Evening Star Newspaper, September 20, 1936, Page 27

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BPCRTS. Sailing Races to Play Prominent Part in President’s Cup Regatta Display of Awards for Big Watér Carnival Here INCOMET CLASS Pilot Moth Boat. on the President’s Cup Re- tined to transform the somewhat again will be sponsored by The Eve- With more than 100 per cent growing popularity has been evinced first sailing race last year. the three-day carnival is the fact that raced last year. Events for snipes those for the comets, moths, canoes Smythe Is Most Formidable D. C. Contender—Girl to BY BILL DISMER, JR. SSUMING & prominent spot A gatta after its “trial” last year, the sailing races, des- somber Potomac into a mass of spotted ‘white next Friday and Saturday, once ning Star, with handsome awards pre- sented the winners by this newspaper. in entries, including the national champion of the comet class, sailing’s by an entry of more than a hundred sailors. Forty-nine competed in the Further illustrating the increased part the sailing events will play in two additional races have been added to the five classes of boats which and albatrosses will be held this year for the first time, in addition to and class A and B handicap boats which competed last year. Puts Spice Into Event. NO LITTLE credit was given The Star last year for supporting the new events on the decade-old regatta through its distribution of prizes, and it is thought that The Star’s con- tinu~d sponsorship of fhese races has played an invaluable part in enticing the large and formidable entry list. Outstanding of all the skippers now entered is Alton O'Brien of Perth Amboy, who won the national cham- pionship for comets in his Aquila at Great Kills, Staten Island, last week. W. B. Piersel of Oxford, Md., who placed tenth in the same race, elso is entered. Neither O'Brien nor Piersel are conceded victory in the coming race, however, for the Capital has a skip- per of its own, potentially an up- setter of both. He is D. Verner Smythe of the Capital Yacht Club, who placed three not:hes ahead of Plersel in the na- tionals and finished but two minutes behind the winner. How close was that race is seen in the time records, which reveal but a difference of two minutes separating the first nine boats! Grant is Rated Contender. ADOLPH N. GRANT of the Rari- tan Yacht Club, in Perth Amboy, is another formidable contender, hav- ing won at Stone Harbor early this month. Three out-of-town skippers also have entered three other sailing events. W. H. Dyer of Providence, R. I, of the vicinity where frostbite dinghys first were seen, is entering that class. Frostbite dinghys appro- priately received their name when hardy enthusiasts continued to sail these small 12-footers, a lot like row- boats, into the cold months of Ne- vember and December—long after the segular racing season had ended. J. D. MacBride, champion of snipe racers in Baltimore, will be among the entrant in that class here, with 8 trio of other Monumental City *snipers” expected to accompany him. An Annapolis girl, Antoinette Fletcher, will lead the wisitors who will sall the moths—smaliest of all sailing vessels—Miss Fletcher coming from Annapolis. As in the snipe class, three colleagues from her home town are expected here with Miss Fletcher. In the albatross class W. W. Heintz, ecommodore of the yacht club at West River, is expected to head a delega- tion from that vicinity. Heintz won the time prize here last year. D. C. Men Due to Dominate. LOCAL skippers are expected to dominate the Class A and B han- dicaps, canoe and 20-foot open class races, with out-of-town entrants yet to be heard from in those events. Most outstanding of those entered in the 20-foot open is Judge Prentiss E. Edrington, who was the international star champion in 1928. Edrington, formerly a judge in the Virgin Islands, | now sails the Lady Avon, and is ex- pected to give all opponents, young and old, & sail for their money. Three races will compose the series for each class of boat, with the first being held Friday morning, the sec- ond Friday afternoon and the last on Saturday morning. Total points will determine the winning boat, with scoring in accordance with class rules. They provide for 1 point for each boat beaten in a race, plus 1 point for finishing, plus % point for first place in each race. Homer Standing By the Associated Press. . Yesterday's homers — Dickey, Yankees, 1; Fox, Tigers, 1; Ott, Gisnts, 1; Moore, Giants, 1; Ber- ger, Bees, 1; Walker, Reds, 1; Jen- sen, Pirates, 1; Collins, Cardinals, 1; Hartnett, Cubs, 1. The leaders—Gehrig, Yankees, 48; Trosky, Indians, 41; Foxx, Red Miss Lelia Peoples, queen of the night many trophies given by The Star for the sa: THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, SEPTEMBER 20, 1936—PART ONE. ng events. YANK POLO TEAM IS HELD UNDERDO Argentines, Never Winners, Picked in Series That Opens Tomorrow. By the Assoclated Press. EW YORK, September 19.— Argentina’s finely mounted polo team and the United States’ Greentree four, led by the great Tommy Hitchcock, ride out tomorrow on the Meadowbrook Club's famed international field in the first of the two-out-of-three series for the Cup of Americas. ‘The game originally was scheduled for today, but inclement weather forced a postponement. The second game will be played Wednesday and the third, if necessary, next Saturday. The Argentines, mounted on one of the finest strings of ponies ever to leave the Pampas, have never beaten their North American rivals, but gen- erally are favored to come through this time. The United States won the first of the international series in 1928 and then successfully de- fended the trophy four years later at Buenos Aires. Each series went to three games. Team Finely Balanced. 'RESH from a victory in the Olym- pics, the Argentines will send a fine mixture of youth and experience Luis Duggan and Roberto Cavanaugh, riding at No. 1 and No. 2, respectively, are handicapped at six goals each. Andre Gazzotti, No. 3, is rated at eight goals and considered the best player in South America this year. At back will be the flashy Manuel Andrada, handicapped at seven goals. He is the veteran internationalist of the team and the steadiest player among the South Americans. The Greentree team, winner of the United States open title, is & 30-goal aggregation, although this advantage will mean nothing in the competition, as the games are played on the flat, Quartet of Money Players. WI'I'H Hitchcock, the world's rank- ing player at 10 goals, riding at No. 3, the United States representa- tives form a quartet of money players. George H. (Pete) Bostwick, playing at No. 1, is handicapped at only six goals, but is unusually well qualified for his position in that he is fast get~ ting down the field in pursuit of the ball hit up to him by either Hitchcock or Gerald Balding, at No. 2. Balding, rated at nine goals, rode with the English team which failed to beat a United States quartet in the international matches at Hurlingham in June. John Hay Whitney, captain of the team, playing back, completes the American side. He is the lowest handicapped player on the two teams, with a rating of five goals, but has played great polo this year. PIN FRANCHISES OPEN. Teams desiring franchises in the Sox, 38; Ott, Giants, 33; Di Maggio, Yankees, 29; Averill, Indians, 26; Camilli, Phillies, 26, League totals—American, 730; National, 586. Major Lea American RESULTS YESTERDAY. New York., 6: Washington, 5. Betrots: 4 Gleveland. 3 = Chicago-8t. Louis, rain. EEHE g3|5 I ililt ‘il—fll\lill‘lll.flllblll 12(97/48 .ebm 7 gue Statistics SUNDAY. SEPTEMBER 20. 1036. East Washington Church Bowling League, which will roll this season at the Takoma alleys, starting Tues- day night, are requested to call Bill | w Brown at Emerson 4363. into the fray, handicapped at 27 goals. | G National RESULTS YESTERDAY. 2 | i ili I G NY|—I10/11115{13(11[12{16/88[571.607 . Deti_8/—I14]11/12] 8k BI17|80/68].54118%; StL12|—{12113] | 9i13/15/83(631s568] 5% Chi|_7|_8/—I16/11110/1115/781671.538119 Chij11| 6}—| 8/10116115/16|831641.565. 6 ‘Wnl_7(11]_6l—I 8|11119116]771691.527120% Pit] 7] 9110|—12/14113{15/80/671.544] 9 Clel 6 7, 9/14|—I(13/14/131761711.617122 [ 7113[12] 8| 91—I12[12(73|741.497125 Cin| 9! 9]12| 6l—I n|1xuxm|75mu|fig. Bos|_8[13| 6] _8I131— 8] 9|65/78].455!: StLi_8110]_6] 3| 6/10|—I10i63190].371143 Phll_BI 51 71 61 O 6111/—I49|96/.337148 Bk 71 O] 71 91 ou%u;mml.nmzs PRl 31 7| 61 71 01 9 i951.345138 B3OBMA— | L_157163/641671751781 L 148168167/691717419019081——I__| e e GAMES TODAY. GAMES TOMOREROW. BRhRey e LY GAMES TODAY. GAMES TOMORROW. New Yor! yn. N. Y. ot 4 Another Slugging Mark for Yanks By the Associated Press. INEW YORK, September 19.— The New York Yankees broke another major league slug- ging record today—their fourth in a week—by surpassing the mark for most long hits by one club in one season. When Bill Dickey poled out a homer and Lou Gehrig and Johnny Saltzgaver hit doubles in today’s game with the Senators, it boosted the Yankee total of long hits to 562 for the year. The previous mark was 560, set by the Yankees of 1930. In the past week the Yanks have shattered the major league home run, run, run scoring by a pen- nant winner and extra base rec- ords. Their total for the season now is nearing a dozen. RED SOX BEAT MACKS Ferrell Turns In 20th Victory. Foxx Gets Three Hits. PHILADELPHIA, September 19 (#). —The Boston Red Sox took the open- er of a -three-game series with the Athletics today, 5 to 1. Wes Ferrell, going the route for the Sox, turned in his twentieth victory of the season. Jimmy Foxx, with three hits, one & triple, led the Boston attack. AB.H.O.A. Phila. Dgr'n, Cronin.ss 3 W.Freilp PO ousess55w DA e ol summsmswssos Totals 39 *Batted for Culler in seventh. Bostol & 020 001 002—5 Phlladelohia 000 010 000—1 Runs—Melillo, Cramer. Poxx. R. Per- rell Dahigren Errorsi—Cronin, Higgins, Peters, Runs_batted in—Gaffke. W. Pe = in. Melillo to gren. ston, 10: Philadelphia, Ferrell, 1; off Ferrell, 6: by s, 8 in 8 {nnings: in 1 ' inning. ~ Losing ‘Umpires—Messrs. John- and Owens. Time—2:15. 't On bases AlleOfr : on Ross B “htfuck Qui—B Ross, 5. Hit: 'ROS: off"- Lisenbee. pitcher—Ross. ston, McGow! SIMMONS BREAKS FINGER. LEWISBURG, W. Va., September 19 (Special).—Simmons, crack Green- brier Military Academy fullback, suf- fered a broken finger here today as his team wo nan easy 28-0 victory over Seth High. Simmons will be lost to the Cadet eleven for at least » month, Griffs’ Records % gqaré [y 32 0 130t o EheF 4ty & COOHOHOUHIIH D TANHRADRDICOT E Z 1 B RS et (e ©O0OOOOODMO I BIHO DN IR 81310 19001 3 00 10 A D ROG 2B D A AR SRS EE D ™ 193 M ONb 198Im 000N Epetet ok e LN B RSB B BDC o P oD o - .—“Hfl.' 35233 Ltgha ooy TIPS et N T i P s DO RSN DD, FEBET S EEEE R (o a0 Pltatmtit} - » i ol SaISay b+ - OO BOI I 2 D D DB B e [ fiisioisisials 3353) e o 2 .Sa caslt - @ corronnd COMORD! g s Py ] 2 HOHORO A DB NDD = > occomossrantintng (1920 o [T 2R3B3RS - 0000WOS M@ T oo 23D @ o 3% = IRE=TORT TR e WONOW- 130N ROm S © AN 0D Py s ':OITAI:..!" ELECTRIC PLANT your , cottege, garage eor Hes @ thoysend - o« thomend $01.60 MARINE IGNITION REPAIRS Battery, Magneto Installations ST.NW. NORTM 1583 iflaaeant, with all of the President’'s Cup regatta trophies. BOY, 14, GAPTURES U. 5. SKEET TITLE Shaughnessy Tops Nation’s Best—Youth Take Most of Championships. By the Associated Press. T. LOUIS, September 19.—A 14- year-old boy, handling a gun almost as tall as himself, out- shot some of the Nation's lead- ing marksmen to win the all-gauge championship of the national skeet tournament today. Richard Paul Shaughnessy of Ded- ham, Mass, who began “trying my luck with the shotgun two years ago, after watching my ded shoot quite often,” won his major title with & score of 248 out of a possible 250. He opened with 99 Thursday, shot 100 straight clay pigeons yesterdsy and came back today with 49. The Los Angeles-Santa Monica, Calif, team of Harry Fleischmann, Bobby Stack, Alex Kerr, Bill Davis and Grant Ilseng won the team championship with a total of 1217, computed on their individual scores in the all-gauge event. Loantaka Skeet Club of Morris- town, N. J., was second with 1,192; a Los Anegles-Mesa team was third with 1,179; Benton, Ill, fourth with 1,173, and Tyler, Tex,, fifth with 1,171, Youngsters Set Pace. BUT it was the “kids” who carried Off all the major honors. Second to Shaughnessy was 17-year-old Bob- by Stack of Beverly Hills, Calif., who had 247. Billy Clayton, 17, Calvin, Okla., won the national small-gauge event and ranked third in the all-gauge after winning a shoot-off with Ilseng, 25 to 24, after each had 246 out of the reg- ‘ulation 250 targets. Elizabeth Small, Grosse Point, Mich, girl, won the woman's crown. The best that Fleischmann, West Coast champion and pre-tournament favorite, could do was a 244. —_— TIGERS OUTHIT, BUT WIN Make Three Less Bafeties Than Indians in 7-3 Game. DETROIT, September 19 (#)—Al- though Cleveland collected 12 hits off Schoolboy Rowe, Detroit beat the In- dians today, 7 to 3, making nine hits off Harder and Lee and cashing in on several Indian errors. One of the Tiger runs was a homer by Pete Fox in the sixth. Q. 2t FiF o <> & | orrrcomm b o | imrroomssBe 05005 moimme | sosmsoronocms RO SR AOOMsIBIA- ©1955015: - iBaiad for B e 20 iBatted for Lee in ninth. Cleveland .. Detroit - =3 000 200 202 201 00x—7 mons. E: Kn! i inger. Goslin, Rogell. Fox, Heath, ‘Sullivan. Hughes. Two-base hits—Weatherly. Heath. ree-base hit— Heath. Home run—Fox. base— Walker, Rowe, 1! % b- hr- Tebbetts, Simmons, ‘Two-ba: lker. * Sacri — Gehringer. uble play—OWwen to Gehringer to Burns. t on bases—Cleveland. 8: Detroit. 10. Bases on balls—Ofl Harder. 6. o= outs—By Rowe 3. Lee. 1. Hits—Oft BN Dotine S Gales: S Bl nings. . Umbires Moriarty, QGeisel and Basil. SEE THE COUNTRY IN A 2020 M ST N.W. TRAILER HEADQUARTERS IN WASHINGTON . 1Y Included among them are —Star Staff Photo. Ask Flag Display For Regatta Time N AN effort to have the entire city attired in regatta atmos- phere, the residents and mer- chants of Washington have been asked by the District Commission- ers to display the United States flag at their homes and places of business on Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday next—the period of the President’s Cup regatta. A proclamation over the signa- ture of Commissioners Hazen, Allen and Sultan to the residents and merchants reads as follows: “The President's Cup regatta is & worth-while civi¢ undertaking from the standpoint of the de- velopment of the city, the im- provement of our rivers and har- bors and the use of them for re- creational purposes as well as the n‘;urmznnce of aguatic sportsman- p. “In keeping with the spirt of the undertaking, the people of Wash- ington are requested to display the flag of the United States of Amer- ica at their homes and places of business on the 24th, 25th, 26th, and 27th of September, 1936, and to otherwise aid in the decoration of our city during this period.” OLYMPIC CHAMPS MAY SWIM HERE Two or More Expected to Compete in Thursday’s Regatta Meet, \WO, and possibly more, Olympic swimming champions are ex- pected to compete in the swim- ming meet at the Shoreham Hotel on Thursday night, when the President’s Cup Regatta officially will be opened. A. Earle Weeks, long a leader in local aquatic circles and vice chairman of the regatta, in charge of swimming, is in Philadelphia this week end, con- tacting several swimmers who car- ried the American flag to victory in the international games. He has informed regatta officials here that he is confident two of them will come down for the meet, which in- cludes four events for men and women, in addition to a fancy diving event for men. The outstanding race for men will ‘be the 300-yard medley relay, the win- . | ning club to receive a handsome trophy for one year's possession. The cup will become the permanent possession of the club winning the event three times. The only stipulation is that a team must represent an organized club. Entries for the 100-yard freestyle, backstroke and breaststroke for men and women, the 150-yard medley race for women and the diving for men close tomorrow night, with R. Aubrey Bogley, room 901 of the Hibbs Build- ing. Pees of 25 cents will be charged each contestant. SYRACUSE TO BROADCAST. * SYRACUSE, N. Y, September 19 {P)—Acceptance of an offer from a national oil company for broadcast- ing of Syracuse University’s four home foot ball games this season was an- nounced today. Headgquarters for Nationally Famous FISHING EQUIPMENT You Name It! We Have It! SPORT CENTER 8th and D Sts. N.W. Free Purking © Metre. 6444 SPEEDBOAT RACES LIST BEST INU. § Big Trophy Event, American Championship Feature Elaborate Card. ASHINGTON'S vast motor boat colony, hundreds of drivers and thousands of enthusiasts, step out in fast company this week end—and the fast~ est company in America. Attracted by the President’s Cup Regatta, annual magnet of the coun- try's outstanding speed-boat kings, pilots from all over the country will show their spray to Hains Point spec- tators next Saturday and Sunday, the days when the outboards, 2255 and President’s Cup entrants will climax the Capital's greatest water carnival of the year. s For an added reason this year, the ever-thrilling race of the wave-bounc- ing 225s again threaten to steal the show from the event which founded the regatta just a decade ago—the President’s Cup race. For, in addition to knowing that anything can, and usually does hap- pen to those daring drivers who skip over the surface at more than 80 miles per hour, watchers will know that to the winner will go the elaborate new John Charles Thomas Trophy, 8 mam- moth silver platter with maritime de- sign, put into competition for the first time this year by the famous operatic baritone. Noted Pilots Invade. GORDON LEECH, chairman of the Race Committee, last night an- nounced a field of seven outstanding boats which will seek to gain the new perpetual cup during the first year of its existence. Led by Dr. Cecil H. Bagley of Bal- timore, who won last year with his Wilmer III, the entrants include La Cucaracha, the new boat belonging to Phillip Geis of Greenwich, Conn, with which he made such an impres- sion at Baltimore several weeks ago; Zatso, belonging to Dr. R. E. Wolf of Uhrichville, Ohio; Miss Manteo, owned by H. A. Greef of Manteo, N. C.; Snail II, owned by George C. Cannon of New Rochelle and to be driven by Hugh Gingras; Baby Toots II of Warner Steinbach of Millburn, N. J, and the Zippy II of John H. Shade, jr., of Philadelphia. The last-named boat went to the bottom after a smash-up at Balti- more just two weeks ago, but Shade and his aides have been working on their craft frantically in order to have it ready for the coming classic. But the two races toward which speedboat racing men are looking with keenest interest are those for the President’s Cup and the Ameri- can Speedboat championship. President May Attend. Prospects of President Roosevelt be- ing in the reviewing stand on Sat- urday have altered the committee’s original schedule to provide for two heats that afternoon, thus giving the Executive a maximum of racing for his office-sponsored cup. With Herbert Mendelsohn’s Notre Dame coming back from Detroit to defend its championship, which it won last year with a speed of 52.80 miles per hour, the President's Cup will be competed for by at least nine en- tries, representing the richest and most powerful boats of the country. Of the nine, four are Gold Cup boats. Counting the Notre Dame, they are Horace Dodge’s Impshi from Detroit, which will be driven by Hubert Looker; George Reis' El La- garto from Bolton Landing, N. Y., and Vincent Bendix' Hotsy Totsy III from South Bend, Ind., which will be piloted by Vic Kleisrath. But George Fisher of Cincinnati with his Miss Cincinnati; Harold Wil- son of Ingersoll, Canada, with his new Miss Canada (the only international entrant), and Jack Rutherford, whose reputation for spectacular and cour- ageous driving long has been estab- lished in Washington with his Ma Ja II, all are basing their hopes on boats especially designed to meet the gruelling test of this classic. Other Notable Drivers. OTH!ZR well-known drivers include Jack Dunn with his Jay Dee from Miami, Fla, and Samuel Dunsford ;mlx his Scotty II from Concord, Even with such an array of drivers, it will be difficult for this race to hold the spotlight against the Amer- ican speedboat championship, open to all classes of speedboats. The out- standing contender is, of course, Mel- vin Crook, the young Princeton Uni- versity graduate who holds the world’s speed record of 82 miles per hour. But Crook also will have his work cut out for him, as seen by his rivals who in- clude Edwin Guggenheim’s Miss Sara- nac of Saranac, N. Y.; John Ruther- ford’s Jay Dee from Port Washing- Restless II, Baltimore's fastest boat. An all-Washington sweepstakes, con- fined to inboard drivers of the Capi- Zippy; Gardner P. Ormer driving his Wooden Horse, and John L. Hyde, jr., piloting his Winkler III. Crawford holds the present speed record of all local drivers. Minor Leagues Pacific Coast. (Play-Oft.) Oakland, 5; San Diego, 4. New York-Pennsylvania. (Play-Oft.) Scranton, 6; Elmira, 6. Trolling Special! MONDAY AND TUESDAY ONLY swivel; reguler 50c value— 39 Bloodworms, 20c doz.—Shrimp L. ATLAS SPORT SHOP ABE ATLAS, Mgr. and Sun AM. Eveni 8 14th NW. 9401 SPORTS. B—-7 Program of Racing Contests For President’s Cup Regatta TARTING with the swimming meet at the Shoreham Hotel on Thursday night the President’s Cup Regatta will continue through Sunday evering, with sailing events scheduled for all day Friday and Saturday morn- lsnz dlm'l power boat events Saturday afternoon and all day unday. . The complete calendar for Washington’s biggest aquatic week end of the year follows: g s q THURSDAY. 8 o'clock—Swimming meet, Shoreham Hotel. FRIDA! (Sailing Races.) First Series. 9:30 a.m.—Start of 20-foot Open Class. 9:35 a.m.—Start of Albatross Class. 9:40 a.m.—Start of Comet Class, 9:45 a.m.—Start of Canoe Class. 9:50 a.m.—Start of Handicap Class B. 9:55 a.m.—Start of Handicap Class A. 10:00 a.m.—Start of Snipe Class. 10:05 a.m.—Start of Moth Class. 10:10 a.m.—Start of Dinghy Class. Second Series, 1:30 p.m.—Start of 20-foot Open Class. 1:35 p.m.—Start of Albatross Class. :40 p.m.—Start of Comet Class. :45 p.m.—Start of Canoe Class. :50 p.m.—Start of Handicap Class B. :55 p.m—Start of Handicap Class A. p.m.—Start of Snipe Class, p.m.—Start of Moth Class. p.m.—Start of Dinghy Class. SATURDAY. Third Sailing Series. 9:30 a.m.—Start of 20-foot Open Class. 9:35a.m.—Start of Albatross Class. 9 9 ‘05 10 :40 a.m.—Start of Comet Class. :45 a.m.—Start of Canoe Class. 9:50 a.m.—Start of Handicap Class B. 9:55 a.m.—Start of Handicap Class A. 10:00 a.m.—Start of Snipe Class. 10:05 a.m.—Start of Moth Class. 10:10 a.m.—Start of Dinghy Class. POWER BOAT EVENTS. 12:30 p.m.—“A” Class Outboard Amateur (first heat). 12:50 p.m.—“A” Class Outboard Amateur (final heat). 1:10 p.m.—“C” Class Outboard Amateur (first heat). 1:30 p.m.—“C” Class Outboard Amateur (final heat), 1:50 p.m.—“B” Class Outboard Amateur (first heat). 2:10 p.m.—“B” Class Outboard Amateur (final heat). 2:30 p.m.—Midget Class Outboard Amateur (Commodore John A. Remon Race) (final heat). 3:00 p.m.—President’s Cup (first heat). 3:30 p.m.—91-135-cubic-inch Hydroplane (final heat). 3:30 p.m.—225-cubic-inch Hydroplane—Free-forall. Ameri- can Power Boat Association Championship (first heat). 4:10p.m.—All Washington Sweepstakes—Unlimited, for Washington owners and Washington drivers only (final heat). 4:40 p.m.—President’s Cup (second heat). 5:10 p.m.—225-cubic-inch Hydroplane—Free-for-all. Ameri- can Power Boat Association Championship (final eat). 5:40 p.m.—Cruiser Chance Race (final heat). SUNDAY. 11:00a.m.—“A” Class Outboard Professional (first heat.) “A” Class Outboard Professional (final heat). 11:40a.m.—“C” Class Outboard Professional (first heat). 12:00 noon—*"C” Class Outboard Professional (final heat). “B"” Class Outboard Professional (first heat). “B” Class Outboard Professional (final heat). p.m.—Free-for-all Outboard Handicap (final heat). 1:20 p.m.—*225-cubic-inch Hydroplane—National Champion- smP for John Charles Thomas Trophy (first heat'. —"H” Class Inboard (final heat). —*“C-D” Class Inboard (final heat). (final heat). 225-cubic-inch Hydroplane—National Champion- ih‘pt )ror John Charles Thomas Trophy (second eat). .—American Speed Boat Championship (final heat). m.—"“E” Class Inboard (final heat). Pp. “I” Class Inboard (“I” boats only) (final heat). .—*225-cubic-inch Hydroplane—National Champion- shléa for John Charles Thomas Trophy (final heat). 5:20 g.m.— ies’ Free-for-all Handicap (final heat). *The National Championship 225-cubic-inch Hydroplane Race for the John Charles Thomas Trophy is for the first 10 high-point scoring boats of the country. Race is conducted under racing commission rules. - BUCS SURE OF FOURTH WEIR OF BEES IS HOT Clinch Position as Wild Toss by Holds Phillies to Four Hits in Reds Turns Tide. Winning by 5 to O. winning the gold trophy with new ket ton, Long Island, and Sam Ekloff’s | J! tal, will find Andy Crawford racing his | 21 bsse: PITTSBURGH, September 19 (#).— A wild throw to the plate with the | bases full by Alex Kampouris in the | eleventh inning allowed Lioyd Waner | to score the winning run and gave the Pittsburgh Pirates a 7-to-8 victory | over the Cincinnati Reds today. The victory assured the Pirates | X fourth place in the National League | standing. & 3 oromim oo 1 =] conumnooo™ T 4o B <y Py EaEe rcnnh b n 2 cnam Th'now.ss 3 3Campbell Miller,ss_ EFS b Dt 19 coscosroNeHO ST ooomBORHOR I DRA—O HoroOOONRBNSHCRD P ° o Totals 43 9 31al4 *Batted for Mooty in ninth. tBatted for Schott in seventh. 3Batted for Thevenow in ninth. §Batted for Joost in ninth. aOne out when winning run was scored. Cincinnat!l e 000 000 132 00—86 Pittsburgh ee.. 110 004 000 01—7 Runs—Walker, sella (2). Kampour ker, Youns (' s batts L. Waner, d. Swil Rige: Scarsella (3). Walker (2). Two-base hits— Goodm: Swift_ Scarsells, Cuyler. Home runs— fensen. Wal base—Thevenow. Sacrifices—Vaughan. Jensen. P_ Waner. Double plays—Riggs to Scarsella. Thevenow to Scarsella, Riggs to Thevenow to Sclrnll;. X rn“:nY to ¥lm§p‘$¥llu! Miller, Vaughan oung to b s—Ccincinnati. 5: Pittsburgh. 12. cinello ‘to | [ BOSTON, September 19 (#).—Young Bill Weir held the Phillies to four hits | today when the Boston Bees opened their final series with the visitors with a 5-0 shutout. Not an enemy reached second on Weir until the ninth. . HO. A. Boston. 171 Wstler.ss L P ] PEREE: 4 iney Kelleher.p 0 Totals 29 4 24 Totals 34 11 27 15 *Batted for Sivess in eighth. coomonssoHms | soowmpmizass) ol ooommsos0smm e Runs—Moore. Berger, Cuccinello. Lopez. Weir. ~Errors—Wilson, Gomez, Warstler. Runs batted in—Berger (2), Moore, Lopez. eir. Two-base h base " hit—Moore. . Stolen base—Urbanski. _Double plavs— Gomez to Norris to Corbett; Cuccinello to Jordan: to Cuccinello: Weir to Cuc- nl’dltn. Left on bases—Phil: E on. Home deiphia 3 7 inning 3 . ' Losing vess. Umpires—Messrs. Pfirman. Stew- art and Goetz. Time of game—1:51 WILL LEAD NOTRE DAME. SOUTH BEND, Ind, September 19 (P.—John Paul Lautar of Moundsville, W. Va., a senior guard, was elected captain of the 1936 Notre Dame foot ball team today to replace Bill Smith, who resigned after & medical examination revealed he to | Would be unable to play this Fall. BOATS. by Mooty, 2, 08 Schote 12 1p c& 1 ; ooty. 1 in 2 innin Tanan: $%in % innings__Losing pitcher— Hallahan. = Umpires—Messrs. Ballanfant and Sears. YOUR BOAT $45, EVINRUDE outboard motor, 20 B ood running order. Airport Boat House, etropolitan 0894 0 JOHNSON 1936 light run only 20 hours safety !::llhlunl in outboard motor : e Jivies batiers running s, batiery A real bargain; $75. RICHARDSON CABIN CRUISER. 1034 model, like new: owner leaving city; bar- ain it sold this month. Capt. Seeles, rinthian_Yacht Cli tor, overhauled: doe: cover, erer, cushiol ned trailer: cheap. ’ I8.FT. SBAILBOAT, just overhauled and painted: mew sail ind outboard suxiiar. See_steward. Corinthian_Yseht Gluk. CABIN CRUIBER, 34-ft. must sell T s, We -gauu-.l. Apt. 502 . n. also 21st 1934 Richardson 32-ft. Inclosed Deck House Cruiser; 6-75 Gray motor, speedc IIS miles perd:?"'l; sleeps 6. Complete in every detail. Cost new $4,785. Sale price ”lm Chance 36-ft. Single Cabin Cruiser, 100 h. p. Buda Marine motor, first-class condition; cost $6,500 new, reduced 5 $1,395 Bay Boat, 35 ft. long, a m bargain ot s Order your new 1937 Richard. son or Matthews Cruiser now. Prices advance October Ist. NATIONAL MOTOR BOAT SALES 800 Water St. S.W. ME. 9303 JER. 26-ft.. sacrifice; metal bull; $160; a real buy. Address Box 241+ H, Star office. - CRUISER. 30 ft., RICHARDSON CABIN suaranteed condition. See Steward, Cape itol_Yacht_Club. &7 YACHT * Jength 75, beam 14, draft 4l; sound. protective treated timbers and piankin, deck jon 14 dining salon salley with range: Tyice and hpatin 75 luct Delco lig! plant, 25 fix nd toilet rooms, bath tud, wo 150-pound Lux fire ex< nks, hoists, anchors, chains, Moored at You've been walting for. More room deck for lenth \han can' be 46 ft. over sil. 11-ft. beam: engine. lighting plant 2 toll A 450-1b. 1ce rg::'l‘leutnr. mahogany-trimmed oil tan! ine seaworthy "_é l;t'flr ‘.‘a%c%.: 58 ornithian Yacht Club. foot of 2: night, Cleveland 1 <

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