Evening Star Newspaper, May 4, 1933, Page 42

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B - TECH AND EASTERN _ APPEAR IN RUNNING - Several Others Formidable. Over 300 Athletes From 38 Schools Listed. BY H. C. BYRD. GREAT fight looms for team supremacy in the open interscholastic events in the track competition in the University of Maryland field day program at College Park Sat- urday afternoon. Eastern, which won two years ago, and Tech of this city; Gilman Country Scheol of Bnl!lmm‘e, Baltimore City | College and Baltimore Poly, and Lane | High School of Charlottesville, are | teams figured to be in the struggle for the title. Ccntnl ‘which nosed out Tech for first laurels last Spring, 32 to 31%, Wwill not defend its championship. Hagerstown is favored to ring up its fourth straight triumph in the events closed to Maryland high schools. How- ever, Penn Avenue High of Cumberland and schools from all over the State will | strive to break Hagerstown's streak. More than 300 athletes frcm 38 schools will take part in the track program. Tech and Eastern have entered the largest squads. Tech will have 32 athletes on the job and Eastern 24. Gilman will be represented by only an even dozen, but the squad is strong. Lane will have a squad of eight cn hand and the Charlottesville boys usually are formidable. Western High has entered nine and Georgetown Prep | mil and both have high hopes of doing we Hagerstown won county school honors lult Spring with 17 points. Towson High was second with 10. Two years | 2go Hagerstown counted 14 points | against 9 for Hyattsville High, the Tunner-up. CHOOLS to be represented are Al- | leghany County High of Cumbcr-‘ land, Pennsylvania Avenue High of | L% Cumberland, Annapolis High, Balti- | more City College, Bel Air High, Boons- | Varied Sports Scholastic Base Ball. Eastern High, 15; Lee-Jackson High, m‘g/#‘rz\nh Freshmen, 5;: Central 'Georerwn Prep, 13; Episcopal College Base Ball. ‘Wake Forst, 17; George Washnigton, 4. (Night). Mount 8t. Mnryl. 5 Georgetown, 4. Duke, 8; Princeton, Harvard, rown, 1. Pennuylvlnh V. T Punlue. U Michigan State, 5 Notre Dame, 3. College Tennis. Nawy, 8; Duke, 1 North Carolina, Virginia, 7; Sewanee, 0. College Golf. Gcorgetown University, town Prep, 3V Northwestern, 5%; George- 2. Michigan, 5; 1. 1., SCHOOL NINES TAKE 2 0F 3 TILTS |Eastern and G. U. Prep Score on Foreign Fields, but Central Is Beaten. ASTERN and Georgetown Prep won ball games from Lez-Jack- son and Episcopal yesterday, but Central was nosei out at Char- lottesville by the Virginia Frosh. Pounding out 20 safeties, Eastern outslugged Lee-Jackson High on the atter’s diamond, 15 to 11. Joe Keegan, | with four hits—a triple, double and two 'singleSAvms the leading -atter. Lee-Jack. AB.H. Eastern. ABH.O. A Ben 1 [ Shppdlb. ¢ 0 4 i Morr boro High, Catonsville High, Cordova F. High. Frederick High, Georgetown Pre- paratory School, Gilman County School, Greensboro High, Glen Burnie High,| Jarrattesville High, Mechanicsville High, Middletown High, New Windsor High, Franklin High of Reistertown, Spar- rows Point High, Westminster High, Towson High, Raspeberg High, Eastern, Western, Tech and Devitt of Washing- ton; Herndon High of Virginia, Wash- cGo'n.ct. 3 M'dorf,cf. Cuakaze: Ttals 45 14°26 10 Totals. 47 20 *Sullivan out in ninth, illegally batted all. ington and Lee High of Virginia, Lane ball. High of Charlottesville, Va.; Strasburg High of Virginia, Harrisonburg High of Virginia, Baltimore Polytechnic Insti- “eepre Hegerstown High, Hyattsville High, [ layed Maryland a 5-4 game in the pic play-off series last June, while int Rainier High and Dublin High G reet, Md. eld competition will start at 1 ck, with the track events beginning | 1:30 o'clock. A dual meet between ns Hopkins and Maryland will be concurrently with the schoolboy HREE varsity events, in addition to the Hopkins-Maryland meet, are on the program, as follows: ; 11 a.m.—Base ball, Duke vs. Mary- and. 2 p.m—Tennis, Johns Hopkins vs. pn.—Lacrosse, Rutgers vs. | ryland. both track and tennis Maryland | vored over Hopkins. Duke appears ‘ hold the edge in base ball, le the Old Liners have only five who fig- | | wred in that struggle. Rutgers, with | a husky aggregation, w‘m be bigger, if | not better, than Mary] HIS BACKS vmzsfnm. Coach Pimmy Jhelan's backfleld at ‘Washington next season will be com- prised only of foct ball men who can pass and kick a5 well as carry the ball. A PANDY TB,ACK STAR ATHENS, Ga. (#).—Graham Batch- | cllor, Ceorgia track athlete, won four first places in two dual meets and three firsts in & third meet. Fights Last Night By the Associated Press. CHICAGO.—King Levinsky, Chicago, knocked out Charley Retzlaff, Duluth (1); Art Lasky, Minneapolis, knocked out “Tiger Jack” Fox, Terre Haute, Ind. (5); Marty Levandowski, Detroit, stopped Mickey Patrick, Chicago (3); Eddie Houghton, Philadelphia, stopped Jack | Cs Robinson, Chicago (5): Tony Cancella, Florida, stopped George Panka, Pitts- burgh, (3). QUINCY, Tl—Rosy (Kid) Bal Indianapolis, outpointed Allen M thews, St. Louis (10); Pewee Terry, st. Louis, outpointed Frankie Gerkle, Indianapolis (10). ST. LOUIS—Barney Ross. Chicago, outpointed Joe Ghnouly, St. Louis (10); Joe Huff, Carondelet, TIIl, outpointed Joe Red, Little Rock, Ark. (6); Eddie| Edson, St. Louis, knocked out Frank Hcllingsworth, San Francisco (2); Davey Day, Chicago, outpointed Can Schaefer, 8t. Louis (6). DES MOINES —Leftie Loule Mays, Des Moines, and Jackie Brady, formerly of Syracuse, N. Y., drew (10). | Picklin.rf. Eastern .. 2—18 Lee-Jackson 0—11 . Boyd, "Painter, Linton. Cole Errors—J. Mifle, fiori, Pit | gerald, Sheppar; | Two-base Mi Keegin. 2 _Smith, Keegin, Stojen bases—Benjamin, Mills, Bo 4 in 1 inning (tone out in sixth); off Sulii- Yan, 3 in'4 innings. Hit by pitched ail— By Ayres (. Ml MikslackD). by Cleary (Lewin). Struck ‘out—Ry Ayres 4; Cléary.'s; by Sullivan, B, Winning Pitehs e1—Cleary. N a light-hitting fray the Cavalier yearlings defeated Central, 5 to 4. Central made seven hits and Virginia six. Raub of Central and Poindexter of the frosh slammed home runs. Virginia hopped off to & four-run lead in the first two innings, but Cen- tral came back to tie the score in the eighth. It was in this frame, however, that Virginia won the game, scoring its fifth run on a flelder's, choice. Central, AB. C'ris.s8 &Enw Bryant.ct b.3b Nau.2b G'orio.rf Delisio.1b Keyser.c Silver'n.p Smith o IR sscoommcon? cooommmonl resnmoomrO Srormnoo? S'wartz.2b | cenmssssosnd EEECISEENSeT ] *Depeiro Totals 29 9 Totals 3 *Batied for Silverman in eighth. Central High ..... 0 0001201 0— Virginia Prosh. ... 13 00000 1 x5 Runs—Bryant. Raub, Nau,_ Depetro. Hine A' Poindexter. Bookér, Schwartz, Error— = 4 Suverm ussel tolen bases—Nau (3. Polndexter. ‘Garter. Quaries Schwartz. Doubl la: inning. ED by the big bats of Cohan and O'Connell, Georgetown Prep hand- ily downed Episcopal at Garret Park, 13 to 6. . ABH.O.A. Episcopal. ABBOA Gordonif, 4 U Brkings.c Tucker.ss Whittle, 3b Ang.D. .. 7 Mason, b’ M'Ma'n.3b Stewart.rf Will'ms,r{ Kelly,If [ 5 = [T | oss0smmmmsan ¢ | 2o55mm 1 1 > 1 Totals . ‘Totals Episcopal 200002 Gesraetown Frep’ 0 1550118 Runs—Case. Cohan (2). J. Keating (2), Mchmnrl . O'Connell (3), Cummings, Good (2 itzh (2). EnurH K ll.mx McMahon svart o Connell. Stoinn oas Thre villiams, Gordo: By McNamara, 8; by Lang, 1. NG STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, THURSDAY,‘MAY 4, 1933. AUSTRALIAN TENNIS TEAM BLOTTED: OUT Entire Davis Cup Line-up Beaten by English Stars in British Quarter-Finals. By the Associated Press. 5 BDURN!MOUTH. England, May 4.— The_four phym who will carry Australia in the Davis Cup wmmflm and at Wimbledon were eliminated in the quarter-final round of the British hard court tennis c“hbmpionhlu. falling before English stars. Jack Crawford, Ay cham) pm. was defeated by G. P. Hughes, Davis Cup veteran, in five hud -fought sets, 6—8, 6—2, 6—0, 4—8, 886, Vivian McGrath, ‘youthful two-handed backstroke ace who defeated Ellsworth Vines in Australia, was eliminated by H. G. N. Lee, 3—8, 6—2, 6—2, 6—1. H. W. (Bunny) Austin, finalist in IF Change Oil! Use Warm Weather Grade Now Let us drain out that light Winter-worn oil before it does Refill with new, ‘amage. last year’s Wimbledon was carried to five mw % lnd to de!nt D. Turnball, also a younpm from “Down Under,” by the score of 5—7, 3—8, 6—3, l—l 6—4. Pred hfiflmm for the other in- vader, Quist, winning, 6—2, 6—4, 6—2. Carnera En Route To ‘Beat Sharkey’ ENOA, Italy, May 4 (#).—Primo Carnera, Italian hea it boxer, today sailed for e' York on the liner Rex to prepare for his forthcoming bout there with Jack Sharkey, the champion. Carnera sald he would start train- ing at Compton Lake, N. Y., as soon as he arrived in the States. The bout is scheduled for June 20. T'S news when anyone builds a better tire for the price than the 17 million Pathfinders which have already made a great name for thrift. EVENING STAR TYPOS SWEEP GOLF LAUREL Take All Three Titles in Annual Tournament of Printcraft As- sociation—Two Ties. TYPI slingers from The Evening Star nearly scored a grand slam in the annual toumlm!m of the Un!nn Printcraft Golf Association on the diffi- cult Beaver Dam Course, finished yes- terday. Of nine prizes awarded, zhm each in classes A, B and C, seven went to the charges of Bill McLean. be make-overs in two sections. In class A Ficco and C. P. Merkle tied for the title, each with 85-10-75, and in class B, Roy E. Corwin and J. E. James, with 98-4-94 each, were deadlocked; both ties to be played off. L. M. Cole, with 97-1-96, breezed to victory in class C. orgpnp CLASS A. ppg_’!-i.flgi.o."Q??."? gr w. H Prank Carter . ’{ s It’s double mews when anyone can give more safety, more style, more o 2555555000t ’?%%fifiw 5—106 5—114 0—118 122— 151 fi gt ] #/ROOSEVELT AND TECH : Baroni and Turner Are Likely to SPORTS., Hot F, lght for"Scholastzc Track Title Due in Maryland Field Day Saturday KEEN DIAMOND FOES Oppose on Slab in Title Series Tomorrow. OOSEVELT and Tech ball teams will mix tomorrow in a public high school engagement in Eastern High Stadium, at 3:30 o'clock that to prove red-hot. The Ruf ders were impressive in their lone | uflu start, the opemng match of the| set, thou they lost to Eastern, 0-4, while Tech showed st in suoduing | Western, 14-7, in the lone champion- | ship test for McKinley. | Frank Baroni, who pitched well for | Roosevelt against Eastern, allowing only | five hits, I-l C ted to take the firing | line against , while Little Eddie | 138—11—118 | Tu to four bingles in seven innings, is figured likely to hold the mound for the boys Who westr the gray. : A ball game, a lacrosse match and Q'&tfnnl.l tflf‘ lre uho listed tomorrow. Prep -tcm-reuhrkmthnhnmcm- tral will engage St. John'’s Freshmen at Annapolis in lacrosse and in tennis Western takes on Episcopal at Alexan- dria and Devitt and Central clash on the Central courts. snee?nsem DRILLS. STOCKTON, Calif., May 4 — Coach Amos Alonzo Sfiln {){ tbeméol- lege of the Pacific has left for his home in Chicago after conducting six weeks of Spring foot ball practice here. He will return in the Fall with two as- ‘!istanu Paul Stlll lnd Laurie Apitz. Better T — PANAMA HAT Cleaning & Bleaching ASTOR HAT SHOP 423 11th St. N.W. The new 1933 GOODYEAR PATHFINDER 5. 30% Jonger average tread 2. 20% thicker tread wear 8. 20% higher non-skid blocks 4. Full Center Traction 8. More shoulder Non-Skid . @, Handsomely prismed sidewalls 7. Full oversize in all dimensions 8. The smartest looking tire at its price your purse is lean (and whose purse isn’t?) W€ have FRONT-PAGE NEWS for YOU! has done in the new 1933 Pathfinder —a tire that’s certainly built and priced in tune with the times. It will pay you to look it over, be- cause you’ll see for yourself that it has more actual quality than many top >lean, heavier oil of the grade ‘our car manufacturer recom- aends for protection in thic -veather. SAN FRANCISCO.—Little Dempsey, Manila, outpointed Billy McLecd, Stock- | ton, Calif. (10). OAKLAND, Calif.—Tony Reno, Nev, and Lee Ramage, Diego. drew (10); Fred Feary. 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