Evening Star Newspaper, December 8, 1934, Page 13

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S Braves’ Racing Plans Stir Base Ball : Great Golf Array Opens Miami Meet INEARLY 30 PROS LEAGUE T0 FIGHT FUCH'S DOG TRACK Affair to Be “Settled Very Definitely” at Meetings Next Week. BY HERBERT W..BARKEB, Associated Press Sports Writer. EW YORK, December 8.—Emil | Fuchs, president of the Boston Braves, plans to call on racing dogs to pull his base ball club out of the financial red next Summer, but whether he'll succeed in getting the necessary permission from the National League still was decidudly open to question today. Upon receiving assurances from the Massachusetts Racing Commission that his application for a dog track license would receive favorable con- sideration, Fuchs said he would or- ganize another corporation to operate the sport in Braves Field. Immedi- ately he found himself the center of what may develop into quite & verbal tempest before it's all over. Called Preposterous. An alliance of base ball and dog racing is “absolutely preposterous.” said Ford Frick, who will take office as National League president next week. “It is entirely at variance with the principles for which base ball has battled so strenuously,” Frick con- tinued. “I cannot speak for the board of directors, of course, but the sentiments I have heard expressed on all sides lead me to believe that the matter will be settied very definitly at the annual meetings next week. Organized base ball has outlawed players for gambling * * * and it Is ridiculous to conceive that base ball | now could permit a sport founded on gambling to move premises with it.” Fuchs, however, pointed out tha under his present plans the Braves | would play their home games in Fenway Park, home of the Boston Red Sox, mainly because it is unlikely & | portable set-up for dog racing could be erected in Braves Field. Fuchs Expects O. K. After Fuchs had conferred with Prick via the telephone, the Braves president said: “Regardless of what has been said, I do not expect to cause any dissen- sion in next week’s National League meeting. directors will sanction every action of mine when I present them with the facts.” In the event that the Braves pl. their home games at Fenway Park, leaving Braves Field to the dog races. Gerald Nugent, president of the Phillies, said he believed the only & into the same | I am sure that the other | PORTS. Landis Is Aloof In Visit to D. C. ENESAW MOUNTAIN LANDIS, commissioner of base ball, honored the Capital with a brief visit yesterday, but kept a dark secret his reason for being here. The czar of the game did not even communicate with Clark Griffith. president of the Nationals, during the short stay. The judge checked out of his hotel early in the afternoon, pre- sumably to go to New York, where he will preside over the joint meeting of the major leagues next week. BIG BASKET BALL TOURNEY PLANNED {Field of 115 Teams Seen by Police Boys’ Club. Star Gives Cup. CITY-WIDE basket ball tourna- ment, sponsored by the Boys' Club of the Metropolitan Po- lice, will be held at the George ‘Washington University gymnasium, through the courtesy of officials of that institution, from December 26 to 31. division by The Evening Star. There also will be competition in the 115, 125, 130 and 145 pound and unlimited classes, with cups going to the cham- pionship team in each t is estimated that something like 1115 teams will take part in the tour- ney, including approximately 10 in he 100-pound class, 15 in the 115, 0 in the 125. 30 in the 130, 20 in he 145 and 20 in the unlimited sec- | tion. bers of the winning squad in_each division by the Metropolitan Police Boys' Club. Start in Morning. morning of the tourney and con- tinue until noon. It will be re- sumed at 5 pm. and continue until 10. On the final night it is planned | to have as added attraction a boxing show. Maj. Ernest W. Brown, wpcnmend- ent of the Mectropol. Police, is solidly behind the tournament, ar- | rangements for which are in charge of John P. Meshkoff and Morris Fox. It will be played under the sanction of the District A. A Team repre ntatives are asked to attend a meoting to be held December Police Pre- A nandsome cup will be awarded | the victorious team in the unlimited | Medals will be awarded 10 mem- | LAY will begin at 9 o'clock each | & THE EVE NING STAR, WASHINGTON, NAVY ELEVEN HAD LOTS OF “KICK.” Navy gridiron classic remains very much of a foot ball game, with special emphasis on the foot. When Slade Cutter sent the mud-crusted foot ball sailing over the cross-bar to give Navy a 3-point and incidentally the margin of victory, it the Midshipmen to achieve lead over Army, was quite the natural way for victory, The field goal has plaved a very Navy's triumphs in the past. Cutter's kick from the quagmired perhaps the most significant | Naval Academy. | world by men in the sea service who | of the satisfaction of a gridiron victory over Army for 13 long years. Back in 1910, when two evenly matched service teams slashed scorelessiy away for 50 minutes, | kicking hero, Jack Dalton, put over the kick that spelled A prodigious left-footed kicker, Dalton failed six times to find the range of the goal-post bar before his place-kick from the 30-yard line victory for the Midshipmen late in the game was good. The following year Dalton was elected captain of his in the athletic history of the It was a kick felt all the way around the NAVY'S D. 816 TACKLE> PLACE™ KICKERY , BOXER AND MUS(C!AM., ™ 2 HEAVYWE ISHT BOXING CHAMPION OF FROM THE 19-YARD LINE GAVE NAY NAVAL.' ACADEMY Y TS FIRST VUiIcTORY OUER ARMY N HS PUNTING MADE TE NAVY SCORE FOSSIBLE - AFTER TAT HE KEOT ARMY AT BAY ALerr T —— AU Biehts Reserved by The Associaied Press placement. Inciden mander, is director field-goal method i over the cross-bar. year's Navy team important part in 19-yard line was him the trick. In had been deprived before his plebe da Navy's greatest test in Chicago. ‘The year 1934 swept to victory in Brown beat the boy: Those three successive victories of 1910-'11- scored without a single touchdown. There was another Navy victory scored solely by the their athletic brushes with Army s from the Plains with two kicks from tally this same Babe Brown, now a com- of athletics at the Naval Academy 2 were n 1919, when Clyde King booted two Tom Hamilton, head coach of this kicked one in the 1 game, but it didn't give the Midshipmen victory. Slade Cutter’s now famous kick was the fourth the burly tackie had kicked this season. are insignificant before the one that spelled viclory over | Army—that's the one he'll remember! Cutter never tried kicking placements before this year when Coach Tom Hamilton ook him in hand and taught | But the other three | fact, he never played foot ball'at all ys at Annapolis He is the heavyweight boxing champion of the Acad- emy, and will admit if sufficiently schoolboy he won a national scholastic flute-playing con- pressed that as & has truly been a “Navy vear,” for in the Midshipmen have every major sport—foot ball, base ball, track, basket ball and lacrosse. For thirteen years the traditional Chinese gong. which SATURDAY, DECEMBER 8§, | for the $5,000 in awards—$1,000 first | money— | Cruickshank, 1934, < SEEK PRIZE CUTS Two Days Required to Get Vast Field of Entrants By Starting Tee. v By the Assoctated Press. IAMI, Fla, December 8.— Golfdom’s old guard, a segre- gated 40, today fought back the challenge of more than 200 “unknowns” clamoring for recog- nition as an elephantine field sought glory and the $12,500 prizes of the fifth anrual Miami-Biltmore open. It will require two days to clear the 300 entrants past the starting tee, and, to complicate matters further, the golfers have been cast in three divi- sions, each with its prize list. The old guard is enlisted in the so- called “bombing squadron,” restricted to the low 60 and ties of the P. G. A. tournament and the low 30 and ties of the national open. Of the 88 golfers eligible under these restric- tions, 40 entered the Miami-Biltmore. For them were $7,500 in prizes, with a $2,500 top. O Vast Second Group. N THE heels of the bombers pressed a ponderous band of 242 home club professionals, out -and their chance to steal the show with a final score better than | the winning one in the bombing squadron. In the third group were the ama- teurs, 18 of them, with the Col. Henry L. Doherty Trophy and other non- cash prizes as their rewards. The field, seeded with the headliners of tournament golf, and these out- |- standing threesomes getting away to- day: John Golden-Johnny Farrel!. Walter Hagen, Phil Perkins-Billie | §; Burke-Wiffy Cox and Tommy Armour- Tom Creavy-Willie Macfarlane. Olin Dutra - Victor Ghezzi - Bobby Johnny Revolta-Bill Mehihorn-Jimmie Hines and Al Wat- rous-Ed Dudley-Horton Smith. Macfarlane Defending. HE division playing today will T rest tomorrow, while Sunday's | group will lay over Monday. At |R the end of two hours of 18 holes for | b | everybody the field will be trimmed to | the low 60 and ties in all divisions, and these will fight it out Wednesday and Thursday for tbe championship. Macfarlane, from Tuckahoe, N. Y., | is defending champion, winning last year with a 268 President George Jacobus of the rewarded with record attendance. | W Brool | Metroponite Metropolltan. No- Weat, Washington. 1 No.1!! Hodges (W. SPORTS. A—13 BOWLING STANDINGS MEN'S B. Y. P. U. Pfl.lofl h Bethan, National Baptist . 'Weu wumnmn No. 3. 1 2.. 1 ‘w. L 26 o High averages—Cles Woods (Me! 9: Reid (Cen 31085 Jores € (Brook ). Xames—Bunce s :n-}-‘e“;mwn ; : et Cleury (W, W. 1), 403 . Jomes (Brook ) 3. | Gecretary . High team game Metropolitan, No. P team uu——Kenunll ‘West Washington. No. Higl High _strike: Hig! w. EN — Brown Grnr (Kendall. 1) h um»u—waods (et 2). 1 ; Hild (Met 109: '3 Hodges (W. W.. \Tempier, oNo- 1. imet SATURDAY NIGHT. Hall Wine & De Molay Alumni Book of Wlshlnlbnn Coavention Tru Blu National Smoke 8hop Plaza Geo. W. Cochran Co Minson Garage ... Liquor L. 5 1 Season Records. High team set—De Molay Alumni High team game High sets—La B 3 LUCKY STRIKE INDEPENDENT. Grotto Grill | Wright Excelsior 1t Judd & Detweiler 16 Jones Epecials. . Diacos Fragers Hdw - | phiel n 4201’::’ Off to the battle tomorrow will be | Bucdeiie .. Pob.{flhs . cake ‘ect. Elec. No Co Professional Golfers’ Association seized | c.mm Tx upon the large numbers of merrbersl FEPCO— here to call a special meeting and was | C; Tru La 112-19; Brown, 112-17. 14 S35 32 1 or Biee. Cor A. B. Warren e, 400 391 Veihmeyer, Blu_Be Hall er ine. il | ariing D 161 Ktndll No. 1, 597; |, 1.691; B 1745 15 Hr Ave isy | N | GEORGETOWN COMMERCIAL. W. L Ballston Mkt. 0 sp & M'nt'rse A C. Wisconsin Stohlman Ch Avenue Grill. 20 16 Super Conc'te Season Records. pllieh ndividual aver: (Ballston) High individual game—Kenny Beck (Jef~ | terson). 166 High' individual set—G. Jacobs (Balle ston). 403 Hich tram game—Ballston Market. 821. High team set—Jeflerson Spring. 1.75A. "]-ltllrhhsi'xkzkuuchell McProuty. Pisher, ) ea High spares—Beck, High flat game—F. elumn (Baliston). 98. 12 13 14 11 16 INTERIOR. W. L. Admin‘trative 23 Engineers. . 4 =] | Engravers. and Indians. . Buiidings ..l Construction . i Auto 8hop. .. Season Records. High team set—Secretary, 1.697. Hieh team game—Secretary L High individual set—Flanery. ual game—Wannan. 153 High ividunl _ averages — Flanery, oA B Z [ Walsh, 87, w L % 15 EERSANa R eR 0o T DA es—8olem’ (Condor). day), 1 E. Abbott —E._Abbott (Cold n (Condor), 388; 1" (Condor). 8 Solem _ (Condor 8tr, o). 10w ¥ 5 Albee (Ri w.!Cori XGrandmerhers asey (Encore), 106-33. T. 106-2 Kaiser A. Konouck (Bon- 105-30: SANICO. Team Standing. v, L. Season Records. » games—Jumbo Bread. 56: enouse 1. 344: G Bl itary Office ges—Bradford 5. R. La Bille (Sanico Thorpe (Doughe (Jumbo Bread), games—D_ N. Pratt e (Doughnuts). question before the league then would be whether or not Fuchs could con- tinue as vrpsldem, of the Braves. 14 at 8 pm. at the Fif! cinet Station, F) and E streets | southeast. Quints unable to have rep- resenta‘ives at this session or who is rung only when a Navy foot ball team triumph: | the West Pointers, had hung silent at Annapolis. u|Olin Dutra can bet the Sailors “kicked the gong around” in celebrat- | chairman of mittee. team and repeated his success of the previous Fall by stopping the Cadets with a placement kick In 1912, after Dalton had graduated, his kicking role Chief business was the election of & “Fer No % national open titlist, as | Deico Light the Tournament Com- & NAVY DEPARTMENT. ’ WESTERN GRIDDERS AWARDED LETTERS l Morse, Former Coach, Speaker at | Dinner, When 20 Are Given School's “W.” INETEEN members of Western High's 1934 foot ball squad and ‘Manager Dan Leary were pre- sented letters last night at the annual “W” Club banquet in honor of the grid team. Bryan Morse, at one time ‘Western High coach, was the main speaker. Letters were awarded to the follow- ing players: Capt. Bob Sullivan, Dick Schleicher, Jack Wadell, Ed Seymour, James Parks, Don Bucholtz, James ‘Tressel, Bill Krause, Frank Wynne, Buzz Parker, Bob Greenwood, George Love, Bill Summerbell, Logan Owens, Clarence Allen, Jack Hasley, Phil M: lone, Hilleary Hoskinson and Ed Lloyd. Krause and Summerbell also received gold foot. balls for making one of the newspaper's all-high team. 20 YEARS AGO THE STAR. DDIE COLLINS, star second baseman of the Philadelphia Athletics, today was sold to the Chicago White Sox. Connie Mack, the A’s manager, declined to reveal the amount of money in- volved in the deal. but one report says it was $50,000. Gandils had the only 1,600 set in duckpin leagues here last night. ‘This team defeated the Nationals two out of three in the Arcade loop. Rolling for the Gandils were ‘Wright, Goodman, Watson, Baum and Moore. Nationals used Brandt, Gheen, Ross, Cullin and Hawksworth. Georgetown’s basket ball team meets Mount St. Joseph's College quint of Baltimore tomorrow night in Ryan gym in the first game here of the season for a college quint of the District of Columbia group. Jim Tormey. center; Kel- ey, forward, and Foley, guard, are veterans around whom the Hill- toppers have built their new team. wish further irformation should call \leshkofl or No. 5 after 3 p.m. MARYLAND WILL PLAY Set for December 16 or 23. Upon condition that several stipu- lations are met, Maryvland A. C. foot ballers last night agreed to accept | the challenge of the Palace eleven, |the game to be played either De- cember 16 or 23 These teams originally were listed to meet in the National City League, but Palace failed to put a team on | the field for the game and was ex- pelled from the league. As a re- | sult, M. A. C. was awarded the first- | half title which Palace had won. Basket Briefs GAME for tonight, with an un- limited cla: team having. a gym is sought by Parchey's | Comets. This team also is ‘Tuesday and Saturday remainder of the campaign with quints having courts. Call Manager Al Mesirow at Metropolitan 9015, after tilts for nights for the Results, Community Center League. Levys, 26: Royals, 15. Marions, 49; Brands, 39. Independent Games. Hunt, 34 Club, 21. COURT RESULTS St. John's, 35: Mount Rainier, 21. Virginia, 63; Bridgewater, 13. Indiana, Northwestern, 35; Wabash, 29. Winona Teachers, 30; Stout Insti- tute, 28. North Dakota Science, 23. Depauw, 49; Anderson College, 19. Wisconsin, 27: Carleton, 26. River Falls Teachers, 43; ester, 37. State, 43; Wahpeton Macal- STRAIGHT OIT THE YVEE by W. IVEN fairly good weather, a notable group of southpaw golfers will gather at Rock Creek Park Monday morning | to contest in the left-handed tourna- ment to be put on by Manager Harry Graham. With the blow-up of the Namandji Ninj tourney at Indian Spring the southpaws had been bereft of the only tournament open only to | them until Harry, who is not one to Jet any golfer down, came along with the bright idea of staging a tourney for lefties. Tt will be the first public links open southpaw championship, and inas- much as southpaws are hardy gents by the very nature of their unorth- odox swing, the tournament probably will gather together quite a group of gents who swing from the port side. Buch men as Earl Jamison, Earl Mc- Aleer, possibly Tom Bones and Sam Rice and Byrn Curtiss, the last two named the perennial winners of the Namandji Ninj trophy. Meanwhile Graham, not satisfied ‘with staging a southpaw event, is plan- ning another affair before Christmas for his beloved public links golfers, 34 won't be another match play tour? R.MSCALLUM ney, for Harry holds that with the weather so uncertain at this time of year it might take a month to com- plete, but it will be a medal play event, if Harry can corral all the lads to- gether over a two-day tourney. “Never give up a hole while you have a chance to get the ball in the cup,” said Calvert Dickey some years back when he was moving around the Wash- ington course in the high 80s. Nowa- days the Dickey man pursues the same course, although he usually gets around in the high 70s, so good has he be- come. But he could accuse a lot of other folks of infringing on the Dickey pronouncement, men such as Pete Branson, who flew down to Miami last night with the golden memory of a holed pitch shot for a 4 on the seventh hole before him. Branson, who pilots one of the fast planes to Miami, topped his tee shot, flubbed his second shot, knocked his third over the green and then holed a short pitch for the par 4. “Ataboy,” said Dickey, his partner. “Don’t ever give up a hole until the other boys are in the cup.” Dickey and Dorie Gruver, his arch-rival, were to have another of their hot matches today, with Dr. T. D. Webb and Joe Baldwin as the other members of the match. Sigma Alpha Kappa, 23; Lawrence‘ Ball State Teachers, 19. | Fox at Police Precinct| Game With Challenging Palace was assumed by Babe Brown, a ;uanL 216- mund guard. ing their recent triumph. Sanico League Averages TEAM STANDING. HS._ TotP. | 8 ‘\ S. Washington Boys' Club, 39; Fort C, Certified Esgs Sanitary Tea Sanico Bakery 3 v Yanitary Ofice 1. set—Jumbo Bread. 171 Sanitary_Office Sanico (Sanigh _Signs). (Jumbo Bread). 1 (Sanitary_Office 1), bender (Sanitary W. H. Garrul (Sanico Hams). 1 High individual (Sanitary Office 1), J_La Bl E. C. Batlen- 112-12, W. C. same. N. Pratt 8% Fhorpe (San- ico Doughnuts), 157: A. Blevens (Jumbo B i56; E. C. Bittenbender (Sani B Jenkins (Sanico P B Saes) and B, La Bhile Signs). 150 each dividual set—S. Thorpe (Sanico ts), 40%; T. Bradford (Jumbo )§: E. C. Bittenbender (Sanitary %0 D] N_Pratt (Sanitary Of: CR. La Bille (Sanico Signs Thorpe (Jumbo Bread), nitary W H, 1) —W. J. La Bille (Sanitary trell (Sanico Hams) ey Signs), K15 T 80; M. Tallant (Sanitary Office 1). INDIVIDUAL AVERAGES. (15 games or more.) SANICO BAKERY NO. 1. %R Gerlara: . A."Anderson i SANICO CAKES. 1117 14 . Fagan. PI Roberts. Grasskope Hudkins . SANITARY WAREHO | BANICO BIGNS 105-15 104-18 100-16 a1 90-14 SANITARY WAREHOUSE F. Hazleton, 58 126 3 | W. _Hughes F." Sparshott T, Bradley | W. “De Neane | B Frawntelter 18 | Moody ... | Clayton " 111 28 9 38 21 3 30 §:.~-::~." NS =ERRY ety ‘.-c.n,.n.m 235E0%: Dh: inson F. Kidwell. H nry LAND O G. Rose. .. Brockwell J. Coakley GAINS SOCCER FINAL. Park View Elementary School’s soc- cer team, defending champion in the Municipal Playground Department’s tourney, again qualified for the city final yesterday and also gained the ‘Western section title by defeating Fill- more's booters, 3-1. vational Eleven Choice Tomorrow ASHINGTON NATIONALS, victorious in five of seven games, figure to add another win tomorrow against the Mo- hawks at Griffith Stadium at 2:30 o'clock. The game is billed for the D. C. pro title. The Nationals have total of 93 points against counted by the opposition. Preceding the game and also be- tween the halves a toot ball field day program will be held. with passing for distance and goal kick- ing from placement as the events. Prizes will be awarded the winners. Entrants need not be uniformed. THREE BIG BOWLING EVENTS ON TONIGHT Girls Resume Davis Tournament. Heurichs and Temples Hosts to Out-of-Town Teams. scored a 21 OMPETITION will be resumed to- night at the King Pin in the Meyer Davis Sweepstakes, play starting at 8 o'clock. Thirty-four women are engaged, but the real scrap apparently has narrowed to four—Lor- raine Gulli, defending champ, 364 pins; Billie Butler, with 362; Ruth | Rothgeb, 350, and Catherine Quigley, | 337—who are far in front. Prize money totaling $102 will be split by the fair bowlers. The final set will be rolled next Saturday night at the Lucky Strike. Two other major events are slated tonight. At the Lucky Strike the Heurich Brewers will meet the strong Annapolis Buick team, with a return engagement scheduled in Baltimore tomorrow. At Northeast Temple the Temple Stars will meet Recreation Five of Baltimore in the wind-up of a series, the visitors having an edge of 50 sticks. ‘The Five Bowling Bachelors—Car- roll Daly, Norman Schroth, Fred Moore, Clem Weidman and Bill Krauss —will take on the Von Dreele All- Stars in Baltimore tomorrow. Eddie Espey was last night's best bowler, with a set of 442 with Sholl's Cafe in the National Capital League, the second highest set of the season in that circuit. Fights Last Night By the Assoclated Press. BOSTON.—Andy Callahan, 144, Lawrence, outpointed Jackie Davis, 142, Cleveland (10). DALLAS—Harry Dublinsky, 143, Chicago, and Tracy Cox, 140, Indian- apolls, drew, (10). INDIANAPOLIS.—Paul Lee, 12313, Indianapolis, outpointed Mickey Brown, 128, Cincinnati, (4). Nick Nicholson, 149, Shelbyville, outpointed Lee Cox, 149, Cincinnati, (4). Lou Thomas, 172, Mickleyville, Ind, stopped Jerry Whilford, 166, Cincin- nati, (2). Pete Leno, 135, Cincinnati, outpointed Billy Breedlove, 135, Green- wood. HOLLYWOOD.—Bep Van Klaveren, 15614, Holland, outpointed Ceferino Garcia, 155, Manila, (10). ‘WATSONVILLE, Calif.—Pablo Da- no, 120, Los Angeles, outpointed Tony Marino, 116, San Francisco, (10). SPOKANE, Wash.—Sonny Jones, 139, Vancouver, B. C., stopped Battling Bulahan, 137, San Francisco, (5). with | HUNT CLUB BOUTS 60 ON AS BOOKED City Officers Permit Show Monday, but Want Plant Fire-proofed. boxing bout booked for Mon- KO day will go through as sched- | ¥ Club, it has been announced, and the objections by the District Commis- remedied by officials of the riding academy-boxing arena immediately | after next week's tilt. | regulation officials yesterday. although Promoter Goldie Ahearn today was to receive recommendations for improve- ment from the District Building. Work on renovating the arena to meet re- quirements is expected to get under way some time next week. | Chief among the recommendations ! | to be made by the District Commis- sioners are that additional exits and self-closing fire doors be provided, as | well as fire restrictive protection to | all exposed columns, girders and wood- | work. The preliminary card for Monday is | {as follows: Norment Quarles vs. Bill | Bullock, lightweights, six rounds; Sid Silas vs. Roddy Davis, welterweights, | six rounds: Joe Morro vs. Joe Firrone, | welterweights, six rounds, and Chester Foubles vs. Sammy Sweet, bantam- | weights, four rounds. FOUR GAMES AT PECK Georgetown Church Basketers to Play in All Classes. Games scheduled this evening and tonight in the Georgetown Church Basket Ball League at Peck Memorial gymnasium bring together Peck Me- morial and Arlington Presbyterian at | BI 6 o'clock and West Washington Bap- tist and Georgetown Lutheran at 7 in the junior class, and Peck Memorial and West Washington Baptist at 8 and St. John’s and Georgetown Pres- byterian at 9 in the senior division. s ——— ST. CECELIA SENIORS WIN. Senior girls of St. Cecelia’s School vesterday drubbed the juniors at basket ball, 22-4. Mat Matches By the Associated Press. NORTH BERGEN, N. Dusek, 208, Omaha, threw Sun Jen- nings, 230, Oklahoma, 39:22. NEW YORK.—Abe Kashey, 212, New York, threw Willie Davis, 247, Virginia, 41:55. DETROIT.—Jim Londos, 200, St. Louis, threw Mehmet Yousoff, 245, ‘Turkey, 44:00. CINCINNATI. — Curley 175, Brooklyn, threw John 180, Manchester, N. H., 30:00. HARTFORD, Conn.—Billy Bartush, 225, Chicago, defeated George McLeod, 195, Igwa, two falls to one. SOUTH PORTLAND, Me—Pat Schaeffer, California, defeated Bull Currle, two falls to one. Rai P. Blendman Maizel Tenenbaum .. Brown Gusinsky Males . Season Kecords. gh team game—Western Eleciri team sei—Capit spares—Clements. Overend. : ¢ wn. 80, Pals uled at the Riding and Hunt | Monar X2 Sl: Alp. Kl AZA Kap Ta Phi B E. sioners on building regulations will be J,.amu Permission to go through with Mon- | '* 1 day's fights came from the bmldml“‘ H Avg HIEh 820 same—E. M Kappa), 96 al T: TF HG Individual Averages. (10 games or more.) Bortnick Kolodin, N lloy .. | Dicken °, | Le Goldbers. g vy : Goldbers. Goodman . Sean Ginsberg . Harris Rosin Jacobson . Ax . e .5 Markowitz. Goldberg . Bookofl Abramson. Barmash Orenburg Abelman J—Emil | Lov Berlinsky Zendel . Pr Donchin, | Galst Killonis, s (A & 156; Falck (Naviga- COMMITTEES NAMED BY DISTRICT A. A. U. Selected to Handle Sports and Various Other Affairs by President Russell. Committees of the District A. A. U. for 1935 were announced today by William E. Russell, president, as fol- lows, the first-named in each case being chairman: lub cn. s M. Fyfe h Joseph _ Arono Boyd Hinds, North- George Univ Welch. t Um\s!ed Olmsted: Joseoh C; 0. U, m an Y A y ar. Geary Eppley. Maryland Winfree Johnson. Weifare and A. Earle Weeks. Washington Y. M. . 8- ree Johnson. Welfare . Francis T. Arme Dorsey Griffith. Cathos ry Eppley. Maryiand Edw Downtown Newby, “C* Club:_Albert “C" Club: Jack Collins, Eastern High School: Max Farrington, George Washington University; Ernest Wiles. Fred Bucholtz. Yank 'Robbins, C. _Murphy. Georgetown. Swimming—A. Earle Weeks. Washington Canoe Club; W. A Hepburn. Garden Pools. Shoreham Joseph Aronoff, Dowmo!n Coaches; James Sprigman,” “C" 3 Richard Newby “C' Club: William 3, Stephenson. “C' Club: Carl Ahlenfleld, “C* Club: Joseph Ransavage Ambassador: Dal las #nirley. Y. M. C. A Dudley Gomon. Shorel.am £—Thomas Clavton A & | Evening s | University Recreational Cazoe CIubR 2 h, Foster. John McGovein. Wi University. versity: Kip Coaches: Richard Conradis. Central Wrest] A Jim McNamara. J. C. C.: .M‘fl)h Aro off. ‘Downtown_Coaches: Charles M. Fyf Boys' Club of Washington g Aronoff J. Kip Ed- Records SJoxeoh A wards. Downtown Co: A. i . Norfreast Bovs” Club A DG embership . investization — Charles Fyfe. Bovs' Club: Joseph Aronoff, Downe town Coaches: A Earle Weeks. Wash- ington Canoe Club: Wi'nfree Johnson, Wel- fare and. Recreational Leg! i]-'lfln7l4 l'fl Rosenblum. Joseph A“}’ln“flb" R h" YM and ball—Ralnh Foster. John MecGovern h"!l Jahgson.” Weifare lnd Recreational! James McNamara. J. C. Grid Graphs Silver Spring Merchants wish to book & strong 150-pound or unlimited eleven for tomorrow on the Silver Spring field. Call Robert Linkins, Sil- ver Spring 173-M, between 7 and 8 pm. ‘Takoma-Northern 115-pounders are after a game for tomorrow on the ‘Takoma fleld. Call Shepherd 1438 to= night between 8 and 7:30 o'clock.

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