Evening Star Newspaper, April 26, 1933, Page 13

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‘ SPORTS. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., WEDNESDAY, APRIL 26, 1933. SPORTS A—13 Georgetown and Maryland to Take Part in Six Events at Penn Relay Carnival HOYAS MAKING BID INFOURCONTESTS Enter 3 Relays, Musante in Shotput—Terps Sending Widmyer, Quartet. BY H. C. BYRD. ESIDES one man each to compete in events for in- dividuals, Georgetown will send three relay teams and Maryland one to the Penn relays at Philadelphia Saturday. Georgetown has entered a quar- ter-mile team, each man to run 110 yards; a half mile team, each man to run 220 yards, and a fresh- man four to run a mile. Its en- iry in an event for individuals is Musante in the hammer throw. Maryland is to be represented by a mile team in the relays and by Wid- myer in the individual events. Wid- myer is to compete in the 100-yard special. A good deal of the showing George- town may make depends on Kelly, who has been suffering for some time with an injured leg. This injury was ag- gravated in the dual meet with North Carolina some time ago. If Kelly can Tun his normal race in the two sprint relays, Georgetown has a fair chance, but if he is not able to do that, then there is not much to hope for. The quarter-mile relay is to be run tomor- row and the half-mile Saturday. EORGETOWN has a fairly good freshman four entered in the championship race for freshman teams. One member of the quartet can do the distance in about 51 seconds, but the others are not that good. Mu- sante is not inexperienced in the ham- mer throw, although he has not done as much in that event as some of the men he will be against. He came from St. Anselm's Academy and while there won_the interscholastic championship of New England in his event. Georgetown's quarter-mile team will be made up of Kelly, Bradley, Larkin and Smith. Its 880 team will be Kelly, Bradley, Smith and Di Pasqualie. Three certain members of the Fresh- man four are McNeill, Gallagher and Keans, with the fourth member to be picked after a time trial between Guiney and Connolly. Maryland is luckier than George- town in that it has drawn the pole, a very favored position. The Old Liners will not pick the four men who are to run until late this afternoon, when time trials are to be held. Evans and Archer are certain to be on the team, with the other two to be picked from Sonen, Cronin and Quinn. Maryland stands the best chance to win at Penn that it has had in years. IDMYER in the 100-yard dash seems to have about as good a chance as any other runner to fin- | ish first. There may be some man in the colleges in the East who can beat him, but it is doubtful. If two or three of the fastest Middle Western or Far West- ern runners come East, which seems un- likely, that will make another story. Bell of Massachusetts Tech beat Widmyer in | a 60-yard dash indoors during the Win- ter season, but it is said that he is not so good at the longer distance. Anyway, any runner who beats the Marylander will have to step down the course at a lively gait. Year in and year out there probably is no more attractive thing in the coun- try in the way of a track meet than the Penn relays. And year in and year out it probably is the most successful of meets. No matter what the conditions, ‘war or peace, plenty or panic, apparently there is sufficient attraction in the Penn games for the colleges and schools to make desperate attempts to get there. And they usually do. Over an average | of the last 25 years there probably have been more entrants and greater crowds at the Penn games than at any other | meet. 'HE District of Columbia Amateur Athletic Union is to hold its an- nual championships May 30 on the Unjversity of Maryland track. The championships were held there last year, but_at night. The following events are to be de- cided: 100, 200 and 400 meter dashes; 800, 1,500 and 3,000 meter runs; 110 and 200 meter hurdles, high jump, broad jump, shotput, discus, javelin, pole vault and 10,000-meter run. Several special events have been scheduled, in which it is hoped to have several stars from other sections. Onc is a medley relay, two men each to run 220 yards, one to run 440 and the fourth to run 880. There also will be a mile relay for clubs, and three handicap events, the 100 meters, 5,000 meters and | broad jump. For the high and preparatory schools, there are carded a 100-meter dash, 800- meter run and a high jump, all scratch. KEATING SUED FOR DIVOBCE.‘ SACRAMENTO, Calif., April 26 (P). —Ray Keating, former pitcher for the Sacramento Club of the Pacific Coast League, who once played in the majors, was sued for divorce today by Eliza- beth Keating. — ARIZMENDI VS. GREENFIELD. LOS ANGELES, April 26 ().—Baby Arizmendi, Mexico City featherweight, has been signed to meet Al Greenfield, New York, in a 10-round bout at Tia Juana, Mexico, April 30. City Pin Tourney Schedule TONIGHT. 7:15 P.M.—SINGLES. Name. Eskite Alley, 8w, mHUTaa>0a 8 P.M.—ELECTRICAL LEAGUE NIGHT. League. Cfass. .. .Electrical E 3. Electrical Electrical Electrical flectrical _Electrical Electrical _Electrical " Elec. Supply Co.. Elec. Power Co at! No. 1 Nail Potomac. Alley. ‘Team. o Gompers 10 P. Clasy, Alley, E 4% D 49 E Name. Arneson & Eskite. . Chaney & Whitt'ston Gray & Wilson Rider & Scanlon’ Alley. t 50 Share & TOMORROW 41 b 43 4 0 P.M.—SINGLES. Name. 6 R. N. Butler Whit Alley_ Nam Class. Alley. 33 Pape F AL ‘Washington Post 5 ln‘ur Printers. 86 Occidental Hotel 3 4 Alley. 6 7 flery, Name 3 Banders & Pape. 34 Moore & Folk % lowery & Col: Class. ° E c c B C C B c o Name. Neldecker Higgins & —~DOUBLES. ‘Plantz. & Butler. Darnall & Orm Scholastic Sports Base Ball Eastern, 4; Roosevelt, 0. Central, 16; ‘Washington-Lee High, Lacrosse. McDonogh School, 13; Tennis. Episcopal, 5; Virginia Freshmen, 1. Golf. St. John's 4; Takoma-Silver Springs High, 2. 'KEEPSIE REGATTA WILL BE RENEWED Abandoned for This Year, Plans Already Taking Shape for Classic in 1934. 0 Central, 1. By the Associated Press. EW YORK, April 26.—Aban- doned this year because of financial conditions, the Pough- keepsie regatta will return to its customary place in the national | sports program next season, no matter what the success of the proposed col- lege regatta at Long Beach, Calif, | July 8. Maxwell Stevenson, chairman of the Intercollegiate Rowing Association’s board of stewards, discloses that plans already are under way for resumption of the Poughkeepsie 4-mile classic in | 1934. “It was canceled this year only be- cause of the realization that holding it might be unfair to some of the col- leges which have sent in annual en- tries,” Stevenson said. “But next year there will be more time in which to make plans to meet whatever circum- stances happen to exist.” Possibility that the Long Beach re- gatta, calling for a varsity race of a mile and one-quarter, might be re- | newed annually in the event of a suc- | cessful start this year left Stevenson | unperturbed. He believes Eastern crews | at least, accustomed to climax races at | | 4 miles, would decline to accept the | | shorter distance as standard. Yale and Harvard, which do not | row at Poughkeepsie, tentatively have | accepted invitations to compete at| Long Beach. NET FAVORITES ADVANCE Springs Victors. All the favorites were in'the group that moved today into the quarter-finals of | [} _ OR'Tke Shields, Stoefen and Rainville Hot | & H HOT SPRINGS, Va., April 26 (P).— |4 b. W NINE IN LAST DRILL FOR OPENER Lone Position Debated for Delaware Tilt Tomorrow. G. U. Beats Temple. v V against Delaware tomorrow night in Grifith Stadium, George Washington’s nine is practi- cally “set.” Only left field remains to be definitely filled. Joe Trilling and Marshall Melpolder, former teammates at Emerson, are battling for the berth. Other positions will be filled as fol- lows: Johnny Fenlon, Colonial foot ball ace, at third base; Bill Albert, former Emer- son star, at shortstop; Don Bomba, burly foot ball fullback, at right field; Otts Zahn, G. W. basket ball captain, at first base; Ed Baer, who hails from Los Angeles, at second base; Fred Mul- vey, foot ball end, in center fleld, and Calvin Griffith, adopted son of the ‘Washington base ball club owner, be- hind the bat. These players will bat in the order named, with the left flelder coming before Griffith. Either Bill Noonan, former Eastern High mound mainstay, or Heine Wein- gartner, Beltsville, Md., youth, will get the pitching assignment. ITH but one more practice remaining before its debut IRGINIA was at College Park this | M afternoon for a Southern Confer- ence game with Maryland that was slated to start at 4 o'clock. Virginia beat Navy last Saturday, while Maryland, which has lost three of four tilts, has not seen action since losing to North Carolina on April 18. Georgetown's golf team will make its season’s debut this afternoon by play- ing North Carolina at the Burning Tree course. Capt. Jock Slattery, Joe Lynch, William Tynan, Richard Mc- Partlin, Donald O'Brien and John O'Brien were to represent the Hoyas. IEORGETOWN’S base ball team got even for a beating it took at the hands of Temple last week, defeat- ing the Owls here yesterday, 5 to 4, by | getting all its runs in a stirring ninth- inning rally. A mixture of hits, an error, a pass and hit batsmen was topped of by a single by Pinch Hitter Sanzero for the winning five markers. Score: Ge'town. AB. apD.ib. B 2 Costeilo.rf 3 Brick.rf’ . Temple. AB. Kilkuski.rf 4 Sibson.ss . A 20 1 Brown,If Rozanski.c Cramer.p. Gudd.p... osmomizsouweR 4 o the annual Hot Springs tennis tourna- | | ment. Francis X. Shields of New York, the | tournament favorite, moved along with | a 6—0, 6—1 decision over Robert Van | Lear, while Lester Stoefen of Los An- | geles and Marcel Rainville of the Ca- | nadian Davis Cup team won their | matches in impressive style. In the women's division the contests | Hilleary of Philadelphia, one of the | tourney favorites, hard pressed to defeat | Eliza Coxe, 4—6, 6—4, an . Another Philadelphian, Alison Harri- son, had a stiff battle to beat Jean Schweppe 7—5, 5—1, T—5. | E were more closely fought, with Virginia | b Totals..30 72710 Totals..38 11125 & *Batted for Neslie in ninth. One out when winning run scored Temple ... 000121000- Georgetown 0000000065 _ Runs—Savarine. Hall. Carpenter, Carolan, Viskovich, Kilkuski, Patton (), Ri rrors—Carpenter. Hargaden, Cramer. ~ Tw hit—Stbson. bases—Savarine (2). Mitchell, Sibson. rifices—Hutchinson, ‘Graham, ' Cramer. bases—Georgetown, t; Temple, 5 base on balls—Off Cramer. 4. . Hits— Cramer, 6 in 8%y innings: off Gudd, I in 0 innings. "Hit by pitched ball—By Cramer (Sa . Viskovich). _ Struck out—B: &:'by Cramer. Wild pitch—Neslie. Balk—Cramer. Passe Los. ing pitcher — Cramer. White and Morrissey. hours and 10 minutes -] | ORRAINE GULLI, president of | | the Washington Women'’s Duck-i pin Association, today issued a | last call for entries for the girls'| city championships, to open next Mon- | day night at the Lucky Strike. The| original deadline was extended until| tomorrow night, but there will be no| grace thereafter. All indications point | to_a successful tournament. Entries may be phoned to Rena Levy at the Lucky Strike, Decatur 1636. Rena is on clerical duty at the men's tournament. 'OUR new leaders graced the men’s | standings today. P. Duvall shot 394 for the lead |in Class B singles, C. H. Franklin and George Tompros went ahead in Class | B doubles with 699, Golden and_Daly in D doubles with 645 and H. Baker | and A. King in C doubles with 685. | Duvall missed an opportunity to crack the all-time record for Class B singles | by slumping in mid-set. start, e shot 97 in the second game | and finished with 145. The record is | a7, | “H. A Hunt, with 360, rolled into | second place behind Duvail. Franklin and Tompros came to their final game with little prospect of reaching the top. Both got hot and| Frank rolled 135 and his partner 131 | for a rousing finish. HE first big “special night” is on | tonight, with 14 teams from the| Electrical League in action. The Electricians annually enter virtually | their entire membership. | Night workers will take their turns | Class, Alley, Name 53 54 55 56 EEEREIET FEE>0»R>0m >PEYUsEoay Alley, Team. 51 Graytar Elec. Co. 52 Westinghouse El Western Elec. C¢ Western Elec. Co. Washington Canoe Veterans' Administration wwmataoch ederal s, D ley. Name. Class. Atoages & Wheeler Doherty & Boha Barnstead & Hill & Roller.+ ¢ oller ng. . g & 54 Dutron & Sincindiver Dool Taylo AFTERNOON. Clasy. Alley. Name. D 38 Qrme Alley. Name. 38 Whiee & 39 Bla 40 Bogss nk & Henneberry. Deaner & Buckholz. Off to a 152-| Weik | Spar'gh | cornen. 100 1 'Girl Rollers Given One More Day to Enter City Tourney tomorrow afternoon. They will roll singles at 1:30 o'clock, teams at 2 o'clock and doubles at 4 o'clock. All eight teams of the Daylight League will perform. They are the guests in the tournament of Fred Buchholz. City Tournament Bowling Scores TEAMS. Pl-ol‘fl ¥ Ri14 00 106 101 104 108 06 135 K7 11 & Hoy. .. Calhoun 11 we . .. W taker 7 85 (1,5 Saunders K6 Homiller 106 1. 100 94 103 100116 &R 99 RR 127 500 532 548 134113 100117 Phoenix (1,584 Young.. 9 921 V'meyer 991 Watson.. 1211 Kilby . . 1 Burrows 576 504 539 . Wonder Bread (1,580 Jeftries. '100 121 104 Ke Carry Ice Cream (1,518). Polviale " 121 11 2 5 5 | oui v Eastern Impresses in 40 Win ASTERN'S Indians, long the hesp big noise in schoolboy base ball doings hereabouts, today are in full cry along the public high school championship trail. Coach Chief Guyon's huskies yesterday vanquished one of the best looking Roosevelt nines in years in a 4-0 game that for a high school title match, especially a series opener, was exceptionally well-played. It was the first shut-out game in the championship series for a good long time. Eastern Stadium and Central, the fifth tral and Western, which struggled to a tie for the title last Spring, again are figured to battle it out. Roosevelt furnished Eastern surpris- ingly stout battling all the way. the Braves had scored three runs in the sixth to gain a 4-0 lead, it was thought their bolt but they managed to check any further Eastern scoring and would have counted a run or two themselves but for poor base running. Central High's lacrosse team was roundly drubbed in a 13-1 game by McDonogh School’s ten in Baltimore. Crentz scored Central's lone goal near the end of the game. Summary: McDonough (13). Position. Central High (1). ilsby Goal Lindsey . “Linton Wilson Bachus Brown Bwift Cook Crentz ‘Edwards Porterfield 3732113 T0001—1 cDonough, s (5). Zimmer- arretts. Cook. Meanley, Brooks, Substitutes— McDonous Central Scoring man | Allers: Central High, Crentz. | McDonough, Horner, Brooks, tral. Church, Johnso: ‘Wessels. ree— Malloney. Time of quarters—13 minutes. organized an interfraternity base ball league. Play starts Saturday morning Grounds. RANNY CLEARY for Eastern and Frank Baroni for the Bears, both surprise starters, pitched well. Ba- roni, however, did not get the support | his rivel received, and was unfortunate | in that Eastern bunched two of its five | | hits (Roosevelt got six bingles, inciden- | tally) with an error and a passed ball | to score its three runs and clinch vic- o | tory. | Eastern's first tally, in the third, came ‘Tech and Western face in the next § game Friday at 3:30 o'clock in the %o contending team, will make its debut & ‘Tuesday against Eastern. Eastern, Cen- | {Cuozz Atter | Fa by many that the Ruf Riders had shot | b with two games on the Monument | Over a Cal;able Roosevelt Nine CLEVELAND LEADS INAA. U BOXING Sherman, New York and Chicago Close nice stop of Harry Singles by Tommy Nolan and Joe Mills, a stolen base, error, a passed ball and an infield out gave Eastern its three Q T Roosev']I Scher.lf Gri csorssoHssmmRosol 20tac0tmian sl Hommoroool ooomnBnmms! cosssunssnEmEad [P Totals 20 627 © *Batted for Bovd in sitxh. 1Batted for Pitzgerald in seventh. 1Batted for Keegin in eighth, 0010030004 0000000000 Runs—Pitzpatrick. Nolan, J. Mills, Wahler. Errors—Sherman (2), Wahler. Stoien bases e—Sherman. Dou- ° er, es to’ Gi to Sherman. Giovanetti (unassisted). base on balls—Off Cleary, 2; off Baroni. Struck out—By Cleary. 3. by Baroni. 5. Passed balls—Fradin ( Umpire—G. Watt, anetti Pirst Central’s ball team hooks up with Emerson tomorrow on Mounment Dia- mond No. 7. In the only other athletic contest listed for scholastics hereabout Alexandria High, Washington-Lee High and Episcopal will compete in a track meet at Episcopal. ENTRAL socked 16 hits in drubbing ‘Washington-Lee High, 16-5, in Central Stadium, Raub and Gre- rio for the winners and Copeland or the losers each hit a homer. Bill Bryant, Central center fielder, sprained his ankle sliding and may be unable to plnsyc against Eastern next Tuesday. ore: Central High School students have | $9d.C Dery Wallace 1f. Preston.p. 3 Sin'has p. Wilson.rf. Birchp.. Totals.. 28 11 Wash! Central Totals.. L004010—5 42360116 L. Chumbris (3), Nau (3), Gregorio ford (2). Darr (%), " “Two-base hi Lisio. Bryant. | Three-base hits—Bryant, De Pretoro. Home runs—Raub, Copeland, ~Gregorio. ~ Double piay—Nau to Chambers to De Lisio. Losing pitcher—Preston. Umpire—Mr. McDonald. Up as Battles Go Into Title Stage. By the Assoclated Press. . OSTON, April 26—Thirty-two survivors, out of a starting fleld of 107, today remained in the competition for the eight national A. A. U. boxing championships. ‘These awards will be made tonight, after 24 more bouts have been run off. ‘The lone 1932 champion passed out of the competition last night when Homer Brandis of San Francisco, who won the 175-pound title in New York last year, was blasted out of the tour- ney by the busy fists of Lanky Frank Wilson, the New England light-heavy- weight titlist. The well-rounded Cleveland boxing 4. | team finished the two nights of battling with five of its seven representatives still holding on in the title quests. The New York State and Chicago delega- tions each qualified four men for to- night'’s semi-final and title rounds; New England, Detroit and Pennsylvania had three each; New Jersey and Kansas City each placed two battlers in the second last round and Minneapolis, Cincinnati, New Orleans, Washington, Memphis and Oklahoma’ continued in the tourney, each with one undefeated battler. Another national title holder to suffer elimination last night was Sedgwick Harvey, junior national 126-pounds champion, who was blasted out of the competition by Tommy Hudson of Cleveland. Dennie Flynn of New Orleans, who won the national inter- collegiate middleweight championship for Loyola of the South last year, con- tinued in the running by edging a de- cision from Frank Kapanowski, rugged Detroit 160-pounder. CHISOX FARM PITCHERS. CHICAGO, April 26 (#).—The Chi- cago White Sox have sent Ed Walsh, jr., | and Clarence Fieber, young pitchers, to _9 | the Oakland, Calif.,'club of the Pacific | At Coast League on option. MEMPHIS GETS TOERNEY‘ CHICAGO, April 26 (#).—The Mem- phis Country Club has been awarded the 1933 Western Amateur Golf Asso- clation championship. Dates will be set later. Dope on Kentucky Derby Candidates { By the Associated Press. ! Mr. Khayyam (Catawba Stable) | —Won six-furlong race in 1:11 3-5 at Havre De Grace. | Trace Call (Audley Farm)—Fin- ished a Iéngth back of Mr. Khayyam Good Advice (Catawba Stable)— ‘Third back of Mr. Khayyam and ‘Trace Call. " LEGION T0 SWELL MAT ATTENDANCE Turner Will Split Proceeds of Shikat-Grobmier Card—No Tax on Women. OMETHING akin to a record crowd for what Promoter Joe ‘Turner is pleased to call a “non- championship” show is expected to welcome rassling’s prodigal son, Dick Shikat, baqk at the Washington Audi- torium tomorrow. Shikat, however, is not the entire reason why Prof. Turner and his pals are expecting clicking turnstiles. The large-hearted professor of grunts and| groans again is figuratively reaching a gnarled hand into his pocket, this time in the form of divvying part of the pro- ceeds with the American Legion. With | the Legionnaires helping to dispense ' ducats, the weekly throng is expected | to be increased materially. | Shikat's opponent upon the occasion | of his “home-coming” after a year with the Bowser-Curley pachyderms | will be Herr Fred Grobmier, who also is German and not as good a rassler as Richard. They will clash in one of the two finish matches, N the other match slated for a defi- | nite decision Ernie Dusek will grap- | ple with Dick Raines. Both are| confirmed touch guys. Reliable journeyman rasslers com- pose the remainder of the card. Vic Christy will tackle John Katan, Paul | | Jones will exhibit with Joe Cox, and | & harmless-looking affair between Jim | and Eli Fischer, who probably! will be announced as from Yale, or| something, will open the show. | The American Legion’s part in the ticket sale will not affect the custom |of allowing women with paying escorts | to witness proceedings free. This cus- | :lom‘ alo;lg ?letl';olhat oln;llllowlng chil- | ren_under enter the portal | two bits, will prevail. Pl o | WOMAN MAY OWN - WINNER OF DERBY Mrs. Crump’s Head Play and | Mrs. Whitney’s Pair Seen as Possible Victors. By the Associated Press. OUISVILLE, Ky., April 26 —Excel- lent chances of becoming the fifth woman to own & Kentucky Derby winner are conceded Mrs. William Crump, owner of Head Play. and Mrs. John Hay Whitney, owner of Crowning Glory and Poppyman. These horses appear the best of those nominated for the 1933 derby, at Churchill Downs May 6. by women owners. ing nicely for the derby are Mrs. I. D. Sloan's Caesar's Ghost, Mrs. C. M. | Amory's Parity and Mrs. H. C. Phipps’ | Utopian. None of the four eligibles of Mrs. Payne Whitney, who won the 1931 derby with Twenty Grand, is expected to go to the post, each having developed fllness or failed to prove of derby caliber. | The only four women owners who | have won derby's are Mrs. C. E. Du ell, with Elwood, in 1904; Mrs. R. M. ._with Black Gold, in 1924: M with Reigh Count, in Payne Whitney with | Twenty Gr-nd 1931, The derby contingent of Col. E R Bradley. only turfman to win three of these biue-Tibbon events, has arrived at Churchill Downs to start training. Though _Boilermaker and Broker's | Tip are his most likely entries this | year, Beefsteek also will be placed in training. and if he develops faster than one of the others, he may be sent to the post in the $50,000 added classic. CHESSMAN INVITES FOES. ‘W. H. Mutchler, chess editor of the Post, will meet all comers in a chess | exhibition tonight at the Jewish Com- | munity Center. Challengers are asked to bring boards and men. Sandlot Notes ‘The diamonders out in nearby Mary- 4z |land apparently are in for one of the 103 80 108 77109 96 101 97106 150 10R 119 101116 97 512519 524 Brown. . Reid. o318 &8 04112 106 2 la8 111 110113 148 399 533 540 DOUBLES CLASS B. 83 85 103 104 108 25116 Hall.... Sterndaie 99 96 &8 598—7202 200 196 Whitford 88 91 98 Burrows. 107102 95 580—105 302 103 DHall. 114111 92 Ridabush 91 85119 612 Riston. 6 McCabe. Damon. 632 Pranklin 115 107 135 ‘Tompros 112 99 131 E 6 CLASS C. HBaker 145118 AKing.. 100 105 11’ 685—245 221 219 W'd'man 102 109 119 RKilby. 88127 98 643100 236 217 Wright. 04 102 S'd’hurst 116 98 117 608—210 200 108 Powell.. 103100 108 O.Dwyer 113118 98 63 Miller. . Jacobs.’. Golden. 134101 99 Holst... 96 90105 Daly... 11 104 Brown.. 128 94107 biggest seasons in years. Most of the teams this area that have been prominent for several seasons have re- organized and several new aggregations are in the field. Lanham and Laurel, Prince Georges County outfits, are among teams that will begin play Sunday. They’ll have it out at Laurel at 3 o'clock. Southwest Market tossers overcame Swift & Co.’s nine, 4-2, in a stubborn seven-inning battle yesterday. Public Documents chalked up & 12-5 villctury over Airways in a five-inning tilt. Scoring most of their runs in the late going, Griffith Blue Coals came through with a 12-6 win over Book- binders. Swann Service tossers have booked the Pirates for this evening at 5 o'clock on Monument Diamond No. 9. The Annapolis base ball club wishes 11 | to card a semi-pro opponent of this city for a game in the Annapolis Park, May 14. L. J. Woytych, booking manager, may ll;el:eached by phoning Annapolis 1803-F-14. A good pitcher is wanted by the Pet- worth Red Sox, made up of boys from 12 to 15 years. Call Adams 5765 or come to a meeting Friday night at 625 Upshur street at 8 o'clock. These teams are gunning for action: St. Joseph’s, with unlimited teams. Call Lincoln 8788. St. John’s Church (Chevy Chase), 313 | with teams averaging 16 to 19 years. A. Runt, 360; . Wheeler. Class : W._A. Johnson, 242: 5: L. E. Weidaman, 260 Class D—C. M. Warren. 2| cock, 378 G. E_MePeeley, Cass E—A. Cohen. 308. N. C. Homiller, . C, Matthews, R. K. Whitford, A. K. Han- Winsor Offutt, Wisconsin 4721. Clarendon Juniors. Clarendon 715. Kenilworth A. C. for Sunday. Kenil worths have a d. Eddie Arm strong, Lincoln 9168. Anacostia Eagles, out-of-town foes for Saturday and Sunday. Atlantic 3679-W after 5 p.m. l Phoenix A. C, for Sunday. Lincoln 5603-W. Others in this category train- | Invasion of Sara | BY W. R. McCALLUM. OLF bugs of the Capital are nll] a-flutter over the forthcoming exhibition match scheduled tul G be played at the Kenwood Golf and Country Club on May 7, with Gene Sarazen and Joe Kirkwood op- | posing Al Houghton and Arthur B.‘ Thorn, two of the better local profes- slonal players, The match, to start at 2:30 o'clock, y will be played as a benefit affair for unemployed relief. Sarazen and Kirk- wood, billed as the stellar touring duo of the professional brigade this year, | are gallivanting around the country in | & de luxe motor bus and will hit Wash- | ington on the morning of the Kenwood | | match. The exhibition will be open to | the public at a charge of $1 a person. | Long paired with Walter Hagen as | | the exhibition partner of the game's greatest showman, Kirkwood is re- garded as the finest maker of shots the game of golf ever has produced. Master of all shots, with a bewildering array of trick stuff which the better | professionals cannot match, Kirkwood in past years has defeated his own championship ambitions by his own imagination. He knows so many shots which the ordinary pro hardly com- prehends that his mental atmosphere | has licked him in a score of champion- ships. But this year Kirkwood, a great | athlete in a game which has many | great athletes, has determined to cor- | centrate i he ball and hes zen, Kirkwood May 7 Has Golf Bugs Gabbing decided to forego the trick stuff in | competition. How successful this has been was shown by his recent par- shattering victory in the North and South Open at Pinehurst. Joe still knows the trick stuff and does it as no other man can do. his shot-making exhibition preceding the Kenwood match, but the minute he ste] the trick stuff will leave his mind. Gene Sarazen, stocky little New Yorker of Italian parentage, is one of the gamest men ever to step on a tee. At Fresh Meadow last year Gene came from behind with the finest burst of golf ever seen to snatch the open champlonship right out from under the noses of Phil Perkins and Bobby Cruickshank, who were tied for fir:t with totals of 289. Far behind starting the last round Sarazen played the final route in 66 strokes, four under par, shooting a shower of birdies on the first nine to get out in 32 and pull up level with Perkins, and coming home in 34 to win the title by three shots. He wasn't human, this sturdy little Sarazen, as he split the pin from tec to green over that last nine and wound up by sinking a 6-foot put for a par 4 on the last hole after a blast from a sandtrap. He may put on one of those rounds at Kenwood 10 days hence, to bust wide open the course record of 68 held by Tommy Armour. If Sara- zen has one of his inspired days, when the, putts are dropping blase Washing- ton golfers who have seen 'em all come and go over the years, will get a real | thrill TI;OOL‘! MITCHELL OUT YO LIFT NET TROPHY {Needs One More Leg on McLean | Cup—City of Washington Committee Meets. MEETING is to be held this week by the committee in charge of the | fifth annual City, of Washington tennis championships, which get under way May 13 on the Sixteenth Street Reservoir courts. This competition for- mally will open the tennis tourney sea- son hereabout. League play is slated to start Sat- urday when Public Parks loop teams are to swing into action. Should Dooly Mitchell win the men's singles this year in the City of Wash- , he will gain permanent posses- sion of the Jock McLean Trophy, as he already has two legs on the award. He was the winer last year. Tom Mangan and Bob Considine have one leg each. Dr. Gerald Smith and Maj. J. A. Dorst are the defending men’s doubles titlists, Reba Kirson holds the woman's singles championship and Mrs. Charles P. Stone and Mrs. Nathan C. Wyeth are the women’s doubles title holders. Louis I. Doyle, president of the Wash- ington Tennis Association; Winfree Johnson, honorary president; Pat Deck and Bill Shreve, secretary and treas- urer, make up the active committee in charge of the City of Washington tour- ney. CARDS BUY CATCHER. ST. LOUIS, April 26 (#).—The St. Louis Cardinals have announced the purchase from Columbus of the Ameri- can Association of Joe Sprinz, a catcher. Bob O'Farrell, regular Card receiver, wrenched & knee Sunday. Buddy Lewis, third string backstop, broke a hand during Monday’s practice. By the Associated Press. SPRINGFIELD, .- Rosen- bloom, world light-heavyweight cham- illman, Louis, Fla.—Frankie- Hughes, Clin- ., outpointed Fay Kiser, Tulsa, Okla. (10); Babe Kiser, Tulsa, knocked (;lflt %fflyllmlll. West Palm Beach, 2. 20 YEARS AGO | * IN THE STAR ASHINGTON scored four runs in the eighth inning to con- quer Boston, 5-4, and even the series with the world champs. ‘The Maryland Aggies vanquished their old rivals, St. John's, 4-3, in base ball at Annapolis. It was the first defeat the Farmers have handed St. John's at Annapolis in the sport since 1906. Lynn Loomis not only pitched well for the Aggies but belted a two-bagger that drove in the winning runs. Lednum, second baseman, and Keyworth, center fielder of the Aggies, were out of the game because of injuries. Walter Johnson, Washington’s great pitcher, denies he is engaged to marry a Boston girl. Capt. Eller, Brewer and Horton are representing Georgetown U. in the Penn relays today in Phila- delphia. ong those mentioned in the Rod and Stream columns are Char- lie Porter, Capt. Isaac D. Porter, John Dean, Hugh A. Kane, Patrick Riordan, John W. Hurley, W. H. Buckingham, Wade H. Coombs, Chat Towers, George Boyd. Will Towers, Maj. R. A. O'Brien, William J. Seitz, George Seitz, Policemen W. H. Buckingham and C. C. Collins, R. A. Martin, J. P. Byrne, N. E. Gibson, J. W. Brown, Thomas Delavigne, James D. Cushman, George Robeson, M. A. McAuliffe, ‘Thomas Smith. J. T. Umbaugh, John J. Meehan, John Kephart, John W. Bowie and Benjamin F. Myers. Teams that rolled last night as Dot Rasostaion coutney opened c lon ey at_the Palace included: Monarchs—Fletcher, Watt, Dunn, ‘Watson and Robinette; Washingtor Base Ball Club—Schaefer, Shanks, ‘Williams, McBride and Morgan; Buffalos—] Brashears, hy, , Jones, Bnd.cEl.rDy Herbert; Indians— Authorized Service Winfield Carburetors CREEL BROTHERS 1811 14th St. N.W. DEcatur 4220 He will put on up to the first tee to play all | MRS. POWELL HAPPY | OVER LINKS’ VICTORY | | Hes Net 79 in Capturing Memorial Event, Initial Triumph in Years of Effort. | **T VE been trying to win for years. I | guess I could buy a dozen cups| with the money I've spent on tour- naments, but I surely am getting a kick out of winning this tournament.” Thus spoke Mrs. J. T. Powell of the Manor Club after match on match had finished putting out on the eighteenth green at the Washington Goif and | Country Club and her net card of 79 remained low in the tourney for the Phylls Keeler Miller Memorial Trophy. Mrs. Powe.l Is one of the stand-dys of local golf. Not a tournament is piayca | but her name is amcng the cnirants. She plays the game for tne pieasure she gets from ii, but even those vwho love it | should win a prize now and then. Her | turn came yesterday, for she followed a ‘medmcre 53 on the first nine with a | stell2r 44 on the mcre difficult final nine of the Wasnington course for a 97, with an 18 handicap for a net of 79. One of the early finishers, she had to | wait until almost 100 women had com- | | pleted their round. But her score stood | up all the way. Three players tied for low net at 82. They were Miss Katherine May, Ken- | | wood, 98—16—82; Mrs. William E. Hall, | | Washingten, 95—13—82, and Mrs. 1. B. Platt, Chevy Chase, 96—14—82. Mrs. H. Q. Quinter of Cclumbia and Virginia | Wilhams, thc routhful Congress.cnal titi> holder, tied for first gross pia with cards of 95. Frizcs 0 ng the teviney & B. Mile: Phylls Ke Manor Club women golfers will play in o “dirty dozen” tolmey tomorrow starting at 9:30 o'clock. The best scores jon 12 “mystery” holes will determine | the outcome of the tourney. ‘Watson Mrs. pt the late Georgetown University's golf team | | will leave Washington Friday morning | for Princeton, N. J., where they will en- | gage in three Eastern intercollegiate | matches over the week end. The Hoya | golfers will meet Holy Cross, Dartmouth | and Harvard. On the team will be Capt. | Jack Slattery, Joseph Lynch, Walter | Tynan, Richard McPartlin, Don O'Brien | and John O'Brien. | —y | | ONE OF TARDUGNOS WINS. | | | BOSTON, April 26.—Angelo Tardugno | of Washington defeated George Pace, | Cleveland colored battler, in the 118- | pound class, in the national amateur boxing tourney here last night, but his brother, Mike Tardugno, lost in the | | 125-pound division to Bus Breese, | Kansas State College. | | | PACKERS SIGN GREENEY. | SOUTH BEND, Ind., April 26 (#).— Norman Greeney, varsity guard on Notre | Dame teams for the past three seasons, | has signed to play next Fall with the | Green Bay Packers of the National Pro- | fessional Foot Ball League. | i | Max’s Pilot 0. K. Outside Germany ERLIN, April 26 (#).—Max Schmeling, former heavyweight boxing champion, will be allow- ed to retain his Jewish manager, Joe Jacobs, for all bouts outside the bor- ders of Germany, Wolfgang Mat- thes, secretary of the German Box- ing Commission, said today. Matthes issued the ruling on Ja- cobs to clarify the German ban on Jews in sports, following the action yesterday of the Union of German Professional Boxers in promulgating a set of rules barring Jews from membership and any activities. STRUART MeToR's . GTH.G NEW YORK AVE, W Jowie Goroll > (01y NEVER CLOSED | deed be a rare sight. SARRON AND PAUL WOULD FAE AGAN Pete Proves Class in Draw. Wants Longer Bout With Ex-Feather King. BY FRANCIS E. STAN. O the list of this old world's lead- ing featherweight fighters today was added the name of Pote Sarrcn. By the proverbial eyelash this serious- visaged little Syrian from Dixie missed his fondest dream last night when he failed to outpunch smart Tommy Paul, ex-ruler of the feathers, but Sarron's eight-round draw was plenty good enough to stamp Washington's “adopted” fair-haired boy as a dangerous con= tender for Freddy Miller’s world title. Before a crowd which bulged the walls of dinky little Portner's Arena, Sarron surprised by winning three rounds and earning an even break in two others from his favored opponent, whose eyes, too, are focused on the crown now adorning Miller's brow. With his peculiar style, so like that of the late Harry Greb, Sarron proved a puzzle to Paul, whose own style is not unlike Pete’s. The Southerner took the opening round by a handy margin, but the Buffalo buster came back in the second to beat Pete from piller to post. IGHT then and there Sarron proved he could “take it.” Back he came bouncing in the third heat to hold his own and then he forged ahead in the fourth. Paul tied the score on The Star’s score sheet by capturing the fifth round, but Sarron again showed cham- pionship stuff by belting Tommy into a near state of grogginess in the sixth. Blow after blow landed on Paul’s chin and only the latter's experience and courage prevented him from taking a more severe lacing. The seventh round served to show the 2,000-odd fans just why Paul reached the top of the feathrweight pinnacle. He grabbed the verdict. An air of tenseness pervaded the smoky little punchbowl when the bell for the final round sounded. Upon this round, according to a majority of news- paper score sheets, hinged the decision. It was even. The draw verdict was not, however, unanimous. Judges George King and Denny Hughes cast deadlock baliots while Referee Charlie Short gave Paul the narrowest of margins. : Neither battler manitested much dis- appointment. Each, however, thought he had earned a slight edge in the final round and as a consequence the ver- dict. “I'd be tickled to get a return bout with Sairon, was Paul's comment. “Right here, too. He's a great fighter.” “The same goes for me,” Sarron I¢ plied in his own dressing room. “E: T'd like 10 rounds the next time. “HE preliminaries brouski to I some of the most poorly-co tioned gents available in the ring rackei—and also a smart-looking 150~ rounder in Xen Overlin, who seered %o have improved 100 per cent since his last appearance at Portner’s a year ago. Overlin encountered Joe Finazzo, the rubbery fat boy from Baltimore. Fin- azzo was fatter than ever around the ! midsection but no one acquainted with his record expected a kayo. Overlin, however, turned the trick with a whacking left hook to the mandibles in the third round of their scheduled si: heat affair. Finazzo was knocked flat- ter than f the cutrent 3.2 lag Only one kayoing Finazzo previcus to last ni Joe's little brother, Sam, repo! even mor cut of shepe than Joe, he lasted two rounds longer agal hcwever. a battler not of Overlin’s ¢ iber. Sam Finazzo stuck around with the aimless Billy Strickler until ihe fifth, when he departed atter a sock in_his midsection. Billy Schwartz and Luther McCarthy were the other boys who reported Jook- ing as though a gymnasium would in- Schwartz, as & consequence, took a six-round beating from Walter Kirkwood, while McCarthy wound up with a broken wrist as a re- sult of the only biow he landed on Cary Wright in two rounds. Softened p for a kayo, McCarthy let his right riking Wright in the small of (he wE was McCarthy and od the canvi dis. EFISCOPAL NETMEN Wit Defeat Virginia Freshmen, 5 to 1, for Fourth Straight Victory. Alexandria, Va., April 26—Episcopal High's tennis team rang up its fourth win in as many starts, defeating Vir- ginia freshmen here yesterday, 5-1. It took three hours to decide the match, in which Dawson, Episcopal, conquered Glassie, 6—4, 2—6, 13—11. Summaries Episcopal. 5; Va. Frosh, 1. gles_Lay (E.) defeated Wallace, 6—3 6—3; Williams (E)) defeated Podaster, 6— ! 6—0: Swift (E.) defeated Tabb, : Dawson (E.) defeated Glassic. 3 26, 13—11: Christian (E.) defeated Brown, vallace and Podaster defeated i 6 Williai ond set by darkness. GIRL SWIMMERS INVADE 15 From Baltimore to Take Part in Meet at Y. W. C. A. Friday. Fifteen girls, representing the Balti- more Y. W. C. A, will compete in the open Swim night program Friday in the Y. W. C. A. pool, at Seventeenth and K streets. The program will open at 8 o'clock. Nancy Rawis, Jean Rawls, Mildred Williams, Beity Lou Trowbridge and Marianna Trowbridge are in the rum- ning for the free swimming and diving course to be awarded the child showing the most progress in the series of events at the Y. W. C. A. here. CARNERA MISSES BOAT. GENOA, April 26 (#).—Primo Car- nera, booked to sail on the Conti di Savoia yesterday for the United States and his forthcoming heavyweight cham- pionship match with Jack Sharkey, de- layed his departure from his home town of Sequals for so long that he arrived here two hours after the boat had RACES TODAY Havre de Grace ABERDEEN STAKES $7,500 ADDED ns. B, R.' train leaves tation . g Eastern Standard Railroad Fare, Round Trip, $3.40 FIRST RACE AT 2:30 P.M.. |

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