Evening Star Newspaper, July 14, 1935, Page 29

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SPORTS. THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., JULY M4, 19 35—PART ONE. SPORTS. B—9 Horseshoe Flippers Start Tomorrow : W. C. C. Wins Middle States Canoe Title Jarrell Out to Dethrone EVI FLESHMAN, husky ice man of Rogers Heights, a defense of the first major title at| stake in the seventh annual Evening wood, Fleshman will battle the| strongest field ever assembled in | a favorite to win for a third time in a row the State championship. of Brentwood directing. Entries will be received up to starting time. concluded Tuesday night. On Wed- | nesday evening the courts will be formers of the metropolitan area will tangle. In the “main bout” of lmsr and Bill Moore, a newcomer to Wash- ington, who won fame as a horse- Maryland Champion in “suburb” of Bladensburg, to- Star horseshoe championships. Maryland but despite the class of | Competition will start at 7:30 The tournament will be played out given over to a series of special con- card will be Clayton C. Henson of | shoe pitcher in the Middleswest, n} FLESHMAN FIRST Star’s Tournament. L morrow night will begin the On the four, town courts of Brent- | several outstanding rivals he will be o'clock with Mayor W. N. Mahaffey tomorrow night to the semi-finals and tests in which some of the leading per- | Arlington, Va., metropolitan champion hotbed of the game. Jarrell Plays Saunders. ANOTHER contest of particular in- | terest will bring together Halr)l Saunders, the District titleholder, and | ‘Temple Jarrell, University of Mary- land student, who won the District | intercollegiate title this Summer in | en Evening Star event. Jarrell re- | cently scored a clean sweep over Saunders in the Metropolitan Smglea' League, and became the second pitcher in more than six years LO‘ present Saunders with a coat of | whitewash. The former Westminster | College athlete and the long-legged | Old Liner are expected to be among | the leading contenders for the| Metropolitan title, which combines | C John Long of Washington Canoe Club taking single-blade event in Middle Atlantic meet here yester= day. HUTSON IS LEADER 1 INGRID BALLOTING Alabama End Totals 38, 548 Votes—Minnesota Men in Running. By the Associated Press HICAGO, July 13—Don Hut- son, Alabama's All-America end. was the top vote-getter during the first week of the poll to select a team of college all- stars to battle the Chicago Bears at Soldier PField August 29, piling up a 38,578 total. More than 200,000 votes have already been cast. more than were recorded in the complete ballot last year. The Alabama ace, who caught the passes from Dixie Howell which wrecked | Stanford in the Rose Bowl last New Year day, gained 21,470 votes over- night to slip past Frank Larson, Min- nesota’s all-America flanker, into first place again. Larson had 37,936. Phil Bengtson, another Minnesota | star, regained first place among the| the ringer-throwing rule of Maryland, Virginia and the District. Four players will be seeded in the Maryland tournament. They are | Fleshman, Jarrell, Ed Kruse and Joe | Merryman, the last-named a former State champion. On Thursday night will begin the Virginia tournament, with George C. ‘Thompson’s courts at Falls Church the scene of action. Here the defend- ing champion will be Deadpan Ray- ! mond Frye of Orkney Springs, the expressionless young man who was the sensation of last year's Evening Star tournament. Unheralded, he | swept through the Virginia event, | and lasted to the final of the Metro- politan play-off, where he was con- | quered by Henson. | Washington Tourney Tough. ' A REPETITION of Frye's 1934 tri- | umph is expected in the Old| Dominion battle, but he may find the going a lot tougher in the Metm-1 politan. Every star that reached the big event last year has improved and some new talent has appeared, Bill Moore being notable among the latter. | Five players each from Washington | and Maryland and six from Virginia | will make up the field in the metro- | politan, these being the survivors o! State competition. The semi- flna.lLsLs‘ will qualify and a consolation round among the defeated quarter-finalists | will determine the fifth place in each | group. Henson, as defending cham- pion, automatically will be qualified. He will not compete in the Virginia tournament. The Washington pitchers will swing 1nto action a week from tomorrow and the metropolitan play-off will fol- low their contest. ‘The keenest battle for the Wash- ington title since the tournament was inaugurated seven years ago is ex- pected, with Saunders, Moore, Roy Wilson, Raymond Brown and half & dozen or more others in the thick of it. IN THE meantime the Municipal Playground Department is rushing plans for a city-wide tournament that ‘will include preliminaries on virtually all its grounds. Saunders is organiz- ing this as a new member of the play- ground staff. The preliminaries will be started on July 29 with two weeks allowed to finish them. The winners | will carry on into eight sectional play- | offs and the sectional victors will shoot for city honors. All recognized stars will be barred. There will be two classes, one for adults and the other for boys 15 years old and under. Saunders last night named the fol- lowing grounds where preliminaries will be held: Burrough _(schoob). % o Eighteenth and onroe streets northe Chevy "Chiase, Forty-first and Livingston ts. Guilinger, Twenty.first and P strects, 8 feld, Becond and F streets southeast. eornwwn Thirty-third and Volta {Smilton. Hamilton street. between Thirteenth_and Fourteenth streets. Happy Hollow. Eighteenin and Kalo- Tama roa Hoover, Second and N streets southwest. Kenilworth Recreation Center. Kenil- worth avenue and Ord street northeast. McMillan, First and Bryant streets. oy Jitehell " Park. Twenty-third and ‘Nontrose, Thirtieth and R streets. New York Avenue, First and New York Warder and Otis_streets. Ninth, Madison and Longfellow aureets Potomac. tomac avenue. between z'nmeenm and Poutieenth sireets south- ast. Raymond, Tenth and Spring road, Rosedale, =~Seventeenth and ~Kramer streets norihea: mnth. Tenth, P and G streets north ma. Patk Fourth, Fifth, Whittler and’ Van Baren meeu Thomson (school), Twelfth and L Fourteenth and Taylor Avenue, Ninth. Eleventh and ““Eighteenth ~ snd Newton stree ‘Barnard, Fifth and Decatur streets. dnflo‘% e Forty-second and Benning ;:‘Blrhnk\ ne ‘Tenth and Monroe streets Bucharian, E strest, between Thirteenth and_Fourteenth streets southeas! Cong: ‘n Hlaihla Nichols lvenu! be- tween 'th and Congress road southeast. H. D. Cooke, Seventeenth and Euclid strects. Carcnrln. Twenty-eighth and Olive Dell Junior Hllh Thirty-eighth place and Davenport stree! Eaton. Thirty- froeth and_Lowell strests. Eckington Recreation Center. Second and Lincoln road northeast. Fairbrother ~ Tenth and E streets southwest. o Fllimore. Thirty-ffth. between R and LT fiara: Fozhalt rosd and Volia place. fth and K streets. B Ry seventn and Tiden streets. Henry-Polk. Seventh and P streets. Janney. ‘Wisconsin avenue and Albe- marle street 'J:flersnn, Blllh and D streets south- Johnson. Hiatt place and hmontl:zr:d rects Key. Cohflu" road and Danni nmnn. Fourteenth and K streef DO veite, Northampton street and ) ot Bratien T dlow. Sxth A5A G streets nertheast, | Playground Dates Set. c View. ERitlipy. “Eiehth 2y Hearst, | leader. | Win Two-Man Challenge Contest tackles with a 35947 total, to 33,584 | for Bill Lee of Alabama, yesterday's Bill Began, still another of the Gopher battle front, regained the | lead in the voting for guards. His total, 34.963, moved him from second to fir: | place. Regis Monahan of Ohio State, | the top guard yesterday, dropped to third with 33,784, behind Charlie Marr of Alabama, who had 33,988. Shotwell Tops Centers. EORGE SHOTWELL, Pittsburgh center, jumped from fourth place back into the lead over the pivot can- didates, with 32,784. Michigan, third yesterday, took second place at 31.316. Elwood Kalbaugh of Princeton, who headed the division yesterday, was third with 29,975, and Jack Robinson of Notre Dame, the Jerry Ford of ' Canoeing Proves Pleasing in Many Ways Kitty Wells, Trudie Lahman, Eleanor Wasser and Frances Gil- lette mmgling with the uupluu ‘SAVOLDI SEEKING O'MAHONEY BOUT {Would Defeat Sonnenberg Here to Get Match With New Mat King. OE SAVOLDI ought to get a home here. He is coming to the Cap- 1 previous runner-up, had 28,748 for fourth. Irvine (Cotton) Warburton of South- | ern California recaptured first place in the quarterback department by the scant margin of 33,614, to 33,187 for Jack Beynon of Ilinois. Duane Purvis | | of Purdue had 33824 votes to keep the lead over Dixie Howell at half- back. Howell had 32,177. Stan Kostka Minnesota’s powerful fullback, con- | tinued to lead at his position with 36,478, to 34,637 for Izzy Weinstock of Pittsburgh. STINE SMITH PULL SHOTGUN SURPRISE at Benning—Fawsett-Morgan Three Points Behind. A “DARK HORSE” combination of Dr. A. B. Stine and Maj. Jullan Smith won the two-man challeng match over the traps of the Washing- ton Gun Club yesterday with a score of 93 out of 100. The Fawsett- Morgan pair landed in second place, three points behind the winners. Forced to withdraw at the last minute the place of Dr. Lyon, who was to have shot with Marcey, was taken by Walter Wilson, who broke a creditable 45. H. H. Shelton won the club trophy on the first 50 with a straight run of 35. After the match | it was decided to stage a registered shoot on July 27. Yesterday's scores: 5" Qfi Woe “Plotessional, “score did Hor. count shoot. Stine-Smith Fawsett-Mori Marcey-Wilson. B SSetton- -Wynkoop. 90 Parsons-Livesey _ 86 89 Emmons-Britto Macfarland Junior High. lows avenue mfimfi'z’r‘.’.‘”xfi"'f th and Ellicott, streets. SSlkth and Ellicott stree Noves. Tenth~ and’ Frankim sireets norteast, Orr. Twenty-second and Prout streets southeast, | Faul junior High. Eighth and Ogle- thorpe street: “Shepherd _strest. between Eighth and’ Georgla avenue. Calvert Thirty-ninth Junlo{ High, Fourth and E 8t streets northe Truesdell. Ninth and Ingraham streets. Van Buren. W street, between Thir- mmh and Fourteenth streets southeast. ‘Weightman, Twenty-third and M streets. Wheatiey, Montelio avende and® Neale streets northeast. Saunders will be assisted by Arthur A. Greene, physical director of the Twelfth Street Y. M. C. A, who will direct play on the colored grounds, which follow: Banneker Recreation Center, Eighth and Euclid_streets. Barry Farms, Nichols avenue, Ana- cotils, 7p, & ardoto. Mirst and T etrests southwest. Stowera Fifts and W' strests. Lincoln, Sixth and L streets southeast. Logan, Third and G streets northeast. Monroe, Columbia road. between Geor- sla_and Sherman avenu Payne (school) Fiftecnth and C streets southeast, (Eose Fark. Twenty-seventh and O stri eets. Waiker Stadium (school). Pirst street. between N and O streets, Toe Wiilow Tree, JThird, Fourth, B and C streets southwest. Banneker, Third and K streets. | Burrville, between | Hayes street and Bell place northeast. rummell. Gallaudet Kendall and Providence_streets northeast. Francis Junio® High, Twenty-fourth and N streets Garfleld. Twenty-fifth street and Ala- bama averiue southeast Lovejoy, Twelfth and D streets north- east. Montgomery. Twenty-seventh street. be- tween I and K streets. treet, | between Champlain street. een Twenty- seventh and Tvent;-euhth " Streets. Shlv Jllnlor Seventh and Rhode guvenA ‘l‘nmw-lnl between K and Wllk:.r Stadium, First, between N and and L s | served with the major at West Point. ital next Thursday night for the third time this Summer to | show his wrestling wares at Griffith Stadium. This time, Gus Sonnenberg instead of Jack Donovan will be the | former Notre Dame foot bail star’s op- ponent. Joe will try his “drop-kick” against | the one-time Dartmouth gridironer’s | “flying tackle” in an effort to prove | that he—Joe—and not Gus should be | the one to take on Danno O'Mahoney, new king of the mat world, in a bout | at the ball yard some time during the outdoor wrestling campaign here. Sonnenberg is the big boy who really paved the way to the entrance of the collegiates into the wrestling | racket. Gus got into the game in the 20s and brought it out of the rut when he unexpectedly upset Strangler Lewis, | who had been regarded invincible. There will be a lot of heft in the semi-final of the Thursday show, with 315-pound Tor Johanson tackling 240- pound Mike Mazurki. Donovan and Rube Wright, recent topliners here, are reduced to preliminary parties. Donovan will meet Ed Meske and Wright will try to overturn Bill Mid- dlekauf. —_ DODGE PUTS FAITH IN OBSCURE PILOT Hubert Lucker of Detroit Named to Drive The Impshi in Gold Cup Contest. By the Associated Press. LAKE GEORGE, N. Y., July 13— Hubert Lucker, comparatively un- known pilot from Detroit, will drive the Impshi, owned by Horace Dodge, in the thirty-second running of the Gold Cup championship here July 27. It will be Lucker's first competition in the classic. George Reis of Bolton Landing will defend the coveted trophy he won last year on the same 2%z-mile course. Among other boats expected to com- pete are Notre Dame, built this year for Herb Medelsohn of the Detroit ‘Yacht Club; Hotsy Totsy III, entered by V:cwr W. Kleisrath of South Bend, ; Delphine II, joint entry of Horace Dodge and Bill Horn of the Detroit Yacht Club, and the Scotty Too, owned by Sam Dunsford of Con- | cord, N. H. SASSE SIGNS CARIDEO Former Notre Dame Star to Aid at Mississippi State. ATLANTA, July 13 (#)—The en- gagement of Frank Carideo, former Notre Dame all-America .quarterback, as an assistant coach was announced today by Maj. Ralph Irvine Sasse, one- time West Point mentor and now head coach at Mississippi State College. Carideo will report September 2 and become a full-time aide, Sasse said, helping with the development of back- field material besides specializing in coaching the kickers. The former Notre Dame star will round out Sasse’s staff, which also in- cludes Capt. Ross Mackechnie, for- merly head coach at Mississippi State, and Capt. John Stokes, line tutor, who e L0G CANOE TROPHY. EASTON, Md., July 13.—The an- nual Miles River Yacht Club regatta, o be held here August 8-10, will honor Capt. John B. Harrison, builder of many Chesapeake Bay log canoes. A trophy named for the captain will be o Ry Tvents-fourth snd Benning road northeast presented the winner of a race for the canoes, L3 | record made by Johnny Weissmuller, This quartet, E. Rodman, Rich- ard Ackad, Harry Knight and John Long. gained The Star Trophy by | Seattle; All-America Swimming Relay Sets U. S. 80 By the Associated Press. OS ANGELES, July 13.—Anx al'- America swimming relay guar- tet today bettered the United States record for £00 meters at the Southern Pacific aquatic meet at Los Angeles Swimming Stadium. ‘The time was 9 minutes 2 2-10 sec- onds. ‘The team, composed of Jack Medica, Ralph Flanagan, Florida; John Macionis, Yale, ard Jimmy Gilhula, Southern California, clipped 18 seconds off the forme: American Kojac, Clancy and Laufer in 1927. 0-Meter Record ‘The invading swimmers defeated the Los Angeles quartet by nearly half the length of the 50 meter pncl, but the mercury swimmers, Herb Cartells, | Paul Wolf, Art Lindegren and Bob| Boals, also broke the old record, being | clocked in- 9 minutes 19 seconds. Cled Smiley, unattached, won the! 100-meter breastroke for women in| 1 minute 33.1 seconds, beinz followed | by Margaret Matchinske of San Diego and Iris Cummings of the Los Angeles A C The spectators thrilled to the per- formance of Russell Branch of Olney- ville, R. I, who out-touched Taylor Drysdale of Detroit to win the 100-meter backstroke event by less than six inches. Daniel Zehr of Northwestern was third, while Ken McNicholls of the Los Angeles A. C. finished fourth. Branch’s time of 1 minute 11 sec- onds was more than three seconds slower than the world record of 1 minute 8.6 seconds, held by Jasaji Kiyokawa of Japan. PRO GRIDDER IS KILLED Kelsch Is Victim of Crash With‘ | Jackson, Former Mate. PITTSBURGH, July 13 (#)—Crist (Mose) Kelsch, the 40-year-old back- | field ace of the Pittsburgh Pirates’ national pro foot ball team, was killed today in an automobile collision. Kelsch, a graduate of the sandlot gridirons, was known as one of the | greatest kickers in foot ball. He was driving to his Summer cot- | tage at nearby Ingomar, when his car | | collided with one driven by Edward A. Jackson, 32, who once was a team- mate of Kelsch. Jackson was held in i $1,000 bail. SCHUMACHER STINGY. In his first 16 games this season— | resulting in 13 victories, two defeats | and a tie—Hal Schumacher of the| | Gants allowed an average of 6%; hits | per game, e taking the senior quadruple single- blade contest but they also helped pile up points in other competi= Knight is holding the cup. ~—Star Stafl Photos. tion. D.C. TRACK CLUB MEETS MIDDIES 'A. A. U. and College Stars' Will Visit Annapolis Next Saturday. Tower of Babel Mat Program Offered by Legion Tomorrow T THE foot of Patterson’s Hill in Northeast Washington, A where lies the American Le- gion arena, there will be| something of the confusion of the| Tower of Babel should the wrestlers | who are to put on the veteran organ- uations first mat show of the season decide at one time to speak their na- | tive tongues. Frenchman, German, Swede, Ital- sists he originated it. Martin knows nothing of it, but that makes no dit- | ference to the Jewish colorbearer. Max always is willing to learn. The “Watch on the Rhine” will sound for the semi-final which will bring together Leo Wallick of Ger- | many and Maurice La Chappelle, deb- | onaire mat mixer from France. It will be Germany vs. Sweden in | one of the preliminaries and Germany EPRESENTED by an array of | {an and American will be among the | versus Italy in another. Hans Schnable collegiate and local A. A. U. | champlons, the Washington | ‘Track and Field Club will open its Summer season next Saturday | against the Naval Academy at Annapolis. Following dual meets with the Stone- wall Democratic Club, here and in Baltimore in early August, the local tracksters will travel to Reading, Pa., for the Chamber of Commerce meet. Bill Guckeyson, University of Mary- land star, set a shot put record and | was second in the discus in this meet last year. Will Meet Thursday. ALL competitors are asked to at- tend a meeting at the home of Coach Dorsey Griffith, 1416 Twentieth street, on Thursday night at 8 o'clock, when final arrangements for the Navy engagement will be discussed. Following is an incomplete list of men who will vie against the Middies: Vinny Fraatz, Bill Beers, Bob McCul- lock, Steve Grey, Bernie Lieb, Coleman Headley, Johnny Leirs, George Shorb, Jerry Looney, Dick Dunaj, Mike Norton, Bill Guckeyson, Edward Clem- ents, “Pop-eye” Karpowich, Cabell Chysinan and Lloyd Wyble. After Danno | 1ot of grab-and-grunt artists to en- gage in the five bouts on the pro- gram. The big bit of the show will be provided by Everett Marshall, champion in the Western sector of the United States, and Max Martin, claimant of the Jewish title. These huskies are to maul to a finish Marshall is understood to have in as the German-Irish flip. He in- who | bears the title of world heavyweight | reserve for this bout a hold known | | —he's & Deutscher—will mingle with Axel Madsen, and don’t call Axel a Norwegian. Count Carl von Zuppe, minus his monocle, will tackle Giuseppe Ferrone, Neapolitan baritone. An American gets a shot in an early limit bout. Eddie Pope, reformed chiropractor, will endeavor to prove it is much easier to twist backs than | snap them. He will practice on the vertebrae of Whitey Wahlberg, Rhine- lander. The grappling will begin at 8:30. ERNA KOMPA SETS BACKSTROKE MARK New York Girl Swims 220 Yards in 2:55.8 to Beat Sybil Bauer’s U. S. Record. [IBERTY, N. ¥, July 13 (P —Erna Kompa of the Women's Swimming Association, New York, created a new American mark of 2 minutes 55 8-10 seconds for the 220-yard backstroke swim over a 60-foot course in an aquatic carnival at the President Pool here today. Competing in a handicap race with Jean Kolinski, Central Association Champion, the 21-year-old Brooklyn girl gave away 9 seconds and finished second, but her time clipped 1 4-10 seconds off the record made by Sybil Bauer of Chicago in August, 1924. Earlier in the meet Miss Kompa in & 100-yard backstroke scratch event, defeated Miss Kolinski and her sister, Elizabeth Kompa, in 1:12.8. Janice Lifson, senior metropolitan diving champion from the Women's Swimming Association, proved her versatility by scoring in a 60-yard free style race. Dorothy Dickinson, 1932 Olympic competitor, found an 11-second handi- cap too much to overcome and was beaten by her W. S. A. clubmate, Elsie Ferrill, in a 440-yard free-style event. THIL WINS DECISION Welter Title Claimant Conquers Tunero in 15-Rounder. MARSEILLE, France, July 13 (#).— Marcel Thil of France, claimant to the world middleweight champion- JOE SAVOLDI Prospect of & match here with O’Mshoney, new mat king, will spur this “drop kick” exponent as he wrestles Gus Sonnenberg at Grifith Stadium flw. ship, tonight outpointed Kid Tunero of Cuba in & 15-round bout. ‘Thil weighed 15415, Tunero 152. Southern Association. Atlanta, 5; Knoxville, 4. New Orleans, 6; mnlhfln 5. Nashville, 4; Chattanoogs, 8. POLICE BOYS’ CLUBS GET RING COACHES 8id Silas and Walter Kirkwood |A Will Instruct Teams for Next Year's Bouts. ID SILAS and Walter Kirkwood have been obtained as trainers and instructors of the Police Boys' Club boxing teams which will enter the ring next season, it has been an- nounced by Morris Fox, assistant di- Tector of the Boys' Club. Silas will coach at No. 4 Club and Kirkwood at No. 5. An effort is being made to make boxing a part of the sports pro- gram at No. 11 Club. ‘Three boys who have been with the club since its inception recently have been crowned golden glove champions. El Brookman, jr., with 22 knockouts in one year of fighting, has been termed the “boy wonder,” being only 15 years old. Joe Petro, jr., at 100 pounds, has so tamed the opposition that his challenges go unanswered, while Ed Arnold, a silver glove winner at 70 pounds, is the most colorful boy boxer in the city. Ed Perussi, fight- ing at 147 pounds, recently stepped into a higher class to capture the pound division. Minor Leagues International. Syracuse, 7-5; Rochester, 2-T. Montreal, 5; Albaay, 4. American Association. Minneapolis, 9; Louisville, 7. Toledo, 7; Milwaukee, 5. Columbus, 6; Kansas City, 1. silver glove championship in the 160- | Uses New “Holt” EVERETT MARSHALL, Western mat favorite, expects to spring “German-Irish flip" on Max Martin tomorrow night at first American Legion-sponsored wesumg shou SWIMMING STARS |Figure KNIGHT RODMAN . DOMINATE: MEET in Six Victories. Host Club Home First Four Times in Row. BY BURTON S. HAWKINS. ALD-PATED Harry “Pop” Knight, 47-year-old canoeist, and carrot-topped Everett Rodman, national high-poing champion, did the expected in leading the Washington Canoe Club to an easy victory in the twelfth annual Middle States regatta yesterday on the Po- | tomae. Figuring in no less than six stirring triumphs over some of the best pad- | dlers in the East, Knight and Rod- | man flashed across the finish line ahead of Jim Burch and Ernie Millar, Potomac Boat Club, in the senior tan- | dem single-blade race, one of the fea- ture events of the day. Ebby Trilling and Jed Florence, | Washington Canoe Club, spurted in the final 50 yards to take the junior tandem double - blade event from teammates Dusty Rhodes and Russeil Swann in a hairline decision, cover- ing the half-mile route m 3:42ls. National Junior Diving Is High Spot at Glen Echo Tomorrow Night. NE of the foremost water | meets ever staged hereabouts | is scheduled for tomorrow night when more than 75 divers and swimmers wiii compete in | the United States women's junior | national high board diving champion- ship and D. C. A. A. U. water card at Crystal Pool, Glen Echo Park. Heading the local contingent of feminine mermaids is the popular and petite Marie Duval, District high and | low board champ and twice winner | of second position in junior national competition. Miss Duval will repre- sent the Shoreham A. C. Constance Renninger, lantic A. A. U. diving champion, who is only 17 years old, is regarded as a distinct favorite by many due to her recent victory over Edna Schuber, favor Marion Mansfield, Lake Shore A. C, Chicago. who won second place in the senior national at Chicago last year. Barbara Cook, Colonial Club, Jef: fersonville, Ind.. also holds enviabl records and will bear watching. Prizes Are Attractive. GOLD-PLATED sterling silver medal, emblematic of the junior championship of the United States, will be awarded the winner in the women's diving event, with silver and bronze medals going to | third place winners. In events for men gold, silver and bronze medals also will be presented to the first three. Officials have been announced as follows: Referee, Dick Newby: judges, Jerry Looney, Everett Ensley; timers Jim Sprigman, Karl Knight, Dallas Shirley; clerk of course, Jack Wilton; assistant clerk, Joe Lyman; an- nouncer, Joe Aronoff; diving judges Dick Newby, starter, Max Rote. Following is the complete list of entrants: 120-yard breast stroke. man_and Margaret n Helen Tichardson. Maryland A. C. 3 garet Rmell ‘Baltimore: Florence Peck and Lillian Gerstein, Ann d Helen Hersh 60-yard tree stvle (noyice)—Mary Zanil- loti. Mardi Chapman, Helen Fiett, Jane | Mana, Shoreham A. C.: Margare Baltimore: Kathleen Bolanz, | and Harriett Meverhoff, Ann Gni R!rlhbflt and Doris Andrews, m\ ylrd free style (boys)—Kenneth Ken. sella. Edward Griffin, Robert Boorman, Washington Y. M. C. A: Harvey Deril Prancis_Flanagan. Jnck Krenmer Wall, Myers, W. McGrath, Charles Kirby, North east Boys' Club; Blomberg and Harry Zukerman. Y. M. H. A.. Baltimore. 90-yard free style (men)—Robert per. George Gowman, Joseph Chesonts. | Kirisley, Baltimore Joe salle. A cM ham A George Huuw *Washingt Eugene Chandler, Maryla; Byron Carroll. Roy_ Mic! Boy:d Club Harrv 'roulm Vieimnesier. m"Abs bel. ‘Batimore ¥ M. B, ‘A 120-yard back stroke (mem)—Daniel N. Vandenberg, Frank ben H ¥ O Y. M. C. A. ub Gardens Northeast Washington ian Adler Mackes. hington Y. M. C. A. rg free style (men)—G. Boyce. < Kinsley, Baltimore Y. B A derwood, uhattached ‘me, Y. M. H. A, Baitimore. shall, unattached York.” Maryland Club 'Gardens: R. Floc Fred bam A. JIM LONDOS X-RAYED Examination of Ex-Mat Hurts Made in St. Louis. Londos, former heavyweight it was learned today. 27, when he lost his title to Dan O’Mahoney, Londos’ doctor said he had suffered two fractured ribs and other minor injuries during the event. 4.50x20 4.50x21 4.75x19 5.00x19 5.25x18 5.50x17 .. Pacific Coast. Oakland, 9; Seattle, 3. Portland, 12; Sscramento, 1. Missions, 10; Los Angeles, 7. Hollywood, 8; San Francisco, 7. INBIG MEET HERE ; ! Middle At-| second and | Carl Ahlenfeld, William Stephenson, | se Carl Ahlenfeld, Dallas | Shirley, Max Rote and Jim Orme, and T0R | Won by K Wei- | m Le- | nd Jul Ao e g Buow: Hog: Yirase:, Rortheast ‘Boys: ‘Ghub. ‘and_james Dive (men)—Robert Knight, John Mar- Harry Cranston and John Broaddus, Shore- King's ST. LOUIS, July 13 (#).—Jimmy stling leader, has undergone a series of X-ray | examinations at Barnes' Hospital since arriving in St. Louis early this week, Following his bout in Boston, June Long l-:u\ ¥ Victor. OHNNY LONG, home club entrant, ran away with the initial race of the program, the junior one-man single-blade contest, to send the Wash- imgmn Canoe Club into the scor{ng | lead which was never threatened, and Dick Acked continued to pile up points early in the regatta when he stroked to victory in the intermediate one-man single-blade race Not until the fifth event did the colors of the host club take a bow, Acked and Herman Vollmer being de- feated by Cimokowski and Krick of the Cacawa Canoe Club, Tacony, Pa., in the intermediate tandem singles blade contest Competing for The Evening Star Trophy, Harry Knight, Dick Acked, Johnny Long and Everett Rodman, Washington Canoe Club, stroked their way to a bitterly fought victory over the Cacawa quartet in the senior e-blade test. rst and second place winners in each event qualify for the national paddling championship to be held at Princeton next week. Rue and Bell gave the Philadelphia Canoe Club the tilting championship in the junior class, while Snell and McCauly poked the Washington Canoe Club to another win in the senior event Brooklyn Dragon Club ace, but others | i OR "ONE_MAN SINGLE BLADE__ Won by Long (W. C ond_ Krick Cacawa): third. Sch (Vb C. C). 4:i3 MEDIATE | ONE - MAN SINGLE C.C): second, rd: Dynes (Phila) MAN_SINGLE BLADE—. 2 3 ot (Cacawa). Time—4:07's NIOR TANDEM SINGLE BLADE— by Florence and Trilling (W. C. C): (W.C. Ci (Cacawa). SINGLE rici ‘mu TEANDEM * SINGLE BLADE— night and Rodman (W. C. C.): reh and Millar ‘Fr\irvmntfi &) and Trilling). N DOUBLE BLADES— second. Pen- ONE-MAN DOUBLE BLADES— ght (W. C. C): second. Long R AR AT Jl\IOR TANDEM DOUBLE BLADES- by Trilling and Florence (W s and Swann (W C C‘ Al and Joe Schad (Cacawa). Time 16R TANDEM DOUBLE BLADI ES— | Won by Rodman and Kaisnt (W. ©. second nd" Schultz (W, G _€): Time Lony third, Hol Hand and Haas (Cacaws). JUNIOR QUAD DOUBLE BLADES_—Won Time— Timeo 5ok SENIOR Qf'AD DOUBLE BLADES _Won by Cacawa Clnoe ub ‘sm ¢, Holland Philadelphia , Graf and i Men Young Club. & Philladeiphia sou "Club, 6 'SIX BOATS GO DOWN IN RACES AT PARIS C. Stanley Dollar, Jr., Son of Ship Magnate, Escapes Injury in Barge Crash. By the Associated Press. PARIS July 13.—Stanley Dollar, jr., son of the shipping magnate, escaped injury today when his oute board motor boat was wrecked during one of the races of an international regatta on the Seine. Five other boats sank during the regatta program. The American, who won the first race of the afternoon, was leading in the second when the steering gear failed and Dollar smashed into a heavy river barge. Dupuy, a French pilot, was hurt slightly when his boat struck a bridge. A special international race proe vided & hallow victory for Dollar when the only other entrant was forced to withdraw. The American covered the 14-kilometer course in 15 minutes 1206 seconds. 4. 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