Evening Star Newspaper, September 8, 1925, Page 29

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

SPORTS. Cornell Due to Have EVEN GLOOMY GIL DOBIE SMILES OVER PROSPECTS Schedule Such That Ithacan Team Can Be Brought Along Easily for Big Games—Navy Should Be Formidable, With Army Weaker. BY LAWRENCE PERRY. 8.—Friends of Gil Dobie say that the grim, silent man is wearing a happier face these days than for several |other events in which he took part. seasons past is because he knows what a great many do no Strong Eleven MGTOR CYCLE MARKS SMASHED AT LAUREL Three world records were broken and dazzling speed was shown at all times in a series of six hair-raising finishes in_the national championship motor cycle races at .the Baltimore- Washington Speedway, near Laurel, vesterday. A crowd of more than 7,000 persons was on hand. Joe Petrali, Los Angeles, was easily | the feature rider of the day. He rode/ in five of the six races, registered three wins, two of which set new world marks, and placed second in the + | The other record: was set by Jim | Davis of Columbus, Ohio. Pressing hard for recognition and FORMIDABLE GRID SQUAD IS PRACTICING AT V. P. . BLACKSBURG, Va., September § P).—Thirty-five candidates reported for initial practice at Virginia Poly yesterday. The squad was the most formidable looking in vears. Seven of the 11 letter men are back in school this year, but there are gaps at tackle, quarter and on both ends. The first game of the season will be played here September 19 with Lynch- burg College. 250-MILE AUTO RACE GOES T0 W’DONOGH D. €, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER Berlenbach-Slattery Bout Meeting Favor WORK OF G. U. SQUAD GRATIFIES COACHES MONMOUTH BEACH, J., Sep- tember $.—With one week of prepa- ration completed, the' coaches of the Georgetown University foot ball squad have reason to be encouraged. About 45 men took part in the first week's practice sessions, which admit- tedly were strenuous for this time of the vear. One of the factors which influenced the coaches to give their men such intensive early training was on account of the excellent physical condition that the candidates report- ed in. Head Coach Lou Little, after yes. terday’s meeting with the players, de QUAKER CITY OARSMEN SET PACE IN REGATTA BALTIMORE, Md., September 8.— Premier honors in the Middle States’ Rowing Assoclation regatta held here yesterday were shared by Walter Hoover of the Undine Barge Club, Philadelphia, and the sturdy Penn Athletic Club eight. Hoover bested a fleld of champion- ship scullers in the guarter-mile dash and the senior singles, while the Pen- nacs drove to a triumph in a desper ate finish over-the New York Athletic Club eight. The Penn oarsmen captured high- point honors with 82 counters. The Undine Barge Club came second, with 27, and the Bachelors’ Barge Club fin- ished third, with 25. ° SPORTS. PAUL’S TITLE IN DANGER IN FACING BUFFALONIAN If Jimmy Should Win, an All-Irishman Fight With McTigue, Which Should Be Treat, Is in Mind of Promoter Tex Rickard. BY FAIR PLAY. EW YORK, September 8.—There is general sroval of the match N that has been made between Paul Berlenbach a Jimmy Slattery. .V Slattery, it will be recalled, has been secured to fill the place left vacant on Tex Rickard’s card by the illness of Mike Mc that Cornell is going to have one of her strong clevens this Fall. ‘he Ithac t carefully, tackles Columbia Dartmou By the Associated Press ALTOONA, Pa.. September 8 Driving 250 miles at the pace of 118 miles an hour without a stop, young Bob McDonogh, from the West Coast, yesterday won the annual Autumn| automobile race on the Altoona speed- way. His time was 2 hours, 6 min- utes and b4 seconds. Two minutes later, Harry Hartz flashed across the line. His time was 2 hours, 8 minutes and 12 seconds. The veteran IlZarl Cooper, who gave the monster gathering of racing fans a sample of high speed during the final 50 miles, was third, 26 seconds behind Hartz. Leon Duray, fifth; Norman Batten, sixth: ““Red” Shaffer seventh, and Vic Spooner, eighth, finished in the cided o call a halt in the hard grind, o s £iving the squad their first and prob- ably last holiday until the curtain falls on tho 1925 season. Signals and plays were given out at the meeting, Coach Little going over them thoroughly with his men so ; 4 A i el that there would be no misunderstand. | af, & game B¢ BVARSVEE, T FEE has changed. Jimmy did not knock ings. The present week probably will | (FFERY o% L Reaes o one else has. be more active than last, with signal |i? a0 Evansville hosp! | probab drills and practice on formations. THE CALL OF rI‘HE OUTDOORS Nothing definite has been done in BY WILL H. DILG, | But this fact should be the way of selecting a first-string line. up. Coach Little realizes that it is President Izack Walton League of America. ;vv=ri! :Hmrtlrn-‘u the first 1old an official dec going to be no easy task to fill the bloom. This fact places of Jerry Minihan, center; Gof- fey, quarterback. and Eddie Brool SAW Donald Hough recently following his return from the Kaibab‘:rwvvx ?nu fight | beans ha star end and punter He intends to build up his team I Forest in Arizona, where he has spent more than a month writing |feeine s about the deer herd. You probgbly recall reading about the Kaibab| Mi around Murtaugh, Busch and Me- money. | Grath in the line and Capt. Hagerty Few thrills marked the grueling|@nd Metzger in the backfield deer last Fall—how they were starving because they had increased m:‘,‘j“‘“‘ s Santiney greatly on the isolated ‘plateau, how they tried to drive some of them ‘n';.;x,:f}u:}‘)'( “"‘"lj"‘ across the Grand Canyon, how they finally t contest, which was staged under a| Coach Little now has just three decided to shoot half of them, [fhne: ot his o and the whole country protested. weeks In which to whip his team into I e L shape for the opening game of the FUENTE scoREs K 0 « | of Philadelphia at the Central High ; . Uy la clev Hough had a hard time finding lheineer! fewer investigations by supposed herd of 50,000 deer. He |y iters and more by ntists.” 1 - If he could cop —_— only 700 of them. He said: season, played with Drexel Institute Stadium Saturday, September 26 OTHER RING RESULTS S b e i e oy : only 700 of them. He sal % It seems to me that such observa-|Rickard will have endid match in “The herd is publicity riddled. 1|tions are sound. This country | prospect if he can bring it offt—Irish cannot belleve there are 50 many deer | gone publicity mad during the past|MAn Versus Iris: nas al e e “:"r"':‘:; i the¥ | decade. It is not the men who get on | Sitre v Lo Mg ”‘,’, Kaibab deer are suffering mostly | the front pages of the newspapers that | be does not develop from two things. One of them is con- | Will save our wild life, but those who |championitis—which me: a fear of stant propaganda on the part of cat.| Work, alone and in obscurity, on sclen- |losing his t a bout between Slat tlemen . who want the Kafbab range | tific facts, which please the deer more | tery and McTigue will be one of the for their stock. The other is the hun. | than the ‘editors. |boxing treats of the early Winter sea ger of Government bureaus for pub- | = L son. Hclty. | SPEEDBOAT SETS RECORD. | ““There should be fewer court jest- 4 | DETR ote —Pack- ers and newspaper men and more | DETROIT, September § P —Pack sclentists and students of biology and ;{7 Chvisciatt T bloted Dy Col. J: G- 1 bothny. It the Cypewriter ware 1o b8, oo Tl e e tnternationad weep| | exchanged for the test tube, the prob- |, ..o oy the Detroit River yesterds {lem of the Kaibab deer could more |Stakes on the Dx Kol o A readily be solved by the Government | ;vering the course at an average | mpionship el A g 1 < speed of $5.56 miles an hour. + A v | He pointed out that writers, for|%’® erday. Andrew SHOCKER IS SUSPENDED. | <ome silly reason, probably based on v e |set a new record for BOSTON., September 8 (#).—Pitcher | the fact that they are a means of pub- | WINS AUTO CLIMB. time being 6 minutes {Urban Shocker of the New York | licity, are considered experts on what-| ! | ey s - | ever phase of life they write about. | COLORADO SPRI ptember | Yankees has - been indefinitely sus . pended on account of a verbal clash | ‘‘Because a man has a flair for find-| 8 (P).—Charles Myers of Colorado with Umpire Hildebrand at New York | in& things out and setting them down | Springs yesterday piloted his auto 3 Sunday. on paper does not make an expert of | mobile from the foot of Pikes Peak, | Tod i champion X him,” he said. “In fact, his business | king of the Rocky Mountains, to the | pugilist of Grea d the is only to report what is happening, | clouds that hover on the summit—a | Australian middlewei | and when he sets up as an expert he | distance of 121z miles, in 17 minutes at the Black Fr | must have a firmer foundation than|482-5 seconds. He smashed all rec. The referee stopped the con | his facility for expression. What we | ords. in the sixteenth round R 2 BLOW FROM BALL FATAL. DECATUR, IiL, September 8 (#).— Louis Chedo, Decatur Three-Eye| League pitcher, hit in the head dur- ing a game at Evansville, Ind., yes- stamped by all as a daring rider wus Eddie Erinck of Dayton, Ohio. Wherever were the leaders in every | event in which he participated there the fol- |also was the bright orange jersey of o \he|the veteran. 'He took pari In five | f ; ring for the | ces and was third, third, third, really wish to win, the contest on Thanksgiving | second and second, successively. The new records. hoth officials and riders say established the Laurel | saucer the fastest speedway, In DEMPSEY LOOKS FIT |t | Petrali’s two records were set in the | 10-mile open national championship and in the 25-mfle open national championship. He also avon the | feature number on the card—the 50- | mile championship. Davis shattered | his own mark for the 5-mile class A | |race. These records not only were | broken—they were shattered, Davis clipped six seconds from the G.mile | mark. Petrali knocked 14 2-5 seconds {off the 10-mile distance and 13 2.5 | seconds from the 25-mile event. Pe.| | trali holds the record for 100 mile: Petrali’s time for the 10-mile dis. tance was 5:23 4.5, for an average of | 109 miles an hour, while in the 25| mile race he averaged 106 miles an hour. In the 5-mile class A event Davis averaged 111 miles. | Petrall's third vietory came in the| After the knockout of the Buffalo boy by Dave Shade there was talk that Slats was a flash-in-the-pan guy, a boxer who looked good against the set-ups and bad against the good ones. But since Slattery’s showing against Maxey Rosenbloom the tune is such that Dobie can bring his team along | reworks, until October 31, when the big red team | k a potentially strong eleven—will be encountere lowing week, and then the Ithacans can breathe along prepar game S all games they day @gainst Pennsylvania ®obie i has some wham to biild somn or a Pfann. o out Maxey or that matter, no Iways at his best when he | s backfield man around | n offensiye, a. Patter- | In Molinet, a strap- to have just the of he wants and with rugged players to support him the Ithaca combination ¢ to be just about right for the Thanks giving day classic Advanee dope with strength. spite the absenc ackfield stars such as Bowman, an outa in dividualist, the backfield w more formidable than that of Pete Reynolds, who Meehan University, has w termed an offensive mind ball-carrying more than tack, whereas Meehan was conservative When Reynolds d nell he 3 that came at it But this season he will stre paratively few perfection Of other only the no doubt had wh ;'];N‘t for Rosey's d awkward esome re punches mem Jort-arm tyle, and | IN EXHIBITION BOUTS P lingered of what sort got gay with Dave borne fighter ) credits k is that, de- SAN FRANCISCO, September 8 (). — Jack Dempsey, heavyweight hampion pugilist, emerged partially from retirement in the midst of a fight card at the ball park yesterday to box four exhibition rounds. two each with two opponents. Appearing stripped for action in an American ring for the first time since " | he disposed of Luls Firpo two years | azo, the champion looked to be in tip- 1 top conditlon. No surplus fat was evi- dent Though he did not extend himself in the exhibition, he displayed foot- | work, his famous weaving stvle of at- | 50-mile national champlonship race. tack and an assortment of t short [ His time—30 minutes 12 seconds, for hooks: an average of 101 miles an hour— | Dempsey’s opponents—Bill Larue |came within a few seconds of better- | of the Olympic Club, tormer national |ing the old mark for the distance. amateur heavyweight, and Cowboy Ed Bill Minnick took the 5-mile class B Warner—played the clown much to[event by a quarter of a lap. He the amusement of the crowd. Larue |averaged 102 miles an hour, the time emerged with a bloody nose. Warner | for the distance being T 25. dropped and portrayed the role of a| The special pumber for motors of knocked-out man when he received | 45 cubic inches displacement was won licht hooks to the jaw toward by Red Wolverton. His average f the second round | speed was 91 miles per hour and his pion was well received by |time 3:14 3.5. the holiday crowd. | | RACE, MAKES SLOW TIME weights, boxed a fast 10-round draw in the main bout of the show | CHICAGO, september § (#).—The | probable swan song on the cinder path | of Joie Ray, for years America’s pre- | mier middle distance runner, has been | sung In « park district meet vesterday. | Ray won the senior mile event in| —Managers of teams «nd others inter- ay has announced his in- ested in the Prince Georges County aking up boxing | Duckpin Association are to sather to- | In another race Betty Sisk dashed | night at & o'clock in the American | 50 yards in six seconds flat, equulingr[/mnn clubrooms here to make plans {the world record for women for the season. their respect be McTigue believed he co ¥ = & are he doe TURF STAR TO REST. - DiEsubey NEW YORK, September § (&) — Amefican Flag, considered by many turfmen the leading 3-year-old of the season as a result of his victories in |the Withers, Belmont and Dwver stakes, will race no more this year. After 4 minor operation had been per- formed on an injured ankle of the fleet son of Mon of War he will be retired 1o the farm of his owner, Samuel D. Riddle PEORIA WINS PENNANT. PEORIA, Ill.. September 8 (). Peoria clinched the 1925 Three-Eve| League pennant yesterday by beating Bloomington two games, while Terre Haute broke even with Danville. at any tea Buck m | se m upoen By the Associated Press MIAMI, Ariz., September §.—Tony Fuente, Mexican heavyweight, knock- ed out Jack Burnes of Denver in the third round last night TUCSON, Ariz., September § (#). —Pat Lester, Tucson heavyweight, was given a 10-round decision over Capt. Bob Roper, former champion of the A. E. F, last night T FALLS, Mont 8 (#).—Billy Defoe of New York City defeated Don Tippero of Bingham, | Utah, in a 12-round bout yesterday | They' are featherweights RGO, N. Dak.. September § (4. —Billy Petrolle, Fargo lightweight, | knocked out Carl Leonard, New York, in the third round last night i plays and insist Eastern teams pre \ of deve quarterback and a pu at New Haven alw tant and the suce usually rests pretty quarter. Harvard will I " year, if only assists in the coachi rial will be bett be very strov sidering her materia a definite plan will be more formidable than ir Lafayette is not likely to sh usual strer N Nor is the Ar Yale has ping a iarter npor. > team largely in the FARRELL THIRD IN SWIM. PITTSB at. W. G | resen |ished third 0-yard t set a world record, | siroke swim 3 1 September than last still because Daly it the own should Navy, con conch with questionably , Tep b, fin breast junior e distance, his her 54 seconds BAUM FIGHTS LARSON. BALTIMORE, Md., Boxinz fans have another program awaiting them tonight at Carlin’s rena, where Wolf Larson and Charlie jaum are scheduled to swap wallops in a 10-rounder. Baum will go into the fight giving about 25 pounds to his ival, who is reported as welghing about 180, DUCKPINNERS TO MEET. HYATTSVILLE. Md.. September 8§ September 8.— TODD STOPS RING. CHESS TOURNEY ENDS. LONDON, ®).—Ro. MOSCOW, September § (P) Russian championship chess ment ended erday with bow the winner prize and the titles. M. Levenfisch was second and M. Rabinovitch third S D The tourna- | Bogolju lewel, ritain, defeat PIEDMONT LEAG 9-4: Greeneboro, 3-3 lem, 2.6: Raleigh. 10-1: Danville, 34 Durham Winstor Salisbury i1 What is @/larm a (ha play ..a player..in a cc'garette.7 Thecharminacigaretteis the Turkish that’s in it—and MURAD is all Turkish. Murap is the world’s finest cigarette because it is made of this superlative tobacco from first shred to last. Nearly every cigarette contains soME Turkish. But in MURAD this premier to- bacco is not a dressing or a sugar- coating; it is the entity of the cigarette You can get some MURAD in many cigarettes MURAD. Charm, in a great artist or a great prod- uct, is simply consistent excellence. It is Quality that goes all through —without letrup or compromise. It is genuineness without interruption —from the first detail to the last. In a great performer or performance, the quality always goes all through. There are many actors who can render a single big scene with the art- istry of a Booth. But the master ex- presses his art from his first entrance to his last exit. His quality goes all through. M URAD The TURKISH Cigarette ALL TURKISH means.......... ALL Charm’ © 1925, P. LORILLARD COMPANY. EST. 1760 but only a Murap is all il i

Other pages from this issue: