. Joe Kuhell, 13; Ristigs, 1. Insects. Versis, 3; Heckinger, 2. American Legion. Spengler Post, 17; Bunker Hill Post, 1. Lincoln Post, 15; Walcott Post, 2. CAPITAL CITY LEAGUE. Unlimited Class. Congress Heights, 24; Highway, held Czechoslovakia to a 1-1 tie yes- terday and virtually clinched the Euro- pean Cup. | letters for Duke University sports ac- —By TOM DOERER HOME RUNS BOOST NS T0 THIRD PLACE [Foxx, Simmons and Coch- | rane Hit for Circuit as Macks Cop Seventh Straight. BY HERBERT W. BARKER, Associated Press Sports V.riter HE good left arm of Robert (Lefty) Grove and the mighty bat of Jimmy Foxx fast are leading the Phila- adelphia Athletics out of the darkness of the American League standings. Behind Grove's 6-hit pitching and with the aid of home runs by Foxx, Al Simmons and Mickey Cochrane, the A's bowled over the New York Yankees, 4-2, yesterday for their seventh successive victory. As a result the A’s moved into third "place. three ‘games behind the second-place Washington Senators and four and a half bchmd the Yankees. ixth in Row. ning his sixth game in ed Henry Johnson by the narowest of margins. Johnson al. lowed only five hits in the eight innings he worked and struck out seven, but could not keep the home run ball away from the A’s “Big Three.” ropped into fifth place as a 4-2 beating at the hands of the St. Louis Browns. who made oniy five hits off Clint Brown, but bunched them for four runs in the fifth. Ninth-inning rallies won two games for the Chicago White Sox from the _ Johany Hodapp's homer nd Lou Blue's triple \p’)l of a 5-run tally that won the second, 8-7. * Wies \srmep o LAy THE KIDS TOOK MORE INTEREST N THE GAME... WE'D WALK MILES TO PLAY-.. AND WE PAYED HARD™ Grove. LEFTY USED To TAKE CARE OF HiS ARM-NOwW THAT HE DOBSN'T \T's BETTER THAN Byed Braves on Cubs’ Heels. | The Boston Braves drew to within 2 | percentage points or the National League lead by splitting a double bill | with the Phillies, while the league-lead- ing Chicago Cubs were taking another beating from the Cincinnati Reds. Ed Brandt pitched five-hit bell to give the Braves the opener, 4-2. singles by Klein, Hurst Davis in_the tenth in hillies the nightcap, 5-3. A record- breaking crowd of 51.331 saw the battle. Ray Kolp had the better of a pitchers’ duel v Charley Root as the Reds won their third in'a row from The two Brooklyn cast-offs, Babe man and Ernie Lombardi, drove in four Red ru Clark Subjugates Giants. Bill Clark held the New York Giants to five hits as the Dodgers won a 2-1 victory h’ Alphonso Lopez driving in both talli Pittsburgh won the first game from St. Louis' Cardinals, 5-1. but dropped the second, 5-3. Steve Swetonic pitched his third three-hit game for the Pirates in the cpener and would have had h\S fourth shutout but for a_home run Pepper Mertin. Bill Hallahan was walloped for 12 hits in the second game, but was tight in the pinches. He struck out_eight men to run his season's total to 51. 22 Years. DOERER 20 years ago. “Kids those days were filled with base ball interest. There were few other things to take their rind off the game, life golf, autos, foot ball, track and boxing teams. The kids of those old days studied the styles of the major leaguers, and it was serious business to play a zame.” “After all of these vears of hurling I ought to find the hitters harder to gt out. But it isn't so. They sre easier to f00] now than they were 15 years ago. Maybe my old soup bone is getting better with the vears. But I don't think so—those hitters today are not as smart as they should be.” fer has come to Lejty in all of those yea: About sir years ago an offer wwas made for a trial with a Three-I League outfit, and Lefty agreed as far as getting o the train. Then he balked. WALKER CONCEDES PAULINO 30 POUNDS Enlarged Middleweight Yet Lose to a Heavy—Paul, Pena in Feather Final. Pitching three nine-inning games in one day is the Southeast boy's claim to iron’ man fame. That happened back in 1915 when the lefthander’s fast ball must have been working at its best, for he tock the entire set. to And his favorite game was a bat- tle with the Quantico Marines in 1917, when his catcher, Monk Fraser, dropped the third strike to permit the run to be scored whick won the tussle for the sea-soldiers. Lefty had fanned 13 of the Marines, then one of the best teams of its kind in this section. But what Lefty has dene does not seem to cause him as much concern as what he expects to do this season with the Judd & Detweiler team during the week, and the French Store nine on Sunday. Lefty is no one-team pitcher, everi after 22 years of hurling. It takes two teams to keep the southpaw active. With his promised change of pace. Lefty ought to make grandpap’s grandchildren in semi-pro base ball do a lot of smacking into the breezes this season. EW YORK, May 23 —Mickey W: er. Rumsor overgrown middle- weight, secks to keep his perfect record inst heavyweights unsullied in a 10-round match with Paulino Uzcudun of Spain in Madison Square Garden Thursday night. Victor over King Levinsky in his last start, Walker will be favored over Paulino, although the battle-scarred Basque may give Mickey a real run for his money. Paulino probably will out- weigh the New Jersey Irishman by 30 pounds, In Detroit the same night the Na- tional Boxing Association will crown a new featherweight champion in a 15- round struggle between Tommy Paul of Buffalo and Johnny Pena of New York. These two are survivors of the N. B. A’s elimination tournament. begun when Christopher (Bat) Battalino out- grew the division and forfeited his title. ‘Horning Jewelers, Union Print- ers, 1. Rock Creek Servicenter, seph’s, 0 (forfeit). Senior Class. Miller Furniture, 12; Takoma Tigers, 3. Dor-A, 7; Swann’s, 3. Koontz, 16; Clifton, 2. Junior Class. Southwest Merchants, 11; Dor-A, 7. Dixie Polish, 15; Swann Service, 5. Georgetown, 10; Fussell-Young, 3. Midget Class. 15; Thempson's 9; Stars Yesterday 9; St. Jo- By the Associated Press. Ray Kolp, Reds—Stopped Cubs wit seven hits and won, 4-3 Monte Weaver, Serators—Held R Sox to four hits. Al Lopez, Dodgers—Drove in bo| runs with double and safe bunt Dodgers beat Giants, 2-1 Georee Blaeholder, and beat Indians, Steve Swetonic, Pir: Good-c-s, nals to three hits and | ture, 1. Nmoml Pale Drys, Post, 5. Furni- Former won first game with hy ninth: latter won second wit also in ninth. Al Simmons, Jimmy Fo¥x and Mickey Cochrane, Athletics -~ Their | home runs beat Yankees, 4-2 Ea_Brandt, Braves—Held Phillies to five hits and beat them, 4 BASE BALL 2% AMERICAN LEAGUE PARK Washington vs. Boston TICKETS ON SALE AT PARK - AT 9:00 A} 5; Arlington triple, |DUKE REWARDS D. C. BOYS Colley, Two Thompsons, Peacock | and Garber Get Letters. DURHAM, N. C., May 23.—Six boys | of Washington and vicinity have won TODAY tivities. They are Nelson Colley, James Thompson and Herbert Thompson for basket ball; Robert Atkins, s%imming; | Don Guber tennis, and Roger Pca- cock, captain-elect of the golf team HANAN Featherweight America’s finest custom -lasted lightweight shoes for Summer. ghtweight Russia Calf and feath- erweight soles. Tan or black. $10%° Last season were $13.50 “Quality, like character, endures” WASHINGTON'S FINEST MEN'S WEAR STORE RALEIGH HABERDASHER 1310 F Street

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