Evening Star Newspaper, May 10, 1935, Page 43

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PORTS. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, -D. C, FRIDAY, MAY 10, 1935. SPORTS. c-3 Collegians Shoot It Out at Horseshoes : Ambers Favorite Over Canzoneri STARS TOURNEY SLATED MONDAY Six Brings Together All Washington Colleges for First Time. ASHINGTON won't hold its ‘ N ; breath over the outcome, perhaps, but for the first time in history its six major colleges next Monday will en- gage in direct combat. ‘Which is by way of introducing the first annual intercollegiate horseshoe pitching tournameat sponsored by The | Star. With Georgetown, George Washing- | ton, Maryland, Catholic University, American University and Gallaudet | represented, the tournament will be | eouru beside the Tech High swimmiug lt will start at 3 o'clock and by | nightfall Monday, it is expecfed, the Capital City may boast of the first | intercollegiate horseshoe champion in | the country, or this part of it, anyway. Four From Each School. HOSE to take part are survivors of competition in which hun- dreds have taken part. Horseshoe pitching became a popular intramural sport here six years ago when intro- duced into several schools under the sponsorship of The Star, in connection with its annual metropolitan Wash- Ington tournamenqt. Four players will represent each in- stitution and the comvetition will be on the down-and-out basis. | A 50-point game will constitute a | match in the early rounds, two out of three in the semi-finals. and the final will be a round robin. With | 24 players at the start, the final wfll be a three-man affair. The winner will receive a solid gold medal and the runner-up one of sterling silver. I cover some new talent for the metropolitan championship. Al- though the horseshoe field here is May Reveal New Talent. HE tournament is expected to un- dotted with ex-college athletes, only | one student at a Washington uni- versity has distinguished himself in ‘The Star tournament. This is Temple Jarrell of Maryland, who for two years has been a leading performer in the Old Line section of the metropolitan championships. Easily the class of the Terrapins, Jarrell gallantly remained out of the singles event at the university thm Spring, but will be among the fou players Maryland will enter in the intercollegiate contest. Coaches at all six schools have given the tournament a hearty in- dorsement, believing it will be a boon to intramural sport. The horse- shoe game, properly played, is a severe test of co-ordination, it may be mastered by the puny as well as the rugged, it is inexpensive and has other advantages that make it an ideal intramural sport. With an in- tercollegiate tournament to point for and a worthwhile title as well as prize at stake a campus boom in horseshoe pitching seems to be in order, —_— MARYLAND FROSH WIN Pound James of Bethesda-Chevy Chase in 10-8 Victory. Hitting Pitcher Lynwood James opportunely the University of Mary- land freshman base ballers yesterda: topped the Bethesda-Chevy Chase held on the four municipal playground | Scores in 132—383 106—408 Corcoran H. Jones M. Burns Lynn .. Anderson V. Russell. ERESO@OT FFZOr | M. Oliverl.. H. City Pin Tourney SINGLES. Class D. Andrlch 93 110 ermn. #9113 92 93—308 118112 Moyer.. 125 88113 147—404 206 228 206 630—224 201 205 R—] 142101 153 Plant... 89 R4 100 I elios 93 BA1I1 Ciark... 95 97 85 560—184 181105 | )l h'!y ]lhll\o‘lll Olfln. L k"] 630—214 197 224 Shorty's Rob'son Oliveri Mitchell M | M G J. G I Paul [FA IR |’ 4 L V. H. A | Al H, w M. E. H. Robertson . W D. Se S. L E G w. | DOUBLES. Class A. 5104 104 Jarmon. INKHAI’N 102 119 Wolfe. 755—251 107 118 153 108 136 102 Diegle'an 961111 | Rleslean 0 100 163 Miltner 116118 Sien Fred'ks 141122 Glson: | ez Russell. | Snerh'i 658 ! 4 Harmon 108110107 Honive 5 Rob'ett 1172110110 m En, i Seai! | King David (1. | 3.Perry Class C. Pat's Buffet 1 Fowler. 103 V'rhees 105 lIN u. _King. 10 H-flen 176 1ok 100 1) 110 104 119 99 54 Johns'n Fraley. 83 8.Jones 1° 531404513 Class D. ‘Tem) |! (1. 55.‘ T Prazier 107 101 103 Mul’ll! fl“ l 11| 121101 114 109102 113 97 104 526 487 545 (1.690) 1 ® DeRosa G Simi. Hardie. Krmer. 124 117 109 620, 388 380 529 ARMY POLO TEAN - TONEETPMLC |First Important Match of Season Will Be Staged Here Tomorrow. | HE first important local -match | in the outdoor polo season oli, 1935 has been scheduled here | tomorrow, when the War De- | | partment four will meet an aggre- | gation from Pennsylvania Military ACollege at 3 pm. on Potomac Park | fleld. Considered an outstanding !uurA | some among the college teams of 20 Years Ago IN THE STAR EGRET, daughter of Broom- stick-Jersey Lightning, won the Kentucky Derby at the Louisville track. Allan Lard, Chevy Chase Club, defeated John H. Clapp of the same club in the final of the Washington Country Club invita- tion golf tourney. The Analostan Boat Club may send a crew to the American Henley at Philadelphia May 22. H. Guy Bedwell's Golden List won the Clabaugh Memorial Cup race at the Pimlico track. St. John's of Annapolis con- quered its traditional athletic foe, the Maryland Aggies, 4-3, in a 10- | inning diamond struggle. Mathews pitched well for the winners, and Derrick also hurled creditably for the Farmers. Navy, Interstate Commerce and ZAHARIAS VICTOR BUT 15 SUFFERER He and Arbiter Maltreated, Rudy Is Disqualified. Cops Take Hand. UBBERY, blubbery George Za- harias finally had completed his conquest of the rassling Duseks of Nebraska today, but the huge Colorado Greek's triumph was not quite as sweet and tooth- some as it might have been. Zaharias hurdled the fourth, last and most formidable of the Dusek tribe last night when he won over Rudy, eldest of the clan, but in the minds of 2,000 incurables lingered the question: 67 | “What if Rudy had not gone berserk?" Conqueror of Joe, Emil and Ernie i | Dusek, younger brothers of Rudy, the big Greek apparently was destined to be stopped by the last of the grappling Duseks last night at the Washington Auditorium. He was getting the worst of it—as ultimate winners always do— when Rudy went haywire and started the neatest little wind-up probably ever seen here. Flying mares gave Rudy the upper hand, and by way of following up his 1) ; | advantage, the Omahan pushed Za- harias halfway through the ropes and twisted the thick green cords around the size 24 neck of his rival. George squirmed and wriggled in professional agony, and Umpire Cyclops Burns a | Tushed to his assistance, only to be 15 | met by a push from Dusek which re- 30 | Sulted in Burns’ coming to a one-point landing in the middle of the ring. Referee Socked on Nose. HE fat referee was up in an in- stant, however, and again he rushed to the assistance of Za- harias, who was receiving a barrage of punches from Rudy while the ropes continued to render him helpless, half inside, half outside the mat. But as Burns again attempted to brush Dusek aside and part the ropes, he caught & punch in the nose from Dusek, and for the second time he went tumbling, legs waving in the air like a turtle turned on his back. It was fully a minute before Cy- clops had recovered enough again to attempt a rescue of Zaharias, but when finally he arose he had plenty of assistance. Ralph Mondt, brother of the more celebrated Toots Mondthe'ephofle Leaguer Hangs and one of the stockholders in the rassling racket, stepped through the ropes to quell Dusek, followed by Bumps Turner, brother of Joe, the local promoter. They were joined by several employes of the Turner corporation, two of whom teamed up with Mondt and Bumps against Rudy, who was dumped unceremoniously to| the canvas and pounded upon by the quartet. Mondt fell across Rudy's shoulders while Bumps Turner grab- bed a leg split and the others made | themselves generally useful. Dusek Is Disqualified. T WAS several minutes before the fight returned to the gasping Zaharias after he finally was lib- erated, but when he was ready to| continue George was presented the match by Burns, who announced that | he had disqualified Dusek. Despite | his being awarded the victory, Za- | harfas was all hot and bothered, and | another quartet of stage hands was | needed to stem George's proposed rush at Dusek in the opposite corner. | Not until one of Maj. Brown's cop-; pers rushed into the ring waving a | billy was quiet restored and the hefties persuaded to leave the ring without | 1JARMAN IS HAILED committing further mayhem. The time was 29 minutes. | If a modern rassle show is as good as it is rough, last night’s fea- ture at the Auditorium was a classic. In the wild affair, in which Dusek finally earned dis- qualification, the ulti- mate in the bone-bend- ing business was -ap- proached, as this typical scene indicates. Here George Zaharias has Rudy’s neck in the ropes, with the disapproving referee, Cyclone Burns, trying to effect the re- lease of the victim as Zaharias makes a vio- lent eflort to shove the arbiter aside. ’ Mat Maneuvers Marked by Modified Mayhem AS DUCKPIN GREAT . Up All-Events Record in City Tourney. AUL JARMAN of the C. & P.| Ellis and Woolton. 66X, $8 Here are the final winners in the ashington women's duckpin tourna- | ment: $5: Minson. 34° Shugrue and_Gulli, o c b ;(amw and Previe : “fl:: League w; offman an 107y Telephone gue was hailed Pux and Brown. Limerick and a today as a bowling great fol- | lowing & performance at the | | Columbia 1last night in which he | smashed to smithereens the class A | all-events records of the Washington City Duckpin Association. | Needing 361 to eclipse the mark | established by the illustrious veteran, | Earl McPhilomy, the C. & P. Tele- | phone shooter banged the maples for & 404 singles set to make his nine- game score 1,201, which topped Mc- Philomy's mark by 44 pins. Starting with 371 in team, Jnmnn added 426 in the doubles and then | climaxed his rolling with the 404 which incidentally places him fourth | in class A singles. He and Bill Wolfe of the Masonic League hold fourth place in class A doubles with 755, With Convention Hall Jarman aver- ply, Teams—Kann's. [ erass” Administration, 1 ) O A All Events. hd o Cll(:‘D Aun Pord Gidrick N3N. $% Class E, Friedricis, S3'and cub. Class C. 1.48 1405, 8 o s zan. W Ricker 305, $6; Stine; 305 "B. Prebie. 208, $1. HE gap between the par- Burnett. Greene, Rippy, Hayes, Fuchs, Yoder, Harvey [ o, Poubles—Miller and Kauffman., 614, | $14 Perry_and Pulton. 5ui. S8. Yarneli | ana’ Ford, 58i. Class D. 1.378, $25 Technical Staff, : McGoldrick. Teams—Hyvattsville Bantist, S5 | Personnel, 9. $5. SinglesA. Ford. 4. Helm. 1370 | Sotdrici and Rouse. Class E Teams_—Lands Duvision. 1.31% $15; 302, S1 16 Dunkan, 269, $5: Mahoney. Doubles—Joyce and Totien. 528. $6: Priedrichs and uter. Merchandise prizes will be awarded to | the_following Class A hig —- 134 eame, 9 h game. Quisley. 14¢ same, P. Ford rawy. i¢h_game. M. C. Cox. 151: flat Class C—Hieh game, high set, Bensinker game. F‘;lm’hme_ M. Harris al Lauer, 91| draw) Class D—High game. Armstrong. 114: Ligh set. G. Miller, 306, flat game, V. Pisher, 89 |, Class E—High & Crawford. 108 | high set. Svencer, flat game, M | Tucke; Iy Prizes will be awarded at Arcadia al- leys Saturday. May 11, 8 p.m. ‘Woodmont Cards Pre sage Par-Busting Year Ch adays and whip out a round of goif 1BG GATE 15 SEEN FOR GARDEN SHOW Age Against Him, Tony Must Win Quickly or Not at All, Say Experts. | BY BOB CAVAGNARO, Assoclated Press Sports Writer. EW YORK, May 10.—A new lightweight boxing champion will be crowned tonight when the veteran Tony Canzoneri, & former wearer of the crown, and youthful Lou Ambers met at 15 rounds in Madison Square Garden. They will battle for the throne abdicated by Chicago's Barney Ross, who announced some time ago he no longer could make the weight limit of 135 pounds. Advance sale of tickets indicates the fight will attract close to 19,000 capacity, with the receipts about $50,000. Ambers rules the betting-odds choice at 9 to 5. The Herkimer, N. Y., hurricane’s youth and sturdiness popularly are figured too strong for Canzoneri to break down the walls of tradition and become the first former lightweight title holder ever to regain his crown. Tony Must Be Quick. GAINST so young and aggressive A an oppcaent, Canzoneri, with 125 fights behind him and win- ner of the title in 1930 when he knocked out Al Singer, must get his man early or, as the fistic fraternity sees it, “get ‘git’ himself.” After conceding eight years to his | rival, the one thing seen in Tony's | favor is the fact that he’s a harder | hitter than Ambers. At 29 years old and after 10 year's of campaigning, | Canzoneri’s legs aren’t the Gibraltars they were a few years ago. But he | still packs a punch, as evidenced by his final tune-up bout in Pittsburgh two weeks ago when he stowed away Eddie Zivic in the seventh round. Ambers has proved his ability to “take it.” He was stung by Sammy Fuller two months ago and then took the decison in a fight that won him the indorsement of the New York State Athletic Commiss It named him the “man to beat” before claim could be made to Ross’ relinquished championship. ‘The 21-year-old Herkimer fighter, |who not so long ago was a former | sparriag partner and admirer of Can- zoneri, is a human windmill, on the order of the late Harry Greb. RACKETERS ORGANIZE | Public Parks and Capital City Leagues Meet Tonight. Organization meetings will be held by the Public Parks and the Capital [cnv tennis leagues tonight at the Kaleidoscope, Connecticut avenue and | Calvert street. Both sessions will start at 8 o'clock. | Plans also will be made for the eity of Washington tourney, which starts \Mly 18. In addition to leading play- | ers who performed last year, David | Jones, former Columbia University and Oxford luminary, ranked in the |nm 10 nationally a few years ago, _|and Hugh Lynch, former intercol- | legiate luminary with Princeton, plan | to compete. allenging Pitt and Peacock. looks as if scoring is picking up. The Pitt-Peacock combination is . " " 1 that might leave Pitt and Peacock e scnael bove,”emmors ey prasa | this country. the P. M.'C. unit will | war Gefeated. the Gommissioners, | Dy aimile GUS” Sonnenbers. o8 $Xc | aeed 120 for half the ‘season which I o X ouer Yeats | oundering far in the rear. Lasi | in for a rough year of it, snd there costly. The score: [ Bt e strengih. asaling M’;‘; TeY| Post Office and Smithsonian |jocal rassiing. ymee roed o Ge | in itself stamped him u topnotcher 2 year they couldn't do it. Pitt and | may be a new flock of names grac- } M. r AB Sk “ellen, Maj. ’;lu'c Arnold, M‘ 4.' -! teams, respectively, yesterday in | por the semi-wind-up, sannenberg.ox merit. ¢ t Based on the scores made Peacock stood out above the crowd ing the headlines, provided the . 3 0°3 % | “C. Square” Smith and ‘j'u 0€, the Departmental Tennis League. .o tnjured soclier I the week b b Clarence Taft, winner of the first| 1 the woodmont tournament, so far that whenever they entered boys keep on knocking par for & 10 Swing in the mallet tussle. jeut. Among Navy players were Robison, foh Evening Star Yuletide toumnment.‘ 2 h a tournament they almost were loop as they have started to do. 1y | C. H. Reed is the Army reserve. Ad-| Hancock, Caldu, Burton, Old, Clif- | Tatch 8t },:‘ng’“" Conn., and in his| turned in a brilliant 406 to assume first | ¥here much of the golfing elite of | £ 0HmECH alongtsmcnlicre near 1 mission to the match will be free. ford, Gibbons and Goldstein, In |Dgce Dick I e:;g"-“’“l;‘m:c‘:::;‘:'“fl | place in Class B Singles, while on the | Washington showed their wares, | (pefng). . 00 «J Announcement was also made here | orstate used Morris, Doyle, Thur- after 23!, minutes when a butt by | o€, aleys with him L. J. Falck tied | and none of the really good ones But the worst is yet to come. PANAMAS 1 ¢ ¢ |that the Army Central Polo Co-| tell, Stratton, Lyon, Bingham, | jeske onenad A out oves! the touxl); with Dutch Sherbahn for second place, | pisseq the first flight, the scrap When Billy Dettweiler, Gene Vin- i o fr',lemumm s‘i:":: ‘:am:‘:;":‘c‘:;‘e;; Johmtowl'l. Pfle?l' Pauls lflge tsl::l- Californian's _eye and dazed him | " '® 40% for tournament honors around z‘g‘ and Maury Nee and Dick Lunn ALEG;I.&RANWSS 3 vens. ar’s players were L, | enough in firing their shots at the rest n e 0 to send a squad to Washington 0| Gore, Breckinridge, Babbitt, Wil- | fan " allow Meske to score a Ollie Clark Is Tied. Washington this year is going tobe | o (he local links paraders par is Made New Again D rotals 53 83 TE ot 3179 TiTs | L A Dicked team from Fort Myer| son, ' Ramsey, Bentley, Driscoll, | I the preliminaries Walter Un. LLIE CLARK was tied at 401 by | Ughter than v, ior where in | due for a shellacking like none the e | % Betheads-Chevy Chase. 200 110 031 g | IeT 10 the season. Waggoner and Hoover. Holding |gerhill tossed Charley Allen in 18 George Simms of Alexandria for | 9ter _vears lads lke Harry PUL | olq gent has taken in many a year. Cleaning and | « Maryland Freshmen.. 103 050 01x—10 Runs—Wheeler, Surgent (?). McCarthy E: Hurley, Steiner. R. hneider. Putnam (%) Johnson. McLeod. Harris. Errors—Wheeler, an, Steiner, Fulks. Putnam es.Three-base hits—Wheeler. erner. Two-base hits—Wheeler, Sacrifices—McCarthy, Bryant, Stolen hses—SnrunL ("l. % Carthy, Bryant. Hurl 3 Surgent to Whieler o McCarthy: to Wheeler to McCarthy. Lelt on bases— Maryl Freshmen. 7: Bethesda-Chevy Bases_on balis—Off Steiner 4, Struck out_—By Seiner. by James, 4. — Duley. 4 in '3 lnnlnl oft 3 § innings: off Bryant.'0 in % ‘inning. pitched ball—By James _(Surgent. Bleimer). Passed ball—Engan:. Wid Bitc ~—Steiner. Winning pitcher—Steiner. Mat Matches + . By the Associated Press. CAMDEN, N. J.—Paul Boesch, 220, C New York, won on disqualification * from Emil Dusek, 212, Omaha; Stanley ~ Pinto, 211, Nebraska, defeated Andy Rascher, 210, Indianapolis; Fred * Grubmier, 210, Towa, defeated John Katan, 215, Toronto. PORTLAND, Me.—Maurice Du- charme, 200, PFrance, defeated Pat Schaeffer, 203, California; Duck Jones, 195, New York, defeated Ted Germaine, 200, Boston; Tarzan Tay- lor, 180, Bangor, and Harry Katron, 175, Boston, drew. vermanEne Bernard Injured, Monday Fight Off HAND injury to Roger Bernard, hard-hitting Chicago feather- weight, has forced Match- maker Goldie Ahearn to cancel the scheduled Bernard-Al Roth boxing matoh for next Monday at the Washington Auditorium. No show will be held next week, Ahearn an- nounced. et esawEnupn - AR RA ARk AR Ak Ak ke kA Ak dAk FREE INSTRUCTION CHILDREN SWIMMING CLASS B ~ - - » ¥ ’ » . » . v 3 SATURDAY AT 10 AM. H Newest Sensation : IMPS GIVEN AWAY H Admission, 25¢ ¢ AMBASSADOR : . SWIMMING POOL - Fights Last Night By the Associated Press. ERIE, Pa.—Maxie Straub, 138, Erie, outpointed Johnny Jadick, 1392, Philadelphia (10); Jimmy Dean, 138’2 Erie, stopped Tommy Hudson, 1293, Cleveland (5); Tony Gamble, 126, Erie, stopped Puggy Downs, 12513, Dunkirk, N. Y. (2); Johnny Russo, 131, Erie, outpointed Pete Rosatti, 132, Cleveland (6). DURHAM, N. C.—Norment Charles, Durham, outpointed Steve Smith, Bridgeport, Conn. (10, lightweights); Red Lewis, 164, Richmond, knocked out Arnold Tarr, 160, Lincolnton (6). MIAMI BEACH.—Carl Guggino, 1252, Tampa, outpointed Jose Santos, 128, New York (10); Benny O'Dell, 191, Syracuse, N. Y., outpointed Joe Lipps, Charlotte, FENCERS T0 CLASH. A fencing bout between Lieut. R. W. Mayo, former Olympic swordsman, end Lieut. John Honeycutt, U. 8. A., will be a feature of the University Club’s last stag night of the season to be staged tonight. Brooke Johns, George O'Connor and Matt Horne also will entertain. BALTZ IN BOAT RACE. Wi will be represented in the Albany-to-New-York motor boat marathon on Sunday by Eddie Balts, veteran yachtsmi BRAKES RELINED 4 Wheels Complete FORD ¢ g+ (28 to "34) or CHEVROLET (’30 to *32) Other Cars Porportionately Low ENERAL BRAKE SERVICE 903 N ST N.W. DE.5483 forth for the Commissioners were McNulty, H. Ransdell, Paxton, Hart, Smith, Lyford, Norris, P. Ransdell, Simpson and Grabill. Post Office used Riddick, Neilson, Shreve, Kause, Davidson, Sillers, Bursley, Whitney and Gable. Smithsonian's players were H. Dorsey, W. Dorsey, Fitch, Tolman, Bryant, True, Gilbert, Witman, Butman and Springer. Blue ribbon winners at the 1915 National Capitol Horse Show were Capt. William Mitchell, A. W. At- kinson, E. T. Stotesbury, Arthur White, Judge William H. Moore, E. B. McLean, John L. Bushnell and Capt. W. W. Whiteside. Bert Gallia, Washington pitcher, worked well against the Athletics yesterday, but lost his game by 5-3. Brooke (Untz) Brewer, St. Al- ban’s School, won the individual cup in the Tome School track meet, capturing the 100 and 220 dashes and the 220-yard hurdles. His team, with 34 points, finished second in team scoring to ‘Tome, which won its own meet. Central High, Washington, with 20, took third honors. Carter was the only other St. Alban’s boy to figure in the scoring. Other com- petitors representing Washington schools who scored were Wingate, Speidel, Milstead, Barrett, Maxam, Birthright, Gates, Mobly, Taylor and Schoehan. Says the Pater I enjoy stepping out these nice BDflM dny: and, like minutes and Floyd Marshall and Tom Alley worked 30 minutes to a draw. F.E. 8. SCORE IN PIGEON RACE Dismer and McGann Have Fastest Bird in 250-Mile Race. Heading home a field of 90 birds an entry from the Dismer and McGann loft won a Washington Racing Pigeon Club race from Pulaski, Va., a dis- tance of 250 miles. Following is the order of finish with the average speed in yards a minute made by the first return to each loft: - Dismer and McGann, 1,132; Willlam Seymour 1,130.67; Dismer and McGann, 1,130.57; C. A. Linthicum, 1,130.33; D. R. Mathews, 1,130; Donald Adams, 1, 129! Lewis Eberle, 1,123; Neitzey and Reinhardt, 1,118; Riley A. Huntt, 1,117; Rudy Worch, 1,116.15; O. A. Salmons, 1,116.14; Robert Bird, 1,109; Moore and Vendig, 1,101; John E. Pres- ton, 1,092: Joseph Goddard, 1084; B. F. Miller, 1,081; A. W. Scheuch, 1,052; P. E. Schmidt, 1,038; Harry Fairbanks, no report. the lead in Class C singles. Charlie Walson performed brilliantly with & 408 to take third place in Class A singles. The New Center Market shooter chalked up 143, 159 and 106. Of the 14 teams representing the major and minor leagues of Northeast Temple Shorty’s Market walked off with the top score of 1,701. George Honey was the high individual, with 376. Tonight marks the close of the silver anniversary event after three weeks of rolling. Galt Davis, Rosslyn Inde- pendent League is scheduled. ROOSEVELT, WESTERN FACE. Roosevelt, the lone undefeated team in the public high school base ball championship series, was to engage Western this afternoon in the Eastern Stadium at 3:30 o'clock. Western lost to Tech in $he series opener. Roose- velt defeated Central. BLAIRS NOSED OUT. National Training School base ball- ers topped the Montgomery Blair High nine, 12 to 10, yesterday on the win- and Roger Peacock were stand- outs, moving like steam rollers over any and all opposition, today, if you can judge by the Woodmont Jjoust, there are several lads who can move as fast as these two tried and true links performers. The boys who in past years were the underdogs have moved up with the favorites and it looks as if it is going to take more golf this year than ever before to win in the forthcoming Chevy, Chase and Manor Club links wars, ‘Take fellows like Volney Burnett, Hickman Greene, Claude Rippy, W. F. Hayes, Louis Fuchs, Levi Yoder and tall Bill Harvey. Any one of them can crack down now- SOH BALL LOOP mms A meeting of the District Soft Ball League was to be held today at 4:30 o'clock in the Playground Department office, Municipal Building. Fuse and Assembly blanked Plant- ing and Polishing, 11-0, and First Au- prentices shut out Metallurgical, 1-0, yesterday in the Navy Yard Soft Ball ners’ diamond. LOOK AT THAT SOLE. See the others STACY-ADAMS SHOES [ J Edmonston J/AND COMPANY, INC. my craft, always wayit’sscooped out at the back. That’s TURF RIDER’S sccret. When the old t endorsement TUR! RIDER WOODS. He .used them exclusively. The famous dodo shot was made with a TURF RIDER NO. 4 SPOON. “Never,” he says, “bave I hit firmer shots.” SPORTING GOODS CO. WILSON Serazen is retained on Wilson's Field Testing Staff Chicago, New York and other leading cities Carl M. Bets, Mgr, 612 13th 8t N.W. GOLF League. nnoemwmnm(mellmen Tourna- of EQUIPMENT None of the four mentioned were entered in the Woodmont tourney and yet the scoring level was lower by far than ever before in any links joust at the picturesque little course out Bethesda way. When you get four gents all shooting 72s to tie for the medal you have seen considerable golf, and when it takes 79 to make the first flight on such a tough golf course it BALCRANK Lubrication Equipment SALES AND SERVICE LS. JULLIEN.Inc. 1443 P St. N.W. No. 8076 HEALTH! Esslinger’s improves your health in three ways. Improves your digestion. Gives you energy. Improves your nerves. Insist on pure, wholesome Esslinger’s. GOOD OLD stingers ®The Tasty Way to Health” Blocking Sciel lethods VlENNA HAT CO. Salt Water FISHING ® Bamboo Salt-Water Fishing Rod —A quatine guides, dou- ble grip, locked in reel seat; 515 feet long. Join The Hecht Co. Fishing Contest. De- tails in Sports Dept. Complete Fishing Tackle. (8ports Dept.—Main Floor.) The Hecht Co

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