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B—8 s PORTS. THE SUNDAY Collegiate Track Campaign A. U, CARDS, TERPS FACE COMPETITIN Maryland Is Only One in Action Here—Michigan Nine Pays Visit. BY H. C. BYRD. OLLEGE track teams get out this week for their first for- | mal Spring competition. American University is the first scheduled for a dual meet, being down to compete with Randolph- Macon Friday at Ashland. Maryland entertains University of Richmond Saturday, while Catholic University makes a trip to Wake Forest. All three of the local universities to open this week expect to have good teams, with the chances bright that Maryland will stand out. American University never has done much on the cinder path, but looks forward to considerable success. Catholic University, largely through the energy and fine personality of Dorsey Grif- fith, has achieved some excellent re- sults under unfavorable conditions, and its supporters are of the opinion that it should carry on much better than usual. Some excellent material s available, although the team is not well balanced. Maryland ought to have the strong- est team it has ever developed. Hard- 1y an event is carded in which it will not be strong, and it is mot likely to lose many dual meets. From Wid- myer in the sprints right on up through all the running events, the Old Liners ought to take care of themselves well, while they are better fixed for the field competitions than they ever have been. The shotput seems to be the only form of compe- tition in which they may not meas- ure up welt with their opponents, but in the running events are likely to outclass the teams they oppose by just as big a margin as they may be out- classed in shot heaving. Track athletics in this section has - Foot Ball Clinic | To Be Held Here ATHOLIC UNIVERSITY will be the scene of the first foot ball clinic here, A. J. Bergman, director of athletics at the Brook- land School, has announced. It is slated for Friday evening and Saturday morning, and will have as its leading guest speaker Andy Kerr, head coach at Colgate. The affeir is being sponsored by a local sports goods house. Along with Kers's talk will be round table discussions under the direction of local coaches. Those to handle these talks on the vari- ous fundamentals of play will be Bergman, Jim Pixlee of George ‘Washington, Tom Hamilton, Navy: Jack Hegarty of Georgetown and Jack Faber of Maryland. The affair is limited to athletic directors and coaches of high and prep schools and colleges. It is expected that representatives from Maryland. Pennsylvania, Virginia and North Carolina will attend. MIDDY RIFLEMEN HANG UP RECORD Win Sectional Collegiate Title With 1,391 Count. Colonials Sixth, | legiate match, the Naval | Academy rifiemen today won the sectional match of the National Rifle Association for Colleges against 13 other teams. | Cornell, which had won from the | Navy in an early dual match, was | second with 1,379. Sectional matches | were held at three other points, and it is known that the Navy's score | topped that of Minnesota, considered NNAPOLIS, April 6.—With the score of 1391, the highest | suffered considerably in the last few | years, largely because of inadequate finances, and secondly because of poor facilities. outdoor tracks at North Carolina and at Duke, but about the only other ones in the section are at Hopkins, Navy and Maryland. Furthermore, a lack of good facilities for indoor meets is retarding the development of track sports. It never will be possible for colleges and high schools to create real interest in track athletics in the South Atlantic section until there are larger opportunities to compete in in- door competition. The 5th Regiment Armory of Bal- timore, now being constructed, will be ready for use next year, some school ought to put on a big meet. HE most noteworthy event of the week in college base ball is pretty sure to be the visit of Michigan for two games at Maryland. The ‘Wolverines seldom come to this sec- tion and any of their teams are attractive and interesting to the West- ern Conference people around and in ‘Washington. Michigan's basket ball team played here last year, but this is the first time its nine has been listed for games. First of the college base ball games of this week is George Washington and Washington College tomorrow at the Clark Griffith Stadium. The East- ern Shoremen probably will show up with a right nifty outfit. And they will be well coached, too, because Tom Kibler is just about as good as they come. Washington College, after it plays George Washington, goes on down in | Virginia for two games, then comes back here to meet Georgetown on Thursday. A third game for the Eastern Shore nine of the week with a local team is with Maryland Satur- day at Chestertown. ARYLAND, despite the fact it apparently has the potentiali- ties of a great lacrosse team, is likely to find itself up against the | toughest kind of competition Satur- day, when it meets Mount Washing- ton, made up, as the latter is, of former Johns Hopkins and Maryland stars. Mount Washington generally has one of the best tens in the country and usually is above the caliber of the best colleges. However, with El- linger and Christhilf as the spearhead of its attack, Maryland is going to be a hard team to stop. ‘ 'UST how a “world series” in base ball will get around the provision of several conferences that no post-season games may be staged is hard to understand. There are few colleges that would want their men to remain after the school year is over to play in a series of diamond contests, and many of them that might still be open in June would be hampered by having to cope with examination dates. There is more in the way of a real world series for college nines than appears at first glance. Varied Sports Minor Base Ball. New Orleans (8. A), (A.A), 2. Milwaukee, (A.A), 11, College Base Ball. New York University, 9; City Col- lege of New York, 4. Iowa State, 19; Simpson, 2. Ohio State, 13; Ohio University, 2. Elmhurst, 4; Northwestern, 2. Swarthmore, 21; St. John's (An- fapolis), 10. Lafayette, 3; Ursinus, 2. Tllinois, 7-15; Illinois College, 0-2. Wisconsin, 11; Illinois State Nor- fmal, 5. 7; Toledo (A. A), 15; St. Paul Track. North Carolina, 76; William and Mary, 49. Richmond, 89; Davidson, 37. Davidson Frosh, 67%; Richmond Frosh, 49%. Georgia, 84; Presbyterian, 47. Georgia Tech, 67!z Clemson, Lacrosse. Navy, 7; Harvard, 1. Baltimore, A. C., 8; 8t. John's, 4, Johns Hopkins, 19; Dartmouth, 4. Golf. Georgetown, 5; Rollins, 1. Pittsburgh, 10l2; Western Re- serve, 713, Georgia Tech, 17%; Furman, 3. Tennis. Clemson, 4; Mississippi State, 2, 6415, There are excellent | and | v, and Blount, Cor- | nell, tied for individual honors with 286 points each, the maxi- mum being 300. |, Woodring, Lenigh. started out with the possible at both the prone and | kneeling firing, but dropped behind | the standing style, | Scores: Naval Academy, 1391; | Cornell, 1.379: Lehigh, 1,354; Carnegie | Tech, 1,344; Pittsburgh, 1,340: George | Washington, 1,327; Maryland, | Brooklyn Poly. 1,324; Columbia, | 1,313; Virginia Poly, 1,313; Lafayette, | 1.304; Virginia Military Institute, 11,200; West Virginia, 1272; Penn State, 1,265. Pts. Lynch ... Blenman ' Burdick | Nicholson Rutherford 0 1 496 GEORGE WASHINGTON Pr. Kn. Totals Free | Turnbull Neal | Mulligan = Hornbrooks v.ees Totals . 490 MARYLAND Pr. Kn. | Schneider | Coleman | Castle | Mehring Davis Totals 'AMERICA AND ITALY SLATED FOR SOCCER Will Meet in International Final | at Rosedale Field—Last Big Event of Season. EATHER permitting, the inter- national soccer series final be- tween America and Italy will \%% | Rosedale Playground field. | tremely unfavorable the game, which was postponed last Sunday, will be played today. The tilt practically will terminate Washington soccer for the season, although a few games may be played |out of town during the next couple | of weeks. A junior team, composed of players ‘under 18 years of age, will participate |in the Eastern championship of the U. 8. F. A and is drawn against an | Eastern Pennsylvania team on April | 27 at Philadelphia. e TANKERS WILL II\_IVADE Eight Cities Besides Capital to Engage in Y. M. C. A. Meet. Eight cities in addition to Wash- ington are expected to be represented | by teams in the second annual Y. | M. C. A. Middle Atlantic swimming championships to be held next Sat- | urday in the Shoreham Hotel pool. Preliminaries will be run off at 2:30 o'clock in the afternoon and the finals beginning at 8 o'clock in the evening. Approximately 125 entries are ex- pected to compete for teams from the following cities: Baltimore, Lan- | Washington. Wilmington won last year, Norristown placing second and ‘Washington third, ever made in a national col- | 1.327; | :'a workout this afternoon. be played today at 2 o'clock on the | Unless weather conditions are ex- | 'Jones Predicts Keen Stretch | caster, Wilmington, Richmond, York, | Scranton, Allentown, Norristown and | Thompson, Buckley, Mathias Display Punch in Show to Finance Trip. BY BURTON S. HAWKINS. HREE knockouts featured a rousing send-off parly of the Olympic A. C. last night when the club opposed a picked team of boxers at the Washington Auditorfum, the gate receipts helping to finance a trip to St. Louls for the National amateur championships this week for four of the battlers. Coach Matt Twomey, Eddie Saug- sted, 118; Lou Gevinson, 126; Willie Feary, 135; and Steve Thompson, 147, were to leave this morning in quest of added glory for the Olympic A. C., District Golden Glove Champlon. Steve Thompson and Bob Buckley, GClympic scrappers, provided two of the three knockouts by flooring George Dombroski (Langley Field) and Soldier Hiles (Fort Monroe,) re- spectively. Steve KaDash, from Fort Monroe, Va, lived up to advance notices by canvassing Dick Strickler, unattached, in the second round of a scheduled five-round bout. Mathias Scores Upset. N ONE of the biggest upsets of the I evening, Bob Mathias, former Central High School boy, won by decision over Eddie Perruzzi, Colum- | bus University fighter, now swinging for the Northeast Boys’ Club, in three fast rounds. Mathias opened a cut under Perruzzi's left eye early in the initial round and kept peppering the gash with rights throughout the fray. Willie Feary, one of the boxers who | vill carry the colors of the Olympic | Tamalanus of Fort Monroe, Va, in a three-round scrap. 500 fans turned out for the nine | bouts. | Summaries 135 POU | pic ‘A’ C.) won by decision over Phil Scott | CLankley _ Field), “three rounds, Willie Feary _(Olympic 'A. C.) won by decision over Tommy Tamalanus (Fort Monroe). three rounds 1 110 POUNDS- -Bob Mathias (Olympie | A. C.) won by decision over Eddie Per- ruzzi YNortheast Boys' Club). three rounds Jack Johnson (Olympic A. C.) won by de- cision over Morris Clingan (Olympic A. C.). three rounds. 5_POUNDS—Creighton Allen (North- Boys' Club) won by decision over | Pyt Alexander (Fort ~Monroe).three rounds: Steve Thompson_ (Olympi¢ A. C.) won by knockout over George Dombroski | (Langley Pield). third round. 3 POUNDS _Tim O'Connor (Olympic A )_won by decision over Jimmy Young (3th Regiment Marines). three rounds. 135 POUNDS—Bob Buckley_(Olympic C.) ‘won by knockout over Soldier Hi (Fort Monroe). second round | HEAVYWEIGHT—Steve Kadash (Fort Monroe) won by knockout over Dick Strickler (unattached). second round. Referee—Kid Sullivan. i eas! | A les [ = i CARDS, MIDDIES DRILL No Effort Made to Run Up Score | in Foot Ball Practice. ANNAPOLIS. Md.,, April 6.—Navy completed its Spring foot ball prac- tice by meeting Catholic University in No effort was made to run up a score, but Coaches Hamilton, Navy, and Berg- | Windy City husky took a hard-fought Craig_Wood . players. | Annapolis, a dozen being freshmen of last season. The Navy had more than | 50 on the field, evenly divided between varsity and plebe squadmen of 1ast | whelmed the Southerner in the final yi: | year. . LITTLE GETS 20 POINTS William and Mary Ace Shines as North Carolina Wins. CHAPEL HILL, N. C.. April 6 (P).— North Carolina defeated William and Mary, 76 to 49, here this afternoon in a track meet held in a chilling rain that muddied the field and slowed the marks in all events. Monk Little, William and Mary star, | scored 20 points, winning first places {in the century, 220-yard dash, broad | jump and javelin. Club to St. Louis, decisioned Tommy | —Harry Thompson (Olym- | STAR, WASHINGTO Will Be Started by Capital Myer Barely Loses a Hit on This Play | | | make the putout. D. C, Copyright, A. P. Wirephoto. APRIL 7, 1935—PART ONE. Buddy is stretching his legs in a fine effort in yvesterday's game in Chicago, won by the Cubs, 3 to 2, in 11 innings, but Charlie Grimm, the Bruins' pilot and firstsacker, smacks his foot on the bag just in time to i | HAND BALL TITLE TAKENBY PLATAK Chicagoan Ends Reign of Atcheson—Gordon, Berry | Capture Doubles. | OE PLATAK, a Chicago reslau-‘ rant proprietor, ended the two- year reign of Sam Atcheson of Memphis as Natlonal Amateur | Athletic Union four-wall hand ball | ! ruler last night on the Central Y. M C. A. courts, when he conquered the Tennessean, 21—16, 14—21, 21—3. | Before a capacity crowd, the blond | man, Catholic, used every one of thelr | grgt game with stinging drives to all | J i | corners of the court. Atcheson, slighter | % | Catholic brought a squad of 32 to | of pyjlg, rallied to show fine form in | | | the second game, but the effort ap- | ;parenn_v was too great. Platak, with | | more strength in reserve, simply over- | ‘ game. | Takes Beatings Here. HE defeat marked Atcheson's sec- | ond failure in successive years to | win a major title in Washington. Last year he was beaten in the Y. M. C. A. championships. A pair of husky Californians, Joe | Gordon and Andy Berry, won the doubles championship by handily trouncing Joe Endzvick and Joe Go | dreau of Cleveland. 21—10, 21—10. { The new title holders, who motored from their homes in San Francisco | for the event. were too powerful for | the Midwest due, runners-up in the A. | A. U. tournament last year. | | Duel in Augu BY ROBERT T. JONES, JR. Only man who ever held Amer- ican amateur and open titles and British amateur and open cham- pionships in one year. UGUSTA, Ga, April 6—I played my third round today with Olin Dutra, open cham- pion of the United States, and I can't recall a finer round of golf. 1 mean by that that Olin had his third 70 in a row and once again it | was a 70 that might have been a 69. | Dutra has had three 70s that easily could have been in the 60s. He was | hitting the ball magnificently today. | There were times when I thought he was using a rifle. | " As I see this masters’ tournament | now, it is a battle among Craig Wood, Olin Dutra, Henry Picard and Gene Sarazen. Here are four of the finest golfers in the world and one of them is almost sure to keep up the terrific pace. This will make it difficult for any one else to break through. All four are quite capable of breaking 70 | and if one does, no one else will have a chance. In my own case, once again, I was sta Final Today| | | | lacking in confidence in my timing | and in my putting. I still was not | sure of any shot in a tight place where I needed complete control. And once again my putting fell away. I have realized that golf or tourna- ment golf is a game that needs a lot of competition. It isn't a matter | so much of shotmaking as it is a nerve and muscular control and this can come only from the battle out on the course. There should be a| great stretch scrap in the final round | tomorrow and I am not going to pose | as any prophet with four such golfers as Wood, Dutra, Picard and Sarazen | coming into the stretch only a stroke | or two apart. (Copyright. 1935, by the Bell Syndicate. Inc.) i COLORED NINES TO PLAY. Local colored base ball teams are | getting down to business, with two due to inaugurate practice sessions | today. The Alexandria Royals will work out at 10:30 o'clock at Baggett's | Stadium, while the Anacostia A. C. will drill at noon on the Barry Farms field. The Morning Star Elks will turn out later in the week. Pairings, Scores In Augusta Open By the Associated Press. UGUSTA, Ga. April 6.—Pairings and starting times (Eastern standard) for the final 18 holes of the Augusta national tournament: Lid ;00 a.m.—Bobby Jones and Lawson ittle 1:00 p.m.—Henry Wood 1:140 p.m —Paul grum 100 p.m.—Olin -Gene and Craig Ray Picard Runvan and Dutra and Denny m Sarazen and Walter 2240 p. Hagen — | Cards of the leaders for today's 18- hole round: Par. out B Craig_wood.” out Olin’ Dutra. out Henry Picard. out Gene Sarazen. ou Par. in ... Wood. Dulra. Picard Surazen. n in ! in "l for the first Scores of the leaders three rounds —20n Olin Dutra enry Picard ne Sarazen ter Hagen . ny Shute Ray Mangrum . *Lawson Little Johnny Revolia Victor Ghezzi on Nelsoi. my Hines Ge w Paul Runyan Sam s. it Leo Diegel 4 Johnny Dawson Robert T. Jones. Willie Gogzin . Ed_Dudley ike Turnesa ir M Dick Metz . Al_Espinosa Phil Perkins *Fred Hass. Jr Bill Burke Willie Klein' . Horton _Smith Harry Cooper . Bill Mehlhorn Tommy Armour z *Indicates amateur. STAGES GOLF TOURNEY ‘While the private clphs are getting ready for their tourney season to open | a month hence, Manager B. Harry Graham of the Rock Creek Park pub- lic course, is going to get the jump on them with a tournament to start on April 29 and run for three days or more. Harry hopes for a big entry list in his opening venture of 1935 and probably will get it. Rain Puts Quietus On College Nines AIN won a unanimous decision -over college base ball nines in this section of the country yes- terday. George Washington's scheduled tilt with Long Island University at Griffith Stadium was rained out, as was Central High's game with Mercersburg Academy at Mercers- burg. Pa. Rain or wet grounds forced the postponement of virtually all Southern games, the weather af- fecting, among others, the Virginia Tech-William and Mary, Michigan- Roanoke, Wake Forest-Duke, Catawba-Lenoir Rhyne, Dart- mouth-Virginia, South Carolina- Newberry, Georgia Tech-Clemson and Vermont - Hampden - Sydney games. Fervid Galloping Home in First Race at Bowie HASEBTOTOTAL " TBFORAHILES Dutra Is Next With 210 as Hershey Pro Takes 76 for a 211 Count. (Continued from Page B-7.) his second into the rough and then {overplaved the green. cost him a | chance to tie Wood for the lead. Out in 36, thanks to a 12-foot putt for a birdie on the eighth, Dutra came back in 34, getting a birdie on the tenth with a 6-footer and a deuce at the sixteenth with a 10-footer. The other two subpar rounds of the day were registered by Denny Shute, the former British open cham- pion, and W. Lawson Little, jr., hold- er of the American and British ama- teur crowns. rallying on the last nine. Shute had a 34 and Little a 33. The burly California youngster shot three straight birdies, 4—3—4. on the thir- teenth, fourteenth and fifteenth, due to magnificent second shots. His 54- hole total of 216 gave him eighth place, with the added distinction of teing low amateur on the list and three strokes ahead of Jones. Loss of Niblick Hurts. ICARD, playing with little, had a P good excuse for his first blow- up. His heavy niblick was found to be missing from his bag. While waiting for ‘it to be rushed out to !him from the shop. he missed two ! attempted recovery shots on the third hole, then dubbed a 2-foot putt and carded a disastrous 6. He approached poorly on the fourth, and hit wide of the fifth green. losing two more strokes to par before he regained | | control. From the sixth through the fifteenth Picard was again a scoring machine, holes, thanks to a 7-foot putt for a birdie on the eighth and an easy birdie 4 on the 485 yard fifteenth. Then he skidded again, carding & 5 on the short sixteenth, where he dropped his tee shot in the water and missing his approach chip to the seventeenth. Henry seized his last chance to rally by dropping a 14-foot putt for a birdie 3 on the home hole, giving him a 76 instead of the ex- pected 77. Johnny Dawson, Chicago “business- man” amateur, and the | Walter Hagen each registered par 72s that might have been three or four strokes better if the breaks had been with them. Dawson 3-putted the first two greens, struck a streak of subpar golf, where he got three birdies, and barely missed two more, then dissipated his chances by 3- putting the thirteenth and fourteenth greens. Hagen, who made some char- acteristically brilliant recoveries on the first nine, holed a chip shot on the third, dropped a 30-footer on the seventh and rimmed the cup three times for birdies on the last nine. RAIN HALTS GOLF TILT Dunlap, Johnson, Tied, Have Five Left at Pinehurst. PINEHURST, N. C, April 6 (#).— Rain today broke up the final match of the North and South amateur golf championship with Johnny Johnson, Lumberton, N. C., and George T. Dunlap, jr., Kew Gardens, Long Is- land, all even with five holes to go. The remaining five holes will be played Monday. ‘Water standing inches deep on the sand greens made it impossible to continue. MAT LISTS STILL OPEN Entries for the annual District A. A. U. senior wrestling tournament will close Thursday, it was announced last night by Tom Clayton, who is handling the lists the Central Y. M. C. A, 1736 G street. Weighing in for the event will take place Friday between 1 and 6:30 at Gallaudet College. KANSAS AGGIES SCORE. LINCOLN, Nebr., April 6 (#.— Kansas State rifiemen won the Mis- » Each carded a 70 by | two under par for a stretch of 10| veteran | SPORTS Teams This Week Labrots to Sell All Race Horses By the Associated Press. ANNAPOL!-S. Md., April 6.—The entire racing stable of the late Sylvester W. Labrot. consisting of 29 horses, will be sold at auec- tion under a plan announced today by the family. Although the racing string will be disposed of the family plans to continue the breeding establish- ment at Holly Beach Farm, near here. The race string will be sold at Belmont- Park, N. Y., on May 17. | Twenty-eight of the twenty-nine | horses to be sold were bred at the | Holly Beach Farm. Twenty-three are 2-year olds and, of the re- maining, four are 3-year olds and one 4 and one 6 year olds. TOP ROW GALLOPS TOEXPECTED WIN Scores by Three Lengths Carrying Top Weight 5 at Bay Meadows. | AN MATEO, Calif., April 6 (#).— A. A Baroni's Top Row justi- fled its position as favorite by | ploughing through the mud at Bay Meadows track today to capture |the $5000 added Spring Special ’Hundicup for 3-year-olds and up at a mile and a sixteenth. 1 ‘Thomasville and Sand Baby, two of the three horses joined as a unit entry by Percy M. Pike, took the place and show positions, respectively. Time for the race, run over a heavy track and in the rain, was 1:47 4-5. Some 6,000 fans attended | the event. I Top Row paid $3.20 to win, $2.60 on place bets and $3.20 for show | Thomasville paid $3.80 and $3.40 and Sand Baby $3.40. Dark Winter held the lead for most of the race, but the winner, carrying | top weight of 118 pounds. was booted | | to the front by Jockey Frank Mauro in the stretch and finished three lengths to the good. Dark Winter faded to fourth. BASKETERS HONORED | Gold Balls Presented Members of St. John's Squad. Ten members of the St. John's School basket ball quint were hon- ored at a general assembly yesterday at the school and were presented with miniature gold basket balls by Brother Eadberg and Coach Horse Holbrook. Those to receive the awards were Mike Simone, Bill Counselman, John | Sullivan, Vincent McHugh, Joe “Pop” Sheahin, John Donohue, Jack Reges, John Swagarg, John Gibel and Man- ager Dywer. POTOMAC SAILORS | | PLANNING BIG RACE | 35 Boats Are Expected to Vie in Event From Hains Point to Quantico and Return. B a Staff Correspondent of The Star. | LEXANDRIA. Va., April 6.—Plans for a miniature “America’s Cup” sailing race to be staged on the | Potomac River May 30, between Hains Point at Washington and Quantico, Va.. under auspices of the new Poto- | mac River Sailing Association. have | been announced by Grover Farns- { worth, a director of the organization. | The race will be over a 60-mile | course, with crews staying over night at Quantico at the end of the first | half and sailing back to Washington | | the second day. Approximately 35 sailing craft from | Washington, Alexandria, Baltimore, | Philadelphia and Chesapeake Bay sec- | tions are expected to enter. The race will be a handicap match, | | and will be open to all types of sail- | ing vessels. | Farnsworth. crew coach of the Old | Dominion Boat Club here and one of | the organizers of the sailing associa- | tion, also announced that a series of short races will be staged on the river, starting on April 21. PIONEER RUNNERS WIN. Twelfth Street Y. M. C. A. Pioneers defeated the Terrell Boys' Club in | two relay races and tied in another in the feature of an athletic program at the local colored “Y" yesterday. | The program was staged in observance | 450 BOWIE STAKE WON BY GOOD HARVEST Captures Memorial Event. “Daily Double” Wagering Record Claimed. By the Associated Press OWIE, Md., April 6 —Gocd B Harvest, carrying the silks i the B. B. Stable, and finely ridden by Silvio Coucci, took five other three-year-old bangtails into camp in the $3,500 Rowe Memo- rial Handicap here today. Legume placed and Brannan took show money. Batchelor Dinner, one of the four horses named by Alfred Gwynne Van- derbilt for the Kentucky Derby, ran fourth. The six furlong race was worth $2,630 to Good Harvest with place ;t;g:‘wmg $700, show 8350 and fourth 50. Good Harvest paid $7.80 to win Legume $5.20 to place and Branna: $3.00 to show. C position until the stretch when he opened up to come in a length and a half ahead of Legume. which led Brannan by two lengths for second money. The winner's time was 1:13 4-5 The crowd which taxed every inch of this plant set up what is thought to be a world record by dropping $30,934 into the machines in the “daily double.” ‘Those folks, who backed Fervid. winner of the opener, and Sisowen victorious in the third, received $23 for the usual $2 investment. There were 1241 lucky holders of “daily double” tickets. BOWIE RESULTS A furlongs Strong in Stretch. OUCCI kept Good Harvest in sixth purse. $800 and_ upward $4.50. $2.70 . second Lindberg). claiming T Fervid. 118 (E. Porter $2.20:" Sparky. 118 Blavfole Time. ud. ' Jess _Abercrobie. Jilted. Evening Chimes. Looka! 1 $3.50. 7 me 5 Jones). third. $4 Time. 0 4Rls ran—Deliberate. 'Ada Cruz. Blue Donna Playful Tour and Bristle THIRD RACE—# furlongs: purse. £600 claiming: for i-year-olds and upward Sisowne. ' 109 (J. Gilbert), won. $A.80 $:1.10: Candescent. 111 (E. Porter) second. $4.10. $2.60; Hogan's Fox. 110 (L e 5. Also Fallon). third 0. Ti ran—Aiwintour. Mad Beth. st Point and Stone Martin FOURTH RACE—1 mile and 70 yards purse. £1.000: the Naughty Marietta: for A-vear-olds and upward. Manager Bill (S Coucci). won. S5 40. S350, .40 (H. Lindbers). _seconc. Hug Again. 110 (G Wat- 60 Time. 1:47 Also ran —Sun Monk. Grainger and Flaming Ma- e FIFTH RACE—#6 furlongs: purse, $ added: the Rowe Memorial Handicap 3-year-olds__Good Harvest. R 140 & second Wal bout 7 1:15 Highe: on). third, Bachelor Din- ister purse. $800 nd upward won, $8.10. Coucei). (R lso_rar per. Jim John and Wise 8 SIXTH RACE—] . m; claiming: for 3-year-olds Saint Kitts. 118 (J. Pollar $2.90. S Tichester. 1 0 second Dark (8. ling Watson) C for i ward.__Master Lad. 1 won. $7.90, $4.10. S (R. 'Jones)' ‘second. $3.8 George, 108 (C. Phillips) 1:4945" Also Victory Flag and Court Gossip. BOB BARNETT RETURNS Chevy Chase Golf Professional Ready for Busy Season. Tanned to a deep pink by the Florida sun and the picture of ruddy health. Bob Barnett. professional at v Chase Club. is back in town today. prepared for a big season of golf at the club where he spends the months from April to December. Bob holds down the Winter berth at the Indian Creek Country Club of Miami Beach and has been so busy this year that he has little time to try out the new set of steel-shafted clubs which Bill Hardy made for him last January. But Bob will be over at Woodholme tomorrow trying for a place on the Middle Atlantic P. G. A. team just the same. Although the boys may not take action on it tomorrow, the appli- cation of Roland MacKenzie for mem- bership in the local P. G. A. is before them, and has been before them for six months. Roland should be eligible to win a spot on the team and should be a member of the P. G. A. tivity Defiance SPARK PLUGS | of National Negro Health week. A | tumbling exhibition was presented by { the “Y™ junior and senior gymnastic | | teams as well as three two-round box- | ing matches. | GOLFERS— Membership available in a desirable local Golf and Country Club. Will sacrifice initiation fees. Dues less than $7.00 per month Not s Summer membership—but a permanent full club affiliation. Address Box 359-X, Star Office. Ringworm or 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 P. O. Box 1538, Washington. D. C LS. JULLIEN.Inc 1443 P St. NW. NO. 8076 APPLICANTS—NOTICE Editorial Clerk In response fo numerous re- quests of Civi] Service applicants, who were too late in registering for one of the recent Editorial Classes, this school has ready for immediate distribution an outline of review studies, which was espe- cially prepared for Civil Service applicants, by the head of the Editorial Department, who was formerly employed in the Exami- nation Division of the Civil Serv- ice Commission. There are about sixty neatly mimeographed pages of practice material on Manuscript Preparation, Rewriting and Re- vising, Abstracting and Indexing. This iy not a correspondence or home-study course. It is recom- mended only for a review or prace tice study. May be had at the school for $3.00. STATISTICAL CLERK We also have ready for imme- diate distribution an outline of review studles which was prepared especially for Civil Service appii- cants. There are 32 pages of neatly mimeographed material on Elementary Computations, Recip- rocal, Weighted Average, Index Numbers, Tabulation, Graphing, and a sample examination includ- ing an excellent list of intelligence questions. This is not a corre- spondence or home-study course. It is recommended only for a re- view or practice study. May be had at the school for $2.00. MOUNT PLEASANT SCHOOL FOR SECRETARIES Tivoli Theater Building 14th Street and Park Road Telephone Columbis 3000