Evening Star Newspaper, November 18, 1921, Page 28

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v .""m " BOLLES AND HAMILTON ~ DISPLACED Wiedorn Goes to Tackle and Cruise Is Putin Reg- ON VARSITY ular Backfield—Both Displayed High Ability in Penn State Contest. A feating Princeton and all oth Pennsylvania State last Saturday; is in the team, two of the regulars, in their places, giving way to other: ance to the long-esta 3 playing ability in the selection of te: With the changes made during the Present week three players who were Tegular varsity men last year, and Who plaved in the winning game ngainst the Army, have been dis placed by players who were &also available last year, but who have, in the opinion of Coach Folwell, gone ahead of their rivals this season. All three of the original players are i unimjured, and yet may ! :lmpfl“':o take part in the final battle. Barcher Soon £arns Berth. who were members of - ?r;:-;':dilass—}lcxee. Noyes and het—showed promise of consid- erable backfield ability. McKee, how- over, was chosen from the trio as a regular back, Noyes and Barchet be- ing - substitutes. Barchet showed ment th:s %;ea!'P llhil lby he date of the Princeton :!:amb—ocdme !:)ber 15—had arrived, he was armly_intrenched in the place held by McKee, and his work in that ; and sabsequent games has been such ihat he is recognized as one of the est becks of the year. bB‘;lles. regular left tackle last sea- such tmprove: . son and the occupant of the same i position this season, has been dis- | placed by Wiedorn. the move causing To little surprise. Bolles is a power- ful youth, weighing 185 pounds, and & member of_the thamplonship acad- . emy crew. He played a fine game, { and was given much commendation i for his work against Princeton and { other teams. His work againet . Pennsylvania State was not so satis- factory. Wiedorn took King's placein the Penn State game, when the latter re- . tired for a time, and substituted for * Bolles on the other side of the line Wwhen King returned to the game. He ' did so well that Folwell felt that he should_be given further opportuni- | ties. He has been playing at left tackle in all the practices of the | weelk, and probably will start against | the Army. ! " Weighing about gix pounds less than | Bolles, -Wiedorn is, however, just as strong, and has had more experience, ! though not starting in so many big 1 zames. For three seasons he has been ! playing such good foot ball that he has barely missed making a regular place, and_he has been in a portion of most of the big games played by the Navy in that period. He is a mem- ber of the wrestling team. Somewhat of a Surprise. ‘Still more surprise was occasioned by the substitution of Cruise for Ham- iiton in the backfleld. The latter has been regarded as a remarkable defen- ~ive back, and a few days ago no idea was entertained that his services could be spared. Cruise, however, has also been playing well, and they are plavers of much the same type, though C'ruise is somewhat heavier and shorter than Hamilton. ‘While no fault could be found with the work of Hamilton in the Penn State game, Crulse, who played the | latter portion of the contest, rather : outshone him, particularly in his part in the wonderful drive in the final i quarter, which so nearly gave the I midshipmen a second touchdown. It is largely on this account that the change was made. Cruise was a regular back two sea- sons ago, playing in the final game,|S. He was injured early last season and | it was during the period of his en- ! forced retirement that Hamilton came } to _the fore, securing an unbreakable hold on the place. This year, their + work has been very even, but Cruise has now forged to the front. As far as can be seen, this is the end of the changes likely to be made in the Naval Academy team, but so fixed and definite i3 the policy of giv- ing places on the varsity to those whose work shows them worthy of NNAPOLIS, November 18—That all is not right with the Naval Academy foot ball team, which started the season so finely, de- er opponents, only to be stopped by evident from eleventh-hour changes supposed to be most_firmly established s. However, the action is in pursu- blished policy of considering nothing but actual ams. BIG GRIDIRON BATTLES LISTED FORTOMORROW Local Teams. ‘Washington Canoe Club vs. Po- tomac Boat Club, at American League Park, 3 o'clock. Georgetown vs. Boston College, at Boston. Gallaudet vs. Drexel Institute, at Philadelphia. Maryland vs. Pittsburgh. . South Atlantic. Virginia Polytechnic Institute vs. Roanoke, at Blacksburg, Va. Johns Hopkins vs. St. John's, at Baltimore. North Carolina State ‘Wake Forest, at Raleigh, N. C. Western Maryland vs. Washington, at_Westminster, Md. Randolph-Macon vs. Lynchburg, at Ashland, Va. : South. Centre vs. Washington and Lee, at Louisville, Ky. Georgia vs. Alabama, at Atlanta. East. Yale, Carnegie Tech, at vs. Harvard vs. at Cambridge, Bethlehem, Pa. YS}‘rncuss vs. Dartmouth, at New or Wesleyan vs. Williams, at Middle- !town, Conn. - Bethany vs. West Virginia Wes- levan, at Wheeling, W. Va. Rutgers vs. West Virginia, at New Brunswick, Brown vs. Coigate, at Providence, » 9 Bucknell _vs. Susquehanna, = at Lewisburg, Pa. Delaware vs. Pennsylvania Mili- tary College, at Newark, Del. Gettysburg vs. Mount St. Mary's, at_Gettysburg, Pa. New Hampshire vs. Holy Cross, at Haverhill, Mass. Springfield vs. Fordham, at Spring- field, Mass. Swarthmore at Swarthmore, Pa. ew York University vs. Trinity C.), at New York. Central. Ohio_State vs. Illinols, at Colum- bus, Ohio. Chicago vs. Wisconsin, at Chicage. Indiana vs. Purdue, at Blooming- vs. Haverford, ton, Ind. Michigan vs. Minnesota, at Ann Arbor, Mich. Northwestern vs. Jowa, at Evans- ton, IIL Marquette vs. Notre Dame, at Mil- ‘waukee, Wis. Iowa State vs. Nebraska, at Ames. = West. Oregon vs. Oregon Aggles, at Eu- gene, Ore. Stanford vs. California, at Palo Alto, Calif. s Games Today. Clemson vs. Erskine, at Clemson, . C. Davidson vs. Elon, at Davidson. Arkansas:vs. Baylor, at Fayette- ville, Ark. Montana vs. North Dakota Aggles, at_Missoula, Mont. Missouri ~ Mines ws. Central, at Rolla, Mo. HIGH SCHOOL GAME OFF. NEW YORK. November 18.—A pro- posed foot ball game between the W. and J. Gridiron Stars Made Class Presidents 'WASHINGTON, Novem- fcopt” of - New burgh last and J, registered its first victory over the Paathers in seven years, ARMY PRIMING FRENCH FOR GAME WITH NAVY WEST POINT, N. Y., November 18. —French, the Army eleven's star halfback, s entirely recovered from his Injuries and is being carefully groomed for the game with the Naval Academy, November 26. In every scrimmage during the week he has shown his usual ability and has been sharing kicking duty with Smyth. Particular attention is being pald by the coaches to the cadet line, In which many defects were noted in re- cent games. Thére is a wealth of good backfield material, including Ascher, Warren, Dodd and Perkins, PRESIDENT 0 ATTEND MARINE-ARMY BATTLE BALTIMORE, November 18.—Presi- dent Harding and & number of his of- ficial guests who are representing for- eign governments at the disarmament conference will be among the distin- gulshed spectators who will attend the Marine-Army foot ball game to be played at Homewood on Decem- ber 3. & pt. Leroy P. Hunt, U. S. M. C, who is here with a company of ma- rines to bulld additional seats and boxes at the Johns Hopkins field for the use of the noted foot ball en- thuslasts, made the announcement yesterday. The marine team will be escorted to the field by the Gth Marine Regiment of Belleau wood and Cha- teau Thierry fame. Among the notables who have ac- cepted Gen. Butler's invitation to oc- cupy boxes are Vice President Cool- idge, Secretary of the Navy Denby, Assistant Secretary of the Navy Roosevelt, Admiral Coontz, chief of naval operations; Maj. Gen. Lejeune, Gov. Ritchie and Mayor Broening. l Gopher Students Dubious. MINNEAPOLIS, November 18— Students at the University of Minne- Bota entertain little hope for a Gopher victory in Minnesota's final foot ball game of the season against Michigan at Ann Arbor of Saturday, as onl; elght were in the party which left today to' see the game. By the Associated Press. C aculty representatives. Coaches of both Ohio State and Towa, the sole undefeated conference teams this year, have Indicated their willingness to enter into negotiations for a post-season clash, which would be against the present conference rules. * In recent years the leading eleven bas won an undisputed crown. This vear, however, Ohio State en- thusiasts ciaim their squad has met and defeated stronger teams than SEEK PLAN TO SETTLE CONFERENCE GRID TITLE HICAGO, November 18.—Agitation for some method of determining the western conference foot ball championship each year by! actual competition between the elevens with highest ranking at the close of the seasonm, is being actively conducted by foot ball en- thusiasts in the middle west, and the subject promises to become an im- fortant question at the December 3 scheduled meeting of the conference \ the Iowa eleven, while Iowa backers | conference elevens, a notable instance STEED STILL HAS PLACE, NEW YORK SHOW PROVES Rules Supreme in Annual Affair at Madison Square Garden—Finest Animals Money Cari Produce Are on Exhibition. BY FAIR PLAY. EW YORK, November 18—The guy that is commonly credited with N having uttered a mouthful when he said something about the passing of the horse ought a-been up to the horse show in the Squadron A Armory in this big town today, or, in fact, any old day this week. Once you hand over your Annie Oakley and get inside that big building, which makes Madison’Square Garden, where they used to hold these shows, size up like a Texas bunkhouse against a New England barn, you wouldn’t believe the buzz wagon had ever been thought of. It’s all to the horse. Honest, there are more kinds of horses under the big roof than there are fish in the vaults of the National City Bank, A lot of us blokes had got the Idea that the only sort of horses left was the kind that lose all your kale for you year after year. Nothing to it. Up there in the mory they've got hackneys and coach horses and hunters and five-gaited geldings and saddle stallions and polo mounts. They've got everything ex- cept_the hol pollol—which s to say, the lower classes of horsedom, such order tea and toast, and sit and 160k at the gee gees. Anybody can g0 up who has the price. There didn’t seem to be a bouncer in the whole building. But then, of course, there was no one who looked likely to start anything ough. Lots of the men, even in the boxes, wore those -trousers that look as though they'd been jumped Into through a_skylight and then started to get ambitious and grow into bal- loons. It's a fine show, and the finest thing about it was that there wasn’t a lady or gent that bawled out a as the cab horse, the truck puller and the sad-eyed mule. They are the finest animals that money can produce, these exhibits, and they know it. You get this in half a_ glance. They hold up their heads like & man who has just dls- covered an honest bootlegger, and they step ljke the show girls used to step in the old days of the Weber- Fields. Varnish couldn’'t make thelr coats any brighter. But to the guy who spends most of his time watching fighters trying to knock each other’s blocks off the thing that gets him best is the fact that he can move about without any fear that some dip will get his watch or his roll. And if some one jostles you he—or she—says, “Pardon me. I'm so sorry,” while if you step on a referee when he picked one horse as shading another. And the tea they served was fine—after you had tilted your flask under the cover of your hat. (Copyright, 1921.) = EROER lady’s foot she doesn’t say, “You blg 2 bum. cantcha watch out where you're nothing walking?’ and maybe ask the man — that's with her to bust you one. Noth~ b ¢ ing like that. It's all to the la de dah. b Honest, & guy wouldn't know there —_— was so many well behaved people in 7. the world. There isn't a man there all- that has to wear a pompadour to — prove he has a forehead. 7 They've got the roof of the big wOoo. place all decorated with bunting and flags and surrounding the ring are the boxes where the H. Percy Astor- bilts and the Chauncy Terwilliger Van Nutts and the rest give the horses the glassy eye and shake hands languldly with toffs who drop into their boxes for a chin-chin. The woman! All the latest winter styles are on tap. Some of the suits would make fine flags for a new Bal- kan republic. while others look just like the old folks at home, except for something that you don't quite get. but makes you know you're lamping the real goods. At one end of the building they've got a reproduction of George Washington's old hangout at BMount Vernon. It's got a real porch, and you can go up there and A prominent Michigan alumnus in a letter published here today advocates a plan for a conference championship series by which the schedule makers would leave open the final November foot ball date, so that the leading elevens each scason might be paired | on_ that date to settle titular honors. Other elevens would be matched for the remaining places in the race. Critics of the scheme point out that certain teams in the conference have | refused to schedule games with other | Magnificently Tailored Suits to Order and Up Individualized models finest all-wool materials. cialized tailoring service that offers you the finest clothes built at moderate prices. Superb Overcoatings to Measure at Very Reasonable Prices I Haas & Co. Merchant Tailors, 1211 Pa. Ave. ==OFEN SATURDA Don’t Miss This Sale Tomorrow " Take Advantage of Many American Colleges Seek McGill Grid Games MONTREAL, November 18.— Many American college ath- letic associations are seel 1932 ‘dates for foot ball games with the McGlll University, squad. Negotistions mow are under way with Dartmouth. University I:xenflvez' are con- sidering a m to ment loo! “lfi g inte the United States for gridiron contests mext seasom. LIEUT. JONES INJURED IN HORSE SHOW SPILL NEW YORK, November 18.—Lleut. Marcus E. Jones of the 3d United States Cavalry, setationed at Fort Myer, Va., was the victim of the first serious accident at the Natlonal Horse Show belng held at Squadron A Arm- ory. He sustalned a sprained left shoulder and a fractured rib, when his mount, Beatrice, fell yesterday at the last jump In the class for officers’ chargers. His horse turned a complete somer- sault, rolling over Lieut. Jones, and it was feared for a time that the ac- cldent was more serious than it de- veloped to be. He was taken to the Naval Hospital, where an X-ray pic- ture was taken to disclose the ex- tent of his injuries. aj. W. S. Patton, also of the 3d United States Cavalry, won the cup in the event in which Lieut. Jones was Injured. Ma). Patton won with Allah- mande, chestnut gelding, with which he captured the same event last sea- son. in smart suits made on fashion’s latest molds—from the A highly spe- TILL 10 P. 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TEAM IS READY MADISON, Wis., Novenber 18.—The University of !'ll\ltd. accompanled by the Freshman elev today for Chicago to practice on Stagg Fiel noon. OFF FOR CHICAGO TILT FOR TRINITY COLLEGE NEW YORK. November 18—Ne York University's foot ball squad fin- ished practice today for its closing game of the season with Trinit; - lege of North Carolina. The lofn’lfa‘:'ll eleven, which is making ita first in- vasion of the mnorth, is &fpected to arrive tonight. =STANLEY CLOTHE Wisconsin gridiron en and the “all-Americans,” a mmage team of alumnl, left early :I! its final this after- Overcoat and Suit SALE 3 for Imported J. & J. Crombie O’Coats Included Everybody CI Stanley ‘o = 1209 Pa. Ave. ’ Il ([ All-Wool Fabrics Perfect Fit, Latest Style, Tailored-to- Measure—All for Guaranteed to Fit and Wear You get everything that your heart desires in a BERNSTEIN Tailored-to-Measure Suit or Overcoat—at the price of a ready-made. 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