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S PORTS. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. Pinmen Shoot for $3,200 in City Championships to grab when they start the ship tournament at Lucky Strike to- to compete, with the 388 teams on 716 individuals, for the doubles title. Nearly 2,000 Will Compete at Lucky Strike. PPROXIMATELY $3,200 will A be waiting for local bowlers three weeks’ shooting in the | twenty-seventh annual Washington City Duckpin Association champion- morrow night. Singles, doubles and team events are listed. Nearly 2,000 bowlers are expected the line today, producing 1,940 of | them. In addition, 617 will roll for the singles crown and 358 teams, or ‘The number of teams is 53 more than last year, or an increase of almost 20 per cent. K Sports Mirror By the Assoclated Press. Today a year ago—Schoolboy Rowe pitched his secons shutout of the season as Detroit beat White Sox, 5-0. Three years ago—Gov. Lehman signed bill to legalize race betting in New York; Babe Ruth hit first homer of season; Dave Komonen won Boston marathon, Five years ago—Paul Debruyn, New York, won Boston marathon as Clarence De Mar finished eight- eenth, EDRINGTON'S AVON SAILS T0 VICTORY Sandpiper, Flighty, Sassy Suburban Entry Strong. ONE—THIRD of the teams entered from the nearby suburban plants with Rosslyn producing the mc of the 13 Silver Spring has entered 33 teams, Mount Rainier, 19: Takoma, 16, and Bethesda and Hyattsville, 13 | each | By far the greatest number of | local teams come from Convention Hall, which is entering 87. Singles will open tomorrow night's activity at 7 o'clock. TOMORROW. Singles, 3 P.M. ss. Alley Class 2% A%Reds aesnw Eddic Espey 40 41 42 43 R 44 47 ) 48 Alley 29 L. Mathers Geo. Toth 30 P.W. Heinrich SO B, He 81 ) H 32 83 34 35 0! Stan Levy, Robt. Renfro John Moseley E. H Woodw'd E. Rodgers R. Gibson 36 Geo. G. Miller Geo. C_ Gist 87 F. T Gartside Leo J_Rittner 88 J_H' Compton MH. R'pberry Teams, Columbia Heights ant Alley Team. League Coiumbia_ Heights Hertz Ur Self. Col nier Cab Co.. Columbia Heights t Barbers. Columbia Heights k Coal Co., Col. Heights ~____ Bedding_Co.. Col. Heights™ Mail Service Post Office nk. Bankers = rs. Southern Railway Z n. East Wash. Church Market, Petworth B.Y.P U Graphic Arts 2 Al ture Div.. Census Bureau York Haberdasher. Petworth 5 Decatur Lunch. Takoma-Suburban St. John's, Friendship Church Falcons. R.R. Y. M. C Purchasing, Southern Railway Machine Division_Bur. Eng. & Ptg. Service. Federal Power Commission Central. C. & P. Telephone Co. Employment Center, Dept Labor Refrigeration, Wash. Gas Light Co. Park Pharmacy. Ts(}:t Duckpin Ass'n al Construction Co = & T D A D. A, 49 3 >000HEEHT>> 00 TwEE> QEONAWEEONNT0aTITD! 8 P.M. d Takoma Night. Class. | Hes Eacle Railway tv B aymast Metropolita, Brot 7 Standard Tire & aBttery Takoma Restaurant. T. Dome Oil Co.. T. D. A 3 Kennedy Service Station. T. D. A. Dorsch’s Bakery, T. D. & Stevens Warner, T D, A Takoma Motor Co. T. D. A American Legion, T. D. A i Doubles. 10 P.M. | HITT O 9T DO HTHOEAR HAT S w > 3 ‘ | | HIOHmA> > 1A > WK > UTCUTHYaaaan Alle: 29 i) r 3 Lambert and W. W. Duncan__ Marchant and B, Pitutark . Simpson and C._F. Green " Livings and A. D. Sartwell V. Devries and C. A, Deacon. § Johnson and N. H. Morley E. Espey Beck Lassover Williams _ HQE S <ty 5 (3 egaw and urd and K oung and H. ayden and J fehler and J. Hummer mes and R A Watson Criswall and J. M. B nnolly and F_Sargent ith and P. Woife rke and B. Krauss Rennerberger and W. R. Clavin urwitz and W_G_ Ragan M. Lak e Wingate i 1<) QM g, ol 2 < 5 3 onifant 20 jok] Q> PRTEeYeY) 53 EEF SRStk otk 4And Imon and B. Myers all and A. Newman RO 25030055 axam, Brad Mandley Geo_ Perry W. Baroni Geo. Dracos Geo. Pickett P ZaG aul” Grinnell . B. Gwynn Q QUANHUNaETT>BOC>> >4 ] >QWQ> W e g LSRR o H. Myers 4 A Bianue Teams, 8 P.M. Recreation and Electrical Night. Murphy ___ Aley Team ague. 1 Blankeps Restaurant, Recreation Post Office. Recreation Busy Bee. Recreatior. _ Phil Bobys. Recreation University Shop. Recreation Marboro.” Recreation Creel Bros. Electrical __ Central Armature, Electrical Bepco Maintenance, Electrical . B. Warren Co.. Electrical Doubleday-Hill._ Electrical Section One, Bu. Eng. & Printing Apprentice. Washingtor. Times B T. U's. Bureau of Standards Thos. Sommerville, Sommerville Wakefleld. Merchants Yanks. Post Office ___ Pure Food. Bethesda _ Doubles, 10 P.M. Cla Wi BAPNR BB DD DRI OvR ORI A LI tbd LEEEEEEL LT ET ] ] Class Rhodes and W. Mullican' and B . Stephenson and J. Overend Throckmorton and_T. Mudd F. Mastbrook and B. Conrad McWilliams and Revnowls . F. Roeser and M. 8. Van Dusen LR Yo EF et ! U>E>00TYQUUEE YT BY PAUL J. MILLER, JR. RESIDENT I. J. CURRAN has an- nounced there will be a special | meeting of all members of the Wash- | ington Social Chess Divan Thursday evening, at 8:30 o'clock, in the ban- | quet room of School's Cafe, at 1032 Connecticut avenue northwest. | At this assembly final details rela- | tive to the new headquarters of the divan will be discussed. Visitors and would-be members may attend this meeting, as it is open to the public. The chess editor of The Star will give an informal address on chess champions of the world and their style of play. No admission will be charged for this lecture and all chess players should find the lecture in- structive. Meanwhile, pending the renovation of the divan’s new headquarters, President Curran urges that all mem- bers immediately contact Treasurer Norval Wigginton, 200 Rhode Island avenue northeast, in order that the ‘'war chest” will be adequate for the emergency needs which will arise im- mediately on moving into the new location. Too Other Winners in Warm-up Series. N A breeze that blew in puffs as high as 1¢ knots and veered any- where from west to nearly south, Capital and Corinthian Yacht Clubs participated in a warm-up race yes- terday off Hains Point as a prelim- inary to the regular Potomac River Sailing Association series that begins next Sunday. | Judge Edrington, sailing the sloop | Lady Avon, won first place in the 20-foot open class after a” close race that found Ralph Young's Myray only 35 seconds astern at the finish. Bill Heintz of the West River Sailing Club was third in his albatross class, | the Madic. Smythe Overcomes B: 1 Start. JERNER SMYTHE'S new comet Sassy Too, after a bit of a tangle | at the start, led a field of nine boats, the largest group in the race. Esca- pade of Ernest Covert was 1 min- ute and 40 seconds behind Smythe. Maj. Jacob's green-hull Litl nosed out F. W. Clark for third position. Crossing the line first and working out a lead over other class A handi- cap boats, Ted De Boer sailed the Sandpiper to victory in fast time. Not for 20 minutes did a second boat in that class cross the finish line. It was Arthur Carr's Sea Gull, a new- comer to the local fleet, with the Corinthian Sea Scouts’ Bob Cat fin- ishing third. On corrected time, how- ever, these two changed positions. Flighty Gets Best Start. ITH only two boats in the class A handicap, W. L. Preston’s dinghy, the Flighty, making the best start of the day, won over John Maloney in the Tralee by 8 minutes. This class sailed only one lap: all others went around the V-shaped course twice, Summaries: 20-Foot Open. Lady Avon ( Edrington) Myray (Young) Madic (Heintz) __"__ Cricket IT (Bush) _ Comet. Sassy Too (Smythe) Escapade (Covert) . Litl (Jacobs) Miss Take (Clark) Nandua (Wright) Serena “(Zimmer) Frolic (White) Gwen (Pagan) __ Elapsed time. 3:10 A Handleap. Sandpiper (De Boer) Bob Cat (Sea Scouts) Sea Gull (Carr) ____ Wild Cat (Sea Scou Buccaneer (EIgin) . | Zephyr (Marsh) B Handicap. Flighty (Preston) Tralee (Maloney) _ SETS GOLF TEST DATES. PINEHURST, N. C., April 19 (#).— The Carolina Golf Association has announced that sectional qualifying rounds for the national open cham- | pionship would be played over Hope Valley course at Durham, N. C., on June 1. PILOTS CARD FARM. Harrison Wickel again will man- age the Caruthersville (Mo.) base | ball club of the Northeast Arkansas | League. The club has a working agreement with the St. Louis Car- 20 boats from the Old Dominion, | AS HEAVIES MEET With McDonald. pitch of the indoor boxing the mild-mannered local heavyweight Texas, in a bout which is slated to go district hopes to employ McDonald fore finally tacking his gloves to the Gallagher Makes His Annual BY BURTON HAWKINS. season will be launched to- tosses leather in the general direction 10 rounds and probably will. as a stepping stone toward outdoor wall. McDonald wll try to make KAYO IS UNLIKELY Return to Ring in Bout ARTY GALLAGHER'S first M night at Turner’s Arena when of Sandy McDonald, a product of The huge lad from the gas-house matches here and a cash killing be- Marty figure on retiring a bit earlier. McDonald Is Faster. | GALLAGHER'S annual comeback this time threatens to be jolted rudely even before it gets under way. By no styetch of the imagination an immediate worry to leading heavy- weights, McDonald nevertheless packs an authoritative wallop in his left paw which may terminate Marty's ring re- vival at the start. Always bothered considerably by fast fighters, Marty may find Sandy an elusive target. Marty's attack, con- centrated on the midsection, never | may be focussed properly on Sandy's | stomach simply because the towering Texan can move more rapidly than Gallagher. Gallagher, however, has trained faithfully for his initial indoor ap- pearance and, if chasing is in vogue, | may be able to catch McDonald. Marty | never has encountered many difficul- | ties with men of his size, but, ironi- cally, invariably is nicked by smaller sound pasting at the hands of Buck | Everett in his last fight seven months | ago. Another Bout Looms for Marty. HOULD Marty hurdle McDonald impressively or otherwise, he prob- | ably will be matched with the winner of the Eddie Mader-Bob Tow argu. ment, unless, of course, Max Bae | does the unexpected for a fight here. In which case Marty | alone. In a pair of six-rounders, Vincent Serica, New York middleweight, will flip fists at Al Lowman of Baltimore | and Mike O'Leary, Baltimore light- | weight, will mix with Bob Anderson of Leonardtown, Md. The latter de- bate features boys who feud outside the ring, as well as in it. They re- fused to stop at the final bell in their last meeting and had to be pried apart by seconds and officials. | Four-round preliminaries, the first of which will get under way at 8:30 | o'clock, list Jithmy De Shong, Balti- | more bantamweight, meeting Jimmy Clifton, a local lad, and Mike Groves | facing Vincent Bonovari in a strictly | local lightweight engagement. NAVY CREW IS PICKED | Line-Up to Face Columbia Is Without a Senior Sweep. ANNAPOLIS, Md,, April 19.—Coach Charles Walsh has picked a Naval Academy varsity crew to race against | Columbia here Saturday without a member of the graduating class in the boat. Capt. Arthur Yeats, at 5; the | George Whiteside, 4, and George Bul- lard, 2, are the regulars of last year still in the boat, while Vincent Schu- macher is stroking the junior varsity. Fred Kittler, No. 3, never has rowed before this year. man (sophomore). This is the varsity boating: Erikson; 2, Bullard; 3, Kittler; 4, Whiteside; 5, Yeates; 6, Walker; 7, Charley Brown; stroke, Schultz; cox- swain, Rowe. Bow, BY ROBERT B. PHILLIPS, Jr. OWEVER large it may loom I | the moment, the prospect of the Maryland Hunt Cup this literate pleasant memories of a small, select and delightful horse show staged ley Farms. Leaning over the rail of the Old on the equestrian horizon at Saturday is not yet enough to ob- by our junior riders yesterday at Brad- National Capital Horse Show Grounds | on the first typical horse show of 1937 (the hotter it gets the more at home ring riders feel), I wondered how the young judges of the Junior Hunt's ex- hibition contrived to make their score- cards come to such logical conclusions, for the performances in every class were dangerously consistent and not many senior arbiters would have wanted to separate the 10 best horses from the run of the mine, and then pick out four for ribbons. Young Robert Palmer and Ellie Wood Keith, who attacked the prob- lem, solved it with uncanny shrewd- ness, however, proving among other things that a child probably has the best ideas about the qualifications of a good children’s hunter or hack. FBOM the “name” standpoint the big events of the day were the ribobn winnings of little Paulina Long- worth in the junior equitation class; of Mary Jackson, daughter of the Assistant Attorney General and Mrs. Robert Jackson, in the children’s hunt- ers test; of Tom Mott, jr., son of the M. F. H. of the Redland Hunt, in the competition limited to members of the Junior Hunt, and so on down the line. Names, places and cups aside, the real point of the day was its reve- lation that a committee of youngsters, none of them over 18 years old, can organize, conduct and ride in a first- rate horse show, demonstrate unfailing good sportsmanship, a reasonable skill in all phases of riding, and in some \ individual cases a truly fine flair for horsemanship. The Junior Hunt put on this show to raise money for its hound fund. and obviously took in a tidy sum from entry fees and gate receipts. members now get on with the busi- ness of learning hounds as thoroughly as they have learned ring tactics and procedure, I predict the next genera- tion of fox hunters around Wash- ington will make our present clique resemble pale prints by comparison. UCH of the managerial triumphs of the day, incidentally, must be accredited to Margaret Hill and Mar= garet Sanderson, the latter the daugh. ter of the Riding and Hunt Club M. F. H. They not only rode in virtually every class for which they were eligible, but kept things humming with orders issued even from horseback. Since there were lunch concessions, entries, cup donations, etc., etc., to be handled at one phase or another of the show, it is only fair to add the names of the entire committee, to wit: Joan Morgenthau, Van Ness Philips, Stratton Nicholson, Elaine McDowell, Jane Davis, Dick Alexander, Mary Lou Miles, Tom Mott, jr.; Margaret Hill, Russell Ford, Louise Crosby, Mary | Jackson, Louise Sanderson, Margaret i Sanderson and Robin Reddick. Well, enough kudos for you kids. First thing we know the praise dished out to you by every one in sight will make you think you're good!!! TO REVERT to the subject of the Maryland, it will be run over the same old course in Worthington Val~ ley at 4 pm. Saturday, and umless somebody has been hiding something for the past few weeks, there is going to be one whale of a race between three horses—Paul Mellon's Wel- bourne Jake, the Northwood Stable’s Indigo and J. W. Y. Martin’s Inshore. Be there 5 or 25 other entries, for the moment they must all be regarded as dark horses until they have proved themselves capable of running like a scared rabbit and jumping the biggest fences on any timber course in Amer- ica. For our money: Inshore again, although such an obvious good thing must invariably tempt fate in this kind of & race. Look at Golden Mil- tler's record,. if you don’t-beliove it. 3 TODAY’S PROGRAM MONDAY, APRIL 19, 1937. CAPITAL'S RADIO PROGRAMS APRIL 19, 1937. . WRC 950k WMAL 630k WOL 1310k | WISV 1460k |P.M. Education Forum A P. 0 5 0 |Mary Mason 0 Boston Marathon Opening Ball Game Concert Orchestra Hit Tunes Luncheon Opening Ball Game 2:00 2:15 2:30 2:45 In & Woman's Eyes School of the Air Myrt ard Marge | Pepper Young's Family {Ma Perkins Vic and Sade The O'Neills Opening Ball Game Opening Ball Game 3:00 3:15 3:30 3:45 Opening Ball Game Hour of Charm Follow the Moon Jerry The Guiding Light £ Opening Ball Game Opening Ball Game Sears' Orch. PR Dari Dan Adventures Sundown Revue [Jack Armstrong Little Ogphan Annie Mary Singin Evening Star Flashes The Laff Parade Marlin Dance Tunes Johnson Family Intercity Express Cocktail Capers g Lady Opening Ball Game 4:00 Evening Rhythms Betty Hudson's Tea Robert Horton Terry and Ted News Bulletins Dinner Dance News Bulleting . 8. News |Lowell Army Band Tony Wakeman o Tune Time News—Music Rick Robert’s Orch. Bulletins Thomas Apple Creek News Arch McDonald News—Scores Pretty Kitty Kelly 0 |Amos 'n’ Andy Uncle Ezra Bowe and Gates Ink Spots Bugho Mary Small John Her: Dinner Concert use Rhythm Community Sing rick o5 Notre Dame Night Poetic Melodies WJSV Calls Dinner Concert Boake Carter -|Burns and Allen Concert, “ . Conversation at 8 Sweetest Love SBongs Five Star Final Rhythm Rhapsody Tonic Time Stamp Club Heidt's Brigadiers Pipe 8moking Time 0 |Fibber McGee and Molly |Good The Air Is Yours Dr. John R. Fitzpatrick Base Ball Round-Up ‘Times Society Detective Mystery WOR Symphony Radio Theater | heavyweights, as evidenced by his| and accepts | | Matchmaker Goldie Ahearn's terms | no doubt would be pointed for Baer | He is a third class-+ If its | Contented Program |The Ci National Radio Forum: Labor Senator Barkley 2 hampions Boxing Matches League Wayne King's Orch. “Let Freecom Ring” Hose wriaa | 11200 |News—Nigat Owl [11:15 |Arthur Reilly |Ruby Newman's Orch. News Stumb |Bill Strickland’s Orch. |Night Charlie Agnew’s Orch. - ‘Bulletins er Hour | News Bulletins Pageant of Melody |News Bulletins Happy Felton’s Orch. Jay Freeman's Orch. Watchman Ozzic Nelson's Orch. | Ted Fiorito’s Orch. Witching Hour Gordon Hittenmark Night Watchman (1 hr.) | Hugo Marianni's Orch. TOMORROW'’S PROGRAM APRIL 20, 1937. Sign off Ssh! |Gordon Hittenmark ‘Today' 'The Wake-Up Club ’s Prelude Musical Clock e Art Brown Sun Dial “ - Morni! ) |Gordon Hittenmark &7 Leiber Cheerio ng Devotions Art Brown 't Ensemble e o Sun Dial Gordon Hittenmark The Old Timer Myriad Voices News Bulletins Breakfast Club Art Brown Kay and Buddy Morning Concert News—Music Sun Dial Jean Abbey Richard Maxwell Betty Hudson Mrs. Wiggs John’s Other Wife Just Plain Bill ‘Today’s Children Mount: |sallie 'Capt. Tim Healy Ma Perkins Hawaiian Echoes Marriage Clinic Singing Strings ain Man Muchmore Police Flashes—Music Betty and Bob Modern Cinderella Hymns of All Churches John K. Watkins David Harum |Backstage Wife The Mystery Chef The Wife Saver Edware The O'Neills Personal Column Vic and Sade | At the Keyboard ‘y Hit Tunes d MacHugh Leo Freudberg's Orch. SENATOR BARKLEY FORUM SPEAKER. Will Discuss “Prospective Industrial and Labor Legislation.” ENATOR ALBEN W. BARKLEY, Kentucky Democrat and strong supporter of the administra- tion in the Upper House, will discuss “Prospective Industrial and Labor Legislation” during the Na- tional Radio Forum tonight, aired over a coast-to-coast network of the National Broadcasting Co. and heard locally through WRC. The forum, arranged by The Eve- ning Star, will be broadcast from 110:30 to 11 o’clock. Senator Barkley intends to discuss the trend which may be taken in for- mulating labor measures as a result of the United States Supreme Court's recent decisions in cases arising under BIG YEAR FOR YANKS. The 1936 Yankees set these new records: Most home runs for one season, 182; most runs driven in, 995; most extra-base hits, 580; most total bases, 2,703, | NoZty Ned AYS, T SHOE POLISH memeT ey the national labor relations act. OE E. BROWN takes starring po- sition in the Radio Theater pres- entation of “Alibi Ike,” scheduled by WJSV at 9 o'clock, with Helen Chandler, Roscoe Karns and William Frawley in the supporting roles Babe Ruth and “Mrs. Babe” will broadcast from their New York home between acts of the base ball tale. I:RANCES BLAISDELL, concert flu! will be guest soloist with the Bamberger Symphony Orchestra, directed by Leon Barzin, a Mutual | feature heard through WOL at 9:30 | Miss Blaisdell has been first flutist with the National Orchestral As- | sociation for four years. R!V. JOHN F. O'HARA, president of the University of Notre Dame; Elmer Layden, athletic director, and the glee club of 41 voices will be heard during the Champions’ Notre | Dame Night, a WMAL feature at 10 | o'clock. ORACE HEIDT and his Briga- diers intend to jump from popu- | lar music to the classics and back again while presenting their final broadcast from New York before an engagement at a theater here. “Wake Up and Live,” “The Song of India,” | “Will You Remember” and “It's Swell of You" are among the selections. | In addition to the Brigadiers the | Kang Sisters, Charles Goodman, the | beth Hughes and Bob McCoy | participate—8 o'clock on WJSV. Milky Way All Star Varieties The Big Sister Home Makers' Exchange Merry Go Round Story of Mary Marlin Hello Peggy Jules Landes' Ensemble | |Honey | Farm Listening Post | boy and Sassafras News—Music |Dance Music and Home Hour » |Chwrch of the Air Willard Amison, tenor The Gumps 'Your News Parade Helen Trent Romance Our Gal Sunday Sylvia Clark Dan Harding's Wife (Words and Music Farm Love and Learn Horace, the Hippo and Home Hour Dick Stabile’s Orch. Music of the Masters Jack Berch's Boys Robert Horton Afternoon Rhythms Real Life Stories Band Lessons Mary Mason Music 58n8ls8ngKurs Charles Sears, tenor Guild |Wakeman's Sports Page | Arthur Wright, pianist Wakeman's Sports Page W. P. A. Concert Band School of the Air Myrt and Marge Pepper Young's Family Ma Perkins Vic and Sade |The O'Neills Base Ball Game Wakeman'’s Sports Page Base Ball Game Consumers’ Program |Chasing the Blues {Follow the Moon |The Guiding Light Base Ball Game Sundown Revue Mary Jack Armstrong Dog Heroes The Singing Lady Marlin Gypsy Airs Johnson Family Jess and Harold Wakeman's Sports Page |Base Ball Game Evening Rhythms Science Service Robert Horton CLARKE PIN VICTOR SECOND DAY IN ROW Isemann Stakes Winner Captures Title in Baltimore Event for Champions. | Special Dispatch to The Star ALTIMORE, Md. April 19.—Aver- aging 131-7 for 15 games to cap- |ture his second major championship |in two days, Astor Clarke gave Wash- ington half of the honors at the champion of champions bowling tour- of New Haven. With White shooting 670, only the 144 average maintained by Wolfe allowed him to reach the title round. White had defeated another Washington bowler, Howard Parsons, in the first round, while Wolfe had | turned back Billy Gauer of Norfolk. TERP CUBS NET VICTORS! Maryland's " crack freshmen tennis | team blanked Central High's netmen, 9-0, yesterday at College Park, six of the nine matches being decided in straight sets. | None of the yearling's ranking Mid- f dle Atlantic juniors was extended | nament here yesterday. Clarke aver- aged 133-2 to win the George L. Ise- mann sweeps in Washington on Sat. urday. Washington lost the women’s title, however, when Lucile Young was beat- | en by Naomi Zimmerman of Baltimore | by 70 pins. Miss Zimmerman’s 608 gave her an average of 121. | The elimination tournament found | | | Clarke beating one of his O'Donnell | Sea Grill teammates, Joe Harrison, in | { the first round, 655-603. Nova Ham- | {lton, who trimmed Ed Blakeney in the | first round, bowed to Clarke in the second, 644-603. Clarke then finished up by defeating an Occidental team- | mate, Perce Wolfe, 673-624. His total | for the 15 games was 1,972. ‘Wolfe, however, walked off with In- dividual set honors when he shot a great 725 in the semi-final round to eliminate the formidable Jack White Air Headliners Afternoon Programs. 2:45 p.m.—WMAL, WOL, Open- ing base ball game. (At 3 p.m..on WJISV.) 5:15 pm.—WMAL, Evening Star Flashes. Evening Programs. 6:00 p.m.~WMAL, United States Army Band. 8:00 p.m.—WJSV, Horace Heidt's Brigadiers; WRC, Burns and Allen. 8:30 p.m.—WJSV, Pipe Smoking Time. 9:00 p.m.—WMAL, Good Times Society; WJSV, Radio Theater. 0 pm. — WMAL, Base Ball Round-up. 10:00 p.m.—WJSV, Wayne King’s Orchestra. 10:30 pm.—WRC, National Ra- dia Forum. 11:15 pm.—WOL, Pageant of Melody. Short-Wave Programs. 7:30 pm.—BERLIN, Concext of Light Music, DJD, 254 m, 11.77 meg. 9:30 pm.—CARTAGENA, Pro- gram in English, HJIABE, 315 m, 95 meg. 9:50 p.m.—LONDON, “The River Spey,” GSF, 198 m. 15.14 meg.; GSD, 255 m, 11.75 meg.; GSC, 313 m, 9.58 meg. tune of 6—1, 6—2. more than two sets—Allie Ritzenberg | taking Durst in two love affairs, Na- than Askin losing only one game in two sets to Durst, Mack Dunie trim- ming Mehl and Morton Phillips de- feating Sokol. Askin and Ritzenberg | later polished off Central's No. 1 doubles team, Durst and Mehl, to the Summaries: | Singles—Ritzenzerg (Md.) defeated H. Durst (C.). 6 Askin lrMfl) de: (. Dunje (Md.) defeated Mehl Montgomery Resident Survived by Husband and Daughter. Pressing Gets Numeral. Speclal Dispatch to The Star. ITHACA, N. Y., April 19.—Robert W. Pressing from Washington, D. C., | has been awarded a freshman numeral | for his work on Cornell's yearling | basket ball team last Winter 014 14th ST. N.W. NO. 8429 YOUR RADIO WON'T WORK PHONE MET. 0764 An expert radio technician will estimate repair costs. If you don’t want it repaired — no charge. LEETH BROS. 1220 13th St. N.W. 8AM.to 8 P. M. BOYDS, Md, April 19 (Special).— | Following a long illness, Mrs. Myrtle C. Reid, wife of Paul Reid of this place, died in a Washington hospital an 8-year-old daughter, Joanne. The funeral took place this morning Gaithersburg, burial Mary’s Cemetery, Barnesville, Md. Mrs. Reid was formerly a Miss Creamer of the Potomac neighgor- hood. being in St. GOLF DROPS RADIX CUP. CHICAGO, April 19 (#).—Harry E. | Radix, donor of the Radix Cup award- ed the professional golfer with the low scoring average of the year, announced tonight he has been notified of the abandonment of the trophy by the | Professional Golfers’ Association. 6—1, (Md.) defeated Petit (C.). Wilson (Md.) defeated Sil- verman (C.), 4—6_6—1, 6—1. Doubles—Ritzenberg (Md) defeated Durst and Meh! 1, 6—3: ) déteated” Dursi —7. ic] —3: Spear | Phlilips and Dunie (Md, and Sokol (C). 6—0. liter and Goldsmith (M and Silverman (C.). 3 Shortage of Rubber. Shortly after Netherlands India placed restrictions on the growing of rubber this year heavy rains stopped production and a shortage followed. | She is survived by her husband and | | from St. Martin's Catholic Church, | SIMPLY THIS — | STOPPED USING LIFEBUOY AND BEFORE | KNEW IT | LOST MY GIRL YOUR MISTAKE CAN'T BEAS SERIOUS AS YOU LOOK WHAT'S WRONG ? YOU'RE A REAL PAL! V'LL HAVE A PARTY AND INVITE YOU BOTH. 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