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SPORTS. A1 HE _EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON,. D. C., SATURDAY { NOVEMBER 8, 1924. ‘'SPORT i Only a Few Outstanding Confests Are Being Staged in Foot Ball Realm Today TWO GAMES HOLD CENTER OF STAGE IN THE EAST Harvard and Princeton Open Big Three Serie: While Ruigers’ Eleven Appears Due to Have Record Marred by Lafayette. By, thie Assor N EWW YORK, November & The ¢ before the final storm of action foot ball scason will come today on Eastern gridirons, where I Harvard and Lafayette and Rutgers meet in the two 1 ant contests of a sparse program Ihe Tiger-Crimson clash at Cambridge will inaugurate the Big Three seri one of the six unbeaten elevens of the East, is vette, which defeated Pittsburgh and W. and J., and . although losing to the latter last week. n cleven, will be tested by Holy Cross. Penn h will connect at State College, with the Nittany favorite over the Tartars, who, however, were good enough Pittsbu which later tied Syracuse. Marquette, whose ning streak was broken last Saturday by Creighton, will »ston College. Harvard will vorite for victory tirely upon Tiger 1 best Har EBill ment With @ Ticer behind a | may : pecially er the an ant e Bast, w outscori best kicker an elusive ru figured to | enter t Wl the of he game a fa-| whose hopes A almost plac h have played the selison en- ALL-AMERICAN |Foot Ball th o experi- | the bartle working Crimson | expected kfield The PLUNGE FORWARD WHEN TACKI.ED vania, neither Alexandria was to be the scene of | two good hizh school foot ball games 1 | today. The high school team of that ter m stand jcity was to play Swavely Prep, while i State, prom- | | Episcopal _planned to entertain the »or rd for thel . %7 ost amportant poinis i v inia Ep opal gridmen. seuson apense of Vermont. | for a mai o keep in mund in | Twoomey and Wright of Devitt Brown t Uaskell Indians: | open field ruaning? | Prep were exp 1 to impress in the Dartir takes « on Univ swered by | game today against the academy team | sity, t s | it Charlotte Hall, Md. ‘BOB ZUPPKE tun York Herd foot ball coach, Universicy of Colzat - Ilinoix. Winner of many W the high-sc chines Confercnee championships by superb son, v 1 t stratezy and “open foot ball.” tuss R whe 15 Lo tho <t Way 1. To take the shortest distance to Wi g : ¢ the Associnted Pross the . Fo run as hard, as fast as pos-| ~“ATLANTA, Ga. November 8.—New oS le, in the spaces between the tac- | trails are b blazed today in | Some Gomparixons. Klers, and not to slow down too|Southern foot ball in some cases s\nd} with 1823 scores: | soon for a change of pace or stiff others the way has been found 05 arm. again after teams have wandered | : 3. To m sciof hic interferonce | From e path: i {380 maleinseioflhi: kinterterence (EERE SRR L & HCr GR B and ot run out into the open 00 |y1aq, in which the contestants were | s soon and to draw the tackler into|not matehed last season. In several | 0 | his personal interfcrence before he|cases. howev clations are being | S¥racuse interds to dart out into the open. |resumed after an interruption. To avoid being tackled near the| Alabama and Kentucky had a battle : side lines; and if tackled near the!|Of sorts last year, the Crimson win- . side lines 56 pliee one foél‘;r‘ hand | BinE from the Wildcats, 18 to 8. rteide the fold of ol In the annual game between Geor- eptuige wieidldior olave . |gia ana Virginia Georgia was re- mbia While running. not to exhibit his | turned the winner, 13 to 0. intent ad a stutter turn or twist at moment of impact; ) straight arm and fade away. 1ING fiing s too soon. to—(a) Ch ge the e TON STROKE PLAYING AT PETERSBURG | ¢ 'WASH fil S BEGOMING POPULAR Conn., November 8 S i at imitators and - jright now there is a mper to get HEAVYWEIGHT HOPL‘. Washington stroke,” said Fd | Leader. Yale rowing coach, whose Eli lerew won a world Olympi | nship last year after suc country umni in an address to gathering here. IS SEEN IN LESTER | “The stroke soon will ha standard- BY FAIR PLAY. ized and races will be fousght NIW YORK. November S —This Pat [out on @ basis of training and race Lester, who is one of the heavies [psychology.” Leader said. The stroke that Tex Richard has induced to head [ which brought victory to the Yale New Yorkward, is regarded L crews during the past two vears of famous Califr s training cannot long remain a Prospect. for . accret, Le said, and_ shortly will be two Judges v in general use. Leader said the time manager Cev. and Spider |had passed when a man in tralning Kelly, fam boih of whom | must confine himse'f to chewing have been & Patrick beef. “Eat plain, wholesome food. The fact remains that in his Cali- | eat regularly, sleep regularly, don't fornia appearance, Pat, who Is six |Smoke, don't eat between meals and feet f hiss landatithe ks lot [leave sweets alone,” he counseled. o Tai because of the z y of| “The ‘Ii.mril‘gl;‘h‘:;'&:o = ‘xdfia that 2 every- | beer Is the it thing rain on, Cen i €Y | he said. “Perhaps that is all right While the target he of him- |for young Englishmen brought up self has led to the opinion in Cali- oD beer, but it is no good for young fornia that he won't do, yet the|American college fellows. fact that he has never bheen knocked Leader declared that the “greatest down. or even been made to back |Face ever rowed” was the Yale race up and that he has handed out sev- | With the Navy crew in the Olympic R Enockoute, inclines thoughttw |trials at Philadelphia. critics serve their opinions. 1t is certain t Lester is slow learning to box. He minds his handlers ity, never leads with rever slugs or violates other his richt orthodox rules of boxing. All this | may make him scent slower and more | deliber is He s eloping a straight left—the kind that old-time Doxers rave about—and is giaduall developing the use of his right as I a secondary defense and also as a means I of assault. T SR all mixed up sometimes. NAME FIELD FOR GRANGE. CHICAGO, Novemb. S. — Harold (“Red"”) irange, 1llinois foot ball star, i$ commemorated to future high | school students by their new athletic | field, which has been christened Grange Field. ” The Wheaton village council in naming the field expressed the belief that Grange is the young- | cabin in time for the noon meal “When we returned to the cabin at o having walked far and hunted est athlete to be so honored. Grange | ROOD, | 1 dunted from the Wheaton High |mishtily without success, we found Eradunted rrom i E% | the lazy renegade sitting in the sun— = = <A and sitting on the carcass of a mag- nificent buck! “He told his story; how he had come out at noon, and on approaching the TIP FOR FISHERMEN. HARPER'S FERRY, W. Va., Novem- ber §.—The Potomac and Shenandoah :rs both were clear this morning. | the clearing. He put his gun together et i S quletly, loaded it, and shot the deer. Washington Gun Club members| I once knew a hunter who was very were to compete in the 100-target|thorough in his -preparations for his all-around ck2mpionship trap shoot|annual deer hunt. On this particular today over the Benning range. occasion$he made great plans, and, in fact, spent the whole evening previ- [ FOOT BALL YESTERDAY ; ous to the opening day in getting ready. He prepared several tabloid Menderson Brown, 19; Arkamsas | Normal, 3. meals which he secreted about his person to be used in emergency; he mounted elaborate maps on linen and blocked them out so that he could Ouachita, 13; Louisinna Poly, systematize his day's hunt; he did Furman Freshmen, 40; Carolina | everything the human mind could in- Freshmen, 0. vent to insure successtul adventure. Vtah Agricultural College, 13;| He left early in the morning, his Brigham Young University, 9. Oregon Aggles, 11; Washingtom State College, 13. already rotund figure bulging in many places with the fruits of his prepara- tions. He walked scarcely @ quarter cabin saw this big deer standing in| | Granse, D. C. COLLEGE TEAMS ALL ON FOES’ FIELDS Today loomed as a fine oportunity for the University of Maryland and Georgetown gridmen to gain na- tion-wide fame. With no college games scheduled locally here, interest was centered at New Haven, where the Old Liners are meeting Yale, and at Philadelphia, where the Hilltoppers are clashing with Pennsylvania. Catholic University and Gallaudet vade Virginia for a pair of con- ts and they are figured to bring home the bacon. The Brooklanders are at Lynchburg, while Gallaudet ig at Randolph-Macon. George Wash ington was primed for its game with | Pennsylvania Military team at Ches- ter, Pa. Although Maryland is not expect- ed to topple Yale, it promised to sup- ply the Bulldog something to worry about. The Old Liners were to en- ter the fray with Supplee, regular end, at quarterback. Georgetown also is not figured to win over the sturdy Pennsylvania combination. Coach Lou Little of the Blue and Gray, however, feft the v confident that his team woula give a good account of itself. With the varsity away, the Cath- olic University freshmen were to ltackle the Apprentice School team of Newport News, Va, in the Brook- land Stadium. HARVARD IS DEPENDING ON ICEMAN-GRIDIRONER CAMBRIDGE, Mass,, November 8.— The ice wagon school of gridiron preparation, which figured in the molding of the career of “Red" famous 1llinois back, will ainother graduate tomight if amache, Harvard sophomore asainst Princeton in his first me at end. nache, whose home is in Leo- . Mass., put himself into shape this season’s campaign by lug- chunks of ice during the Sum- Most of Gamache's previous s heen at center ampbell, former and Harvard end natural wing- Crimson’s hopes have Ergest stars i « minste for ng mey G Lo tivityN ackle, but Dav or t 1 star Much center about his work. man of the TWO SCHOOL GRID TILTS ON ALEXANDRIA FIELDS | .2t SOUTHE | ng run; (b) reverse | € | THE CALL OF THE OUTDOORS BY WILL H. DILG, President, Izaak Walton League of America. T is not always the man who goes farthest from camp who gets the most games Of course, the general rule is that the heaviest bags and fullest creels go to the most energetic worker, but the gods get things “I recall last November on the occasion of a deer hunt, of mine the other day, “one of the party demurred at getting up so early in the morning, the alarm having been set at 3 o'clock so that we could get out to the cabin and get started at daybreak. We left our fellow hunter to his fate on his promise to get up later and come out to the RN GRIDDERS HAVING A BUSY DAY hard fight against but was de- Florida put up Army last season, ted, 20 to 0. Maryland threw a scare into Yale losing a hectic struggle, 16 t f before to 14 Vanderbilt and the Mississippi Ag- gies became involved in an argu- ment that could not be settled last season and it will be renewed this afternoon. Last year's game resulted in a scoreless tie. V. P. I was able to defeat North Carclina_State by a score of 16 to 0 and V. M. I scored a 9 to 0 victory over the University of North Caro- lina. Furman won from the University of South Carolina by a score of 23 to 3. Clemson’s Tigers turned back the Davidson Wildcats, 12 to 0. Galaudet ran up a score of 21 to 0 against Randolph Macon. ANNUAL MEETING OF A. L. TO BE HELD IN ST. LOUIS CHICAGO, November 8—President Ban Johnson of the American League has announced that he has awarded the Spring schedule meeting to St. Lou The session at which the 1925 play- ing chart will be drawn up will be held on February 12. This is the first time that a major league meeting has ever been held in St. Louis. — GOLDSTEIN BOOKS BOUT. CHICAGO, November 8.—Abe Gold- stein, bantamweight champion, has been matched to box Eddie Shea of Chicago, in a 10-round contest at East Chicago next Friday night. said a friend of a mile, shot a big buck, and his annual hunt ended with the crack of his riflp. He came back to camp as mad as a wet hen, cussing his luck. And he had shot a most unusual dee A friend of mine once recounted to me the experience of his most dis- couraging hunt. With a companion he was canoeing down a small Northern stream. The trip had been prolonged, and food was becoming light in the grub sack. So the two campers decid- ed to have some fresh meht in the shape of partridge, the sedson then being open. So one night they stopped early, and after setting up the tent hurriedly, set off into the woods to hunt. They hunted long and diligently, but saw not a feather. Tired and rather dis- couraged, they returned to camp. As they approached the tent they un- loaded their guns, and had no sooner done so than six beautiful partridges flew out of their tent. The birds had apparently come in to investigate while the hunters were away in search of them. | he was doing that evening. Genius Afire SALSINGER. HE real development of Ty | T Cobb as a ball player did not | take place on the playing ficld at Augusta, but in a Summer amuse- ment park. Here, where the work- ing classes of Augusta sought relief and recreation in the Summer eve- nings, the foundation was laid for Cobb’s meteoric rise and dynamic career. Leidy decided, after closely observ- ing Cobl’s play, that this boy could not be developed by ordinary coach- ing. He knew the boy had imagina- tion, and he concluded that the most effective methods with him would be to appeal to this imagination. | Cobb was a stranger in 4\ugn~'l:xi and one day Leidy asked him what Cobb re- plied that he had no engagement and Leidy invited him out to the Summer pa his park. at the end of the car maintained by the street car company because of the financial ad- | vantages to be gained, had the usual Summer rk equipment—merry- round, Ferris wheel, vaudeville show cave-of-the-winds and so forth. T. this place Leidy took his vouthful re- cruit. They walked around and Leidy, finally, sugwested that they sit down | and rest awhile. line, Sowlng the Seeds. As they sat on a bench Leidy com- | mented on the amusement offerings. “You ought to see what they have in the big cities. This Is nothing. Why, in New York and Chicago, Bos- | more i | produced, Delan Scwirg the Seeds— Ty Cobb’s Resolve. oncned the ga tion to these pa Finally, after n the other Cobb parks. es of Co wlises of the Leicy had attractions about the "hey're ima North tou he begar major league vast stadiums tel ball built of stone and concrete, enormous places like palaces, just like the old Romans and the Gr used to have for their games where the lions Just used like, to th fizht where the gladiators battled hand to hand till one was dead “Why, vou think we had a big erowd out today. Say, in them big cities a crowd like this couldn’t he seen in them parks. If they didn't have more people than that out to % game they wouldn't open the gates. They're more people out to a game in them bigz towns than there is peo- ple in all of Augusta.” Then he told him of the fame that came to major lcague stars. How all the metropolitan newspapers ran their pietures, how great writers de- voted columns to them, how every- Lody honored them. A star ball play- erow ccording to Le much ortant than the President. The Picture Grows. He would tell the youngster of the stars e had produced; the | Eroup of base ball immor He re- lated their deeds of valor. He would b a detailed account of the base- g ability of, some of the old stars and add, after moment of re- flection, but to be frank with 1, . I think you got more speed than ¥ of them fellows had” He told » of the great hitters the g: e had n d Anson, W ner and Lajole, who was up then, of others. He would pause and con- fide to Cobb, “but I think you could become a better hitter thdn any of them fellows.” ton and Detroit, Cleveland and Cin- [ ana so, day after day. Leldy, the cinnati and those cities they have | ,n€ S0 SO¥ @ S e parks that would swallow a dozen of | call ypon his imagination to build these places and you'd never notice ;o\, DRYU U9 MAEHALON te bl ‘em. You've heard of Coney Island, | (W B ECEECS TOF MY 3 tinsel e ioeaaao Eend 08 Coney IS\rS: |pi| Dayidtter dayihie addedi tinselito aa e S » Coney 182 lthe goal he was making brilliant; he Ana Leldy followed with a viyia |2 fring ambitlon in the hgy. Leldy . i £ hecame more and more convinced that Worakpictuze OtfiConeysaaiany | iHe SRS ERRS SRT RS conviced Shel went into minute detail, and, as he o it s saw the concentrated interest of his listener, he called upon his imagina- | tion to supply added features. hey were back the next evening, | Cobb and Leidy. Again they sat un- | der the tree, on the old iron bench, | and, while the barkers shricked their wares, and the merry-go-round organ uealed out its old tunes, and th uth of Augusta laughed and velled in amusement, Leidy gave Cobb fur ther word pictures of the big citie the hugeness of them, their vastnes the fascination of the metropo H and all that was n blaze incentive doing and he ded to start the iis Leidy was was pleased to note that iterest became keener. He asked questio ought information. The boy was construct- ing a picture of his own. goal. He had firml become part of the 1 1t was solved to Tomorrow—Chapter VIII—Hard Work Copyright, 1921, in Canada and Great Rrits icon Newspaper Aliance. served.) EASTERN BEATS BUSINESS IN POOR GRID SPECTACLE T'S rather tough to be a doormat year after vear in the high school championship foot ball series. eleven suffered yesterday at the he That 45-to-6 beating t hands of Eastern demor Business trated be- vond a doubt that the Stenographers are once more the underdogs of a titular series. Eastern could not claim much glory by the big score it piled up, for its foe produced about the most dismal brand of competition seen in any of the series games for many moons. There has been a total of 79 points | scored against Business in two series | ames, as Western High beat the| Stenographers, 34 to 0. However, there is one ‘outstanding reason for | the failure of Business to do well in the titular competition. There are not more than 300 hoys, probably, in the student body at Business, and the foot ball material combed from this | small number is about as productive as a diamond manufacturer. | Frequent fumbling on both sides marred yesterday activities. At times Eastern played just as poorly as its lowly rivals. There was one scintilating spot in the Ninth Street- ers’ play, though. The small crowd in the stadium was made to realize that Munson is one of the best de- fensive centers in the high schools It Coach Lynn Woodworth could dis- cover several “Munsons” he undoubt- edly would make the rival teams sit up and take notice. It is regretted in high school ranks that the team Eastern presented yes- terday could not tackle Western and ‘Tech. With Flaherty, Sweeney and Eggleston in a revamped line-up, the East Capitol street boys showed fre- quent flashes of real foot ball ability. /p and Summary. Positions. Business (6). Hogge........... Left end ~Cooperman Radice. Left L Commings Sutton Teft ~Nickolm Hughes. Cent Eggleston bt g i Sheehy.... "Rizht tackle.... Flaherty. “Right end.. [ Sweeney . Quarterbac Kesuler, . LTeft halfback... Hool Right halfback Heeke ... Fullback. ....... Score by periods: Eastern 6 12 14 Business 8 0 0 Snbstitutions: Fastern—Parker for Hetntz for Sheohy, Sheehy for Heintz, for for Hogge, Ia ammerer for Nickol, ‘aylor, Evans for Cooperman, Kessler, Kessler Ker_for Mills Taylor for . Cooperman_for Evans, Tew for Klank. allowitz for Munson. Tonchdowns—K (2), Sweeney (2), Flaherty, Hook, Parl Stewart. Points 'after touchdowns - Kexslor (2), Howard. Referce—Mr. Magofin (Michi- gan). Umpire—Mr. Towers (George Washing- ton). THead linesman—Mr. Quigley (Ienn). Time of periods—10 minutes. SWIMMER BECOMES PRO. NEW YORK, November 8 —Norman Ross, outstanding swimmer of the country prior to the advent of John- ny Weismuller, has resigned his ama- teur standing to become director of swimming at the Detroit A. C. At one time Ross held more than 75 world and American swimming rec- ords. MANOR LOFT PIGEON WINS 200-MILE RACE Manor Loft's entry set the pace for other birds in the third pigeon race from Danville, Va, to Wash- ington, conducted under the auspices of the Washington Racing Pigeon Club. The racer covered the 200- mile course in 5 hours 20 minutes. Complete returns with the average speed in yard a minute follow: Manor Loft, 1,083; F. J. Voith, 1,078; Phil Krouse, 869; F. E. Dismer, 854; M. J. Fitzgerald, 801. The third race over the West course, flown from Connellsville, Pa., a distance of 160 miles, was won by one of F. H. Crown's birds. The speed averages of the recorded re- turns follow: F. H. Crown, 689; C. and W. R. Pennington, 676; Louis Hofer, 649; Manor Loft, 607; J. W. Frank, 595; A. B. Moore, 529; H. E. Findlay, Navy Loft, 527. 528; Inside Golf By Chester Horton Another point that is proved through picturex made by the new Process of 250 pictures per second is that in the orge photographed, the clubhend ix taken back from the bail on a straight line and ix kept low ing kept even with the Gradually the ac celerated speed of the clubhend causes it to gain Instilling Confidence— | [win Duncan swing. so | to the ground.| .stinies of its members, is a fine There ix no wrist |, ver, although he has never won netion whateveri e pig title. Crabb not played in the firxt two-|i; the open championship for many thirds of this| oars although he has a fine game back swing, the|,f golf and has been around the clubhead be- hands. | 265 HARRIERS SEEK COLLEGIATE TITLE Assacinted Press, I YORK. Movember S.—-A fleld hill and dale runners, repre- 19 eastern institutions, has the 1924 inter- nntrv © over the Park . when Syracuse conrse on w 1 de- fend the championghip it has won | for the past two years. Johns Hopking, which produced the | | individual iner last year in Vern | coth, will not Le represented in the | | 1924 varsity race, which promises a | stirrimg fizht for individual as well | m honors. | hampion Orange harriers have f the victorious 1923 powerful nucleus for their third straight crown. As a racuse probably will start Lut faces keen opposition, | particul from Columbia, runner- |up last vear, which has veteran | tes Dartmouth, winner of the | recent quadrangular race with { Columbia, Pennsylvania and Cornell, and Yale, which has a strong squad individual ace in “Mac” Smith, reshman winner of 1923, who cap- cd the recent Springficld meet in brilliant time of 31 minutes 59 scconds. This performance for a mile race eclipses the record for Van Cortlandt Park set by Looth last year at 31:10. Cornell. winner of 17 plonship races held since 1899, 1 veteran leader in Ed Kirby, who contender for in- laure but Jack Moakley squad apparently Is not up to former standards. Pennsvlvania also has an ace in Elmer McLane, but does not figure as a strong team contender. Harvard has two capable men in | Chapin and Cutcheon, while Holy | Cross has an Olympic team star in » Larrivee, le, Muine, of the 24 char has al <yracuse and Pennsyl- with 20" entries each, have ated the largest eligible lists varsity Only seven are permitted to start under the colors of afly one college, however, while only the first five figure in the team ng. rnell has 19 entries, while the rs are as follows: Columbia, 16; Bates, 15; vard, 15; New York Unive ‘ Rutgers, 15; Dart- 1 nceton, M mouth, a- ; City College of New 11; Holy Cross, 10; Lafayette, and HR 4 the course of the Congression; , and another on nefit of th » Sarazen Af in 1 performer n championship sar, will pair with “Long Jim’ York against Fred snal at Columbia and ensation of profes- and a most con- since he annexed at Skokie in that won W toppled h many strokes to spare. | Barnes from his following vear, the last 18 holes from Bobby Jones and John who trailed the little Italian- n pro by one shot. back in the dim years of | American golf—1905—McLeod won tho American open championship. T®e Mideet,” as he whs then known, | became the glant of the game, for McLeod tied with Willie Smith at the Myopia Hunt Club, and then go- Sarazen throne at shooting to win Elack, | Americs Away J rabb, the Congressional | -hole match starting at | OFFOW MOrnineg. Thf_‘ after- {noon round will start at 1:45. | Jim Barnes won the open title at | Columbia here in 1921, flashing into | tho lead with a 69 over the first | round and maintaining a steady pace | | | a 68 over ing out in a gale of wind, won the ay-off. ther Meleod, Sarazen {or Barnes has ever repeated in the open championship, but for that mat- | only three men have won the twice in the last 16 years. Crabb, a jovial Scot, ob- the Congressional Club a vear ago to preside over the golfing FORMER GOLF CHAMPIONS ' TO PLAY HERE TOMORROW| > former holders of the most coveted goli championship in the | d—the United States open—will play together tomorrow over | for one of Washington’s most worthy organizations. Three great golfers, whose names are bywords wherever the game is v lesser known because he has not played in so v competitions, will play at Washington" b - Instructive Visiting Nurses’ Society. GEORGE V. ROTAN TELLS Francis Ouimet’s Two Supreme Putts ILLINOIS-CHICAGO BATTLE FEATURES WESTERN CARD Windy City Aggregation Will Bend Every Effort to Call Halt on Zuppke’s Team—Has Toiled on Methods to Check Grange. Associated Pross. HIC/ ), November 8 —The .University of 1llinois came to Chicago today for the greatest test of the season of its Western Confer- ence foot ball supremacy, the contest by far overshadowing two other conierence games and a meeting of Notre Dame with Wisconsin at Madison. Chicago, second in Big Ten ranking to Illinois because of a t played w-lh_(‘,hin State, had to present to the great Harold “Red” Grange. lllinois’ nationally famed halfback, a line reckoned, tackle to tackle, the best in the conference, and an entire team pointed since the season opened for today’s game. It appeared that Grange was in for his greatest individual test of the season, after brilliant feats in the Michigan and Iowa games which left him with a record of better than a point a minute of play and an average ie game of more than 10 yards gained each time he carried the ball. 7 Weeks ago the 33,000 seating capac- sEvacE TEAMS FAGE ity lva Stagg Field was sold out. No \kl.u:dln‘: room was available today | and the few tickets in speculators hands found a ready market at from 310 to 50 apicce, with the demand greatly overtopping the supply. Notre Dame hoped for a victory by way of some of the spectacular play- ing that brought wins over the Army Princeton and Georgia Tech and was anxious to journey to Southern Cali- ON CAMP MEADE GRID, Foot ball of the first order was expected in the Marine Barrack Tank Corps game at Camp Meade today starting at 2:30 o'clock. Both teams have pointed the way (o2 on New Year's day with an to the Engineers of Fort Humphreys, | Unsullied record. Coach Rockne had his full strength in the line-up, with T Captain Walsh back at center and Stuhldreher in the pilot position. The Badgers, after two weeks o preparation, had an unknown bag of tricks. They were in better condi- tion than at any time during the sea- son. No championship hopes hung in the Iroquois and Renroc elevens were to be opponents today at 2 o'clock,| on field No. 1 at Potomac Park. Corinthian players are seeking a | game tomorrow with some team aver- aging 90 pounds. Telephone chal lenges to Manager Boswell at Frank- |balance as Northwestern came o Mgy |zrips with Michigan at Ann Arbor. [Michigan was favored to win becauss |Coach Yost decided to start Capt CUE STAR TO PLAY. [Herb Steger at his usual halfback Thomas Husstom, former . three- (803 TROTETEDle lacked Its'two regu- cushion billiard champion. will mect | 27 G038 2n¢ (ne of its tackles, hut Charles Bartelmes tonight at the |~ po ywocrn oft o {’o 2 ‘m-’*, 5 Lewis and Krauss parlors. Hueston |5 ©i° 1 rEl “’{,-»‘ A -‘-h"_ ) s took the measure of B. Rowland|tioT; befun 1ast week > scalp Clark, 250 to 174, and Capt. Hardin, | (rEEalteERtNORy caTs SO T failure. Indiana and Ohio State renewed re- lations at Columbus for the first time 250 to 155, last night. since 1917. The Buckeyes, undefeated in the conference, but tied by lowa d Chicago, had opportunity to come a serious t contender witn victory, while Ir A was given a ance to emerge from the Big Ten cellar, where it rested with two de- |feats’'in as many | The non-conference gzames of Towa with Butler at Towa City with "Ames_at Mi due with Depaw volved questi acy or State ference team worthy oppo up hard fights, Minnesota and Pur- te. in- at Lafa of individual suprem- honors. The no were regarded as nts and prepared to put al Country Club in a benefit match | newest and largest club for | {MANDELL DISPLAYS REAL RING ABILITY NEW YORK, Nov Congressional course in low figures An entrance fea of $1 for the day will be charged, the entire amount raised to go to the Instructive Vis- iting Nurses' Society. Sarazen will pair with Johnny Far- rell of New York in an exhibition least match at the Washington Golf and|one lightweizht worthy of testing the Country Club on Sunday, November|prowess of Champion Benny Leonard 16. has been revealed in the person of The championship of the Washing- | Sammy Mandell of Rockford, Ill, who showed championship ¢ ast night ton ;:nlf and Country Club will be|in winning the decision over Jach decided tomorrow when Dr. James| pernste fonkers, after 12 T. McClenahan and Walter R. Mo- | cyamas ms Q:,\zl.:f.’\,[:r',;»,:,,;:“” 5 Callum will meet in the final round.| Mandell met Bernstein at his own J. Holt Wright. last year's champion, | rugged style and his unusual speed to was defeated in the semi-final last|win a decision in a whirlwind rally week by Dr. McClenahan. in the last two rounds. The Rock- ford boy, if the prozram announced The executive committee of the|recently by Tex Rickard is adhered ‘Washington Newspaper Golf Club|to, will be matehed with the winner met last night at 26 Jackson place | of the Vicentini-Terris battle, and the and accepted the offer of the Con-{ultimate vi tor w then be in line gressional Country Club to hold the | for a title tilt with Leonard Fall tournament of the scribes on| The efforts of the boxing commis- November 17. sion to stimulate activity in the From scores made in the Spring | featherweight class, in which Johnny tournament at the Washington Golf | Dundee vacated his title. reached the nd Country Club the players will be | point yesterday of n g pairings divided into flights, with prizes|in the first round ournament, offered for first and second place in|the winner of whi il be named each flight. The handicap committee will meet next Friday night and ar- champion. Three houts will be he 14 at Madison range the pairings. Plavers who did [ Square Garden on November 21, the not complete in the Spring tourney | Semi-final will be held threa weeks must turn in three scores to James|later. and the « battle D. Preston, superintendent of the |about three weeks afte < Senate press gallery, by Thursday|Kid Kaplan of Meriden, Conn. will night in order that they may be|meet Bobh of Camp Holabird rated. Otherwise they must play at|Md., in the first bout. The second scratch. Entries must be in Pres-| Will be between Danny Kramer of ton’s hands by Friday, accompanied | Philadelphia and ike Dundee of Salt by the $1 entrance fee. b . Lake City, and the third will bring together Jose Lombardo of Panama and Lew Paluso of Salt Lake City. Each will be 10 rounds. STIMULUS RUNS FIRST on the hands, at| : Which time the IN $50,000 FUTURITY clubhead, turning er the top,” ~ . caumea” the Sweixin to break upward. | [ T has been said by a great many expert golfers that too much trouble | PALTINMORE, November s Thix lets (he clubhead fanl nz'nlmmlla! not be taken in studying the surface of the green when one is | riga by Harry Thurber sroterar oy nto its place at the top of the bac . . . = feld gt % Sl ('n\ o swing and brings into the hands and | Preparing to putt. But there is one great American player who does :Mf'\'";‘“ "{,.:,“,:}‘. x ‘y"-'flfj;-':v*:v;’ Sneats e e ilIELt | tension - which | not scem to exercise unusual deliberation in playing to the cup, and this |in the Pimiico faturiy. ond nosiae shoul be felt at I~ n n the . . . e % g s SIS xwing. This ix the Tnte hreak of the | Would scem to indicate that perhaps there can be such a thing as too e himselr el e wristx. 1 have always maintained | much preparation in this department of play. EarrEE R e that the late break yielded the hard- | ELEES 5 ; BT . e Iaonmeniby 305 200 e s e The player to whom I refer is Francis Quimet, whose style is well{The time was 1339405, = " asalnat the ball, because thiv action | known to followers of the big tournaments. Francis, scemingly, is non-[,, ST Tore owned Ly William zuie cnables the player to “gnther” hia|chalantly careless in his putting. Of course, he really isn't, but, as he | warons (hpr'ti 17 e flela, was r:-yfl‘-;n ‘-m:'nfi;-;u‘:“::::.; lnnp'u ": %~ | doesn’t go through the preliminaries in which so many experts indulge, | Whitney's Candy Kid Toc kées veur CuENEAm 1 o ine| he _appears to be correspondingly hasty. m»l\gn:(. “_L ”'1\‘:",",{:\(”:4' ‘:x‘r:xl.‘: vrv;e‘ &round at the start of the back swing. | Nocvertheless, he often gets wonder-| The eighteenth is a par 4 hole and | J{i% °f W, 8 Kilmer, tired at the e {ful recults on the green. I recall|both were Ao e aflelamontoraene U. S. BALL PLAYERS WELCOMED IN PARIS | By the Associated Press. PARIS, November 8—The New York Giants and the Chicago White Se on a European exhibition tour, arrived in Paris sterday from London, and were greeted at the railwa station by 15 French newspaper photogri- phers and 50 corresponden The base ball visitors received the “great- est reception since that given the Prince of Wales on his last visit,” cording to a veteran usher at Gare du Nord. . Manager John McGraw, who is hon- orary president of the French Base Ball Federation, was greeted by Frantz Reichel, general secretary of the French Olympic committee. Mc- the Graw told the French corréspondents, | through an inter were certain to today. He added that he was going to pitch Nehf and give the French fans a look at some genuine mound work. Among the crowds that gathered to witness tke arrival of the Ameri- cans were a number of children. One little girl, when she saw Frisch, Sten- gel and Nehf emerge from the train, asked: “Ar¢ those the glants York?” The French appeared to be some- what nonplused that the ‘“gjants” were such small men. The game today promises to be one of enthusiasm at any rate. The ad- vance sale of tickets alrcady has gone over 100,000 francs. . ter, that they of New ball game"” | | particularly his putting in his match with Rower Wethered, the British mateur champion, following the 1923 irnament at Deal You will recall that the Walker cup which went to England 1a d a most successful expe | ence. We won the cup matches. A {Ouimet and Dr. O. ¥. Willing finishe |at the top in the St. George's cup tournament, Ouimet winning out in i the play-off. although we dan't lifting the amateur ! titie very mood record hefe put’ out of the ru we we were nin, Ouimet distinguished himself espe- jcially, getting through to the semi- | finals, where he was only downed by Wethered, after a terrific struggle, by la e of 2 and 1. Wethered, by beating Robert Harris of Scotland, 7 and 6, | me champion, ving week Wethered and The folle Ouimet, who is immensely popular in Eneland, met in the Walker cup matches. Believe me, it was some match. Coming down the last Ouimet was two down at the four- teenth hole and it looked as if Wethered would establish an almost unbeatable margin at this stage. The fourteenth is a long hole and both were on the green in three, but the Britisher got a birdie by sinking a 25-foot putt. This put it distinctly up to Ouimet. Francis showed his gameness and his skill by dropping a 15-foot putt for a halve, although he had to conquer a slippery surface to do so. After this the American rose to real golfing heights. He made birdies on the fifteenth and sixteenth holes, halving the one and winning the other, halved the seventeenth, and so e to the las@ hole with a cha stretch, to hold his opponent to an even break. on the green in two Wethered needed two putts to get down, but Francis, after a fine second shot, had a chance to make a three if he could negotiate a curving, side- hill slope, around a quarter stymie on a very slippery green and exceed- ingly hard to hold. ay, and took fourth money, BUSY M. I. T. STUDENTS HOLD RACE AT SUNRISE To miss the putt meant defeat. TIt| CAMBRIDGE, Mass. November § was as hard a play as you could|The stu s of Massachusetts Insti- select. An immense gallery was look- | tute of Technolozy can find no ti ing on. There was everything to|t0 train for foot ball or base bal make him nervous and mnothing to|teams, but in order to have a varsity reassure him. Ouimet stgpped up.|Crew they had interclass elimination tapped his ball boldly and sent itjraces at sunrise, and also practice unhesitatingly to the hole. with lights on their shells until afte What applause he received! dusk. At 7 am., with laborers on His play counted heavily in the|their way to work and a few entl American victory, for although he|astic classmates as spectators. ei did not succeed in doing more than|oared shells go out on the rive square his match with Wethered, he| The evening sessions cannot begin thereby saved a point for the United |until late classes are over, and will States, and the match was finally | continue through dusk. Affer several decided by that margin. shells had been lost to sight of the coaches, lights were ordercd, and the Charles River basin now presents an evening picture of racing lights. 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