Evening Star Newspaper, November 28, 1925, Page 27

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SPORTS. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C.. SATURDAY, NO VEMBER 28, 1925. Foot Ball Fades From Eastern Sport Pages : Base Ball Body to Meet on Train ARMY-NAVY GAME HEADS ' CLIMACTIC CARD TODAY Service Elevens Primed for Colorful Contest in New York—Boston College Faces Holy Cross. Lehigh Encounters Carnegie Tech. OLLEGIATE foot ball steps from the Eastern sport picture this ‘ afternon after a brilliant season, which has witnessed the crown- ing of Dartmouth, the rise and fall of Cornell, Yale, Columbia, Army and Harvard. and the sensational finish ef Princeton. Five Eastern elevens, in addition to Army and Navy in the out- | standing classic in New York, are in the last line passing in review be- fore fandom today. One of the quintet, Bucknell, closes its scason against Dayton, at Dayton, Ohio, in an intersectional game. The other two games pit Boston| e e B | EADING GRID GAMES | T0 BE PLAYED TODAY Pittsburgh. | ha Travel Rocky Roads. I'he Army and Navy eleve traveled rocky roads this year. So have | 105t of the other teams. It cannot be | otherwise the way modern schedules are arranged. Games fully as stiff as | ihose booked for November are listed | for October, and those who go at these | with all the zeal and preparation they | used to for thelr climactic battles do ! rise again to top form. Hence are knocked about in November EAST. Armiy vs. Navy, at New York. Holy Cross vs. Boston, at Boston. Lehigh vs. Carnegie, at Pittsburgh. MIDDLE WEST. Dayton vs. Bucknell, at Dayton, Ohio. | BELIEVE IT OR NOT. (Rer. U. 8. Pat. Office.) —By RIPLEY . Fre ConnoR \ SKIPPED Tz ROPE (0,1l Tives IN | HR., IE MIN O\ City o Jan, iv93 | | |HUGE SPORT PALACE {Anistralin: WILL OPEN TONIGHT NEW YORK. November 2§ (#). Tex Rickard's $3,000,000 coliseam the New Madison Square Garden—| opens tonight- with a program of | amateur, professional and motor- | paced races, the preliminary eventsi| to the thirty-ninth six-day bicycle race | which opens ‘at 12:01 a.m. Monday. Fifteen teams will enter upon the | six-day grind tomorrow night at 8! o'clock, the field including the win- ners of the last race, kred Npencer and Bobby Walthour Other teams follow: tegisie McNamara, Newark Tl and Franco Georgetti, Ital Alf ullet, ewark, and Cecil Walker, Gerard Debaets and A, Belgium: Harris Horder, and Harryv Horan, South N, Constant Girardengo Gaetano Belloni, Italy: Pletro Tinari and Louis Benezatto, Italy Alf Grenda, Tasm: a, and Alex Mc Heath, Australia: Charley Winter and | Paul Croley, New York: Willis Spencer and Ray Eaton, Newark, N. J.; Er- nest Kockler and Carl tockholm, Chicago: George Wambst and Char- Lacquehay, France; Otto Dri, rmany, and \Willle Coburn, Kearny, | P. Bestetti and Ferrario, | V' red ] N. Goosens, | lor, Newark. WRIGLEY WILL PLAY HOST TO BOARD OF ARBITRATION Members Who Have Problems to Settle to Catalina Island, But Will Do Most of Deliberating While Traveling. Goin BY JOHN B. FOSTER. 28 —The high-soun arbitration the Na to the some as much to do with bas ting betwee: AW Novembe tion YORK board what mysterious organization, which 1 ball—will hold its annual meeting on a spec Chicago and Los Angeles early in January : The National Association is to meet Catalina Island t guest of William Wrigley, whose principality the island happens to be Wrigley:js a member of ihe association, because he is the owner both o the Chicago Cubs and the Los Angeles club of the Pacific Coast League. | ‘The board, the hardest-worked bod FOOT BALL SECRETS in base ball, because all the di By Sol Metzger ot ot sociation—that and, fans, n op: is as ferences of the minor leagues coms before it for settlement, is anxfous tu | ket all of its tusks out of the way be fore the train to the association mee ing arrives at Los Angel It [ doesn’t, it won't have an time spend enjoying the delightful climate of Catalina, for there were variou ! messes brewing in the base ball | cauldron |- First of all. there is a hard-and-fas | desire on the part of the most of tir WALTeR f ruajor I e b . get rid o Haskell Indians vs. Loyola, at Chi-| {major league bosses to g o form™ is upset. The Army was a great team against Notre Damie, or o it appeared. But Notre Dame. the wiseacres tell us, was overrated, and in consequence the Army became overrated. Well, if there «is anybody on earth sapient enough to know just the real, intrinsic strength of each team every Saturduy. one who can avold these pitfalls, hasn't turned up yet. In the old days the big teams didn't play hard gzames until they met one another in November. and there was not form to upset. Has Its Troubles Since the Notre Dame victory the Army has lost to Yale and Columbia, but showed some stuff against Davis. Elkins, a good outfit, and wi a hard game on its merits. The Navy earned ace for itself by a tie game with nceton. which, as events turned vut. was an opponent of class, but lots of the Navy glamour vanished in thin Aair when Michigan smothered the Mid- pmen, and thereby acquired a halo ich in turn was considerably dim- med by the course of events. ‘Fhe Navy took that drubbing with- out a whimper, and since then has becn plugging away earnestly. It cannot be said of efther team today that it is first-class. o far neither eam has earned that description, hut overpraise, from which all teams and many players suffer—no plaver s as z00d as be is made out to be—has not come to the Army or Navy either comparatively freely, and two humble teams arve just S as not to play a first-class game. ther team capable of one better game than cither has shown. Records of Teams. The Army bas won six of its games this year gnd lost two, while the Navy has won five, lost one and yied one. ® The complete oIy kely is record of the two ARMY Win. & Mary 0 10% stre Dame. 0 0 28 (4 21 [ TWO COUR T TONIGHT AT Y.M.CA. Methodist and Peck isket ball teams will try for ary Me- al heir second wins in the Sunday 1001 League series tonight at Cen 1Y. M. A. 'he Calvary flve meets the Claren- don Baptist team at 8 o'clock in the rst zame of the weekly double-header. Peck toxsers appear with the Friends’ quint in the second encounter. Taking a substantial lead at the art of the game, Army Medical Cen er hasketers ran up a 34-to-22 score on the Rover five last night in Walter Reed gymnasium. St. Mary's Celties of Alexandria are woked to meet the Capital Preps Tues- «ay of next week, and on Friday night will battle the Palace professional five. Both games will be staged in Alex- hian tossers opened their sea- night with a victory over the Lehighs by the score of 25 to 18. Man- ager O'Donnell, at 808 I" street south- pvest, is booking for the winners. Ace Athletic Club basketers suf- rered their first setback yesterday at the hands of the Calvary Reds. The count was 22 to 13 for Calvary HYATTSVILLE GUARDS TO HAVE STRONG FIVE HYATTSVILLE, M When the “big five’ Company st Infantry Maryland National Guard, of Hvattsville takes the floor next Sunday night against the Yankee 1o0ssers in the preliminary between the Washington American Professional League team and the Original Celtics, at the Arcade, Washington, the line. /D of the local =oldiers will be picked ‘rom Frank Chase. Compton and Co- han, forwards: Crosthwait, T. Belt and \Wright, guards. and Vincent and Cos. tinett, centers. These selections have just been made by Lieuts. Hugh T. McClay and samuel L. Crosthwait, who are coach- ing the soldiers’ regular and reserve fives. B. F. Ch: ha tain of the “big fiv Those assigned to the company’s w«econd quint by the coaches include Shanklin, Bill Chase and Carr, for- wards; Parish. Noack and Burton, ruards; Troy and G. Belt, centers, and Dix, all-around man Lieut. McClay, whose dutfes as ath- letic officer include, in addition to that .f coach, the arranging of games for he Company F teams. announces that e desires to book contests with teams n and around Washington for the focal soldiers for Monday, Thursday »nd Saturday nights on the armory floor here. TLieut. McClay has succeeded in ar- ranging & number of engagements for the doughboy second five, but so far has been unable to close any dates for his “big” quint except that of Sunday Light with the Yankees. As oppo- vents for the company first combina- tion, Lieut. McClay would like par dcufarly to hear from the Stantons, Fomets, St. Martin’s, Hartford Sports thop, Anacostia Eagles or any other ¥nlimited teams in Washington or vi- nity seeking action. Lieut. McClay may be reached by telephoning the armory, Hyattsville 378, after 7 p.m. 2ol HARPERS FERRY, W. Va.. No- “ ember 28.--The Potomac and Shen- ‘ndoah Rivers both were clear this wiorning. been elected cap- } cago. Albion vs. Western State Normal, at { Albion. SOUTIL piSouth Carolina vs. Centre, at Colum- ia. Lynchburg vs. Roanoke, at Lynch- burg. Kentucky Wesleyai vania, at Lexington, Ky. FAR WEST. Utah State vs. Washington State, at Los Angeles. Colorado College vs. Colorado Mines, at Denver, vs. Transyl- State, at Los Angeles. ON PICKED GRID TEAM By tho Associated Press. NEW YORK, November 28.—Dart. mouth’s great eleven. generally re- garded as the country's outstanding foot ball team for the 1925 season, carries off thé bulk of honors in an all-American line-up, selected and pub- lished today by the New York Sun. ‘Three wearers of the Green—Tully, Diehl and Oberlander—gain places on the Sun’s first team, while a fourth, Captain Parker, is put on the second eleven, ¥ The Sun_ will tender the players a dinner in New York December 5, and present each a gold watch. The first and second teams. named by the vote of 10 foot ball writers who confined thelr selections to the terri- tory between northern Maine and the Dakotas, follow: i Nebr. .. Dartm'ih MacMillan, P'c'fon Sturbihn, Yale Joss. Yale. . ° | e hender, Ditm'h, Friedmaa, Mich, Oberlanier. D't Tryon. Colgate. | Grange, lillnois. Lentz. Navy Brown. Michigan Kilgour, Harvard Chase. Pittab'gh Thiye: Pease. Columbia Slagle, Pr'c’ton .. Kreuz, Penn lansky, Geo't'n FLOURNOY TOP SCORER IN DIXIE CONFERENCE | By the Associated Press. RICHMOND, Va.. November | The close of the Southern Conference gridiron season found Peggy Flour- noy: Tulane's stellar halfback, winner | of high scoring laurels in the circutt, | with Edgar Jones, Florida captain and field general, in second place and leading the fleld goal booters. The leaders: | | | | Flournoy. Tulane. .. Jones. Fiorida Hubert, Alabama. Mahoney. Sewanee. . { Morton, Georgia White. 'V M. 1 Rauber. W. and L, Lautenschlager, Tl ison, Tennessee. Cohen_'Mississippi Wrcoft. Georsia Te Brown,’ Alabsma Vanderbil : South C: a o 5 od. N. Carolina Vanderbilt. T.D. F.G. T. o7 ol ELEVEN IS SELECTED The Star today prints the seventh of its series of all-sectional foot ball teams, selected by eminent coaches in the various conferences. Myron ‘Witham, coach at Univer- sity of Colorado, has picked the fol- lowing players as an all-Rocky Moun- tain Conference eleven: CENTER. Volk, Colorado Mines. GUARDS. McGlone, Colorado Universi Ryan, Utah University. TACKLES. Dykeman, Utah Universit; Brown, Colorado College. ENDS. Healy, Colorado Universi Tauffer, Utah University. QUARTERBACK. Chilson, Colorado University. HALFBACKS. Hyde, Colorado Aggies. Thomas, Utah Aggles. FULLBACK. Bohn, Colorado University UTILITY. Rankin, Colorado Aggies. TWO CONTESTS OF NOTE ON SOUTHERN GRIDIRONS NEW ORLEANS, November 28 (#).—With foot ball on its last legs for the season, two games in the South stand out today. South Carolina meets Centre in Columbia and Arkan- gas plays Tulsa in Tulsa, Okla. The other Southern games attract interest in the States in which they are played. Teams of rival Virginia cities clash in the Roanoke-Lynchburg set-to at Lynchburg, and Kentucky ‘Wesleyan and Transylvania are booked for a battle at Lexington. HARVARD CONSIDERS TRIO, . Eighteen Harvard players are con- sidering Clement Coady, tackle and fullback; Madison Sayles, end, and Jake Stafford, quarterback, as candi- dates for the captaincy of next year's eleven. S =S G SOCCER GAME CARDED. | Army Medical Center and German- American reserve teams are listed for a soccer match today at 2:30 on” Wal- ter Reed fleld. i o Southern California vs. Washington | | | " HAS BEEN SENTENCED BATES HAS REFEREED 1060 BOXING AND WRESTLING Cassie (URTin GoMeZ To 978 YEARS IMPRISONMEN T Soriv, Span, (Nov., 19% MATCuES |10 a reported breach between Pro-| TmuTr™® A BULL DOG OWNED 2 SAM MIYER. of Lite Rocic ek | Is 0veR €0 YiaRs { HE German-American Soccer organization known as the membership includes some T Soccer Club of the Oriole City Mre. N. Schmidt is president of the local group. Miss Schmidt. vice presi | dent; Mrs. F. Loffler, secretary, and Mrs. W. Nandjuris. treasurer. In addition to playing the game, the fair socceists have charge of the so- cial end of the joint organization. Planning for occasional social eve- nings is their responsibility. E Buehler heads the social committee, assisted Dy Mrs. Machler and M. Brunner. Unlimited basket ball teams have been formed at Garfield and Blooming dale playgrounds for girls over 16. Maude Parker, director of girls' play- ground activities, with headquarters in the District Building, is the gen- eral manager of the two teams. Both groups are ready for competi- tion and will be glad to accept chal- lenger from any group of their age, provided the challenges are made through Miss Parker. Bloomingdale's team is-practicing in St. Martin's gymnasium in prepara- tion for its opening game with Gar- fleld, scheduled for next week. The original date was set for Tuesday night, but it was found necessary to change this and the new date has not yet been announced. of fly rod anglers. T ing, hat or car. I say it does not | greater chance to get away. I feel | certain .of this. I have used it, and |can see no difference. Therefore. the |nan who wants (o give the fighting Jis, who wants to be called on for more | skill in landing the fish, must still re- | sive the fish a sort to the hook with the barb filed off. | ot the start of the back swing. As you of course know, the barbless hook is not simply a smooth curved hook without a barb. The barb is re placed by a hump in the hook. In this connection I witnessed the landing of & good sized trout recently {out in the western mountains by a Ihook that had been broken, had no Ipoint whatever. {landed the fish and’ then di {that the hook had never even scratched the trout’s mouth. A slight |velease of pressure and the trout | would have spit out the hook and been free. {Ames kept a tight line, conseduently the trout was landed simply by keep- {ing the blunt end of the hook tightly | against the inner side of the fish’s lip. When vou're feeling especially skill- ful you might try it some time. ‘Or, Detter still, if you want to ses how good you are, suppose vou write to B. L. Brown, the noted outdoor phd- tographer and fisherman up in St. his barbless flles. Brown got ahold of a Texas cactus plant miot long ago that had spines on it exactly the shape of a flshhook. He found them to be very tough, and tried-some flies on them. I haven't heard of the re- sult; but: you've got-to hand it to Brown for giving the fish nine-tenths {of the advantage with his new fies. " CHAMPION BOXER ILL. LOS ANGELES, November 28 (#).— Iliness. of Fidel La Barba, American ite postponement of his bout with B omcio, scheduied Here for next ‘Wednesday night. FLATAQUAL IS WINNER. . John Flataqual won from Fred Rey- nolds in last night's match of the District p: Grand Central parlors, 100 to T1. Bob Ames of Texas | The current was swift and | Pauk Minn., and ask him for some of | fiyweight champion,: bas..caused. in-{ WOMEN IN S BY CORINNE FRAZIE women'’s talented learned the game in Germany as well as many less experienced enthusiasts. Last year .the women’s team played the Balti | season are planning to challenge the women's section oi the Wingfoot } fish a betfer chance to get away: that | [ ocket billlard tournament ##t should communicate with Mai sister The have Club of Washington has on the feminine pla, a ub. who se. of vers ore. team, and this Aeld’s line-up includes manager Mary 1h, Kathe) Brown Alme: sonnel of the Bloomingd not yet been announced. St. Peter’s will be hostess 1o Vincent's Wednesday, December 2, for their annual basket ball clash. St Peter’s gymnasium, where the contest will be staged, is located at. Third and E streets southeast Mary Rauh is the oflicial coach for the St. Peter's tosser: 8 Holtzbauer is coaching players Abbie Greene. Olive, Rozelle. director of George town playground, has announced the formation of a dodge ball league to include six school teams, from Cor coran, Fillmore, Addison. Curtis-Hyde. Trinity and Jackson, respectively. The schedule will open on December 1 and will continue until the Christmas holi days. imes will be played daily at 3:4a. All of them will be staged on the Georgetown field, with Miss Greene as referce. Five innings of four minutes ch 11. constitute a game. Fach team will be in the circle for two-min ute periods. THE CALL OF THE OUTDOORS BY WILL H. DILG, President Izaak Walton League of America. HE barbless hook is now standard equipment with many thousands It has proved itself. safety, humanity and convenience. certainty of catching a fish that is hooked. but it enables the angler to | return undesirable fish to the water without manpandling them, and it reduces the brain fever of the angler by being casily removed from cloth- Tt combines the virtues of It does not detract from the Inside Golf By Chester Horton. A good deal of the ordinary golfer's trouble. with weight shifting begins How from a start o start standing seems problem. One ®ood way is to let the welght fall forward Gntil it is about 80 per cent on the. feft leg. The right e g leans §m . rather loosely, o ward the ball. Then, as the club starts back, begin an im- mediate circling movement_to the vight,. starting slowly and grace tully. This cir- WEICHT O~ TOP | RiouT LEc AT Top OF BACK SWING |cling will move all the weight to a point directly on top of the right leg —in fact, the right and left leg will trade places with each other at the start of the back swing. All you have to do then is simply hold that position, while the shoulders and upper body twist with the club. 'This puts the weight in the right place— poised on top of the right leg, while the left toe has a hold on the ground. At the moment of impact from. natur: body motion—chances are if you try to throw it in you will overdo. it and, dip the right shoulder, which should never drop downward. (Copyright, 182 SEMINOLE A. C. ELEVEN IS ANXIOUS FOR GAME Seminole Athletic Club, 115-pound gridmen are without a game for to- morrow afternoon. Any team having the use of u fleld and wishing to book the Seminoles nager Sparks at Lincoln 1784, RPORT ' Marion | to be the | CLUB GOLF MATCHES HANGING IN BALANCE | of i the team matches hangs in the’ balance | today following a meeting of golfers | last night at the home of Harris {of the Bannockburn Golf Club. Divided opinion as to the desirability | of keeping on with the matches | marked the meeting. The question | was finally referred to the District | < tion; and will come up for the annual meeting of | the organization in March. Tom’ Moore bf Indian Spring and Lynn Haines of Bannockburn favored continuance matches, while F. Paxton Washington Golf 1 Country Club was aguinst them. “hevy Chase and Columbia also were | represented as not being in favor of | the matches. Paxton was author of & | jmotion to refer the matter to the | District association 1 Five matches remain to be played on the 1925 schedule, and will prob- ably never Le played. The team of | the Washington Golf and Countr: Club was in the lead by a scant ma Ein when the last match was con- | clude \DEMPSEY SEEKS RELIEF FROM HEAVY GYM TAXES LOS ANGELES. November 28 (®). Jack Dempsey, world heavyweight boxing champion, has told the Los Angeles City Council that its ordi- nance requiring him 1o pay into the civic chest $10 a day as a license fee for his gymnaeium was a knockout blow for his cash regzister. Dempsey said that he also pays the State boxing commission 5 per cent of his dally receipts, and that the two levies put an embarrassing financial crimp in the gymnasium in- | come. which is derived from a 50-cent admission fee. He asked that the civic ordinance be redrafted to lower the tax. WORLD SWIMMING MARK BROKEN IN RELAY EVENT CINCINNATI, Ohio. November 28 | ). —The world 200-yard relay swim ming record was smashed ‘here when the Central Y. M. €. A. team nego- tiated the distance in 1.36 13, clipping 135 seconds fropi the former mark made by tha Tilinois Athletic Club at Milwaukee. 5 The record-breaking performance featured a local meet., held with the sanction of the Ohio division, A. A, U. Louis Rutledge, Walter Lauffer, Harry Glancy and Russell Webb com- prised the Central Y team. Continuance interclub golf | BN . LR 2 2] SPANISH HEAVYWEIGHT PLANS TO INVADE U. S. BERLIN, November lino, heavywefght champion of Spain, here for a bout next Tuesday with the German_ pugilist, Breitenstraeter, has disclosed plansg for an invasion of the United Statés, which he hopes will lead to & championship match with Jack Dempses. : Paolino, now under the management of Francols Descamps. said he expects to leave Paris for New York on De- cember 20, accompanied by Georges Carpentier, Paul Fritsch and Bert Molina, French boxers. Paolino has a record of winning 32 out of 36 matches by knockouts in Europe and is known as the “Pyrennes Tiger GRANGE FIGURES IN SUIT. CHICAGO, November 28 (P)—Har-| old -ange, professional foot ball player, has been named in a suit for garnishment flled by the Chicago Morris Plan Bank, which seeks to collect $2,828 alleged to be due from Grange's manager, C. C. Pyle. This action is to prevent Grange from turning over any property or paying any money to Pyle without a court order. NASH Conveniently Located on Fourteenth Street Hawkins Nash Motor Co. | Sales and Service 1337 14th St. * Main 5780 | in_staging the affair. | border: | Al SITE OF TITLE BOUT DUE TO BE SHIFTED, By the Associated Prees LOS ANGELES, November Jack Dempsey, world champion heav weight boxer. will not fight Harry Wills, negro challenger. in their pro- | posed 1926 bout at Michigan City, Ind. informants at the Dempsey camp ha made it known. The reason. unverified here, is due d Fit: . Ind. immons &nd his colleagues, engaged | be moter Flc South Ben That Chicago would eventually choken for the fight here. in the event that city provides for bouts, under a recently enacted is the opinion | play | State law. Dempsey statement that he was bound agreement to fight un the banner of Pr ster Flovd Fitzsimmons, a that he intended to fight for Fitz mons wherever the latter chose stage the battle. except in the of New York. KEARNS IS ARRESTED FOR DISTURBING PEACE SAN DIEGO, November 28 UP)—Jack Kearns, former manager of Jack Demps heavyweight champion the world and present manager of Mickey Walker, welterweight cham plon, was arrested at the international at ana late last night when he is ated a disturbance. At the San Diego County jail, where he was booked on a charge of disturb. ing the peace, Kearns guve $500 cash bafl to insure his appearance in fce court to Calif us 'D. C. BOWLING TEAM INVADES PITTSBURGH Wiashington's team of picked bowl ers left last night for Pittsburgh where the second half of the season’s first intercity match is to be rolled s evening on the Squirrel Fill John' Blick. mapager of tu» confined himself to the |line of scrimmage bY | right angle into the 18 I his face turned up so he ean watch | 1 by officers to have cre- | tof t | sIf ‘in front of | on | Dis- | the better method is the one pi trict vollers, announced his prolable | line-up for the match as consisting of Work. Happy Burtner, George Friend, Percy Ellett and Frank Mil ler.© Glenn Wolstenholme, Reds Mor- gan and Joe Mulroe also are lkely to figure in the scoring. Rolling on Convention Hall alleys last Saturday, using the plain hard wood pin, the Washington five gained an advantage of 161 points over their opponents. Rubber-banded ducks will be used on the Pittsburgh drives. FIGHTS LAST NIGHT NEW YORK.—Gene Johnson, who gained a newspaper decision over Jimmy Goodrich, pion, in Elizabeth. N. J out by Sammy Vogel, round: DENVER.—Jimmy Sacco, Boston, lightwelght, scored a technical knock: out over Fighting Nobe, Rawlins, Wyo., 3 rounds. NEW ORLEANS.—Young Stribling of Atlanta won a technical knockout over Billy Britton, New York, 1 round. DETROIT.—Tony Marullo, New Orleans, middleweight, won a judges’ decision over Bob ge. Detroit, 10 rounds, HOLLYWOOD. ‘was knocked ew York, Newsboy Browhn, New York, flyweight, gained a decision chwartz, New York, 10 Knute IHansen beat Benny Touchstone, Los Angeles. 6 rounds. SAN FRANCISCO.—Tommy Cello, San Francesco, lightweight, won a de- cislon over Jack Silver, San Francisco, 10 rounds. Frankie Brown, San Fran- cisco welterweight, knocked out Dave Slavin, Newark, J.. 3 rounds. Bat- tling Bolo, Manila lightweight, got the decision over Joe Terris. St. Paul, 4 DIEGO, Calift.—Young Harry s, San Diego lightweight, was awarded a decision over Billy White of Jersey City. N. 10 rounds. ~RADIATORS, FENDERS WITTSTATES R & £ W NV = BOWIE RACES Nov. 16th to.28th, Inc. First Race, 1.P.M. Special traine leave White House'Station. W. B. & A. every 15 minutes after 11:13 direct to grandstand. Stop eavying vwnersaf Studebaker Pourer Durabiling - Finish lightweight cham- | NANRRRRR RS ERNN SRR E W RN NS SRR RNNNN NN NN {Johin Conway Toole, president of th International League, who fights tl majors on measures that have to ¢ with players. Toole wants to ki the big fellows from using the litt fellows amongz the minors as b checks for multitudes of players whos | they desire to farm out and call bach {ut will. The majors are more anxious to acquire long strings of players than {to reduce the number. There is also another reason for tiv board of arbitration working on the traln inst When the lina all of free to ente prospect action at to 7 Certain tes wish the discussions about ti putting two clubs in an 1 isco. This seems subject which belongs strictly to the Pacific League, bu there are some who think that pe: on to change that group must | anctioned by the association as whole. SCHAEFER TO DEFEND HIS BILLIARD CROWN —'GYN\-“. S R Playing Defensive End <ystems of require the end futerference. When that is dove the | end should come defensive end e to brea <tr t atross the 1 sharp | vlay und it by driving in 1 down the interference. At the same thus knocking time he shou heep the runner with sles him, us he interference. ‘o get the path the runner either to make the tackle or to force the runner to give g toward his own Whe runner does the latter he is es tackled for a loss by the defen acks coming up to meet th Certain ends when playing vstem on defense make th of going etraight across the I scrimmage. and when the p end run or leave the bodies headlong eves [ # ores i N "HICAGO. November 2% (&) Young Jake Schaefer. who won the 18.2 balkline biiliards title when he de ted Willie Hoppe in the sensationa 5 world's championship, will de nd Lis crown douard Hore Belgian play this istake e of s an st they their < the direction e play, in that way tripping the interference. An end doin; is of no value in actually s runner Well ittle atter mploy care of hir he cannot force his way the runner the latter has sweep in the direction he hehind his interference. The only time the end can effec- tively play defense by throwing him- the interference, as pictured in the lower illustration, vers wet field when it is im- possible for the offensive backs to change their direction. Just the same wee ‘hey wilt 1,360 points in block < of 500 each night. beginning Monda) haefer holds the world's record o average in a 4.000-point game | with Horemans in 1921, and 480, the | highest ever made by a'player in this country, in an exhibition match here |in January, 1 Horemans recent ran out from the bank & 300.poi match with Leemput, the Dutch sta: DID NOT MAKE FUMBLE Fratt of Seattle denies he made !the fatal fumble which gave Rogers a chance to scoop up the loose ball land score Penneylvania’s winnins | touchdown agalnst Cornell. But ldeclines to say who did clea; is going PREPARE FOR GRANGE The New York Giants are prepa Red Grange's bow in the s as a professional with th next week. Hinkes . Giants’ speed king, has been shifted to a defensive backfield posi tion, where he will oppose the rushes of the Midwestern marvel above. NEBRASKANS CELEBRATE. Nebr., November 28 (#), no scheol vesterday fo f Nebraska student r the defeat of Notre | Dame yesterday demoralized all ef. forts of faculty members to hold classes, forcing u formal dismissal by Dean Carl Engberg in midmorning. Dean Engberg sald no formal action would be taken against ringleaders. be- cause no property QUAiCER GIRLS REPEAT. WELLESLEY, M team won the intercity championship United States Field Hockey As ociation by defeating New Yor FRRRRRRRR RN RN RAERNRANR ] Baseball Umpires? “Thgy Just Ain’t Human” That has been said many times of umpires. It does not seem possible for a man to take all the abuse that is heaped upon the umpire dur- ing a season of base ball campaigning. Any one who has watched ball games has considered the lot of the umpire. Hughie Jennings has known many umpire He will tell about them in his series of base ball articles which begins in The Star next Monday under the title. “Rounding Third.” He tells of the human side of the umpires, their sense of humor, their bland re- torts. There are umpires and umpires—as yvou will realize after reading: ROUNDING THIRO by Hugh A.Jennings This is the greatest series of base ball articles published this vear. Nothing like them has appeared since the Ty Cobb series which The Star published a year ago. Be sure vou read them from the very start. Copyright America o It Ne iance by paper North et de e e ek ok ok A e ok e o e o e e e sk e e e e e ek ok e sk ek ek e e ek ek e e BEGINNING MONDAY IN THE STAR PHRERRANNNRAANNNE S 3 i i 4 H i e : : e

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