Evening Star Newspaper, November 13, 1925, Page 31

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SPORTS. HE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTO NOVEMBER 13, 1925 SPORTS Weather Is Worrying Eastern Elevens : Grange in Last Home Stand Tomorrow HOPE FOR DRY GRIDIRONS |PALACE QUINT GETS Inside Golf] ¢ LINKSMEN TRAIL |FACES WABASH IN FINAL |RUSSIAN AND POLE FOR IMPORTANT CLASHES| LASTORiLL Tobay| | ANSICE RxO |y norroLk TOURNEY| A ME ON ILLINOIS FIELD| TE FOR CHESS LEAD - ‘Washington's Palace Club completes }l"hell .“'Oll: i!wl ..:‘PUC:X';:"\: B‘f\?¥f: NORFOLK, Va., November 13 (®). e MOSCOW, November 13 (#).—A P = its preliminary training for the|pear & vy iveic 4 Y8 | —With the professional-amateur match the conclusion of the third round of > . . ar a zizzaizzzizz at the point 5 A . s < - & fotesnat(orali chées miskers ton , Critics Believe Heavy Going at New Haven Would |american Bascet hall Leusun race | hioive Sne minse ity e i | ot of the . the major event of the| All-America Back Ends Career in Conference Next | international chess macters: tour g o o with a scrimmage against the Cen- ball. The inexpert| ¢ the Princess Anne Country Club o . - . Russia’and Rubinstein of Poland were He]p Yale Agalnst Pl'lnceton——}\[any Annual tral High five, champlons of the High plaver sWINgIng | was under way today with scores of Week in Ohio State Contest—Mud at Chlcago in the lead with h. Ma = School League, tonight at 8 o'clock = will hear his shaft | the leading golfers of the Nation par- shall, the Amer har and in the school gymnasium. Tomorrow make a leng whirr | ticipating. ! Meetings on Saturday List. il Sl S Mg il SRTI0 Corien QoW |- En s o b 830 orelomics S aaliie Expected to Handicap Dartmouth. T ot s with 2 points each a short breathing spell before opening There is a lot of | off continuing at intervals of five min- Six games were drawn. In the ad I encante o i B S s T difference between | Utes, The maatehes weee for 72 holes = Journed gaines Torre and Lasker have By the Associated Press. day night. the prolonged|and two flights of 18 holes each were [ By the Associated Press the better iinst Marshall NXIOUS ey S A z Manager Lou Sugarman today an- whirr and the| carded for today. R 5 and Rom: 3 pectively A‘ I‘ i S eyes today were turned upon weather conditions by foot | nounced the release of Carl Saile rv“:’}.“‘!’lv‘ 2 Among the players participating are HICAGO, November 13.—Red Grange tomorrow sings his swan song rsult Marshall, = United ball teams of the East as muddy gridirons were threatened for |ex-Dartmouth player, who was try i . - " | Walter Hagen, Chick Evans, Al Wat : H >rof = s —the Illinois emorial | St#tes, and T exico, adjourned another week end of stirri onfli (gs ing for a berth in the Palace line-up. means that the|rous, H. Beckett, Gene Sarazen, Cyril o st grvuhrm.l thatfbrossh Bhimiglory,matheatlliois M emdrie] Romanowsksy wee of stirring conflic i DiEon S berthiniine/alace ey Wrists haNe enap: | Walker, ook oo h Eamzen, CYIl Field at Urbana Russia, adjourned -\O campaign in recent yecars has been so much affected by the weath- | Greve of New York. ":‘i“:l‘(‘l“{‘:efl;“'i';figl {"orrenler. Tom Bovd, Walter Beckett, It may be a lusty chant of returned kick-offs, long runs and accurate | The drawn games were: Loewer er as the pre b i : o A group of Washingten sports at exac e right | Pat Doyle, John Golden, Ray Outmet,| oY Pl : 4 St fisch, Russia, and Retl, Czechoslo S lwfls‘zn! o (v ‘f“f 1“1’"}‘7 uthrffi ‘m the sclwm early dn Qctob e D e ot e T e |.yol'n;1 “ihm ‘:e and others who have been prominent | PAsses, accompanied by the admiring tributes of fans, gathering there to- | vakia; Spielni; tria, and Bo and snow, accompanied by sogy fields, came later. p ington team will g0 o New York | |farL cnmmee’ |clubhead meets the | in recent years' golt champlonships|day to witness his final home appearance against Wabash. Next week, | gatryischuck 1 Saemisch, Ger ... Followers of Dartmouth are especially perturbed over conditions at | Sunday in a speclal car as the guests | |(For PRAtTicey | Vall: Such a golfer | throughout the country against Ohio State, the ontamed Wi snid f the W many, and Habinowiisch, Russia; Be Chicago, which threatened to hamper Dartmouth's swift-running attack, in- |of the Palace Club. The party leaves | |-THEN wwip 17 . [concentrates * his| ~Five threesomes of particular in-| 382173t DO Srate, the tniame e Teaiontof the West-| go1jubow nd Rubinstein, Pc » cluding frequent use of the forward pass. But the Dartmouth optimists |Union Station at 1 o'clock. Whole effort, and | terest today were those in which Tom | F ¢ S i s picture, to which he has given so many vivid [ jana; fa, and Yates pointed out that Red Grange ran wild in mud on Frankin Tield. so per- —— SEOFE) ol ihe lonn o ‘WbcomplanIng | oore it L e A | Grange's past in|the gameimay be small, for. Coach! Zuppkelplansito e e haps Oberlander and Lane can heave and dash in slime far from home. LEAGUE ELECTS HE that clubhead maximum speed at the | gan. a RCoeHNG e e R Caas | sawe son’ fe witl f ok s BGH e 2 Watinlcwer AL defeated We New Haven would be a help to Yale | fullback. 13 P)—At a meeting of representa- f?,‘*‘fl',m;}‘]‘d he gets It by Swinging the | and McLeod: Hagen, Walker and Ar-| rneersectional interest follows the| Grange spiked per ng. against Princeton, owing to the fact| CAMBRIDGE, Mass., November 13.tives of ‘clubs in the Pledmont |hody. If you poise a club at the ton | Turmie mink i order bt under| D1 Green of Dartmouth with its|concerning his actions at the close of that it would compel the lighter Nas- [ —Harvard's practice 'vesterday for [ League, W. G. Bramham of Durham. | of the back swing, then just let it | par. Al® Watrens. wrofeceimal, of | PASSING game and deceptive reper- | the foot ball season. sau backfield to abandon its aerial at-| the. Brown game was light in com. [N. C.. was re-elected president for |fall, absolutely unaided, to a point | Girand Raplas, and Jonn MeMenamin, | 0re into” Chicago as guests of the s feins Lot ® yard esining powentot tack. Backers of the Tioer eleven, | PATiSon with what it had been all |five vears near the bottom, then ‘whip it, you|amateur, of Hampton, Va., won first | Staggmen. The Marcon fleld = 1s|ed to play for a New York outfit that | the backfield £ cusanitedi - Backers of t ger eleven. | (he week. There was a short but e will get the idea of what I mean prize vesterday in the professional | RUddy and this may aid Chicago in was wiling to.give $40.000 for three s i onl however, took hope from the fact that [ spirited signal drill following the TOMBS KNOCKED OUT. (Copyright. 19 Fmatenr medal play. Howard Beckatt,| 118 efforts to stop Oberlander and |games. He is not sure of what he |another coat of polish o the defensive the Eli e 8 e of its|kicking practice, but most of the ses. 2 e atoirmoghipias L John . Mar | the New Hampshire passers, who|will do, maneuvers the Minnesota team Wwi B Aggregation. in spite of its g D! t 5 (GELES 7 - Atlanta professional, and John F. Mar- o, ainst 1 1 sreat offensive power, has been un | 5107, which ended early, was spent | LOS ANGELES, November 13 shall, jr., Norfolk amateur, won the |3{ter making short work of Eastern b s . : i i T o ftion: o : ; new | CHICAGO, November 13 (#).—Chi ca orrow 2 gn the defensive asainst Brown plays. | )--Jackle Tombe, former Olympic|D ) WRENN IS DEAD: |secord purse. ana Tommy Armour, |SPRosition. come West secking new | [} steady, having been scored upon b¥ | This work will continue briefly today. | featherweight champlon, was knock- | e Ua R S e oy e | worias itoi contuer: | cago's foot ball team will take the| Li actice sessions Georgla, Brown and Maryland and| The first team line-up vesterd ed out in the second round last night = 7 SR Chicago, looking back to halting | fleld against Dartmouth tomorros week, t the final int | Newton, Richmond amateur, captured | . et s e L OTe _ fiarll Baatenity oo syloata comprised E. Bradford, left end; Pratt, | bY Jimmy McLarnin, Oakland ban- WAS NOTED ATHLETE“}S.‘“ on Rielimond amateur, captured | Gy e n. the Tiinols Kame with the | Without: having had a single scrim. |s e big clash, w L DenmANIE o it T e §“’ ot [tamwetgh x;((wll of 1'_;';.‘ ,:,‘;g,n:-;?.x.“;:- on n,;:h d: mage since the lifnols contest last ¢ ely to perfect! rloge the season for Frinceton. Dart-| Turner, center; . Bradford, right — = | Mel Shorey, professional at West|fenge. “he so g & hanaian ) N Fedy D ROTER I CIIE F1e ot ohim tho|| Enica: \Godtty LoIEht atine. Basieet [ Potomar Pask, and his biother, Johm, | L0 118 offense, though McCarty may it BB s Bt g E, 1 ember scene after its struggle with Chicago. | right end; Stafford, quarterback GARCIA SCORES K. 0. NEW_YORK, November 13 (®.—|a Washington publiclinks amateur|3uPlicate his gains of last week in|{&roons® practice fleld into o mud lof . 2 Amherst and Williams are among | Cheek, left’ halfback; Zarakov, right| HARTFORD, Conn, November 13| Robert D. Wrenn, famous tennis play- | star, were the best of the Distriet [!h® rain and siime. G e Tan s CINT 30 s AteTiSE astern teams which will wind | balfback, and Chauncey, fullback. UP).—Bobby Garcia of Baltimore last | €7 and allaround athlete is dead | representatives vesterday In the Prin Northwestern Hopeful. at Chicage The squad galloped |0 Play agains schedules tomorrow This is pretty close to the array |night knocked out Johnny Kochansky [ National champion for four years,|cess Anne tournament. Their score throush the mite £or oo Hous and a |02, would be ¢ Last games on ¢ gridirons will | Harvard will have on the field at the . J.. in the sixth round, | @ second baseman and a quarterback | of 34 -35—69 gave them a tle for fifth Northwestern,” among the Big Ten | pait chieflv rehearsin few new|an injured knee be played tomorrow Ed McMillan, | Kick-off against Brown. v are featherweig at Harvard, a Roosevelt Rough Rider | % in the first day's play. y elect aince its defeat | tiovs A ittlo. thue o toent in|among the ger center and c during the Spanish War, a_major in | St aIbL o sairsiant o e o Paare e it pent in lander, Dutch Diehl and Georg the Air vice d g the World | patrs in which Washing player Victory o ad| ocrenaive deill of Dartmouth and many other - War, he died last evening in his apart- | was fnelunded and rankings follow i o shmemi}a 0T B e o ey rs of high caliber ment( here of Bright's disease. He was | Fred MeLeod and v lne-up s ready, while the Bofler- | NEecding the fCcloll, Stage el ntin . Pennsylvania, meeting 53 vears old, and for 25 vears he had el & Bothom s makers are without Capt. Harold | petey oo o ues TOr Prect ot 1o ex L etoxced Thanksgiving, will atte been & member of the New York Stock | Evan. 73 (27th, tie): Bob Harnett ana I | Harmeson, halfh and Gladders, | Pect be in excellent condition. teom e 2 e e bk Exchange. ' ot Norfolk. 75 t David | fullback wh as won six of TN o . BaneRCHY O “ictory over Pittsburgh tomorr BY CORINNE FRAZIER: He was,national tennis champion in U Sy o g s played in 30 years. va L_'\‘T-!‘ )I|4'). , November 13 UP)— | State - ¢ Aviny’s charce of vlotory over Co- ¥ 1 1894, 1896 and 1897, and shared | (38 te) P bl iinst whom no touch: | Dartmouth’s foct ball team worked |iron and Fer 1is one of imblaat New York were diminished NIVERSITY OF MARYLAND rifle team, which lists many of the|the doubles champlonship in 135, In 89"n haa Been made. s geared for (DU NSEE VESEHAY [oF mote (e nfdrained < section, and yes Aaw b Vlion e (BRIl E S leading Illll\!\;:llle~ of the country on its schedule, will shoot first | tienal amasreriack e wae eang s | DONZELON, AT 100 TO 6, et T ing | ain and @ mudy eld ' ieking. el b and Hewlitt have replaced then against the University of Michigan in a telegraphic match on|hockey. In his later vears he becam B 1 g potential starter bt | < s BcE I AEE ARG GLLECINIL S a2 vard and Brown at Providence, Syra- et ’ . . ? ¥ ability. He was graduated from Hat LIVERPOOL, England, November an muster. Friedman is| 04 and third teams opposing the 2 s E=o QD S Sir iae Cores ormerly the Old Liners’ schedule has not opened until after Christ- [vard in 1895, 113/ ®'—Donzelon, by Chaucer out ¢ 3 with Gregory. Molenda| ol iY, (eAETEee The S Oriot s the c al ike, however, and A e O O Men: | mas, but this vear it was decided to stimulate interest by opening the sea- | ;1% wife died some yenrs ago. One|Tortor, today won the Autumn « ; idn the backfield—the| 0 EC I ooaking wet and covered < tactics in an i Jarginiaand Penn State ot Morgan | son several weeks in advance. This new plan, if successful, will be/adapted P {ite meinclpalndce o0 e Ty ate pine its falth on Marek, | ¥ith mud When the workout ended. | Jour session. Mo serlous opposition polis. permaner R MIAEAH0E oL N0 Filonte 1710 it nd Capt. Cunningham in i x. and the coaches are be : . b Elonge D% suxe s6 dnd Ha% = sturdly et IOWA CITY, svenber 13 (4 - and paches = NEW HAVEN. Conn., November 13. | Doroth v, rifle manager, has|fleld in the Bloomingdale division AMERICANS UNFA'R The winne owned by Admiral | /4 OFUHRES 28 ziuas o 1y def - Twenty-elght o geld war rts toward the Purdue Yala's Toot ball alie ¢ against | announce schedule, as|having overcome their strongest foe $ir Medworth, Meux. Dowager Laay | kike Michican, it bas Tost One O | an e umisi abola. el coashos uber 11, when the new he T Foriciron Beide ¢ | when they defeated the Burroughs TO LOSERS CHARGE 2 nea-Amethystine wass6e o UE e b paecan embarked last night for Minneapolis, | Stdium will be dedicated fapdluntil Jas hresl o) Michigan saxtet early this week. Wallach up = SEVC S0y Spaci IS5 CPIONONG) IvL & ojgauie 10 | where they will wind up the - FANSTON, 111, November he Bowl. Noble displaced Cutler at ) Maine. {parently has a clear fleld before it S - SR I ence season ugainst the Gophers to Every n on hwestern" left halfback ame Known Delaware. 4 . “ln the Gartleld division and Carbery e Minnesota is cHipplped for its re. | MOITOW. sity team Is fit and ready for the P e the hotn shdiRicH 20—Pennsylvanin State|and Peabody-Hilton are sweepin CHICAGO. November 13 () Y T ception of Towa at U,,’ Gopher ho Coach Ingwersen gave the foot ball | due game tomorrow. Baker, wh ards, have not v recovered from L £ everything before them on the Plaza| American public, which worships fL0 i horees coming. Since Minnesota has squad no rest vesterday and the worl- |heen: out e was Syracuse University. | grounds. The title will probably ners and jeers the losers is all Wrong | Ang aeine Sonroinystn place at | Conference standing | Ut Was us strenuous as ever. Most |in the Chicago 5 Cutler has not played for five weeks N 1 Institute. decided when they oppose each other, | in jis attitude, belleves Dr. Ernest H, | o0 4&F G pinnacl 4, it is prepared for | °f the time was spent perfecting | passes with old with the exception of a five-minute ut = higan Agriculty as neither has found its peer in the| Hopkins, president Dartmoutl: its 7 t of the seasor - the Towa pass att 1 providing | his kicking seer empt against Brown. His knee has|C9 e ¢ Tllin other teams battling for the title University. He is here for the Dart AWH while the Hawkeves are anxious to|2 defense f ; aerial game. | will start again no means regained its strength and U o I ——— mouth-Chicago game tomorrow KAN w A TOSSE s regain prestige lost In the Wisconsin | - e is likely to be veserved for an ciay, s with| y, the Chevy Chase Playground| T think the public’s attitude, par- | R e i & onsin | oy MBU 5. NovEmbertE | George rex Institute | 10,0 B sse! o he le: 1 (#) —Hard n kept the Oh State B T "] mergency. ! | League the 7B tossers are In the lead toward the players, is . ¥ feate it Noe ard rain Kept th 1o Stal ailermalk a - st : ken | 24 telegraphic with Vermont. | ;mpet have triumphed over three of e o HOLD INITIAI DR'LL 2 ot TSt Can team indoors for its last workout |will e {67 Tiatay aft Sturhahn is suffering i a T sdntitoa he above-scheduled | s X il unfiax 18 e . elnrient Caiueglc for A r tinger and will play with his hand [ 1T > Ted strongest opponents. SA. SB| “go ¢ P A Bomt Raln heornegle | here before leaving fc Arbor, eavily bandaged. Richards has had | Tl ‘r'::-”'\:“"‘ Marylanders “:x'it”;‘i‘::;:‘nnd All teams in this league are [ hody of he touted to the skie pered practice of the Rockne men. | aich. Where the Wolveris ine T ot Phree s ot Iiaree since hid | pete for'the intercollegiate champlon | fiom e E. V. Brown Schoo Bt Iet it loa o gams or twe; make & | 1cnawha o ; , - of the Rockne men. | be'Tict Tomorrow, Tt - %quad |- RADIATORS, FENDERS etnrn. to: the sieht-nnpk bertl 1D to be decided the week beginning | o g t No. 1, leading in | few lttle mistakes, d where §s it? | .. JKanawha Preps, runners-up to the B feres b, | comprising 55 men, trained this BODIES MADE AND REPAIRED Wertham 15 ontior the - the | December 27. Additional matches are | gpe Chevy Chase Dodge Ball League. | It is prot Erannent ol vellow any Junfors in the Alovsius % Pols 5 *,‘\" morning, stopping off practice NEW "RADIATORS FOR AUTOS & e pending wiih West Virgin Atlioma (e Chev, Chash, Dotge Sl League | It o promutly braned ne sellow. o | duel B e mmene et Winter, TS ichican, AR | sesuion” st Tolebo. . The *soehinan | WITTSTATT'S R. & F. WKS LR > lEht] College of Ttah, Chicago, Vashington i eot (i 5h eara, o T sill hold their initial workout tonight team, Stat - and drum |~ — - . and Wisconsin t 7:30 in Business High School gy URBANA, 11, November 13 (). —a | €TS8 and s al thousand rooters ) there and & moning Bradle . at 3:30 on the Chevy Chase play American attitude toward sports ium = vt e Sl sium, r the direction of Coach |, h , 5 {also will mak ip to the Michi- he side lines in case s Tech School's junior class | 8round. o the detriment of sports. It isn't | ¥ S heavy rain and decision by Coac h‘:né‘ ;f,,,,llf’,:"_,fi Gl he: Michi switches from a line-hammering to | basket cam defeated the senfors the playing of the game we're i nown last season as {he | ZUPPKe to start his seconq team | 5% o e L forward-passing style of stratesy : in & llvely practice game by | Interplayground teams will engage | ested in, but only the winning of the eam, known last season as the | yzainse Wabash tomorrow combined | o Lr0SPECts for an Ohio State viotory It has been jed to retain on e ot three goals The final|in their third-round contests tomor-| game. We seem to bhave a sort o iyt lusioce i ey o mposed | s pread loom among the many Atn ;;O‘TH';{T;:L‘, Buckeye practice sessions BATTERIES at Hght tackle, because of the failure | score was 18 to 12. The teams twere | Fow morning at 10:30 | mania to worship the winners. We : Bt C Gixkes. | dents h ho had been 100king for- | oftanse for Michigan ploye. Karow and » - of the veteran Butterworth o recover | déadlocked at the end of the third| In section 1 Georgetown will play | cannot give credit to the man who has | a1 ies HuPPert, Chatlin, Gordon | wurd (o seeing Red Grange run wild | Snense 197 Michis: sl S Pay as You Ride from the injury to his knee. Butter- | quarter, the count standing 10-10, but | Montrose at Montrose, and_Happy | fought a splendid, clean battle and | “"7 %" in his Jast game on the gridiron where | par “out oehe o ainstays, having PROBEY TIRE STORES worth is a possibil for a pagtial |in the final period the juniors netted | Hollow will meet Mitchell Park at|lost—credit because he made such a| Cardinal and Corinthian jusior 1 Hotw ERYer hiNiare: been out D A meell e playing period four goals to their opponent's one. H. ¢ Hollow. Willlam S. Phillips | fisht. We forget all about how finely |are matched for u game tonight ut Zupp apparently is 1ooking to next | vesterday ¥ | RIS ESASCUN. Yesterday's lineup. which, the| The freshmen and the sophmoressand Towa Avenue will clash at Iowa [and how cleanly the loser played and | Immaculate Conception gymnasium at | vear in giving his second-string men | % | Ith & P B N.W 1200 H 8t N.E oaches insist, is likel¥ to be duplicat- | will nfeet Monday afterncon in a simi- | Avenue in section while Twin Oaks | lost in our immediate worship of the | §:30. in opportunity MINNEAPOLIS 1 in opening tomorrow’s same, was |lar practice game in preparation for|and Columbia Road will battle on the | winner. i : ¥ follows: Left end. Gill; left tuckle, | the championship series to open after | Park View fleld. : And it is a bad thing for foot ball | Epiphany Junfors won e Capt. Joss; left g wrhahn; cen- | Christmas. Rloomingdale journey to Rose-|and a bad thing for the play the season by downing the ter, Burt; right guard, Richards; rizht = Sia. | Sale and Plaza ew York | have seen men driven out of 4 to At half-time the tackle, Benton; right end, Botts; quar Basket ball tossers of the Ile-| Avenue in the section 3 encounters.|over the matter of dropping a pu h team led, 14 to 7 bk Tummen: left halfback, Noble: | mentary and Playground leagues The schedule for section 4 lists Vir-| Players have made mistakes and had | ¢ Aomaeh N TiEht haltback, Kiine: tullback, Allen. | paused to catch their breath vester-| ginia Avenue at Garfleld and Van|no peace in their lives afterward, Z - day, while Jupiter Pluvius reigned— | Ness at Hoover keenly were they made to feel what FINNEGAN GETS BOUT. PRINCETON, N. J.. November 13.|or rather rained—all over Washing-| N , S | they had done, all through our wrong S 2 _Princeton wound up its drills ves. | ton, leaving them not one dry spot| Marjorie Webster’s junior and|attjtude.” WATERBURY, Conn., November ‘terday and is in readiness for the |on which to carry on their strenuous :?rl:{n:llw?;'l;’or,\"t:uv:: n:o‘;n;h;; }'rminm N Ao o ) v]-!(i."\' Kennedy of New L o l a g ree struggle h Yale. | campal school and city cham- | Play the st game 1e interclass rleans has been signed by George el BIE Vs el RS e e e i WILL SEAT 80,000. pricans, has been sined by ceoree | | eisurely = i Sl S inw the enforced idleness a gen- | the Potomac Park Field. o emhos 13 ) ck (Honey Boy) Finn ot Bos- ntire workout, but Roper kept hi During the enforced idleness a g kit e hes YORK, Novem 13 A m espattered teams going as eral survey of e situatio in the o kK w 1 soon on the ton in n round boxing ut here l - lismissing the first eleven only a |various “division camps” was taken. x n ¥ | striction of temporary seats which Both half hour earlier thar others In the Rosedale division, a study of | the teams. The seniors’ red tunics| . ijincrease the seating capacity of [Wen are featherweights. Finneg: B hne Pt composgd of | the “battledine” revealed the fact | ¥1ll vie with the juniors' gold as they | o Yankae stadinm from. 63,000 iF | recently defeated Babe Herman tion Will ers, % managers, | that the Pierce contingent, which has “':"‘”‘q'}““l”"'“q':":; S £0.000. The additions are designed | gn By this morning and will practice | twice waged a successful campaign| .. or Wednesdar. Novantie: | primarily to handle foot ball crowds. VE. L n_the bowl this afterncon for the division trophy and is batting | feheduled for Wednesday, November|py; they also may bo available for | E«x }SF[‘S S?H‘I‘ AT IT. ; Conf".m Trainer Fitzpatrick rgported to vear for permanent possession, | Lot the SORehes Tl SUCCt (he MATHLY | world serles games or boxing shows. | Hartelmes und Lappeine will urnish wight that the entire squad, with |has not vet been cherked n its tri| 1000 Nide deams AR PipiEIss maloninithel st mockeg Y Ch & the exception of Bartell, substitute hant advance and has only two Ty tettaea 5 urney at Granc ” thmter: 14 Ta pefect condition. The | more foes L eonauer before caiming | oo WOIL has been selected cap-| MITCHELL BEATS COMPSTON. | Roorke defeated Reynalds st nigne, | 4 OUT & NOICE Tiger head coach can count up 12 |the vietor's crown. Teanley loader of the Suaiors | WENTWORTH, England, Novem-|= - zood backs, the three combinations| The Monroe forces, winners of the 2 e e = ber 18 OP)—Abe Mitchell defeated ranking as follows: Caulkins, Dignan, | Columbia Helghts division title for Members of the George Washing- | Archie Compston, British professional | Gilligan and Slagle, Ewing, Booth, | two vears, were repulsed in their at-|ton University Fencing Club will meet | golf champlon, by 10 up and 8 to play, | Bridges, Prendergast, Disston, Beares, [ tack on Park View, but were trium-|tonight from 7:30 to 9:30 for practice | in their 72-hole match, ending today, Weeks und Chandler phant in all other engagements. If |with their instructor, Prof. Lanzilli, |for a purss of £200 a side. The two first teams. all of whom | Park View succumbs to West, the | at his stadio, 1521 K street northwest, | mmmmm———oo Potts was restore. aht Noveml o 1 robably see service, lined up |1924 titleholders still have a chance. | —— e i 1 erwise they must bow to their suc.| Washington Field Hockey members PIMLICO AUTUMN ME Spec]als for y Gactieat tomon Lo Novembar ond 1o 1tn First team—Lea. left end: Gates, | cessors. wiil_practice fomorrow ‘morning on ADMIRSTOR ndtadine tan left tackle; Crago, left guard: MeMil [ Jackson's tossers, twice victors in | the Elipse from 11 to 1 o'clock. An FIRST RACE—1-16" P.M e T e | e et v airead | additional practice will be held In the | o STRPFLECHANE EACh DAY _ Hunters Darby, right tackle right t their claim to the throne, having ;‘f"’"’""" f:]"-‘maf to 6, ;Nn“riall,\‘ f]nr 1180 AN due Baltisigre 132 e s e i L e nauished by both Addison ans| business and professional women who | _ Returs eaves M1 'Roval Siation halfback: Dignan, right halfbaek; | Curtis Hyde § {are unable to attend the morning | B4om N Dnen) We carry the follow- + Gllligan, fullk Bucharan was overwhelmed in its | BAmes. W.B. & A. electric Jine. ing lines of shells— Second tearn Rennard, end; retain the Virginia avenue | Rosengarten, left tackle, K left | crown, retiring from the battlefield | Super X, Winchester, guard; Hobsc riest, center its defeat at the hands of | & S b ek W d Raldwin, right French, right | Ketcham, which is contending with, ; estern Field and tackle, Jeffers, right end; Ewing. [Bryant or honors. : . quarterback: Prendergast, left half-' Brightwood Park is leading the o Remington EEa B | e $35 Iver Johnson Hammerless Shotgun 12, 16 and 20 Gauge $94.9%8 MAKING FRIENDS . ol “P've tried ’em all but eipcr' '} Le Fever 12, 16 and : ience has shown me that It has been said that the only ;':l. eiliamole satithacion 20 Gauge Guns way to make real money in the there’s no cigar that smokes $2 5.00 used car business is to sell them up to an ADMIRATION. Try S “as is”. That may be a good one and smile!” | e |THE BERBERICH way to make money—for a short : : e oy | RECOMMENDATION time—but it is not a good way g:ij;n?:’alio Al wool, R ¥ $798 | IS YOUR DOUBLE ’ to make friends. We figure that Cigar Toda - GUARANTEE OF ; Other Models if we get the friends, the profit y Duck s Back - SATISFACTION will take care of itself. St 10c and 15¢ || Hunting Coats, $9.00 SEMMES MOTOR COMPANY 2 for 25¢ Pants, $5.00 RAPHAEL SEMMES, President 3 for soc Bass Hunting Used Car Department 1707 14th St. N.W i 1 Boots, $12.98 Main 6660 Open Eveninge DoDSE BROTHERS DEALERS SELLE00OD USED CARS Bring in your old gun and trade iton anew one. Howard A. French & Co. WM. DEICHES & CO., INC., 414 10th,ST. N.W. 0,12‘5‘.3.',‘?.,5 f}..yuym

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