Evening Star Newspaper, October 3, 1935, Page 42

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Cc—4 s Mrs. Clark and Lily Harper BY W. R. McCALLUM. | ington for this year, the gressional next week will bring to- tional title of the season. Also it will are winding up their busiest season | Navy Country Club, a tall matron | in the tourney which is to open next EVENT NEXT WEEK | | Much in Limelight of ARKING the high spot in M Middle Atlantic Golf Asso- gether all the leading golfers from this be the final match-play test of the around the Capital. who plays far better than most male Monday mo ng. Mrs. Clark and ! HIGH SPOT OF '35 Play Next Week. | woman’s golf around Wash- ciation woman's championship at Con- sector in the chase for the biggest sec- year for the fair club swingers, who Mrs. David H. Clark of the Army- | golfers, will be the outstanding entrant Lily Harper will be the ones to beat, when eld to t k won convinc- from Por s the home cl before they can get alol in t championship. Mrs. Rol#hd Mac- Kenzie, wife of the Congressional pro, has been playing very well. So has Helen Dettweiler, the blond girl who | has a bright future in golf if she works hard on her short game. These two are good enough to upset either Mrs. Clark, the champlon, or Miss Harper, the girl who has been runner- up two years in a row and is due to ‘win soon. from Mrs. Morrow Entered. LIRS E. BOYD MORROW, thrice a mid-Atlantic champion and §iX t nd State title holder, already is an entrant and Mrs. J. Marvin Haynes, twice a winner, may come up from the South to play. Along with Mrs. Betty P. Meckley. the present Maryland champion; Mrs. | Jack Scott, runner-up to Mrs. Meck- | ley for the Old Line St: tle: W - fred Faunce, the District ¢ Elizabeth Houghton, runner- | District title, and Mrs. Leo Walper, | the Kenwood champion, these two | and Mrs. rk and Miss Harper, would constitute a formidable field in any woman’s golf tournament a. where. Miss Harper has branched | out in the naticnal field this year | &nd, with national championship ex- perience behind her, may go a long way. | Several features in addition to the | championship will be staged by the association and the club tournament week, among them a d. ing contest on Monday and a mixed foursome tourney on Th tries will close tomorrow gressional Club and mi o panied by the fee of $3. | PORTS. AKING into consideration the large number of persons fishing on the two best grounds in Chesapeake Bay, the Gooses and Southwest Middles, it is no wonder that some of the enthusiasts did not | return with many blues Sunday. How- | ever, some did get good catches. In-| cluded among them were R. K. Miller, C. B. Sinclair, L. Mathis, L. E. Boehme, Bill Sour and Miller Kies- king. These anglers, with Capt. Wolfe | at Kenward Beach, crossed the bay to the Gooses and landed 31 biues. All boats in the upper part of the bay in the vicinity of Galesville, | Shadyside, Herring Bay, etc,, are tak- | ing their fishing parties to the Gooses. Sunday Capt. Noah Hazzard | took out John Storm, H. H. White, | William E. Cunningham, William L. Majors, Charles Messenger and Thomas A. Lake. . Supplied with four bushels | of chum, these anglers landed 27| blues weighing up to 7!2 pounds. Many good catches of rock and blues have been reported off St. Georges Island and Tall Timbers. Elmer W. Holland, fishing with Capt. J. L. Goldshorough off Tall Timbers, landed nine rock weighing from 8 to 5 pounds, Capt. Walter Cheseldine is reported to have landed 77 sea trout and blues, hing from 2 to 7 pounds, and Jack Coleen had more or less a field day with a catch of 31 blues landed off Tall Timbers, Off St. Georges Island the rockfish, | in the thousands. still are in shallow water 4 and 5 feet deep. | Several days ago Oscar Hiser made a good catch on the Gooses. Monday he organized another party and fished on these grounds. He selected Capt. Baker of Kenwood Beach and had in his party Judson Gude, David Eng- | land and George Schmidt. Fishing | from 8 a.m. to 2:30 p.m., they landed 48 blues, some of them weighing 8 pounds. The majority of these fish were landed in the morning. Capt. W. W. Wilkinson, at Old Rock Run Mill on the Susquehanna River, reports that boats with guides are getting from 9 to 20 wall-eyed pike a day. He said the river and creeks are clear and low and that bass are strik- ing. At Rock Hall, Md., Capt. Lewi Blackston, jr., reports trolling for roc as excellent. Large ones are biting early in the morning and late in the evening. At Ocean City. Md., ocean fishing is not so good. All varieties are being taken. Surf fishing is reported better than at any time this season. A. H. 4. Mears, at Wachapreague, Va., says sea trout 6 and 7 pounds are now being caught, as are croakers and channel bass. Capt. L. S. Corbin at Quinby, Va., reports the best fishing in years. Large channel bass and all other ocean fish are breaking. Capt. Bryan Travis, at Cape Charles, Va., reports channel bass fishing as excellent. In three days he reports he landed 23. CANIONER FAGES ATARTAR N ROTH Latter, “Punching Bag” Two Years Ago, Held Like- ly to Dethrone Champ. By the Associated Press | EW YORK, October 3.—Tony | Canzoneri, the fighter-farmer | from Marlboro, N. Y. will| come to the big town tomor- Tow night to meet the challenge of | young Al Roth for the world light- weight boxing championship. A couple of years ago Roth was a | training camp punching bag for Tony. He's conceded a good chance of de- | throning Canzoneri, but some fight experts are. wondering if he will be plagued by an inferiority complex | Roth became a star in his own right last Summer with convincing victories | over Leonard Del Genio and Davey Day, outstanding title contenders. Tony Is Ring Puzzle. ‘ 'ONY is one of Father Time's great- i est ring enigmas. He is 30 years | old and has been fighting in leather for 10 years. His legs are not as strong as they were a decade ago, but they are gaited fast enough to step | around with the swiftest and best of the younger crop. | Lew Ambers, the Herkimer, N. Y., | buzz-saw, found that out last May when Tony beat him in 15 rounds for | the title. Since then Canzoneri has had four 10-round non-title bouts against much younger opponents and won them all. Roth plans to let Tcay do the lead- ing for the first few rounds to find out what the “old man” has. Then, if Roth is still on his feet and able to navigate, he is going to turn on the pressure. The fight is scheduled for | 15 rounds. Roth Aiming for K. 0. ROTH will get $4,000 for his end of the purse. He is so confident of | winning the title by a knockout that | he is reported to have bet one-quarter | of that amount he will knock out Tony before the tenth round. { “I could lick Tony two years ago when I worked for him" said Roth. | *“I'll keep punching until those candy | legs of his fold under him.” B LIST BEAVER DAM PLAY Although the final round in the |as the 1935 edition of the Rough ARMIY POLO STARS, WILL SHOW SKILL Maj. Swing Is Seen as Top‘ Performer in Tourney THE EVENING ROM mouth to source the Po- tomac is clear and now is th2 time for bass anglers to get in are being landed in Maryland and Virginia streams. The Shenandoah is clear at Harpers Ferry and at River- ton, Va., both branches of the Shen- andoah are clear, According to reports of broken lines, rods and straightened-out hooks, the sport goods stores must be doing rushing business. The greatest sport ever enjoyed by anglers for bluefish now is the order. These fish are rans- ing in size from 5 to 10 pounds. Lots of people think with the passing ot September the fishing season is over. As a matter of fact October is the | best month for fishing both in fresh and salt water. At this time only the larger fish are caught and will con- tinue to furnish great sport until cold weather drives them to their homes in ocean depths, ~ GRAPPLE TONIGHT their heavy work. Many bass/ STAR, WASHINGTON, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, DG, 1935. SAVOLDI, RAINES Aggressive Wrestlers Head Attractive Program at Base Ball Park. RESTLING roughness may hit a record-breaking pace | at Grifith Stadium to- | | night when Joe Savold, | i former Notre Dame foot ball great, and | Dick Raines, reformed Texas cowboy, | et together in the feature of Pro- | moter Joe Turner's weekly show. Both highly aggressive and grand shiowmen, these principals are expected to stage one of the fiercest matches of the fading open-air season. Never having had his athleticd shoulders pinned locally and losing only to champion Danno O’Mahony on disqualification here, Savoldi- en- When we think of the wide area of water in Chesapeake Bay we wonder | just why it is that the blue are being caught, principally on two fishing grounds, “the Gooses” and Southwest Middles. One of the leading boat cap- tains at Herring Bay told me recentls he would take me out on the bay, chi all day in the vicinity of the black buoy off Holland Point and if T caugbt cne blue he would give me his boat. Capts. Robert E. Lee and Ncah Haz zard report they are not catching anything in their neighborhoods. This is conclusive proof that the biues are not in the upper part of the bay There may be a school observed now and then, but here there is no real fishing. \‘VASHINGTON now is enthused over the fine blue fishing in Chesa- | peake Bay. Boats are unobtainable Saturday and Sunday uhless engaged in advance and even during the weck it is difficult to get a boat for a trip | to Southwest Middles, “the Gooses” or | James Point and on these well-knowa tnds your catch will be iimited if you do not have a good supply of ale- wives for chumming. During the first part of the blue fishing season all anglers were trolling. Now all ure chumming and if you run out of | chum you just as well may wind i ir lines and go home. One bushel of alewives is not enough—take two or three bushels. The first bushel vl get the fish into your slick, formed by the ofl in these fish, but you have to hold them with your chum, hence the second bushel absolutely is neces- sary. Riley Carroll at the Eleventh street fish wharf is handling alewives for the local anglers, and yesterday morn- ing had on hand 100 bushels, with | more coming in by truck every day. | His phone number is National 8637. | W. L. Santman, who has been fish- ing on Southwest Middles every week during the Summer, switched his scene of operations recently to the Gooses. He said: “S. T. Maltby and I had a very enjoyable day on the Gooses. We caught 25 beautiful blues and missed with equally as many or more strikes. | The smallest of our catch weighed 4 pounds, and we had two which weighed 93, pounds each. From my own ex- | perience I am convinced that there are just as many fish on the Gooses and as large as those on the Middles.” These anglers had as their guide Capt. Bill Hayden of Solomons Island. Brooke T. Young, well-known local angler, fished on the Gooses last week and had in his party Ray Adams and P. J. Hohlhammer. They went out from Kenwood Beach with Capt. Greenhawk. Chumming for four hours, they caught 38 blues, weighing Opener Tomorrow. from 5 to 7 pounds. Young, who has | fished practically everywhere, said he HILE War Department's Maj. C. C. Smith has been singled out as the man to watch in the handicap polo tournament starting tomorrow after- noon at Potomac Park. Maj. Joseph ' Swing, sponsor of the 6th Field Artil- lery from Fort Hoyle, Md., will be the Ieading player on the field in the open- ing game. Swing, who leads his team into ac- tion against the Washington Free- booters in a free attraction at 4 o'clock, will carry a 3-goal handicap into the fray. The rest of his line-up, | which includes Majs. Hayes and Far ren and Lieut. Bruce Scott, bear 2- goal handicaps. | Capt. Willingham of the Freebooters | is entered without a handicap, while Lieut. Col. Davidson, Capt. Galloway | and Lieut. Luebbermann each have one. Tomorrow’s game will be one of the two free games in the champion- | ship tilts. Other attractions will cost 25 and 50 cents for box seats. Of the 32 players cn the 8 teams, Maj. Smith of the favored War De- partment aggregation received the highest handicap. He must enter each game with a 6-goal hinderance. No| other player in the tournament has fore than three. ROOSEVELT’S HOPES | IN FOOT BALL RISE Heavy Eleven Shows Promise in 13-to-6 Triumph Over an Alumni Combination. OPES of a winning team at Roose- velt High this season arose today Riders reflected upon its 13-6 victory | over an alumni team in the Roosevelt Stadium yesterday. The massiveness of the Roosevelt team, in contrast to the small elevens of the past, also contributes to the optimism of Upper Thirteenth street supporters. At that, the high school's current never had better sport. HILLIP LUSTINE, O. K. Hiser, Judson Gude and Stevens Miller also selected the Gooses for a try at the blues. They went out with Capt. Baker from Kenwood Beach and land- ed 45 blues, weighing from 5 to 9 pounds. One of these anglers told us he was using a brand-new 45-pound test line, and that a big blue, which he estimated to weigh 12 pounds. broke his line as easily as if it had been cotton thread. While these and many more catches were made on the Gooses. many other anglers were fishing on Southwest Middles. Dr. J. Nelson Paine continues to land big blues on Southwest Middles. He and Courtney Marcey, Carl Bond and Percy Taylor, hooked 32 the other day, weighing from 5 to 8 pounds. Dr. | Paine told us he counted 75 boats on these grounds on his last trip. They had as their guide Capt. Raub Drury. A. R. Class, director of housing, and | T. Y. Milburn, local architect, used the trolling method and landed in one hour 15 blues averaging 8 pounds. They went out with Capt. C. F. Wil- loughby. Minus chum, they started for Southwest Middles. In the mouth of St. Jeromes Creek they saw a school of blues breaking, and in the first 10 or 15 minutes had lost two of their four Japanese feathers. With the re- maining two feather lures they caught all their fish in one hour. Fishing on the Gooses, John O. Patton, John W. Donnelly, Ralph Davis, Henry and Clarence Jenkins and Ernest Mirrison landed 25 blues, their largest fish tipping the scales at nearly 9 pounds. Eight lines were broken, one of them a brand-new 60- pound test line. counters in Raines an opponent well | qualified to demand his best. |~ Joe Turner's ranking No. 1 money | winner for the 1935 Summer season, Savoldi is expected to attract two separate and distinct followings to- | night. Always popular with the Capi- tal wrestling public, the former Notre Dame all-America foot ball player also figures to bring out hosts of grid game followers, * Invariably a show stealer in pre- liminary spots locally, Raines tonight will bid for a main event status. A headliner and big favorite elsewhere, the 22-year-old mat yeoman may at- | tain a similar position here if he im- presses sufficiently in the tussle with Savoldi. In a semi-final number Hans Kampfer will engage Len Hall. Thirty- | minute time limit matches will find Dean Detton meeting Emil Dusek and Clff Olsen engaging Silent Abbott. The show will start at 8:30 o'clock. FNSHY PODNDS " SPARRG HATES BIG PRO GOLF LIST OFF nounced that its entire Winter sched- ule has been canceled. Action was taken after the receipt California Cancels Nine Events at | of a letter from George R. Jacobus, president of the Professional Golfers’ Ruler’s Suggestion. Association, that the schedule “does 3 (#)—|mot meet with the approval of our Thlf%nfig?naluwm:non of O"”n Tournament Committee or myself.' Golf Tournament Sponsors has an-| The move took away from barn- SPORTS. Women Divot Diggers All Set for Middle Atlantic Championship Struggle B | storming pro golfers prize money of | $32.500 for a schedule of nine tourna- | ments. “GEESE” FOR TIGERS. Detroit had two “geese” yesterday— Goose Goslin in left field and a goose | lost all 5 Scotch foursomes and broke egg on the score board. BRITISH GOLFERS BOW. TORONTO. October 3 (®).—The British Ryder Cup golf team, beaten last week end by the United States in the International Cup series, bowed to a team of Toronto professionals yesterday, 9': to 5',. The invaders "even in the 10 singles. Winter will soon be here. Be prepared for the first cold snap! It will pay you to equip your car while stocks are complete and prices are low. to avoid the rush. Avail yourself of our immediate service now You'd be surprised how inexpensively you can outfit your car for Winter safety and comfort at Western Auto Stores. “Rubber-Coat” Top Dressing Preserves and WAt erproofs Protects and beautifies, Replace Old Spark oy Plugs with New Guaranteed 10.000 Miles Each in Sets Wizard Wonder—Non-Evaporating =3 Anti-Freeze 2-Gallon t anti-freeze. Re- ives safe, care-iree winter. Wicked in Workouts for ‘ Gallagher Scrap. | f practical joking of Kingfish Levinsky had disappeared to- scowling, determined warrior appar- ently more determined than ever to | Marty Gallagher within seven rounds | in their meeting at Griffith Stadium Aware that he must dispose of Marty Gallagher decisively to qualify Neusel and Primo Carnera at Mad- ison Square Garden in November, the | hardest workout yet at Our Lady of Victory gymnasium on Conduit recad. | UCH was the pace set by Lt\'msky.‘ in Monday's workout that Tiger spart mate to go the entire 16 days ‘whxle assisting Joe Louis in prepara- | off yesterday. With Williams recu- | perating from the effects of the King's ored light heavyweight, voluntarily worked overtime. | sky's bombardment, Edwards one of | the finest gymnasium workers in the badly. e never seen such a puncher,” | and from more angles than anybody | I've ever seen. It's impossible to fig- weight and he's going a long way in | this boxing game yet!” o BLACKSEURG‘ Va., October 3—| | Sodaro and Ben Dodge are back in/! | the line-up as Virginia Tech tunes up rival—the Maryland Old Liners—for | the twenty-first time on the grid-| Unable to play against Clemson |last week, this trlo of mainstays| 1'1’1\'1‘ that Tech will hurl at the Terps. quarterback and placement kicker de | luxe. Reynolds is a big, fast 6-footer | liantly last season, and Dodge is & star 200-pound tackle. | trot into Baltimore Stadium with an | even chance to upset the highly Kingfish, Through Clowning, HE rollicking good nature and | day and left in its wake a make good his promise to knock out next Wednesday night. for a shot with the winner of Walter King yesterday blazed through his | Sparring Mate Lays Off. Roy Willlams (who proved the only tion for Max Baer) was forced to lay potent fists, Billy Edwards, local col- Though standing up under Levin- | country, admitted he was staggered mw | Billy observed, “that man hits harder ure his style. He's still a great heavy- V. P. 1. GAINS STARS Veterans Buck Reynolds, George to battle an old Southern Conference | iron in the Baltimore Stadium. | should add much to the foot ball Sodaro is a stocky, hard-running | from Maryland soil, who played bril- | With their return Tech expects tD‘ touted Old Liners. GODFREY IS “CHAMPION.” BRUSSELS, October 3 (#)—George Godfrey, American Negro heavy- weight, outpointed Pierre Charles of Belgium last night in 15 rounds and gained the International Boxing Union’s designation as “world heavy- weight champion. raw.v WIZARD Batteries now as low as WIZARD De Luxe Extra Plates! Extra Power! Guaranteed 24 Months More Starting Power! More Amps! Longer Life! Saves Money! 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Here is the schedule at Beaver Joe Bovello, halfback, went over the Dam Sunday morning: line for the two scores, but received Second flight. 9:10, W, T. Henderson | great aid from Jake Fleischman, 240- Foacir v oY e E0ke i Bigha | pound, 6 feet 2 fullback, who shared J. T. Hughes vs. Charles W..Griffin; | the ball-carrying duties. 9:25 vi . R : et “Aieht Joa6 Ratgk £ Zubes | Line-ups and summary: s Roosevelt. Kol Chevrolet '30-'32 .. 59¢ equally low. OF MYSTERY FACES.. WI N $I 75 CASHPRIZE o CONTEST! A Contest that will thrill every Man and Young | Man Interested in Science, Sports, Mechanics : S | ALSO! DON'T MISS THESE VITAL ARTICLES hy i l; ‘@ Championship Football, by e R“;dn Am)n;.-‘fflaugu seventh flight. 9:35. | R. Murphy: eig Schommer vs. S. C. Y & Alumni Mo, Helea, vy E R Kaufman v: flight, 9:40, John Carroll. 3113 14th ST. N.W. | 923-25 7th ST. N.W. MAIL ORDERS ADD 10%. WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. L I I g Bernie Bierman of Minnesota R. .J:.ml Doolittle on Avia- | Full Details | of Contest in November ¢ L] PALACE SLATES WORKOUT. A practice for the Palace A. C. has been called for this afternoon on the Seventeenth and B streets field. On Sunday players are to re- port at 10 am. at Seventh and G streets southwest for a game with the Richmond Arrows. r HEEE=0; QHM; Bovello Fleischman R Q L R F R @ - Fox gosevelt 00 0—13 Alimni 27000 6— Touchdo ). Grimm. Point after touchdown—Beamer (pass). Referee | geibler (George Washington), Umpire— Littman (Washingion and Lee). & INVENTIONS MAGAZINE

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