Evening Star Newspaper, April 11, 1937, Page 32

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SPOR1TS THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., APRIL 11 1937—PART ON; SPORTS. United States Golf Association Is Careful in Setting Dates COUNTRY IS GIVEN | CLOSE ONGE-OVER Gets Clear Picture of How Numerically Strength Is Distributed. BY the Associated Press. EW YORK, April 10.—Within the next two weeks the United States Golf Association will re- lease the entry list for the na- tional open, to be played June 10 to 12 at the Oakland Hills C. C. near Detroit. The list will be complete with qualifying points and number quali- fiers. Golfers throughout the country will study the list, make comments on it, possibly venture criticism of it. Few, however, will give any thought to the amount of detailed study that has gone into the preparation of that list. That is because the work done by the U.S. G. A’s executive staff, headed by Executive Secretary Joseph C. Dey, jr, is cloaked in anonymity. Yet, twice a year—once for the national open and again for the national ama- teur championship—they delve deeply into an analysis of the state of golf the country over. The starting point each year is the previous Summer’s entry list. That of last year’s open, played at the Baltusro! Golf Club is Short Hills, N. J., and won by Tony Manero, now the pro at Salem, Mass., then a somewhat obscure veteran from Greensboro, N. C., hit a new record of 1,277 entrants, Get Clear Picture. 'OR the sake of convenience that entry list is split up by States. The State entries then are itemized again according to the cities, towns or villages in which their clubs are located. In this way the U. S. G. A. analyz- ers are provided with a very clear pic- ture of just how the numerical strength of the country’s amateurs and professionals is distributed. And that numcrical strength is one of three fac- tors taken into consideration when the qualifying points are decided upon—so well decided upon in 1936 that the 76 pros and amateurs who survived for the final 36 holes at Baltusrol repre- sented 20 of the original 28 districts. Besides numerical strength, the other factors which figure in the allo- cation of the preliminary trials are the playing strength of each district and its distance from the championship proper. This year, from the latter viewpoint, the tournament has a sin- gularly auspicious location. Fairly well centered geographically yet not too distant from New York, Chicago and other centers of population which also are concentration points of good | world middleweight title. golfers and wide gmr interest. Choi(‘cs Prove Wise. ACH year there is a certain amount of change in the number and loca- tion of the qualifying points. Two years ago, for example, Madison, Wis., was added to the list, and for two rea- sons: 1. To relieve the pressure on the Chicago district. 2. Because analysis of the Chicago entries revealed that a large number of contestants were com- ing from Madison and other points in Wisconsin. Last year Troy, N. Y., was used as | & qualifying point for the first time. In previous years golfers from the Central New York area had had to go to Buffalo, Boston or New York, mean- ing a long trip and further congestion of districts which already had enough difficulty handling their own entries. The response in Troy, which took | in the “capital city” area of Albany | and Schenectady, was entirely satis- factory, 33 turning out for the open trials, 33 for the amateur. Other areas which have bore out the U. S. G. A’s wisdom in awarding them trials of their own are Connecticut, which previously had been handled jointly by New England and New York, and the Carolinas. Officially suru Season. USUALLY the U. 8. G. A. takes the first step in picking a new quali- fying point and thus spurring golf in- terest in that particular section. Oc- casionally a club or sectional asso- ciation will write in, requesting a quali- {ying round in its district and guar- anteeing a number of entries sufficient to make the move feasible. The 1937 list, which likely is to in- clude several more points beyond the 28 used last year, now is under con- sideration by Harold W. Pierce of Bos- ton, chairman of the Championship Committee. When it is released some time before the middle of April it will be the signal to golfers throughout the country that the season officially is on and to hopeful and able pros and ama- teurs everywhere that it is time to start polishing their strokes for the national open champlonship. FETE FOR BOWLERS Arch McDonald will preside as toastmaster and present the prizes at the twelfth annual banquet and dance of the Lutheran Bowling League Tuesday night at the Raleigh Hotel. More than 225 are expected to attend, as both the men’s and women’s leagnes Wwill celebrate, starting at 6:30 o'clock. Rev. Howard E. Snyder, pastor of Atonement Lutheran Church, will be the speaker of the evening. The men’s league is headed by Vernon George | on. At this stage of the women’s wrestling bout at Turner's last night, Clara Morthensen, who claims to be world champzon was about to throw Clartce Davis, a challenger —Star Staff Photo. There Also Was a Good Deal of Hair Pulling MMMAN’S AHAGK BRINGS RIOT HERE 2 ARGELLI RING TILT FURR'S FAREWELL D. C. Welter Goes on Tour After 10-Round Go Here Tomorrow Night. BY BURTON HAWKINS. HIL FURR'S final fight here before the volcanic-tempered local ~ welterweight pushes West with a view toward making a concentrated assault on the cream of 147-pound ranks will be uncorked tomorrow night at Turner's Arena when the tattooed lad squares off with Werther Arcelli in a 10- round feature bout. In the opinion of Chris Dundee, Phil's newly acquired manager, Furr needs a complete change of scenery and plenty of work with polished opponents. Phil, therefore, will travel with Dundee and Ken Overlin, middleweight mauler, to the Pacific Coast. The trio will depart Tuesday morning for Seattle, Wash., where Ken will face Freddy Steele for the | Not at Best, Furr Insists. UNDEE'S blueprints for Furr's| immediate future include negoti- ations for bouts with Barney Ross, Ceferino Garcia, Glenn Lee and Al Manfredo. It is possible, however, that Phil's first move toward hopping off the fistic treadmill will be a scrap with Gordon Wallace on April 26 at Vancouver, British Columbia. Before vacating this sector, how- ever. Phil hopes to erase the stigma of what has been advertised as a run-out against Arcelli. It has been said that Phillip, after witnessing | Arcelli chill Sid Silas in three rounds, | Sit-Down Bug Nips Golf Pros, Willing to Take Relief F unds As Pay for Leaning on Clubs NY day now, if Wiffy Cox and Clarence Clarke, those two inveterate jokesters of golf, have their way, the office of Harry Hopkins, relief administrator, may be infested with a flock of broad- shouldered, ruddy-faced golf profes- sionals jabbering strange language about half-shots, pitch and run shots and 8X irons. The pro golfers, it seems, are getting forced to walk 18 holes or more a day to play for paltry purses of five grand and more. They want some- thing easier than hitting shots at distant pins and agonizing 4-foot putts. “Say, Clarkie,” cracked Wiffy Cox, “how about & real tournament some day soon? for example. show and struggle around and we have to live in these swanky hotels and suffer all those inconveniences. And for what? For a few dollars. Why we even get our feet wet. Maybe we ought to have a sit-down tourna- ment.” “Why, Wiff, it isn't like you to be so dumb about things that count,” said Clarke, the big Jersey blond. “You ought to know better, being from Washington, where they sit down all the time. I've got a better idea than that. How about a bunch of us hesitated in agreeing to meet the Italian. After many days of sup- posed quibbling Phil condescended. While an operation on his nose has | aided his breathing considerably, Furr, by his own admission, is not in top | condition, although you'd never know it if he didn't tell you. His workouts | with Overlin have been speedily paced and although Phil naturally going up to see this guy Harry Hop- kins or Mr. Ickes or whatever his i name is, and asking him to put on a real golf tournament. We pros are the only people of the country who haven't chiseled in on this relief | dough, and I think we ought to get | in on it. And think what fun we could have with it. “It would be the only tournament suffers in comparison with Ken he | nevertheless has impressed hangers- | Arcelli wound up the stiff slate of | his conditioning grind yesterday at | New York and will taper off here | today with light work. Manager Bobby North claims Werther hasn't appeared at top shape here yet, de- spite his victories over Silas and Johnny Lucas, having kayoed S8id after a two-month lay-off necessi- tated by a broken hand and suffering | from a cold when he met Lucas. Attractive Semi-Final. N AN enticing six-round semi-final, eagerly anticipated by local ring- worms, & pair of youthful promising heavyweights will collide when Max Roesch of Texas meets Frank Ty- mosko of Richmond, Va. They were slated to clash two weeks ago, but a gashed eye received in training forced Tymosko to puli out. Three four-rounders, one of which still is in the making, will round out the card. In others, Mike O'Leary, Baltimore lightweight, will face Ole Anderson of Leonardtown, and Frankie De Angelo, local feather- weight, will trade blows with Russell Driscoll of Baltimore. The first bout will get underway at 8:30 o'clock. MAROON HAS TALL NINE. CHICAGO, April 10 (#).—Coach Kyle Anderson of the University of Chicago base ball team isn't claiming any Big Ten title yet, but he believes his club will “look down” on every other conference team this season. Bix regulars on the Maroon squad are and the women's by Ethel Keller. Dancing will follow the banquet. 6 feet or more tall, with Pitcher Paul Amundsen towering 6 feet, 5 inches. in the country we could win by lean- ing on our clubs and looking pretty. Even I could look pretty for a thou- sand bucks.” Cox and Clarke are two guys along | the pro trail who don't take their golf so seriously as to interfere with their fun. They can take a 78 when it costs ’em dough and get a laugh out of it, even though they kick a shoe around in the locker room after- ward. Where some of the boys go into the crying room when they shoot up into the higher brackets, this pair of jokesters can laugh about a bad shot. Not that they aren't serious enough on the course when they're making a shot. That means dough, but if the ball takes a tricky hop into a trap, they can laugh. CHIP shots along’ the golf trail . . . The Winter circuit is ended and Sam Snead is the guy who's getting most of the puffs . . . Sam, playing his first season in the big circuit, has grabbed well over $4,000 in cash and the boys regard him as the best prospect in many years . . . Harry Cooper tops the money winners with cash contributions of nearly $7,000 since January 1, but the Snead kid is getting the play . . . at all the tournaments, the galleries have wanted to look him over . . . and it’s no hokum about his lengthy hit- ting . . . maybe he won't be quite as long as Jimmy Thomson when Jim hits one, but he won't be far back . . . we watched Snead play with Lawson Little at Augusta and the kid out- hit Lawson plenty . . . Little is no puff-ball, either . . . nor is Ralph Guldahl, and Snead outhit him, too .+ . . Guldahl wants to know why the sports writers call Snead and Nelson youngsters and don't mention him the same way. “I'm 25 years old, the “Ugly Duckling”Is Latest Golf Ball Offering Pellet, With Weird Decorations, Said to Have Greatly Increased Flight. T'S getting so that every time you turn around on the golf course some enterprising man- ufacturer springs a new golf ball on you. The latest thing in golf balls, its appearance timed to catch the perspiring efforts of J. Quincy Duffer and his millions, is a sphere called the “ugly duck- ling” and decorated with the weird- est collection of markings you ever saw on & ball. For many, many years the dim- ple marking has been standard on golf balls, ever since the mesh marking went the way of the dodo and wooden-shafted clubs. But this year's Spalding line certainly has gone a long jump away from the dimple marking. In case you didn’t know some - kind of marking is necessary on a golf ball. A perfectly smooth sphere wouldn’t fly 100 yards and if it did fly that far it would do 80 with a collection of dips and & curves that would make Shanty Hogan dizzy. Back in the old days when they first started making gutta-percha- covered balls they found that a ball which had been cut and slashed carried further than one which hadn’t been used. That put ‘em on the right track and now some kind of marking is standard. The main idea seems to be that the marking holds the ball up in the air by forming a vacuum be- low it in flight. The new golf balls in the Spald- ing line are marked with a dia- mond-shaped patiern and a series of bumps and humps that are far different from the regular and symmetrical dimples of other years. For the new sphere is claimed longer flight, but they aren’t talking about increased dis- tance. What they are talking about is the ability of the ball to get up quickly from the iron clubs. b Matt Keirnan, Spalding man- ager in New York, takes the air on the new ball: “What does your ordinary golfer have trouble doing?” Matt asks. “He has trou- ble getting the ball up, doesn’t he? Well, he’s the guy we're looking for with this new ball. It does: get up quicker and faster. Is it longer, you ask? Well, we would rathei talk about something else. You know we aren't supposed to make the ball any longer. But we think we have a ball that gets up Some day we'd like to have Matt talk about what the driving ma- chines show up there at Chico- pee, Mass, on the matter of length of golf balls. But the man- ufacturers have a ‘“hush-hush” idea on that. The U. 5. G. A. doesn’t like the idea of building golf balls that fly furthe: & | at the same club in Wilmington, Del,, tired of being | | maker . . . A sit-down tournament, | Here we put on a good | |ney of the Summer, timed to catch | college net teams in the East, came same age as those two, and they call ‘em youngsters and don't give me & tumble,” Ralph sasy . maybe it'’s because Ralph has been around | the top brackets of the game so long . for *four years. Laugh yarn of the week—Alex Smith and Gil Nichols were working where Tony Sylvester, pro, was breaking Bannockburn in as a club- they wired a New York agent for a club repair man, and the reply came back that there was an | excellent workman available . . . his | only fault, the wire said, was thul he | was fond of liquor, “Send clubmaker at once” Alex wired back. *“He can have what Gil and I leave.” Thirteen years ago Cyril Walker, 110 pounds of real golfing man, won | the open championship at Detroit .. . this year the open will be played over the same Oakland Hills course, and where is Walker? . . . He's out of the game entirely, a forlorn figure wan- dering around through the tournament galleries, unnoticed and unknown . . .| it's a tragedy that a guy with such| a great game should be an also ran, completely out of the game ... he probably made less money out of his championship than any top-notch pro. Bob Harlow is on his way to Chicago to take charge of the $10,000 Chicago open scheduled for July 23, 24 and | . Chick Evans, the aging Chicago nmnwux will be in charge of the com- | mittee , . . it will be the biggest tour- the Ryder Cup team on its return home. Women golfers of the Capital will | open their tournament season a week | from Friday with the playing of Lhz' Phyllis Keeler Miller Memoria] tour- ney . . . entries will close April 19 with Mrs. J. E. McCabe, at Cleveland 4158. EAGLES’ NET TEAM DEALT GOOSE EGGS| Swarthmore Takes All But One Match in Straight Sets. Harris Dies Hard. AMERICAN UNIVERSITY'S net- men, handicapped by lack of practice, proved no match for Swarth- more’s tennis team yesterday, losing every match and a 9-0 decision to the visitors. All but one of the victories of Swarthmore, called one of the best in straight sets. May of American carried Lyons to 6—3, 4—6, 6—2 be- fore losing. The best match of the day, however, came in the meeting of the No. 1 singlists, Frank Hutson of Swarth- more waging a great fight to defeat Len Harris in the first set, 12—10, be- fore capturing the second, 6—1. Summaries: SINGLES — Hutson _defeated 12—10, 6—1; Doriss defeated Lee, 6—0; Lyons defeated May, €3, Levering _defeated _Hudson, §5 Maes Gefeated Winter, oo, 6—3; Livingston defeated Sarles, 6—1, t—: DOUBLES—Hutson and Macy defeated Harris and May, 7—b5, 7—5; Lyons and Doriss deteated Lee and Hudson, -3, Levering and Todd defeated Winter S Baries, Petworth League FINAL STANDINGS. t] ey wADDRARISHE ESEQW? Petworth Butler's Barber's Soller's Plumbers York Service Sta. Brotman's M'ket 4 Little Tav. Shops York Haberd'ers Sch’er Motor Oo‘ 36 4 a1 %2 SR2ERZZZEN! ERRR BB *33. JERBLERE *Total pins rnr 78 games. Individual Aver G. Wingate | Sadtler _ 78 W.Hly jr. Furman Burch Benner Riley Mooney _ Appler _ Lago 308 Bate - 92 0-5_ Connell ~ 68 08-12 De Vries 19 SOLLER'S PLUMBERS. Sollers _ 81 108-9 Baker __ 60 Finnegan 81 107-7 Wrenn _ 80 L'berger 81 105-31 Burke _ 18 YORK SERVICE STATION. 0 Groves _ 27 &&‘Z‘r’ = 1 9 Oliver___ 69 Filllus 112-57 Grant___ 69 | Bill BROTMAN'S MARKET. ___ 78 119-33 Brotman. 78 Glionek = 7b 100-23 Parker 75 Sherman_ 36 106-7 Oster __ 33 LITTLE TAVERN S8HOPS. 3-11 Araujo _ 74 0 Hancook. 42 510 F Baows 46 )RK HABERDASHERS. 71 104-4:4 Kushner_ 50 69 104- 5 Lewis o HOT-04 Artiey 40 SHAEFER MOTOR CO. by 70 112 Schaef'er 78 Beardsiey 47 1084 Bal 81 Thuston 68 106-8 W.H'I'y.sr 42 acoms RESTAURANT. Payne 109-64 P\lrd 75 MFBnT Bl 103 -66 Capone J.HR'des 80 102-16 Sterling. 2l WI( I KINGSWELL. INC. Kohler Reg w liams. E.Ba'ws_ g'denberg Burrows West, 100-15 99. 20- Thuney _ 87 107- u Pneanm iliman ; i e, g-l Wnl'.l 1 92-13 i b Baxter Is Target of Crowd, After Wakeman, Radio Man, Is Struck. 1Contmued From Plrst Page ) the match, also was in the midst of the melee and received a well battered body in attempting to squelch the snarling Baxter. After the skirmish, which lasted about five minutes, police pried B crowd and escorted him to his dress- ing rcom through the milling spec- tators, who by this time filied the ring and jammed the aisles. No one was arrested, the police finding difficulty in singling out an outstanding par- ticipant. The feud between Baxter and Wake- man had its inception about a month ago, when Wakeman, in interviewing the twister, said he didn't believe Laverne was “so hot.” Tony's idea merely was to pep up the radio pro- gram, but Baxter took it seriously and swung on Wakeman in the studio. Baxter later staged a one-man sit- down strike at the arena in protest of Wakeman being on the press bench The riot climaxed a hectic evening, which found Baxter tossing Marshail only after ripping the shirt and under- shirt off Referee Bortnick, biting and hitting the arbiter and generally con- ducting himself in an unapproved fashion. Newspaper men who cover ‘wrestling bouts week in and week out during the year and are immune to the hip- podrome aspect of the matches, were amazed at the authenticity of the at- tack, which strictly was “on the level.” Women Play Second Fiddle. PLAYING second fiddle to the riot was the appearance of women grapplers here for the first time. Clara Mortensen, who claims the feminine world lightweight championship, flipped Clarise Davis following a brand of showmanship which suffered little in comparison with the final event. The so-called beauties, with sand- paper complexions and the modesty of strip-teasers, bit and kicked each other, tossed each other over the ropes | to the spectators and pulled hair until | Clara finally decided to terminate the comical contest after 9 minutes and | 40 seconds of action. In other bouts, Jack Hader disposed of Ernie Powers in 233 minutes through the medium of a boot in the face; Jim Coffield trimmed Bobby Rob- | erts in 26!, minutes, flopping on Rob- erts after both had collided head-on in the middle of tNe ring, and Bluebeard Lewis trounced Gabriel Dian- nunzio in 8 minutes with a body slam. Powers instituted a new wrinkle in the mat game when he shelled and ate the peanuts tossed in the ring by spec- | tators. | NEW BOWLING LEADERS r from the threatening |\, & Lo | vuumm | Second NEW YORK, April 10 (#).—Scor- ing games of 429-401-499 fot 1,329, ‘ Walter Zanger and Val Metts, Louis- | ville, Ky., ousted Johnny Hogan and Johnny Seebeck, Passaic, N. J., from | the doubles lead in the American | Bowling Congress late today as scores continued to mount in the big pin classic. Zanger posted a sizzling 718 total on games of 244-232-242. Metts con- tributed 611 on scores of 185-169-257. The Kentuckians wound up 18 pins short of the '36 winning total, 1,347, scored by Andy Slanina and Mike Straka, Chicago. e MOORE PUTS BEES OVER. COLUMBIA, 8. C., April 10 (#)— Gene Moore paced the Boston Bees to & 5-1 victory over their Columbia farm hands today by poling out a homer with two on in the first inning. Wally Berger registered the fourth run with a circuit drive in the fifth inning. Boston (N - 300 002 000—% Oolumbia (S.A.) 001 000 000—1 Batteries—Babich and Lopez; der and Rice. CLASH FOR SOCCER CUP. ST. LOUIS, April 10 (#).—Crippled by the loss of Alec McNab, their canny Scottish fleld general, the St. Louis Shamrocks, Western champions, meet the New York Americans, Eastern di- vision victors, here tomorrow in the first game of the national challenge cup soccer finals. HE. 81 31 Harkrae- ‘WOULD RETURN GLOVE. Robert Roland, 1324 Nineteenth street northwest, has a base ball glove he would like to return to its owner. | Purchasing Duckpln League Averages and Standings Menorah 5 ~ 30 Season Records. ta, 6: Vist, ‘ndividual @ Singer, : Weinberg, 114 individusl game.—s. singer, individual set_—Schecter, 418, strikes—D. Singer. spares—J. Binger, flat game—Weinberg DEPARTMENT STORE. 31 Credit Bureau 38 Guy-Curran n Records. team game-—Woodward & Lothrop, 0 49 24 b4 team set—Lansburg! individual game—AlL individual set—Bill strikes—Jack Wolstenholme, 49. spares—Irwin Simon. 199. averages—Irwin Simon. 114-47; chkswollunholme. T14-5: Al Mcbonald, 113-54 1,776, McDonald, Kingsolver, RECREATION, Phil Bobrs Busy Bee Res. Univ, Shop Post Office Marlb. Hotel 48 30 Blank'n's Res. Dipl'mat Cafe 44 34 Ind. Oil Co. Bregm'n Grill 44 34 Hill & Tibb. Season Records. High team game—Diplomat Cafe, 660, High team set—Diplomal Cafe. 1.854. High individual game—Joe Freschi, 1¥: Hish individual set— Charies Beall, High strikes—Joe Harrison, Hih spares—Joe Harrison, Higl erages—Joo Harrls Astor Clarke. 15504, LADIES' FEDERAL LEAGUE. it 25 R. P C. Agriculture Agriculture Treasury 1 Marines Vets” Adm. Oftice Post 41 H. O Labor D 40 41 H O L. SODALITY. L. . Nativity 1__ 20 Holy Comf't'r 35 St. Martins 26 8t. Joseph's _ % 8t. Gabriel 1 8t. Gabriel 2 Nativity CIVIC CLUBS. Lido = 18 Optimist S. 8. Lions Kiwanis 1 Reciprocity Clvitan Wash. Lions_ : LUTHERAN CHURCH. Luther Place. 50 Mt. Rainfer _ B0 Grace . John' St. John's 1 Kelier Takoma, Atonement Christ Church Zion Trinity - ; Incarnation 3 St. Paul's 2 INTERSTATE COM. COM. Mimeograph 30 Examiners rmits 41 3R 34 Inquiry Tofmal Cases 38 34 statistics omcu. 5028 A £0,Co.. ¥ 5% T Edmanm 2 Conn 2 Edmonds 1 Hilbert _ HEIGHTS. Hertz Arcade Bun.~ Arcadia Eagle Bedding 2 Ben Hundley Premier _ C. &OC. Pt. Mem Metropol 1 4 Centennial 5 W. Wash'ston 46 51 | Betworth mple Hyaus\me K nda Ratl Natl Bap., Calvary _ . OF LABOR. 26 Prices 3l Immigration Cost of Liv. Cost of Liv. SOUTHERN RAILWAY. 42 30 Trafic Broskland Tabulation _ & Employ. Stat. 5 aturalization mpl. Center 47 Construction Paymaster Disbursing YOUNG PEOPLE'S FELLOWSHIP. 41 28 Trinity 8t. Stephans Good Shepard C. & P. LADIES. Aux, Ser. Bur. 51 21 Plant North 49 Gen. Office 7 Columbia Dhat 5 Cleveland NAVY DEPARTMENT. Qrdnance ___ 54 39 Hydrographic 40 4 41 A T, Secretarys and u. Eng 41 Commandants 8. and A. 50 43 Aeronautics Lithographers 5043 ¥ and D. Barracks 44 Encineers B. Y. P. U. LADIES. Met. Nat. 27 SE 37 17 41 40 33 Metropolitan No. 1 Petwo! Hyatcsville West Washington Tem Nalnonll Baptist Mem. 8 Calva 2 Metropolitan No. 2” 8 Season Records. igh tea m games—Petworth, 535: West hingt w'u‘m'\“n‘fh sets’Petworth, 1.455: Metro- lits No. 1. . POLEh Nnaividal rames—Brown, 138; M"l?q'm individual sets—Sabean. Hart, H strikes—Beler and Sabean, 26 Goch r an en abares—Brow. I50; Sabean, 128, Hizh averages—Sabean Brown, 1000 Hart, $0-20: Beel He picked it up on a Monument |} : 90-12. Grounds diamond yesterday by mis- take, thinking it belonged to his brother. ) CAPTURES IRISH TITLE. BELFAST, April 10 (). —Victorious 3-0 over Linfleld, Belfast Celtic won the Irish Foot Ball Association Cup today after a lapse of 11 years. A Tousing game saw last year's trophy winner well beaten, the Celts taking the cup for the third time in their career. . SCHUMACHER GIANTS' BEST. MEMPHIS, Tent.—Hal Schumacher has relieved Bill Terry's managerial mind of one big worry regarding the Giants’ pitching department. Schu- macher has rounded into form so im- pressively Terry has tentatively named him for the Giants’ opening day as- signment. e e SOUTHEAST GOLF VICTOR. BATON ROUGE, La., April 10 (#).— Vincent D'Antoni of Tulane University defeated Lawrence Larcade of Louisi- ana State University, 1 up, in the 18-hole finals to capture the South- eastern Conference golf championship today. FOX OUTBOXES POSTER. NEW YORK, April 10 (#)—Tiger Jack Fox, 177Y2, Spokane, Wash,, stopped the veteran New York heavy- weight, Lou Poster, in six rounds of their wind-up bout at Rockland Pal- ace tonight. Poster weighed 18314. PLAYER SEEKS TEAM. " Elmer Dobberstein would like to -38 | play third base or shortstop with some good nine in town or in the suburbs. He has had five years' experience us & NKERS. - w. e The Citv Ba Amer. Secunt‘ & Trust 1 Onion ust Co. i Mol Semey & Hrast 4 % % :"fl“'jr Savings & T’Y\IE'- Co.. B.Hibbs & Amrr Séc\!fll' & Trust 8 Auch'oss. Parker Red'h 7] Riggs National Bank Munsey Trust Co. Alex. Brown & Sons « Season Records. e—City Ban E":“ 'g“r‘n:.nmt—Amulcln sty & Tru 78! Hi ‘nfll iduy H:{R Thaividual m—cm High striket Hrimex - Hlll‘ !vne.r:exes-»and"s ll‘ 71 1\3-13 ProCTeem 55325325 233 83 o-wrisht, 168, ‘Wright. Fasazers s Tornadoes Sleuths Wrecking Crew Audicrats Analysts Blow Hards REEPREERTN BIBEITER W. L. Aux. Serv. Bu. 51 21 Plll’l! i 1 Offi Q7 'lg D'S ‘Met. Nat. SShmbia ™" 37 38 Cleveland - Season Records. 1 venu s—A. Vito ;“h“fl.l. Keith (Aux. Serv. 1 games—Allen (Co- D MrcOathran (Cleveland). hris individual _ sets — McOathra (Cleveland). 362: Allen (OColumbia). 335 H'l"l‘l"l‘.l;:lllm games—General Office, 5186; A e séts - Aux, Serv, Bur.. 1418; North, 1.436. 5 Anrflm [TME COMMISSION. U. 8 M Lo e aay S3R5F (Aux. ':n urance. 2 36 36 2 Remmations. 1 a2 ] M. 2 35 Smptroller. 1 36 'm 36 36 Insurance 1 27 Seasen Record: Bizn a-mc—A L, lansda Tiviaual set WP, iy | ..m.-qmmu" 618: Becreta: 687 fl%fl verates—A L Lagi 3807 115-5; Ombtrnller, 2 Nox semi-pro. He may be reached at Lin- coln 8318 between 8 and 7 o'clock. P W us-i cn? ‘Broner, g ‘High e and ©. stnec. 362 Tom E‘"’ BT e .fio. ©C. &. Btoner. BUREAU OF ENGINEER! Team Standings. W. L Mermeids __ Shipworms Bhellbacks___ 42 36 Kels Barnacles 37 41 Biigerats _ Lobsters - 38 34 VETERANS' ADMINISTRATION, Team Standings. Col. Constructién Design 2 Bug. & Stat. Wid. Claims Vet Cl Svc. Engineers Pri sty Finance 5 Chief Clerks Appeals Claims - C-Files Pensions Solicitors Ptg. & Dup. 43 41 Season Records. High team set—Finance. 1.67 High team game—Construction. 03 1y 1i8h individual average—Stephenson, High spares—Thornburg, 195, High strikes—Silverman. 49. High individual set—Stephenson, 393, High individual game—Caivert, 154. nYNAMlT! LEAGUE. L. L. Faazers ] 31 Wreck. Crew. 41 40 Analysts 45 2| Licky Strike LADIES’ DISTRICT. Team Standings, W. L Rosslyn 7 18 Temple _.___ 8 27 Arcadia an]onn Beer :.:’r‘ Georgetown 38 R Season Records, High team games—Rosslyn, 818; Btrike. 613 sets—Rosslyn, *1.750; L Lucky h’ individual games—Gulll (Lucky IR (Highway Engineering), individusl sets—Eilis (Rosslyn)s Gulli (Lucky Strike), Spares-Guill (Liicky Strike), 188: Rase \(Rosslyn), "169: Wootton and Eilia (Rosslyn). 16K, High sirikes—Gulll (Lucky Strike), 49; Wootton and Rose (Rostlyn) High individual_averages. Strike). 114.41 se (Rosslyn Wootton (Rosslyn). 110.44: M_ Lynn (Hij 109.67: Eliis (Rossiyn)s (Highway Engineering), Young (National Beer), 10%.31. *All-time league records. AGRICULTURE INTERBUREAU. | Economics | Plant Industry” Plant Juniors' TP 29,708 40104 4 7 Audicrats a8 4n R Blow Hards _ 31 50 SILVER SPRING LADIES. Georgiana Beauty Shop Shepherd Park Restaurant Raphael Beauty Salon Germans Bakery Pickwick Grill Murray's Candy Shop Monument” Electric National Ale Edmonds Wade Buick Wynnewood Park Leedy’s Electricians Season Records. High team sets_Georgiana Beauty Shop, Sleaths 1.560: Shepherd Park Restaurant High team games—Pickwick Grill, Georgiana Beauly Shop 547 High _individual sets phael). 384: Schulte (Ge: g High ‘individuals games—Rothge phael). 147. Stambaugh e wood) 13K; Almony (National Ale), 13%; Schulte (Georgiana). 138 High individuai spares—Rotheeb (Ra- phael). 165; Spates (Shepherd Park). 161 High individual strikes—Schulte (Geor- giana) Spates (Shepherd Park taurant). Restaurant), 103-11. SILVER SPRING AMERICAY. | Dixie Pig E. C. Keys & Son Wolfe Motor Co Paul's Place Stewart Bros Shepherd Park Restaurant me Oil Co. Service_Electric Co. __ | Silver Spring Market National Beer Joe Judge's Restaurant_ | Morningside Laundry Season Records. High team games—E. C 72, Wolte Motor Co., 630 . 2 L.fi“:t‘;yuam sets—Wolte Motor Co me Ofl Co. 1.783: Dixie Pig. 1.776 D W individus, games—strickler (E. C. Keys), 178 Taft (Service Electric Co.). 176: MeCaha (Wolfe Motor Co). 1 High individual_sets—Arbaugh (Spring Market) hrove: M rx;me 13500 a8 & D P Keys & Son Morningside 18043 Rocniz (Stewart Bros) & h indivi ual EDI!‘«;—T!"I‘AD[' (Wolfe b Coy. a7l: Strickler (E. C. Keys) Pling (Dixie Pig *Hieh individual aver Co.) OECSmith (Wolte Moto O'Donnoghde (Woite Motor). CLYDE KELLY LEAGUE. (Second Series.) ges—Temple (Wolfe ickler (E. C. Ke °i16-3. w. L @ Teachers 16 17 5 Circle 3 Prophets 17 16 Deacons Season Records. High team game—Elders, 573 High team set—Trustees. 1 Hign spares—W. Barker. 1: win. 13 High strikes—R. Thomas. 35 b indiyidual averages—Barker individual games—D. Langhorne, fig] R. W. Ricker 1 High indiidual "Sets—W. Barker, 350 Thomas Semi-Circle - Sextons Trustees Elders 104 SILVER SPRING GEORGIA AVE. L W. L. 26 Colesv'e 8 8t 4 50 15 P 4 5 Hioel 43 Walsh Motor | Tak. Cons. Co. 46 44 White's Hwe Season Records. High team sets—Silver Spring | 1740: Takoma, Construction Co.. res O's. 1.71 T ehCteam gamies—Takoma Construet | Co. B21: Silver Spring Hotel. 617 and 61 High individual sets—McKay (Monument 94: Moore (Takoma Construc- 92: Mullinix (Grotto 1,736 n idual_games_-Harvey (Silver Spring Hotel). 170: McKay (Monument | Electric). 160; Bpates (Silver Spring Hotel), Spring Hotel) A LR 42: Wootton (Silver 8pri High_individual spi koma Construction) Woodward YorSoring Cleaners), 315 Maninie (Groth GrilD), 209, High ™ individual (Takoma_Coinstruction). {Grotto Grill). 111-60 Printing) | struction) ing). 110-2: ey \Silver Spring Mullin: nold _(Takoma lln k. B cormeinua prin: WAR DEPARTMENT—MEN. L, W. 3 Armies = Wash_Acy Fort Belvoir i Engineers 3 Auditors Adjutants Firine Squad Estimates Construction | Pinance Barbettes 18 1R 18 16 15 15 13 Tailored YOUR figure has tall, short, p Wilner Tailored C Over 300 Pat- erns to Choese From at $3 9.50 1 Jos.A. W CORNER 8TH + | Mooers 4: Bugar Section, A. A. A. 41 | Shops P | Extenston | Interbureaus Accounts | So-Kems 8oil Com&r\:llor Season Records. High team sets sPlant Industry, L7288 Extension and ar S 1.7 cam games —Plant Indusiry. tion. 604: Sugar o 1 dstrom, ' 409; kames— Dor : Heleker, 165, METHODIST PROTESTANT. Seaton, Pt Myer Hgts & Mt.Tabor. 2 Cherrydale C. Ave.. R T Ave. 5 All Stars 39 First Chureh_ 34 50 Season Records. JHigh team game—Rhode Isiand Ave, el Hmh Tean set—Rhode Tsiand Ave, No. 1, Stien averages—Mahoney (Port Myer ), 110-56; J. Scholl (Cherrydaie), individual game——Jones No (Mouns (Calvaryk (Cherry- (Fort Myer 55 individual set—Ross Hig strikes—K. Barker dale) High ~spares—Mahoney Heignts), 207 34 WASHINGTON LADIES, Ell Gees Colonials Nomad s Vee Bees 371100 Season Records. High individual sets—Gulll, 389; Ro geb H Ford Din, 100 55 Levy, Executives Escrow Loan: Auditors c ri 113- Fling, k'zs ll“ l‘ Hummer, 109-413 ual sets—Bool Keeley, 786 Bra t. 3 i b4 lat sames—Croft. 95, Nash and isani. - With Sthikes—Mears. 45: McMahon, 4:: H._P. Evans. 41. Connolly and High spares—-Sheckles. 107 Booker, 184; M. P. Wood, 178 FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION. w Hummicbirds 4 Buzzards 3 Season Records, High team eames—Buzzards, 851; H a ip-0-wills fon team sets—Buzzards. 1598 B sets—Eliott, 4 games—Eliott Hien Stikes—Dias. 48 Marvel h spares—Elliott. 136 h averages—Thomas, 106-26; M-~ rds individual . 3 ‘Hizh \rm\ldull Hign indivi dugl strikes—Spates (Silver averages—Saunders 112 Kirsch (Cornelius | Con- | 17 oElliott. 101-48; Mooers. 101 ODD FELLOWS' LEAGUE. Teams. Amity 1 Eastern Columbia Pleasant _ Stuart | Eriendship Covenant g to ix Season Records. High averages—Perce Ellett. 110-11: George Gloss. 111.33; Wally Donaldson, strikes—Perce Ellett, 47. spares—Perce Ellett, 238 Individual Rame—Charles Grom Individual set—George Gloss, 400 flat_game—Tom Kelly, 97 team game—Columbia. 601 High team set—Columbia. 1.694 L ] ] ] 20 31 1 Individually nothing to do with it lump or otherwise. In lothes it's your good points that are emphasized. Choose your fabric and pattern frém scores of new designs. We'li hand- tailor your clothes and make you appear as well dressed as any man .. . yes, and better than most men. ilner & Co. “Custom Tailors Since 1897” & G STS. N\W.

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