Evening Star Newspaper, September 25, 1921, Page 31

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r 0 )ncx g Hi& margin of victory ~ $TEARN TOPS GUNNERS SPORTS SPORTS 'Guilford Wins Amateur Golf Championship : All Local Elevens Open Season Saturday GrARDNER BOWS,7AND 6, . ¢BY FAILURE ON GREENS anton Player’s Great Putting Decides Match ‘That Is Marked by Tremendous Drives. Five Tee Shots Go 300 Yards or More. t T. LOUIS, Mo., September 24—Jesse Guilford of Boston wen the 5 national amateur go!f championship by defeating Robert Gardner of Chicago, 7 up and 6 to go, in the 36-hole final at the St. Louis Country Club today. \ Guilford, after obtaining a lead of 6 up m the morning round by .« shooting 73 while Gardner failed with his puttur, was held even during the first five holes in the afternoon, but by scoring a string of unbeat- able birdies ou the next four holes he became dormie seven after halving the 29th. Such an enormous gallery, esti- mated at upward of 7,000 persons, followed the match this afternoon that the players and referees were all but trampled under foot and the gal- lery swarined onto the twenty-ninth green before Guilford could get a , vhance to hole his easy putt for an easy vietory, $ up and 6, and they halved it in four. making it 7 up and 6. Gardmer Is the Favorite. Gardner, who won the title in 1909 and 1915 and was runner-up to Chick ans in 1916, was an odds-on choice over Guilford He was not playing his best game part of the way, how- ever, and he was ragged on the Ereens most of the time. iissing up- of a dozen holable putts, While Cuittord, Who never betors Bof farther than the semi-fikals, at which point he was defeated by Gardner in 1916, ved an unbentuble game on the greens and made few errors else- where. Gardner outdrove the Boston “siege gun” on nine holes, while Guilford s*xceeded his oppanent from the tee un_a like number, The Boston player scored the long- FRED M'LEOD 0 PLAY IN PRO GOLF TOURNEY Fred McLeod. the pro of the Co- lumbia Country Club, who finished in « tie for second piace in the national open championship, will leave for New York today to take part in the annual championship of the Profes- sional Golfers' Assoclation, which starts Tuesday. The first thirty-two players in the open championship constitute the men who will compete for the professional title. The tourna- ment will be played at the Inwood | TRYSTER IN FRBNT |RESULTS OF GRIDIRON /BOOST FOOT BALL Whitney Horse, in Initial Start of Season, Wins AVRE DE GRACE, Md, Sep- tember 24 —Harry Payne his first start of the season, won the $10,000 Potomac handicap, the He, however, was forced to the limit and probably would have been Potomac Handicap. H Whitney's Tryster,. making feature race here today. nipped in a couple more yards. ‘With a concession &6f 23 pounds, Bi Jiminy kept well wp with the pace. and under the ufging of J. Rowan was rapidly wearing theé victor down. Frank Coltiletti got Tryster over on his toes from the insifle position, raced around the first turn closely pursued by Careful, and then settled into a smooth stride that proved too swift for the others to follow. Bi Jiminy put Careful away before the field had swung Into the far turn and then made her bid for the purse. She responded gamely in the final tuh home and succseded in making it mighty uncomfertable for Tryster. By Gone Days also closed with a rush to beat Polly Ann a head for show money. Havre de Grace Results First rave, two-sear-olds, .V! flll""fi“ “.. Country Club. Jock Hutchison, the British open champion, is the present holder of the P. G. A. title. McLeod was run- ner-up for the championship two vears ago. losing to Jim Barnes, the present open champion, in the final est drive of the day, getting 520 yards on the fifteenth hole, where rdner was twenty yards behind him. Gard had three drives of 300 yards or mmre, while Guilford had iwo. The d ng. however, had little to do with 2 result, although Gardner lost the eventh, twenty-fourth and xth through errors from the her did the irons bear much tha outcome. Putting had most to do L the res: as the Chicagoan imi- 1ated Chick Evans' game of vesterday by missing _short ones with fre- «quency and holing long ones never, while Guilford missed few long ones and almost never any short ones. Driving Amazes Crowd. Thus, up to the greens it was a ¢ battle royal, the crowd gasping in awe as one tremendous drive after another cracked from the tees and Tughing forward to see where the caddies planted a white flag for Gard- ner's ball and a red one for Guil- Tord’s. Then when one player would snap_an iron to the green, close to the flag, only to have the other fre- | quently drop his ball closer still, the multitude, like a herd of stampeded steers, would fairly run for a van- tage point around the sixty-foot! take two or three putts, while Guilford not infrequently got down, in one, if close, and in two if barely | on or even just off the green. Then the throng. which openly fa- | vored Gardner, groaned and dashed to the next fairway to see the “siege 2un” of Boston and the “big bertha” of Chicago whale out two more ¢ drives. It was a good-natured mob, « if unruly at times, and coatless men, ! gayly clad women and barefoot boys hurried and scurried from hole to hole. The contest started evenly enough, with a pair of 4s and with Gard- mer winning the second hole with a perfect 3 and Guilford the third in the same manner. Then they halved two and again each won a hole, but after halving the eighth in par Gardner made the first turn down because of topping his brassie to the creek. Then he lost two in a row, the eleventh, because of woods and ‘water, and he was never threat- ening thereafter. He dropped the thirteenth by missing a short putt and the next two in the same manner. After winning the short sixteenth, and halving the seventeenth the for- mer champion had to vield the eight- th to a birdie 3, Guilford sink- ing one of his long putts and quitting for lunch, 6 Guilford had scored arkably low score at wch a grilling tourna- ment played in heat and rain. Loser Recovers for Time. ; In_the afternoon Gardner ahnwed [ momentary signs of recovering his Josses by taking the nineteenth hole with a par 4, the short twenty-first with a perfect 3 and the twenty-sec- | ond with a 4 after dropping the short 4 twentieth. He kept his opponent's lead to 4 up by halving the long twenty-third, but_a row of four birdies, while Gardner got only two pars, made him 8 down at the turn into the final nine rdner cut this to 7 down when wizardry of Guilford's putter de- ed him momentarily on the twen- ghth hole, but Guilford became dormic 7 by nalving the . twenty ninth in par, and grasped the crown which Gardner had worn twice by halving the short thirtieth. *Guardner had gone through ' i the the tournament in good form and repelled two dangerous foreign foes in T. ot B. Armour Scotland and Willie Hun- ter. Britis amnion. The new champion, who takes the square, only to see Gardner laborious- | |to make the new parts of the course B (b) Bauer entry. Becond race, claiming: npward: mile end seventy Clemon). $11.00, §1.00, 107 (Sterling), $19.70. $13.00, second; Cunso, 107 (Roganowski), $3.60. third. Time, 1.48 2.3, Stirup, Sie Jask. Mickey Moore, Tan IL. Bally 1, ‘Mary’ Magneto, Lough Red, . BalTbTed 21op eav round. Another mew club will make its debut to Washington sportsmen some time next year. It is the Argyle Country Club, which proposes to take over the grounds to be vacated by the Town and Country Club, on Georgia avenue, which some time next spring or early summer will move to its new location. The grounds to be taken over by the Argyle olub were originally the prop- erty of the Columbia Country Club. When the latter moved in 1912 to its home on Connecticut avenue, in Chevy Chase, the Town and Country Club tok over the proptrty and has had it ever since. Golfers of the Che Chevy Chase Club face a busy fall season in club mile irds—Theod (-\llenl $12.60, 0, won; Mose, ‘111 (Woodstock). $22.30, $10.50, second; Bodansky, 102 (Tryon), $8.50. third. ‘Time, 1461.5. Wo- dan. Henrie, ”x:lmn. Sather, Chief and P?'] RI\'-I laiming; fout-vear-oids and ward; llve lnfl l halt Mw'— -“The Boy, 3 (Haymes), BB, W, oui oot Joh T 108 (Mecimes” $9.50 4 Tina Frank, 111 (Bgewell). 550, third, Time: Lo Carmendale, Btermity, Zed, Charley Sum: my, Silence, Well Fi Mumbo Jembo, Gold- o sitpper: Fort Bites and Noran s Taoe, Potomac handleap; $10,000 sdded and sevesity par tournaments, in addition to the twe | thfee.yearolds and_upward: and a eix- oben events to be held about Wash- o A S ngton this fall. Two club oh Por 5 [Hela by the Chevy Chase Crad eash oo, "‘ R, $hira, e, 140 25, Derk Hotse, Polly Amn. Dnc de Morny, Serapts, Montaivo and Jeg also ra th rees, flflnh‘ handicap; three-year- olds and upward; mile and a gateenth—hrides- man, 118 (Callahan), $4.16, 3 Servitor, 113 . Rowan), $8.10, 200, second: Poario 10 (Rt v Time, “lean Gone 0d Viclet alwo ran. Beventh race, three- mile and & farlon; am), $18.00. $8.76, (Woodstock), (Ponce),_$5.70, A'Fen, vmm H- 1n_a fall, play for the Siamese cup and the F. Oden Horstmann trophy. The Horstmann trophy is competed for at seventy-two holes medal play and the winner is the club champion for the yvear. Out at the Washington Golf and (‘z;xaL Y Club Chairman McClenahan greens committee is preparing available for play some time next year. The new fairways, after hav- ing been sown to corn, are now being plowed and seeded and with a good icrop of grass in the early #prin should be ready for use som:vflm‘z during 1922. The first two holes will Indtwereet | C TUifd saae, claiming theee yirolds snd up. | L 90 CONTESTS SOUTH ATLANTIC. Vicghutu, nu n-vnn-. ) Fon: Virginin noke, 0. Virginia ‘l‘u , 14; Hatapden-Sid- ney, 6. Nerth Csrolina State, 21; Rasdolph- Macdon, ©. SOUTH. Géorgin Tech, 42; Wake Forest, 8. Tenneunee, 27; Emory and Henry, 0. Alabama, 34; Fleward, 14. Furuen, 46 gm ne, ¥. F , 415 rein M. A, 8. A- urn, 48; Sidney Lanfer, 0. , 39y North Geergia Ag- fl-. . EAST. Yalé, 281 Bates, 0. Harvard, 16; MiNdlebary, 6. Harvard, 10; Boston Unfversity, 0. Pemmaylvania, 80; Delaware, 0. Court Rules Race Track Must Let Shilling Ride HAVRE DE GRACE, Md,, Sep- tomber e Havre de Grace race track officials were diretted in an injunction issued by the eourt of Harford commty not to interfere with Carroll Shilling in hix occupation ws a Jockey on this course. Tt 1o expeeted that the courts will mow deeide the whether race track owners in Mnryland esn bar Rolders of licenses gramted by the state rejected SKffiing at thé begh- Ring of (he present race meets ing. He was suspended 'flw‘T years age for slieged hity Aqueduct Results First Tace, furlongs, three-year-olds—— | Matoarneen, U5 (Rice), 12'to 1, 3 to 1 and & 2, W thia, 115 (Turper), Meteury. 105 eAted). T w thi 14 Courtyiew, Orcus, Cove,” Arrow of Gold und | s, the Bushwick Steeplechane three-yegr-olds; abont Bryn, 131 (Sfmms) out, second; Decisive, 140 Choyach. 2 L 4:11 15. Valspar and Phoeni Tace, majden tvoyoer. -olda: -ellhl’ furtongs—Fuzee. (Robimon), 5ama2 105 -u-. Briliiant Rej, uz ( even amd 1 to 2. 3 13 (rem. 4 3 e el T01 0 Aw: ing. Atto, Jumo, Mudoba, Radiola, Goodheart. Flamion, Adelis 8. and ' Arnold B. also r r“"l‘fl. nd ward D1 ar-olds and ‘up % T Chtnmnn). & 6 6, 1 o 5 and oat. woa Mad 'Hatter, 129 (Sande), ot and out, sec- ond: Kingdom 24, 103 (McAtee), out, third. Time, 21145 (new track record).’ Only three’ starters. Face, claiming, three-y. —Crystal I‘vrd m 1!Mu~fi7. 3 to Ko and 2 to 5, won; 1 (Fator), i1 (Tufper). 8 to 1. adere. Nobant. Lampus, Cote 57r, ont Marier Flatt a !& 5 Armistice also ran. 2 o, 6 furlong {mo-year-alds—fe. Atee), 7 12 5, 2 fo 5 and 1 R’ orer. Vo (litee). 3 te 5asa T o gecond; Com Mcleskin, 108 (Turner), g, .~ Time, Chentér Brook, ety et i Biidon, 1¢ Itsh Brigadier, Fits- #ibbon and Utah also tam. Woodbine Results be used intact and a new green will S l;:e;:?_‘llltg::)r"thfrhth!(rd nl;'ur'% of the n?.r:-:.r:u ll‘l‘:l.! ::e'-'fi?a“ i » ) nd 350, second W)n;n e e fourt! fth, six, Awhiin, 115; Restiess, 11! 3 seventh and eighth are all new holes | Back 'Em |&‘hm' Brackrs 118 Wapyiend | Farae: 0T CTapgart). B1065, it Time, and the ninth will be practically a | Pale, 115; Litite Ams ‘3,.:‘3 ainet Cares: | One, a3 Meave, Day new hole. Changes in the second ,.,...""; The Tenreatss, 1ANe | pue asd Bacle Jobh aimo Hin. g nine will be radical and will include m 15 ‘Paneake, il Racquetta, o, Egslinton g % building of several new greens and Hoa ble—fGrace Fowter, 115; Mad | oids llx lnnnm—u-n ; Cravery, 80,80, tees. Theé course will be lengthened $2.20, wonm; Stacey Adams, 106 Nell, E. K. anun ents from about 5,000 yards to approxi- cond Tace, PETEE mately 6,200. dhp for three-year olds P; lbvn two Loeal golférn are tuning up for the h!:'imé .g‘m;‘j',g Cig B annual: District championship, which | dest, 148 Peceant 140 tetptectitde han- u umm-m 0 apd $3.85. secosd; Push Pin, $4.45, third. Time, 1.13 25, ¥ast Trail _ Redstone, Elemental, Rocky umn and Ofarits also fan. 06— W oodbine lll!mlll .tl“llhchie will be held at seventy-two holes Te0S, purse nsslr Tamiicap: three-yearolds and about two | medal play over the course of the | three-yesr-olds and - h-'m}'ih; £6r | miles—Tranapero, 'SM'B"E“" K = le,.)o' Chevy Chase Club_October 20 and 21. ur-‘sl Fibeoch. 'wg )l“dy x'"'"" $od 8.1, won: Casdidats 2d. 41 (Hirnen), wrgich have not been set. The wom- | bet, m'"n'l'.r-’w bd‘;d"-l"‘h‘:" | weras i Dandy Clronads, | Fupérial and MeAdams an’s championship will be held at R‘r dnt_Yorké, 104; Yeomanette, | Fourth réos, The Maple L Columbia October 24-28, inclusive. 1 ‘m Mie—‘m'mdl-f 108: Trusty; 113: | three-yearolds: fillies fomled in Canad: = l‘"‘,{fn Pl A and one-sisterhth—Tudof, 126 (Calvert), three-year-olds and e .,',’L‘:-,{‘;{ FI0.55, §3.55 and $2.25, won: Witch Flower, MRS SLATER IS VICTOR {eenth_Tan 11, na phoatee, GecTapenrt), 9255 and §210. secomd: ton, 2 nnaf r IN COLUMBIA PUTTING | S b eleeth FRCETE, o Cutped e Fifth race, Toronto sutumn rup handicap: Red. 103; lnclnenez "& 113; Sibols, Bfi an, Hlegees’ 111} 1 Fifth race, se, $1,338.19; claimi three- ;mum And 1P one. mite a8 Jieds—Chasesar, 131, 3R, swu-. 1z; Bl Flo, 184; Ci Charile snmny, e 5 nm i ':Ve. 12 It was a bad day for the Leech family in the Columbia Country Club weekly putting contest yesterfiay. In i the final of the main event Mrs, Ed Leech was defeated by Mrs. C. Slater, 3 and 2, and in the decldlng match in the consolation, Mrs. A. Leech, jr., lost to Mrs. B. Chariton Graves, 3 and 1. - Competition next Saturday will be started at 2:30 instead of 3 o'clock, as has been the case all summer. On October 15 there will be a putt- ing tourney for the championship of the club with the men and women competing. The women have been l' lx,aia “.1: iming; for raoh, thees year-olds and u’p Sop, mile sag seiesty A 4 s—Seourgema: 19 Janet OIS, e o 108; Aotlle Beventh raoce, three yeatolds bragging about their wizardry with ‘* : the putter, openly declaring they ex- | C: 104; ‘*Blue cel the sterner sex, so the lattet have b i; *Laey Lil- decided it s about time to call nl owatice clatined alt. S crown held by Evans for a total of four years by reason of a two-year Roldover during the war, won it by the same score as Evans took it in the final last year from Francis Ouimet. in addition to defeating Harrison Johnson of St. Paul, who had ousted Ouimet, Guilford downed George von PIm of Salt Lake City, Trans-Missis- &ppi, 5 and 4; Dewey Weber of Chi- cago in the second round. 3 and 2. and Chick Evans in the semi-finals, 7 and 5. Guiiford Long Prominent. ‘Guilford won the New Hampshire “hampionship when a boy of fourteen and he soon sprang into fame as a long Ariver. He has caotured the Massa- ohusetts amateur and onen titles, once defeating Ouimet in the final. He Tias plaved in the national event sev-! eral times in the last dozen years., today has: sgldom been exceeded, the éasfest vic- téry being that of C. D. McDonald ln‘K the first meet ever held in 1895. He! won from C. E. Sands at Newport, 12 and 11, while the closest contest was that in which Harold Hil‘on of Great Britain defeateq Fred Térreshoff at Apawamis in 37 holes for the only victory a foreigner ever won in the event. AT WASHINGTON TRAPS At the Washington Gun Club's semi- thonthly trophy = shoot vestefday Stearn ran away from the remainder of the fleld' by breaking 47 of 50 targets thrown in the event for the clasa A spoon. Others Bhootlng at 50_targets scored as follows: HO‘&E. 443 Stine, 43; Hlln er, ‘Wilson, 43; McC:;‘roi;k Lige: as; ier, Burrows, Mason, Price, Harton, 35 Parsons, FPorcher, Bowie, Hawley, fl Sherifr, 17. Polo Title to Rockaways. PHILADELPHIA, September 24— TRockaway defeated Meadowbrook, 10 to 7, today In & match for the sehior pold” champlonship of the United Bfates at the Philadeiphia Club. —_— BUCS BUY JOPLIN PLAYER. Joplin of the Western League has w.n-— Mueller, outflelder, to the tsburgh Nationals. Country f MANY DUCKPIN LEAGUES WentheF athe Mo {hréeyearclde dnd ter—Exterminator (K .80, And $3.70, Won: ly Dekf, 117 (McTaggAFt), $2.63, becond: Goiden Sphere, g‘uu). 87 lll“'l’lhl Time, 2.051-5. I, Goaler, Bonlface, Begistrar, incog and le_a8a_hetenty yaide: th Yowell, m TKeisay). 16, lani 42,60, second; r U (Boyle), .60, fhird. Time, ns " Salvitelte, Sweet | wet, Anmut, Satinimoore, Flame, Rock Bilk, Rex Galety, Bpohsor also ran. Bugle March and Chief Sventh race, mile one-sixteenth: {hree-yearoide “and 115 (Claver), §7.45, $4.30 -rll Joan 8f Are, 87 (Parrington), $15 $7.55, see- o BT (eDermotty, $4 95, third. Rothterer, Spearieme, Exhofter. Wakefield, Woodthrush, Chow and rt: so ran. First_race, six furlongs; four-year-olds nd and E o, e, fiflfi' v’"«’r}'fla‘-}‘.’ 3 ‘%-m foe )5.’ ednion l(e(v'.e'ln‘l‘l-: rah. I '\.u.nm e ITH several of the largest leagues in the city taking the drlvel FALL IN LINE THIS WEEK ‘ I ushered in. Several cifcuits already have opened their cam- paigns, but the vast majority of the pin topplers will swinig into action this week. Matches are scheduled on practically all alleys for leages composed of four to a dozen duints. Most prominent of the aggtema- tions due to get under way is the jten-team District League, one of the g:e h!cehm.t bellev: they eatt wriggle Tough to a championship. During the first !\ve weeks the YESTERDAY £ 5 OUNDER .vm b L] v o o |High School Coaches Want Colgnte, 73.8t. Bonaventare, 7. l' rdham, 23; Main aers, 0. e lightweight foot ball cham- 'NQI” Pame, 56; Klll-:-" o. by the principals and faculty ath- e nr{hu. 35; West Virgin Darimonth, $4; Norwich, 3. Smaller Boys to Have :.'r'.'....-"' by ',.li"k'?.‘g;.;, Own Title Series. racgie Tech, 42; Thiel, 0. B OB B BT Latyaette, 48; Muklenberg, Fraskila ' ast Marshan, ’ 14 ) baight, 0. A pionship series will be cENTRAL. played by District high school elevens this fall if sanctioned letic advisers of the several ins! tutions. Abundant material available at four of the schools for is the organization of teams with a weight limit of 135 pounds and the coaches ate anxious to give the smaller boys an opportunity to demonstrate their prowess on the VIRGINIA OPENS SEASON ! BY BEATING DAVIDSON: CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va., Septem-{yles and if a league tournament :s TWO CONTESTS BOOKED 'FOR DISTRICT GRIDIRONS Georgetown and Gallaudet to Play at Home, While George Washington. Catholic Uni- versity and Maryland Will Go Away. | BY H. C. BYRD. ITH yesterday’s big scores of the opening of the foot ball season a recent memory, Washingtonians will begin today to lo forward to the beginning of the season for local college elevens next Saturday. All five schools are scheduled to get in action then, with two playing at home and three away. Games here are to be be- tween Georgetown and Lebanon Valley and Gallaudet and Camp Humphreys; contests on foreign fields will take place between Maryland and Rutgers, George Washington and Virginia and Catholic University and Richmond. Most notable of the games scheduled on local flelds are those between Maryland and Catholic University. Georgetown and Fordham, George Washington and Georgetown, Mary- land and Virginia Polytechnic In rNerth;res;;m ls .iolled ! by Beloit in Big Upset . EVANSTON, 1L, September 24. nd penaities todny ber 24.—Virginia opened her gridiron season here this afternoon with an exhibition of offensive play that proved baffiing to Davidson College, which went down in defeat. 28 to 0. A well directed aerial attack coupleéd with smashing off tackle drives was responsible for the defeat of the North Carolinians, Virginia substitutions were fre- quent and before the fray had been ended two complete teams had been gridiron. Three schools now are x Do e forming lightweight teams that will :"“‘"" x5 :""‘“" el nEton were |be sent through independent sched- I 0] puy; out ian eleven | strong_ to stand an even chance| | Georgetown, that game | sanctioned other aggregations will | against enter the lists. ywould be by far the most important | Tried as an ‘experiment lust year, and interesting. coaches at Western, Tech and Central . found that successtul light-weight| AS the situation atands at present. teams could be developed, and the |though, probably the greatest local series among the three schools, which | jnterent will be created by the Catho- was won by Western, was both in-{jjc University and Marsland contest: teresting and instructive to the play- and if C. U. turns ont as good a team ers. Ina way the light-weight eleven!ag its material indicates is probahle| in the high school takes the place of 'the game nrohahly will he ss g00d vl Four times Northwestern cn ried the bali to the one-yard line, only to loxe on fumbies or dewnn. the freshman eleven in the college, for most of the smaller boys are members of the new class, and it used aguinst the Tarheels. Line-up: . s s affords the coach an opportunity to Davi o P rion | train material for future use with Mhackeiiosd avie | the first team. ! “Syenek Guyon Favors Light Elevéns. Such is the opinion of Charley Guyon, the old Carlisle star, who, is tutoring the gridiron candidates at Wwitt Canr Soore Rinehart (capt.)Left mmuek "Rethen | Bnstern High School. The former Hight baiimck 1] Shephard | upil of Glenn Warner developed Qpplemen.. phis Pu.lhm x % Snbxtitutions—For Michie, Fomter fop, WIS man. Michie for Dietpick. | bard, Blackford for Hubbard for O Robertson for [X Zundel for Daviy, wmu-m Tor. hvachettons. Carrington for Fester, Rovey for Blackford, for Hall, Hennesscy for Ward, Stephen: 83, for Zumdel, Dunm for Harcts, Weaver for HARVARD PLAYS WEL, BEATING TWO ELEVENS CAMBRIDGE, Mass,, September 24. —Harvard started its foot ball season with a double victory today. In the first game the Crimson defeated Boston Univerkity, 10 to 0, and in the second won from Middlebury College, 16 to 0. Harvard sent approximately fifty players into the two games. Harvard's vareity eleven in the making was represented in the men who took the field against Boston University in the first contest. The Crimson players took it easy, holding the Bostonians safe and using only open offensive formations. The line, an uncertain factor in Harvard's plans for the season, st the visitors' assaults. The line-up of the Boston University game follows: Harvard (10). Position. Kawe. 3 ...Long Deitrick _for HnN-rd for Upple- leman for -lover the zame. i up well against | Metzier may such an excellent team at the Capi- tol Hill institution Jast season that the boys became wildly enthusiastic As a result the call for candidates this fall brought eéut many not qualified to make the first team, but too promising to allow thém to remain idle. The 135-pound eleven. Guyon assumed, was the best golution of the problem. So the Capitol Hill coach began the organization of a light-weight team, and the boys are taking to the game in a mannet that indicates the eleven will be a formidable opponent for any other in its class. The Eastern management is casting about for én gagements with other scholastic com- binations and will have quite a sched- ule, even though no inter-high scheol series materializes. Quyon, however, il rather anxious te pit the team against other high school outfits, for he is convinced that it would benefit al_concerned. Tech is certain to place a light- weight team on the fleld. for Wilbur Apple, the Manual Trainers’ physical difector, is an ardent advocate of .omp-—min athletics for the smallor s. The Marcon and Gray may have . couple of teams averaging less in weight than its 135-pound comhi- nation, as there are so many liltle fellows anxious to play foet ball. Central also is preparing a small team, and Coggins, onestime Maty- land star. probably will assume the coaching burden, g0 that Head Coach | give all his time to the big Blue and White eleven. Westetn Boys Would Repeat. ‘There is enough material at Busi- r| Dess for such a team and Mike Kelly, Hubbai Miller | the old Holy Cross player, who is rocker. Sanfomaouso | instructing the Stenographers, thinks unhardt. wWeibneon | well of the idea. Géorge Green, West- Tockwo A hia | ern foot ball mentor. is another who |cmnr {wants to see the youngsters in ac- Rowll Cochrane | tion, and ¥f a squad of sufficient size Fit "'nmxterlran be recruited at the school on the ‘t!b':nln R Williamwon | west side of Rock Creek, the Red and Pl "mlwhne 125-pounders will endeavor to YALE MEN MAKE LONG RUNS AGAINST BATES NEW HAVEN, Conn., September 24. —TYale deferted Bates College in the opening foot ball game of the season here this afternoon, 28 to 0. ‘The game had few features and was piay- ed under a warm sun before a crowd of 12,000. Neidlinger, substituting in the Yale backfield for Aldrich, furnished the spectacular play of the game in the 96 | fourth pefiod Whéhn he ran 37 yards around right end for & touchdewn. The_long run of the game was made by Wight. who feplaced Mallory in the Blue lifle-up. He werit through a broken fleld for a 50-yard gain in the last period. V. P. 1. IS SCORED ON, BUT WINS BY 14 TO 8 BLACKSBURG, Va., September 24. —Virginia Tech raised the 13921 foot ball curtain here this aefternoon, de- feating Hampden-Sidney, 14 to 6. The | visitors played rings around Tech for the first two quarters. Thefe was hothing like a counter until the be- glnnlni of the third perfod. when, after five minutes of play, Tech scored on a series of rushes and soon afterward repeated. - The visitors’ score was due to a recovery of & fumble. Tech fumbled repeatedly and was trequently penalized fof holding. In- fraction of that rule cost the team t their success of last vear. Althauzh bent upon furthering the interests of the little fellows, coaches are not neglecting the grooming of | {elevens that will fepremen: the schools in the annual championship. Coneider- able progress was made by ali squads lest week and one of them—Eastern —wili be sent inte a game Tuesday. The Light Blue and White is to face St. John's on the Potomac Park grid- iron. Central will get its initial tfial Saturday, when it entertains Char- lotte Hail's eleven in the lorida ave- nue stadium. The prep schools about the District are hurrying their teams into_shape. Army and Navy, with a difficult schedule &head, has & husky 8quad at wotk, while 8t. John's has & host of material, mostly green, but am- bitious, under training. At Gonzdga haif a hundred boys ate practicing undef the eves of Jack Sullivan, for- mer North Carolina State and Geoge- town player. The Georgetown Préps at Garrett Pak may have two teams in action and Friends School contem- plates the organizatidn of an eleven. in other years, the preparatory schools have turned out excellent sg- gregations and this year should be no exception. CANTON BULLDOGS WILL PLAY D. C. PRO ELEVEN American Professtonal Feot Bail Awsociation elevens will appear against the hington team this season on dates soon to be closed. Negotiations between the local club oAB_ohealt | three touchdowns, the referee calling | And these teams have begun ang r:mm mi’o‘ ”i'a";fl" i . wos; Nan | the ball back. = Line-up: {fism il clash with e Black and ; - hi. s ) . le_gml n"tm mm-msumh White at Americah m", o ‘m“ Mot | B i To date the best ga 'i‘ oked tor e e ,,,.,. et it ran. aitiong. thooe. acheruisd. 13 the. oas rhes, allowan m rlanv ttest with the Canton Bulldogs on --M( 8ty nm. l 5 h- i Décember 4. The ORicans, saptained gt o 2. by Bob Higkins, former all:Ameri- u‘;: "n'i" %ml. oty p Hocl Granite Ware, ore. Caretul and 0ldt also ran. race, {he Latonla Gun Clab: = faf © | rosters of the teams will not be per- dhrecirestolde "aud up—Gu :I:IesLg‘:&;kpl'nmzhc:;t;m?:‘ (fhe clity. | manent. Prior to each mateh n?. Bl ”"' and 'gt'" iamong its members the 1eALINE DI | bus Taniviinm (OF ledm abMEAMents, | Hig 2,0y “ '“rd apillers of the Distiict, and the thatm: | 245 individual records afd averages|1.13. ~ Marvin Illy. m.umuom plonship campalen o be inaugurated | moy Se Dt 4 usual. However, therd | Braokholdt and Dr. Ci” on the “Royal drives Pmm‘”f Yo be | 2ls0 will be kept an individual team | Fifth race, Twin Cit M\np. Illl' Ciy L i récofd for each- player, to show the | Jiceiehth; threeyeafolds and no-gf. B Rovals and Districts will be oppos- | Tumber of games won and lost, BY | 35’60 “whn: Black Serrint; o kel 4380 ing teams In the openink encounter. ooty icam for whieh he "““m“’ and 200, | (Girseh They will clash on the Royal alleys, | I¥¢ highest bowiers in team percent: fi:’u e starting at 8 o'clock Other matches | 3%e e recogiise ] pocte { in the circuit this week follow: Tues- | Pyt duint, and rewarded ““"‘"’"Y day, Rathekeller vs. Temple, at Rath- | [f At the end of five weeks tr s skellér; Wednenday, Colonial _vs. |§5 ‘o *If!ng i‘;‘:t:ue:‘::rflfnlg;: ;o-mm 'wo s il . Blliek —Tee Company, at Colomial:ii pmgs will be organized on the basis 12,40, " third Thursday, Goodfellow vs. Leans an Currency, at Royal; Friday, Acme vs. Southern Railway, at Roy: Everything will be humming at Recreatioh Health Center tomarfow night, Whef threé big cifcults will be- gin championship drives. The éntire third floor will be taken over by the Internal Revenue League;, with ten teams at play. This, the second an- nual campalgn for the bowlers of the Treasury Department bure; ’ will be opened by Commissioner o '{flleh nal Revenue Blair, who will slide the first ball along the dfives. While the Tax Collectors are mak- Ing merry thé twélve-team Bankérs' League will begin its season on the of individual aversges and a handi- cap league, similar-to that of last seasén, conducted: With an éx f the !hlfl{ four lod‘n' or the Brateic Lo ed by hl‘ l‘ Alsunlntlull flll opén ith c s ship race & weeh ffor tomorrow nl t on the Royal @rives. Records of valué may be re lnd _by the M:- sons this sedsoh, v intend to stelctly enfore the Fodl-jine Tle and will have paid offielals to judge the Dowling. Scledules for this week of sevéral well known leagues follow: Tuesday, Bureau of Eoznvlg. aid Prinunx. nt second floor alleys. Down in the sub- - way the Commercial League, 8 ten- | oomrre o edn Inte ;"x:—'m:'n arand team outfit, is scheduled to staft.” Recréation; Ordi ,_.'g‘ t Grani ;,4“ The Eventag Siak Novelty Duckpin tral; Thuride s i ern RNt lril'ltllfi League will start Tuebday Seieee, at the Reoreation, with signt | merce Commission, &t teams endeavorin to crash the N!ufie&l cireu| maplés. 1f the quints livé up to their h.vs done some Ien ng in thei t{‘» names, the engagements should be|matches at the AFcadle alleys. In the as noisy as o_at feeding_time. Apes, Beats, Cal 4, Eels, g3, Goats and Hogs are to be the eon- testing teams. The only quist one, latteF league last weék Kent Astiford, a Potomac Boat Club guiht member, bowling his Arst nuq ‘mede a-tene frame soore of 149, gr:"l"‘ L'%.'ve. Dicie “oany "asa" Fores fa%h, Sile and one-sizteenth; four- "% ap l* g "’f m-mn. 80, third. Aanclag Spray, Aph ‘and Americhn HAL MAHONE CAPTURES BIG FREE-FOR-ALL PACE UMBUS, Ohio, Beptefiber 84— Smith can end at s0n ber 30. LOOSE GAME TO V. M. I enn State, are nationally famous. Anothér battlé s expected with_the Richmond A. G, oh Octo- Games_scheduled 50 far by Wash- ington_follow: October 9, Hobart A. . C. of Philadelphia; 16, All-Lancaster, LEXINGTON, Va., September 24—|Pa.; 23, Holmesburg, Pa.; 30, Rieh- Yirginia Military Institute defeated:mond A. C.; November 6, Akron Bi- Roanoke College; 13 to 0, today in'lents; 13, Buftalo; 20, Syracuse; the opehing foot ball game of the! gelaon Both sides played loosely, ut Ro#hoke's two. Line-up: ore, &"‘kfl s Sebuson e Bice, ROMP FOR GEORGIA TECH. ATLANTA, Septéinber 24.—GedTgia ‘Tech's powerlul backs crashed through the lighter Wake Forest line Oakey for 'flel'lu H 27, Panhandles of Columbus, Ohio; cember 4, Canton Bulldogs; 11, Cleve- 1. made ten first downs to| land Tigers. With Independent Elevens Peericas Athletic Club gridders Will hold a signal practiee this mornin, at 3d ahd L #treets northeast. Al candidatés faf the eleven are ex: pecl ai té teport in uniforth et 10 o’¢ldel ng the Quentins should conlmhhl? e ith MAnager o J. F. Buffess, 101 street sbutl Southérh At nlz which will open its seasol unday in a game with \lrglnu Athietia Club, wants its members to report for prac: H-l one, a game western pacer, and easily skirted the ends in the cwel:lxred n;g free-for-all ‘avnnl tlr:ufi openlnghzlme dof l;w 1’2‘12 {z% h:u Hoover Puymund ture lay’s program of grand el #Season here today for a 1 vie- vee .'fl o laghiie. fout-Reat stcaatle: | witi tions. Ga. Tech (42). . | Soach David :Es%lé-m 52 Pt 'es?hl‘ 1 tty brilyth this afternoon. ams In the 105: firs ieh he vmz?? R 2.0 *, .bi pound class castihg abeut for gathed mdlfl “w ? T ?l’ procure nn&am-nu with thé £ of tha i&fififldt in nkees by addressin lg 9 H Bell: fnan, Box 29 ul! l\h feF, Md. Efifi“‘n Forn n Heney ?fi umotmou first mil hon thenbeflntu-.hn e won the race. is enxisus to )-bound team Réamed A rocure l’imfi wi !h 3 nd ehallenges to Ditime, 108 fi mct 'fihu‘}t of tice at 4:30 o'clock this afternoon at from a_foot bail standnoint as an other. However. on a basls of the - Georgetown- | University squad at just as fast a inast few vears, the Frrdbam. and Marylapd-Virminia Polv- 5 (e us the pioh are abie to stand teshnic Tnsfitute games shorld de-|up under in an effort to whip to- velan the hest oractical expositions g ti.r com L0 beat University of of the =reat fall xnort Richmond down at Richmond this Wora in a_complate list of wames ini week. Robb has much b which lacal schools are to take part! terial than C. 2 | placed on the g ihose that have wa t hc.mn and 1t generally { that the Brook!s | tables on the k each week: OCTORER 1. enrewtswn ve. Lebenon Valley. at Ameri- | loam Tanove @-rk, | s5ena beat C. U. a year ago, R— : o= i e ot Maryland's entire squad was gi ! a complete lay-off. the Humphreys, st Kea- ianuwm to take the afternoon for Mretend at Butwers. AailenA~t w3, Camo Green. dall uh.ale\‘;r purposes they cared to uss iit. And after a week of rather ha:d OCTOBER 8. work there were few in the 5 | Memroetewn . Ursivus, at Amerioan! who did mot want the day's vaca- "'N' "Pl tion. ok o Tania aad Masban. P 0. U. &t Fordham. 1 | OCTORBER 15. omnm- i, Westmisster, 4t American V. n m 8%, Marv's, at Breekiand. Guaded v Pepn Militarw. ~t Chester’ Pa. shington ve. William and Mary, PO ot vq . R Fehr'n. ot Crllege Park. WINS ERID INAUGURAL FAIRMONT. W. Vu., September 2 OCTOBFR 72 {The West Virginia University fo . ot Bronkiard. ! e efente e 3 - T Yerre, ot Boklard ertoan| D811 team defeated the W Vir Lergse Faik. ginia Wesiovan oleven in the openin fiuz;;:'n“n‘.!:‘l:.fm- | game of the season here today. 35 to 3 Grorge Washington vs. Drexsl, at Phila-| The Wesleyans were outclassed delphia. i completely. and being a much iter ! OCTOBER 29. | team t v constantly placed on {11 e defensive. Their only scoring was "gmr-mm T Seorge Washing'on, %, done when Ra: a Eubstitute i ‘, h,d"‘"” ",m_‘ Caroling. ot ore. | ROES at right halfback, kicked a ficld | udst vi. Narsiead Frechmen. at Een: {=oaL i West Virginia carried the buil over d.“. gl st Bucknell. NOVEMBER 5. Geergetown vs. Fordham, at ndot us. 8t Joha's C. d Mary. {the line five times on straizht plavs intersperred with a few short for- ward passes. Line up: West Va. (35). Posit H American | H ! NOVEMBER 11 (Armistice Day). George 'uh- n vs. Galias fean ’Alm NOV EMBER 12, €. U. vs. Maryland, at Ametican League | Park, \ i Georgetown' at Geergia Tech. NOVEMBER 19. . Quarterback LLe Tt baifimek TODAY BASE BALL .30 AMERICAN LEAGUE PARK ‘\O\'EMBER 24 ™. Beflasy, 4t Americes | hfl‘v 5. ‘Waal ., at Brooklasd. ' forth Carelina State, at Bal- | b w Lecal Elevéas Serimmage. In llew of regular games yesterday all local foot ball squads, with the ’oxcepunn of the University of Mary- Inad, were put through hard work- outs which involved ali the elemental for early season scrimmages. in | some against Penf Scate, being whibped 53 to 0, Is not such as to cause much concern on the Hilitop over the pos- sible outcome of the contest here hext Saturday. George Washington was out on its own field in Potomac Park. The Hal chetites came 10 town In order to give the men who attend evenihg classes and work during the day an oppor- tunity to get out to practice after 4:30. The ff and Blue intends to Joutnes to College Park Tuesaay for another scFimmage with the Maryland eleven, and Maryland probably will come in hers Wednesday Goach Robb s Griving his Cathollc FOOT BALL PLAYERS ARE CORDIALLY INVITED TO CALL AND INSPECT OUR COMPLETE STOCK WE HAVE EVERYTHING YOU NEED AT PRICES THAT WILL PLEASE YOU SPECIAL SALE OF GOLF NEEDS $5.00 Bagsat........$3.75 Drivers & Brassies. .$2.50 Up Mashies ..........8250Up Other lrons.......$3.00Up Pedi-Car, request. Steinfeld Bros. 116 W 224 St ! | rke), entin Athietle CI (‘l l. wnh a nquu S hm’*‘y g:m-, Sere o """5 D aina teane fi:“,‘:‘r’m o j b 1 okl | BE sbosdy um‘” Wi, | GOING HUNTING? COME HERE FOR YOUR GUN, SHELLS AND CLOTHING 16:20-10.12.GAUGE 95¢ SHELLS BIG STOCK OF SHOTGUNS REASONABLY PRICED WALFORD’S, 909 Pa. Ave. STOLL AUTO BEDS AND KAMP KOOK STOVES

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