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SPORTS. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1935. SPORTS., * A—19 ‘Braddock Sees Huge Gate, Wi —_— w Rates Joe Only Real Foe, but Sure He Can Take Him. By the Associated Press. : EATTLE, November 5.—James J. ; heavyweights, came forth to- = day with a prediction of a mil- with Joe Louis and then without drawing a breath, promised to beat Bitingly summing up the shortcom- ings of other possible adversaries, opponent in whom he was interested. “There is no one now that means said. “I figure that a match between Louis and me will draw better than a ponent for tne biggest meney. S s is quite a fighter. but I really think hasn't been tested vet, and I feel sure Anxious to Face Joe. i RADDOCK will not defend his title | into the ring, he said, he wants to see none other than Joe Louis in the Here are the champion's opinions of ranking heavyweights boxer, but Louis will take him. “Primo Carnera, King Levinsky and they faced Louis.” Braddock dismissed Jack Sharkey manager. was more expressive. He | calicd Sharkey “a bum and a quitter.” | excellent boxer. but “not good enough” to whip Braddock. Gould said he| MILLION OR MORE Plans June Fight. Braddock, reigning king of the | lion-dollar gate for his expected fight | the brown bomber from Detroit. Braddock declared Louis was the only o great deal outside of Joe.” Braddock | million. I'm picking the toughest op- nk can beat him Louis really that I can take him.” until June, but when he does go other corner. “Max Schmeling is a pretty good | Max Baer were scared to death when with a shrug. Joe Gould, Braddock's | Gould credited Louis with being an | would sign for Braddock to meet the | Is He, Was He R. F. (TED) U. C. L. A fullback. now storm center Coast School. or Did He? JUSTIFIED BY ELEY OR the first time in 10 profes- than a victory today, but the un- Clashing in the feature of the Lin- ging match in which many thought ,manner after riding out a storm of rating as one of the best local fistic Colored Welter Is Clever in Draw With Buffalo, Held sional ring battles Billy Eley, Washington colored welter- defeated youngster lost little, if any, prestige as a result of a 10-round draw coln A. C's opening indoor boxing show last night. Eley and Buffalo top- Buffalo earned a shade. The experi- enced Philadelphia welter started | Eley's punches midway the fight. Eley’s performance, however, was }rmspccu in recent years, He was | outsmarted by Buffalo on occasions. HIGH RING RULING Winner by Some. F weight, reviewed something less with Gene Buffalo. ped off a snappy card with a slug- flashily and wound up in the same | satisfactory enough to justify his high | but he packed a dangerous wallop and | perhaps inflicted the most serious | damage of the fight in the third round, which ended with- Buffalo slightly rocky. STRAIGHT OIF THE TEE by W. HE duffer is coming into his own on the local golf courses. For six months he has been forced to accept bad lies, has played the ball from divot holes and has blasted away at golf balls stuck in sundry spots where he couldn't possibly play the shot and now his time has come, for Winter rules are being put into use on the local lay- outs. ‘Washington invoked Winter rules last week end and immediately the scores began a big drop. Columbia, following_the match of the century. for the Cummings Trophy yesterday, is about ready to put Winter rules in effect and other clubs will follow suit within a few days. It is the hey-day of the duffer, Francis Ouimet, Boston veteran (left), latory hand to Levi Yoder, his teur championship. The match at Cleveland. . garrison finish by Baby Kid | With plenty of good golf weather in Chocolate of Philadelphia was good | front of him. Most of the clubs will enough to win a unanimous decision | Permit the ball to be reteed all ager from another Philadelphia welter, | the course except in hazards, while | Ca’vin Reed, in the eight-round semi- |Some Wwill permit teeing only in the final. In a featherweight scrap over | falrways. all revolving around whether he is his twin brother or whether his twin brother is he, or both are a couple of other fellows, the same distance Ted King was | awarded an unpopular decision over Bohby Green. | Preliminaries saw John Freeman taking a unanimous verdict from Lem Simons in a six-round middleweight |bout and Jack Grant teghnically | knocking out Silas McAllister in the | first round of a scheduled six-round KEY, of eligibility row raging at the —Copyright. A. P. Wirephoto. | heavyweight battle. { A capacity crowd saw the show, | B e e 'MARYLAND A. C. IN FRAY ; tember. | | FRATERS WANT DATE. Braddock will box Jack McCarthy Tackles Fredericksburg Pros at s of Boston in an exhibition here to- night. BURK. BORDEAU BATTLE Bout Tops Boxing Card Tonight at Our Lady of Victory Gym. Kirk Burk, former local amateur heavyweight standout, and Ox Bor- KEYS UP U.C.L. A Whether Star Back Is Right or Wrong Key. ny deau, ex-George niversity foot ball player, tonight the feature of an e card at the O Church, Reservol The show is fo Holy Name Societs Backing up the main event. Mike Tardugno of the Jewish Community Center will oppose Joe Doty of the Mohawk Club in a lightweight battle and Jimmy Clayton will engage John- ny Di Pour. The latter two are welters | Action will start at 8:30 o'clock. | Admission will be 50 cents. CATHEDRAL CLUB'S DEFY. A challenge to the Friendship Heights 115-poynd team has been issue by the Cathedral Club. which would like to play this Saturdav. | Call Allan Rothenberg at Adams 6338 ERE s BASKET OFFICIALS MEET. | Referees of the Approved Board of District Basket Ball Officials will meet at 8 oclock tonight in Gonzaga Col- lege for a business and interpretation session. STELLARMORIS WINS. By a 6-0 score, the Stellarmoris eleven defeated the All-Stars, a group of former high school pigskinners, on the Soldiers’ Home gridiron. Fights Last Night By the Associated Press. PITTSBURGH—Mickey Duris, 140, | Johnstown, Pa., outpointed Tony Her- | rera, 141, El Paso, Tex. (10); Norment | Quarles, 129, Norfolk, Va., stopped Ross Fields, 130, Weirton, W. Va. (6); Jack Trammel, 190 _ Pittsburch, | stopped Ike Battles, 178, Erie, Pa. (6 BALTIMORE—Joe Rivers, 131, Bal- timore, knocked out Danny London, 125, Brooklyn (9). | FLINT, Mich—Nat Litfin, 123, Pittsburgh, outpointed Leo Rittenour, 121, Akron, Ohio (10); John Whiters, 100, Pontiac, Mich., outpointed Ba tling Bozo, 190, Birmingham, Ala. (8); Ralph Gizzy, 137, Pittsburgh, out- pointed Jack Kelly, 138, Akron, Ohio (6). CHICAGO—Wilfred (Moon) Mul- lins, 128, Vincennes, Ind., outpointed Willie Davis, 133, Mexico (10); Bob Tinsley, 136, Chicago, outpointed Bus Breeze, 140, Manhattan, Kans. (6); Jackie Sherman, 149, Detroit, stopped Gus De Salvo, 146. Milwaukee (3); Harold Brown, 143, Chicago, outpoint- ed Danny Mellilo, 149, Cincinnati (4). BISMARCK, N. Dak —Dick Dema- | faculty representative, was en route | as e Associated Press. OS ANGELES, November in 5.— B I the eligibility and identity of & star fullback at the Univer- | sity of California at Los Angeles was | missing today. | The missing “key” was cnrolled as | R. F. (Ted) Key, but R. B. Norman, | Amarillo, Tex.. high school principal, said he actually was Clois Francis Key, former Texas Mines grid star, pl ing at U. C. L. A. under his brother's name and with his high school cre- dentials. Dean Earl J. Miller, U. C. L. A. to El Paso and Amarillo for first-hand information ccncerning the foot ball- ving Keys brothers, involved in a situation as baffling as the famed mys- tery play, “The Seven Keys to Bald- pate.” One Key Won't Talk. U C. L. A. officials said late yester- * day Key would make the trip to Texas to help Dean Miller get at the truth of the matter, but Key had not been found when his train left The welter of conflicting opinion brought no comment from an R. F. Key in Amarillo, quoted by Norman | his source of the information | which caused Dean Miller to withhold Key from the California game Sat- urday. All efforts to reach R. F. Key at Amarillo failed. A messenger from whom he accepted a telegram said Key told him he would see no one until today. W. W. Cook, now in the public school system of Los Angeles, identi- fied the picture of Ted Key as the vouth he had 1n English class when he was going to school at Vernon, Tex., thereby corroborating the state- ments of the youth and his father, James Key, and his sister that he is R. F. Key. Resembles Other Key. COACH MATTY BELL of Southern | Methodist University, the next | grid opponent of U. C. L. A., said at Dallas, Tex., he was “thoroughly con- vinced” Ted Key is the same as Shorty (Francis Clois) Key, former foot ball player at Texas School of Mines. Coach Al Baggett of West Texas State Teachers College said a news- | paper picture of Ted Key, the U. C. | L. A. star, resembled Clois Key, whom | he coached at Vernon High School prior to 1928. Press Box ¥ ray, 146, Bismarck, outpointed Joe| (Contin - i oM EDeavesi (6 non || nuLued BroM Sevents Page) Gramling, 139, Bismarck, stopped |him. “A good punch? He had a Eddie Munyer, 152, Rugby, N. Dak. (4), HOLYOKE, Mass—Johnny Jadick, 137, Philadelphia, McMahon, 139, New York City (10); Gene Barrett, 131, Grand Rapids, Mich,, outpointed Harry Dillon, 133, New York (8). ; MILWAUKEE—Oscar Rankin, 162, outpointed Tait Littman, 163, Milwau- kee (10); Billy Celebron, 147, Rock- ford, Ill. knocked out George Engle, 147, Chicago (1); Tony Bruno, 156, Milwaukee, knocked out Willie Fitz- gerald, 147, Chicago (3); Don Le- manske, 148, Milwaukee, outpointed Toots Bernstein, 150, Milwaukee (6); Clem Kopydlowski, 132, Milwaykee, outpointed Sam Pasquale, 130, 'Chi- cago (4); Tony Pate, 161. Milwaukee, stopped Joe Cieslak, 162, Milwau- ke (2). BILLINGS, Mont.—Hubert Dennis, | 135, Bozeman, Mont., knocked out Babe Daniels, 135, Duluth, Minn. (2). TRENTON, N. J.—Stanley Pyontek, 154, Trenton, N, J, awarded tech- nical knockout over Puggy Snyder, 147, Vineland, N. J, round. NEWARK, N. J—Charley Mautz, 183, Palisades Park, N. J., outpoint- ed Frank Zamoris, 174, Orange, N. J. Qo). S Today a year ago—Dizzy Dean wants $25,000 and Daffy $15,000 sal- ary for 1935; each made $12,000 since close of world series in exhibitions, vnlfevi].le. ete. outpointed Billy | in the sixth | great punch. I caught him on the way down, but there’s no doubt in my mind that he was the best of them all.” This statement must include Louis, and, when examined closely, it seems | to include Mr. Tunney himself. Well, | Mr. Tunney has never denied it. His respect for Dempsey is boundless, and it grieves me to add that the feeling is somewhat mutual—I'll be shedding _bears if I don't get away from this respect-and-admiration stuff. It's a relief to state that Mr. Tunney has no respect whatever for the present heavyweight supply, aside from Louis, He may detect a prospect here and there—as with Mader—but he would not trade you one of his blooded cattle or stately elms for all the heavyweights. rolled together into one package suit- able for shipping. Agriculture, world affairs, expan- sion, development—they are Mr. Tun- ney's dish. He has drifted a bit from the realm of pure culture. Shakespeare still grips him, but he denies hotly the charge of O. O. McIntyre that he continues in close communication with that faded satrap of the footlights, Mr. G. Bernard Shaw. No, you will find Mr. Tunney most occupied these days with the inter- necine strife in Europe—and perhaps a spot of local ring strife for a chaser. (Copyright. 1038, by the North American ewspaper Alliance, Inc.) \ £ o | With its undefeated record at stake Maryland A. C. will stack up against | | i the Fredericksburg Pros. composed for { the most part of former George Wash- Dean Off to Texas to Find ington University stars, tomorrow | nig o'clock Such former Colonial aces as John- Clark. Ras Nielson and Finis Parrish, | Jina halfback, will be in the Fred- The “key” to the mystery about | ericksburg line-up. A game for Sunday some | streng unlimited eleven is sought by the Alexandria Fraters. Call Alex- andria 553, Ball Park Tomorrow Night. PALACE TO POLISH PLAY. In preparation for its Sunday game | | with the Frederick Pros, the Palace A. C. will practice tonight at Water | Eq 8nd O streets at 8 o'clock. | - | Three vears ago—Army defeated Harvard, 46-0, handing Crimson its second worst defeat in history. ht at Griffith Stadium at 8:30 Fenlon, Wayne Chambers, addition to Joe Werle, North Caro- Winter rules wouldn't have helped Albert MacKenzie and Luther Steward to win the Cummings cup from the perpetual cup holders vesterday at Columbia, for their mistakes were made, not through the green, but on the greens. Miller B. Stevinson, playing in deadly silence, without the usual joshing that accompanies these matches, won the first five holes from the chal- lengers and then sat tight on their lead to coast home to a 2-and-1 victory. It was a great victory but tears were | strewn all over the fairways as faith- | ful “Pop” Steward, George P. James, | Vi otherwise “the Greek.” and & gallery of four or five kibitzers tramped after the gladiators. And now they are thinking of awarding Woodward and Stevinson another cup, for no one can see how the first mug can be wrested from them. The betting to- day is that the next match won't be played until 1940 “How does this match rate so much attention?” Charlie Hatch asked, when they wouldn't play Lou Laudick |and myself2"” Donald Woodward and | R.MECALLUM “This is a match of great interna- tional interest” Woodward said. “Didn’t two of us play in the British amateur championship and didn’t one | of us win a match, once, by default?” | — 'OUT at Chevy Chase today a field of two score women were com- peting in the final event of the season for the Women's District Golf As- sociation. It is the annual tourney for the of the association and members of the Executive Committee. ‘EVERY Fall the aging muscles of Uncle Nick Altrock seem to take on new life as the veteran base ball comedian plays in the Fall events at extends a congraiu- conqueror in the national ama- ended on the seventeenth green Rock Creck Park. Uncle Nick doesn't win any tournaments but he gives a lot of the lads the cold shivers just the same. | Today Uncle Nick is ensconced in | the top spot in the qualifying rounds for the turkey tourney at Rock Creek Park with a score of 71, shot through the murk of yesterday. It looks as if that score will stand up for low today. Jack Crook and J. L. Arm- stead shot 72s to finish second to the veteran, while Volney Burnett. Indian Spring champ, scored a 74. The medal round will continue through today with match play rounds scheduled for later this wee EASTERN, WESTERN MEET \ rn of four pre- ineligible gridmen, Eastern hool was to square off against stern today in the fifth game of the interhigh series at Central Sta- dium at 3:30 o'clock AI:milr‘h the Red Raiders gained a pair of crack ends in John McCracken and Carroll Price, also was expecting additional rein- forcements who failed to make the scholastic grade. Bob Gamage, 195- pound tackle, and Owen Bromley, promising back, will not see action due to class-room deficiences. *“Best looking car on the street, sir! And they all soy it's as good as it looks, , the whole town is saving... “This year it's HUDSON" ARLY crowds at the Auto Show are passing along the word: “This Year, It’s Hudson.” Call it style, call it beauty, call it class ... the words don’t matter. The news is out that Hudson delivers, for 1936, the biggest package of automo- bile surprises that Automobile Show crowds have ever seen. .. put up in the smartest wrapping of fresh, new style. The biggest cars ever priced so low! First-day show visitors discovered to their delight that these bigger, longer 120 or 127-inch wheelbase room— Head glances the real new for Hudsons have more room—20% more than any other popular cars. They reveled in new-found elbow room, leg room, head room. Already, it is “Our new Hudson” to thousands of 1936 car buyers who have seen, have compared, have be- come proud owners. s have turned . . . and first have recognized that here is leader of the style parade. And crowds gathered as they learned about 5 things you never saw before —in Hudsons that are completely 1936! Radial Safety Control, a wholly new easy-riding principle that driving safer, steering safer and stop- ing safer. Duo-Automatic Hy: . double-safe stopping with a separate safety braking system, always in reserve, that takes hold automatically in emergencies. Rhythmic Ride that has built smooth roads right into the chassis. u Line Steering. And the Automatic rakes Draft Eliminator. Come to the automobile show— and join the crowds around the new Hudson. SEE 5 THINGS YOU NEVER SAW BEFORE | President’s Plate, open only to officers | DEFEND LAURELS Natcaps, Jumbo Breads Hit at Average Rate—Shifts | in Navy League. | LEADERS of tfo bowling leagues | | move serenely on after weekly | turmoil on the drives last night seriously threatened their posi- tfons and did succeed in dropping out | of first place a team thag had been | & pace setter since September 2. | National Capital Park and Jumbo Bread maintained their leading roles |in the Federal and Sanitary Grocery | Co. Leegues, respectively, but Hydro- | graphic five relinquished its favored position in the Navy Department loop in a 2-1 loss to Quartermasters. The Federal leaders remained in first place by taking two games from 1. B E. W, and although G. P. Os 1,794 tset was high in that league for the night the Printers dropped two to Navy Yard. Holst shot a 387 to aid | in the high set. Investigation crept v.p just behind the leaders with a swee; over I. B. G, while Highway Engincer also advanced by taking three from Veterans' Administration. | JL‘!\{BO BREAD had neither individ. ual high game or set scores, n Over Louis: Inconsistency Marks Derby Eligibles 'BOWLING LEADERS BEST JUVENLES Memory Book Now Appear Associated Press Sports Writer. the 1936 Kentucky Derby may turned in performances this year that Any horseman will tell you that a pion juvenile may turn out to be develop into another Man o' War, a RAGE HOT, GOLD 1 Good Route Prospects. EW YORK, November 5 —Try- N be just so much guesswork, should furnish plenty of debate dure thousand-and-one things can hap- a plater 3-year. or that a horse Twenty Grand or an E Hollyrood, Grand Slam and BY ORLO ROBERTSON, ing to pick the winngr of but upward of a dozen 2-year-olds ing the Winter months. pen before next May, that a cham- umated off its 2-year-old form may Such thing: up cc Cold m scored twice over Hunt's Fru stave off the challenge for the Sani loop lead. Charles Snider of Coffee shot 137 for high gan Office’s Richard La Bille ra high set of 370. Warehouse's 5 pagne at Belm Both Bred to Go Route. I.lEY TOO, however, was among the gam Eame also rar big tes/ the the and 1,592 set were team marks. | Arcadia officials called attention to @n unvsual _occurrence when two games in one match of the Centrai Presbyterian Intrachurch League ne- cessitated roll-offs. In their fight for second place the Pitzer Cless and C. T League teams twice ended the regula- tion game with identical scores. In both instances, however. the Pitzeritrs bowled over the most sticks in the ex- tra box. A 122 GAME and 326 set bled © ™ Miss Raver of the Miriam five to top all rivals in the Eastern Star League at Lucky StMke, while team honors were divided between Arcadia $100.000 F are bred to . Hal nd ccond to mud- 1e Kentucky whip- in the Coach Dan Ahern | and the Milans. Arcadia scored the best game with 506. while the Milans' 1,455 set accounted for the greatest number of pins. Administration s Pi#LICD RACES October 31 to November 14 (Inc.) Audit monopolized team honors in the Farm Credit A ministration loop with a 542 game 1,534 set, but individual honors split between J. Hawes and A. Te i h o ad 12 - First Race. 1:30 pm. Wisse. The former had & 131 game Dails Double Closes 1:15 p.m | Terwisse the best set—345. v Admission (Inc. Tax.). $1.65 Compare the value. Then — drive a Hudson Six or Eight. Discover for yourself the performance that has set scores of official records . . . that has already made thousands of 1936 car buyers proud to say ‘“My new Hudson.” PRICES BEGIN AT 710 £. o. b. Detvoit. Standard group of accessories extra. 93 or 100 H. P. in Sixes... 113 or £24 H. P. in Eights. Longer wheelbases . . . up to 127 inches makes draulic The Tru- 'RADIAL SAFETY CONTROL o DUO-AUTOMATIC HYDRAULIC BRAKES ¢ THE RHYTHMIC RIDE ¢ TRU-LINE STEERING ¢ AUTOMATIC DRAFT ELIMINATOR patent applied for 20% MORE ROOM THAN ANY OTHER POPULAR CARS 'HUDSON TERRAPLANE DISTRUBUTORS 1707 14th St. N.W. ADams 6874 Open Evenings and Sundays Schultze Motor Company 1496 H St. N.E. Dave Morris Auto Service 1529 M St. N.W. SIMMONS-HARRISON GARAGE Mitchellville, Md. Rockville, Md. BULLT BY HUDSON—HUDSON SUPER STRAICHT EIGHT. $760 AND UP: HUDSON SIX. $710 AND UP; AND TERRAPLANE, $585 AND UP, F. O. B. DETROIT K BROSIUS BROS. & GORMLEY patent applied for . AND THESE OTHER NEW 193¢ FEATURES NEW SEAMLESS STEEL ROOF ON BODY ALL OF STEEL ¢ LONGER WHEELBASES (up o127 inches) ¢ ELECTRIC HAND (optional) (Packard Washington Motor Car Co.) New York Ave. Garage 606 New York Ave. N.W. Oil-Rite Co. A Metropolitan Dealers Bell Motors 1512 14th St. N.W. Absher Motor Co. 93 TO 124 HORSEPOWER Connecticut at S ADams 6874 Potomac Motor Sales 1218 Conn. Ave. Co. Dungan Motor Co. 1720 15th St. N.W. o 1311 E St. S.E. 1425 Irving St. N.W. Nearl ealers TYSON CROSS ROADS (’;ARAGE MORGAN & ALLEN MORELAND MOTOR CO. WATERS MOTORS Vienna, Va. Cottage City, Md. Wnl.dorf. Md. Gaithersburg, Md. 1