Evening Star Newspaper, March 8, 1935, Page 44

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D—-2 S PORTS. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., FRIDAY, MARCH 8, 1935. SPORTS. Need Seen to Curb College Ring Rooting : D. C. Women Look to Big Golf Year CARD-TERP CLASH IS POTENT AFFARR Fans May Be Asked Monday to Explicitly Follow Rules | on Cheering. BY H. C. BYRD. HILE every local college campus is beginning to echo the cries of Spring spoMs, practically every- body in Washington interested in college athletics is thinking more about what promises to be the big- gest indoor event held in this section —Georgetown vs. Maryland in basket ball, and Catholic University vs. Maryland in boxing next Monday night in the Ritchie Coliseum at | College Park. No other indoor athletic event in the history of the District of Colum- bia apparently has attracted so much attention. To tell the truth, the double bill is attracting so much attention that both the Catholic University and | Maryland authorities, in regard to the | boxing meet, are seriously concerned. The average boxing fan goes to V\nlch | professional fights to yell just as much as and when he feels inclined, | but this is not expected at college meets, not while the bout is in progress. It is getting more and more dif- ficult to control outbursts of applause or boos as the case may be, especially when student bodies, which are strongly partisan, can be led so easily under such conditions. There is a possibility that C. U. end Maryland may make a joint pub- lic appeal to those not connected with either university, as well as to their cwn alumni and students, to observe the custom in intercollegiate boxing under which no applause of any kind 18 expected until a bout is ended. Teams Evenly Matched. F THE basket ball game and boxing |. meet turn out as seems probable, there is likely to be plenty of cause for partisan enthusiasm. So evenly matched do the teams appear that hardly a hair's breadth sepa- rates them, and such conditions breed tense feelings. Georgetown and Maryland both | have had erratic seasons in basket ball. If one or the other happened to be at top form and the other at low form, one probably would win | rather easily. With both keyed up, | though, to do their best in the first | basket ball game played between them | in nearly two decades, it would seem | that both ought to rise to the occasion and play well enough to satisfy even the most exacting of their own fol- | lowers, Catholic University has been prep- ping its boxing team with this meet | as its big objective and is certain to be at its top. Marvland has lost two two of its stars, but its victory over | the Army is indication that it should not be looked upon as anything less than an even bet. With McAboy and Nedomatsky in the line-up, Maryland would be a heavy favorite to win, but with them out it is not anything more than a toss-up, with two of the best teams in the East striving for high honors. Maryland is planning to handle a| record crowd Monday night, despite ' the fact that 5,000 were present last week on the occasion of all-university night, a part of the program of which was the Army-Maryland box- ing meet. Only about 400 tickets of the regular seating capacity of the big building at College Park remain unsold, but 1,000 extra tickets have been printed for chair seats that will be placed arcund the ring immediately after the basket ball game. These | tickets, though, except for a limited | number for which standing room may | be available, will not be good for ad-i mission until after the basket ball game is finished. ‘Would Permit Rooting., NE alumnus of a local school is| responsible for the suggestion that there is no reason why col- leges should attempt to control the applause of crowds at boxing meets and that the sensible thing to do is to let them yell just as much as they wish. This suggestion might work | out all right in a case where each side | was ably supported in the stands, but hardly would be fair when a couple of thousand students from one school might be sitting in the stands and not one from the opposing school. That lopsidedness in the cheering would not be courteous to the boxer ‘wearing the colors of the school not represented by a big cheering con- tingent. However, this argument| L |Bethesda Five S prings Upset In Tourney, With Johnson Ace; Eastern Makes Easy Advance EXINGTON, Va, March 8— Bethesda-Chevy Chale High's gallant basket ball team, which rallied dramatically to van- quish Augusta Military Academy, 29-28, in a stunning upset yesterday in a first-round game in the Wash- ington-Lee tourney here, tonight will come to grips with the Staunton Military Academy quint. Staunton yesterday beat the High Point (N. C.) High team, 30-18. Eastern, District of Columbia public high school champion, as well as titlist in The Star's recent metro- politan tourney, also won yesterday. The Lincoln Parkers, the only team of the Washington area competing in the tourney for South Atlantic honers, handily downed Charlotte (N. C.) High team, 47-20. Eastern meets John Marshall High of Richmond at 7:30 o'clock tonight. Only four other teams are left in the tourney, which ends tomorrow. Massanutten Military Academy was to engage Asheville (N. C.) School for Boys and Atlanta (Ga.) Tech was to battle Virginia Presbyterian of Dan- ville in the other second-round games | this afternoon. T WAS the inspired Bethesda- Chevy Chase entry that furnished the thrills yesterday so far as the District of Columbia area is concerned. Eastern was expected to win—in fact, is figured to gain the title, which it won in 1933 and 1932. Eddie Johnson, who bears a striking resemblance to his - famous father, ‘Walter Johnson, was the hero of that late spurt which brought victory to the Leland lads, the champions of EDDIE JOHNSON. Montgomery County. The blond lad in the last five minutes broke through, dribbled half the length of the floor and whipped the ball into the net to put his team in the van, 25-24. ‘Then after Montgomery lads, fight- ing furiously, had clung to their one- point lead, Eddie (known as the Little Train) calmly dropped in another During and After “Shots of Record Run two-pointer from the side, the ball not even touching the rim. Bob Harris, Johnson’s mate in the front part of the court, dropped in a long cne to make it 29-24 and apparently assure a victory for the Lelanders. But Gallagher, Augusta forward, con- verted two foul shots and Jackson scored from the court and Augusta was only one point behind the Mont- gomery boys at 29-28. In those last few stirring seconds Joe Grills, Augusta guard, missed several long shots before Johnson raced in to grab the ball off the backboard and stave off the enemy until the final whistle. Johnson, with 10 points, was high scorer for Bethesda. Frank Louza- pone, guard, scored 8. ACED by Capt. Lavelle (Dope) Dean and lanky Chick Hollidge, Eastern early exhibited marked superiority over Charlotte. It was a sweet win for the Lincoln Parkers, who were beaten by Charlotte in a semi-final match in the 1934 tourney. Eastern was out in front, 13-4, at the end of the first quarter and in- creased its lead steadily as the game progressed. At the end of the half the Lincoln Parkers’ advantage was 20-10. Eastern used several reserves in the second quarter. With the first-stringers taking the court again in the third period, the Easterners ran their lead to a 32-14 margin as the third quarter ended. B o Eastern g.’Y Charlotte (‘3~st(«8 Halltdlo.f B 2 Edelin.{.. | Buckholz.f* Colley.f. Shaner.c Sch Bpaing 00 747 Totals... 8 420 Winters. Umpire—Mr. Referee—Mr. Hackney (2R, Beth.-Ch, Ch. (29). Augusts (28). 2o, Totals. 2 Referees—Messrs. Winter and Hackaey. Other tourney games resulted as follows: Massanutten, 21; Raleigh, 10. Virginia Presbyterian, 29; Spartan- | burg, 8. C., 26. John Marshall, 38; Asheville, 30. Asheville School for Boys, 32; Jef- ferson, Roanoke, 17. 'MIDDY BASKETERS ~ ON TWO-GAME TRIP, | Will Oppose Duke and W. & M. | Six Navy Teams to Perform Away From Annapolis. NNAPOLIS, Md.,, March 8—The Navy basket ball team, fore- runner of six athletic aggrega- tions of the Navy which will be away | from Annapolis this week end, left today for two games. Duke will be played at Durham tonight and Wil- Iam and Mary at Williamsburg to- morrow. Buzz Borries, captain and center, who was kept out of the Army game by illness, is in good physical condition after a week in the hospital. The gym team will contest at Princeton tonight and at Cambridge against Massachusetts Tech Satur- day. The wrestlers will oppose Penn State at State College, the boxers close their season against Pittsburgh in that city and the swimmers and water poloists meet the Pennsylvania teams in Philadelphia. At Annapolis tomorrow the Navy has Columbia as its opponent in fencing and Maryland in & small-bore rifle tilt. The plebes meet Columbia freshmen in fencing, Mercersburg Academy in swimming and Western | High in a rifle match. BALL FILM FADES OUT Last Showing Here Will Be Made Tonight at Dunbar. “Play Ball,” the motion picture de- picting the finer points of base ball, will be shown here for the last time, would not hold good in a meet such as the C. U.-Maryland because both sides would have plenty of husky en-| couragement. But even beyond this | reason is the fact that college nndr university crowds at a boxing match | are expected to show a somewhat | decorous attitude and not allow fight- | ing instincts, or instincts for the kill, to get the better of them and result in outbursts that demand knockouts, such as sometimes are heard at pro- fessional fights. Boxing is one of the most sclentific sports known, is one of the best forms of exercise, physically, mentally and psychologically, but, like other things, it can be debased. .This is what the college people are trying to prevent. —_— HONOR TERP RINGMEN Tickets Available for Affair to| Be Given Wednesday. Reservations for the dinner and en- tertainment in honor of the Univer- sity of Maryland boxing team next Wednesday at Scholl's Cafe may be made now, it has been announced. The reservations may be obtained from the alumni office of the univer- sity, from Ted Vandoren, president of the Washington Chapter of the Mary- land Alumni Association, at West 1122, and from Wellstood White of Dulin & Martin, at National 1293. GO AFTER CUNNINGHAM Mile Champion Faces New Set of Rivals in Canada. MONTREAL, March 8 (A’),—AG new erop of ri will try to stop Glenn cmmxnshm winning streak in the mile run of the Canadian indoor track and field championships tonight. Cunningham, holder of both the in- door and outdoor world records Yor the distance, is billed to face Glen Dawson of Tulsa and Joe McCluskey of New York, Casimir Kucharski, Polish 1,500-meter champion, and Les Wade of Montreal, Canadian mile champion. when it is presented et 8 o'clock tonight in the Dunbar High School Auditorium. There will be no admis- sion charge. The picture was shown yesterday at the weekly meeting of the Kiwanis Club of Washington, when George Moriarty, American League umpire, spoke. FORMER champion and a de- fending title holder make their debuts in the tenth annual District A. A. U. basket ball tournament at Tech High School to- night when Sholl's Cafe, champion in 1932 and 1933, opposes the Marine Barracks quint and Bovello Plumbers face the Agriculture Flashes. A non-competitor last year, wben the local tourney was passed up favor of the national A. A. U. umms- ment in Kansas, the Sholl's team is 8 hot favorite to triumph in the unlim- ited division. The Sholl's-Marines game is scheduled for 9:30 o'clock. Bovello won the 130-pound cham- pionship last year, but is moving up a notch in this tournament to the 145- pound class. Its tilt with the Aggie Flashes is slated for 7:30 o'clock. Sandwiched between these games is & fray between St. Martin’s and the Democratic Club of Falls Church. | they are 145-pounders. EORGE'S RADIO, suwm’umm- G macy and the Northeast Boys' Club quints remained in the A. A. U. tournament numin. Iut night. George’s had an with Fort Hunt, winning, i’l to 2! while Stewart’s proved too strong with the Silver Spring Merchants and tri- umphed by & 36-t0-29 count! ‘The Northeast Boys’ Club advanced without caging & basket. The Thom- . Ten Basket Tilts On Tourney List EN games among the 100, 115 and 130-pound teams have been scheduled for tomorrow after- noon in the District A. A. U. basket ball tourney at Tech High. Play will start at 2 o'clock and the last game will go on at 5. There will be no games tomorrow night. Players are reauired to report at least a half hour before their teams are scheduled to play so they may be weighed in. There will be an admission charge of 10 cents. The card: 2 p.m. (100-pound class)—North- east Boys’ Club Orioles vs. George- town Boys' Club Grays; George- town Boys’ Club Blues vs. North- east Boys’ Club Cardinals. 2:45 (115-pound class)—Reliance A. C. vs. Cavaliers; Georgetown Boys' Club vs. Takoma Boys’ Club; 3:30, Y, M. C. A. Eagles vs. North- east Boys' Club, Boys' Club Fleet- wings vs. Sports Center; 4:15, Dewhurst A. C. vs. Boys' Club Red Sox. 4:15 (130-pound class)—St. An- thony vs. Washington Post (Alex- andria) 5:00 (130-pound class), Young Men’s Community Club vs. Ebel's Grill, Northeast Boys' Club vs. Georgetown Boys’ Club. PLANS BIG RACE TRACK Promoter Says Massachusetts Is to Have East's Largest. MIAMI, Fla., March 8 ().—Walter | E. O'Hara, president of the Naragan- sett track at Pawtucket, R. I, has announced he is going lorwud with plans to introduce racing in Massa- chusetts by building “the largest track in the East.” He said it would not be the proposed Suffolk Downs plant in East Boston. _—— BULLOCK BOOKS FIGHT. BALTIMORE, Md., March 8—Billy Bullock, Washington, D. C., light- weight, will meet Mike Sciplo of this city in an eight-round bout here next Monday night. \Ex-Champion, Title Defender Play in Basket Ball Tourney | son School team, slated as the opposl- tion, failed to put in an appearance |5l and the club quint won by a forfeit. ‘The third game me in the play-off for the 3d Corps Area championship will be played tonight in the Heurich gym- nasum, when Fort Myer and Fort Meade clash at 8 oclock. Fort Mon- roe, which defeated Fort Myer last Monday -ndlutnl‘btmrod. 33-31 decision over Fort Meade, holds the tist, 20. Ninth Street Christian, 35; National City Christian, 23. ‘Government League. Patent Office, 41; Weather Bureau, 9. Navy Department, 23; C. & G. 8., 22. Independent. Renrocs, 38; Anacostia, 25. Bavoy mur. fl Takoms, 31. Georgetown Boys' Olub, 26; North- east Boys' Club, 20, 4 great feat. '* SIZE OF 'KEEPSIE FIFLD UNCERTAIN Seven Major Crews of Last Year Expected—Regatta Set for June 18. By the Associated Press. EW YORK, March 8—The Poughkeepsie Regatta, one of sports’ major classics, will be rowed this year on Tuesday, June 18, but the number of competing crews will be in doubt for & month or two at least. Coincident with the setting of the | date by the stewards of the Intercol- rowing experts hazarded a prediction race, They regarded it as certain that the seven who rowed last year—Cali- fornia, the winner; Washington, Navy, Cornell, Pennsylvania, Syracuse and Columbija—would be back. Invitations are expected to go to Tech and possibly others. more of these may accept. One or race for junior varisities and a 2-mile freshman contest. HARGADEN REMAINS Conference Selection for Third Year in Succession—Temple Gets Two Places. OR the third consecutive year Ed Hargaden, captain of Georgetown University's basket ball quint, has been selected on the Eastern Inter- collegiate All-Conference team by coaches of the various colleges. - Howard Rosan of Temple and Clair Cribbs of Pittsburgh also were chosen for the third season in a row. Don Gibeau, running mate of Har- gaden at forward, was named on the second team. The conference will wind up its regular season next Wednesday when Pittsburgh and West Virginia clash. A Mountaineer victory will create a tie and make & play-off necessary. The sall-conference teams as se- }:eted by the coaches yesterday fol- w: Pos. First Team. Rnnn.d’l'em le lahar, W. Va Becond Team. Gocke. W Gibeau, G. U. {unger ezl . Bitt . .Rigg. Clrn!(le - .Brown, Temple...... Emrick, Pitt 'Pol’wuds—}l ughes. Centers—] joon, Guards—Phar Carnegle; Messikomer, W. Temple, ‘WILL ELECT NO CAPTAIN. CHAMPAIGN, IIl, March 8 (#).— Tllinols basket ball team has declined to elect a captain for next season, recommending instead that a leader be appointed for each game and an honorary captain chosen at the end of the season. Only two juniors, Harold Benham and Howie Braun, were among the 10 letter winners and neither was a regular. MALLORY YACHT WINNER. NASSAU. N. P, Bahamas, March NEW AUTO GLASS Noc%:fi?z.oo At s .flll? mfllnml Colt ‘uk. vNDlllIl.ll | legiate Rowing Association yesterday | |that at least seven, possibly eight, | | crews would enter the 4-mile varsity | ‘Wisconsin, Marietta, Massachusetts ' The regatta also includes & 3-mile | ON ALL-STAR QUINT| Copyright, A. P. Wirephoto. Local Teams. West Virginia, 43; Georgetown, 13. Lincoln, 39; Howard, 37. Washington and Lee Tourney. Eastern, 40; Charlotte (N. High, 20. Bethesda-Chevy Chase High, 29; Augusta M. A, 28 Sherwood School, 25; Woodward, 19. Other Teams. Kentucky, 46; Xavier, 29. Kansas, 47; Oklahoma, 42. Carolinas-Virginia Tournament. Lenoir Rhyne, 40; Atlantic Chris- | tlan, 30. High Point, 52; Appalachian, 40. Utah Aggies, 54; Greeley State, 34. 'HOYA HOPES LESSEN AS FIVE IS ROUTED | Must Spruce Up for Battle With | Terps After 43-13 Licking by West Virginia. EORGETOWN'S hopes of whip- | ping Maryland on the basket ball court in the final college | not so high today following a 43-to-13 | beating absorbed last night at the hands of West Virginia in Morgan- town. The Mountaineers, fighting to re- | tain their slim chance of tying Pitts- burgh for the Eastern Intercollegiate Conference championship, took a 23- to-3 lead in the first half and though they slowed up thereafter the outcome never was in doubt. The Morgantown men scored 18 points in the opening minutes before Georgetown was able to tally. Capt. Ed Hargaden, held scoreless from the fleld by Pittsburgh the night before, could count only 3 points last night. game’s high point scorer: Summary: W. Va. {9’\‘ Georgetown _(13). GFPL Simpson.t. .. 3 Barna.f. Gocke. ts. 2 Hargaden.f. Gibeau.t 5 1 13 Corle: 2 8 043 sl .-u..:.-u_o | srsmesioma’ ' Totals. Referee—Mr. pire—Mr. Kistier OPEN BASKET PLAY-OFF Gonzaga and St. John's Meeting Today in Colonial Gym. Gonzaga and St. John's were to come to grips this afternoon at 4 Ward _(Marietta). (Salem). Va. |o'clock in the George Washington gymnasium in the first game of the play-off for the Private High School Basket Ball League title. ‘The winner will meet Georgetown Prep tomorrow also at 4 pm. on the G. W. court. The three teams ended the league schedule, each with two wins and two defeats. BOX AT FORT MYER. Fort Myer and Fort Howard (Md.) boxers meet tomorrow night in a six- bout program in the new Fort Myer riding hall, starting at 8:30 o'cleck. The scraps will be the first ever held in the hall. BROOKS SEXTET SCORES. Brooks Club girls’ basket ball team came through with a 17-11 win last night over the United Typewriter Grays. BRAKES Relmed, 4 Wheels Conpleto CHEVROLET s g 5° r _Cars Proportionately Low G ENERAL BRAKE SERVICE s 903 N ST N.W DE.5483 *28 to C) | game of the season next Monday were | Stydahar, with 13, was the Above, Sir Malcoim Campbell is shown going at full speed as he set a new standard of 276 miles an hour at Daytona Beach, Fla., and, below, he is learning just how close his tires came to being worn through during his OFFICIALS ASKED 10 STAND READY Britisher Near Disaster Lifting Record to 276 Miles an Hour. ___ (Continued From First Page.) on the late ebb tide, shortly after 4 all 12 of her 2,500-horsepower cylin- ders. Barely Avoids Disaster. E WAS doing 262.390 miles an hour as he headed into the measured mile in the middle of the course, | through it, and from there on he coasted to & stop at the far end of the course. “It was quite smooth going down,” he said. Within half an hour he hnd changed tires and was on his way back. He was doing 270.270 this | time as he came up the measured mile | north, and 282.030 as he smashed | through it in 12.81 seconds, thunder- ing beautifully and riding like a man in a rocking chair, just 0.81 seconds above the mile he'd have to make for | the mile to average 300 miles an hour. | Shortly after he left -the measured i mile on the north run he had another of the fantastic experiences that have beset bim on all his trial and record |runs. Bluebird hit a bump as he started decelerating, the record in his grasp, and instantly the wheel wrenched. The car flew toward the soft sands of the dunes, and only a herculean ef- !fort on his part swerved the monster back to the path of safety. It was said that 12 women fainted on a nearby porch of a Summer cottage on the beach. Few spectators in the crowd of 50,000 lining the course were gathered at that point. FOCUS ON DASH MEN IN MIDWEST MEET Record Holder at 60 Yards Will Have Formidable Rivals in Headlined Race. By the Associated Press. HICAGO, March 8.—With interest focused on the individual events rather than on the team cham- plonship situation, which Michigan is expected to dominate, the twenty-fifth annual Western Conference indoor track meet wil' be held tomorrow aft- ernoon and night in the University of Chicago Field House. The blue ribbon event of the meet probably will turn up in the 60-yard dash boasting an exceptional field, in- cluding Ohio State’s Jesse Owens, Towa’s Jimmy Owen and Willis Ward and Sam Stoller of Michigan. Owen bettered the world record of 6.2 seconds for the distance with a brilliant 0:06.1 in a dual meet last week. The others have equaled the l'F you have Eczema, Ringworm or Athlete’s foot CLAYTON will give you immediate relief. CLAYTON is sold at all People’s and other good drug stores in Washing- ton, D. C. Distributed by CLAYTON . ©. Box 1838, Washington. D. © pm., and came thundering down the | 11%4-mile stretch, Bluebird hitting on | 272.727 as he nashed‘ Canadlens Again In Hockey Final YORK, March 8 (#).—The Montreal Canadiens, the old- est team in the National Hockey League and one of two which never have failed to reach the play-offs since the circuit was expanded to its present size in 1926, are “in” again. The Flying Frenchmen clinched their place in the 1935 series for the Stanley Cup and the world's championship last night when they held the Montreal Maroons to & 2-2 tie although badly out- played. The draw gave the Canadiens third place in the international group. FIGHT PAIRS LEFT IN'FOUR-BALL GOLF Picard and Revolta Battle Favorites for a Place in Semi-Finals. INEW SPRI NARKS COMPETITION HERE Program Probably Is Most Comprehensive Yet to Be Presented. e BY W. R. McCALLUM. NEW spirit, a new form of competition in the team matches and several competi- tors who didn’t play in many | of the tournaments last year are due to become factors in women's golf around Washington this year, Marked by what probably will be the most comprehensive schedule ever offered to the fair golfers of the Capi- tal, the Executive Committee of the Women's District Golf Association now is working out that schedule, to be made public around March 25. This schedule will provide that the Scotch foursome form of competition, never before used in tournament play ampng the linkswomen of the Capital clubs, shall be in force this year in the interclub team contests. It will By the Assoclated Press. IAMI, Fla, March 8.—Eight star professional teams, sur- | vivors of a round of superb | A golf such as the vaunted in- | ternational four-ball tournament has seldom seen, fought it out today for | the four semi-final berths. Only by becoming the second team ble Tommy Armour-Bobby Cruik- x ‘shnnk combination could Henry Pic- |ard, Hershey, Pa., and John Revolta, | money in the $4,000 tournament. Horton Smith and Paul Runyan, rated next to Armour and Cruikshank as favorites, faced trouble in a match | with Johnny Golden and Bill Mehl- horn. Both highly-regarded teams na: rowly missed elimination in yester- day’s sensational first round, each being forced to the thirty-sixth green to win. C and Armour of Chicago defeated Joe and Mike Turnesa of New York, one up. Smith of Chicago and | Runyan of New York downed Ed Dud- | ley of Philadelphia and Orville White | of St. Louis by a similar score. Other matches in the second round of the 12-year-old tourney bring to- gether Willie Macfarlane of Tucka- | | hoe, N. Y., and Harry Cooper of Chi- cago and a team composed of Vic | Ghezzi of Deal, N. J., and Willie Klein of Miami. Gene Sarazen and Harold McSpaden, Kansas City sharpshooter, meet Billie Burke of Cleveland and Wiffy Cox of Brooklyn. Macfarlane and Cooper yesterday defeated Al Watrous, Detroit, and Frank Walsh, Chicago, 4 and 2, while Ghezzi and Klein ousted Ky Laffoon, Denver, and Craig Wood. 5 and 4. Sarazen and McSpaden won from Jules Huot of Quebec and Willie Gog- gin, San Prancisco, 4 and 3; Burke Favorites Pressed. RUICKSHANK of Richmond, Va., Johnny Farrell, 2 and 1; Picard and 1 Revolta won, 5 and 3, over Johnny Kinder and Phil Perkins, and Golden and Mehlhorn were winners over | Denny Shute and Jimmy Hines, 1 up. All matches are 36 holes. WILSON TEACHERS WIND UP CAMPAIGN Newark State Teachers Will Be| Opponents Tomorrow Night in Home-coming Game. ILSON TEACHERS' COLLEGE will close a successful basket ball season tomorrow in the | local gymnasium when Newark State Teachers will be played. New cheers and songs were intro- duced to the student body at a mass meeting held yesterday in prepara- tion for the game. which will feature “homecoming night.” Members of the team were introduced by Coach | G. Harris White, while Dr. E. C. | Higbie, president of the college, spoke briefly, commending the squad for the spirit shown this year. Following the game, a dance will “W” Club. BLOW BOOTERS LEAD. Blow Booters, Eastern section champs, gained an edge in the series for the city elementary school soccer championship, when they conquered Park View, defending titlist, 2-1, yes- terday in the second game of the set, on the New York avenue playground. The first ended in a 1-1 tie. By the Associated Press. National League—Detroit, 6; New York Rangers, 1; St. Louis, 3; New York Americans; 2; Montreal Cana- diens, 2; Montreal Maroons, 2, tie. International League—London, 4; ‘Windsor, 3; Syracuse, 4; Cleveland, 1. Canadian-American League — Bos- New Haven, 3. 2801 Georgia Ave. 15,000, 20,000 25,000 Miles Unconditional Guarantee of 1 On All Tires l“l!l 0ee 8345 o } 3. 75 4.75x19 5.00x! 5.25x17 5.25x19 5.25x20 5.25x21 5.50x17 5.50x18 5.50x19 6.00x17 '5.4 6.00x18 ever to down the well-nigh invinci- | | Cleveland, have a look in on first | and Cox downed Walter Hagen and | be held in the Little Theater by the mean something entirely new and | novel in golf as it has been played among the women hereabouts. But over and above the new scheme, \a new spirit is appearing among the | women, evidenced by the big sched- | ule through which they play this year, | and denoting the hard work put in by | Mrs. Charles K. Wing of Army-Navy, \msta]led as president last December, | and her committees, particularly the Tournament Committee headed by Mrs. Roy C. Miller of Kenwood. And | as a background to this work it is fairly certain now that three of the foremost goifers among the fair sex, | who played in none or in only a few tournaments last year, are going to be prominent factors in the events this year. Mrs. J. Marvin Haynes of Con- gressional, District women’s champion in 1925 and 1933, and Mid-Atlantic title holder in 1931 and 1932, is due back mn the Capital about May 1 to take her place as a top-line competitor and a member of the Congressional team, favored to win the interclub team matches. Mrs. Clark to Compete. RS. DAVID H. CLARK of Army- Navy, who so capably demon- strated her superiority over the woman golfers of this section last Fall in winning the Middle Atlantic at | Washington, is to play in some of the other major tourneys this year, while Miss Winifred Faunce of Manor, who played in only one major event last | year and won it, also is to play in more events this year. Miss Faunce, one of Washington's leading feminine golfers for many years, had a perfect average in 1934, playing in only one tourney—the Dis- trict championship—and not only winning the title but also grabbing the medal. She pointed carefully for the tourney and was successful, but was unable because of business de- | mands to play in the team matches as a Manor member. Miss Faunce is a Government employe. The team matches will start early this year, about April 1, and by the time Mrs. Haynes returns to Congres- sional they will just be getting warmed up for the real war which will wax hot during May and June, The Chevy Chase Club team now holds the title, but if Congressional presents the strong team which it has outlined un- der the captaincy of Mrs. Roland MacKenzie they are’” going to ride roughshod over the other aggregations. You can look, if Mrs. Haynes, Mrs. Clark and Miss Faunce play in many of the tournaments this year, to see their names in the winning lists. Varied Sports College Boxing. West Virginia, 6; Carnegie Tech, 1. Western Maryland, 46';; Villa- nova, 1. College Track. North Central, 7525; Armour Tech (Chicago), 28%5. JranK MEDICO REVOLUTIONIZES * FIPE SMUOKING This simple yet amazing filter invention with Cellophane exterior andcool ngme»huuen interior keeps juices and flakes in }duund out of mouth. Prevenls(omebne. rawmouth, wet heel, bad odor, frequent expectoration. No breaking in. Im- A proves taste and aroma of any tobacco. Fd RECOMMENDED BY MILLIONS OF MEDICO USERS WHO WILLSMOEKENO OTHER PIPE Filters TUBES as low as 69¢ Y595 16.75, 10,000 TIRES AND TUBES SAVE 25 to 50% In American Storage Co. Warehouse Sale by Consolidated Sales Co. CO. 4138 Open Sundays, 8 AM. to 1 P.M.—Open Evenings Until 8 P.M. SAVE ON GOODYEAR OODRICH U. S. ROYAL All Sizes, Including Truck Tires at Tremendous Savings. =) 6.00x21 }8.95 6.50x18 6.50x19 30x314 .....$3.35 31x4 32x4 45 |s.00x20 As Low

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