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PORTS THE EVENING S 'AR, WASHINGTON, D. C, MON DAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1925. SPORTS 25 Kreuz's Absence Weakened Penn Defense : Michigan to Resume Iis Title Quest TEAM ALMOST HELPLESS WITHOUT FINE FULLBACK Injured Star Had Played Li r any sketiccism as to the greatness = 3t - o of this tful dodger of the gridiron s In Clash With Illineis and Grange. | vantatiea1n" the’ wake ot the mieteoric swath he cut through the | —— S {mud of Iranklin Field, where he led v ' el " b {the 1llinois attack that crushed Penn- 3 BY LAWRENCE PERRY. {sylvania and simultaneously shattered EW YORK November 2. greatly at loss with N have heen without Grange This applies to the defcnsive as t offensive. All season Penn's m 1 the line, stopping holes. He Penn’s coaches evidently has no Lis Western Conference rivals had. © with the linemen diving in low and was absolutely meat for the Hiinois would take a cataciysm for Penn to change her syst of smash but it is cu T see the e8] Grange and 1 thrived upon it. as any one might have known they would The writer believed that Penn hud made some special preparation to *he end that Grange might not pass b 4scrimmage line, but nothing had been done, and Zuppke cashed in vichly on the basis of information his scouts had brought him. Penn Ends Weak their hands on Grange. and his plays were 5o contrlved that it was oniv in * freque the Quaker wingmen got a8t e at the inter n, Penn’s six-man defense with the center rovir somn a frse]t perfectly to th scheme of at tack. The Western forwards not only opened hole for Grange, but as rule gave lim two le and outsi kle to « m The answer to ( success @sainst Penn was that he was able al bevond the line of most wlways to get n ind that is all he asks of m in the world. He is the foot bull p time all—everytl To repeat, to run & hoz-wild he n before he passes th .. Mich fzan and wa, too, | showed th me and Cornell Stepping Along [ iell is certainly on its w and s Penn can get in u nic est be 0 now and Thanksgiving, the big m is apt to give the Quakers ter s 1t nsive strength the Army to go down to de- feat in the last quarter + Michigan, by sinking der a mammoth sco right now as the greatest eleven east of the west coast at all events. One ma even fargher and clude the whole country in speaking of the su premacy of the Wolverines at this Tennessee was in's beating d a surprise. But the Bulldogs 8 voten strength, and it Georgia Tech deve'ors overconfidence there mav be a surprise in Atl November 14, Tech, let after the hard Alabama sar prey for Notre Dame Alabama, by the way. seemed to have let down a bit itself last Satur day wir Wisconsin their third i rd in the ot by Bro galloped along on its course. nd ved to Dart Minnesota . UTAH U. POSSESSES GREAT GRID OUTFIT| BY MYRON E. WITHAM, Coah of Foot Ball, University of Colorado. BOULDER, Colo., ovember 2 University of Utah. powerful teain, both of isively and defensively, appears to have the best eleven the Rocky Mountain Conference has seen N many se U Utah ste orward by beating team. With quality and quantity of its on rent weakness of defense against acrial attacks, which showed i rlv games with Southern [ nd Arizona, and now at top form A ranzy and powerful front line, flanked by ends of fine | sique, ca- pable of handlin . nsive tackle affords a fast 1d shifty 1ckfield chance to develop attack whie defense under constant men. 1 as ph pressure vailable, the ches is to develop powerf win it for some nd interfevence for This increases offen- « A i he r or the 3 ty af present wr ing, also focus their offensive thrust at the defe with the in <he e ¢ ively u W charging into the pass play s end rned after the The tail back. b osiart for the ball 1o t old an thrus front man of ihe wektield formation who is erouching u cover of the 1i The front 1 passes back to the end the outside of the piay. Opportunely used this triple the break cames over s + Colorado A s this constant threat and with a good aerial attack, have given Coach Harry Hughes a well balanced offensive. - has proved to be in many closely contested wles, us PRO FOOT BALL SCORES At Chicago—Cardinals (Chicago), 10; Duluth, 6. At Milwaukee—Greenba, waukee, 0. At New York—New York, 19; Cleve- land, 0. At Providence — Providence, 17: Rochester, 0. At Pottsville—Pottsville, 20: Colum- bus, 0. At Akron—Akron, 13; Dayton, ¥ At Detroit—Detroit, 26; H>mond, 6. At_Buffalo, N. Y.—Frankford Yel- low Jackets, 12; Buffalo, 3 At Chicago—Bears (Chicago), 6; Rock Island, 0. , 6 Mil- 1e, Where Quakers were Quite Inefficient —Pennsylva C veral years of foot ball. | \GRANGE IS GREATEST, GRID CRITICS AGREE By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, November 2.—Any hesitation the East may have had in placing the laurel wreath upon the rel-thatched head of Red Grange Great Game in Secondary any national championship hopes en- | tertained by the Red and Blue, in her 1ia game against lllinois out her ace, Kreuz, as Illinois would | Grange, averaging more than | first_down—about 11 yards—for ever ; | one of the 32 times he handled the ball, pect of the game even more than to | fully lived up to the most extravagant nighty fullback has been ranging be- |claims previously made for him and was missed on Saturday, greviously |¢¥ablished beyond question his place |among the greatest foot ball players of all time. t studied the Grange problem the way | Seasoned critics, veterans who had [he normal game that Penn plays, [seen in their prime such stars as coming up and the ends smashing in | Willie Heston, Jim Thorpe, Ned M. han, Ted Coy, Charley Barrett, George Gipp and Eddie Kaw, were a unit in {proclalming Grange the greatest ground-gainer the most elusive run- | ner of them all, and when all the evi defe for the lllinois flash has hed there is not much to dispute attack as built around Grange GRANGE HAD GOOD TIME IN THE EAST, HE ADMITS RURBANA, 1L, November » (). |theso claims. ed Gra » could have had the en The circumstances of Grange's tire Univessity of Ilinols and all that {achievements made them loom all the was in it all o himself last nizht for he triumphed over ob Never in the history of this collese at every turn. Before the own has there been such an out- |most critical eyes he has ever faced pouring of students and townspeople (he slashed forward on a boggy field to pay homage to & returning hero | that was expected to slow him up and as that which greeted the man who jripped to pieces wu defense that was upset Pennsylvania and his team {regarded as the strongest in the East, wwtes upon their return from the [one that had been especially drilled I to check his The famous redhead was sorely t with handshaking and -back- | T slapping and said casuully that he During the first 16 yeurs of the East had a t enoyable visit to the [ern intercollegiate cross.country com State of his nativity petition Cornell the team cham I pionship 14 time won PENN'S FAILURE TO CLEAN GRIDIRON AROUSES ZUPPKE I Field with the idea of thus offsetting the speed and dodging ability of Harold Grange Saturday, they th lack trouble, for their pains. According the University of Pennsylvania foot ball authorities deliberately al- lowed an accumulation of many hours of wet snow to lie on Frank- lin rather of had cir trouble, or bor ing to Washingtonians, who willing. be done His demand that some about made the trip to see “Red” play and | thing be d ut ftall. even at {linols coaching staff, the latter were ' pr ipal result of which wus the ad utterly dumfounded to discover that, ! dition of a heavy top layer of fine up till a late hour, no precautionary | 33°t svread over the morass—soot : e . which made the players even more wsures had been taken to insure @ | than usually unrecognizable and ne dry playing surface, an oversight | cessitated each athlete’s wearing a swadays almost unheard of among | oyl In his beit, - shisan e rether the deplorable underfoot arger educational institutions just be- | conditions were the result of desig fore a big game i just neglect, the result of the game Bob" Zuppke, head coach, it is|was the same. Grange did his stuff to uthoritatively stated, when he got|the satisfaction of the mu u first glimpse of the field and re- ' sands who came just to see h owers of speech. used | never slipping or falling, and much of his well known | to his laurel collection a wreath | Ary in pointing out the fact ranking him among America’s best i aw was cheap and freshman foot ball mud horses, GREAT TEAMS POSSESSED * BY YALE AND DARTMOUTH BY MAJ. CHARLES D. DALY, Associated in Foot Ball Coaching at Harvard. AMBRIDGE, Mass., November ~The 1925 scason is now headin into the home stretch, and in the East Yale and Dartmouth pear to be among the strongest teams. Pennsylvania, were it not for her defeat Saturday by lllinois, s0 be rated among the strongest elevens. Moreover, there is an cxc Hent explanation for Penn’s off day, and that is the great “Red” Grange. > been | 2 3 4 5 6| i 8 9 | | | | | HAVE seen par golfers hold th | [ whizzed through the ball that t | It | forward goliers today s not necessary to hold the swing, but the truth of who are consistent] {each round of golf they | swing. | In figure 1 we see the forward | swing pictures at the point where the | ¢lubhead is just about to pass through | the bull. There is a great forward energy on the player's part right here, und this has been intensified by the fact that the clubhead, guining speed in near its maximum speed right here. | Because of this great forward energy there is atendency for the middle part of the body to shove forward with the { club. This lets the left hip out loosely o the flight Just as the ball is hit, or a an instant afterward, the s outward slightly into rec line, but this is not to hit the ball with the hip as it is to ecommodate the necessary body ac- tion in the swing. and the player who | designs to hit with his GLENNA WINS ne of fraction left hip the ai ) much she IN GOLF AT BY W. R. McCALLUM club would jerk the stiffened body upward until it almost left the the matter play because they overlook this detail of the it downward flight, attains very | hip entirely | e left leg so firmly as the clubhead he outward and upward swing of the leit leg quite so stiff as that in the ; is, there are thousands of | adding 10 to 20 or more strokes to { will have some trouble with his shots, You hit with the clubhead In figure we see the resuit of let- | ting the hip go forward loosely at the ihium: instant. The body here lacks | resistance to the forward n of the clubhead—a leverage ction very much desired The instant the hip moves out, as it has her the hands, |arms and perhaps the shoulders let down a little on the clubhead, so that , instead of hitting harder with the | clubhead, you hit ier. | " 'Hold the body in line with the ball [and stiffen the left leg in the forward | swing to make sure of keeping the | body in line You should finish the | | swing with the body still in line with | where the ball rested If the body {moves awuy forward of the line vou |are giving the left side too much free { dom | ri AND LOSES WASHINGTON | ISPLAYING flashes of the goli that has won her two national D woman's championships in the last four years. Miss Glenna Collett | won and lost in two 18-hole exhibition matches yesterday | Goli and Country Club. Bejore a gallery plentifully be- sprinkled with feminine golf enthusiasts Miss Collett paired in the morn- ng with Miss Fritizi Stifel of Wheeling, W. Va., against Leo Dicgel and J¢ Farrell, two star professionals from New York. and given a handi- | cap of a stroke every other hole, the women were beaten by 3 and 2 In the afternoon. before a greatly augmented galiery, the largest crowd of persons to witness a goli match in Washington since the na- 19, tional open championship here 21, Miss Collett and Diegel defeated | Miss Stifel and Farrell on the seventeenth green; the steadiness and’some br the wo! 's liant goli of curacy of Diegel to nullify the sple Miss Collett is the first ehampion to appear in Wushing: 1 for nearly two decades. he had | never been in the city before for more than a few moments between trains and the feminine golfers of the capital we above Miss Stifel. | title holder combined with the ac- | d 70 recorded by Farrell. | 1WOMEN 1 | BY CORI! VE FRAZIER- INAVY STILL HOPEFUL [NORTHWESTERN NEXT FOE OF DEFEATING ARMY| OF UNBEATEN WOLVERINE ANNAPOLIS, November 2.—Navy | is stricken, but not hopelessly, over the overwhelming defeat, b4 to 0, inflicted by Michigan at Ann Arbor | Saturday. Instead of dwelling on| its humiliation, players and coaches | already are planning how to make the best of the portion of the season that remains. After all, the great seagon at the Naval Illinois to Carry Battle to Stagg’s Fast Eleven In Chicago—Ilowa Hopes to Tie for Big Ten t in Next Two Tilts. Lead at Lea By the Associated Press object of the e Academy is to CH]( AGO, November 2. | —Their jobs against ir produce a team which will defeat the tersecti Army eleven, and that is still re o ”,"' b\ BRI et B : = garded as a possibility. If that can paign this week, the Wolverines hoping to tighten their grip o1 be done the xeaxu? il lm-lr ;.].u'ded the title race top at Northwestern’s expense, and “Red” Gr and h as a puccess, and even the heart-| . . g e breaking defeat of Saturday will not |€FTY men to upset Chicago. be remembered. 1 The Yost men, fresh from their 0-0 victory over the Navy, have Not since modern foot ball began|hoth might and right of tradition on their side bas the Naval Academy sustained|pBen,y Friedman, Wolverine quarterback ace, and such an overwhelming defeat as was | o9 "¢ it and Malend St ey its lot Saturday. Back in 1903, when | Uregory, Gilbert and Molenda, Northwestern Navy foot ball was at its weakest,| Whose injured ankle has kept him out of several the Army won, 40 to 5, and thus is|up in others. Then, 100, there is the moral cifc the most severe beating previously |which gives Michigan five and Northwestern two w suffered. e "] The fact th Moreover, the repeated piercing of | oy e ble. Navy always has had a stalwart | {to turn the and formidable line, even when weak kay 8 in other particulars. This year it is PLACE OF GRID GAME (';' : 18 i heavy and experienced and was tilt in hana v u thought to be almost impregnable, | — — tear heen disas ret. Michigan plerced it at every Doint | pe (. Associated Press buoys up the hopes « and it could not open up for the!™ 1 YELLOW SPRIN( Navy backs. - s ber 2-—Antioch College has given : th sreat Ar can ¢ an NEWSPAPER LINKSMEN oot Ball for v ,-%"fl,;,.q ball, & ¢ ast hination of soccer and basket bal 3 TO PLAY ON THURSDAY | "Foot ball was dropped two vears | ) ; neral of L. White Bushy, a close |cially adopted s a substitute [Siingsola 8 these SQUSIEN. ¢ friend of many of the Washington he new game was introduced alcount on dow t Vit e newspaper men, caused the exec tive committee of the Washington | morwork, 18 2 reauirement to play | titie. shoul 1d the Newspaper Golf Club today to de- |member of the all-Danish soccer team | CBLnuUe unbeaten. ‘ luy the Fall tournament of the club | for seven vear & Been e o ] na, & ly o scheduled for tomorrow at the Con. |V a0 the b tion of gressional Country Club. The tourney will be held Thursday. spee he most popular college sports BY JAMES BRADEN Former Yale and All-America Fullback. HE Summer between grammar school and high school Red He decided to give up schoo His father, aged cou who was now T school or go to work, be no loa had not been become a bum,” says Re had other ideas. ou can either said Red's dad. “I want you to go to sc o A MISS RYAN IS VICTOR there He entered Wheaton High School time has s of and was impelled to go out for the|care, wor Th been something fateful in the move- | the last one in which he seem ments of Red toward the high places | free SRR of foot ball, yet time after time he| “It was so funny to be ont | vember 2 () most abandoned the game. The thing | field before u crowd.” says Red - which impelled him to go out for the!ing of the first game “Everybody eam in his high sche days was | seemed to be watching I felt so k that he received his equipment free. |nervous and self-conscious that T wish ed I hadn't told them I'd play g Gets Free Equipment. | The boys won the game that day “That was my first ‘issued ¢ | They won one other contest that se ball suft and it certainly made me|son. It was not a remarkable b i M. Johnst « \ feel good,” says Red in telling of his|Ning. There was not much coaching Yot Califo X experiences. “ormerly 1 had been |t Wheaton High School during Red 2 v cutting off old pants and sewing them | first two years. The bovs' team wus = e up nd o gathering a heterogenous | rather & hit-or-miss affair. At his win - outfit together. I feit now that as I|Dosition young Grange did not set the | 160 Wesbre o had a suit I'd better play world on fire. He did become more | {ie FRals, s < S He started as an end. A picture of | interested in the game than at Sslp e b il the team shows much happiness in the | brevious time, and desire t i5 the semidans. & faces of the boys. Red at the present |Ccome a better took fi e e in_his mind. Wesbros rt & It was easy for him ard Kir ¢ sasket ball teum and the Johnston & Cusey wn, [ as a freshman. he excelled. Especially pre b Miss e on the trac I belie wuck is the great place to | N SPORT| i B A S s e turned out hundreds strong to see | h strong athletic body Op 2, wer and soggy field this remarkable player ran wild against one |(heir champion in action. ~ They saw | : g Red's father was agr ul, Lr)l\ teams of the East her below championship form )hu-er]ng; old Sol will shake off his “November blues™ this afternoon there will | |-IA' ed when 1;.; son appre £ the writer were asked to pick | the sting in the iron that has | A RIS P P g s e s i . {that Spring and said som | qut the most outsianding plaver | [ EOOT B méde her famous on two continents, | | D¢ six games played in the Elementary School Basket Ball League. | \or during the Summer vacs = Eastern foot hall during the past | ALL SECRETS But they saw a Miss Collett “ho} nery and Gage will clash in the Bloomingdale division; Dennison ’livnwm)wun‘:l several ]vmv 0 e | week he would surely name this y Sol Metzger. showed in her every action a great |and Cooke will play in the Columbia Heights contest. Small s -y | the joys of caddying on the golf links, | At the Sign of the Moon | player from the Middle West. | " L golfer and a shot maker without a|*" Y -olumbia. Heights contest. Smallwood-Bowen | poq"3dvanced the idea that he was | Both of the service teams were de- | ‘peer among the feminine player of { will meet Fairweather on the Garficld cc Fillmore and Addison at |getting too big for such emplc ed Saturday. Let it not bhe this natior | Georgetown ; Bryan and Buchanan at Vitginia avenue, and Webb and [and casaally suggested work 3 . lought that when Michigan defeated | "The gallery, well handled and courte- | Pierce on the Rosedale field |ice wagon. - o~ Rl b | Annapolis by 54 points the Navy team | {ous to the players, was well rewarded | A} of the games are scheduled|steady wrist. Both of these assets|. . vD¥: You can't stand that hard today? | was weak and demoralized | efforts in braving the early |, 3.5 |are a matter of personal make-up—not | Yoracey Thogs, father. “That's the Y On the contrary. the Navy eleven is d patches of snow which dot-| — I =4 e 2 | lest job there is.’ i 3 now in personnel and is excel- in the morning as the | Blow School's dodge ball tossers| off the tee or on the fairway, where | 1L, Can get the job will it he ) C oxe dally at | lently couched, and its defeat speaks mateh got under way. | have yet to taste defeat in the Rose-|hrawn and musele play such an im. | 5 g @ . m. Satur- much for the greut ability the | ¥or Miss Colleti, even though she | dule League. Eight games have been | portant part. our feminine gotter 1a| Sure:” answered his dad. any. 'S plm Michigan team the titieholder, did not stand out|played and still no team has proved |at o distinet disadvantage. and such | i 1o-vear-old high school freshman should it be thought that the serv- | fce outfit won from an easy opponent. | The Army, like the Navy, is strong | | | | Nor when Yale defeated the Army | | 1 i | this year and is most capably direct- = ed. “The proper deduction, to the B writer's way of thinking, is that | 3 Michigan and Yale are exceptionalty | — VR strong. i ‘When Center Feeds Ball to Plunger. | the fact in relation to has numerous excep- | Fumbles are generally the result of tional backs and a fine a of | poor passing by the center rush. In strong linemen. Each Saturday her | feeding the ball to a_back who is to team heads up for competition in ex- | hit the line, he should always lob it cellent fettle, and, above all, she has| at the back’s belt, as in the upper | | developed an attack in which the jllustration. Then, if it is not passed | pass and the plunge are successful too hard, in other words, if it it | and the complement of one another. | lobbed, the back will have no difficulty | It is to be noted that the victories |in receiving and holding it. | in this season’s competitions are being | If he passes it a bit too low shed by wide margins. In most | the lower illustration, the bac estal | cases the winninz team scores three | erally fumbles the ball, as he is not times and the loser, which | able to lean over and cateh it w matter of fact, be a close |out losing his drive and_balance. . looks outclassed, judging | high pass by the center is also lil the score. This is another mani- | to be fumbled by the back. of the change the forward | In passing to a back who is to s has made in foot ball. A team |the line the center should aim for by festation with only a slight scoring margin | belt line and always lob the ball rather over an opponent can by means of | easily. A swift short pass here, even he pass capitalize this margin a |if in the right position, will frequently number of times during the game. | be fumbled. The 10 per cent margin of superior- | i e RESUPB which ordinarily operated to in- victory by one score now re three or four touchdowns. King Feisul of Irak is a foot ball fan. THE CALL OF THE OUTDOORS BY WILL H. DILG, President Izaak Walton League of America. sure sults in HE excitement of the chase often plays odd tricks with its victim. 1 think one of the best I've heard for a long time was told the other evening by a man from Wyoming. It was about a bear hunt. He had taken out two men, neither of them real amateurs, in the | Western mountains. They came to good bear country one night and { began to set up camp. Behind the camp was a canyon of a sort fre- quented by bears, and the guide mentioned this fact as they were mak- ing a camp fire. “Let’s take a hike back a ways, and| “So’'s mine!” cried his companion, see if we can see anythi zgested | “Get your knife out quick!” ¥ ik Sl "":‘Nf The first hunter fumbled for his Ol 0l sf 1o AlRareRcader S0 the | ppife, but in the meantime the other guide agreed to get supper while the | had fixed his gun. He fired at the two of them took a skirmish around |oncoming animal four times, and the Tor bETh - bear dropped. As he dropped he fell into & little gully. The hunters were The hunters had not gone far when | quaking with the excitement and one of them grabbed the arm of the their close call. They had no time ‘mher and pointed to a thicket just for the bear. They heaved deep sighs ahead of them. “Ther one!” he|and went back to camp. The guide {cried, and both got ready to shoot.|asked them what they'd fired at. “A {The bear turned toward them just as|bear,” said one of the hunters, “We [both rifles cracked. Both missed. |left him up in a little gully {One of the men found his gun had| So the guide went up there and | fammed and he couldn’t reload. He |found a newly killed porcupine! ‘Ynokel! up and saw the bear coming| Just one of the tricks that over- | toward them. “Get him!" he cried, | expectation gometimes plays even on | My gun’s jammed:” experienced hunters. | played ad and shoulders champion in the making. ably fine golf on her first journey over the difficult Wash- ington course and exhibited a game that was very nearly the equal of that of Miss Collett. Miss Stifel made one of the finest {shots of the day at the thirteenth hole, where she played a hooked spoon shot around a large treee to the green 200- yards away, her ball stopping only § feet from the cup. At the same hole in the afternoon Miss Collett and Farrell halved in birdie 3 Miss Collett had a score of 84 in the morning and 81 in the afternoon. Miss Stifel's score could only be approxi- mated, as she picked up her ball sev- eral times during the course of the two matches. Miss Collett’s 38 on the final nine of the day was one of the best exhibitions of the game ever | furnished here by a woman player. | The course was heavy and slow, dot- ted with clumps of snow in the morn- | ing, which disappeared in the after- | noon. Unfamiliar to the .two girls, they nevertheless showed little lack of | judgment of distance and played very well under the circumstances. |~ Farrell played the better golf of the two professionals, scoring a 72 in the morning and a 70 in the afternoon. His “in” nine of 32 in the afternoon was & remarkable plece of golf, the Quaker Ridge pro having no less than five 3s on his card, He had a 4 at the last hole to tie the course record, but hooked his second shot and failed to get down the putt for the 4. Diegel had a 72 in the morning, but picked up his ball on the troublesome fifteenth hole in the afternoon after going into the ditch. Farrell scored his third sucecssive 2 on the four- teenth hole in the morning round, but | failed to get a deuce in the afternoon. At the close of the match the { woman players were presented with handsome wrist watches by former Representative C. C. Carlin on behalf of the club. Later the members of the match and some of the Washing- ton Golf and Country Club officlals were guests of Mr. Carlin at dinner. MORNING ROUND. | The 1atter, a remar out M e s a8 s u : 365 3 In 1145553655 4—42—85 Miss Stifel— Out .......64675558 '] In..00.010l55444064406—43—-80 Diegel— Out <......434645453—38 In 1142443544 3-84—72 Farrell— Out'li.....33654%444—37 In...0.01l 4354254443672 AFTERNOON ROUND, Miss Collett— out ... 545545586443 In 114353464405 38—81 Miss Stifel— fout P70 T 614655665647 [0 556630064 6—io—v8 Diegel— Out ......435544443 36 Tn 13043x444 o™ T 535445483 an In..o 3338884838 | strong enough to show them the way. | The game scheduled for this after- | noon in the league brings together | the Webb fitth grade and Pierce fifth grade teams. These two are very evenly matched and a hard-fought bat- tle is expected. In the Chevy Chase Playground | Basket Ball League the 7A team will meet the tossers from 8B tomorrow afternoon at 3:30 on the Chevy Chase playground. Both teams are from | the E. V. Brown School. ! It will be 7A'S opening game. lost its first game last week to 7B. sB| Washington Recreation League will hold a business meeting this after- noon at 5:30 at the Y. W. C. A. on E street to plan for the basket ball| season and to clear up old business. Representatives from all teams in the leggue are urged to be present this ?Iernonn, 80 that the program | can fe completed the Wintar | series. Any teams which wish to join the league should send representatives | to this meeting. Those already en- tered are Bethany Church, Calvary | Church, Hyattsville American Legion Auxiliary, Acacia A. C., Good Shep- herd Church, Mount Vernon Athletic Club and the second squads of the Metropolitan, Washington and Cap- itol Athletic clubs and Strayer's Busi- ness College. for It may be just one of our silly femi- nine ideas, but it seems to us that if there {s one place on the golf course where man and woman players are on an equal basis, that place is on the {green. Putting is not a matter of I strength, but of control and accuracy. Yet, when Glenna Collett sunk a particularly long putt yesterday in her match with Fritzi Stifel and the two pros, Farrell and Diegel, on the ‘Washington Golf and Country Club course, we heard numerous com- ments in deep bass to the effect that hler[ shot was truly remarkable—for a sirl. To our inexperienced eye it looked like a beautiful putt for anybody, but no more remarkable for a girl than for a man. There is no earthly rea- son why a girl should not match her masculine opponents in putting if she possesses a_reasonably keen eye and RADIATORS, FENDERS WiTHSTALES R & . WKS Franklin 6805 Central Auto Works 449.451 Eye St. N.W. TOWING I 3 Cqmplete repairs In ogr gwn shop. 1f with red hair approached L. C. Thomp- | son, who had an ice plant in Wheaton, | shots as were made by Miss Coilett and Miss Stifel when they placed their | balls within a few feet of the men in | driving off were indeed remarkable— Established 1893 ick that Summer | Thompson looked at the candidate for girls. They are the shots which [ind was not impressed have put these young ladies where| “You see that 125-pound cake of ice they are in the golfing world. But |there? he said. “Well. if vou can At Miss Collett's spectacular putt vester- ‘m.mmm— hat I} gtve you a.dob. 1Ll day was just natu 1y remarkable, | het you a dollar in addition t you . . without any qualifications. | can't do it 3 - R e s o DIG Reductions CUEISTS PLAY TONIGHT. ll;l‘fll\(h“:l'hv" cake and put it on his Val Clive Richmond and William Par- | 5 (Covyright. 1 i —The Greatest ates sons are scheduled for tonight’s mateh | (Tomorrow—Red’s Iirst Touchdown —We Have Ever Offered Runs.) | in the District pocket billiard cham: plonship tournament being staged at You have choica of our magnifi- " PIMLICO_AUTUMN ME; the Grand Central parlors. I i Eaeri0, ARTIY | . i) e WHYS cent stock of fabrics to select from W 10 6th | L 3 PM. 3 Tnion Methodist Episcopal and | 1,5pacighfrain. B, & ¢ s ation you can appreciate the valué Naval Hospital basket ball teams are | - Retutim, o jeaves A Riat 3 4y booked for a_game tomorrow night | Baltimore. .05 M. (D R R = hnis at 7:30 on the Naval Hospital court. | w. 5 & i and | Tailor made means vou get the sarment as you want it Suit or Overcoat Made for You $99.50 Regular $35 Values 27 Regular $40 Values 354 Regular $50 Values Full Dress Suits To Order, Silk- $45 Sinedt . o T Mertz & Mertz Co. 906 F Street : 4 BECAUSE the STA-SET Collar Shirt is & mew discovery in the art of shirt making—because it is truly differ ent from anything clse and because the govern- ment encourages invention by protecting the rights of the inventor—the United States Patent Office protected the invention of the STA-SET Collar Shirt by patents granted August 18, 1925. Ask any of the leading men’s stores to show you the distinctive features of the STA-SET Collar Shirt—buy one for the comfort and ease of a soft collared shirt—wear them regularly for the assur- ance of neatness and style in any situation and under any conditions. STA'SET COLLAR SHIRT