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Depression Seen as Likely to TEXAS DERBY HOPE “SOFTIES” PROFIT BY ENFORCED TOIL Zuppke Asserts Colleges as Well as Students Will Reap Benefits. BY LAWRENCE PERRY. OO long has the voice of Bob Zuppke been silent. We asked him if two or three adverse foot ball seascns had stilled his tongue and shackled his indomitable spirit and the answer from the classic precincts of Urbana is ringingly second to none, | g about Illinois foot X asked him, will be the effects of depression on t therto | pampered sons of affluent fat | “They will be—and are: ndid,” he replies. “Heretofore a majority of our foot ball players have come from onments which were far from soft ok at the foreign n our "NO\V life is for many not be brougk D, 2 on golf courses. TI 11 be g their way through college and taking part in contact sports which did mnot sppeal to them in their lah-de-dah days “It will be good for them and the educational institutions where the tendency is toward diminishing athletic and physical activities. Nothing is sillier than to declare athletics a fad and so to be cut down when the wolf is at the door. “It will be a bad thing for our youth if boys are not encouraged to play games and directed in them. “Youth feels an irrepressible urge to express itself physically and should re- ceive the opportunity to do so. Older minds sometimes do not fathom, or do not understand, this desire. “Maturity,” he continues, “often for- gets that the best and highest ex- pression of youth is physical—because the body urges development. in ng to be so soft r boys who will 4t A GE expresses itself better men- tally because the body is de- teriorating—not as great and rapid a depreciation as in a motor car, but_enough. | “Brawn and brains go together. Thi relation is not brawn against brains as one so often hears. Brains needs the good blood of a healthy body. Thflt“ is why nature calls upon young men 1o develop their physiques. Then again, every one hopes to be a protagonist, a hero; it is aspiration born of a laud- | able vanity. “Athletics, the expression of a vigor- ous brain, inciting a healthful body to express itself—there is the combination which makes your greatest athlete. “For, what is he? He is an idea going into action. Any idea that does not go into action usually becomes sick and produces serious nervous diseases and other troubles.” So much for the wisdom of a matured | foot ball coach who has a faculty of inspiring and driving youth to heroic achievements en a barred stretch of turf. Stars Yesterday By the Associated Press. Joe Cronin, Senators—Made debut as manager by hitting three times in four times up against Athletics. Lon Warneke, Cubs—Shut out Cardi- nals with four hits and fanned six to win, 3-0. | Clint Brown, Indians—Held Tigers to | seven hits in 13-inning duel Tommie Bridges, winning, 4-1 Gus Suhr, Pirates—Hit two doubles and one single behind Bill Swift's four- | = hit pitching to help beat Reds, 4-1 Al Simmons and Red Kress, White | BSox—Simmons hit first homer of sea son; Kress batted in three runs in 4-2 triumph over Browns. | — BOXING MATCHES LISTED sY” Ringmen to Meet G. W. Squared Circle Team April 22. Boxing exhibitions, with glovemen of the Central Y. M. C. A. squaring off against members of the George Wash- | ington Squared Circle Club, w be held at the Central Y. M. C. A. Ap Leading Y boxers include Mark Mooney, welterweight; Doc Blue, light- weight; Winston Mooney, middleweight and Curtis Varah, former Marine Corps | Semi-Finals in Four-Wall Play at with | B THE EVENING STAR, WASHIN( 1§ \ 3 Prove Ultz;ma'te Azd to. SPORTS. College Sports Chiliy Cub Fans Warm Up on Beer By the As: ted Press. HICAGO, April 13 —Beer went well at the 1933 base ball in- augural at Wrigley F ncessionaire John Seys said the the grand nd. 'did a rushing business desy chilly Spring weather. | | N s of the new beer | he grand stand, bu } lat. - \DUKE OPPOSES V. P. I. . IN CONFERENCE TEST Plays Two Other Teams Before Its Twin Bill With Maryland on Easter Monday. URHAM, N. C. April 13.—Cham- pions of the loop in 1929 and high in the ranking each year since then, Duke will start its 1933 Southern Conference base ball campaign by meet- ing V. P. L's Gobblers today. Off to a fine start with victories over Michigan State and Elon, the 1933 team m gation. The Easter series will come to a close Moncay Wwith the staging of the annual double-header after the Blue Devils have met Guilford on Friday and the Durham Bulis of the Piedmont League in a double bill Saturday. Uni- versity of Maryland has been select=d as the opponent in this year's Easter Monday affair. BRITISH NETMEN TO VISIT Oxford, Cambridge to Oppose Yale, Harvard During July. NEW YORK, April 13 (#).—The an- nual tennis series between a combined Oxford-Cembridge team and one repre- senting Harvard and Yale will be con- tested this year at the Newport, R. L. Casino July 13, 14 and 15, the Unitea States Lawn Tennis Association has an- nounced. The series, begun on an informal ba- sis several years ago. has been playea eight times with each team four times the winner. Since 1924 the competi- tion has been for the international in- tercollegiate tennis cup given by Ber- non S. Prentice, chairman of the United States Davis Cup Committee. | Both the English and American play- | rs will compete in several other East-| ern tournaments and the national in- | tercollegiates at Haverford, Pa., begin ning June 26. | o » FOUR LEFT AT HAND BALL| “Y" Scheduled Tonight. | Semi-finals in the annual District A. A. U. four-wall hand ball champion- ships will be played this evening on the Central Y. M. C. A. courts. In the first tilt, at 5 o'clock. Joe Cowley, | who last night defeated Paul Pearlman, 21-7, 21-9, meets Jack Kosowsky, at 6. | and J. B. Payne, who conquered Bill Neville, '21-18, 21-19, engages George | Newman, winner over Jack Arnoid, 21- | 11, 81-15. The final will be played Saurday at 2 p.m. | Competition in the singles advanced Tuesday with no upsets and doubles | play also got under way with the fa- vorites scoring. Tom Charshee and Randy Myers, last season’s doubles champs, won the opening match in de- fense of their title, downing Arnold and Neville, 21—16, 2113, | Summaries: | feated Goldstein”™ (J. Peariman (Y.) defeated 21 Dotibles—McLean and Goldberg defeated | Pea n, 21—=20, 21—15 an 21—16; Schwartz _and (defeated Vinebers and Woodward BOYS TO SWAP BLOWS |Alexandrians to Visit Northeast| S, J“h" | At Club for Bouts Tonight. Boxers of the Northeast Boys' Club | and the Alexandria Boys' Club will trade punches tonight in a meet in the | Northeast Club's ring, starting at 8:30 v'clock | It will be the rubber affair of a series in which each club has beaten the other once. Creighton Allen, Northeast. and Joe Kmech, Alexandria, will mix in the feature bout of the nine carded. | | | SEEKS SUNDAY GAME. A practice game for Sunday morning | was fortable VIEWED BY CRITICS Strideaway, Sure Starter, if Track Is Fast, Arrives at Louisville. birds at C! ered today to take Strideaway, the Ke nominee of the Three D's Texas and the Far W tender for the $50,000 added 6, a new arrival | Barring | sidered a |if the track Phala: s colt ing the Winter | The Three D's Sta luck” racing establi Its Liberty Li; |1in wor out dark | the runn C. C. Van Meter's Red ing Derby hope of the B at | Derby Stable v be another great Blue Devil aggre- injury « withd the 1931 Derby. Col. E. R. Brad win three Derbys Idle Hour far is highly pleased of three of his D maker, Broker's T J. C. Milan’s C: Monday mac gible to wi was the only Dr N day's card at t as fa- vored to repeat r sprint Muddy tra Louisville and Milk workout cluded North Mill ville, and Pre-War turn, 1:53, and Grac Lexington, BOY WINS SWIM TITLE Takes ntucky course Macionis of Philadelphia 220-Yard Junior Hon NEWARK, N. J.. April 13 Macionis, Pl rs { the 220-ya swimming Athletic C world event, in 2 minutes ‘The tim the recc interschol. ast Kelly. Brothers' Charles Roge Y. M. C A, wl OUT OF GERMAN SPORTS | Lewald Quits F S| has government's He also is c Glympic C for the 1936 the pr 6TH CORPS W CHICAGO. April Chic the I door polo INS AT POLO st 880 Man for Virginia U‘II'}! Big Stables Look To ‘Outlaw’ Track HICAGO, April 13 (#).—Sports- man’s Park. Chicago’s half-mile racing plant, is getting some ing requests for stall reserva- opening of its meeting, regarded as an “outlaw™ t vear, such noted sports- Wi Sharpe Kilmer of rk, Charles T. Fisher of and Stuyvesant Peabody of icago, have applied for stall space. > tion books, issued today, call races daily, with a rse il n of $4.500 each day. ex- cept Saturday, when they will be $5.000. NEW SANDLOT LOOP " IS IN MAKING HERE Three Teams in Line and as Many More Probable—Treasuryites List First Drill. ST steps in the organization of a new base ball league were taken last night at the Central M. C. A, when represent- Sanico Warehouse, Acacia | rance Co. and the Chesa- mac Telephone Co. signi- ticn of entering teams, gton Gas Light and Swift other probable starters meeting will be held next the Y. Meanwhile e asked to call Vic itan 8878. fied their Pepeo, W ther nday night at ns interested 1278 at Metr he Treasury Depart- 1d their first drill to meet at T iteenth street and Pennsylvania avenue, not later than 4:30 pm. The team will use either the east or west diamonds on the Ellipse. samuel H assistant chief | rk of the dep is president of | team. W y- Tr John Park ow night The team Firemen tossers e with the for nday afternoon at on the V. A. C. diamond in Alexandria. g thelr season, the Ballston tment nine will engage the A. C. tossers Sunday after- 3 o'clock on the Mulhall Field Indian Head Cardinals will omit drills t but will practice April nt field No. 2. The Cards ve double headers polis Semi-Pros, Quantico and the Chesapeake & Potomac Telephone Cc team will hold a dance ey High School arill this evening and ng at 4 o'clock on the Peewees Market Peewees, r opponents rd Roache who topped the 16-15, are through Man- at Atlantic )00k ager Be 4168-W rthern A. C. diamonders drill this ‘clock on the Hoover ation for Sun- Mary's Celtics. who meet the A. G. O. Department Satur- after other foes \ 0749 after 7 pm. is sought by who work this on Monument | Manager Ca ac- is is book- ted teams ner's Red Sox. at Lincoln 5399, 1 Sunday after- the diamond asked to be 116, Capitol for the team NEW YORK RACING HITON ALL S0ES 'Cut in Days, Prices Become General—Lone Fall Meet Is Provided For. Associated EW YORK, ened and planned store for metropolitan New York this season but if the crowds respond | well enough to lowered admissio | prices it may be extended a bit | Following the decision of Belmont | Park to cut its Spring meeting to 12 days, a tentative the four tracks around drawn up, to be p Club appro starting at will open at that The Belmont Spri Empire meeting fo ont racing s in sented to the Ji for today. Jamaica i the E Park made toga was mot included though it is expected to o gust more or less as usual Lapses of from four days to a ed between t - c support w associations are expected meetings to fill The associ: duce general and the club and $3.50 for wo The tentativ Jamaica Belmont days, second Mc Aqueduct—Jur Empire City 1 Belmont Park—S ants the Curb for Basket Pivot Play Seen League That Will Open on Ap clected president of nis League t night t was rs Is 19 Under for 108 |° Holes at San 69 and 68 on week ¢ morning and a rec- the afternoon. Rogers | years ago and never \ree Antonio, One sug: t man be re- ition on or in row line had lots it was pointed out e would make it diffi- defense.” URUGUAYAN RIDER D& ow/ EARKSAHUGE UM Totals $350,000 in 10 Years on Buenos Aires Track on Percentage Basis. By the Associated Press. UENOS AIRES—On any list of | professional athletes who have made their prowess pay them | big money, the name of the| fockey Ireneo Leguisamo, idol of the| Buenos Alres race track, belongs onc-f two-three | In 10 years of riding at the Jockey | he has ssions on hippodrome in comn unts he has 5 per cent 2 the m ridden plus anothe to the jockey $100,000 or more. TEN-YEAR average ear 00 would be notal n the Unite nted of the prize variably given | ergs | gen- | race | to mn-} “golden e Ruth can match it collected | winnings hat | oney | | | ning of e more remarkable in Argentina, | won all his akes in it always took two, and | a dollar. And » 1928, in 19 2,980 horses, of which 887 | per cent. won. His biggest | horses he Ken try Club | world records—one day 108 holes s secend in the other. approach Leguisamo’s record money-maker. Don’t take a CHANCE on thin slick tires! R {EMBER that brakes stop only your wheels—it takes fires that grip to stop your car. For your own and your family’s safety, buy new Goodyears now—the new cost is so small it’s not worth thinking about and you may save a lifetime of vain regret. The Quality Tire within reach of all! The World’s Most Popular Tire Year in and year out, on the basis of tested quality, the public con- tinues to buy more Goodyear All- Weathers than any other tire. Greater mileage, greater traction, greater safety and low prices all contribute to still greater value in the 1933 SR 65 edition! Priced as AND UP low as year was | rode won $527.-| akes and when he twice set by booting in | ix winners on an afternoon card, and | 10 weeks later by riding in every ome of eight races, winning seven and plac- .DOUGLAS No other South American athlete can who nos Aires | ce then he has r W.L. ! SHOE From all over the coun- try we are getting tre- mendous apfroval of the new W. L. Douglas $3.00 shoes for men. Their solid leather con- struction and correct styling have caught fa- vor everywhere. Made of full-grain calf or kid. Their looks speak for Stepped up in safety—in appearance — in mileage — stepped down in price! The new Goodyear Path- finders are even better than 17,000,000 former Pathfinders which made a reputation for thrift Priced as s A50 AND UP at 11 o'clock on the Monument Grounds with an u ited team is wanted by the Hecht Co. nine. Call Paul Messink at National 5100 between 9 a.m. and 6 p.m themselves in any W. L. Douglas window — your feet will tell you how comfortably they fit. heavyweight champion. I ALEXANDRIANS FORM NINE Eagles Now Ready—Schedule for | City Fields to Be Drawn. | ALEXANDRIA, Va, April 13.—Or- ganization of a base ball team to rep- resent the Frat d Eagles was effected at a at 413 King street 637 N ST. NW. low as A schedule of municipal base ba at a_meeting F o'clock in the office 0 : M. Duncan n F i z fo e | | WARNING Certain cigars are being offered Interest in tr to you at so-ca'led “bargain’ sl e 5 prices. But don’t forget this! ; : Many cigars are being duced because they wouldn't sell at their former prices. Not so with the Bayuk “Phillies” —now 5 cénts. It was the largest-selling agame | Waddy St. Mary's Ce for Mon nine in TRADE-IN? SURE! Get ready for spring! You re- Vernon Do McMenamir W. L. Douglas name and reputation is your assurance of long and satisfactory wear. TRADE-IN , OPPORTUNITY on All-Weathers can trade in old tires now i on Goodyear All-Weathers Roberts, Kenn: —one tire or a set. “America’s Best Known Shoes” . $3.30 $3.60 $5.00 Men's Normal-Treds §7 $2.40 $2.60 W. L. DOUGLAS STORE IN WASHINGTON 905 Pennsylvania Ave. N.W. |Boys’ at . . $220 In 1929 —a peak sales year —the Bayuk Philadelphia Perfecto (Familiarly known as “Philadelphia Hand-made”) was the largest-selling 10-cent brand in America. Bayuk guarantees that this cigar today — at 5 cents—contains the same fine Im- ported Sumatra wrapper—the same fine Havana and Domestic long-filler—the same ripe tobacco. MAIN STORE 14th AT R NW BRANCH STORES SERVICE STATION DISTRICT TIRE STORE Connecticut and Nebraska Aves. Emerson 0301 1602 14th St. N.W. Pot. 2771 DE. 5700 |, 10c brand in America e Memncria's colors : for years. The Bay_u'k - : :.\Ien's at . e T Guarantee below is g i | RO your protection. FORMERLY 10c A7 P rangular meet late t Jayn\ AL (il D d o= \/ G which Episcopal, Washington-Lee and 3 \ W s Predericksburg are expected 1o Show i A i } )\/ 0 £ ..l pheiripsres 5 A 7 e H » 8 ™ BAYUK'S GUARANTEE . LINCORPGRATED Havre de Grace April 15 to 29, Inclusive SEVEN RACES DAILY Special Penna. R R. train leaves Twion' Station Teon PR direct to track., Eastern Standard Time. Railroad Fare, Round Trip, $3.40 FIRST RACE AT 2:30 P.M. BAYUK PHILADELPHIA PERFECTO For the comvemience of our tomers this store will be opew Eru{pu during Easter Week cus-