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C—4 =x SPORTS. THE EVENING STAR, . WASH NGTON, 2Dt (O WEDNESDAY, JULY 1, SPORTS. Forced to Wear Shoes, Williams at Disadvantage Meeting Haynes ROD AND STREAM ! BY GEORGE HUBER. COME WHEN SHOD EROY HAYNES, seventh ranking been refused a request to fight in his an all-colored card sponsored by the dropped his third decision to Al Ettore counters. The three engagements Wil- Arkansas Youth, Sporting 14 Wins in 17 Bouts, Is heavyweight, will stack up against Tom Williams, an Ar- naked tootsies by the District Boxing Commission, tonight at Griffith Sta- Allied Democratic Clubs of Washing- ton in Philadelphia on June 22, Haynes meets in Williams a hard-hitting liams dropped were the only bouts in which he has been forced to wear HIS ONLY LOSSES Underdog Tonight. | L kansas barefoot boy who has dium in the feature 10-round bout of Making his first start since he clouter who has won 14 of 17 en- ring shoes. Haynes Points for Louis. AYNES, who is being pointed for a bout with Joe Louis, will strive to his tough opponent in short He has knocked out, among| Primo Carnera and Natie E floor order. others, Brown, Williams has trimmed such scrap- pers as Ceal Harris, Jack Redmond, Bearcat Wright and Tut Jacksen, but | is conceded little chance to win over his veteran foe. In an eight-round semi-final Andy Bundy, colored lightweight champion | of the Pacific Coast, will clash with} Eddy Cooper of Baltimore, while sxx-i round arguments list Tiger Sullivan aring off with Leroy Williams and ammy Williams facing Roosevelt Rowe. An_ opening four-rounder, due to| start at 8:30 o'clock, pits Young Harry | Wiils, Baltimore lightweight, against Kid Howie of Charlotte, N. C. | Democratic delegations from Rich- mond, Baltimore and Annapolis are expected to attend the fist-slinging | festivities. | HAS DIAMOND, NEEDS FOE. Hub Restaurant A. C., which has a | diamond, wants a twilight game with & strong unlimited team today. Call Manager Peters at Atlantic 4600. JOHNNY STONES CLOUT. Smashing hits to all corners of the | v Stones trounced the | Shamrocks 7. vesterday in a pee- wee base ball game. 20 1 EARS AGO IN THE STAR Carl Mays' underhand delivery baffled the Nats as the New York ‘Yankees pounded out a 6-1 victory in a game marked by a rumpus at the local park. Ired by remarks of George McBride the previous day, Mays aimed a bean ball at the Washington shortstop which struck him on the shoulder. McBride then deliberately threw his bat at the Yankee hurler and when Manager Clark Griffith rushed out toward Mays, Agnew, a New York sub, struck Griff in the face. The latter retaliated before the pair could be <eparated Agnew was taken from the field to a police station and forced to deposit $60 collateral. Charles (Chick) Evans, jr., won the national open golf champion- ship at the Minikahda links in Minneapolis with a score of 286 for the 72 holes—the lowest made since the organization of the tournament in 1894. Connie Doyle reached the final round of the national clay courts singies tennis championship by defeating Willlam S. McEllroy of Pittsburgh, 6—3, 6—3, 7—5. He now meets Willis E. Davis for the title, as R. Norris Williams has in- ICF!OSLEY CONTROLS REDS | Exercises Option to Buy Main In- JAMES J. What do former heavywei restaurants, others read Shak comebacks. But Jim Jeffries, o time, likes to whittle, When FANS LOSING HOPE Tony Unlikely to Accept Offer From Ahearn Unless He Is Snubbed by Ross. ITTLE hope that Tony Canzonerl, world lightweight champion, would accept the offer of Goldie | Ahearn, local matchmaker, to fight | Cowboy Howard Scott, District 135- | pound champion, in a title bout here existed today among boxing fans. Canzoneri, who was offered $10,000 by Ahearn to risk his crown here, is expected to abdicate his lightweight throne momentarily to meet Barney Ross for the welterweight champion- ship. , The only hope for the local scrap appears to be Ross’ refusal to face Canzoneri. At that, Tony is sched- uled to fight Lew Ambers for the lightweight title late this month should Ross snub him. terest in Club. CINCINNATI, July 1.—Powel Cros- ley, jr., has assumed command of the | Cincinnati Reds, having exercised an option he has held for two years to buy a controlling interest. “I have found the game interesting and fascinating,” he said. formed the committee that he was on his way West and would not de= fend his championship. AT GLORIOUS Incidentally, the club showed & pastime he operates a boxing club at Burbank, Calif. FOR CANZONERI GO, Psychologist Says Fighter JEFFRIES. ght champions do? Some run | espeare and still others essay ne of the greatest champs of all not indulging in his favorite —A. P. Photo. Mat Matches By the Assoclated Press. ALBANY, N. Y—Gino Glriabldi,\ 218, St. Louis, defeated Ernie Dusek, | 208, Omaha, Nebr., two out of threev falls. PROVIDENCE, R. I1.—Paddy Mack, | Philadelphia, defeated Chuck Mon- tana, Detroit, two out of three falls. | LINCOLN, Nebr.—John Pesek, 198, | Ravenna, Nebr., defeated Ole Ander- | | son, 220, Osceola, Nebr., straight falls; ‘Jnck Edwards, 220, San Francisco, | pinned Lord Mills, 230, London, Eng- land. | MINNEAPOLIS, Minn.—Bronko Na- gurski, 230, International Falls, Minn., pinned Farmer Tobin, 248, Presque | Isle, Me. —_— SUHR JOINS ALL-STARS. PITTSBURGH, July 1 () —Gus Suhr, first baseman for the Pittsburgh Pirates, has accepted an invitation from Manager Charley Grimm of the Cubs to join the National League All- Stars for a game with American League stars in Boston July 7. profit last year of $50,000, but most of the money was spent in improvements. MEN WEVE GOT A GREAT PRODUCT! GO OUT AND INSPIRE THE CONFIDENCE OF THE TRADE-AND WELL LEAD THE FIELD. GLEN ECHO FREE ADMISSION AMUSEMENT PARK CRYSTAL Q0O DAILY EXCEPT SAT., SUN. & HOLIDAYS DURING THE MONTH OF JULY SWIM C UNDER 14 YRS. 10:30to 1T A. M. LASSES 10t010:30 A. M. ~ldulth 7 TO 730 P. M. MON., WED,, FRI., AS A SPECIAL COUR- TESY TO PERSONS EMPLOYED DURING THE DAY BE A GOOD SWIMMER. AND GET IN THE SWIM BLACKSTONE, E C ‘Throughout Still Whittling ’Em Down ]'ASK FUR |_[]U|S T0 REGAIN PEAK Must Reconstruct Ego to Succeed Again. BY FRANCIS J. POWERS. HICAGO, July 1.—One man's opinion, a physician and psy- chologist with a keen kniowl- edge of boxing, is that Joe Louis will find it difficult to regain the pinnacle from which he was tumbled by Max Schmelipg's jarring right hand. “The man's ego never had been challenged until he met Schmeling. his brief professional career Louis always was presented as the destroyer, and that presenta- tion made possible many of his easy victories. He became a single pattern fighter, and when Schmeling solved that pattern and applied a corrective, Louis was left without any counter plan. Tunney and other great fighters of an imaginative mind would have been able immediately to readjust their plans, but Louis knew no other scheme. Must Reconstruct Ego. “J_OUIS' future depends upon his ability to reconstruct the ego destroyed by Schmeling. It is pos- sible that the natural skill which made the Negro great at one style of fighting may be sufficient to con- struct another pattern. In last week's fight Schmeling had the moral ad- vantage of being the under dog. Louis possibly assumed the championship role too early, and a championship al- ways is the forerunner of defeat. “This much. seems certain. Louis will be at a psychological disadvan- tage in his new, few fights. His opponents no longer will regard Joe as the great invincible of boxing. They will feel that what Schmeling did with his right hand can be dope again, and will meet the Detroiter with less fear and certainly less trembling. Louis still may be the great fighter claimed before the Schmeling bout, but he will have more difficulty in proving it than on his first rise. Braddock Benefits Most. "THE man benefited most by| Schmeling’s victory 1is Jim Braddock. Had Louis defeated the German, he would have been offered as nothing less than a second Atilla, and even so smart a fighter as the champion might have fallen at least & partial victim to the same compiex that overtook Baer, Levinsky and others. It will be impossible to pre- sent Schmeling in the role of a | super fighter; not with defeats by Baer, Hamas and Sharkey marked against him. Max will carry the bur- den when he meets Braddock, and it's | questionable if he ever again will | fight as well as he did against the ‘Brown Bubble’.” There you have one man's opinian. Homer Standings By the Assoclated Press. Home runs yesterday—Gehrig, Yankees, 2; Hoag, Ygnkees, 1. The leaders—Foxx, Red Sox, 22; Gehrig, Yankees, 20; Trosky, In- dians, 19; Dickey. Yankees, 14; Ott, Giants, 13; Averill, Indians, 12. League totals—American, 357; National, 295; total, 652. F ...ABOVE ALL, ISHING down at Solomons Island or any other nearby bay point ‘isn’t the expensive I pastime some anglers believe it to be. A party of five can make | the trip down there and back for less than $2 each, exclusive of meals. Here's how it shapes up. Eight gal- lons of gas, $1.28; bait, $2; five-hour boat trip, $5; total, $9.28. Divide that by five and everybody can have a glass of beer and still te out nc more than $2. And a trip down there is worth while, with the trout and rock biting as they are. Big schols of rock run- ning up to 2 pounds may be seen anywhere along the bay now, espe- cially at Point Lookout, Cedar Point and Cove Point. The writer observed several scattered ones Sunday as far north as Dares Beach. Rock may be taken best while trolling with blood- worm spinners, and trout, hardhead and king will take shrimp, crab, bloodworms and squid while still-fish- ing or drifting. Vincent P..Gomez and two other anglers were out with Capt. Earl Bar- rett from Solomons Saturday. Cloudy weather and intermittent showers made conditions the least bit unfavor- able, but they returned after two and & half hours’ fishing with 20 rock, 4 trout and 50 hardhead. ERE is the round-up of fishing conditions within driving dis- tance of Washington, obtained from reliable boatmen: Conowingo Dam: Capt. Paul Swei- gart—River is somewhat muddy, fair catches of pan rock. Susquehanna River, Old Rock Mill Run; Capt. W. W. Wilkinson—Guides have been doing very well, had several lines broken on large rock. Best re- | sults on red and white pearl spinner and bloodworms. Ocean City, Nd.; James Jarman— Catches on the surf good on upper and lower beaches. Wanchese, N. C. (Oregon Inlet); Capt. Wayland Baum—Plenty hard- head, also fluke, sea bass, sheepshead and trout. Sparrows Point, Md.; Capt. Louis P. Markel—Taking from 100 to 125 hard- head per party, no rock. Rock Hall, Md.: Capt. Lewin Blacks- ton—Hardhead continue good, small rock taken. Shady Side, Md.; Capt. Robert E Lee—Only fair catches made last week, bad weather the cause. Oxford, Md.;: Capt. Oscar M. White | —Average catch per boat, 125 to 150 hardhead, a few trout and spot, also. Tilghman, Md.; Capt. Biscuit Cum- mings—Seventy-two rock taken troll- ing, hardhead good, looks good for rest of this week. Deals Island, Md.; Capt. Dewey | Webster—Fishing poor last week, but should be good if weather stays clear. Patuxent River, Broomes Island; Capt. H. C. Elliott—Fishing good ex- cept in bad weather, rock large. Piney Point, Md.: Capt. L. M. Spriggs—Rock better at Tall Tambers. large blues, expect more trout soon. THE unusual catch of having two fish. usually bass, pike or pickeral, hit the lure at the same time and both get hooked and landed, occurs more frequently than is generally known. It is not unlike the hole-in-one expe- rience of a golfer. Authentic cases exist where the angler has had it happen twice in the same day. The largest two-in-one catch recorded is that of two 5-pound bass which were hooked on a basser plug. ‘The usual double-header experience OR SALESMEN ON BOSS'S TIP - > DON'T DESTROY CONFIDENCE 8Y HANDING OUT CHEAP CIGARS - GIVE GOOD ONES THAT MATCH THE QUALITY, OF OUR PRODUCT! 6 MONTHS LATER BOYS-YOU PUT IT OVER ~WEVE WON LEADERSHIP IN OUR FIELD THAT MEANS A NICE BONUS FOR EACH OF You! H! MY FAVOR ITE BRAND — Sk eBlacl(stonc THE CIGAR OF SUCCESSFUL M!N oo JInest /ofzg-/e_a/f ALL—HAVQNA}/{/é’r PERFECTO, 2 for 25¢ + CABINET OR LONDRES, 10¢ - YANKEE OR PANETELA, 2 for 18¢ is that bass No. 1 grabs the lure lnd starts off with it, and that bass No. attempts to take it from him and gets hooked. A “Two-on-One” club has been or- ! ganized by the magazine Sports Afield, and a certificate of membership issued | to each angler who furnishes suthen- | tic proof of his unusual catch. One of the strangest catches is that reported by a Florida angler, where a large bass gobbled a pork rind strip hook lure. In some way this hook slipped out of the fish’s gills and was grabbed by a second bass, so when the fish were landed two bass were taken on a single hook. Another variation is where an angler hooked a small wall-eye which started off on a run. Suddenly the fisher- man felt a tremendous tug and, after a tough battle, landed a 30-pound musky that had completely swallowed the pike. ‘The reverse of the two-on-one epi- sode is that where a very hungry or foolish great northern grabbed a plug cast by one angler, dashed around and saw another plug. He grabbed this one, also. He now had two anglers to contend with and was finally brought to gaff. In trout fishing, where two or more flys are used, a double-header is not s0 very unusual, especially in pools where trout are pientiful. Down here on the bay if the hardhead are at all plentiful a dozen or more double- | headers are just about the average for a trip. GIRLS SCCRE HEAVILY. CENTERVILLE, Iowa (#).— The girls’ basket ball team of Centerville rang up 1,060 points in 27 games of | the campaign just closed against a | total of 533 for the opposition. Sports Mirror By the Assoclated Press. Today a year ago—Don Budge upset Bunny Austin, 3—6, 10—8, 6—4, 7—5, to enter all-England tennis semi-finals. Three years ago—Barney Ber- linger won national A. A. U. de- cathlon championship with 7,500 points. Five years ago—Frank Shields and Sidney Wood advanced to final of all-England tennis champion- ships. * goodriclu Sefety Harbor Bette rment Is Near Allotment of $15,000 Made for Planning Big Turning Basins, MMINENT realization of plans for improving the Potomac and Anacostia Rivers, long fostered by the River and Har- bor Improvement Committee of the Washington Board of Trade, have appeared with the word that funds are about to be allotted by the War Department for the deep- ening of the channels of both streams to the mouth of the Wash- ington Channel. An allotment of $15,000 has been made to cover preparation of de- tailed plans for carrying out a project which not only would im- prove the entire water front be- tween the War College and the head of the channel, but would permit larger boats to enter the local harbor directly from oceanic lanes, The project would include the deepening of the river to 24 feet and the installation of an 800-foot turning basin in the Potomac and a 400-foot turning basin in the Anacostia. Funds for carrying out the detalls of the plans are expected to be authorized as needed. Deeper Channels. Together with the removal of the mud bank along the south sea wall at Haines Point, the face-lift- ing not only will improve the ap- pearance of the entire water front, but also remove what now is a definite health hazard. Consider- able debris accumulates on the mud bank. F lghts Last Night Py the Arsociated Press. LOS ANGELES.—Art Lasky, 107, Minneapolis, stopped Johnny Pacek, 180. Chicago (5) SAN ANTONIO, Tex—Willard Brown, 143, Baton Rouge, La, and Tony Herrera, 143, El Paso, Tex, drew (10). e BANCROFT TO PILOT. SIOUX CITY, Iowa, July 1 (#).— Dave Bancroft, former major league player, has accepted terms to manage Sioux City of the Western League for the remainder of the season, succeed- | ing Marty Berghammer, who resigned. FACTORY SPECIAL SALE OF WRIGHT and DITSON TOP FLITE TENNIS RACKETS Your last opportunity to procure these fine Rackets at this saving. Only 317 To Be Sold Regularly $12.00 These are 1936 factor: have a slight imperfectio; noticeable and will not affect yo Tennis Balls 6 Wright & Ditson Championship 36.45 ing rackets and which is ha! ur playing. 3«ms|.oog ATLAS SPORT STORE 927DST. N Open Eves. and Sun. Mornings (OPEN SATURDAY, W. Met. 8878 JULY 4th) ’March Right Into Any Meisel Store During This Glerious !;qulp your car for the drive and save your cash for a good time. Celebrate with Wecrackers—not blowouts. MONEY DOWN AND_THE FaM et Silvertown WITH LIFE SAVER GOLDSM PLY These world famous tires with the Life Saver Golden Ply have been proved three times safer from high speed blowouts—Yet they cost no more. Every popular size in stock—fresh live rubber resists injury and wear. % GOODRICH BATTERIES As Low 500 A WEEK X PHILCO AUTO RADIOS WHERE YOUR CREDIT 1738 14th Street N. W. 3059 M Street N. W. as §39.95 OPEN EVENINGS AND SUNDAY A. M. 1100 H Street N. E. 611 Pa. Ave. S. E.