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coast had the promise of so N San Diego will be the scene of of the northwest—on Christmas day. On New Year day Penn State a fornia will do battle at Pasadena upo: ment of roses. With the exception of the Leland Stanford-Pittsburgh affair these games were not arranged without some diffi- culty. For instance, promotors of the San K h University of Oregon eleven meed Virginia, but of late the Pacific t conference has been frowning upon members identifying themselves with municipal sporting projects. So the Northerners declined this oppor- tunity of dealing with the Mountaineers. Also Keeps California Out. The attitude of the conference seems also to have prevented the coast champions, University of California, from accepting the invitation to play at Pasadena. The team which did Accept. the University of Southern California, made a fair record in the recent foot ball season. California beat her, 12 to 0, but she defeated Leland Stanford. 6 to 0. As showing team it may be pointed out that whereas Oregon and Washington tled, 3 to 3: Californta defeated Washing- ton, 4 7. and prevailed over Stan- ford. 28 to 0. Unless the rigors of the lpng journey and west coast hospitality affect the players too greatly the east should make a very good showing against rivals of the far west. While none of the teams from this section has any claim to championship honors, West Virginia. which was unbeaten this vear and d one tie game. is an #fceedingly strong outfit. It will be ~uUrprising if Gonzaga can hold the Morgantown men. Pittsburgh will leave for Palo Alto on December 23 with a very strong ©outfit. a team that took some time to find itself in the recent season. but when it did was very potent. The team broke &lving day. but was not too radical in its let-down. Of late the men have Been practising with the vim of No- vember. Twenty-five players will take the trip. Penn State working three a week in prepa- ration for the Pasadena contest. State feels that she was the victig of an unending chain of adverse circum- stances during the regular foot ball Season and counts upon routing all jinxes and hoadoos in this Pacific| coast engagement. Plans have been Aryanged to have the eleven and sub- utes leave fur Califo = itutes I rnia on De footballers have been | (Congright. 1922.) CORNELL VL BTA " COCH FORRACKETERS Jornell University has f v recoxnized and placed | on a firmer basis by the action of| the board of trustees, which has &u- | thorized the appointment of a pro- fessional coach to take charge of the same at the university, Prof. C. V. Young, director of physical education. has stated that | & coach, whose name will be an- nounced as soon as arrangements have been completed, will be obtained | to instruct any students who care to! learn the game during the winter months. e obtaining of a tennis coach does not mean that tennis will be- come u major sport at Cornell. but the varsity teams probably will be | improved because of better playving material developed during the winter ;n"lhc six Indoor courts at the drill all. Down the Alleys What promises to be one of the most hotly contested matches of the| meason is scheduled for tonight on 1)fe Rathskeller alleys., when the Terminal Ice grapples with the home team. If there is a team in the Dis- trict League that can beat out the Rathskellers for the pennant it is the 1%men. and as the men under Harry Arminger are right on the top of their game at present, it will take some tall bowling to win from them. The fun starts at 8 o'clock, and there Wil be reserved seats for the ladies. Colonlals wound up their “away- | from-home” games last night and, while their matches on foreign drives have been somewhat disastrous, they cartainly closed their journeys in a b&¥e of glory when they took all thres from the Goodfeliows on the Grid Treats for California : ‘Co'llegév WILL SEE TRIO OF TESTS . BETWEEN EAST AND WEST West Virginia, Pittsburgh and Penn State Should Do Well Against Pacific Rivals Unless Long Journeys Affect Players. BY LAWRENCE PERRY. EW YORK, December 15.—Never before in history has the Pacific tional foot ball games as at the present time. 1 Virginia eleven and Gonzaga University—one of the outstanding elevens Pittsburgh will meet Leland Stanford at Palo Alta on December 30. | Diego game had ‘wished to have| the outstanding form of the Berkeley | training ‘after Thanks- | BLACK SPOTS THREATEN TROUBLE FOR TOSSERS Independent basket ball ranks here bave been filled to averflowing this season, but none of the recruit teams has come into_ the fold with more blaring of trumpets than the Black Spots, latest addition. The | Black Spota consider themselves the | last word in the 130-pound class, and { according ‘to. their press agent are prepared to take the measure of any other aggregation In. their division. Any quint questioning the ability of the Black Spots may communicate with thelr manager, Paul Matthias, at 1244 Franklin street northeast, or over telephone, North 8§254. | Mankattan Athletic Club has been granted permission to wuse Noel House gymnasium for its basket ball_games this winter, and would be pleased to hear from other Wash- ington quints. All challenges should be sent to Manager C. T. Hutchinson, 1505 Rosedale street northeast, or telephone to him at Lincoln 6925-W. many thrilling post-season intersec- a struggle between the strong West nd the University of Southern Cali- n the occasion of the annual tourna- COLLEGE BASKET BALL At State College—Pen: Juniata, At | Forentry, ! Stroller girls want engagements { with 120-130-pound sextets, especial- ly Epiphany, Veterans' Bureau, Good Shepherd, Columbla, Hurricana and Alexandria Friends. Challenges will i be received by E. Johnston, 513 Ken- tucky avenue southeast. Boy Scout Troop 28 is casting about for matches with 100-pound teams. All challenges must be telephoned to State, 49; le—Dickinson, 65; State Ridge a17 VVindsor—Loyola, 345 Blue | {},, tanagement, at Lincoln 6955 ot alinmuton—Williams, 42; Nor- | Grant Athletic Club's quint is Jook- wiel ing for games in the 110-pound class. Telephone challenges to L. Carlina, Linceln 7158. East Riverdale Midgets, averaging 80 pounds, desire action. For games, write I. Batson, Riverdale, Md. At Easton—Latayette, 1anova, 33. TLDEN T0 TARE ThP TOBULSTERUPGAME William T. Tilden, national tennis champion, is planning a long trip in order to get back on his game follow- ing the operations which have cost him part of his index finger of his { racket hand. The champion intends to start for the northwest in June. He will take Allexun(h-r Wiener, his protege. with 36 Vv Vetorans of Forelgn Wars over- came the 21st Engineers, 27 to 19, in a practice tilt. The winners passed well. Perry Athletic Club disposed of the Epiphany Eagles, 29 to 26. Loftus and Clarence starred for the victors. ‘ Epiphany Midgets, contenders for the 95-pound District title, scored thelr ninth straight win in a 31-to-14 match with the Columbias. Georgetown Athletie Club courtmen ran roughshod over Arlington Ath- letic Club in a 102-to-16 game. Cha- conas and Sellers were the stars of the fray. Naval Reserve basketers overcame the Carlisles, 34 to 31, at the Naval Reserve Armory. Neither team made any substitutions during the game. CRID HONCR CLAIMED BY STANTON JUNIORS Here's another sandlot foot ball title claimant. Stanton Juniors, who were not scored against during the season insist that the 115-120-pound elass championship is theirs. They played eight games and won handily in most of them. Their record speaks for itself. It follows, with Stanton Junior scores mentioned first: 12, Seminoles, 0; 26, Rovers, 0: 6, Quentin Juniors, 0; 6, Terminals, 0; 6, Simp- sons, 0; 6, Langdon Juniors, 0; 21, Rovers, 0; 14, Yorke Juniors, 0. Canton Bulldogs will present 2 formjdable line-up for its match with the Washington _professionals at American League Park Sunday. The visitors' squad includes Carroll (W. and J.), and Chamberlain (Nebraska), e will probably start playing in Chicago.” said Tilden. “From there we will work to Seattle and Portland and go down to San Francisco and Los Angeles toward the end of July. playing exhibition games and enter- ing local tournaments. I will take | matches as they come along with no thought of winning, but just to keep up the development of my game. We | should get back early in August for the national doubles tournament in Boston. Then I will be as ready as I can be for the Davis cup and the natigpal singles. “The Davis cup will be my ulti- mate goal this year. If I feel T am &ood enough to make the team I will ask the Davis cup committee to take my word for it. If I find that I am not. {T will frankly say so. My only idea is to do all I can to help retain the cup.” HOPKINS GRIDIRON LIST IS ALMOST COMPLETED BALTIMORE, Md.. December 15.—| Johns Hopkins will play nine foot| ball games next fall and eight of them have been tentatively arranged, ‘ctober 27 being the date that is open. It is planned to play Wash- ington and Lee on November 17. so that the game with Maryland may be returned to Thanksgiving day. Hop- Kins' tentative list follows: ends: Henry (W. and J.); and Lyman October 6—Princeten. (Nebraska), tackles; Osborne (Penn Qctober 15—Mount St. Mary's. State), and Waldsmith (Akron U.), otober 20_Haverford. guards; Speck (Canton U.), center; Hovember 3—Vestern Marylazd. Robb (Penn State), quarterback; Mc- L S Quade. (Georgetown), and _Smytk Novembor re askington o¢ Drezel. | (Centre), halfbacks, and Elliott (La- November 29 (Thankagiving . day)—Uaiver. | fayette), fullback. sity of Maryland, probably at stadium, Elevens of Knickerbocker club and Mohawk Athletic Club that played a scoreless draw several weeks ago are priming for their second tilt to be held Sunday at Union Park. Both teams were sent through signal drills yesterday and worked well with a soggy ball. NINE GRID GAMES LISTED FOR SYRACUSE IN 1923 Playing southern, western and New England teams as well as its tradi- tional rivals, Syracuse University in 1923 will have one of the best sched- ules it has played In years. Nine games are to be played, =ev: at home, as follows: :***** 2.8 8.8 0 ¢ Going Out of What He Wants = Bl Business Must Vacate By + January 1st $40 to $50 Sherman alleys. All three games of the victors were 500 or better and demonstrated that Manager Coleman has worked his boys back into a| fighting spirit again. With 513, 521 and 500, the Colonials totaled 1.534. ‘Welch has replaced Charley Benson as anchor man of the Colonlals, and | he made good with high game and; “Three matches were rolled in the| Masonic League last night on the Sherman alleys, Stansbury winning all three games from Harmony, the Nationals grabbed the odd game from the King David quint and Joppa won | two out of three from Takoma.i Harry Krauss of the Stansbury team had three games over the 100 mark, leading all six teams with high set. “allbach of Joppa had the biggest ame of the evening, 133. Ladles’ League did the clean-up act last night, winning all three games fgom Internal Revenue with the x’r‘. 465, 470 and 449. Lilllan Wenz rolled high game, 114, while Clle Billle crashed the high set, 294. Nuts of I Terminal “Y" League captured the odd game from Ex- press with the scores 424, 426 and 377, Aght for his team, but couldn’t win slone. He had high game of 132 and high set of 345. b Mount Pleasants of the Mount Pleasant League whitewashed the Crescents last night, capturing all three games with scores of 520, 499 and 508. Waple, lead-off man for the victors, turned in & set of 344—114, 106, 124, his final game being also the highest. 7 = ‘Hibbs quint of the Bankers’ League ran away with two out of three from with the scores 478, 478 and 543. iNeuse of Hibbs had high game high set, 124 and 31 Im the Bureau of Engraving League the Machinemen ‘E‘rlbbcg" all th!re‘o 2! fro! the xamining quint, l‘h#:'mr:‘ being 482, 430 and 476. Anchor Man Davis of the-winners had high game and high with scores ?! 113, 95 and 110. [} high set, 118 and $32. i Billi’s Team of the Washington | [f Ott of Express put up & nmoI i the Second National team last nll’h!vl Suits & Overcoats Then he will be “another boy in your neighborhood to ride a YALE Bicycle.” For over 20 vears this wheel has been su- preme in its fleld, and today it still leading. Ask dad—it is ' almost a “sure shot” he rode & YALE when a boy. He knew how GOOD it was then. We'll guarantee this wheel to be even r mow. We also carry the YALE PRINCETON LA FRANCE $30.00 . Boys’ Velocipedes ASK FOR THE “FAIRY” and get the best. --Three styles, plain and ball bearing. 3 Buflt just llke & bicycle. $11.00 up. : BI-PLANE-FLYER Just ‘what the boy or girl wants for Christmas. Ball bearing, heavy rubber tires oo $30t0 $37.50 * Suits & Overcoats ; Down to * 520 All $25.00 Suits & Overcoats Down to NoRRIS 888886888 8 60868 66¢8888648000006¢38 4 XRAX DISTRICT AGENT FOR ~ Indian Motorcycles | FRENCH o 4 9th St. N.W. * * * * BROTHERS 911 G Street. ; 23 3 3 e e ok ek sk ke ke ke ke ke ok Basket GALLAUDET TO PLAY C. U " ON BROOKLANDERS’ FLOOR Each Team Will Present Three Regulars From Last Season—Georgetown Books Twe Foot Ball " Games for 1923 Schedule. ASKETERS of the District varsity group will take their place in B the sun tomorrow night when quints of Gallaudet College and Catholic University meet at Brookland in the inaugural game of the college season here. Both squads have been training carefully for several wecks, and are reported fit for action. The rival coaches, Fred Rice .of the Brooklanders and Teddy Hughes of Kendall- Green, have sombed squads Targe numerically for what they consider the best fives, and much action is promised in the opening tilt. The engagement is to get under wag promptly at 8:30 o’clock. A preliminary match between C., FRIDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1922 IMARYLAND IS INCLUDED INYALE'S EIGHT GAMES NEW HAVEN, Conn., December 315, —Yale's foot ball schedule for next sea- son, just announced, calls for but j elght games. and. in ‘conformity with I(he so0-called “triangular agreement,’ | calls for no long trips from home. | ,,Beven of the games will be played at !the bowl, while the Harvard game, i the last of the season, will be played at Cambridge. Yale will open the season at the bowl on October 6, when North Caro- the strong eleven from the University of Georgia will gome to the bowl. Reports that Yale would meet Mc- Gill University are not borne out by ! the schedule. It is belleved that the | desire of the Canadian university to | play half rugby and half foot ball, | combining the Canadian and the American sport, was a stumbling | block to a game. i The schedule follows: SPORTS. Ball Starts Tomorrow - Night SOUTHERN I A. A. FACES | FRESHMAN RULE BATTLE REENVILLE, S. C., December 15.—Fate of the Southern Intercol- G legiate Athletic Association, organized thirty years ago, is to be decided at the first session of its twenty-eighth annual meeting, to i be held here today and tomorrow. Dr. Henry D, Phillips of Columbia, president of the organization, announced he has called an executive ses- sion to precede the first business meeting. .Dr. Phillips displayed a marked reticence toward discussing the pos- sibility of some members “bolting” because they are opposed to the one- ling will be the invader. A week later | year rule. He indicated he was not looking for a dissolution, saying that it_was his belief that “the leading colleges of the association will be willing to observe continuance of the rule.” CAMPBELL WILLCOMCH 1553 5 S NN RN A reserve teams of the contending var: ably will not materialize. Catholic University will enter the fray with a team including three veterans of last years first quint, a substitute player of that aggregation and a member of the last freshman basket ball combination. Capt. Law- ler and ex-Capt. Lynch, guards, and Cberts, center, who are slated to start, were regulars last winter. Lynch was rated as one of the best ! basket ball players in the south At- lantic section. Dowd, who got in some games last January and Febru- | ary, and Larkin, a_ freshman team graduate, are to be forwards. The Brooklanders are bewailing the fact that they are weak in reserve strenth, but they appear to have sev- eral second-string men almost as good as their varsity players. Fits- gerald and Breslin have shown their wares on class teams at Catholic Uni- versity and made good with a ven- ! geance in games. O'Connor, son of ! Pat O'Conmnor, prominent in Wash- | ington boxing and wrestling circles, | gives promise of becoming a for- | midable basketer, and Clark, who was A pitcher with the Brookland ‘nine last spring, is developing rapidly. Gallaudet has had one test—that against Eastern High School early this week—and it revealed much po- tential strength at Kendall Green.: Boatwright and Danofsky. torwlrd&‘ 1 | and Capt. Biynes, center, all veterans of the last quint, seemed better than ever, while Bradley and Barnsen. guards, were strong. This quintet probably will be started against the Brooklanders. The numerous re- serves sent against Eastern also per- formed creditably. | Officlals for = tomorrow night's match have not yet been gelected. An effort is being made to procurei James Hughes, veteran arbiter, as! referee. An umpire also will be em- | ployed. Although Geergetown is making ! every effort to arrange an attractive | schedule for its foot ball team next! fall, only two engagements have been | listed definitely. One is with Le- banon Valley on October 6, and the other with Bucknell on November 17, | sities was considered, but it prob- mine a south Atlantic college gridiron champion next fall. The Old Domin- lon eleven has listed eight games so far and five of them are with other representative Virginia colleges, two with North Carolina teams and the other with the University of Georgia. Most of the teams to be encountered | by the Virginians will be met by sev- eral other south Atlantic aggrega- tions, thereby offering good opportu- nities for comparisons. Lacrosse men at the University of Maryland are to see much action next spring. Games with leading twelves of the east are being booked. Among those to be met by the College Park stickmen are Penn State, Lehigh, New York Unlversity, Stevens, St. John's and Johns Hopkins Gallaudet has been given a place ion the foot ball schedule adopted for the Gettysburg College eleven next fall. The Kendall Greeners will in- vade Pennsylvania November 24. CENTRAL IVE T0 MEET PREP SCADOLTOSERS Central High School's basket ball team, which was to open its season at home today with a game against Swavely School, starting at 3 o'clock, has nine more contests definitely booked and another pending Wwith quints outside the high school league. The scholastic champlons of last win- ter have home-and-home arrange- ments with the University of Virginia Freshmen, Tome, Episcopal and Woodberry Forest, and a tilt in their own gymnasium with the Princeton Freshmen. The schedule follows: Jasuary @ Baltimore City Collegs st Belt both games to be played here. No- RS (Pen N S P vember 10 has been offered the |Frsumea at Central; 20, Princeton i Quantico Marines, while Boston Col- lege or Holy Cross probably will be! met November 3. Fordham is ex-i pected to play in Washington next fall, but so far no date agreement has been reached:s Swimming Zymnastic teams of | the Naval Academy are to be un- usually active this winter. For the natators, meets have been listed with Syracuse, Boston Tech, Rutgers and Yale in addition to the intercol- legiates. The gymnasts are to en- counter Philadelphia Turn Verein, Pennsylvania, Dartmouth and New York universities before entering the intercollegiate meet. The intercoil- leglate meet. The Intercollegiate gymnastic finals are to be held at Annapolis. Virzinia’s 1923 foot ball schedule is such that it should be easy to deter- P W orth-W hile Worsted Suits and Qvercoats Made to | Measure at Even Lower Prices ~Than Asked For Ready-Made Clothes If you are going home for the Holidays—you will want a new suit or overcoat—and why not f have it MADE TO YOUR MEASURE— when such savings are possible. A special purchase en- ables us to offer the finest quality worsteds and overcoatings' ever associated with -such low prices—and you will recognize the superior quialities in an instant if. you’ will but come ‘into | _the store and examine . the materials. . Tuxedo Coat . & Pants (o Newcorn 1 = MEN-Be Proud of Your Clothes This Christmas! ‘Take Advantage of These L$3 50 .A Full $60.00 Value - 002 F Street N.W.- Open Saturday Until 9 P.M. tral: 14, 16, Usiversity of Virginia Froshmen ot Char. lottesville; 17, Wood Forest at Oramge: 24, Tome at Fort Deposit; 26, Woodberry For- st at Oentral. Basketers of the Y. M. C. A. day school are to open their season to- morrow, when they are to entertain the Friends School quint in the Y. M. C. A. The Y line-up probably will in- clude Owens and Engel, forwards; Halstead, center, and Fry and Barger, guards. OBERLIN COMING EAST. AMHERST, Mass., December 15— Another Intersectional contes Gberlin is a feature of Amher: gridiron schedule. Oberlin will come east next fall, playing here October 7. Values to $40 283 Values to $50° - Values to $55 .90 50 | & Green October 6. North Carolina; 13, Uni- versity of Georgia; 20, Bucknell; 27, Brown. | November 3, Army; 10, Maryland | 17, Princeton; 24, Harvard at Cam: bridge. EIGHT BATTLES BOOKED FOR VIRGINIA’S GRIDMEN CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va, Decem- ber 15.—University of Virginia has | arranged eight of the nine foot ball i games it will play next fall. All are with southern teams. October 13 is the date that is open. Virginia's bookings are: ATHARVARDEXTFALL |others contending that the contin- uance of the rule means their with- CAMBRIDGE, Mass., December 15. ‘The appointment assistant grad- drawal from the 8. 1. A. A., together with Sewanee, Alabama, Florida and uate manager of athletics at Harvard of Thomas J. Campbell, a foot ball others contending they will stick by star in his undergraduate days and a the rule, the gquestion of freshman players will make the conference one foot.ball coach since—this fall at Vir- ginia—has been announced. Campbell was a varsity letter man on the Harvard elevens of 1910-11, playing in the backfield. He had coach at Bowdoin, University of North ®Carolina and at Harvard. He succeeds William J. Bingham, who re- $9—Randelph-Maoon. ""'-:"c'—lu-d'fvmfi':fli. announced todsy also that g:::m g—m; Militery - di." xow-'n-a ‘bc re-en- e > BAg rector of rowing at Har- Hovember 3—Washington and Les. at Lex-| yorg for the year 1923-24. ——— GALLAUDET FIVE BOOKED BY ST. JOHN’S COLLEGE ANNAPOLJS, Md., December 15— Gallaudet is on the basket ball sched. of 8t. John's College, which has Hovember 17— . Polytechni £ 'fifix‘. io. Novermber $8—North Carolina, at Chapel Eill e PLAY FOR SOCCER HONORS. Elevens of Plerce and Monroe schools were to clash this afternoon on Union station plaza fleld for the public school soccer championship of | just been announced. George Wash- hington, Each has to its credit | ington also may be played, Here are a VIC(QI‘* in the !tel‘xts for the |the dates: laurels. 'he winner of today's game, Which was to start at 3:30 o'clock,| Jamsary 15—Piekinson at Oarlisle. will be city champlon. —_— —Loroln ATLANTA, Ga., December 15.—John Moclntyre of Pine BIuff, Ark. has|' Jasuary $7—Peansylvania Military College at been elected captaln of the 1923 Geor- | Chastr. ;.\mry‘ 10—Loyela at ST g .‘:.lnl 0—Waesters at Westmia- gia Tech foot ball team. McIntyre has played at guard for the Yellow Jack- ets for the last two years. Baltimare. College. A T THE TWO FASHI 3 Sale Pri . 528 It is an afterthought—yes. You c our overcoats so soon. They are such fine overcoats, and being able to buy overcoats to go the same ratio of reduction. So here we are with the overcoats. of the liveliest ever held. Virginia Polytechnic Institute, through its athletic director, C. P. Miles, is not in accord with those in opposition to the rule, but. he says, “while we opposed the rule when it was first proposed on account of our small student body, after it was put {into_eftect we have become heartily in favor of it.” Auburn, through C. L. Hare. faculty chairman of athletics, admits the j chiet desirable effect of the one-year rule has been imulate in st in freshman foot b It sounds & warn- may introduce in objections unless contes between freshmen are limited. much emphasis’ contends “upon freshmen athletics and 4 number of freshmen large games will lead to unhealthy com- petition for outstanding high school athletics and defeat the primary ob- Ject of the one-year rule—that of preventing proselyting high school Conditions may also arise athletes. rious detriment of his class standing. Transylvant rule becau the larger univi {vantage to the smaller institution: | Biving the former a better opport: i nity to build up a stronger team and the latter simply suffers from a short- age of men. —_— ‘WORCESTER, Mass., December 15. —Albert Riopel, halfback and full- back has been chosen captain of the 1928 Holy Cross foot ball team. Riope! a junfor. ON SHOPS Now Overcoats Come in— Overcoats & Suits ces | 332 an’t blame us for thinking good and hard before we reduced we have been doing so well with them at regular prices. But, frankly, we were a bit conscience-stricken. The men who have been coming in and buying those wonderful suits at the sale prices of $23.75, $28.75 and $33.75 have looked a bit disappointed at not with them at They are as good as the suits—and that is saying a mouthful. There isn’t a better way to cash the Christmas check, and there isn’t a better Christmas thought —one that has any more sense to it—than putting Christmas money into one of these wonderful values in suits and overcoats at $23.75, $28.75 o $33.75. This isn’t a Government department, but we cer- tainly are “paying off” in the way of vaiues. No Charge for Alterations FRED PELZMAN, Pres. Goodman & Suss Clothes Tailored at. Rochester Manhattan Shirts 15th &G Next to Keith's Tashion Sho Stetson Hats—Interwoven Socks s 9th &E Opposite Crmn“'i ORI S OUPPS Y JEN N vl bl