Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
SPORTS. Travel Wear Hits Western Five : Scholastic Golfe < 0., CHAMPS LS W& L ST St. John’s Springs Great Surprise by Defeating Title Defenders. BY BURTON HAWKINS, Sta Correspondent o1 The Star. EXINGTON, Va., March 12— Down y'har on the crust of the “you all” country, St. John's Prep of Washington today eagerly awaited its quarter-final en- counter with Spartanburg High of South Carolina tonight in the South Atlantic Scholastic Basket Ball Tourn- ament. While the cadets basked in the THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON. D. C, FRIDAY, LOCAL FORECAST—THUNDERSTORMS. HEADs ITS ST JOHN'S- TAILS 1T's BETHESDA- CHEVY CHASE TAKE YOUR CHOICE ON THIS ONE glory of a surprising upset victory | over the previously undefeated John | Marshall High of Richmond, 31-22, a ! dejected Western High quint departed for the District after falling victim to Monroe A. and M. Prep of Georgia, 22-26, in another game which failed to follow the blue prints. | Western, however, was not without fts measure of consolation. The Red Raiders, together with St. John's, will seek additional court honors in The Evening Star’s metropolitan tourney, which gets underway Monday night at Tech High gym. Western meets George Washington High of Alexan- dria Tuesday night St. John's, which clashes with Be- thesda-Chevy Chase Monday night, buoyed its stock considerably by virtue of its amazing triumph over the Vir- ginians, seeded No. 1 team of the tourney and possessor of a winning | streak which had reached 19 games. | Cadets Favored Tonight. S‘PARTANBURG failed to impress > crities noticeable in defeating E. C. Glass High of Lynchburg, Va., 23-21, and St. John's was a slight favorite | to survive its quarter-final test at 7:30 o'clock. Should the cagets reach the | semi-final round they will face the winner of the Staunton Military Acad- emy-Savannah High tilt Saturday morning at 10:30 o'clock. Western, visibly weary after its hard 200-mile journey here by automobile yesterday, entered its game withoutl rest and the result was a painful, if | enlightening experience to Coach | CIiff Moore. St. John's, which arrived here Wednesday and enjoyed a good | night’s sleep, was as fresh as a drop of | dew and much more durable. Jack (Ace) Reges, an elongated center with a bothersome case of water on the knee, and Joey Gallagher, a diminutive, streamlined guard, easily were the outstanding stars for St. John's in springing what will rank as the greatest reversal of dope in tour- ney play. Reges, whose troubles were in- creased during half-time, when a bot tle of smelling salts accidentally was | dumped in his eyes, scored 13 points | and generally conducted himself in flawless fashion. He snagged the ball off the blackboard, controlled the tap YA BETTER ENJOY BEIN'A BIG SHOT Now- 'CAUSE IT WON'T BE FER LONG' P v THERE MUST BE SOMETHING FIELD TRIALS DELAYED. ‘WARRENTON, Va., March 12— Fauquier County Field Trials’ As- sociation has decided not to hold its Spring trials, but to concentrate on a two-day meet in the Fall. —By JIM BERRYMAN. BROTHER HOOP, CAN You HEAR THAT RUMBLING SOUND ? WE'RE 1 BELIEVE IN FOR ANOTHER IN THAT “WORM-TURNING STUFF! = ELEN DETTWEILER. young Congressional star, isn't going to be ranked as the leading golfer of the Winter tourna- ments for women in the South, but she has earned a niche as one of the soundest players of all the girls who've competed in all the tourneys in which Patty Berg and Katherine Hemphill have been the top-liners. Helen now is at Belleair, Fla., wind- Mackenzie was there and he said she ! has improved her iron play very much. That's where the improvement was needed. She always could pop | those tee shots a long way. even when she first took up the game six years ago. Laudick in Florida. LOU LAUDICK, Columbia Country Club golfer, is causing lots of con- < WHAT A KNOCK-DOWN, DRAG-OUT AFFAIR THIS IS GOING To BE l_ ALL I WANT IS ANOTHER CRACK AT THAT BIRD FROM TH' WEST END OF TOWN !/ IF WESTERN AND EASTERN MEET IN THE TOURNEY.IT SHOULD BE SWELL “MELLODRAMMER.” 50, THOSE City Boys THINK THEY C'N SHow ME SOME PLAIN AN’ FANCY \ S THE 1936 TITLEHOLDER HAS NS SOFT SET-UP IN THE TOURNEY'S NEwcomER: | SIXHIGH ScHOOLS EAGLES AND CARDS - JEEK SWiM TIE INUN USUAL CLASH ing up the Florida season and getting | ready to make the swing back north toward Washington. She'll be home sternation among the colored calidies at the La Gorce course in Florida. That's the layout on swanky Mia i Meet at ‘Y’ Tomorrow First | of Championship Class and turned in a defensive game which = about April 1, she writes, ready for Beach, which is named after Jack La | &peaks for itself. He limited Morris Boltz, opposing center, to a single field goal. | Gallagher Also Effective. | THE dark little Gallagher contribut- | ed 10 points, eight of which were scored in the first half to give St. John's the needed confidence to con- tinue its accurate attack. Reges also kicked through with eight points in the first half and it was this effective duo which swung the tide to the Johnnies. St. John's stepped into a 6-3 lead | at the end of the first quarter, in- creased the gap to 18-10 at half-time and epjoyed a 27-17 margin et the end of the third period. Western displayed only sporadic | flashes of its true ability and Monroe | neatly capitalized on that fact to pull away in the final moments of play. Western enjoyed a 22-20 lead late in the final quarter, but three successive | baskets by the Georgians against the | fading Washington entry quickly de- cided the issue. Most of Western's discomfort, how- ever, was attributed directly to a 15- | year-old kid, Lamar Murphy, who | bucketed 12 points and otherwise irri- | tated the Red Raiders with a snappy | floor game. Burns High for Western. GERALD BUKNS and George De Witt, unanimous all-high selec- | tions, were outstanding for Western with 12 and 5 points. respectively, but | the lackadaisical attitude of the team, coupled with their travel-worn bodies, erased them from tourney competition. In other games today and tonight, Monroe A. and M. will face Jefferson | High of Roanoke, Va., and Massanutten | Military Academy will meet High Point High of High Point, N. C. One of the other surprises of the | preliminary tossing was Savannah High's narrow 30-27 conquest of Au- gusta Military Academy, but in per- haps the most interesting game, with the exception of the St. John's-John | Marshall tiff, Jefferson High defeated Lexington High of this city, 19-15. Other games saw Massanutten Mili- tary Academy whip Anderson High of | Anderson, S. C., 35-21: High Point | High of North Carolina trounced Har- | grave Military Academy of Chatham, | Va, 30-21, and Staunton Military Academy of Staunton, Va.. trimmed Greensboro High of Greensboro, N. C., 40-29. a fast start in the tournaments to be staged by the Women's District Golf Association around the Capital. “I'm really having a grand time,” Helen says, “and getting a lot of expe- rience, and I think I can safely say that when I return around the first of April you'll see that I've improved a little. “You can't help it, playing with such good golfers as Patty and Katherine and Jean Bauer and the rest of the topnotchers who are so good.” Helen writes that the Hemphill girl, whom she beat at Palm Beach, by the way, has improved a great deal this year. Miss Hemphill now is in front | of Patty Berg in the matter of tour- naments won. “Down at Ormond Katherine was playing Patty,” writes Helen. “Quite a large gallery followed the match and at different intervals such remarks as ‘Hemphill one up’ and ‘Hemphill now two up’ would pass areund. There was a youngster about 5 years ol in the gallery and after several of these remarks the youngster asked: ‘Mother, what's a Hemphill.' " Patty Still a Student. ATTY BERG, by the way, still goes to school. She’s only 19 years of age and life to Patty isn't just a round of golf tournaments, for she studies in between rounds of golf. The Berg fam- ily is fairly well fixed with what it takes and Patty has her private tutor with her. She doesn’t spend all her time playing golf, as some folks be- lieve. Helen Dettweiler's first start of the year around Washington will be in the Phylls Keeler Miller Memorial tour- ney at the Washington Golf and Country Club. This affair always opens up the season for women golfers about the Capital. Helen, with her improved game, will be the mainstay of the Congressional team which won the first team title last year. She stopped at Ponte Vedra for a few days while Roland Western Loss May Be “Break” . . Gives Red Raiders Ch Tourney—St. John BY ROD THOMAS. HE ill wind that swept West- ern High School from the Washington and Lee basket ball tournament may have blown a lot of good for the Red Raiders. Beaten in the first round by Monroe A. and M. of Georgia, the Raiders today are homeward bound with hearts set upon winning the metropolitan Washington cham- pionship in the fifth annual Eve- ning Star tournament opening Monday night at Tech High. Our own Burt Hawkins called the turn on Western. Said he: “If Western makes the trip to Lex- ington the same day it is to play, Jook for an upset.” Burt recalled that Central, when he managed the Mount Pleasant quint, took an ‘unexpected shellacking at Lexing- ton under the identical circum- stances that no doubt accounted for Western's downfall. The Red Raiders now will have time to rest up thoroughly for the ance to Rest for Star ’s Fans Exuberant. Metropolitan struggle. The fact is that Coach Clif Moore of West- ern was reluctant, in the first place, to enter his lads in two tough tournaments following closely their hard-won triumph in the public series. Western will make its Star tour- nament debut Tuesday night, with the strong George Washington High team of Alexandria as its op- ponent. In the meantime a legion of St. John’s College adherents today were exuberant over the Johnnies’ feat in erasing the defending champion, John Marshall High of Richmond, at Lexington. If the Catholic High champions of the Capital accomplish no more in the tournament they will have added tremendously to their prestige and raised their hopes, already high, of winning the metropolitan-crown. In their first-round game of The Star tournament the Johnnies will meet Bethesda-Chevy Chase Mon- day night. Gorce, vice president of the National Geographic Society, who plays golf once every blue moon, whenever that happens. They tell a yarn about how Jack wandered over to the | course ome day and they weuldn’t let him start without being introduced, even though the course was named after him. Anyhow Lou is spending the Winter | at Miami Beach and setting the boys | google-eyed with his lengthy wallops. One of the holes at La Gorce is around 560 yards in length, and even Willie | Klein, the veteran pro, has trcuble getting around the green in two shots. Lou got hold of a couple the other day which wound up over the green. “Ah just cain't believe it,” one f the sepia caddies was quoted as saying. LANDON IS FAVORED | Sends 14 Wrestlers Into Final Matches of Prep School Meet Tonight. THREE prep schools have nearly equal chances to win the annual wrestling championship at Friends favorite over St. Albans and Friends. Out of the 73 matmen from the city’s private schools who began com- petition yesterday, Landon has 14 in tonight’s finals, while St. Albans and | Priends have 10 each. Only three other schools have chances for individual championships, with Devitt and St. Ann's each hav- ing two in the title round and Calvert one. Tonight's pairings and yesterday's results: TONIGHT'S MATCHES. FINALS. CLASS A. P Smith_(F.) vs. N. ys). B. Elliott (F.) vs. P. Strong_ (L.). .~ Toby Strong OS> 5eR Albans) vs. Albans) vs. R. W. _Sn . W. Herbst 9 .) vs. J. Randall (L.). dgett (L.) vs. Hilton (St. Albans). Byers : V8. guy?fl‘ (8t. Albans), J. Amussen R ; ‘Number in_finals—Landon. 14: St. Al- ans. 10: Priends, 10: St. Ann’s. 2; Deviit, Carvert: 1. YESTERDAY’S RESULTS. CLASS A. FIRST RO! h_(L.) won on ) Pisher. (8 Fag>gromms we UND. forfeit from D. Albans) won L), 0 1 from won on P PRELIMINARIES. T, Strong (L) threw Schiossber R. C‘llmbe.r.fivlstv Ann’s) fall from H. A me ac vantage from Jim Chambers (8t. Ann's). 2:06. SEMI-FINAL. P. Smith (F.) threw W. Thomson (L.) 2:30: N. O'Donoghue (St. Ann’s) defeated Schmidt (F.). time advantage. 3:8: Elliott (F.) t H Ab. Jdefeated G Pulver (L), Re P. O'Donoghue (8t. Ann’s) arney (L) overtime, 0:44: Col lefeated Foster (L.). overtime, 0: ans) defeated P. Hoj aly (L) defeated Dunn (L.). s (8t Ann's) threw Jackson (L. erbst (L.) threw Goodrich (8t. Al Perkine (L) defeated Arnold (). time Marsh ( ] sdvantage. 1 .) threw Bern- ton (L), 5: Nicholson (F.) defeated Miller (8t Albans) time advantage, 0:58: ritchett (D.) defeated Buck (L) time advantage (extra period), 0:47: Hooper £ orton ~ (Woodward), 4:00. oK % Chambe; Ibans) threw Filei K“P'IN“ ar (D.). threw R. | TO WIN MAT CROWN T School tonight, with Landon a slight | O'Donoghue (St. | I for All Teams. OUR uncoached swimming teams | —representing Central, Eastern, | Roosevelt and Tech—will vie | with Western and Wilson, both | coached by the same man. for the first | interhigh championship ever awarded in that sport tomorrow afternoon in ! the Y. M. C. A. pool. J. Dallas Shirley, whose interest in swimming resuited in teams which h> | assembled and tutored at the two “W" schools, is the man responsible for the | first tank competition of all six ! schools. In the event the meet goes over as anticipated, swimming probably would take its regular place on the program of high school minor sports, with not regular affair, but also with teams being officially sponsored by the four now non-supporting schools. Entries Close Tonight. 'HERE is little doubt but that ef- ficient coaches could be found for Eastern, Roosevelt and Tech once it is shown that there is interest in swim- ming at those schools. Central has had fine teams in the past, but withdrew were necessitated on its pool. One of Although entries do not close with Shirley at the Y until 6 o'clock to= night, around 75 are expected to com- pete from the half dozen squads. West- ern and Wilson both will enter full squads of 17 each, nearly a dozen are | expected from each of Central and | Bastern, Tech will enter 6 or 7 and Roosevelt 3 or 4. Western Juniors Stars. Two other junior swimmers, Albert | Hamm and Ed Murphy—both of Western—are a pair seemingly destined to go far in senior ranks this year. Both are junior champions of the Dis- trict, Hamm holding the 220-yard title and Murphy the 50-yard cham- pionship. Wilson's main hopes rest upon Capt. John Satterfield, John Ziegler and John Hechinger. For the most part, the competition will be among untried youngsters, the majority o1 whom will be in competi- tion for the first time. If ambition and school spirit mean as much as they usually do, the situation calls for a hot, though wet, time. Because of the pool's limitations only male spectators will be allowed. Admission is free. —_— TIGER MATMEN ATTRACT. Princeton’s basket ball games in her home gymnasium were characterized by exceedingly sparse attendance, while the wrestling team, now in line for intercollegiate honors, is packing them in every time it shows. A/@?f(//'/gd sAvf;S 10' | only the interhigh meet becoming a | from the sport this year when repairs | | its entrants, Dick Baker. is the junior | | breast-stroke champion of the District. | Use New-Fangled Ball in| First D. C. Game Without Center Tap-off. ENEWING athletic relations | after a breach of six years, Catholic and American Uni- versities meet on the basket | ball court at Brookland tonight in a game whose innovations strikingly are | in contrast to the embers of a fading season. } Not only with it will be the first sports contest between A. U. and C. U. since 1931, but the first basket ball game in the District in which the | much-discussed elimination of the center jump will be in vogue. Also, for | | the first time, the new seamless bail | will be used which should produce | more of a “jack-rabbit” spheroid than ever has been seen on a local court. Schmarr Finishing Up. | JT WILL be the last game of the | season for the two teams and the last that Hermie Schmarr ever will, play in a Catholic U. uniform. As if the reward of victory over an intra- | city rival were not enough, a triumph | |is needed by both schools to end its | season above the .500 mark. To date, each has split even in 18 games. If victory is craved more by either, it probably is A. U., which sees its | | chance tonight to even its series with | | the Brooklanders which began in | The Cardinals hold a 5-4 lead in the nine games played, but those | four Eagle victories came in the last | four games, one in 1929, two in 1930 and the last in 1931. Lining up for C. U.. with Schmarr at forward, will be Wayne (Whitey) Ambrose, another forward; Zeke Brown, center, and Irish Carroil and Sam Pagano, guards. A. U. will take the floor with Sid Zink and Skippy Edwards, forwards; Sherman ’Lee, center, and George Brown and Everett Palmer, guards. SHO’ LOOP NEEDS CLUB Milford Apt to Take Franchise Crisfield Gives Up. CHESTERTOWN, Md., March 12 () —Withdrawal of Crisfleld from the new Eastern Shore League has sent | officials in search of another club to complete an eight-team circuit. Milford, Del, is discussed for & | possible place. | 1927, Factory Replacements Standard Makes e Guaranteed ONE YEAR UNCONDITIONAL 4.40x21 __ 4.50x20 4.50x21 435119 5.00x i) 495 “"‘u’;‘.‘;‘“’ 3.45 ' 5.45 } 5.95 %:13 } 6.75 3.95 4.65 CONSOLIDATE 2801 Georgia Ave. N.W. OPEN EVENINGS AND SUNDAYS Why Pay THOUSANDS OF TIRES—TUBES Standard Makes—Nationally Advertised GOODRICH and FEDERAL BATTERIES Closing Out Our Entire Stock of AUTO HEATERS Guaranteed for One Year GUARANTEE — TIRES OTHER MAKES—ALL FIRSTS—NEW 1937 STOCK MARCH 12, 1837. PLAN TITLE PLAY DETALS TONGHT Metro Tourney, Dawes Cup Event to Be Discussed by Officials. BY W. R. McCALLUM. UITE a group of our leading golf solons will gather at the Washington Hotel tonight at the call of Frank Emmett, secretary of the District of Columbia Scholastic Golf Association, to thrash out details of the achoolboy links schedule around Washington and set schoolboy golf on the champion- ship trail. Jim Cosgrove, president of the Dis- trict Golf Association; Dr. William C. Barr, secretary of that organization; Birch E. Bayh, head of the Depart- ment of Physical Education of the Public Schools, and George Diffen- baugh, who knows more about a chip shot than about splitting an infinitive, their fingers at the schoolboy links- men and tell 'em what is good for 'em in the business of smacking down that elusive par. Faculty representatives and man- agers of the high school golf teams also will be present and for the first time around Washington movies of Horton Smith, Lawson Little and Jimmy Thomson will be shown. Tourney Set for May 21-23. 'HE fourth annual metropolitan schoolboy championship will oe played this year on May 21, 22 and 23. probably over three different courses, as it has been played for tha last three years. Indian Spring, Ken- wood and Congressional were used last year and probably will be used again. In this tourney two years ago a kid named Bobby Brownell first made his big splash in golf. Bobby, then an un- known youngster, met Maury Nee of Georgetown Prep in the first round of the tournament. In those days Maury played more in those days before the college foot ball bug had bitten him. Young Bobby took Maury out, played him level for 18 holes and then dumped in a bird on the nineteenth to whip the favored Nee lad. Today the same Brownell kid holds the District amateur championship | and is due to win more tournaments. The lads will set the dates for their | private school league championship, | which will go into its eighth year of competition this year, #f you can call competition a tourney which George- town Prep wins every year as regularly as a clock ticks. Roosevelt Dawes Cup Choice. THEY also will arrange a schedule for the Dawes Cup matches among the public high schools and right along this line it looks as if Western'’s links warriors, who've had a strangle-hold on the Dawes Cup for the last three years, may take a trouncing this year. Bill Shea, their No. 1 man, biggest point winner and championship win- ner last year, now is sporting a fresh- man’s cap at Georgetown University and will be eligible for the Hoya var- sity outfit next year. Roosevelt High, with Brownell head- ing the team, looms as the one to lick in the Dawes Cup tourney this year. Funny thing, too, about those Dawes Cup matches. Shea and Brownell met several times over the last two years | will b2 among the men who wil! shake | SPORTS,. rs Look % Varied Sports South Atlantic Basket Ball. 8t. John's, 31; John Marshall (Richmond), 22. Monroe A. & M. (Ga.) 26; West- ern, 22. Spartansburg (S. C) High, 23; Lynchbirg, 21. Massanutten, 35; Anderson, 21. Savannah, 30; Augusta M. A, 27. Jefferson, 19; Lexington, 15. High Point, 30; Hargrave, 21. Staunton M. A, 40; Greens- boro, 29. Exhibition Base Ball. New York Giants. 1; Cuban All- Stars, 1 (12 innings). National League Hockey. - Detroit Red Wings, 4; New York Rangers, 2. Boston, 6; Chicago, 2 International-American Hockey. Providence, 6; Pittsburgh, 2. American Association Hockey. Kansas City, 3; Tulsa, 0. Eastern Amateur Hockey. Baltimore, 3; Pittsburgh, 2. * D-3 to Meets A. A, U. Tourney. THE girls’ A. A. U. basket ball gymnasium where Rockville and the United Typewriter Grays A 115-pound game between Y. M. C. A. and Langley will open hostili- George Washington Freshmen and Sterling Restaurant, starting at 8:30 STARS WILL RACE IN 13-MILE EVENT | s was quite a golfer. He is today, but ne | Sunday Contest Here Draw Prominent Out-of-Town Marathoners. | thoners have given Sunday's District A. A. U. 15-mile cham- pionship run a classy aspect, among other illustrious distance run- ners. Jean Berthelot of the Mellrose A. A pion, but others who have made their reputation in this type of event and who will be seen here are Joe Kleiner- Kantrowitz and Mike O'Hara of New York’s French Sporting Club; E. Wil- son Rich of Baltimore's Country Club | Lieberman, Frank Worthington, George | Casper and John Clarke, all of Passon A. A. of Philadelphia. 1 | hopes, as B. G. Chitwood, Jerry Looney, | Bus Nicholson and George Shorb all have signified their intention of going ROMINENT out-of-town mara- with a national champion included | is the national 20-kilometer cham- man of St. Anselm's A. C., Dave and W. Rittler, jr.; Dr. George E. Washington will not be without its | the 15-mile distance. Route Is Mapped. | HE route will follow a course start- ing at the Washington Boys' Club, | Third and C streets northwest; south | on Third to Constitution avenue, west on Constitution to Fourteenth street, north on Fourteenth to Longbridge avenue, across the bridge to Mount Vernon Memorial Highway, east on the highway to Memorial Circle, this side of Alexandria: around the circle and back the highway to the Highway | Bridge, north on the bridge to Four- teenth street, north to Constitution avenue, east on Constitution to Third | street northwest, north on Third to the finish line at C street. | The Charlotte Randell Memorial | trophy will be awarded to the winner, trophies also going to those who finish second and third. Silver medals will go to the fourth through seventh ! place winners and bronze medals to the eighth through twenty-fourth place finishers. | TO PLAY VOLLEY BALL as No. 1 men on their school teams | and Billy consistently licked Bobby. But it was different last year in the two tourneys in which they clashed. | Tow-headed Bobby whipped Billy in the District junior and in the District amateur, both times, 1 up. Brownell Apt to Be Leader. LL the lads interested in golf and attending public or private hign or prep schools located within a 15« mile radius of the zero mile stone are invited to attend the meeting. Man- agers of all golf teams are urged to attend. | Brownell may be chosen head of the | schoolboy league at that meeting to- night. Others in the field for the honor will be Buddy Sharkey of Gonzaga. | Dick Meyers of St. John's and George Flather of Wilson. VETS LIST SOCCER TILT Soccer stars of yesteryear will play a current all-star aggregation on the Film Protects Face- Stops Razor Scrape! New-type shave cream forms film between blade edge and skin—allows razor to shave closer without scraping Monument Lot Sunday, when a team composed mostly of old Waldorf and British United players is united for the purpose. Such old stars as Light, Grosart, Turner and Graham are expected to shake the kinks out of their legs for the test against this season’s best players. Other old-timers are asked to call Frank Govan at District 5552. e L T TAKES MANERO'S POST. GREENSBORO. N. C. March 12 () —Orville - White of Chicago has been "elected golf professional at Sedgefield Country Club here. He succeeds National Open Champion Tony Manero, who resigned to become pro at Salem, Mass., Country Club. More? All Firsts. Two complete floors of the most diversi- fled stocks ever assembled. $995 EXCH. PRICE 2 MOUNTED Up to 3 Years FREE 6.00%19 .00x20 6.00v21 TRUCK TIRES o 9.95 azse.. 15,95 Ly Lo 30.95 a0l All Other Sizes | 6.95 | 8.95 8.50x18 6.50x19 6.30116 _ AMERICAN STORAGE BUILDING—Sale by D SALES CO. COLl. 4138 AM.—FREE SERVICE IN REAR | Round-Robin Tournament Brings Invaders to “Y."” [ A round-robin volley ball tourna- ment will be held at the Y. M. C. A. | tomorrow, starting at 5 o'clock, with ‘Phlladelphia and Richmond sending teams for the event. | Philadelphta and Washington are | traditional rivals and the fact that| | the former placed second in the na- tional tournament last year augurs for an interesting team. There will | be no admission charge. QUINT HAS CLEAN SLATE. Jack Stanton, former Tech High courtman, led the Wollock Aces to a 30-28 victory over the Crusaders at the Eastern High gym. The vic- | tory enabled the Aces to end the sea- son undefeated. : NOT GREASY WON'T CLOG RAZOR NO BRUSH NEEDED | 20. | duced the winning margin Rockville, Uniteds Clash in Only Final Carded in championship of the city will be decided tonight at Heurich's clash in the only titular game of a triple-header, starting at 7:30 o'clock. ties followed by an unlimited clash between the defending champions, |o'clock. The girls' championship | game is scheduled to begin at 9:30. The tourney's first champion was crowned last night when Merrick Boys' Club 100-pound quintet snatched the title in that class with a 14-3 rout of Y. M. C. A. Merrick had assumed a 9-2 lead at half-time and held their opponents to one free toss in the sec- ond half. Members of the champion- ship unit were Francis Councelman, Duke Coppage, Marshall Dellinger, Audrey Estep, Philip Friedman, Babe Holland, Harold Katz, Richard Poston, Robert Poston and William Works, Asgies Twice Catch Up. DEPAR’I’MENT OF AGRICUL- TURE'S 145-pound team twice came from behind to nip Columbia Beverage, 24-23, overtaking its rival which started out with an 8-2 lead. By half time, the Aggies were ahead, 9-8, only to lose the lead again at 22- Baskets by Davis and Gabe pro- Despile a rally which nearly over- came an 18-pound deficit, the Y. M. C. A. bowed to W. P. A’s crack un- limited team, 52-33. W. P. A. was holding a 28-6 lead at intermission, but the “Y" tosscrs scored 16 points at the start of the second half, while holding their opponents to 2. Bill Noonan led a counter-rally, however, winding up with 19 points as the night's high scorer. MOUNT RAINIER FIVE MAKES IT 22 IN ROW Star Tourney Entry Moves Into Western Shore Final of State Title Play. \/IOL"NT RAINIER HIGH “¥1 SCHOOL'S rampaging basket ball team today was a long step closer to the intercounty championship of Maryland following the twenty-second victory of its undefeated season. scorea yesterday over Annapolis High at Ritchie Coliseum, 30-18, in the West- ern Shore semi-finals. ‘The Mounts are bent upon coming to The Evening Star metropolitan tournament, opening next Monday ai Tech, with a clean slate. They have one more game to play before that event starts. Today Allegany High of Cumberland meets Frederick High 1n the State tournament, and Mount Rainier, on Monday afternoon, will take on the winner for the Western Shore title. Mount Rainier will play its metropolitan opener Tuesday aft- | ernoon against Washington-Lee. Coach Perry Wilkinson started his second-stringers against Annapolis, but yanked them after the Anne Arun- del County champions ran up a 6-2 | lead. The Annapolis team remained at 6 points while the varsity Mounts ran up 12. and thereafter the Prince Georges boys dominated. SLAWSON BOWLERS BEST Garner Women's Championship at Congressional Club. Mrs. C. E. Slawson’s team won the women’s bowling tournament of Con- gressional Country Club, which ecli- maxed probably the most successful season ever. sponsored there. The winning team was presented with a trophy which is to be awarded annually to the champion. Mrs. Frank Yates captained the op- posing team. NEW “no-brush” shave cream has now been de- veloped that gives perfect shaving “lubrication.” It’s called Glider. Glider forms a thin film of protection between blade and skin. Over this film your razor passes swiftly, smoothly, cuts off each whisker at the base without scraping or irrita- tion. You spread on Glider with your fingers—never a brush! TryGlider! Itssoothing ac- tion leaves the face smooth, fresh—never greasy or sticky. Sore spots quickly disappear. THE J. B. WILLIAMS CO. Glastonbury, Conn., U. §. A. Makers of fine shaving preparations for over 96 years AQUA VELVA for after shaving=— closes skin porq fahta off “plmple your| cool, tioned" thatc] air-cond| feeling.