Evening Star Newspaper, September 16, 1921, Page 27

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SPORTS. : JOHNSON AND ANDERSON, | The Beginning of & l}eautff-ul »F-riel-ldsh-ip. 4 1T'S ABSOLUTE MONSENSE TOGGAMG UP I THIS UruFORM To-ruenT! I BET I'LL BE THE DMLY ONE 1N ENENING CLOTHES. TILDEN AND DAVIS MEET Latter Advances Only After Terriffic Battle With Robert Kinsey, But Other Survivors in National Singles Win Easily. - 1 WAS BY W. H. HOTTEL. HILADELPHIA, September 16.—Quakertown will oppose Australia £ and California in the semi-finals of the national tennis singles s championship tournament at the Germantown Cricket Club thisl afternoon. At 2 o'clock Wallace Johnson, the veteran chop-stroke artist, , WELL, OSWAL D, You'RE ALL LIT UP 1 SEE. | FORGOT To TELL You NOT Yo Do VOU AT LEAST ARE CORRELTLY DRESSED, ANYONE WOULD THINK. ASKING You To WEAR. A DWNG SUIT THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1921. *'Semi-F inals Reached in Title Net Tourn ey : Maryland —By WEBSTER. 1 ToLD My wirTs AT wAs SLLy To WEAR T BUT OF COURSE SHE K BevTer Eleven Aided by High School Grads GAINS SEVEN THIS YEAR, S has been the case for several years, foot ball at the University of Maryland this fall will benefit considerably by the acquisition positions on the all-high eleven last year as members of Tech’s team have entered the College Park institution, and all have' considerable Burger, center; Ed Pugh, fullback, and John Hough, guard, are the stellar lights of the Manual Trainers’ 1920 aggregation who will wear or freshman squads. All four of these men should de-l BY H. C. BYRD. A of good men from Technical High School. Four players who won potential capabilities as college athletes. George Heine, tackle; Joe Old Gold and Black jerseys this fall, either as members of the varsity I { velop into excellent ‘varsity material | generally was rated as the best back in the high or prep schogls in this SPORTS. . a=’ & f | got their high school foot ball ex- | perience at Tech have been important | cogs in almost every eleven. And the prosent foot ball squad ix not an exception. From last year there & ! on the varsity squad “Piggy” Mool Morrison Clark, “Sally” Bosley and others who have not fortunate as these men in_ holdink the center of the gridiron spotlight. M. U. Hias Sevem D. C. Boys. Incidentally, it might also be men- tioned that Tech and the other locil high schools have furnished most of {the materiai for athletic te: Maryland for a long while. A: pres- ent, for instance, the foot ball squad probably is more local in its per- sonnel than any other coliege or un:- versity in the east. As the team its first signal eleven players trict schools. Moore, guard, and Clark, are_from Tech; Groves, quarterback, an1 Brew- er, halfback, from Western: Railev. been quite so - will meet James O. Anderson, the hard-hitting Anzac, in the upper por- after another season’s experignce. | Vicinity. ~Hough, Heine and Burger | center, from Central, and McQuade., , tion of the bracket, and two hours later William T. Tilden. world cham- None of the four is particularly | Were lr;lul lzm’(]x"';.( in their play, but |fullback, from Eastern. Twenty-four . pion on clay and turf courts, will battle. Willis Davis of San Francisco heavy. but eyery one will put on | Were the steady, hard-working type of | of the twenty-seven men now out for | i the lower half. Anderson and Tilden are the favorites, but Johnson % conceded to have a chance—a much better one than has Davis—of upset- ting the dope. Davis was the only one of the four|they are predicting that he will take survivors to ha HELLO, GSWALO! WHAT'S THE GENERAL | OSWALD, | NEVER REALIZED wwu-‘ A HANMDSOME RASCAL You \WWERE . | i players who really are more vaiuable to 2 team than the so-called stars. And, in this connection, it is rather interesting to note the big part that weight within the next year, which should add much to effective playing | in collegiate ranks. Pugh, at the | end of the last school year, was due | to_return to Tech this fall for an- other half year, but attended summer letics at College Park. Since back in Tech High men have played in ath- | | the squad are from either the Dis- | trict or Maryland. First Scrimmage Held. Yesterday the Maryland lined up in its first scrimmsge against eleven i T oi trouble in the fifth| Anderson’s scalp. One thing that will 10EA OF THE SOUP AND FISH To-MIGHT 5 5 school to make up the credits he | 1904, when the big Duganne was put- | Delaware. Neither team was very round. and he t five sets to win | be i s e ho; = “RE Too SWEET FOR WORDS ' ch make up e he'|; 1904, & Dug: L e i over Robert Kinse s;nfellu‘w é';fim;“m?, Bs i3 oBusoNE faxarinnatibisichon THiNk. WE WERE GoinG To POSE Fo You )' lacked. Hough graduated at Tech | ting up a game at tackle which |proficient in the use of plays or sig stroke game will be something new in the most bitterl: waged clash of the | to the antipodean, and it may throw L it ULD SEE YOU MOW : tourney. Davis won, 4—6. 6—1. | the invader off his balance. John- iEnsico had, until now young fellows who fensive efforts. 16 6—4 But he was nearly all in at| son's style is strange to Australia} the finish and his opponeut utterly col- | tad Anderson has pan into Mothing i 1&psed. needing a healthy dousing of cold water before he rev 16 go to the clubhous. long, though, until Kins covered. | like it =0 far in the tourney. ! Davis” game is built along the same lines as Tilden's. However, it goes witheut saying, that it is not so force- ul. Neither 1s he as steady a m.vi d sufficiently It was nof ¥ had fully re - Johuxom an Eaxy Winner. ampion. who would have to have a i, | TEAL Oft diy to lose. from Craig i to a rather . rdon I “Johnson won as ddle, anothe he plea | : game. - SUZANNE NO QUITER; | WOULD RETURN IN 1922 YORK, T d managed to handle eptember 1 THE MPVIES OR SOMETHING T JoHN DREW WOULD WRITHE In AGONY er than any other plaver in == tourney has done. except Bill Johnston ‘h';"'“"'::“‘s »r":"““ tod s gl SRS : peen goins the S ] i T B0 woft that M| rounds nere to the effoct that she had ! DoN'T kivow You FRoM ADAM them. been fearing defeat for nd that | BUT YOU'RE A FRIEMD OF MINE the reversal she recently experienced | {in a match at Forest Hills with Mrs. | t Molla Bjurstedt Mallory caused her | o suffer the extreme nervousn arked h urt apnea ofily elve points during #¢ven of these being service ac on the other hand scored placements the the game, <. Tilden aced and and that she w There is no fo: wher put for best effe | that she swould. if | courts tomorrow azainst selected, put 3 - said. heuld come cropper in Wwould be that has = 1y opponent De Joannis, vice president of h Lawn Tennis Federation. Drowess, Lenglen to d the players, x Fully Extended. dntarg nevacis cre s B o rd er wanted to win a match | j1an¥ Persons over here doubted that | he did the one with Kin- er had to work harder | Kinsey | so badly as sey, and he ne to accomplish his purpose. had beaten him in the Metropolita championship final earlier in th “Mlle. Lenglen.” he said, “wants to | come back to the United States. per- haps next year, as she is anxious to | o | appear at her very best and to show | enth, ‘and the husky smasher was |American enthusiasts what she can | Pyt b e b e R e ] do when in good health. | nlace in the first tén in the national | ranking safe. Both played the hard- | e hitting California brand of tennis, with | \ Davis being the more sensational. but atic, and Kinsey the steadier. | outset, and while much better tennis | lias been on view on several occ event, the large crowd was treated to ; «afiout the most spectacular battle yet «dch other across the met not more BY FAIRPLAY. ! e o wihania EW YORK, September 16—To hear Cleveland promoters talk, .fire velocity until one or the other ! It was only Davis' rise to brilliancy | his featherweight title in their bout at Cleveland tomorrow.” New in the tizht spots that saved his{Yorkers are not so sure about that. It's pretty hard to separate a clever séy held the advantage at 4—3 ig the | S J ) . ‘ Jnyrm only to have his rival run out | is to let bouts go to a finish. But that, of course, is against the law. We no longer have prize fights; we have “boxing contests. 1t was a battle for the net from the = Witnessed. At times the men faced S R the ball back and forth with rapid- N : 3 Danny Frush has a great chance to separate Johnny Kilbane ffom would err or score a placement. £ con. With each having a set, Kin- | 3 R g o h staller irom his title in a twelve-round bout. The only way to fix stallers three games by a brilliant rally. Davis FROM KisCuss - | TWO MORE FOR PRO ELEVEN. | “Letrkus, former end for west- | minster College, and McCarthy, once a guard for Syracuse University, have Leen added to the roster of the Wash- ston professional foot ball tea “oach Hegarty intends to send his | charges into daily scrimmages, start- ing October 1. | KENYON ELEVEN TO DRILL. Kenyon Athletic Club's eleven wil { hold its first practice tomorrow mor |ing on the Mount Pleasant pl ! ground. The following candidates are expected to report at 10 o'clock Cran- ford, Hunter, Corson, Nee, Barber, Summers. Slanker, J. Murray, F. Murray, McGann, Daum, Ross, Waters, Alley and Flynn. Now OM ! My NAME'S SWALD KISCUSS bruary and Heine and Burger | proved him one’ of the greatest men in the position the university has ever there was considerable “messing up” of of- nals and | fumbling_and E One big sale!-with savings | _ as sure as money in the bank! Maryland Grid Team Here University of Maryland’s foot team will piay two of its | | most fmportant games atAmer- fean League Park thin senxom. The Old Line gridmen will meet the Virginia Polytevhnic Insti- te eleven October 22 and ‘atholic University November 12, on the Grifiw fleld. Mary- nd’» games with North Caro- lina Univers Baltimore. The land-St. John's held at Annapolis the morning In Two Important Games | HERE S the bold, brief story! accounts in the East. uricty Brand UITS 872 We’ve made Society Brand clothes famous through- out the District; we’re one of their largest They had a big surpius of suits on hand—overlots left 1ost control in the fourth set andi qpo gunn ‘oo e = P S of October 15, the day Navy i e atatal is steady pace, y Part of it is that when a title from Abe Attell out on the Pa- - » . . e nen terma. Then the Afth | champion takes the law literally and | €ific coast some eight vears ago. he Hamblin to Coach. to emtertain the Tieinccton from filling orders, oddments they had worked up dur- Set became a battle royal, with both | puts up a boxing contest—shows his | D§¥4D. to use his championship 49 4| GALESBURG, IIL. September 15 o . A B . : Fammering the ball with might and | skill in avoiding knockout punches,| 24junct to his automob Adolph “Ziggy” Hamblin, former : ing their operatives’ otherwise idle time. They favored main. but with great accuracy. Kin- | whileat tha same time hedealswithhis | P§L 1t Was @ big asset. == . o | with Knox College, will teach bioloj Brennan Outpoints Walker. séy ran into a lead at 4—2, only to|opponent in a manner not at all bru- e got out of fighting by and coach athletics at West Virginia po. . services n ri- ide Kilbane didn't mind that so kept his title. rohibitive price for his tal, then his money is held up. The A uvanen: Anpeateds v b Johnny Wilson case is a present ex-| ample. The JeTsey boxing law stresses | boxing as against fighting; even deci- | OUS sions are not permitted. Yet because, Panning. Johnny didn’t conduct himself like!long as have Davis fall into one of his un-| beatable streaks and win four| straight games and the match. ! Anderson Is Not Pushed. Anderson never had to give his best 1o heat Hunter. and it was evident |an abysmal brute it is thtmbs down| At is difficult to say whether or not’ serges, cheviots, finished and unfinished worsteds. mixtures 1pat he was saving himself for his|on him. his laurels n danger at !he hands , % y <gmi-final match with Johnson today.| Well, anyway, to get back to Johnny | of Danny is looked | and novelties. 1 T%e Anzac did not attempt to put the | Kilbane, he is well liked in this city | upon as no means power behind his service that he dis- as a man who has always upheld th. world-beater. When Kilbane was Collegiate Institute this year. Hamblin has won more letters than any other athlete ever entered at the local col- . He was graduated in 1 . and (und asistant coach at Knox. ST. LOU: er, Kansas City. ing to a_ referee’s decision. The heavyweights. 5. September 16.—Bill Bren- | | nan, Chicago. outpointed Hugh Walk- in a twelve-round decision bout here last night, accor ‘us with these suits; we’re going to sell them all at $37.50. Fashions and fabrics suitable for fall and winter wear— ved in his victory over Norris Wil- | decent aspects of his profession. H | younger no one \\‘0ulvll have handed £ 5 . : Rl,’.fi,. om Wednesday. and he got just | is a little gentleman, and pleasant to| Frush a chance against him. But| Plenty of the plain browns and grays and, best of all, eiough out of the contest with the »New Yorker to put him on edge for «the test this afternoon. 4 Johnson playing better tennis 1Bis_vear than in many seasons, ac- gording to his close followers, and meet. Even so, there is no one you talk to who isn't pulling for Frush to take the Cleveland fighter, even though it involves the migration of the teatherweight title to England. Kilbane is too much of a safety-first guy. He wasn’t always so. The writer can remember when Kilbane was about the most popular puglist in the country. But after he won the time. If he does get licked he will have the satisfaction of knowing that he received good money for his beat- ing—$60.400. As for Frush, he is bat- tling merely for his training expenses. Which shows how confident he thinks he is. suit. plenty of solid BLUES; and every man needs at least one blue Sizes and styles for every one from 34 to 46. (Copyright, 1921.) INTERSECTIONAL MATCH FORAMATEUR GOLFERS 8T. Society Brand suits stand for style and quality; the 3 $37.50 stands for a big saving to you. Get busy! AT DAY Best hats we know anywhere are Dobbs Hats Have the style and quality that survive the season. And though high in quality, Dobbs is di- vorced from high prices. 57, %8, *10 Stetson Hats, $7 and $3 Crofut & Knapp, $6 Johnny is older now, gray-haired, and, besides, he hasn't fought in a long LO September 16.—Thirty- | . tio golf entered in the national afpateur golf tournament, which opens here tomorrow ill today play api intersectional match, beginning at 9 _lo'slock this morning. The match will be played in foursomes, the play- ers being teamed according to their r3pk. Each_section. middle western, Pacific. northwest, southern and east- ern, is represented in each foursome one player. One match calls for R. A. Gardner, Cliicago: H. Chandler Egan, Portland; Hobby Jones, Atlanta, and Francis Omimet. Boston. which, according to 1qéal authorities, is among the great-'| est amateur foursomes ever arranged. Egan and Gardner have twice held the amateur championship, and Ouimet hjas held the title once. w —_— INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE. 3: N io Tomorrow is the big Model 47 COUPE New Price—Delivered 2,355 Practically unlimited power, speed and endurance are combined with [ real economy in the Model 47 Eight- cylinder OLDSMOBILE. At all speeds and under all road and grade conditions this “Eight” displays re- markable power efficiency. OLDSMOBILE SALES CO. 1016-1018 Connecticut Avenue Telephone Main 78317 Announcing the , Vienna Halis For Fall Jersey Cit: “Toront AMAAAAAAAAN/ " FISHERMEN! . ATTENTION! Join the Crowd On ‘Howard A. French’s Annual Fishing Excursion To * Chesapeake Beach Sunday, Sept. 18th Train Leaves Chesapeake Beach . Junction 9:15 A.M. Prizes to be Given Away Phone or call in person to our ore and ask Capt. Hurd for ny information you desire about he trip. Tickets on Sale at Our Store 424 9th St. N.W. At the new lowered prices $3.00 to $5.00 The finest materials and the most careful workmanship combine to make the Vienna Hat superior. & Smart, exclusive styles. The Hecht Co. Veldurs,w% Also. *Perfeck” Felts, $5 Colors: Pearl, Tan, Seal Brown, Dark Gray, * French Brown and Black. Hats of All Kinds Cleaned and Blocked in our factory, 435 11th St. N.W. Vienna Hat Co. 410 9th St. N.W.

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