Evening Star Newspaper, April 3, 1935, Page 12

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A—12 SPORTS. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. €, WEDNESDAY, APRIE 8, 1935. BPORT Georgetown Teams Show Renewed Life : Entries Pour in for City Pin Tourney <> SPIRITED EFFORTS BRIGHTEN OUTLOOK' Optimism for 1935 Gridiron; Campaign Grows From Spring Practice. BY H. C. BYRD. F DESIRE to achieve means ulti- mate achievement, and if will- ingness to work hard eventually | Woman Licensed As Jurf Trainer By the Associated Press. YORK, April 3.—For the first time in its 70-year history the Jockey Club has granted a trainer’s license to a woman. She is Mary Hirsch, 22-year-old daugh- ter of Max Hirsch, himself a famous conditioner of thoroughbreds. Miss Hirsch, who already holds trainer’s licenses in Michigan and Tilinois, has beenracing thorough- breds successfully for several years. The Jockey Club's action is ex- pected to pave the way for the granting of licenses to other sports- women, notably Mrs. John Hay Whitney, Mrs. James M. Austin enables one or a group to reach & goal, then Georgetown teams are ini a fair way to go farther and do mure; than they have for several years. | This is true not only of base ball, | golf, tennis and track athletics, but | also of foot ball, in which the Blue and Gray is really sawing wood. Tomorrow the Georgetown base ball team gets on the field with Harvard, the opposing nine. There is not so much optimism for the diamond sport for this year, but the members of the | squad are hustling just as hard as “i all the material in the world were available. The golf team also opens its sched- ule this week, having Rollins College of Florida here Saturday. The match is to be played at the Congressional | Country Club. G Tennis begins next week, but it is| hardly likely that the track men will | appear in competition before the last | Friday in the month at the Penn| relays. and Mrs, John Bosley. YACHTSMEN PLAN 10 REVERSE RACE May Run Back From Havana to St. Pete—Vamarie Is Easy Winner. By the Associated Press. AVANA, April 3.—The yacht fleet in Havana Harbor in- creased considerably today as yachtsmen discussed the pos- Both Coach Jack Hegarty and} sibility of a return race from Havana Graduate Manager Murphy are enthu- siastic over the workouts of the foot ball squad. “Both Jack and I are exceedingly | pleased over the situation in Spring foot ball,” said Murphy. ‘“The boys are making some real headway, and if the present state of affairs is a criterion, as compared to the last two or three years, then Georgetown will be heard from next season.” \WO Harvard teams come here to- | to St. Petersburg, Fla., to make up for | the absence of a contest in the annual race in the other direction. Three more class A craft sailed into the harbor shortly after midnight to- day to double the number of arrivals, but the greater part of the original fleet of 21 contestants still was some- | where at sea. More than 24 hours after the win- WOOD ISALL SET Elated at Craft’s Showing, He Will “Go” Saturday if Weather Is 0. K. FORTRYATARK By the Associated Press. IAMI, Fla, April 3.—Gar ‘Wood, elated at the showing of his Miss America X made in trial runs, was ready today to try for a new speed record on Sate urday, weather permitting. Wood, who holds the present world | record of 124.86 miles an hour, de- | clined to say whether he thought he had traveled that fast when he “threw the throttle right down in the old | corner,” in a test run on Biscayne Bay yesterday. He did say, however, that the boat had surpassed the salt water record of 111.71 miles an hour made several years ago by Miss America IX. Since he set the present world standard in Detroit in 1933 Wood has stepped up the horsepower of the Miss America X by 600, The officlal run “in all probability” will be made Saturday over Indian Creek, which skirts Wood's estate at Miami Beach. He has set a number of world rec- ords over this course and this year | will start on one, his south run—it is necessary to make the average speed on two runs, in opposite direc- | tions, in computing record time—800 | | yards farther north than before. | | It will necessitate his going under | | & bridge full blast, but he said he | believed he could do it in safety. The | new starting line will eliminate a curve on the course. | ———— | | COLUMBIA OPENING SET | | | Martin R. West, Columbia golf chairman, tentatively has set April 28 | as the formal opening day at Colum- Gains Unique Athletic Distinction A blond Englishwoman is the first of her sex of any nationality ever given official ranking as an adept at Jujutsu, the unique Japanese method of self-defense. Mrs. Sarah Mayer, wife of a British army officer, who has been a student in the noted Jujutsu School in Kyoto, Japan, recently was awarded the “black belt,” which means her name was placed in the grade of those worthy of official ranking as expert. TFA MBARK~TURE 30 TEAM MARK NOW 15 IN SIGHT Occidentals Shoot Tonight in National Event—Ace Duo Is Failure. BY ROD THOMAS. ILE the duckpin bowlers of the Nation fire away at the Arcadia, Washington is preparing to stage a maple-shooting party all its own that, in size, will outstrip any tourna- ment ever staged by the N. D. B. C. Indications today were that the ‘Washington City Duckpin Associa- tion would achieve its goal of 300 teams for the annual District cham- plonships to be held at the Columbia, | starting April 22. | Jack Ferrall, general manager of the Agricultural Interbureau League, said his outfit would be represented by 11 teams, although the regular Toster contains only 10. Arville Ebersole, W. C. D. A. sec- retary, announced an entry of 24 teams from the Masonic League, with prospects of gaining more. E. C. Bittenbender and J. R. Fagan Sanico League officials, promised 15 or 18 from this circuit. Aubrey Abbott, the A. & P. League hustler, said he would try for the entire membership of this big or- | ganization. | The Temple Minor League {in_solid with 12 teams. Ebersole announced the following special dates: Masonic, April 26; Agricultural Interbureau, April 25; Sanico, April 22, and A. & P., May 1. came —A. P. Photo. COLLEGE “WORLD Next Saturday night is the deadline for entries. ‘Tonight the Dance Committee of the men's and women's city associa- | tion will meet at the Lucky Strike, at 7:30 o'clock, to complete plans for a | first annual shindig. of Washington and Palace of Martins- burg, W. Va. The Martinsburgers, all experienced tournament per- formers, are formidable. They will be captained by Clande Caskey, who is | the only remaining member of the team that years ago made it hot for all-star Washington line-ups in spe- :cml matches. | I tournaments this season will shoot tonight. They are J. M. “Monk” Walker, winner of The Eve- | ning Star event, who will be in the { line-up of the R. Harris & Co. team, and Frank Orletsky, the Bill Wood |Dub Sweepstakes champion, rolling | with a Sanico team. Champions Perform. WO bowlers wno have wor. major ‘The Occidentals are looking beyond the tournament to an engagement Friday night at Convention Hall with their perennial foes, the Connecticut Blue Ribbons, Eddie Espey, Campbell Sweep- stakes champion, may have another title in the bag. He rolled 656 last | night at the Rendezvous to take the lead in the Knights of Columbus | Sweepstakes, an event held annually in connection with the National Duckpin Bowling Congress tourna- ment. Espey's final game of 155 put him on top. Tony Santini, defending champion, bowed out of the picture with a set of 611. A number of strong contenders from out of town have yet to take their turns. Hartford has a formidable pair in Jim Maher and Tom Pickett. Doubles Stars Fail. LLIE PACINI and Johnny Ander- son, one of the doubles combina- tions upon whom Washingto banked to win a title, fell by the w side last night with 734, Anderson topping the pair with 389. Park Restaurant of Luray, Va. a booster team, led for the evening w 1,577, W. Morrison shining with 356 Dave Burrows, with 357, led The Evening Star quint, which shot only 1,522, and A. J. Fant, who has been treasurer of the National Duckpin Bowling Congress since it was organ- ized, topped the National Savings & Trust team with 355 when it shot 1,562. Following are last and tonight's schedule night's scores MEN'S TEAMS. ner, Vadim Makaroff’s ‘72-foot ketch, | bia, to be celebrated by a big golf Vamarie, from Oyster Bay, N. Y. tournament in which the golfers will crossed the finish line, San Cristobal, | qualify for positions on seven teams. J. Wesley Pape’s 49-foot schooner, | The usual Boaster’s tourney, which from Fort Lauderdale, Fla.; Venturer, has marked the opening day at Co- SERIES” IS URGED Occidentals Take Turn. Park Res ASHINGTON will make its big- g ¢ L4725 gest bid for the men's team Mor'so; morrow, the nine for the game championship of the National $'&$.T 117 at Georgetown and the lacrosse ten to meet Maryland. The Crimson probably will have squads of its usual Evenin; by g Star Kilby 9 BY ROBERT B. PHILLIPS, JR. almost somersaulted over it, as you O FAR as we are concerned, 1935 | Will observe in the sketch drawn by already is down in the books as G. “Davy” Crocket, Star stafl artist, standard, which means about as good as one usually sees on college fields. The Crimson lacrosse team will have o be good to whip Maryland. There is not much doubt that the | latter has pretty close to its best at- tacking forces since it took up the game, and if it can build its defense into scmething fairly resilient and at | the same time solid and consistent, | it should be strong enough to take | care of itself against all comers. | ‘/~ORNELL'S base ball team visits | Maryland today and tomorrow | for two games. The Ithacans | played two contests at College Park | last year, with an even split as their reward. | Today’s will be Comnell's first game, | as well as Maryland’s. and not much | can be said about either. Maryland, ! though, it is thought, will be much stronger than when it took the field last Spring. THLETES all over the United States are beginning to look ahead to the Olympics next year | as the ultimate goal for which they | now are striving. One hardly ever | hears from a good college or amateur | boxer, from an exceptional track man, a pistol or rifle shot, a skater or any one in any other sport field without some remark being passed about be- | ginning to get in shape for the | Olympic tryouts. With the preparation now being made by athletes in all branches of | competition, it will be a great sur- | prise if the United States fails to | send to Berlin next year the greatest galaxy ever gathered in a single com- bination to represent any nation or group of nations. T IS doubtful if any branch of coaching in any intercollegiate sport finds as much variation as to procedure as the handling of Spring foot ball squads. Some coaches spend practically their entire time teaching fundamentals, in order to make -sure, as far as they can, that the young men they expect to depend on the following Fall will know how | to charge, block and tackle, Other coaches go to the other ex- treme and teach largely the plays and gemeral teamwork to be used in | the Fall, holding that the blocking, | charging and tackling have to be taught all over again in September anyway. Other men adopt neither of these views, but try to strike a happy medium, giving of their time both to fundamentals and to team play, pretty much as if they were training their squads with a view to opening | the schedule within a month or five | weeks, 1 All three viewpoints have their ad- vantages, and possibly depend a good deal for their efficacy on what kind of squads the coaches have to work with. A veteran team for instance would not get much in the way of fundamental work, but almost en- tirely be groomed in team play. ‘A green squad might be given a large dose of tackling, blocking and charging. Suiting their teaching to the kind of material available may be the reason for the wide variation in the work given. HE Southern Conference boxing tournament will be held a week later next year, it being the in- tention to have them take place the same week end as the basket ball | tournament. This arrangement was sought last | year by several schools but too late | to make the readjus HONOR VERSATILE STAR | Le Roy R. Hunt, Jr., Is Presented | Block Letter by Manlius. MANLIUS, N. Y., April 3—Le Roy P. Hunt, jr, son of Maj. and Mrs. Le Roy P. Hunt, sr., of Quantico, Va., has been awarded a block letter for basket ball at Manlius School, where he captained and played forward on the court quint which just closed its season. Hunt also is first lieutenant of C | Company, Manlius School Battalion, | R. O. T. C.; a letter winner in foot | ball and base ball, treasurer of the 1935 class and a member of the Ath- letic Council. . TENPIN LEADERS HOLD | Third Place in Doubles Is Best Effort in A. B. C. SYRACUSE, N. Y., April 3 (Spe- ¢ial) —Joe and Frank Caruna, with 1,303 to take third place in the doubles, provided the latest feature in the American Bowling Congress ten- pin tourney here. é-me of 267. A ory Joe Caruna had a ' ‘g a 59-foot staysail ketch owned by Edmund Spence of Clearwater, Fla., and Robert J. Newman's 60-foot schooner, Shellback, from New Or- leans, passed Morro Castle. About four hours earlier the race record holder, Haligonian, a 45-foot schooner owned by L. S. Ruder of Hamilton, Ohio, had arrived. L. M. Balliere's Aweigh from Gibson Island, Md, came in yesterday morning to take second place. g No class B yacht had arrived tod: ay and the biggest yacht of all, the 113- foot Azara, also was unsighted. Early | arrivals expressed the belief that many entries had turned back to St. Peters- burg after being becalmed off Tortugas Light. G. U. PREP NINE READY | ‘Plays Bethesda Today in Opening | 16-Game Schedule. Georgetown Prep's base ball nine was to open its 16-game schedule this afternoon on the Garrett Park dia- mond with the Bethesda-Chevy Chase | team at 3:30 o'clock. Only two players from last year will be in the Georgetown Prep line- up, but the Garrett Parkers have high hopes of placing a strong team on the field. Capt. Billy Dettweiler, short- stop, and De Sale Powell, first base- man, are the veterans. > The line-up and batting order of the prep school team follows: Bob O'Shaughnessy, left field; Austin Parks, center field: Bobby Troutman, third base; Lloyd Rice, pitcher; Capt. Dettweiler, shortstop; De Sale Powell, first base; Elkin Franklin, second base; Bobby Renehan, right field, and ESquire Pennington, catcher, Navy Department League | Hydrographic Bu. Engineering Secretarys Commandants Adjutants - Barracks . & A Ordnance Press av Aeronautics Paymasters Construction Engineers . Y. & D C. &R Designers Season Records. High team game—S. & A.. 61 High team set—Ordnance. 1.715. High individual game—McEiroy (Bar- | racks). 159. | High individual set—Pepin (Ordnance). | High spares—Prevost . (Hydrographic). | "High strikes—Van Horn (Navigation High average—Falck (Ordnance), 11 Individual Averages. Sturges. . Ramsey’ . Brigham Thacker Browning . . . Howard Benson Martin .. Kesmodell .. | Taylor Sinopoli . Roennegki Rawlings Groves Brown. all. ... Flaherty | Benedetto. .. i Small . 3 CONSTRUCTION. G. 8t. Sp. Bi321% exzEdz o | Prevost. lumbia for years, will be abandoned | this year, but the customary festivi- | ties will be staged just the same. | Columbia golfers are all steamed up over the team matches, which will run | through the entire season, on a handi- cap basis, to keep Red Banagan busy. | The big red-head already has worked |out a handicap schedule for the team | contests. S 'BOOK FIELD TRIALS ON APRIL 9 AND 10| National Capital Club Events to| Be Held on Hill Farm Course at Glen, Md. | PORTSMEN are manifesting great S interest in the approaching bird dog and field trials of the Na-| tional Capitol Field Trial Club, to be theld next Tuesday and Wednesday | |and not Saturday and Sunday, as | erroneously reported. The course for the runninz has been laid out on the large farm of Dr. William Hil at Glen, Md. not far from Potomac. Quail have been | obtained and will be released for point work by the dogs. | Ernest Mead of Richmond, Va., and Claude B. Stickley of Vaucluse, Va., |are to judge the three stakes, con- | sisting of puppy, novice-shooting dogs |and all-age dogs. . | Dixie Tavern in Rockvile, Md., will | | be headquarters where handlers and dogs will be accommodated. On the evening of the 8th, a member club dinner at the Tavern will precede the drawing of the stakes and arrange- ments for the following day. DESIGN. irm. " P 396 Galleher. Kuttner. Keeler .. Aldridge NAVIGATION. 84 47 44 5% Van Horn. . 142 17 09 124 43 18 45 119 ORDNANCE. 72 30 174 60 18 114 1 316 380 Scriviner’ Williams Wyndh Ulrich, Peterson, Hallock. BIG PIN SCORES A HABIT. BROOKLYN, N. Y. (#).—Andrew Varipapa of this city has rolled a perfect bowling score of 300 on 28 occasions, BOWIE RACES Apil 2nd to 13th Inclusive. i ! 12in & New Fore® ave. "N, Az Hor 1250, T2i00, 3. ork Ave. N. 1:10, 1:30. pom. DIRECT TO GRANDSTAND First Race 2:30 the miracle year of horse sport. One night in January we saw ! Capt. Herbert Ernest ride a horse into & jump at the Fort Myer ring. The horse failed to take off, crashed through the fence, rolled on the cap- tain. He was carried out on a stretch- er. A few minutes later it was an- nounced he seemed to have no broken bones. “Just a bit shaken up.” Heads waggled in amazement. Last Saturday afternoon when Mrs. | Margaret Egan’s Topiary dove through that chicken coop at the end of the| Riding and Hunt Club hunter trials course, our first thought was, | bad. She was so keen on hunting. | She will be missed.” | After her mount’s quarters had smashed down upon her and rolled off, .~ “Too | | Mrs. Egan lay quite still and quiet. The crowd held its breath so pain-, fully it seemed as if all the air over Meadowbrook suddenly had been drawn into lungs and was bursting to escape. Five minutes later the ladies and | gentlemen who had been trying to re- | call Mrs. Egan’s favorite flowers were | ! pushing their jaws back into joint again. She was conscious, she said she would be all right in a minute and she submitted rather reluctantly to being hauled off to the hospital. The fact she still is there and won't | be out for a few days yet doesn’t de- tract from the wonder of it all. A week at Walter Reed is not so much compared to eternity at Arlington. And with dne look at that spill even the toughest betting agent from Lloyd’s would have wagered you 5 to 1 it would be the latter. And they talk about the softening of the race of horsemen. Poof! F BY chance that downhill jump didn't seem so much to those in | the stands, consider that practic- ally every horse that tried it, rapped, in varying degrees. Steady old- timers like A. Smith Bowman's Dan = o \ | o o s : illustrating how De Long Bowman perched on Dan’s neck. Aside from the Egan excitement. the hunter trials were fairly satis- | factory to every one. WV f demanded honest hunting horses in | held in one of New York's major Rintoul team of Baltimore. most tests, and only here and there a show-ring special slipped in. We | division, went enough like a hunter | to qualify her in any company, and | collegiate athletic conferences regard- | tournament, Coakley Has Plan to Bring U. S. Leaders and Japan’s Best Into Games. By the Associated Press. EW YORK, April 3.—A college base ball “world series” fea- turing eight outstanding American teams and possibly league parks this Summer, Andy Coakley, for 21 years base ball | thought F. L. Oyster's Catalan Blue, | coach at Columbia University, an- which beat a big field in the open |nounced today he had written to the | Conn. supervisors of several sectional inter- Duckpin Bowling Congress tonight when the Occidental Restaurant bowlers take their turn at 8 o'clock. | They will occupy alleys 31 and 32 with the Wash B. Williams team. Recently crowned champions of the District League. the Occidentals are | rated the Capital's strongest combina- tion. Leading the team, which is sponsored by Fred Buchholz, will be Joe Harrison. struggling to retain his | place at the top of the national rankings. The Occidentals will be shooting at The conditions | # Tepresentative from Japan, may be | 2 high mark of 1888, rolled by the 1 scotr 1011071 The all- time tournament record is 1,951, chalked up two years ago by the Mor- gan Recreation team of Hartford, ‘This will be Sanico night in the named in honor of the the others that are more prominent ing the plan and that responses from Sanico League of this city, which on tanbark than across country also demonstrated they had at least them all had been enthusiastic. While plans for the series are in a | entered three quints. Other teams listed for tonight are learned the meaning of galloping on | formulative state. the tournament Convention Hall and R. Harris & Co. into fences. On one point, however, all who had to ride the course agreed. They'd rather have slightly stiffer fences that were two panels wide next year, and from the angle of the spectators, it might be better to move the whole caboodle across the road to the scene | erate the tournament. of the old horse show grounds. The same hills, the same type of tests could be arranged, but the crowd, standing on that steep slope, would be able to view every jump. As it is only two-thirds of the fences really | can be seen easily OBERT W. LEEDS, secretary of the committee staging the At- lantic City Horse Show in Con- | vention Hall, May 15 to 18, has an- nounced the following list of judges: Harness horses and ponies, George Greer, Rye, N. Y.; Mrs. Earl Miller, Darien. Conn.; Carlton L. Elmes, Chi- cago. Five-gaited saddle horses, Rob- ert G. Jones, Paris, Ky. Three- gaited saddle horses, Lewis F. Waring, Rumson, N. J.; John W. McComb, Wilmington, Del, and Robert G. Jones. Hunters and jumpers, Thomas W. Durant, Brookville, Long Island; Wil- liam H. Almy, jr., South Westport, Mass.: Bruce Jenkins, Norton, Conn. Roadsters, W. H. Cane, Jersey City. Seat and hound classes, Mrs, Earl Mil- | sponses I have received and honestly | ler, Darien, Conn. Draft horses, Robert G. Jones. Veterinary judges, Dr. William J. Lee and Dr. William H. Ivens, Philadelphia; Dr. Charles J. McAnulty, Atlantic City. Holy Name League Individual Averages. HOLY NAME. 74 140 368 25 16 . 37 115 3278 ST. ANTHONY'S. 72 1 70 147 _ Swann . W. Heagerty. LADY OF, o 78 180 19 aizs! So 8K Snotnn! o 55 £ ™ . s P 26 43 26 0 HARRISON AUTO HEATERS CREEL BROTHERS 1811 14+ STNW.:++DEcarua 4220 298200 Ses) ™ s 16 NINES ENTER LOOP Unlimited Outfits Will Start Com- | petition May 5. Sixteen teams will compete in the National City Unlimited Base Ball League this season, it was detided last 5 | night following a meeting of loop offi- cials and team managers. Play will begin Sunday, May 5, with eight teams playing in Class A and as many in Class B. The opening pairings follow: Sec- tion A—Dor-A vs. Miller Furniture, Murphy’s 5 and 10 vs. Cherner Motor, Pig ’'n’ Whistle vs. Army Medical Center, Blue Flame Valet vs. Union Printers. Class B—Lewis Ice Cream vs. Warwicks, David’s Grill vs. Wood- men of the World, Stansbury A. C. vs. Capital Transit, D. G. 8. vs. George- town A.C. - SCHOOL NINES LISTED The local scholastic base ball sea- son was to open today with Central High School and Georgetown Prep en- tertaining & pair of local rivals. Central was to engage Devitt Prep at 3:30 o'clock in the Central Sta- dium, while wn Prep was to play host to Bethesda-Chevy Chase at the same time on the Garrett Park diamond. Both Central and Georgetown Prep will see considerable action this week, weather permitting. Friday the pub- lic high nine will travel to Alexandria to meet Alexandria High, while on Saturday they will tackle Mercersburg Academy at Mercersburg, Pa. George- town Prep will meet Western Friday on the Garrett Park field. By Modern and Scientific VIENNA HAT co. would be held either in the Yankee Stadium or the Polo Grounds— pos- sibly in both—the week of June 24, by which time all colleges are closed and there would be no interference with the players’ class work. Four days would be required to op- Four teams - would engage in double-headers on | Monday, four more on Tuesday, two |on ‘Thursday and the championship, a | one-game affair, would be played on | | Saturday. The victorious college would receive a cup and the individ- ual players medals. Bids Sent Organizations. NVITATIONS to participate in the I series have been issued to the Big | ™ Ten, Big Six, Pacific Coast, South- | eastern, Southern and Southwest Con- | ferences, and the Eastern Intercol- | legiate League. Coakley said he had not yet com- { municated with Japanese representa- tives, preferring to wait until plans | are more definite. There may be some | difficulty in bringing & team from Japan because the intercollegiate base ball season there does not siart until August, he said. “A college world series would be a great boost for the game."” the veteran Columbia coach said. “I am encour- | aged no little by the enthusiastic re- | think if it is given a trial it could | be worked out successfully without taking a financial loss.” | _The only hitch in the plans is the matter of obtaining financial support. Several plans are under consideration with alumni of colleges in the East- ern League said to be willing to under- write the tournament. ST. JOHN’S TRIES AGAIN | Golf Loser to Central, It Will Play Devitt Tomorrow. St. John's High School golf team, stubborn loser to Central in its open- ing match yesterday, will try again tomorrow when Devitt is met at Rock Creek in a Private School League match., The Kaydets bowed to Central on the Rock Creek course yesterday, 6 to 3. It also was Central's first dual match of the season. Summary of yesterday’s match and the remainder of St. John's schedule follow: Sulliyan (8t 4 and 3; Merti i | John's) defeated Rogers, (Central) defeated Horst- mann. 4 and St. John's won best ball, 2 and 1. arland (Central) defeats Barbee. & and Hutel on _ (Central) defeated Winsett, Central won best ball,_ 3 and M (St. John's) lernean, an 3 ntre won best ball, 4 and 3. Schedule. Park: 13, open: 16. Western, Potomac; 18, Tech. at East Potomac: Roosevelt, at East Potoma . Devil ok Creek; 27, open; 3 T at Rocl Rock % May—2, Georgetown Prep. at Garrett 3, s, at Garrett Park: 7, . Deyitt, at Garrett Park: 11. open; Rock Creek; 16, Gonzaga. at ac; 18 open:’ 21 'Roosevelt: af ; 2 ; 24-26, Metropolitan open 14. Tech, at East Potom: Rock Creek: WASHINGTON'S FINEST LIGHT BEER NAVY WILL PROLONG " GRIDIRON PRACTICE ' Regular Toil Ends Saturday, but Kicking and Passing Will Continue a Week. Special Dispatch to The Star. ! NNAPOLIS, Md., April 3.—The { regular Spring foot- ball prac- 1 tice season at the Naval Acad- | emy will close on Saturday, but com- | petitions in various kinds of kicking, | passing and other elements of the game will continue through next week. Practice has lasted about a month, a | shorter period than usual, and efforts | have been made to interfere as little | as possible with the sports of the | season. | The squad has numbered about 60, the larger portion of whom were mem- bers of the plebe squad last Fall. A | number of the members of this large and promising squad have attracted favorable attention. Among these : Fike, end; Sloan, Lynch, Player and Fleps, tackles; Du Bois and Gun- derson, guards, Soballe and Funcher, centers, and Ingram, Case, Watson, Antrim and McFarland, backs. SWEEPS GOLF MATCH | | G. U. Prep Finds Devitt Easy in School League Tilt. Georgetown Prep was away winging in the Private School League golf com- petition today, following a 6-to-0 vice tory over Devitt in the Georgetown team’s first defense of its title yes- terday, at Garrett Park. Summary: Spalding defeated Holden, Higgins defeated ~Syperson. Georgetown Prep won best ball. Canning defeated Hamner. 5 and Dettweiler defeated Oches. 0 and 8; Georgetown Prep won best ball, 6 and 4. Electrical League Western Elec. 1. g-enuu Transit ¢ i | and 1: and % | and 1. | Jack Creel ros. Western Elec. 2. . Season Records. H 13ileh tndividual game—Clements. 178. High individual set—Overend High strikes—Overend. 53; Clements, 45: Evans, 42 Miller. & O ures.Mover, 214: Clements. 182: S. Lawhorn. 180; Ho- garth. 170 Overend, 170; Evans.’ 175 ugle: 173. h _individual _ averages—Clements, uai-l;o: Moyer, 113-25; Overend, 112-39; James, 112-31; 8. lawhorn, 110-65; R. Spary 107; James, rt] BREWERY / High team game—Western Electric No. | team set—Capital Transit Co., Duncan. 1577—549 Nationa] & & Trus Fletcher 115 11 Hooper. 94 1t Fant 11 Weber ., Pardoe. 1 SR 101 104 MEN'S DOUBLES—WASHINGTON. Chal'te 128134 96 And'son 127137123 Burrows 114 113 125 116 106 656—247 247 MIXED DOUBLES—WASHINGTON. G.Sm'll 114 104 SCHEDULE. and City Restaurant, € Wash B. Williams Co.. D.C Wachington. Washington S. Kann Sons Co. Team Standing. G TP W team game—Yankees cet— es. Wailach Wallach lach. 112-44, Henry Individual Averages. YANKEES HG Mathews Kendrick Schneider Cornell Clary Leonard Osborne Ragan 0 318 Riston ..... Cuozzo Goldberg Berlin Fletcher ... 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