Evening Star Newspaper, September 15, 1935, Page 40

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

B—16 = S PORTS. THE SUNDAY.-STAR, -WASHINGTON, D.. C, SEPTEMBER 15, 1935—PART ONE. SPORTS. Lipps F ights Cancela Here Tomorrow : Sports Writers, 2 to I, Pick Louis BIG MAJORITY PREDICT SCRAP WON'T GO LIMIT Average Round Named for Knockout Is Seventh, as Associated Press Polls Scriveners. MITCHELL'S HURT ALTERS PROGRAM Substituted Boxer Comes From Baer’s Camp With Good Record. BY JOHN B. KELLER. OE LIPPS, heavyweight from Georgia, was all set to take the measure of Terry Mitrhell, the Brooklyn terror—if he could— at the ball yard tomorrow night, then move on to fat fight dates in New York's Garden. But the Mitchell part of the program “went away,” so it'll be Tony Cancela that Joe will face in the eight-round main go of the Turner-Ahearn boxing bill Terrible Terry took one smack on his kisser from a sparmate dying a work-out in New York yesterday and had to have eight stitches in his lip. Informed of this mishap, Matchmaker Goldie Ahearn burned the wires and finally landed Max Baer's sparring partner to fill the date. Cancela will get here today. It looks as if the pmgmm revision gives Lipps a tougher assignment, but he'll still have a crack at the Garden it he manages to get the better of Cancela. Any fighter doing that would be highly regarded in New York. So Lipps, fresh from his two-round knock-out win over Kirk Burk, Wash- ington fist flinger, last week, will be in there tomorrow night fighting all he knows how. JoE s rather pleased to get a shot at | Cancela at that. Like Lipps, Tpny is from the South, and at one time billed himself as Southern heavy- weight champion. Lipps got an earful of him and for some time has wanted an engagement with the Tampa fight- er. The switch from Mitchell to Can- cela may be something of a break for | the Georgian after all. | Lipps has progressed impressively | since he first appeared here late in| July to lose a close decision to Mitch- ell. That was his first appearance this far north of his Georgia home and his first fight in some time. He | was not at ease in his new surround- | ings. although he made a hot go of 1t all the way. Since Lipps has put three fights un- der his belt, winner in all. He handily | disposed of Lou La Page and found | nothing more annoying in Julius YVeigh than the New Yorker's refusal to make a fight of it. Veigh bicycled his way through the bout, with Lipps vainly trying to get at him. Against Burk last Tuesday Lipps weathered a solid sock to the face— #nd this Burk has a potent punch— to come back and knock his man cold in the second round. ; Change Pleases Lipps. Cancela Has Been Around. ANCELA is a ring veteran. He has been battling 'em since 1929 and battling & flock of good “club” heavies, too. Tony has done most of his fight- ing in the South, but he is well and favorably known in the Middle West and has made frequent appearances in the East. Recently he has been aiding Baer in preparations for the meeting with Joe Louis next week. Tony has met fighters familiar to ' Capital followers of the boxing busi- ness. Three times the Tampa lad has encountered Buck Everett. One meet- ing resulted in no decision, once Everett won and once Cancela got the verdict. According to the New York records, Tony holds a decision over Bob Tow. He has defeated Eddie Simms, Hans Birkie, Al Morro and Harry English. Cancela has no greater booster than Max Baer. Last January Max, then champion, went tiarough four brisk exhibition rounds with Tony at Tampa. Cancela looked so good to Max that the latter declared himself ®s ready to back him against any, heavy short of the class of main con-| tenders for the title. So it looks as if Lipps might be taking on quite a task this time. Favorites in Prelims. FAVORITES of Capital fight fans| will be seen in the preliminaries | tomorrow night. The eight-round semi-final is a rematch of Phil Furr, &tll District welter champion, and Frankie Camden, the punching Camden, N. J., speedster. Furr, com- | ing back after a long rest, boasts he | will turn the tables on Blair this time. Cannonading Joe Temes, Tampa featherweight, is down for an eight- rounder with Danny London of New York. Joey got nine wins and a draw here before bowing to clever Petey | Sarron. In four-rounders Joe Doty, ‘Washington lightweight, who recently upset the dope with a decision over Perry Knowles. will meet Wade Allison while Young Dizon, Filipino, who has been starring on the West Coast, will engage Sammy Mars, This will be the last of the Turner- Ahearn fight offerings this month. | New talent will be brought here in October. Gabe Menendez has coming | up from Texas one cowboy, Howard Scott. who has beaten among others Joe Rivers. Sam Sobol, manager of | Lipps, has added to his string of fighters Maceo Bonds, a Washington colored light-heavy. early Fall cards. BAER'S HARD BLOWS IMPRESS PROMOTER “Hitting Better Than Ever,"” Says | Mike Jacobs—Max Appears in Fine Condition. By the Associated Press. SPECULATOR, N.Y., September 14.— Promoter Mike Jacobs dropped into Max Baer's training camp today and saw the former heavyweight champion turn loose the best punch- ing exhibition of his training grind | for the match with Joe Louis at the Yankee Stadium September 24. Willie McGee and Tony Cancela stood up against Maxie in the first four rounds, although absorbing plenty of punishment, but Paul Pross took a hard right to the chin and was unable | to finish his two-round stint. Mike Jacobs was among the visitors and expressed himself as much im- | pressed by Baer’s “fine condition, his steady boxing and punching skill.” Joe Jacobs, manager of the ex- champion Max Schmeling, said he| thought Baer “was punching harder than ever before in his career.” . ROSS JEWELERS TRAVEL. Ross Jewelers will travel to Oxon Hill today to meet the Fire Department nine of that town. The game will start at 1:30. | him up. Both will be on | | donkey foot ball game, something not Upsets Galore Promised in Policemen’s Ring Show YANK[[S GETGRIP. Underdogs, in Reckoning of Experts, Tell How They’ll Win—Ma Goodwin Speaks Up for Bob. AVORITES will fall at the big boxing show to be held | : for the benefit of the Met- ropolitan Police Boys' Clubs in Griffith Stadium the night of September 30 . . . that comes from a flock of fight-wise folk around the Capital . . . you may believe that Petey Sarron, Buck Everett and Phil Furr will finish ahead in the 10-round co-features . . . but many ringworms are ready to say you're all wrong. They're shooting at the moon . picking California Joe Rivers to beat Sarron . .. in what should be one of the hottest scraps be- tween little fellows in Washington in months .,. . claiming Bob God- win will take Everett in the heavy- weight contest . . . predicting a decision for Sid Silas over Furr . in a welter argument that should pull "em out of their chairs no matter which® way it goes, Rivers backers are letting their fighter make their point . . . Cali- fornia Joe lost twice by the nar- rowest of margins to Sarron . . it'll be different this time, Joe tells the world . . . “I was hungry then and just getting started here.” says Rivers . . . “I'd been around beg- ging for prediminary bouts for months . . . since then, I've had several real main event opponents here and in Baltimore. “This will be my turn. “I expect to stop Sarron . . . just as I stopped Mike Belloise . . with right-hand punches to the body.” Ma Godwin makes the argument for Bob . . . Godwin has been out of the local picture some while ... “Bob lost quite a few fights in a row,” Ma admits . . . “but each and every one was due to a badly cut eye . . . that eye ncw is healed over solidly . . . Bob has had a long lay-off . . . he has been training regularly for weeks . . . in wonderful shape now , ., . he ought to defeat Everett . a fighter he always wanted to meet.” Here's Ma Godwin's final flour- ish ... “Bob will be the District’s No. 1 heavyweight after September 30.” Silas dces his own talking to win his support . . . Sid still burns up whenever that beating he took from Furr is mentioned . . . “Furr still is the District welter cham- pion” . . . Silas says . . . “but I'll be king of the welters here after our next meeting . . . I expect to knock out Furr.” Sid goes on . . . “Phil was given a technical knock-out over me when I was on my feet and ready to step . . . but this Summer he has lost decisions to Tony Rock and Frankie Blair . . . I beat Rock afterward . . . and only last week Cary Wright fought toe-to- toe with Blair . . . how, then, does Purr figure with me? , , . I'm ask- ing you.” Silas supplies the answer ... “T'll beat Furr down with body punches.” And another thing, according to Sid . . . “Ray Bowen will handle me for this bout . . . as he did for the Rock fight . . . I'll have the advantage of excellent handling . . . I'm in great condition . . . and feel sure of winning.” 8o now that you have their cases presented by the second choices you might have an idea of what will go on in the ball yard ring the night of September 30 ... looks as if the boys will be in there fighting in the three 10 rounders two weeks from tomorrow . . .and the trio of top bouts will be backed by well matched prelimi- naries . . . Heinle Miller, secretary of the District Boxing Commission, has looked after that ... and Heinle knows the game. In all, 59 rounds have been scheduled for the police show ... distributed among nine bouts . « « there will be no intermissions . . . the show will start promptly at 8 pam. . .. a boxing commission in- spocwr will be assigned to special duty as “starter” says Secretary Miller . . . charged with having two boxers at the ringside and ready to step in . . . &s soon as the bout preceding theirs ends. YAROSE WILL RISK | CROWN AND KNEE Middleweight Champ, Slated Has Tricky Joint. By the Associated Press. Middleweight Champion Teddy Yarosz and his ballyhooed | tirement next Thursday night for a| defense of the title against “Babe” | round bout at Forbes Field, the ball park of the Pittsburgh Pirates. to Meet Risko Thursday, PIT‘TS'BURGH September 14— “trick knee” come out of re-| Risko of Syracuse, N. Y. in a 15-| It will be the champion’'s first ap- | pearance—excluding a couple of tune- up bouts—since he hobbled out of a ring at Scranton, Pa., last New Year v, the battered, beaten victim of same Risko, a handsome Polish boy who has had only 24 fights in his professional boxing career since he left the Navy wearing the middle- weight crown of the Tars. Risko failed to win the championship then because it was a non-title fight. Backers of the clever, clean-living Yarosz say the result of the title fight | hinges on the question of whether | the champion's right knee will hold | The title-holder blamed an injury | to the knee for his defeat at Risko's hands, but friends of the Syracuse sailor claimed it was just a case of | too much Risko and that the injured knee was only an alibi. | YOUTH OF 19 HURLS RED SOX TO VICTORY Stewart Bowers, Gettyshurg! Soph, Masters Brownies, 5 to 2. Cronin's Homer Helps. By the Associated Press BOSTO"I September 14 —Stewart Bowers, 19-year-old Gettysburg College sophomore, pitched the Red Sox to a 5-to-2 victory over the St.| Louis Browns today. He gave eight passes and allowed eight hits, but was effective with men on base. St. Louis used four pitchers and the game virtually was decided in the | seventh, when a base on balls to | Cooke by Walkup and Cronin’s ninth home run of the season, off Knott, | gave Boston a 5-to-2 lead. With one out in the ninth, Solters | walked and took third on Mazzera’s | single. Manager Cronin yanked Bow- | ers, put in Jack Wilson and Bell grounded into & double play, ending the game. With one game to go, the series now stands two-all. St. L A Laryss.. Burns. 1h Sfllter< cf rt Beftif Hemsl Clift.3 Care: Cald’ell n “Coleman Walkup.p Knott.p. iWarnock 1 Thomas.p Totals.33 & Totals..28 *Batted for Caldwell in sixth. TBatted for Knott in eighth St Louis -~ 000 001 100—2 Boston _ - 201 000 20%—5 Solters. Bell, Melillo. Cooke (2) Error—Hemsley. Runs a2 . Carey. Cronin (2), Almada_ Two-base hits— Dahleren. Three-base hit—Al- Home run—Cronin. Stolen base— Sacrifices—Aimada, Bere. Double lay—-Meiillo to Cronin to Dahisren. Left | on bases—St. Louis. 12: Boston. . | base on balls—Off Caldwell up. 2 off Bowers. Thomas, Caidwell, mn 1 aRanm FERPIPS Wilson,p.. 0 Johnson (). e7zeta, a Ceoke. i W Styuck out—By | Hits—Off out in seventh): off 1 in 1_inning: off Thomas. none in 1_inning; off Bowers, ¥ in 813 innings: off Wilson. none in % inning. Winning pitcher—Bowe Losing _ pitcher—Cald, KD]H ‘lessrs Moriarty @ PLANS DONKEY TOURNEY First Ever Held Here Sponsored | by American Legion Post. A donkey base ball tournament— the first ever held in Washington—is being planned by the Victory Post of the American Legion to start at Grif- fith Stadium the night of September 28. Eight Washington civic organiza- tions will be involved in a series of games which will end on October 2. Moreover, the post is planning a | Time yet attempted, but the natural out- growth of the idea of using donkeys in sport. Plans for the grid contest will be announced later by Morfis A. Bealle, local athletic officer of the Legion. Featuring the scheduled diamond tournament will be a game between the police and fire departments, who will resume their time-honored ri- valry on Sunday afternon, September 29--two weeks from today. The open- ing game on the 28th probably will be between the Lions and Optimists Clubs, | PHILLIES BEAT BUCS | By the Associated Press. | Philadelphia a 17- | Quakers in the fifth after allnwing‘ | nine hits for five runs. | base hit—P. Waner. oft Walkup, 1 | Ve There’s a Reason i AURORA POLOISTS REACH FINAL TILT | Open Tourney—Play for Title Wednesday. By the Associated Press. ESTBURY, N. Y. Septem- ‘ N ) ber 14.—Seymour Knox's Aurora four, 1933 open polo champions when El- mer Boeseke rode with them, today gained the final of the 1935 event as | they stood off a last-minute rally; from the Hurricanes to score twice in the last few minutes for an 11-10 | victory. For a moment in the last period it appeared they had let victory slip | away from them as the Hurricanes Two of 'em, in fact. One is that although she is known in the movie colony at Hollywood as June Travis, she really is of a base ball family., her daddy being Harry Grabiner, business manager of the Chicago White Sox. The other reason for using her picture here is superfluous. ——~Copvr1ght A. P. Wirephoto. | | | IN CLOSING STANZA Blanton Hammered After Stretch of Strong Pitching—Prim Credited With Win ITTSBURGH, September 14—A last-inning, three-run rally gave to-5 victory over the | Pittsburgh Pirates today. The Phillies battered Cy Blanton for four hits in the final inning, after he had held them scoreless for five frames. Blanton was pulled in favor of Waite | Hovt, who finished without allowing a hit. Joe Bowman left the mound for the | He was replaced by Ray Prim, who was given credit for the victory. . Pitts Jensen 1. 3 Ha(ey c(‘ e 3 > FYTyRIIPy. ) ETTOEE S | 2omsm0s a3 | o> | s ,;‘ il 3 Seasnassnol | 2 & 9 Totals.. Score by innings: Philadeiphia 022 000 003—7 Pitisburgh 013 011 000—3& Runs—Allen. Chionn Cflmxlh (2). Todd. Vergez, Gomez. Hafe: P. Waner. Lav- e Qe LY oung " Chioszs. Go- mez. P. Waner, Runs_batfed in—Gomez Watkins. Camilli. Todd. Prim. Grace, Vaushan (2). Youns. Jensen. Two base hits—P. Wrner. Lavageito. Hafey. Three- Stolen bases—Ca- Vergez. Sacrifices—Moore, Browne. Allen. ~ Double play—Grace to Left on baser—Philadelphia. 4: Pittsburgh. 8. Bases on balls—Ofl Bo man: 1 6ff Prig- none; off Blanton. % Struck out—By Blanton. 6: by Bowman. Hits—Off Bowman. 9 in Prim 2 in 4 |nn1n Rl: innings 2 2. Winnine Bitcrere B " Losihe pircher | Blanton. Umpifs—Messrs. Klem Stewart | and Reardon. Time—1:59. YOUNGSTERS PLAY VETS Chevy Chase Stars of Present and Past Meet on Diamond. Past and present diamond stars of Chevy Chase will meet October 6,| when the old Bear Cats of a decade | ago meet the current Grays in an Old Timers-Youngsters game on the Chevy Ci.ase playground. Having lined up many of the old performers who played minor league ball after their sandlot experience here, the Bear Cats will present such | as Bobby Stevens, who played with Newark and the Phillies; Mike Stevens, of the Three-Eye League, Gilbert Tribby, who performed in the Blue Ridge Circuit and*Duke Oldfield of the Maryland League. milli cRez. Vaughan. Huck Hillary and Dick Knight also will play with the Cats. ‘The Grays will present their cur- rent line-up which includes Gus Crenshaw, Don Bradley, Bill B\Bher. Tom Valenza and Jack Smith. | Aurora 1 Post (5). |Six-Run Rally Overcomes Reds. | chased from | strongly on Wally Berger's double dur- Hank | Wit Duryee, Henry Gichner, Jim Cummins, | ¢ pulled upon even terms and then went ahead on a four-hit run up of the field by Bobby Strawbridge. That appeared to be just the spur they needed as Knox himself took the following throw-in to hit the ball | up the field for the tying score and Ebby Gerry followed a few plays | later with an angled goal from close in to climax a sustained attack and give Aurora its margin of victory. Aurora Gets Early Lead. AVJRORA rode out to an early lead, Billy Post scoring three times in | | the second chukker to make it 5-1 and they continued to outplay Laddie Sanford and his mates through the first half to run up a margin of 7-4 thrdugh the fourth period. Rallying much as they did against | the British invader, Hurlingham, in | the first round Thursday, the Hurri- canes held Aurora scoreless through the sixth and seventh chukkers and the early moments of the eighth pe- | Beat Hurricanes, 11-10, in Mat “Villain” WiII Oppose | ip.” | demands. | the ball yard last Thursday when he fought the tough Emil Dusek to a‘ riod while scoring four times them- selves. Then the rally fizzled out as Aurora again went to the attack to dominate the last few minutes of the game. Billy Post was high gun for the day with five goals while Knox, San- ford and Bobby Gerry each uoredw three times. Title Mnch Wednesday. THE winners will play for the title | next Wednesday against the uc-1 tor of tomorrow's match between ! Greentree, featuring Tommy Hitchcock, and the defendin: Templeton four led by Guest. Line-ups and summary: Aurora Pesition Seymour Stenn 9-goal Winston | Hurricanes. nen Sanford E. B Gerry. Jr._No. 5.R.A. Strawb oe 5. William' Post. 2d Back - G- Rathborné Score by periods Aurora ___ Hurricanes - 102 Scoring—Hurricanes Gerry (3 Strawbrides (51 K Knox' (3, Mills, 71 120 02—11 121 13—10 | ord (1), R.| Rathbone (). E. Gerry (2), | 'BRAVES, BEATEN 14 TIMES IN ROW, WIN Dressen Chased From Field for Disputing Ump. By the Associated Press INCINNATI, September 14.—Driv- ing Tony Freitas from the box in the sixth inning with a barrage of seven hits, four for extra bases, the Boston Braves snapped their 14-game | losing streak today and won from the | Cincinnati Reds. 6 to 4. Ten men went to bat in the heavy- | scoring frame, which sent Freitas to | the showers and brought in Benny Prey. Manager Charije Dressen was the field by Umpire George Magerkurth for protesting too ing the rally. The Reds claimed the hit was foul, but the umpire ruled dif- ferently. The Reds outhit Boston, 12 to 11 but bunching the seven hits brought about victory for the Braves. Boston. AB.H. . Cinci. Mowrylf "4 Mallon.2b T'pson.r{ Berger.cl Whit'y.ib Peher.ih Urb'ski.ss Spohrer.c Frank'e.p Suhl D219 Soomwsw iCamp'ell *Sullivan EE TSR W CI e | somammanssomn? Totals_ 37 1127 R Totals_ *Batted for Prey in seventh. tBatted for Nel lwn in pinth, Boston . - 000 006 000—6 Cincinnati - 001 100 101—4 Runs—Mowry. Mallon. Berger. Whitney. Urbanskl, Spohrer, Chapman (2}, Bot! Runs batted ' in_—Ber- ler ll\, Whll ey. Urbanski, Frankhouse (2). Goodman. Cuyler. Lombardi, Freitas. Two-base _hits—Mallon, _ Berger. Frank- | Bethesda Business Men's house. Goodman (2)._ Three-base hits— . kar Vs, sh on the o'e‘:fi. L « Answering the demand of the District’s colored population . . . & six-rounder between Gene Buffalo and Billy Eley has been put on the card . . . Buffalo has scored con- sistently over all welter foes here this Summer . . . the Philadelphia boy is a whirlwind in the ring . .. Eley is a local lad . .. and a pleas- ing fighter with a remarkable record . . . for the brief time he has been in pro ranks. In other bouts will be . .. Ray Ingram and Billy Bullock, light- weights, at six rounds . . . Joey Green and Leroy Dougan at six rounds . . . Billy Fitzsimmons and Joe Dobson over a four-round route ... Baby Face Untz of the Marines at Quantico and Wild Bill Howell scheduled to go four rounds . and an amateur affair of three rounds will bring together Eddie Arnold and Terrell Roberts . . Boys' Club boxers who will demon- strate one phase of what the police-fostered organizations are doing for the youngsters of the Capital. Looks as though Washington’s police will put on a corking show September 30 . . . to swell the funds used for making life better and brighter for the boys here . . any John Law will talk with you about getting tickets for this fistic fete—J. B. K. DAVISCOURT NEXT FOEFORDONOVAN Irish Jack at Ball Park Thursday Night. NE of the most popular wres- tlers to appear here since the | CANTHOLD TIGER Detroit Drops First Game, Takes Second to Keep Lead of 974 Tilts. By the Associated Press. EW YORK, Sept. 14—The Yankees finally tossed a wrench into the wheels of Detroit’s pennant machine today by winning the first game of a double-header from the Tigers, 2 to 1. But it didn’t do much damage, however, as Detroit went on to take the second 5 to 1 and maintain its 9'2-game lead. Johnny Broaca, who lost the first game of the series in a relief role, limited the league leaders to three hits to take the ftirst game. The only Tiger run was Goose Goslin’s homer in the fifth and the bespectacled | Yale graduate did a masterful job of | bearing down through the remaining frames to keep the Tigers from get- ting any closer. Bill Dickey pounded a home run in the second to start the Yanks off ahead and they gathered their other run off Alvin Crowder, who pitched six-hit ball, in the third. Blondy Ryan opengd with a double, advanced on Broaca's sacrifice and breezed home on Jesse Hill's single. Rookie Handcuffs Yanks. THE second game was decided about | as quickly when the Tigers pounded big Walter Brown for four runs in the second inning, then stood by while their brilliant rookie | | Tuesday night. | ing the Negro sensation to flatten the | 41 Choose Joe an BY EDWARD. J. NEIL, Assoclated Press Sports Writer. EW YORK, September 14.— N perts from Boston to Cali- | fornia, every man jack of | accomplishments of both warriors, | pick Joe Louis by 2 ratio of almfost two to one to knock out Max Baer in | Sports editors and fight ex-| them eye-witnesses to the greatest the Yankee Stadium a week from | The Asosciated Press asked these men to cast their ballots today on the probable outcome of a duel that promises to be the most sensational and richest in years. They went gal- lantly out on a limh, 41 of them pick- | former heavyweight champion, 23 choosing Baer by a knockout, Strangely, the average of all the rounds named for the knockout was the seventh for both sides, indicating | the general belief that the battle | should end less than half way along | the 15-round route. A half dozen | picked Louis to win the decision, | while eight named Baer by that method. New York writers, almost to a man, pick the sable sphinx from Detroit | to knock out Max, though Hype Igoe | of the Journal, likes Baer, and Paul | Gallico of the News has picked both at one time or another. Cas Adams and Dick Vidmer of the Tribune, Joe Williams and Walter Stewart of the and d 28 “See” Max. Wagner, Omaha Bee-News, K. O., 6; George Edmond, St. Paul Dispatch, K. O, 8; Cy Sherman, Lincoln (Neb.) Star, K. O. within 10; John Bentley, Lincoln Journal, K. O. within 7; Gene Kessler, Chicago Times, K. O. 7; Marvin McCarthy, Chicago Times, decision; Guy Butler, Atlanta Jour- nal, decision; Morgdn Blake, Atlanta Journal, K. O., 9; Bill Keefe, New Or- leans Times-Picayune, K. O. inside 8; Edwin Polock, Philadelphia Ledger, K. O. within 10; Lou JafTee, Philadel- phia Ledger, K. O, 6; James Gantz, Philadelphia Record, K. O, 5; Sam | Greene, Detroit News, K. O. within 7; ‘W. W. Edgar, Detroit Free Press, Louis, K. O. within 8; R. G. Lynch, Milwau- kee Journal, K. O. but not before 10; Dick Cullum, Minneapolis Journal, K. | O, 8or9. They Pick Baer. MORE Baer pickers: John Car- michael, Chicago Daily News, K. O, 7; Harry Martinez, New Orleans States, K. O., 7; Harry MacNamara, Chicago Herald Examiner, K. O., 7; Abe Pollock, Denver News, K. O. be- fore 6, Jack North, Des Moines Trib- une, K. O.; Perrv Lewis, Philadelphia Inquirer, K. O,, 7 or 8; S. O. Grauley, Inquirer, demsmn Joseph Phelan, Philadelphia Record, K. O., 8; How- | ard Mann, Chicago Daily News, deci- sion; Roland McIntyre, Milwaukee Sentinel, decision; John Fried, Phil- adelphia Bulletin, K. O., 10; Ed Moore, hurler, Roxie Lawson, held the Yanks World-Telegram, James P. Dawson of | Waterloo (Iowa) Cour in check. Lawson, winning his third mme since he came up from Toledo, s touched for nine hits and gave ‘<1x walks, but fanned six and was | highly effective in the pinches. A double by Gerald Walker, a triple | | by Jo-Jo White, and singles by Mar- | vin Owen, Mickey Cochrane and | Charley Gehringer spelled Brown's | downfall. Jimmy Deshong held the | Tigers in cheok with three hits until | he was removed for a pinch hitter | in the eighth. The final run came the Times, Ed Frayne of the American all pick Louis to win, mostly by early knockouts. Home Boys With Louis. MIDWESTE’RN experts leaned to- ward Baer, with the exception of Detroiters who voted solidly for the home boy, Louis, while Californians favored Baer in the main. Han Smith and Bill Leiser of the San Fran- | cisco Chronicle, Buddy Leitch of the days of Ralph Wilson and | 4o piren when Gehringer nicked | San Jose News and Joe Custer of the Billy Bartush, Irish Jack Donovan resumes main event status | in the weekly Turner show at Griffith | Stadium Thursday night His op- position will be provided by Dick | Daviscourt, a fellow Californian Colorful exponent of thea “Irish a specialty he devised, Don- ovan will engage in Daviscourt one of the great “villains” of the mat game. A hard-boiled, caulifiowered veteran of the grapple and grunt profession, Daviscourt, because of his rough tac- tics, always has lustily. In contrast, Donovan is a great crowd-pleaser. He wresties mainly along orthodox lines, but can be as tough as his opponent when occasion He demonstrated that at draw. Several supporting numbers to the Donovan-Daviscourt engagement are peing nrranged by Promoter Turner. ST. BERNARD RACES TO HAWTHORNE WIN Easily to Beat Top Dog in $5,000 Handicap. By the Associated Press C nard. temperamental star from the stable of E. D. Shaffer, was in a run- ning mood today and galloped to an easy triumph in the eighth running of the $5000 added -Hawthorne Handicap. The 3-year-old son of Bulldog, which ran second to Omaha in the Arlington classic, second to Good Foam in the Travers and won the Kenner Stakes at Saratoga. but looked an ordinary € a rejuvenated | horse on other occasions, won as he 3 | pleased. Jockey Paul Keester hustled him to the front in the first few strides and | had no trouble in staying there to win by a length and a quarter over a | distant relative, L. E. Kcmorous' Top Dog. Mrs. F. M. Grabner's Spanish | Babe landed third to make it an all- Chicago finish. St. Bernard was the favorite with the crowd of 17,000 spectators, Haw- thorne's biggest crowd in five years, and paid off at $5.60 to win. $4 to place and $3.40 to show. His victory also added $4.100 to the bank roll of | Owner Shaffer. The time for the mile | and an eighth was 1:503s. BOWLING BERTHS OPEN. ‘Teams desiring a franchise in the Bowling League are requested by the president, Judge Donald De Lashmutt, to be pres- ent at the final meeting tomorrow night at 8 o'clock in Bethesda's Boulevard alleys. . NINES IN TITLE CLASH. ‘The championship of the Federal League will be decided on the East Ellipse diamond at 4:30 o'clock tomor- row when Procurement Division and G. P. O. Federals meet in the final of a three-game series. GRID DRILL LISTED The Marion A. C., District unlimited sandlot champions last year, request all candidates for the foot ball team to report for practice today at Fair- lawn field at 11 o'clock. “Snail” De Labre’s presence is particularly de- sired. Today’s Schedule In Sandlot Loops &7 FOLU)WING are sandlot league games scheduled for Sunday: NATIONAL CT Blue Flame. vajer Shop o on the South Ellipse at 3 o'clock. Junior Class. Dixie Pigs Auths South s, Ellipse at 1 o'l o o MidEet cn = . otor ve, u on'the Boutt Elliose at 11 0ok "0 LAND COUNTY. Senate Glnn s at Cabin John at 3 o'clock. NOITHEIN VIRGINIA. White Section. Aldie at P\Iroellvlt Vienna at Mills Marshall' at® Faifax Station. Red Section. Arlington at_Manassas. Ballston at Palls Church. Balyhite Star Market vs. ‘Middleburs. st All games_at 3 o'clock. ATLANTIC & PAC ipse at 11 the crowd booing Simpson" 8, Eharmacy on the | Johnny Murphy for a double and | came all the way in from second {on a wild pitch. FIRST GAME. | Batrolt he Ge Gb Goslin 1 Walke Rogell. s Owen Crode Tota! AR 1 2 HY=DNAQ, - 000 010 H00—1 2 011 000 00x—2 Ryan. Errors— H Grey D like ¢ San Jose Mercury-Herald, all Louis by a knockout. Pat Frayne o the San Francisco Call-Bulletin, Alan Ward of the Oakland Tribune, Bill | Henry of the Los Angeles Times, Laird Gregory of the Portland Oregonian, Al Warden of the Ogden Standard- Exam.iner, of the Far Westerners, all stand loyal to th. home-bred Baer. Boston voted four-to-three for Louis. Austen Lake of the Boston American, Burt Whitman of the Her- ald, S. J. Mahoney of the Record and Harold Kaese of the Transcript pick Louis to win by a knockout, while Bill Hamilton of the Herald, Howard Reynolds of the Post and Peter Kelley of the Record believe Baer will win. | Some of the experts, like George . ' Barton of the Minneapolis Tribune, Dr'rm White.ct Bill Dighy of the New Orleans Item, Star and Jack Conway of the Boston | American, prefer to wait until they | have seen both men in training camp | ! before stepping off the deep end, while | Dawsonp 3 | Speculator, N. Y. 000 000—1 | . Owen. 'HICAGO, September 14 —St. Ber- Ba off Deshong. : off Lawson. By 1: by Lawson ning. Wild Ditches— ! Losine pitchers- Brown o Geisel.” Ormsby”and TWO TIgHT BATTLES WON BY WHITE SOX ! Lyons Scores, 4-2, and Whitehead, | in Ten-Inning Battle, Beats Athletics by 2-1. By the Associated Press I)HILADELPHH September Ted Lyons and John Wi won a pair of pitching duels fc Chicago White Sox today, Lyons turn | Ing in a 4-t0-2 win over the Athletics | in the opener of the double-neader, | and his twirling teammate emerging | victorious, 2 to 1, in the 10-inning nightcap. | The Sox staged a two-run rally in | the ninth inning of the first game, which gave Lyons the victory over | Rookie Woodrow Upchurch, young left-hander. Rip Raccliffe sngled n the tenth| nning ofythe nightcap, advanced when | Al Simmons walked, and came home | with the winning run on Zeke Bonura's safety to right. Chicago AB.H.O.A. Phila__AB. Tauby.rf. ( Wars'T.2b 4 0 Cramercf 4 Finnev.r{ 14— Totals 31 9 Chicago e 000 110 002—4 Philadelphia _ 2 001 001 00 S Rune_Simmons, Bonura. Appling, Hop- Warstler. ir. Errors—Sewell. fen Rahs batied TSt Hayes, Berrv. Warstler. hi—simmors = Home _runs— HOpkins. Warstler. Sacrifice— Double DAI\.\—HnDkH\S to Haves, r to Warstler to Foxx. Haves to Ap- Left_on bases—Chicago. . 6. Ease on balls—Off church. 2. Struck out—By by “Upchurch, 1. Umpiresoy cGowan, Summers and Marberry. | ase Simmons, Hi s Chicaca A Radcliff.1f S 1 ~usoni Fioan0 oom? 2005 1 onae Dietr e, 0 I iz Totals 33 5 30 17 - 000 000 100 1 000 100 000 0—1 | Hopkins. Finney. Er-| rors—None. Runs batted in—Whitehead, Bonura, Higgins. Two-base hits—Warstler. Avpling,_Stolen base—Radeliff. Sacrifice— | Haas. Double plays—Warstler to McNair | to Foxx (2). Applin Foxx to McNair to Foxx Fliladelohia, 0 5 Chicago Philadelphia Runs—Radcliffe. ng to Haves to Bonura. | Lf", on ba es— Struck out—By Whitehead. 4 ‘ Hits—Ofl Dosle. 7 in § toen.”” off Dictrich, 0 i 2, inning. Losing pitcher yle. | Umpires—Messrs. Summers, Mar- berry and McGowan. Timi 05. b CALL GRID MEETING. CUMBERLAND, Md., September 14 | (#)—High school foot ball coaches | and officials of Western Maryland and neighboring sections meet here Tuesday night to discuss the rules. | rounds. Ralph McGill of the Atlanta Constitu- | tion, avowing his belief that Louis will win in eight rounds, reserves the | right to switch his guess after he gets | a look at Baer in his workouts at Picks 'Em Two Ways. D BANG. sports editor of the ~ Cleveland News, came up now | with the double-barrelled prediction that “a 100-per-cent conditioned Baer | might win inside of three rounds.” but if he isn't, “Louis should plant | him inside of six." Bang's belief | | that Baer can finish it quickly is | shared by Claire Kelly of the Chicago American. who says Baer can win by a knockout in three rounds, the swift- est outright pick on behalf of the giant Californian. Poss Parsons of the Denver Post, of all the critics picking Baer by knock- out, named the latest round, the elev- enth, for the victory. while none of the | Louis knockout predictors thought it | would take the Negro more than 10 | The Associated Press critics were evenly divided in their choices, all predicting a knockout. Alan Gould, | the sports editor, picks Louis to win in six, while this writer thinks Baer will come through in 10. Charles W. Dunkley, choosing from Chicago. names Louis in five, while Russ New- land, in San Francisco, likes Baer in- side of 10. John O'Donnell, Davenport Democrat. K. O. within 8; Dan De mond, Sioux City (Iowa) Journal, K. O. B LOUIS PLEASES 1. ,500 IN TORRID WORKOUTS Boxing Is Featured by Furious Exchanges With Cavalier in Outdoor Ring. By the Associated Press PO\‘IPTO\' LAKES. N. J, September 14—Joe Louis put on a torrid exhibition of glove throwing in his outdoor arena today, having braved the damp and chilly weather to ac- of 1500 that ney at the gates ned indoors, but the was far too small to accommodate crowd. The Bomber donned a he sweatshirt and traveled two rounds each with Paul Cavalier, Lew Flowers and Bob Moody and one with Roy Williams. The workout was featured by several furious exchanges between to hold t | Clyde McBride of the Kansas City |Louis and Cavalier, the latter stand- ing toe to toe with the Bomber and exchanging punch for punch. Among the spectators was Young | Bob Fitzsimmons, son of famous old Ruby Robert, and a good heavyweight himself several years ago. “He seems to be a natural boxer™ said Fitzsimmons. “He does every- thing instinctively—and he does it right. He's the finest ringman I have seen in years.” Minor Leagues American Association. Columbus, 11-4: Toledo. 6-8. 8t. Paul. 9; Milwaukee, 4. Southern Association. Chattanooga, 4: Atlanta, 0. Nashville, 10; Knoxville, 1. Memphis, 2; New Orleans, Pacific Coast. Missions, 5-9; Seattle, 1-5. Sacramento, 5; Hollywood, 0. Portland, 5: Los Angeles, 4 San Francisco, 5; Oakland, 4 International (Play-off). Syracuse, 5: Newark, 2, Piedmont. (Play-off.) Richmond, 14; Asheville, 4, BASE BALL TODAY 1:30P.M Here are some of the opinions: Dan Taylor, Cleveland News: “It all | depends on Baer's physical condition. | In shape he should score a knockout | | within 10 rounds. Louis never has | been tagged like Baer can tag them. | Louis couldn’t knock out Patsy Per- roni or Natie Brown and Baer is cer- tainly a better fighter than either | of them.” Warren Brown, Chicago Herald-Ex- aminer: “Louis any time he wants to, Some More Opinions: H G. SALSINGER, Detroit News: “Louis will win. but it's difficult to tell the round. Lnuls can beat any- body who opens up.” Mark Kelly, Los Angeles Examiner: “Louis can't hurt Baer. Max took Schmeling’s best shots, then beat a man who is as good a boxer as Louis. I pick Baer.” Sid Ziff, Los Angeles Herald-Ex- | press: “Baer may be tough this time, but he is too easy to hit. I believe | Louis will score a knockout in one of the late rounds.” | Frank T. Blair, Long Beach (Calif.) Express: “Louis by a knockout in the sixth round. Baer, at his best, couldn't beat this Negro, who is a short, deadly | puncher, while Max is easy to hit.” | Poss Parsons, Denver Post: “Baer | will win by a knockout not later than | the eleventh, but he will have to take \ some terrific punches.” Earl Coughlin, Cedar Rapids (Iovm | Tribune: “If Baer survives three| rounds, I look for him to win inside of 10.” Here are more Louis pickers: Arch | Ward and Harvey Woodruff, Chicago Tribune, by K. O. 6; Havey Boyle, | Pittsburgh Post Gazette, K. O., 8: Leo Kautz, Davenport (Iowa) Times, K. O. 6; Jim Doyle, Cleveland Plain | Dealer, K. O, 10 or less; Fred Ware, | GUARANTEED ¢ USED TIRES POTOMAC TIRE CO. 28th & M N.W. Double-Header Washington vs. Cleveland AMERICAN LEAGUE PARK Tickets at Park 9 AM. in our 49th Anniversary —the— ALLSTATE TIRE in Washington, D. C. with the Greatest Mileage The person having this ALLSTATE Tire . will receive FREE A brand New 1935 ALLSTATE Tire with New Flat Tread Write Us Giving Full Information Immediately SEARS, ROEBUCK & CO. 911 Bladensburg Rd. N.E.

Other pages from this issue: