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SPORTS. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, B. €, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER .15, 1924. SPORTS. Maryland Gridmen Scrimmage With Third Corps : Navy Is Priming for Princeton ANNUAL BATTLES BEGUN | THREE ScHOOL 6RID INORTHERN-STANTON GAME |GOBBLERS PREPPING |VARIED ATTACK PLANNED ON COLLEGE PARK FIELD| BATTLES DUETODAY HEADS SUNDAY GRID MENU| FOR THE OLD UNERS| FOR BATTLE WITH TIGERS Foot ball of the first order was - BLACKSBURG, Va., October 15— expected fn three high school games N ORTHERN and Stanton foot ball teams will clash Sunday at 2:30 | Vitkinia Poly foot ball warriors are kly Meetings| today with interest centered on th haiate S Both Teams Profited Greatly by Weekly s St W non Rae o'clock on the Tidal Basin grounds in what promises to be one |their bhig battle with Maryland Midshipmen Are Looking Toward Game at Old N dium. Central High ®School Stadium in .. Y 3 99 H i i ~ £ . . - o Last Fall—Marines Sure to Present “Live Business planned to oppose St. _of the most interesting tilts on the sandlot menu. Contenders for | \Vachington Saturday sau With Hope, in Spite of Beating by Ma t John's College on the Monument | the 135-pound laurels, and each confident of topping the other, the elevens| Poly knows it will be up against g by Marquette. Eleven Against Georgetown. U T e o Aot ang | are expected to supply a game that will rival an unlimited class battle. |*, WoTthY foe in the Curly Byrd's Three Backfields Being Developed. freshmen in a practice match Col- | Sunday’s contestants will be carefully groomed today, tomorrow and Fri- |over a period of five years have been % lege Parle | attered hefore | 433 Capt. Oral Mitchell of the Stantons, a former Gonzaga High athlete, | bitterly” contested e . C. 5 Although Swavely faltered before | and McK & i i tutherford, whose dropkicking 4 obes 1B o BY H. C. BYR Business High, it should extend the (‘llx‘(:ldri‘l‘lls“y of the Northerns, who played with Tech last year, will direct [, ! oo B s s NNAPOLIS, October 15—Navy folks are looking toward the game g at Princeton next Saturday with hope, in spite of the decisive HE Third Army Corps and ‘the University of Maryland began today | Centralites, who failed to make much | "1% = B like a hou e With his hefty of an impression against the Mary- The Northern aggregation is re-|Northerns. The Brookland team is[toe and he is expected to cut quite defeat administered to the Midshipm 1 S d. 2 stere e Midshipmen Saturday. their series of weekly scrimmages, which, last year, were a regular tand freshmen yesterday in scrim- | ported to have four clever ball car- | especially anxlous to arrange a game |a ficure on Saturds 2 B Wednesday performance. Both teams benefited in 1923 from the | mage arill. The Biue and White's line [ riers in McKay, MacDonald, Tebbs | for Sunday. All of the Gobblers came out of | this week indicates that the Navy will have a much more varied attach corkouts and both are pleased to resume them. lacked real offensive driving power |and Ormes. Gass, Worlsman, .Clark, = the Auburn struggle. without tJury. | than it had against Marauette sng will he attack rotiioutsiand botiaie pieasg against the Old Line frosh. Gordon|Van Buskirk, Burg, Drevilius, Bert:| A challenge has been issued by the | This was fortunite, as the blainom & arquette and will be a stronger team in every way When the squads met a year ago in the weekly workouts there was | was the only impressive ball carrier ;nu;x l‘lv'k-‘-l\slek"‘:lfind“:ullivnncsw (‘tn‘.«‘fl C","(",'\f:,,y?"r,""‘k’ u.;:l hopes | presented one of the huskiest teams:| Those connected with the Naval Academy tcam are just h(‘mm'x-;'- 2 ch school team. o be used as Northern linemen. Con- | to tackle the ckerbockers, George- | that Ioly has tackled vears. There al ir breath after the lightning & é s Sr S nothing tame about themt. In fact, so much real foot ball did they put|of the bish schotl el | 010t 0l7 improved since they started | town -Athlotic Club, Apaches Moo | mers o Jon aickled in years. Ther :;:(_n “l‘:l:rt(l;:;:}lr' '}U; ‘_u{_ T the lightninglike change which brought abou: into their play that the day came to be known as “bloody Wednesday.” | ment with St. John's and should | practice several weeks axo, the North- | hawks, Mercury, Yosemites Ar- | sufficient to hinder the scrimmake | 1o be able to ;;' ”."'”‘\"‘ "(_““‘ team in the Tast 10 minutes of the game, But, despite the strenuousness of the practice at times, the value of scrim- | emerge the victor. Western High fol- | erns are 'flvpll 'f' ‘wzlll:)p !:hs: ‘S(?"'“f'f,' h:f’.;(-u. : ;Th:‘!ophm;: {M_“,,’-“. Car- | vesterday against the big freshman Lm-” p milih n‘,v] 'pm\ll\ ble reason for it mage sessions with unknown elements cannot be overestimated. . lowers believe their team will make[a team that claims to have won all | ragher a G&€ 2084 for gam team i otter outplaying Marquette for three quarters and scoring in ! C IS WL S e f ! matters Interesting for the Maryland | of its games last year. - This afternoon will see the final| final quarter by a ficld goal, the Navy had its goal line crosced the It is said that the Third Army Corps is not quite so strong this year | matters | Manager Frank Kersey, who hobes | sorimmage practice before the team | and seemed utterly helpl Y s goal line crossed three time- as last because of losses in the line. But while the line is said to be just | 7§ ':N.,; and Tech gridmen were to| Brookland gridders are ambitious | to schedule a game Sunday for Wi ISiveal hera for. Wi hiietin i .fim el ”‘f( rn' S 2zall st a team which had not made a single a little weaker, it also is said that the backfield is improved. be subjected to some rough treatment j to figure in the 135-pound running. ;»fi:lxyc(ll‘;:tmlt:";nk’v::hi'l:'r. ¢ be tele- P e rfl;rsu e -”r’ xll.‘:,\ r‘l nm ”‘”j.fi;"",'e al| Univ R o5 eparatio e s | Manager Albert Clayton, North 7888, Maryland realizes the need of real|University of Maryland on Thanks- | today in preparation for the opening | Manager Al yton, North 7883, b i i i 2] jiepes: 3 ! - pract in both defensive and of-|giving day, having Pittsburgh sched- |of the 1924 high school championship |intends to ,-Arh:-d;llfl £ames with r’l,llrl"'- Michigan Park Athletic Club took | ‘t:m\”::\o";!:lc:m ":‘v truction of * the | we Wi nclan i fensive work, especially the former,|uled in the Baltimore Stadium. Balti- | series Friday in Central Stadium. endon, the Argyles, Stantons and the |, AUTEPRAR TRE A o e % | RUTGERS NOw AIMS |team up to this time and the fact|simi game, somo imterest ot for its mame with Virginia Poly in[more adherents of the Black and to 19. Kierman played well for the <l i S ol romised Central Stadium Saturday. Blue, and of Maryland also, are : winners. | ve Navy.r : getting an opportunity to work out|getting a fairly e line on the Apaches will invnde Alexandria [IERsttes SDMtnE in | the SIASC quarter |0 e Acaden arainat other teams, as Central and |strength of the Hopkins eleven. Sunday for a game with the Virginia | e opever, tieigmme tdleit edialmum. |yt o= 8L TNe Inithe dact Fastern already have engaged in| It-is generally thought at Hopkins Athlctic Club at Dreadnaught Park. | . " her ‘of elements of strength in: t! tlew: tor e Jepl el practice sessions with it and Western |that the team is the strongest that IS NO I _ - i By dieihmco sl niEseae s nie Naval team L o cers. one for th was due to scrimmage againsi the has ever worn its colors, and the Georgetown Athletic Club will dis. IV v ks Octahier 15 o Gornelly Keep Plays Covered. V5 to 1 . yearling outfit today {game with Pittsburgh should give a * cuss its foot ball prospects at a meet- | reaction to its first defeat in four Yo fs R holies st the Nas - Ny to 0 in 3 | airly ood idea of just how strong ing tonight at 7:30 o’clock in the club- | ¥ears Tarched with luterenct oy o e i 2t fdy i sl daad e While reports are going the rounds 'it is when thrown against the real 9 house | : ¢ big Red sends the | s s ot : Sciin 10 toj0. Wi that the Marines are in bad physical | thing in foot' ball. Pittsburgh ought BY LAWRENCE PERRY. s | -up which lost to Williams | Tation for. any game ecxcept : in Baltimore dr condition for ir game Saturday|io win the contest by four touch- ILWAUKEE, W October 15—What about Marquette? Since| A brisk drill will be in order for| inst a veteran Rutgers eleven in | With the Military Academ ; 5 M S y the Winton players tonight at 7 |the first meeting between the two | brings the season 1ty « = that the agreemer n as an emergen vith Georzetown, when time comes ¢ 1 Dk Ay icons e & el e st s D B L R e the foot ball cleven of this institution went to Annapolis last | {h Winton .plavers tonight .at 7| e fAret, Ll There is caretul avoid toii o I atiihe aaxeomen ably will have the liveliest aggrega-|if it holds the western Pennsylvanians Satufday and smothered the Navy team this question has been | southeast riehly ring and confident | the mistake of bringing the team 2 eton will be r tion of crinples that have becu seen | o anything less than that. i 3 ity to repeat the achieve- | 8long too fast, so that a stum e ase, Princeton will at Grimih's ball park in 2 long while, Tt will be remembered that the| It ix said that White and Cald- The first reaction of the average foot ball follower who knows noth- Marines were “all crippled up” last | well, fullback and halfback on the vear the day befors they played{ Virginia Military Institute eleven, Geos own and also the day beforc | constitute about nine-tenths.of the| org foot ball—is likely as not to be a shrug. nother big game — to | (e Siact. ‘ihe lo0 Axmy Goips, Dt steniiiof ihe tean DWinteil o =2ds . s Manager H. Struder of the Alex return this week to aid Head Coach | have been n a Ma tre | f trip to Princeton 3 1 hunter” “Going out and getting 'em.” | o e LS when hostilities besan it was a dif- | great pnnter, a good man to run with 2 anc geifing, em oA dria Tigers is on the lookout for|Jack Wallace. | and it is quite possible that the st . Ferarit sty 10 supposedly injured | the ball and throws a forward s _ In the interest of the intercollegiate sport and for other reasons, the | ;ames with teams eraging 120 At aca Dobie is working with | ard of the first three men came throush with performances | with exceptional accuracy. Caldwell | writer is happy to correct the impressions as set forth, wherever they | pounds. He mayv be reached at 407! the outfit which lost to Wil- | have been maintained to the that were suff ntly good to winlis good at arrying the ball and{may exist North Alfred street, Alexandria ms players are bending to | the game and nothing me could nave been|catches a forward pass with the same | pgaop in 1920, when the writer last| P St Stephen's gridders, who downed | 1. u;‘,’ ‘|‘ e "“1”‘:‘ : ‘v”l”;;n“\nk ’(‘{‘ .h’rhi‘ rl‘l’”:: }l‘hm'”' ”\' » ¢ sked by their adherents facility that White throws it. Take|was § il Ae—nni Z =z e gt G <k | a heren ey At :‘!‘“Al‘y“'{r‘“m“. M1 |¥as in Milw "’1}“lllr‘"r];’ .m':.'» ":’\_ NOTRE DAME-WEST POINT | Eckington Athletic Club in a 13-t they strike at Rutgers is ex- | that there is no doubt that both w pretty much of a national topic. Wentern Union team is se | Rutgers is sharp- | develop later in the season and 3 t next year, the opponent for Sunday. Teams averag- | ening up the t of its form direct- | the team in poor shape for | mengoi Ann "Arbor : ; S 2> 10| ing 135 pounds may call the | ed at Cornell since the season began, | tic_contest . Y of Michigar ing about Marquette—other than the obvious fact that it is playing high- | 4t Frankiin 3639. | George Foster Sanford, former men- | No doubt, if efforts had been dire an will furnish the b of the New sey =chool, will | ed to that end, a better s e and the Navy te ite Rockne sayx the desire . victory over Ne is considerabl corn husk ~r of Notre Dame lianans' desire for warrantable 83388 * 132382322242 232424 . pened, upon a agement, presented a star in C pee | Long, who is playing in the back-| this year and probably the team|gion_'Marquette was an institution of | mERgemEnt, v a sta pected to sound the quality of their | make a big effort W a v « 5 , Be B et e W ington, st | Would make & rather hoor showin, | Sor it ts Was gn ninn o TICKETS AVAILABLE HERE | tain, “who raced 50 vards o a touen: | porformine. - bia, Dart- | nesitate to ‘use much of thelr a4 Fomin, e i i the other- = taam stered 0| _North Carollan University and | he Marquetie of todav. @ Bus Saturday nre available here. They | tonight and Saturday at 7:45 o'clock, | wil i unity to score |the two teams. Aetini Mars] Long formerly | North Carolina State hook up tomor-|2Toup of splendidly designed s may be procured up until Friday |at the Georgetown Hollow. . ek, and Coach Dobie is con- Eoma L ¥ stern Maryla OB rmerlY | row at Taleigh in one of the big|Puildings, housing medical, dental, | il from Jumex K. Hays, Seeres Y sl e le oo Naval scouts reported that Prince playedi Bome DAl st of T hectlo - Onal Bectns |12, (ifYerall attis fand) varlous other |8l 57 SiU S NGEY. (ime ‘A Tarint Mercury Athletic Club's pilot s . n elimination of this de- | played much the same g Maryland and, while a fellow prob- | & e 2 institutional departmen sts to % |urged to get in touch with Mana rovement of the | Lehigh as the Navy did a 1 : largest crowds of the foot ball year, Axsociation. His rexidence in 9035 (3 i s ably dislikes In = way ito beat i | o e e ety 1o | eikitorawhoimenw Stha ol et |lin onamin it and hix telephone | Binnon of the Seaman Gun 3 ular emphasis | quette last Saturday. ana 1 team, it nevertheless pleases him | and : 5 siastic al-§ jette something closely akin to the % Lincoln 4730, goals, for use if an- | plain indicati that there z know that he is on a bottes onc. | WAys watches the contest. And it is|INerte Sometiins cIBRes SO S0 FIC| in Columbin ! « 1 ar the end of the | ypine fedh b gl ~ Hopkinx University plays on|eral public. Everybody there is for |(iThed out to Welcome Gi (nm DACT resse - tollowaresweck this year until' it faces the|question of his or hem partisanship. |Slearly how the Cream City fecls | Ating t . R e 3 To Match Your Odd Coats St b Wi WITH TIGER LINE-UP. ON LOSING ELEVEN 35 Tl St M, Cufim i 500 AU SISEMAN’S, 7th & F 1¢ y |but is open to all creeds and sects. - Y S Thanksgiving | 170§ =g . EISEMAN’S, 7th & 1 STAR AND NICKNAME |‘BIG THREE’ ELEVENS |one-rourth of ‘tne studints are rrot- ay In 1350 Il oo one of consgant | KLY to d custom next = estants—150 Methodists are listed in| e —— St ——— © inter £ pe- | Saturda ) 5 r pirit o nfidence in the Do- strength in d to carr: 4 LOST BY MARQUETTE| MUST BE BOLSTERE bt meatly A0 CO | pmivewmoN. X 3. ctaber 5 —ror |y e i P s s confaents S Bt sty m ko | ) sessssssassssanse , Jews and so on.|geveral hours yesterday the Princeton | (w1110 October i . 006 tho tis | eontiny raertanehnalt e i registration is slightly more | varsity line-up was shifted back and g ; : : % not placed | Folwell s assistants i — |than 5,000. | forth ‘and the coaches jromised that,two score foot ball e Herb rdy, but the possible effect of | in& to this end syetas P4 E ostte University foot ball ' WALTER CAM | With two exceptions, the entire foot | it will be a far different team that |Steger of Oak Park in ot o e : quota of Jetent backs is Tl arquett niversi t ba BY cAwr ¢ 5 ot | f n the mo of the | Quota of competent back team which beat the Navy at Annapolis| Hou 3 ball squad is composed of Wisconsin | faces the Navy here Saturday from the | ¢ho University of Michigan eleven, has | j s 1 mtoliod Basd Saturday, his lost a singer, and, as a| Here is a summary of some of|boys, although the university draws|one which fought a mno-score battle |, = .o .0 = 0 (T N e e ol hax fo. dtstnctls Ahe consequence, a nickname. the vital and tender spots in the|heavily from North and South Dak with Lehigh last week. e el The NIMGUGIREReoRT ol N : Hatite: aealat o1 [he acks, while Flipp: 4 g &l anatomy of the “Big Three” “Yoot|and Minnesota well as fr the | Following the introduction of sev-| having played on a losing team. g o it PR . In the' last two years, through the |?T ) v its opponents. In 15 con- |lings and H. H warbling of Charlie Regan. a varsity |Pall teams as they stand today. home State. With regard to eligibil- | eral new plays which may or may not| In next Saturday's game his record | : opposition was kept scor ioalimpressions n Cr it end, 3 | Yale: HMas not vet finally settled|ity for the various varsity athletlc|be unicosed asainst the Middies. DInS-| i mee¢ its supreme test when his . Dartmouth, Columbia |regularly in the fir T 2 i known The Singing Hi {upon a quarterback. To the writer's |organizations, including foot ball, |more generaled the varsity un and | N MEEE (5 SIPTERE, PO SRR B SR CEEEIE ere the most im- | seldom ried b PAY AS YOU RIDE name that brouzht them renown on |mind, far more serious point is|th e s!{\‘mlnrds are applied as|down xhp'fi»u)x but ‘:e:- Was 10 as- | he -filinois stadium at Urbana t 1s crushed by the Dobie | Second string 1 E »ns. Before big games,|in the lack of development of the|exist in the Western C: surance that he would be at quarter- | ypi€, oo HOS S tied N ring the Red regime. Albertson, Que m was waiting to go out line. It looked for a time as if their [the exception that freshmen aturday v Western' Confe . = star like K ve given consi DT oAy p sm;”l Payment Down , Coach Frank Murray |kicking might be weak with the|may play outside games. out was missing from the | a0 geason, although ti y credi v some wit vy coaches t : alance Monthly would ask Regan, who is quite a singer, |amount of protection the rest of the dmission o the universi L6 D, DHCERIS Sbsenceiwas dueitota i ce cach other 10w am, which |complete rela to lead in a pep song. A victory al-[team provided, but Failing seems based upon certificate from recog- '“.’}' P\'l v:cfl. | In the fifteen games Steger hs d to depend upon individual | necessary in 1 i n t Sav. folliored now to get distance and Beight with |nized high schools and secon pOne thing has been settied by Coach ved with Michigan, the closest e pace of its lin t T 0 PROBEY CO Regan, however, has graduated and |some reasonable assurance despite the | Schools or, lacking this. upon Bl omevet, and that was that S scoreless tie with Wander 2l s _ 1t is certain il 2 Coach Murray and his assistants have |tendency of the line to give way.|trance examinations. There is no :\_r:vl }3” be at center. So far the He started in the li p i keep up its pac been o busy drilling their men in|Thev also are Vulnerable to wide end |more chance of 3 ringer being inducted | DIVol place has been occupied either | oniy one game that year, the cor he highest price cver paid for alstraight plays ag preparation for the foot ball game with | running on their defense and their|into the foot bafl eleven at Marquette | Y¥ Forrest or McMillan. with Illinois. Last year he wi i 000 for Bota- | employs them in the Navy that they have not had time attack still lacks that drive which itthan at Wisconsin. It would be too| —_——— — | regular and shared in Michigan's 3 fore, it is highly to call “choir practice” “,.__4‘!] find n‘hn# last sear s !;uu‘h to a (h:n]nn proselyting is EILBAE A | seven victories. He had aided in two ag use the pass as song-leader for the squac he sin rinceton: e Tiger eleven must|done, but if it is done it is as care T | victories this season Ing that is done will have to be im-|come down to earth with a steady,|fully concealed and as sporadic as it| ' STOCK. Under Glen Thistlethwaite, now promptu, A y dependable center trio on offense and |is among the big ten of the West, the | BALTIMORE, October 15.—James |coach at Northwestern, the Oak Park The Singing Hilltoppers.” therefore, | defensea The team is fast and the |big three of the East or any other|F. O'Hara of Baltimore has confirmed | High School ran up a long string of are no lol er, but Milwaukee sporting | forward passing well conceived, but|g&roup. | reports that he and Gad Bryan of At- | victorieg in which Steger was of writers have picked an even better | there still is too much irregularity ip| Marquette draws athletic material [lantic City, N. J.. had disposed of [the backfleld mainstays. Such a name. and the eeven is now known|the charge and sometimes in the |from the Catholic secondary schools, | their stock in the Jefferson race track | string of victories has brousht Steger as_ the ,.‘d.T\ ,\\-tx..nf.-m-"h —rn‘,s passing and an unsteadiness which |Jjust as does Notre Dame, and this is|to a New Orleans syndicate. 'the title of Coach Yost's “mascot.” came as a result of the fact that the|will be more noticeable when the [Something of an asset. But the Mil-| Marquette team has not been defeated | Tigers meet some bigger game. They | waukee college recognizes its oblign- | R — since November, 1921, and that it has |are fumbling badly and that, too, in|tions in behalf of sport decently or- such a heavy, powerful line. ‘[htlr best running game. ganized and cleanly played. There is| Harvard: The Crimson still lacks|no reason why it should not be an While the Uni ¥ - 4 - ,o.‘. S -|".:',.?::".',',;,,""\vi‘,‘,:;"‘('““o‘m-h- ion between backs and line. |Increasing force in this respect in members of the hard, hitting back. | EVerY mow and then the line is|this region | ] Heiahn st A saard |moving forward all right when the| Frank Murray, the coach, is e S e Pr»},i:s""‘wn backs hit—but not always. And it |Tuftsman who never played foot ball | to feel that the easy schedule of the |CeTtainly does knock the confidence [at his college. He came to Mil- : out of a backfield man to have his |waukee as assistant to Huski gives them a greater chance . b o A x own line coming toward him when |now coach at Wisconsi of attaining fame than does anything | il = il o e anicocs ANTIRINE ine iattiices: not only the groundwork but ere DesaioNn e v material, the structure of a sound and victo- | : T rious system of foot ball. He is also | Washington's games, exce, 1 Califomis atair o ot ook ai| SERIES IS DEADLOCKED, |%Cull professor of economics and is all difficult. Neither Stanford nor| g EessucoqiSslons ofithe anlest toachie B = Southern California is met. The Bears | KANSAS CITY, October 15.—An er- |at the university. Freeman z- | y i EE tackle | California Sontherners (he|TOT in the twelfth inning yesterday |gerald, his line coach, is a Notre 1 R 7033 Weok before they piay the Seattle|€ave the Kansas City Monarchs a|Dame broduct, and Llovd Scott, the . —— eleven and are likely to present o |4-to-3 victory over the Hillsdales of [other assistant, hails from Colgate.] baftié-worn! ot (tojithe)bis mortn=| o dcIDniSHI Ehs moventhisame the — e = two teams are pl-;llying ;r;‘r the negro The problem of Enoch Bz e world championship. e series iS| yn Sweden an elk has been broken e enlamicr Bnoch Bagshaw, the | o wateven! each tean Shavingh wonl| 1o g SseE Suie L de Lol L L ST ot sot s op|three games and one resulting in a |racer, giving fast horses at Stock- last year—he has got to find a clever | hice Bame field general. 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