Evening Star Newspaper, July 30, 1935, Page 13

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SPORTS. T HE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, TUESDAY JULY 30, 1935. SPORTS. A—13 Temes Gives Washington Good Pugilistic Break by Scoring in Legion Show AIDS GANE HERE | BEATING BERNARD Florida Lad’s Victory Is| Decisive—Preliminaries Merit Approval. BY JOHN B. KELLER. N UNDERDOG'S bite may be much worse than his bark. That is why Joe Temes, the underweight feather out of Tampa, Fla., is something Capital boxing show promoters will be talking turkey to for some weeks anyway. . The ‘clouting cracker established himself in the local fight game nicely | last night by decisively outpointing | Roger Bernard, supposedly tough stuff from Flint, Mich, in the 10- round feature of the Turner-Ahearn combine's show at Griffith Stadium. Bernard had been built into some- thing of an idol in Washington fistic affairs and great was the demand of | the boys who follow the fight business here to see him in action against| Petey Sarron, erstwhile king of the featherweight division in this vicinity. But in substituting for Petey, a suf- ferer from an attack of boils on his trusty right arm, Temes managed to | knock everything for a loop. Joey went into the ring with as much as 2-to-1 wagered against him | by the wise guys of the fistic profes- | sion and all he did was take half of the 10 rounds of the main go at the ball yard. So outdistanced was Ber- nard that he got credit for winning only two of the heats and he was fairly lucky to get an even break in | three. Temes Easily Best Puncher. PmHAPs Bernard underestimated | the Tampa lad who had forsaken main billing in Florida, where he had been victor in more than 100 bouts, to tackle the Washington end of the ring game as a mere preliminary bat- | tler. Up to last night Temes had been awarded a verdict in eight of nine engagements and he had come | back to lick Julie Katz, the one scrap- per who had held him to a draw here. Anyway, Bernard never looked the humming hot stuff he had seemed in other tilts around the Capital in his | fight last night until the last three rounds. In the prior going, Temes outpunched Bernard just about two to one and built up such a startling lead that only a knockout would have earned the decision for the Flint feather. Driving along with the body-buck- ing type of banging that had made | him so effective against other foes, | ‘Temes had Bernard rocking repeatedly from the outset of the clash. He out- | slugged Roger time after time and | quickly had a throng of fight fnnsi who hitherto had not been so favor- | able toward him rooting strongly for | his success. | Bernard’s Short Smacks Missing. Tm was no particular dissension | with the unanimous decision that ‘was given Joey after the 10 rounds of brisk . milling. He looked a winner from the start and the fans were fairly well satisfied with the break he got. At the beginning there was some doubt as to whether Bernard was giving his all. Roger was sluggish. Nothing like the Bernard that had fought his way to such a standing in the Capital fight game. None of the short, jolting punches that had punished unmercifully other | opponents in the ring here were ex- | hibited in the early going. In fact, Bernard was far below the form he | had displayed in his other fights in | Washington. He did not show his| cleverness at infighting until the bout | ‘was beyond recall. Temes tore into Bernard from the first bell and clearly swept the first| three rounds. Roger barely managed | to get an even break in the fourth, ‘when he lost two more rounds to the hard-hitting cracker. In the eighth, when he gashed Temes about the right eye and had the Florida lad staggering, Bernard appeared his usual eelf. And he did 5o in the tenth, when with a desperate flurry he had Temes all around the ring. But Roger had subsided in the ninth to get nothing more than an even count. ‘Temes looked the goods most of the way, while Bernard fought in & man- ner that made the crowd realize that | Sarron, bolls or not, had passed up a | great opportunity to square affairs with his chief heckler. Prelims Above Average. THE preliminaries were better than the 1,066 who paid $1,352.09 to get into ‘the ball park received them. That eight-round semi-final between | Andy Martin, Boston veteran, and| Patsy Severo of New York was a corker as a boxing match. Patsy got & two-to-one decision, but the engage- ment migat easily have been reckoned & draw. Eddie Burl, groggy as he is, came through with a decision in one of the two six-rounders on the card. Eddie was not so good and once took a wal- lop on the jaw from Dave Barry, St. Petersburg feather, to go down for a count of eight. But Barry hit the canvas a couple of times, too, and was guilty of atrocious fouling that put him out of the running. In the other six-rounder, Ray In- gram, out of Florida, and Johnny La Rocco, who halls from the 'Gater State by way of points north, scrapped to a draw. Theirs was something of & head-to-head affair, with both boys ‘wasting a lot of time in wrestling. ‘The Marines landed and had the situation well in hand shortly after the opening four-rounder got under way. Gene Harrington of Quantico took all Wild Bill Howell, local prod- uct, had to give and handed Wild Bill more. It was a good night for all save the promoters But they are likely to capitalize on Joe Temes. The cracker earned his spurs as a main go boy hereabout. 20 YEARS AGO IN THE STAR N One of few times Joe Temes (on left) attacked Roger Bernard from short range, but it helped him to Boxers Decide on Some Close-Up Stuff get the decision in the lLegion show feature last night. EXT time Jim Nichols comes to the sixth hole at Congres- sional playing in a golf match with Harvey L. Cobb, the lat- ter is going to wince and wonder what links miracles Jim will pull, after what happened on that hole a day or two ago, when Cobb played two perfect shots to the green, while Wiffy Cox, Kenwood pro, doesn’t often knows what to do when he does. He wedg from the pin. Nichols topped and sliced and won the hole. Nichols normally is a long hitter, but this tee shot was topped so dis- mally that it ended in a little ditch a few yards in front of the tee. Unable to play out straight for the green, he had to hit the ball over onto the fifth fairway. Cobb meanwhile whacked out a good tee shot and | put his second on the green, while Nichols, figuring the hole lost, took a wild wallop at a mashie shot from away over there on the other fairway. He made the one shot in a million. The pill hit a foot from the pin, took one short hop, struck the flag and dropped into the cup for a 3. And Brother Cobb let out a moan. But the shoe was on the other hoof yesterday, when Maj. F. M. Da- vison chipped one in for a bird 3 on the same hole and Cobb, with a 12-foot putt for a half, sank it, for & bird. “Never forget, Maje, that I don't give up,” Harvey said as the ball rolled in for the half, A‘T INDIANAPOLIS, where Wash- ington has four candidates for the national public links title in the current tourney, only one of them had more than an outside chance to qual- ify today as the final round in the 36-hole test was to end. Claude Rippy, the lengthy Nort‘h Carolina lad, was worried about his amateur status a few days ago, but today all he has to worry him is a flock of pars. He shot a8 74 in the opening round yesterday 6 Feet, 4 Putts, 50 Card Missed STOKE SAMMONS of Congres- sional, still pondering on the whys and wherefores of why a guy can't bust 50 on any nine holes, recalls with envious memories the round he had a couple of days ago when he had the cherished dream firmly in his grasp and let it slip away. Stokes leaped up the hill at-the eighteenth hole to see his second shot lying 6 feet from the cup. Two putts and the record would be his—a 40—and his first score under 50 on any standard-length nine holes. But Stokes, always the generous one, helped himself to four putts for a brilliant 51. Four putts from 6 feet? Sure, it can be done when your nerves are all jittery and the cup won't ;t:uy still long enough to hole the George Will Get Mat Match Here If He:Tosses 0’Mahony HOULD Danno O'Mahony'’s to tie for second place. Another round near that figure would put him well up the list of qualifiers for the match play rounds which open tomorrow. George Malloy scored an 80 and Bobby Burton and Ted Burrows, the other boys from the Capital, both had 84 and needed fine rounds today to get into match play. et in traps, but he this one out 5 feet Not since Al Houghton went to the semi-final at Salisbury in 1925 has a Washington man gone anywhere in | the national public links tourney. ! | Rippy may be that man, for the local | | municipal champ has a lot of golf shots and is about due. VER at Congressional Mrs. Don Scott played the back nine in 39 strokes, a stunt that is close to being the best bit of golf recorded by a woman at that course this year. | Her first nine was 46 for a total of | 85. much has been written and said about the tennis ability of Barney Welsh during the past two sea- sons, little attention has been paid the backing he gets from his parents. At practically every important match their son plays, Mr. and Mrs. Welsh can be seen on the sidelines. From their front-row seats, neither gives vent to any emotions during their son’s activities, although his | mother is the first to applaud when Barney is completely fooled by a placement. Because of his string of unbroken victories, one has yet to see her emo- tions when Barney loses, but she'd be sure to be one of the first to con- gratulate the victor. She's like that the three other playgrounds. BUT five playgrounds remain repre- sented in the girls’ doubles round robin matches, and a semi-finalist was to be determined this morning, when Takoma’s team met Hoover's at the Garfleld courts. The winner will join the other three playgrounds. Montrose, winner of Section 1; Twin Oaks, in Section 2; Takoma, repre- senting Section 3, and Burroughs of Section 4, in the semi-finals. UARTER-FINAL matches in the boys’ junior playground tourna- ment were to open this morning, with all remaining competition to take place on the Chevy Chase courts. Harry March of Burroughs and Tech High's No. 1 racketer, was a heavy favorite to add the junior title to others he has gained this season. Seniors are not scheduled to play until this afternoon at 3 o'clock, when Billy Contreras of Virginia Avenue caulifiower center, Boston, have estab- EVERETT, KNIGHT | BOUT ON GRIDDLE —=Star Staff Photo. Rivers-Sarron Fight ~ Also Is Planned for Police Benefit Affair. LANS for a Ken Overlin-Babe | Risko fight definitely aban- | doned, Maj. Harvey L. Miller, secretary to the District Boxing | Commission, now is bending his efforts toward matching Buck Everett, local heavyweight champion, with Joe | Knight, Cairo, Ohio, in a 10-round | | bout, with California Joe Rivers and Petey Sarron battling in a 15-round cofeature on the police benefit card scheduled for September 30. | Knight already has agreed to the fight and Miller is expecting Jtmmy‘ Erwin, Everett's manager, to sign | soon. Should these negotiations fall through, however, Bob Olin will be sought to defend his light-heavyweight title against Bob Godwin. Sid Silas and Phil Purr will battle over & 10-round route in & promising preliminary match, while Ray Ingram and Billy Bullock will trade blows in a scheduled eight-round bout. Other preliminaries will bring to- gether Bobby Goldstein against Jimmy Fitzsimmons and a three-round set-to between members of the Metropolitan Police Boys' Club. Joe Green will| stack up against an opponent yet to be named in a six-rounder. * BROWNS FARM A PAIR. ST. LOUIS, July 30 (#).—The 8t.| Louis Browns have released to their San Antonio, Texas League farm, Ollie Bejma, an inflelder, and Beau Bell, an outfielder. Both are subject to 24- hour recall. meets Hop Lomax of Georgetown; Sam Root and Lloyd Eller, both of Chevy Chase, play each other; Melvin Bower, Takoma, faces formidable Charley Channing of Burroughs, and John Cranston, Sherwood, tackles Eugene Owens of Mitchell. Semi-finals will be played at 2 p.m. ‘Thursday and the finals Friday mom- ing at 9:30. A NEW champion of the women's tennis league will be crowned at the conclusion of the tournament which opens Saturday on Rock Creek’s courts as last year’s winner, Mrs. Ruth Martinez, Eastern High's racket- swinging teacher, is out of town. Entries will be taken up until 6 p.m. Friday by Florence Black, who may be reached by calling Cleveland 6296. SYLVIA STABLER and Bob Moore are the new mixed doubles champions of Sandy Spring as a re- sult of their recent victory on the Homestone Courts. In a hotly-con- tested match which went the limit they defeated Jean Coulter and Carl Beall, 6—2, 3—6, 8—6, who only the previous day had trimmed Claire Hut- ton and Charles Ligon. Miss Stabler was also & member of the women's doubles championship team, pairing with Claire Hutton to defeat Miss Coulter and Mrs, Allan Brooke in straight sets, 6—4, 6—4. At the conclusion of the tournament, at- tractive cups and trophies were pre- sented to the winners by Mrs. Mor- timer O. Stabler. Pum.!cwuuhi"mmumn lot more likely to Barney Welsh and Ralph McElvenny than does suc- cess in the national doubles cham- plonships, which will be passed up by this pair at Brookline, Mass, next month. Instead, the two-time local public parks doubles champs will go to New Orleans to seek the national cham- pionship, which was denied them last year in the final round when the PLAYGROUND BOYS WAIT FOR FINALS Cooke Is Winner of Last Test—Ferrari Captures Feature Dash. LAYGROUND cinder pounders today turned their eyes to- ward the city meet to be held next month following Cooke's triumph in the Western Conference yesterday in the final sectional test. Little Pete: Ferrari breasted the tape first in the feature event of the day, the 70-pound class 40-meter dash, to send Cooke off to. a flying start in amassing 61 points to win out over Georgetown, which scored 40. Ferrari, a tiny trackster, bested 49 youngsters in garnering top honors. Dick Dunaj, former Washington and Lee speedster, who holds the Dis- trict indoor: 2-mile, Virginia cross- country, 2 and 3 mile records, stepped to an easy victory in the mile run in the unlimited unrestricted class. Dunaj also represented the winning playground. “Big Boys” Also Contest. RYON HAYDEN and William Mar- low, both of Lafayette, finished in that order ahead of Prank Price, for- mer Central High sprinter, in the 100-meter dash in the unlimited un- restricted class. Bill Chipman, well known local ath- lete, sailed over the high-jump bar at 6 feet 1 inch in an exhibition. Chip- man will compete in the city meet next month. Summaries: Point Scores. 61 Lafayette 40 Stoddert Bancroft 40-meter run—Won by Pete Perrari (Cooke): second, Willlam Jeffries (Fil- | more): third. Guy Falcone (Chevy Chase) unning broad jump—Won by Bernard | ss_(Cooke); second, Edward Murphy (Weightman); third, Harry Eliott (Hardy) Running high jump—Won by Tom Smith (Cooke): secord. Jack Burke (Cooke): third. Buddy Ulrick (Fillmore). 160-meter relay—Wwon by Cooke (John Burton, Billy Castle. David Walsh. Billy Cush);’ second, Georgetown (Francis Sey- mour, Benny Rodill, Jack Poole. Merin Hil- lerv): third. tie between Stoddert (James Humes. James Bell. Ted Bright. Joe O'Nell) and Filimore (B Stratos, J. Jefiries, Cogan. C. Eirich). 85-Pound Class. 40-meter run—Won by Bob Boyle | (Hardy): second Buddy Williams (Cor- | coran): third. Robert Kelly (Eaton). | Running broad Jump—Won by Bill Cross | (Georgetown); secon Harry Martin (Cooke) : third. John Miller (Eaton). Ri high Billy unni jump—Won by, Bailey (Cooke): second, George Horkan (Mitchell); third, John Heat ) wole (George- wn). 160-meter relay—Won by _E: Keily. J. Wright. W. Kline, R second. Cooke (S. Di Blase. N. Bavden. H Martin, B. 8egal); third. Gallinger '(B. | Smith, W. Jackson. J. Iry, N. Gittleson). 100-Pound Cl: run—Won aton (R. Sawteli) 50-meter Sap Sellers (Georgetown): _second, James Taylor (Eaton): third. James Poole (Georgetown) Running broad Jump—Won by Howard Edwards (Chevy Chase); second, Roger Sawtell (Georgetown); third, Lawrence Birch (Montrose). Running high jump—Won by Joe Orason ); _ second. Shoemaker (g:grnw'n); third, Anthony Pisciotta (Cooke) 200-meter relay—Won by wn (M. Shumaker, V. Mastin. J. Percy W. Toole); second. Cooke (B. Steiner. H. Kas- sel. B, Crocker, J. Orason): third. Stod- e:;t) (T. Bell, F. Dwyer, J. Ryan, P. Sulli- 115-Pound Class. Donaldson Rning mh 1 D—Won by Ed Abell & 8! umi 'on Abel] (Georgetown); second. Bill OUff (Fill- more): third. Paul Lavezzo (Cooke). 240-meter relay—Won by Chevy Chase ; second, Ea . King. R Oftutt, G Gilllon) " thirdr Gallinger Perrone. D. Burrows, C. Steep. J. Castro). Unlimited Class (Restricted). 100-meter run—Wwon by Rufus O'Far- rell (Cooke):: second. Joe Carroll (Stod- dert): third, Owen Brownley (Corcoran). ( Bnning broad jump—Won by Bill Vit te) : Z third ' J. Geracy lDflckeY.n SdacooE: Half-mile run—Won by Dick Palmer (Bancroft): second, ~Sanford Hughes (Georgetown): third, Jack Riston (George- town). ey = & Ligh jump—on by John Bur- nal nham, [ Running ton (Mitchel second. al L] :g Oeo“l)'lttovn»: third, John Norris (Geor-e- 400-meter _relay—Ww Cool 4 Babcock. 8. ek, W s N B Ak s Noonam T fhird: i T, thir Georgelown (J. Riston, D. . Ml ler, H. Lomax). i mmu'_' o 3 Unlimited Class (Unrestricted). 00-meter run—w. (Lafayetie): second Wlam: Marion (as fayette): third, Prank Price (Cooke). Richard_Dunaj e Bnouffer ( One-mile relayo Wan: By Lafayette (8 - —Won aye . Stuart, L_Sholtes, W. Marlow. B. Hayden): d, C C. Cros Cross, R. x racy): Snyder, 5 58, E. third. Georgetown Carroll. G. Chaconas). MRS. M'GINTY GETS 85. Mrs. George B. McGinty, a new golfer at Columbia, who has been threatening to win a tournament for 2 year or so, scored an 85 over her home course for her best mark. She played the nines in 43 and 42. It Is O’Mahbny, E Not Belonging h | the crippled children of the district. Nordstrom, Iowan, Sets Pace With 71 in Public Links Golf; 74 by Rippy BY PAUL MICKELSON, Associated Press Sports Writer. NDIANPOLIS, July 30.—~Lloyd l Nordstrom, a strapping Nordic from Davenport, Iowa, and an elusive par that hid in the *“‘cof- fin” were the targets of the field today as the battle for the national public links golf championship medal en- tered the final 18-hole stretch. ‘While most of his rivals skidded and fell in the traps, trees and creeks of the Charles E. Coffin course, a lay- out that more than upheld its repu- tation and name, Nordstrom took a three-stroke lead in the medal fight yesterday with a 71, 1 over par. His round, dotted with flve birdies speared with a red-hot putter that rammed the ball down from 25 feet on three greens, was the only one within speaking distance of par. And except for a tee shot he thought he hit into a lake on the sixteenth tee— and didn't—he probably would have posted a 69. Haste Proves Costly. Nordstrom’s mistake was that of a man in & hurry. On the sixteenth tee he sliced his tee shot toward the lake. Thinking the ball had disap- peared into a watery grave, he im- mediately hit another without investi- gating and couldn't do anything to recover his two-shot penalty when he found his first ball on dry land, be- cause the rules don’t allow a pro- visional ball at water hazards. Tied at 74 behind the big blond from the tall corn State, a salesman BY ROBERT B. PHILLIPS, JR. RANGE always has stressed classes for the young hunt- O ers, just cutting their eye | teeth on show ring fences, | and that fact incontestably gave Dr. Lewis Allen's Royal Wonder a dis- tinct edge in reaching the champion- | ship circle. Royal Wonder is a 3-year- | old, and as such was able to lift four blue ribbohs in events not open to the L | bunter fleld at large, The sauce for that pudding was Ties for Second on a vacation, were seven players from scattered sections of the Nation. They were Tab Boyer and Louis Cyr, Portland, Oreg.; Claude Rippy, Wash- ington, D. C., clerk; Delbert Walker, Long Beach, Calif.; Fred Gordon, Santa Monica, Calif.; Mike Balega, Minneapolis, Minn., and Pete Doll of Louisville, who led his team into first place in the 36-hold medal play struggle for the team championship. ‘The Louisville squad’s first round total was 305, two under the score posted by the Los Angeles quartet, winner of the team championship during the past two years. Score Running High. So HEAVY was the toll of shots taken in the first round that a pair of 80's appeared to have a chance to land in the qualifying bracket of 64, who will battle for the title now held by Dave Mitchell of Indianapolis in match play starting Wednesday. Scores ranged from Nordstrom's 71 upward to the century mark. Mitch- ell took a 77 yesterday. Carl Kaufl- man of Pittsburgh, the “Bobby Jones” of the show, was on the danger line with an 80, as was Charlie Ferrara of Los Angeles, former champion, who also took an 80. | Eight tied at 75—Ralph Presby. | Sacramento, Calif.; Fred Grote, Mi waukee; Bruce McCormick, Los Angeles; Wesley Casper, Louisville; Arthur Armstrong, Honolulu; Harry Umbimetti, Seattle; John Ross, Los Angeles, and Frank Bringoli, Staten | Island, N. Y. the civilian jumping courses in the Garden are to be enlarged and com- plicated after the military style . . Jim Andrews now has in his stable Liverton Lodge, the imported English brush horse, brought to this country by Mrs. T. H. Somerville . . . Charles Town plans to run four days of racing in connection with the three-day horse show, August 15, 16 and 17 . . . Berryville is building a new outside course for the meeting there August 22 and 23 . . . the Horse Shoe Cup ONE NET FAVORITE GOES OUT QUICKLY* |McDiarmid Is Upset Victim at Southampton—Parker Tops Seeded List. By the Associated Press. EW YORK, July 30.—The an- nual invitation tennis tourna- ment of the Meadow Brook Club at Southampton went into the second round today with all of the favorites except John Mc+ Diarmid of Fort Worth, Tex., still in the running. The Texan left the courts late yes- terday beaten by Henry Culley of | Santa Barbara, Calif, 6—1, 3—8, 6—3. . Frankie Parker of Spring Lake, N. J., top seeded in the tourney, came through with a 6—2, 6—4 victory over = | Charles Harris of West Palm Beach, * Fla. Mangin Scores Easily. GR.EGOR.Y MANGIN of Newark, Seabright winner last week, downed Jess Millman of Los An- geles, 6—2, 6—3, and Bitsy Grant of Atlanta, Ga., defeated Hal Sur- face, youthful Texan, 6—2, 6—4. | Norcross Tilney of Princeton defeated ' | Leonard Hartman of New York, 4—6, 6—3, 6—3, in a stirring court duel. Ranked behind Parker in the seed- ing were Mangin, Grant, Clifford Sut- ter of New Orleans, Gil Hall of | Orange, N. J.; Wilmer Hines of Co- [ lumbia, 8. C.; McDiarmid and Lefty Bryan of Chattanooga. The rain that held up the matches for many hours stopped play alto- gether at East Hampton, where the ~ | Maidstone Club’s annual invitation ' | tournament for women was to have | started. Thirty-two players entered the opening round, postponed until<+ today. Mrs. Arnold Heads Draw. THE seeded players and their op- ponents follow: 1, Mrs. Ethe] B. Arnold, Los Angeles, Calif, vs. E. 1ch[.ennon; 2, Mrs. Sarah Palfrey Fabyan, Brookline, Mass., vs. Kath- leen Fox; 3, Gracyn Wheeler, Santa * Monica, Calif., vs. Florence Le Bou- | tillier; 4, Mrs. John Van Ryn, Phila~ poured out, however, when the Won- | at Orange must have been named that | d¢lPhia, vs. Halen Fulton, Winnetka, der crashed through with another|because both rider and horse need Ill: § Carolin Babcock. Los Angeles, blue in the thoroughbred hunter class, | four of them to get around the tough | C3lif. vs. Mrs. W. Merrill Hall, New contested by 29 hunters of all ages. | Furthermore, only once in iwo days | did the big gray son of Coq Gaulois fail to wind up in front of all op- position. | course. ‘There may have been another Cav- alcade among those Lancegaye foals Mrs. Somerville exhibited Saturday morning . . . Manley Carter had a York; 6, Mrs. Dorothy Andrus, Stam- ford, Conn., vs. Catherine Wolf, Elk- hart, Ind; 7, Mys. M. G. Harris, Kansas City, Mo, vs. Katherine Barker; 8, Jane Sharp, Pasadena, That was in the green hunter stake, 'swell idea when he kept the colored C8lif, Vs. Anna Page, Philadelphia. | where a single knockdown slipped him into third place behind Gen. Mitch- ell's Golden Repulse, the winner, | and Mrs. George boys with rakes working on the cut-up sod between classes, and ran drags over it when it had dried . . . Dr. Greenhalgh's | Allen had to miss Royal Wonder’s | Diamond Dust Hunter’s Choice, which took the red.| first great day, being laid up in Win- | Incidentally Golden Repulse was single class behind L. R. Colbert's | Skyrocket in the race for reserve | championship. The two classes | wherein they met, the lightweight | and ladies' divisions, ended with one victory for each. Altogether they would have stood at a 14-point tie, except for the hunter pairs, in which Skyrocket shared in the Colbert vic- tory and eased within closer striking distance of Royal Wonder than we had at first realized. Jm ANDREWS' luck seemed to come all in a rush. He had been faring below par with his string up until | the last houfs of the meeting, when | suddenly Greenwood won the Monte- | bello Cup for local hunters, Magic Maid and Kippema placed one-two in the big hunter stake, Round Hill was | third in the Corinthian and the An- drews hunt team capped the spurt with & handy victory. In addition to the plate and prize money, Jim also vanned home a nice-looking black colt named Tar, purchased in & mid- | day auction held for the benefit of The committee at Orange bright- ened up lts routine by staging some five-gaited saddle horse classes. L. SASSAFRAS SURCINGLE, the longest-striding show scout that ever peered through a bridle, reports that Col. Kenyon Joyce and Janon Pisher, jr, were widely praised for their hunter judging . . . the board of arbiters was well filled out by John W. Macomb, for saddle horses, and K. C. Johnson of Norfolk and Samuel Nicholas of Philadelphia for open | jumpers . . . bad luck seems to be hot after Mrs. Cary Jackson, who has Jjust recovered from a bad fall at Devon and took another from Shere Khan on the second day . . . was as- sisted to the judges’ stand slightly dazed, but later recovered and left the ring under her own power . . . Manley W. Carter, who manages the Orange meet, says an outside course has no place at a horse show . . . thereby drawing an absolute line be- tween hunting hunters and show horses. By the Associated Press. Boemn, July 30.—Because he “always forgot to tell the newspaper men about it” Dan O'Mahony, Irish heavyweight wres- tling challenger, climbed to fame with a misspelled pime. Danno’s name aas been spelled O'Mahoney ever since his first bout in this country. The mistake in adding the “e” was brought to light yesterday when he signed his name to a newspaper cartoon, and the artist called it to his attention. “Sure, and you want me to spell it O'Mahoney,” Danno said, “but that's wrong. It's been wrong all the while, but I've always forgotten to tell the newspaper men about it.” MRS. D. N. LEE'S By Jinks, center of so much rumpus at the recent charity horse show in Maryland, was seen going sound as a Coolidge dol- lar. The National Horse Show in November is going to have a sheaf of corn and a haystack in the ring for the hunters to turn around as they cover the new-type courses .. .and GUARANTEED chester Hospital suffering from com- plications that followed his accident at Culpeper, when a horse ran into him while he was standing near the gate. “Bllie” Jacobs Wetherall is one of the best woman ring riders and most enthusiastic huntswomen in Virginia, but she doesn’t tie her own hunting stocks . . . Saturday was, by the ther- mometer, the best Midsummer horse show day in many seasons . . . and by far the coolest Orange has known in years. — SOLDIER NINES CONTINUE Langley and Belvoir to Battle in Feature Today. Another double-header is scheduled at the Army War College tomorrow when the 3d Corps Area base ball championship series is resumed. Langley Field and Fort Belvoir, vie- | tors Th yesterday's games, will meet in | the feature clash, while their victims. Fort Meade and Fort Myer, will also play. The series’ final games will be played on Saturday. A ninth inning home run by Mc- Geever was all that saved Fort Myer from a shutout yesterday as Belvoir scored 10 runs in the first two innings to win, 11 to 1, while Langley made six runs in the last two innings to Meade. Scores: Fort Meade ____ 002 101 000— 4 Fort Langley ___ 021 020 33x—11 Batteries—Kimmel. Dadeseo. and Patton: Weiler and Hetrick. Fort Belvoir 840 100 000—11 12 & Fort Myer T 22,000 000 001— Batteries i L Bildger and The final score was 11 to 4. 101 16 2 el 0DD PAR AT MANOR Fischer Scores 3 Without Hitting Fairway or Green. Mel Fischer of Manor claims that mere pars made in the orthodox man- ner are only for beginners or rank amateurs. Fischer bagged a par 3 on the eighth hole without hitting the fairway or the green. cup and it stayed in. DAYTON FAN BELTS For All Cars MILLER-DUDLEY/ me ST. .NW. NORTH 1583 USED TIRES POTOMAC TIRE CO. 28th & M N.W. FISK Factory Rebuilt (Not a Retread) TIRES 5.25-18 .....$545 BRAKES 4 Wheels Complete FREF ADJUSTMENTS Plymouth DOES YOUR CAR SHIMMY-WOBBLE STEER HARD OR SHOW UNUSUAL We Are Steering Correction EXPERTS break up a close game with Fort | Koscher | 3 and McGeever: Payne. | Yep, he knocked the ball into the | A PLAY-OFF next Saturday for the first half championship of the Washington Boys' Club League is necessitated as a result of Washington | Flour Co’s 11-3 victory over the Northeast Boys' Club yesterday. By winning, Washington Flour tied the" losers for the league lead, each team ' having won seven and lost one. The deciding game will be played on dia-- | mond No. 3 at 11 o'clock. | In a five-inning Church League af- | fair yesterday, Mount Vernon poundeo - |out 18 hits for an 18-5 slaughter of Metropolitan Baptist. Snyder and Burgess led the assault with four hits apiece. Pitcher Bill Albert collecteo . three, while Felner smashed a home - . run. King and Ringold hit round--. trippers for the losers. G. P. O's 14 hits were no mors than those made by I C. C., but the. . Printers had two more runs in their system than the Commerce boys were able to find and outlasted their foe 12-10, in a Federal League contes Scores: LEAGUE. R Industrial. Southwest Market, 9; Sanitary, 6, Departmental, P. W. A, 6; Printers, 2. National Capital. Thompson's Dairy, 9; Acacia, 17; Diamond C: Federal. G P.O 131 C C 10 ashing ys’ Club. Bopshington "Flour Co.. 11, Northeast Church. Mount Vernon. 18; Metropolitan, 5. olored Departmental. National Museum, 13; Treasury, 4. Independent. Civil Service, 8: Comptroller, 7. Farm Credic. &: P. H. Av 7. Megtcos Miller Furniture. 6: A Veterans' Administration, rmy .. 2 Public ads. 5. Little Tavern Shop, 18; Washingtor Boys’' Club, 12, Marietta, 11; Takoms, 1. Automobile Salesman | + WANTED! Excellent opportunity with one of Washington’s oldest and most progressi: Ford Dealers. 1935 Ford V-8s sell- ing as fast as we get them! Apply at once to Mr. Hawkins, HILL & TIRBITTS, 1114 Vermont Ave. N.W. THE NATION'S PLAYPLACE TODAY AND EVERY DAY FROM 9:30 A.M. to 11:30 P.M. SWIM In crystal pool or sun tan your self on the seashore sand beach or enjoy all the more than fifty Minneapolis team of Charles Britzius and William Schommer defeated them in" five sets. Of course, both will en- ter the singles, too. TODAY BASE BALL ;0085 Washington vs. - Boston AMERICAN LEAGUE PARK Tickets at Park, 8 AM. 2 amusements that start at one shoulders be pinned to the mat | lished George as a flight favorite in *elock and run until midnight. o 3 tonight in Boston by Ed Don | tonight's tangle. Both O'Mshony and S George, Joe Turner will substi- o s tute the new champion in place of the Irishman as an opponent for Joe Sa- voldi here at Grifith Stadium next Thursday night. Turner this morning received confirmation on this point from George, so regardless of the oyt- come tonight local wrestling fans are assured & championship match. Although the County Cork Irishman 5.50-17 ..... 595 6.00-16 ..... 7.19 6.50-19 ..... 8.75 Fully Guaranteed FISK SERVICE STORES 1337 14th St NW. Pot. 3600 KNEE-ACTION CARS OUR SPECIALTY Reliable Motor Service 14th and W N.W. Am striking out three times, ‘Walter Johnson hit a long triple to the center-field fence, which scored George McBride with the winning run in the teath in- ning to defeat Cleveland, 2-1. Branch Rickey, manager of the Essex ‘ g:rsy:::r “5 6 75 Dodge DD.-DH. Other Cars Propertionately Low ENERAL BRAKE SERVICE 903 N ST N.W. DE.5483 Only 45 minutes from town. By street car—25¢ R. T. Motor—20 minutes Conduit Rd. or Mass. Ave. in 15 min- utes. FREE PARKING SPACE OR 10c PAID AREA No. 8603

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