Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
A—16 VIGTORYISAGIT, HE TELLS COVELLI Lauds Pal After Hot Bout; Asserts He Never Will Fight Him Again. ’ BY FRANCIS E. STAN., HROUGH a pair of puffed lips, and the din of mingled booes and gleeful shouts, he mum- bled the words to the down- cast Kid as soon as the decision was ennounced, but Frankie Covelli didn't hear. So, weakly walking across the up- stairs dressing room a few minutes later, little Pete De Grasse, deadly fistic rival of Covelli, again made local boxing history verbally. He held out his hand, with: “Honest, Frankie, I'm sorry. It was @ present for me. The fight was a Graw, an' I want you to know I'm sorry as h——. Honestly, I prayed| for a draw after that tenth round because neither of us should have lost. I don't want you to hold that decision against me, that's all.” Covelli, blinking hard. grabbed the outstretched paw of the little Mo- hawk, St. Regis tribe. Indian. “Maybe | Tl get another chance.” he grinned sportingly. But then and there Wash- ington’s hopes of getting & third thrilling episode in the slashing ring war between the two Brooklyn neigh- borhood rivals ended “Not against me, you won't.” was De Grasse's comeback. and the mean- ing was sincere ate, nothing else. “I think you're the d—dest fighter who ever walked in a ring. I don't ever want to fight you again. To me 1t would be suicide.” They took showers together. these two featherweight gladiators, pulling an Alphonse-Gaston act over the lone cake of soap in the Riding and Hunt Club. And then they walked out of the empty arena together, arm in arm, end pals. Referee Votes “Covelll.” HUS, in all probability, ended a ring feud which has produced the Capital's two greatest legal- ized boxing battles. De Grasse Wwas awarded the decision in both—the scrap held October 30, and the one last night—but the first fight easily could have been called a draw, and, as De Grasse admits, last As a matter of fact, the concensus of | opinion in the press row was that the Kid earned the duke by a shade. Referee Denny Hughes shared this opinion, but was overruled by Judge Howard Livingstone and Carroll Dunn. Decisions, however, don't seem to | make much difference after fights like those. Neither boy lost a whit of | prestige. Both gained, and most ofl all, so did fans who witnessed the pair of battles between a couple of classy | featherweights who can fight. at least for my money, in the main bout here every week. The best way to watch | perhaps the most evenly matched | fighters in the game is to throw away the scoresheet. sit back and enjoy 10 solid rounds of pure exchanges, and call it a draw at the end. Should Have Been Draw. N THE STAR scoresheet Covelll was ahead by two points at the end, 33 to 31, but if there was to be an official vote forthcoming from this observer, it would have been | a draw. Four of the rounds were | even, with Covelli seemingly gaining four, and De Grasse two. But to take any round away from either scrapper was an injustice. By a single jab to the face, Covelll might have been given the first and third rounds, with the second even. Because Frankie once paused for & gasp of breath in a classic fourth heat, De Grasse might have been awarded the session. The fifth, eighth and ninth were all even, with the Jatter rounds producing perhaps the three most glorious minutes of even the most calloused ringworm's life. As for the other three rounds—the sixth, seventh and tenth—we sort of Jeaned to Covelli in two of 'em, and to De Grasse in the other. Frankie weighed 128 to a surpris- ingly low 1233 for the French-Indian. I { enough, was just a flock of pre- liminaries after the Ieatuu‘ tussle. Eddie Burl, the newly inspired Florida featherweight, continued his winning ways in the six-round semi- wind-up when he whipped Dominick Nicco of Brooklyn without losing a round. Nicco, who previously had ecored & technical knockout over Eddie, was on the floor twice, going down for a count of two in the first round, and again for eight in the sec- ond. The decision was unanimous. l Jimmy Reed of Erie, Pa., and fight- | ing out of Washington, won & six-| round welterweight go from Joe Morro of New York, taking every one of the #ix heats, and, of course, gaining a unanimous duke. | Another unanimous decision and a | kayo marked the pair of four-rounders. Joe Ferrone, improving local welter- weight, flattened “Tiger Joe” Phipps of the Quantico Marines in two rounds, | while Sammy Sweet handed Joe Trans- | peranti of Baltimore, a less harsh | lacing. SOCCER GAM'ES ARE HOT Burroughs, Park View, Fillmore Win Interdivision Tilts. Burroughs booters conquered Bowen, 2-0, and Park View kickers overcame Gales, 2-1, yesterday in opening inter- division games of the elementary school soccer tournament, sponsored by the Municipal Playground Depart- ment. The winning teams were final- ists in last season’s tourney. Fillmore beat the Reservoir team, 2-1, to win the Georgetown division title and will meet the E. V. Brown booters tomorrow on Georgetown play- ground to determine which shall face Park View in the Western section play-off. ALABAMA ROLLS ALONG ‘Held Scoreless in But Six Periods on Gridiron This Fall. UNIVERSITY, Ala. (#)—Alabama, | which is belng mentioned prominently for nomination to the Rose Bowl, has ecored in every quarter this season with the exception of six. For two periods against Tennessee and single quarters in the Georgia, Mississippi State, Sewanee and Ken- Burl Wins Again. HE rest of the card, interesting night’s | could have been awarded to Covelli. | A Halls Hill is a little settlement about | SPORTS. Mat Matches By the Associated Press. BUFFALO—Jim Londos. 200, Greece |threw Rudy Dusek, 220, Omaha. Nebr one fall. YORK — Dick Shikat, 222 ‘Germsm’ tossed Sander Szabo, 217, | Hungary. one fall. Jim Browning. | 220, Verona, Mo., threw Thor John- son, 304, Sweden, one fall. | ROCHESTER —Ed Don 218, North Java, N. Y. | Billv Bartush, 221, Chicago, two out of three. George AT EADLINERS ASK NEW REFEREE Bortnick, as Official, Is Pro- tested by Zaharias, Garibaldi. F GEORGE ZAHARIAS and Gino | Garibaldi have their way about | it. Referee Benny Bortnick will do no officiating when they clash to- morrow at the Washington Auditor- jum in & two-falls-out-of-three rasslefest. Claiming that Bortnick is too prone to disqualify a grappler for such trifles as gouging, kicking below the belt and stamping size 14 brogans in the opposition’s face, both Zaharias and Garibaldi have requested Promoter Joe Turner referee for event If the upholstered boys really are serious, then tomorrow’s exhibition | may reasonably be expected to set a new high in showmanship. Zaharias, who is well remembered for an 11-| minute victory over Ray Steele, here is known as one of the roughest growl- ers in the mat racket. Garibal reputation as a toughie is little less | known. Both are among the top-flight | ‘ in way of ability. too, which may mean | lhree falls will be necessary for a de- | cision tomorrow. The semi-wind-up will feature the return to Washington of the popular Bortnick in the main Sando Szabo, who will meet young Vic | They are to tussle until a | Christy. fall has been scored. In the pair of 30-minute prelims. Tor Johansen, billed as weighing 315 pounds, will meet Steve Znoski, and Abe Kashey will tackle Charley Allen. Tickets are avallable at the Annapo- lis Hotel. Women, accompanied by | paying escorts, will be admitted free. “ym 1§ VICTbR IN TANK Takes 8 of 8 Events in Defeating Western High, 48-29. Winning six of eight events, Central Y. M. C. A. swimmers last night de- feated the Western High natators, | | 48-27, in the Y pool. Boggs of the Y won two events, the | 100 and 220 yards free style tests. | Clay took the 100-yard breaststroke for one of Western's victories, the other coming in the 160-yard medley relay. Summaries: policyard relay—won by Murphy. Ramble L onarSe MU o 100-yard back stroke- second Mosrelo (W) Y. M . C. A Muilady): sec- “inird. McKay by _Randle third.” Reinberg atd” Tres atyle—Won second. Dering (¥): Time. (1 284 0-yard’ free stvle—Won by Bogge jrcond,, Carney (W) third. Murohy Time, 2:52 )‘lrd hr!lt( ltr';:(l-won by Clav lson (Y) 'Y 84 10 (W n W Smedy W 100-yard free sts) gecond, Mullady Time. 1:01 ] Pancy diring—Won second. Harding (W.) Fifty-three points 50-yard medlev relay—Won by W. n\ln‘;’vnenu‘l 4Sia7 Ralt) second. ¥ M. C 5 Bogas (¥ TRReT Rar (W by Marshall o) third. Carney ( e defeated | to substitute another | by Marmion third. Bonham | THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1934 HUNT CLUBBING. RINGSIDE BEHA' = (TP 4 e ARMSTRONG ELEVEN RETAINS D. C. TITLE Beats Dunbar, 13-0, in Game That Also Nets South Atlantic Championship. '! RMSTRONG still rules the roost { among colored public high school | foot ball teams of the District The Tech eleven yesterday triumphed | over Dunbar, 13-0, to in the D. C. title and also gain the colored South Atlantic Conference crown. Quarterback Freeman scored the first touchdown in the early minutes, when he got loose on a 65-yard run. Tech threatened to count several riods, formidable. Near the game, however, Armstrong again got the range. Briscoe went off tackle to the second touchdown and Neversen converted with a place kick. Line-ups and summary: Dunbar (0), Ar 3 WRTEEH0] QHEA ong (13) . Jonnson B. Duvall Briscoe " Neverson . Smith | mDEpPEAACTE Y | Armstrong |, Touchdowns—F;ee Poin { atter tonchaoun— Wineton. Bubsteutionen | | Duncan for McNeill. Curtis for N. Parker. Stribline for Gordon, Thomas for Hill Ash m coe. mi Referee—M: Hawkins. Martin 1 Mtnin Linesman Umpire—Mr. QUINTS IN DOUBLE BILL. Two games are listed tonight in the G. P. O. Intersectional Basket Ball League in the Langley Junior High School gym. Linotype Section and | the Fourth Floor Bindery five meet | in the opener at 8:15 o'clock, and | at 9:30 the Proof Section takes on | the Third Floor Bindery quint. 'Halls Hill Gloomy, Big Boy Sad As Jurney Ends Golf Season LL is gloom along the Halls Hill front. In case you don't know what Halls Hill is (and few white folks do know) a mile west of Cherrydale, Va.. where a vast majority of the caddies at | | the Washington Golf and Country Club are recruited. They grow up in generations, those | caddies at Halls Hill, and when they | are old enough and big enough to ! tote & golf bag their daddies bring | ‘em up to the club and turn ’'em into bag-toters for men like Chesley | W. Jurney, Dorie Gruver, Calvert Dickey and others who play at Wash- ington. A large section of Halls Hill has | the glooms today because the High Sheriff of the United States Capitol has ebout decided golf is over for the season—for him, at least. The iarge section is all included in the voluminous person of “Big Boy” Evans, the 240-pound colored boy | who caddies for Jurney, sergeant at arms of the Senate. Big Boy's days of bag-toting for Jurney are about over for this year and the chubby-faced colored boy is all disconsolate, for he supports a family on the earnings from those rounds of golf in which he packs the High Sherifl's big golf bag. Last night, as Big Boy came into the Sheriff’s best likker (he always rates a drink after a round of golf) the Sheriff spoke to him in this wise: “Big Boy, I guess I won’t be out until day after tomorrow. And it probably will rain then. Guess we had better pack the clubs away in moth balls. . It looks like a long Winter.” Big Boy assented, and now he will have to go back to caddying for com- mon folks. The High Sheriff is a good tipper and a liberal customer. Not every caddy has a patron like Big Boy. But carly next Spring, when the birdies begin tweeting and Spring comes out of the South, Big Boy out there seeking that elusive birdie, which has evaded him this year. He ROt one two years ago. and ever since he and Big Boy have been striving for success again. on the eleventh hole,” said Big Boy, “but we missed it.” It's always * when Jurney and Big Boy go out to maul a golf ball. tucky games the Crimson tide has been held scoreless. Literally, too, for when Jurney pushes one into & bunker or s ditch, it is A the locker room to sample some of | will be on the job, and Jurney w'll be | | “We had a putt for one today,| Big Boy who plays it out. |'em they get a lot of pars. A%% Between | on the par-5 fourth hole at Washington, Pete Branson, crack airplane pilot on the Washing- ton-Miami run, will make 'em. Bran- son hit a short tee shot on the fourth | yesterday, walloped out & hooked iron shot that should have gone out of | | brounds, but hit a tree and bounced back on the fairway, arched a mashie shot o the green and then sank a | 40-footer for the birdie. thereby brmg- ing great pain to the countenance of | Jerry Blazek, who had played the | hole in orthodox fashion for a par 5| to lose it. WO fellows playing golf with T clubs from the same golf bag | were favorites to cop the major | | portion of the purse in the Kenwood Club's pro-amateur tourney today. | The two were Roger Peacock, Indian Spring's crack amateur, and George | Diffenbaugh, the little Indian Spring | mentor. Roger's clubs were stolen & few weeks ago and when they were re- covered he gave ‘em to his daddy-in- law, George Shields of Columbia. Roger ordered a new set, but they haven't come in yet and so he is using Diffenbaugh’s clubs. Roger could use a broom handle and play any golf course in respect- able figures, so being without his own clubs does not handicap him. So these two—Peacock and Diffen- baugh—using the same bag of clubs, are favorites to cop the main award. They won most of the pro-amateur tournaments staged earlier in the sea- son and against the same opposition; there isn't any reason to believe they cannot go along in the same groove today. Their main opposition seems to center around the team of Gene Vin- son, District amateur champion, and Mel Shorey, the East Potomac Park pro, although Al Houghton and Maury Fitzgerald, Kenwood pair, may have something to say about the money distribution. Al can play Kenwood in par with his eyes closed. w and R. A. Carr. All finished the tour- | ney with net scores of 79, which hit the blind figure right on the nose. tourney at Anacostia Park MILEAGE METERED MOTOR OILS SUPER REFINED PENNSYLVANIA WASHINGTON -Avtz-v(onvnnv 6 19 (AT M) NAT.412 AS COVELLI mp DE GRASSE WERE BANGING AWAZ/_I \ ( & HEN better birdies are made | INNERS in the blind bogey | are A. C. Nelson, Dink Ward | A CLOSE-UP OF VIOR fi: WELL - WELL / FAWNCY SEEING YOU HERE OLD | THING / w. times more during the next two pe- | but Dunbar's defense was too | close of the| BY W. R. McCALLUM. OHN J. DUFFER wastes any where from 5 to 15 strokes in t doesn’t use the proper club at | | the proper time. He whales away |with ‘a niblick where common sense would dictate the use of a flat-faced {iron; he hacks at the ball with a | mashie where he should hit it with No. 2 iron and he blithely takes !a wooden club from a trap where | |he hasn't a Chinaman's chance to get out with anything less than a the aforesaid John J. would |use in golf the common sense he used in business, and realize that his chances of making a spectacular shot CRambers for | are practically nothing, he would cut | his score by somewhere between 5 and 15 strokes, in the opinion of George Diffenbaugh, the little Indian Spring pro, who knows the game from A to Izzard and who himself | (fine shotmaker that he is) positively refuses to play the spectacular shot | It was like this, in the good | | in a medal round and prefers the more prossaic way of getting the ball | in the hole. George claims that where one chance-taking shot comes off, scores of them fail. one run-up shot succeeds. scores of nmy little pitches miss the target. | “Always take the club that has the least possible element of chance,” says |the Indian Spring mentor. J asked George. “It means,” he said, “that when Johnny Duffer has a perfectly level shot from 20 yards of the green, with no bunkers to carry and a smooth stretch of turf | between his ball and the hole it will | | be far safer for him to take any kind | Duffer Overestimates Himself. UST what does this mean?” we run that ball along the ground, than to take a pitching club and knock it | short or over the green. It means that when the ball lies in sand in a | bunker with a gently sloping bank in front, that he shouldn't take a niblick; that he would get somewhere on the green with a putter, while he might leave it in the sand with the lofted club or knock it over the green. much safer to take the club with the | smaller probable margin of error on| | every shot. It means that Johnny, instead of being sure to hit the ball as far as the green or the hole, usually | errs on the wrong side and is con- | sistently short. In other words, he | tries to play the shots as Jones or| ;Runyan would play them, but he’ Tickets sold |- $/M90 ncfl: TRIP i cars and Indi Monday, December 3. Baltimore & Ohio Chestnut Street Station, Philadelphia, Is within easy walking distance of Franklin Field. Forreturn train service or other details, telephone District 3300 or Natione!7370. BALTIMORE & QOHIO a round of golf because he It means that it is far better and | ARMY-NAVY Football Game, Philadelphia, Pa. Saturday, December 1 coaches or Pullman cars (Pullman charges extra) on the following air-<onditioned trains 1 Ar.Philo. (Chestnut St. Sta.), 10:48 A. M. Both trains carry Club cars, Parlor cars, Dining Return on any regular train leaving Philadelphia to and including 3:44 A. M., —By JIM BERRYMAN WHAT A SENSE ©OF HUMOR--- N HE LAUSHFD OFF' BURLS PUNCHES FoR © RounDs,/ * TIGER MAN" PHIPPs MISSED A WILD SWING AND CAME FACE To FACE WITH JUDGE LWINGSTON | { | were in the low 'WESTERN FINISHES | GOOD GRID SEASO | Routs Gonzaga, 27-0, in Wind-up. 21 of Points Are Scored in Last Period. | OOT ball so far as Western High | is concerned is over for this sea- | son. It has been one of the most | successful campaigns in years for the Georgetowners. The Red and White wound up its R.MsCALLUM |lacks the physical and shot-making equipment to do them as they do. Pride Is Costly. AKE a case like this: Our elev- enth hole here at Indian Spring is a good hole, a hole that | wants a good tee shot and an ac-| curate pitch. Our boy friend Johnny hits & good tee shot, and he hits a good fron (for him), with the ball winding up between the bunkers. with just one tiny corner of a trap to go over. Thinks Johnny he will take season with a flourish yesterday, | drubbing its old foe, Gonzaga. 27-0. in a game harder fought than the | score would indicate. It was only 6-0 until the final quarter, but then Coach Dan Ahern's charges turned on the heat to run up three more touch- downs Gonzaga came within 2 yards of‘ the Western goal and of tying the score in the third quarter. Summerbel! plunged across from the 2-yard line to the first touchdown. | Allen crashed through from the 1-yard | line for one of the tallies in the final quarter. with Hoskinson counting the | other two touchdowns, one after a 55- | vard run, following an intercepted | pass, and the other on a line buck. Line-ups and summary: Western (27). l Gonzaga (). | +.... McCoy senmick his niblick in hand and make a fine | little pitch shot right up to the pin. He tops it and it goes over into the bunker at the back. He winds up with a burly 7, when he had a sure 5 and a possible 4 in sight. Had he | taken a flat-faced club, a No. 3 iron, W for example, and run that ball along | the ground, he couldn't have missed being on the green. But he chose the | spectacular shot, and it cost him at | | least two strokes. He goes on to the | twelfth hole, where he hits a screamer and his ball lies on the down slope in the fairway, a spot where he never old Summer time. Sweaterless, playing in flannels under a warm sun, Roger Peacock (putting) and Maury Nee, complete a round at Columbia. has been before. He thinks he can get home with a midiron, and he takes it, instead of the more conservative spoon or brassie. He forgets about | green and the trap. His midiron shot | Poache bk C.\r'nn‘ o o Hoskinson 1 ryushmnv b t v | Buckles for Wy Lio: eicher. \ Waddi! 1A lor Hasley. ker. Love for Saeitol Maloney for Wacdil, Lidel for Summer- | | Summerbell for Lydel. Owens for | 1l. Donahue for Lioyd. Ollsnhln( o, 8t Hasley for Wzd Treseell for for Pinotti | der for Penwick. Hackner TorWhtmger. | for McCoy F Um- pire—R_ Sweeney (George Washington) \Lr\umln—Dl’ Jack Simpson (Loyoia). IN MOLLYCODDLE GAME | Lowers and Uppers Oppose at Gal- laudet Thursday. | Lowers and Uppers of Gallaudet clash in their annual mollycoddle foot | ball game Thursday morning on the | Kendall Green gridiron. Jeems Eller- horst is coaching the Lowers and An- ton O'Branovich is tutoring the Up- pers. O'Branovich was forced from the varsity grid team this year with | exclusive and J | Jacobs, 21-4, 21-10. SPORTS. Three Others Here Placed in Class B of Rich Meet Starting Dec. 8. ITH at least three Wnsmng- | ton golfers due to play in | the tourney—biggest event of the golf season where in the world, from the stand- | point of the purse—only one of the | entrants from the Capital in the Miami-Biltmore extravaganza to start December 8 will be eligible for the |Tamp) first class. any- |, DeGrasse Sees Draw, Gets Ring Win : Houghton Rates High in Miami Golf LONE CAPTAL PRO OF CLASS A GRADE e Pin Standing HEURICH ll'."-o\'ll! e Bottle ‘House.. . Ice Dept. No. i Brewery Ice Dept No." EE ST eAm FEZRERZA Briamang & 3 & Keg Drivers Season High team game-—Office. 540. High team set—Office. 1.561 High individual game_—Bur strikes—Porter, 11; Burns, | Prather. o High spares—Prather. 50: Snelton. 45 H'lh flil same—Prather, 06, MEN'S B. Y. P. U. w West Washinaton No. 3. Brookland | Kendall No. 1 Metropolitan No. West Washington No. 1. . Metropolitan_No. "1 | Kendall No. | Hyattsville They have done this year what the pros call a dizzy bit of phenegling by | arbitrarily setting 2side one group to play in class A, while all the others will fall into class B. Al Houghton of Kenwood, who never has done anything much in the Biltmore tourney, is the only local pro in class A, composed of the pros who 30 in the national open and the 64 qualifiers in the P G. A championship. Al falls in the first class because he qualified for the P. G. A, where he went to the quarter-final in the tourney at Buffalo. sional, I L Chase. and Leo Walper of Bclhflda are slated to play in class | B in the coming affair. because they Three in Second Class. OLAND MacKENZIE of Congres- didn't get in the first 30 .n the open | and didn't qualify for the P. G. A The first group has been named the "bombers” and the second group or B plavers the “pursuiters " Prize monr) totals $12.500, with $7.500 put up for the first class and $5,000 hung up for the second group. Barnett already is in Florida. where he holds down the Winter job at the very elegant Indian Creek Club, while Hbughton, Mec- Kenzie and Walper plan to leave the | Capital early next week for Miami The “pombers” include most of the top-notch pros of the country. There isn't a real exception among the big winners left out of the first group, and by December 8 the Australian troupers will be back in Florida, ready to do or die for the greenbacks that go to the winners. The entry fee ix 15 bucks, which. if the expected 400 enter. will net some- thing like $6.000 for Henry L. Doherty and his merry men and go a long way toward defraying the expenses of the tourney. In addition, the Doherty group is to stage another tcurney right after the Biltmore, at Nassau, w heavy enough to justify night trip from Miami. the over- First Effort at Grouping. UST how the thing will work out, in respect to the classifications remains to be seen. It is the first attempt in golf to classify pros ac- cording to their playving ability. In the past all pros have been rated even, and all have started from scratch, which is nutty enough when you con- sider that gents like Tommy Armour, Sarazen, Laffoon and a lot of others can give several hundred pros 2 up and beat ‘em. The men running the Biltmore tour- | nament may have a good idea at that But for the convenience of the gal- | leries, the “bombers” and “pursuiters” | are not to have different starting days. | They will all play on the same davs. Tt looks like a gay and gaudy affair and a good way to start a gidds in Florida, for it won't end until De- | | cember 13. e PING-PONGER IN UPSETS Bob Barnett of Chevy | OO, | National Baptist 21 Sea g High individua nce (Temple), Hi Cleary (W No B0 408 Jones. (Broskiand). 302 “Kendall No. 1, a7 w, £h strikes—Brown i ¥ e with 1% eac) ah spares—J Hodzes (W W No. 3, R0. E. Cleary (W. W Non 1) Hieh averagec—Clears Wonds Ml 3 CATHOLIC LADIES. Standines. st L A \ 0. H Holy Com. A Holy Com. C 13 11 Season Records. High games—D forter B Donrells gh set—Donn A A Com- = Holy Comforter JMack LA TFioly Holy ter A: E. Holy Comforter N r B ‘spares—Grant. Hieh team game—Holy Comfort eam set—Holy Comforter A. 1385 ADVERTISEMENT. THE ADVENTURES OF GRACIE— WITH GEORGE BURNS AND GRACIE ALLEN MY NEPHOO READS FORTUNES, HE TELLS IF A MAN'S CLEVER BY CIGAR LEAVES GRACIE, YOU TELL FORTUNES WITH TEA LEAVES~NOT CIGAR LEAVES ! Herman Conquers Two Favorites in Handicap Tourney. George Herman scored upsets last night in the handicap ping-pong tnumev at the District courts, when e defeated Al Sappington, 21-5 and 3[ 14, in the first round, and R. S. in the second. Sappington and Jacobs are ranking District players One quarter-final match was com- pleted and all first and second round encounters were finished. Summaries: t round—Topin defeated R Sherts 21-15: Thacker defeated ~Pond McGeary defeated Levine a knee injury, after four years' serv- i' and \here| that 30 yards of fairway between the | jce as quarterback. Uppers are favorites to win over | fe 15 ed Knoop. 21-1 ated Medley. 28-2 feat catches the top of the bunker in| Ellerhorst’s outfit, which triumphed ,,..m Williams front. It falls into & bad lie and he takes a 6, where he might have got- ten home with a wooden club had he | put his pride in his pocket. I see 'em ! | day after day, and it hurts to see a | fellow who ought to break 90 every time he starts waste stroke after stroke until he runs his score up above 100, is ready to quit golf, goes home with a headache and thinks the | game has him licked. We can teach ‘em to hit the ball, but it is hard to | teach 'em that vanity does not pay ! Diffenbaugh or Houghton would pitch | | the ball it isn't the shot for him. | And probably Diffenbaugh and Hough- | ton would do better if they chose the | | shot with the lesser margin of error. | Can't Think for Duffer. | IME after time I see my pupils | pitch from just short of the eighteenth green and stay 20| feet short or top the ball and go 30 feet over, when they couldn’t miss with a midiron or even a putter. We can teach ’'em the swing, but we| can't make '‘em think. They must| do that themselves. And day after | \ day I see 'em play the fourteenth with | an iron club, press it and end up in a bunker, when they could renrh it easily with a spoon or a brassie.” ot this special fare ere goed in fon . . ..., 8:00A. M 9:00A. M M4SA. M. ividual Seat Coache: last season, 27-0. Varsity Coach Teddy | Hughes will referee the game. SOCKS REFEREE; JAILED Chilean Heavy Champ Infuriated by Adverse Decision. LIMA, Peru, November 27 (A — Eulogio Cerezo, the heavyweight | champion of Chile, knocked out the of flat-faced club, even a putter, and | dividends in this game: that because | referee during a fight and landed |, in jail. Cerezo was fighting Arturo Pedxlh\ and didn't like the referee's adverse decision! He argued with him, { punched him in the jaw and knocked him through the ropes. An infuriated crowd started to | throw chairs and other missiles from | the ringside and police had to rescue | Cerezo. He was taken to the nearest police station and will be placed at | the disposal of the courts. AS LOW AS 50 PER WEER 13th 8 K N.W. NA. 3323 d Topin. 2 ed Dowell $reeman defeated Georse | Jacobs defeated Frey. 21-17 | man defeated Sappington. Lafferty defeated Garnett - Anderson_defeated L. Sherfy. 17-21 1-17: Wood defeated Brylawski cond found.—Rogers defented Thack- defeate defea ffated Bummers. Blank_defeated Dowell. 1? A o Gereatea Stevens. son _defeated Wood Carpenter defeated = Fres Herman defeated Ja- | Angerson defested oo asteated C GUN REPAIRING Shot Guns—Shells. Mer OBsordti, Fries, Benll & Shurp PAYMENT «lse TIRES, RADIOS AUTO HEATERS, Etc. Firestone Service Stores, Inc. 3rd 8 B S.W. NA. 1021 T —— OF (OURSE THEYRE YEAH? WELL| Go0p - VINTAGE 1 A GRADE A | (|GARS ARE MADE VINTAGE | FROM THE TOP3 CIGAR GOOD? | GRADES OF AMERKAN FILLER TOBACCO ONY g MY NEPHOD WATCHES Uk HENSACKE Ao | [TELLIFAMANY |F C1GAR TH (LEVER BY | pumB—IF 1%35 CIGAR LEAVES?) LEAVE A UTTLE, Tune in: Adventures of Gracle. 9:30 P. M. Every Wed. Nits, Station WJI B