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SPORTS. Washington and Lee Quint Visits : Many A. A. U. GENERALS WILL ENGAGE IN TWO CONTESTS HERE Tackle Maryland Tonight and Battle Catholic U. To- morrow—Hamilton Fish Defends Foot Ball at Georgetown Grid Banquet. BY H. C. BYRD. ASHINGTON AND LEEX two games, one Park at 8 o'cloc nd at the to play Colleg tomorrow night The game toni the scason and five 00! Not much is known of the stren| brings here a quint that compares i the foot ball aggregation it display prove a formidable fo Last vear Wz not so strong this ¥all n and Lee was joor game, but to have much sspects for a s game will sme kind of an expected. is he Gen- | 1 togethe: sther sons did som: Ensor, ¢ g and Stever B lition the il have members some men who did ¢ well a vear ugo as meml freshman _five. Adams, vear's freshman tea place at forward, while Linkous is giving Sup- plee the battle of his life for center. Tt is possible the start line-up to ht will be I and Faber, ] Supplee, center. and Beatty guards, which is p aup went through ver Trovel rdwell 5 in these squad tonight ceptionally the last from ardwell he lir wd, after it finishes its tonight with W gton and Lee start think ut tc with Nav its game row forward to tomorrow t for the am can ac- r d went to to the Navy in mall margin wual banquet in honor of wn University foot ball i last night at the Racquet . two features stood out, one the of 1 sport and Represen- e other Head C it splendid tri Lou_Little by Ger indefinitely Representative any doubt in an what he thinks of only that. but in private conversation after the banguet he said that he had no objection fo beinz quoted in any- thing he said that furthermore he believed that he represented more than 90 per cent of Harvard graduates in saying that Harvard does not stand for the kind of “mush” recently printed Crimson. student. paper. and that Harvard helieves in foot ball as one of the most valuable parts of its campus life. He also sald that at Darthmouth and Princeton, where great teams were tu d out last 17all, nothing has been said about overemphasis on foot ball, intimat E the s ball mi e paid the expressed that he remain to and erown Fish did not leave Iv's mind as to ball. And not b alled on ht be gauged by the success attained. And he followed that by saying tha so far as 1 was able to find out during the past Fall there was was not much emphasis of any kind placed on Harvard ball. In fact, when I looked for the public rating af the team. T could not tind Harvard at all. At le T went down to twen- h place in the list nd when I had not then run across the name of Harvard, 1 stopped “I an getting sick and tired of all his mush that is coming from Har- vard shout the overemphasis placed on foot ball. continued F The Harv much to say only made itself T ridiculous by doing Speaking as a_Harvard man and a former player I can not think of a single constructive criticism of the game as it is played today. 1 would not change it the- Jeast bit. A man who plays foot ball for the elght weeks of the season learns more on the gridiron than he does from any course that he may take| the year round “The princip: gets from foot b a 11 are ¢ cter and will-power and these t vill do more for him in after life than any thing else he can learn. Any father! who wants his son to be a real virile | man should want him to pl [nntl ball and unless they want to make | 2 molly coddle same of it foot ball cannot be improved.” Little Is Paid Tribute. Father Vincent McDonough, faculty director of athleti at Georgetown, paid Head Coach Lou Little a remar able tributc in his address. In fa about 99 per cent of what he said was in praise of the Blue and Gray coach. Among other thin Father Me- Donough said: “All that Lo man Little has done has been to lift Georgetown from the depths of ordinary college foot ball team d placed it in a position | among the greatest in the country: all | that he has done has been to create | in our opponents’ estimation the hig est_opinion of our 0 play and ex- cellent sportsmanship: all that he has been accomplish every- more than Georgetown hoped for, and thus has endeared him- self to every member of Georgetown's raculty, to every member of its stu- dent body, to every member of its alumni. Let us do everything in our power to keep Lou Little as one of Georgetotwn's permanent fixtures. Georgetown's motto is ‘Multum in Parvo,’ which, translated and applied to this occasion ans that we have “Much in Little. Fred Stohlman, guard on the foot ball team at Georgetown in the davs when Newman and N en coached, was toastmaster at the banquet, which given by the alumni. Capt.-elect McGrath, in an appropriate little speech, made Capt. Hagerty of this year's team a present on behalf of ihe teaem, which he said was a sim- ple token of how much the team ap- preciated his leadership during the past season. SPRINTERS TO COME BACK TO RACE GERMAN STAR Hubert Houben's prospective inva- sion of American track sports has brought from retirement two excellent | dash men in Louis Clark of Balti-| more and Hirold “Boots” Lever, for mer intercollegiate champion. i Houben is the German congueror ot | Loven Murchison and Charley Pad Aock. « m, RADIATORS, FENDERS TES MADE AND REPAIRED B RADIATORS FOR AUTOS WKS. WITTSTATI'SR. & F. B19 13th ST. N.W. 1423 T. REAR gainst onc of the larger schools. | Kentucky: | quence that the 1 basket ball team comes here today ith University of Maryland tonight k. the other with Catholic University same hour. It will be the first Southern Conference contest of one tomorrow the initial attempt of the Brookland gth of the W. and L. outfit, but if it n any way with the standard set by ed at College Park last Fall it will o for both Maryland and C. U COLLEGE BASKET BALL. At_Can Dart- houth, | At New' Orleans—Tulane, 31; [ lor, At Ann Arbor—M burgh, Af Towa City—Tow ridge—Harvard, 36; Bay- i = \CENTERS WILLLEAD MANY DIXIE ELEVENS the Associated Pres v ORLEA By December 1. are the most popular choices ball captains of Southern Of 38 leaders named for 1926 the snapper-back position. have a decided edge on the elections thus far re- corded, 21 of the front-line forces having been named to 17 in the sec- ondary defense ra Mo n of ¥ 2 Louisiana College serve ond terms. With only two ends named as cap- | tains, the flankmen are in a minority Three tackles, three fullbacks, four quarters, six guards and nine half- ~ks complete the list. | Centers who will { tenms Mor: lina; for foot teams T backs i 1 = nd White of o named to captain their Boy, South Caro- a; Pool. Georgia orth Carolina_ St of Mississipy Rebsamen, C Furman, Sorra, Tech: Logan, N Burke, University Boozeman, Arkans: tennary: Thoinas, n- and | White, Louisana College. Haltback Morton, G Sewanee; Stevens, Mary Turner, Auburn Alabama: Black, Birmingham Ware, Hampden vidson Quarterbacks—Godfrev, Louisiana State: Harkness, ssee; Camp- bell, Oglethorpe, and Wi Mis: sippl College Fullbacks—Rauber, Washington and Lee; Theriout, Southwestern Louisi- ana, and Hogs. Louistana Poly. Guards—Mackall, Virginia; Whis- nant, North Carolina; Spicer, How- ard; Lawton, Wofford: Harvey, Clem- son. and Henley, Millsaps Tackles—Dildy, Ouachita: Griffith, an College of South Caro- lina, and Meriwether, Hendrix. inds—Gargile, Vanderbilt, Pain, V. M. L. McLEOD BEATS DIEGEL AT PINEHURST, 2 AND 1 PINEHRST, ern and December 18.— Freddie McLeod, Washington pro. de feated Leo Diegel. Canadian cham- pion, yesterday 2 and 1, in an exhibi- tion match over champlonship num- ber 2 course. McLeod, whose side has been trou- bling him all week, spun around in 2 less than par, needing 4 for a 70. The match was even going to the sixteenth, but McLeod took both that and the seventeenth on clean drive and iron play. He got a birdie 3-on the third hole. U. S. GIRLS FLAT-FOOTED. BELFAST. December 18 (#).— Amerfcan girls are flat-footed—at those are who played field hockey nst the Irish girls’ team,. which has just returned from a successful American tour, according to Miss McKlisack of Belfast. The American hockeyists did not use their toes in running, she says, with the conse- sh team simply ran away from them. ALABAMA KEEPS WADE. TUSCALOOSA, Ala., December 18 (®).—Wallace Wade, for three yvears head coach and athletic director at the University of Alabama, has signed a five-year contract to continue. His salary is said to be around $10,000 a year. e s SCHAE! WELL AHEAD. BOSTON, December 18. — Jake Schaefer, former world 18.2 balk line billiard champion, led Willie Hoppe, also a former world champion, by 362 points at the end of the sixth block of their 3,200-point contest. A run of 348 W haefer's star performance. O0UT OF PENN RELAYS, Tarvard's track team will not par- ticipate in the Penn relays at Phila- delphia next April, preferring a. week ol tralning in_the warm climate of Willlamsburg, Va TURTON BILLIARD VICTOR. Running out in 52 innings, Turton defeated Larash, 250 to 211, in the Dis- trict 18.2 balkline tournament. Clarke and Wolfe meet tonight at Lewis & Krauss parlors. I ST RACKETERS TO DINE. Members of the Tennis Club of Washington meet for a dinner at Wardman Park tonight at 7:45 o'clock. Hugh Miller of the Dumbarton Tennis Club is president of the organization. SYRACUSE, N. Y., December 18.— Palace Club tossers of Washington gained a 24-to-21 verdict over the Kingston basket bail five in an exhibl- tion contest here last night. American Basket Ball League. Standing of Teams. W.L._ Pet. W.L. Pet. Chicago.. 170°1.000 Ft. Wayne 1'1 .500 Wash'eton 3 1 .760 Rochester. 3 Cleveland. 3 1 Buffalo.. . 1 1 TROUSERS | To Match Your Odd Coats EISEMAN’S, 7th & F 7 Pitts- THE EVE BELIEVE IT OR NOT. WiLLiE HesToN SCORED MORE Tan 6QQ PoinTs For MicHIGAN HE WAS NEVER SToPPED ! R :%\, SACRAMENTO < MRDE 7 JTS (PC.Lesgue ) ~BUT ONLY 2 RUNS GAME AGAANSYZFI'(ISGD NG STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. (Rez. U. S. Pat. Oftice.) HAS WORN THe. | { i { GEQ | KENNEDY | i NATIONAL Tl::AM PREPS | Members of the {10 bring the Arm; SAME SHIRT FOR THe LAST 32 veArRs account of expenses WOMEN 1 N SPORT BY CORINNE FRAZIER: EMBERS of the Riding and M the season—from the Mrs. Marshall Georgia Mooser and Mrs. led the drag. The field included Mande Preece, Anna Andrew Cummings, N Kenna anl, ¥ Kather Snyder, Winlfred Lydia Archbold and Mrs. A. Qer. Tomorrow Exnicios was Thomas J Persis Hedrick, Snyder, | West, A. sny- +fternoon the club will | hold & hunt. Memboers will| meet "k at the clubhouse. Thirty-five or forty riders are expect- ed to particip The tre mos t sport en the rider verbal instructions e given to how to reach the first point. where | written instructions will be found in- forming the hunters how to proceed At each succeeding point additional | instructions are found — posted on fence, or tree, or hidden in a stump, or behind a stone wall. When the| next to the last objective has been | reached, instructions are discovered | informing the riders as to the lo cation of the treasure. The hunter to find the treasure wins Tomorrow’s hunt will be followed by a tea at the club. The Washington Field Hockey Club will practice tomorrow morning at 11 o'clock on the Ellipse field and again in the afternoon from 4 to 6. All members are urged to attend these work-outs as the club is endeavo to get into shape for the return with the all-Baltimore team, whic being planned early in Janu game will be plaved in The Orioles issued their when they were in Was week and the locals accepted tenta tively—dependent. upon the the local manager to arrange a time | when the full team can make the trip. | The Marjorie Webster School basket ball title was won by the Seniors last night when they triumphed for the second time over the Junlor sextet. The score was 22 to 16. Had it not been for the Seniors’ long lead gained in the opening period, the series would probably have been tied up and a rubber game made necessary to declde the champlonship, for the Junlors, after once getting started, outplayed their opponents, two points to one. But they did not get started until the second period und in the meantime the new champions had col- lected 15 tallies to their 5. In the second half, the Juniors reg- istered 11 additional points to their opponents’ 6. But this was not suffi- cient to overcome the 10-point lead gained in the first half and the Seniors claimed a straight-game victory in the two-out-of-three series for the school crown. hunt forms is ohe of the of equestrian | are gathered | Line-Up and Summary. Seniors Position Betts Langenteld... . K. Elizabeth Collin Beatrico Zeigle Sue Mowery:. Frances Stempert Betty Wolf Subetit 30 Virein . C.Doroth. R G Anna Wright L. G....Celeste Mason Juniors—Amelia Deekens peth. Joncs {or H Barbara Brown. for Mason. = Goal £ Spin Tpolater) g pointer s 4 1s). Slusser Deckens ( 1 1). Referee—>Miss Sinclair. re—Mies Marjorie Trick. 1 mphress The meeting of the Home and School Association tonight at 8 o'clock in the auditorium of Eastern High School will be featured by a demonstration of the physical education department activities ‘at Eastern. Some of the organized sports will have to be elimi- nated, due to the limited space in the auditorium, but a general idea of the athletic program will be presented. The first basket ball practice ‘was held last week at Eastern. Approxi- mately 150 reported. Imogene Stock- ett will coach the squad of 60 fresh- men.E. Fosdick is in_charge of the NASH Conveniently Located on Fourteenth Street all-women’'s hunt in the history of local r hunters rode the same course f { ming first | ¢ Hunt Club participated in the first rs Wednesday. The lowed in the opening hunt of American University through the park to the club. master, Llizabeth Jackson, huntsman’; Tohnson, whips. Rowland Dawson sophomores, numbering 40; Mrs. Vir- ginia Woodin is coach for the 40 Juniors and séniors. Tntracliss eames will be plaved off ter Christnias. Six teams will be roup for these series class teams y and the ann - cheduled. Maryland_ Swimming Athletic Club's closest rivals in this vicinity, formed a basket ba team and planning to journey to W ston to engaze in contests with several local teams. including the Marjorie Wel ool and the Metropolitan Ath b. Naomi Lantz, manager of the Marylanders, is in communication with the respective nanagers of the Washington clubs with a view to com- pleting nezotiations for the meeting: The Capitol cl Curtis-Hyde romped on the Fillmore I in the opening game of the George. Playground League double- played on the Georgetown tossers town header field. Jackson administered a 22-to-13 de- foat to their opponents from Trinity in_the other fracas. The two unbeaten teams, Jackson and CurtisHyde, will clash Monday afternoon in the critical game of the fes. It will be Jackson’s last game. Hyde will have several more to play before completing its schedule. | Tomorrow’s game, if it does not ae- tually decide the title, will have an important bearing on the final out come of the series and will be an: jously followed by the many enthu slasts. im- | has | is | 'PRO FOOT BALL DEAD, | MAJ. GRIFFITH THINKS | DAYTON. Ohio. December 13 (P).— “Foot ball will never become decadent 1gh its spoliation by pro i ' declared Maj. John 1 of Chicago, one of the game's leading authorities, on his arrival here tod to-speak- at the testimonial. dinner fo members of the University of Dayton | foot ball team. 1 Maj. Griffith scathingly demounced professionals and their actions in tempting college pl: . and stated | that thelr greatest opportunity to com- | mercialize the game ~was furnished | this vear. 1l i ‘Through greed and avarice th {lost their chance,” he said. “Most of | |the professional teams thronghout the {country were financially broke thi | year. Their managers grasped at the opportunity to bufld up the game pro- | nally by obtaining college stars played them to extinction be- | « of their greed for gate receipts. rybody saw through the idea. The |games were not short. they were | | *hippodromed’ contests played simply | {for the money that the promoters | {would get out of them. | ‘Almost overnight,” Maj. Griffith | asserted, “sentiment changed. T have watched these gestures with great in | terest. I saw a sentiment for profes- | sional foot hall sprout, bloom. wither. and now I believe it has died | s S i ALOYSIUS WILL HOLD ANOTHER RACE SUNDAY Washington long-distance runners get another workout Sunday at 11 o'clock in the fourth of a series of practice races being staged by the Aloysius Club at Union Station Plaza. QUINT SEEKIN GGAMES. | The Epiphany Chapel £-95 pound quint is seeking games for Wednes- day nights in its own gymnasium and wishes to book contests for Mondays, Tuesdays and Thursdays with teams having the use of floors. Call James Reed at Franklin 774. GONZAGA FIVE TO OPEN ITS CAMPAIGN TONIGHT CHOLASTIC basket ball fans S when gymnasium. . Kenneth Simondinger, the Holy coached the Gonzaga foot ball eleven For the team he has Bozek, Two- mey, Byrne and O'Malley, members of the scholastic champlonship grid iron eleven and experienced basket ball players. In addition to these newcomers the squad includes Capt. Enright, Geneau and Geghan of last year’s team, in ad- dition to a number of capable sub- stitutes of the 1924-25 campaign. After losing to Western in their opening encounter, Georgetown Prep tossers yesterday staged a comeback 1and defeated Briarly Hall, 28 to 28, At halftime the count stood 20 to 14 in favor of Briarly. Taking a lead at the start of the game and maintaining it through- out, the Woodward School five hand- ed ‘a setback to Devitt Prep by the score of 26 to 13. Rooney of Wood- ward was high scorer with 11 points. Eastern's basket ball schedule, an- nounced today, includes 17 games, 8 of which are interhigh school series first appearance of the Gonzaga High quint tonight at 8 o'clock, the I Streeters encounter an look forward with interest to the alumni team in Aloysius y Cross athlete, who so successfully , is in charge of the court squad. contests. Bliss Electrical School will be met tomorrow morning in Eastern gymnasium. The list: _ December—19. Bliss_Electrical School. at Eastern: 22, Gonzaga High, at Egstern: 81, Reading' High School. at Reading? Pa. Junuary—9, McKinley Tech. at 12, “Western, 'at Arcade: 13 Episcopal: 14, Catholic Us men, at Eastern: 15, Gonzag | 19, ‘Business, at Arcade: 21. St. Alban's, ai | Eastern; 23, Central, at Arcade o | Kinley Tech, at Arcade: 30, Western, at | Arcade i February—4. St. Mary’s Celtics, at Ale; andria (pending): ©. Buainess. at Arcade: Central, at Arcade: 17. Catholic U. fres men, at Catholic University. Central's quint plays today at Char- | lottesville, Va., against Lane High | School. St. John's meets Western on | the latter’s floor, while Business en- counters the Gallaudet College frosh at Kendall Green. Harvard and McGill University of Canada will open the college hockey season for New York on the Madison Square Garden surface January 2. U777 72 2L T T DO PR TP 2070 077777770 utos Look Like New —After Cold ~—Dry Steam —Cleaning The only process that reaches exory part of your car—inside, out- side, underneath—and the motor, without harming upholstery, rugs, guint. Have tho car cleaned fof mas, Cold Steam Process Auto Hawkins Nash Motor Co. Sales and Service 1337 14th St. Main 5780 4 ~7 Laundry, 1139 17th N Bear New Masflower. Phone Fr. 8633 D, - 1IIIII LI IL IR 12T II 1771771174772/ 7773 T e P2, N 2222722222 7 e PR FRIDAY, DECEMBER 18, Records Shattered During Year HE Premier Five, a combination of Northern Junior and Kanawha player 192 G. U. VOTED TROPHY FOR TRACK PROWESS By the Associated Press. PHILADELPHIA, ;144 SMASHED December 18.— SPORTS. ON TRACK AND 122 AT SWIMMING Dartmouth College, Georgetown Uni-(Meet Staged Last July in San Francisco Regarded as versity and Charles P. Flournoy of Tulane University were awarded tro- phies last night by the directors of the Veteran Athletes of Philadelphla | for outstandi formances on the | gridiron and track this year. Dartmouth was voted the foot ball | champlonship the East and wili| recefve the Joseph H. Jolley trophy:| the Georgetown track team, which | vecord in the two.| at the Pennsylvania | Apkil, will receivel 1. Shull trophy declared to be the er to his I receive EW YOR tional ar December 18—I cur athletics, whic Judge and Flournoy wi uable foot ball p team in the country and w the Veteran Athletes cup. In announcing their selection of Flournoy as the most valuable player, the Veteran Athletes said he had scored more ficld goals and more touchdowns for a_total of more points than any other player in America. “His wonderful running, extraordi- nary punting (his average for the season being 30 vards), his drop-kick- | ing and deadly defensive work 1d | the Veterans' statement, “combine all the requisites of the greatest player as evidenced by his total of 120 points 18 more than Tryon { lgate, the Jiastern leader. “The trophies will be distributed at A dinner here on the of Janu ary 16, indoor track and field championships It was the first time in many been held in a part of the country a: the efficient manner in which the m Amateur Athletic Federation and th, doubtedly will encourage the nationa distribution, year by year, in the cas BASKET BALL SECRETS By Sol Metzger TO AVOID HOLDING. FOR WAVE Vie Gauzza final practic with the RLYS TONIGHT ¢ ‘ationals hold their for their game eleven Sunday. team will meet at Union Statlon plaza at 7 o'clock. Sunday’s game will be a replay of a | former econtest which ended in a tie ore. The winner encounte Palace Athletic Club on December 2 with the 150-pound title at stake. tonight Waverly ket ball players veloped bad habit of an opponent who does ot > possession of the ball. This Jul at all times zood basket ball plaver should hamed to use such methods on defense. He should cover his man by quicker starting when the ter is trying zet into the s in the illustration on the e Palace team eliminated the Ana. I CHICAGO IS DE—ZTERMINED AS TO ARMY-NAVY GAME | I’lans to raise $100,000 1if m-rr»u\“ | les from the race. left. In the illust; this opponent h on him, so the Yy his opponent’s arm in order to check him and to permit him to get into the play first. That is il legal and quite costly PREMIER FIVE TO MAKE BID FOR DISTRICT TITLE on the en the er has sef fon t £o! avy foot N go have been made by of to Chic leaders tions hereby to s the former service od P 1niz forestall ob- | 1e site o ligh former e Central . will be ready to sw © next fortnight Gordon are the Central on the basket ba Birthright, formers included in Northern Junic actio: ourt within t Burnett, Tash, Colley and per- plaved a stellar role with the and Keren was a member of the Kanawha quint. Manager Sam Gordon expects 1o of the Company A team of the District enter the team in the 125-pound title | Natlonal Guard. 24 to 13. riace, but is also booking games with | 135-pound fives, The opening tilt will be played with the’ Business Reserves | at the close of the holidays | Giames may be booked throush the | manager at Adams 4987, | ay th v ¢ the squad. Broo Royals are to tackle the Naval Re ceiving Station Monday at Washing the The enting Mount v ‘meet Friends at Wil Rainier schedule tossers quint nios tonight with the Lehigh in Rosedale zym. Managers of 125-pound teams having the use of floors are requested to call Hyattsville 431-M for games rep: Columbias held the Capital Preps to a trio of field goals while administer- ing a 43-to-16 beating. Bob Bradley accounted for 10 of | the winners' Joints when the Peck { Big Five took the Army Medical Cen- | ter quint to camp. 24 to 16. Petworth Boys' Club tossers | their opening game with Second Bap- tist, 22 to I8. D. C. FIGHTERS SCORE OVER BALTIMOREANS etback to the Printers, to 16 |, Washington boxers had the better of 2 = <op, | the going in the two feature bouts last Hyattsville High opened its seasol | night on the program of the 1 with a win over the Sigma Nu team '™ | Athletic Club’s second sh of the University of Marvland, 24| \\qstorium. C how to 18. Harry Groves of the Mohawk Club won an easy decision over Lew Hay- wood of Baltimore in the eight-rounder that finished off the card, while Tony o | Cortez gained the advantage over Jac Pullinan basketers took their seventh | Rvan, a Baltimorean who was substi- straight vietory when thes downed | tuted for Phil Raymond in the six. Z Sreps. 38 to 17. | round semi-final. theRHaChtord Liney | Johnny Walker took a close battle from Joe Piscatelli in a four-rounder. Pep Albee and Billy West fought a four-round draw and Jimmy Mack bat- tled on even terms over the same route with Johnny Conro NEVERS PACKS H‘I‘S GBIPS. FRANCISCO, December 18 (®). When word reached here that $25,000 had been deposited in the Atlantic National Bank of Jacksonville, Fla., to his credit, Ernie Nevers, captain of the Stanford 1925 foot ball team. began packing his grips and will leave for the Southern State tomorrow to took the measure | play professional foot bal Washington Barracks took ] measure of the Independents, 43 to in the soldiers’ gym. The Independents were leading, 8 to 4 the first quar. ter. but the home team went ahead in the second and never headed. Frank Sumner basket that gave the Comet 8-to-27 ce over the Epiphany I ast night at Eastern High. ontributed the Anderson and Sweeney each con tributed eight points to their team's strict ihe Yankee tossers trimmed the Com pany F team of the Hyattsville Na tional Guard, to 19, Jack Harrington, newly appointed manager of the Aloysius five, is pre- paring the team’s schedule at Lincoln 1452-W. Chevy Chase tossers bowed to the Naval Recelving Station quint, 26 to 19. Memorial Club dribblers scored over the De Molay e, 22 to 15, in their opening encoun Taking the lead just before inter- mission, the Boys’ Club Celtics hand- ed a trouncing to the Elliotts, 41 to 30. Cardinal Junio A GOOD REASON ‘We are jealous of the repu- tation of Dodge Brothers Motor Car—because we sellit. Thatinitselfis good and sufficient reason for taking particular pains to see that our Dodge Broth- ers Used Cars are in good order when sold. SEMMES MOTOR COMPANY RAPHAEL SEMMES, President Used Car Department 1707 14th St. N.W. Main 6660 Open Evenings Dopse BROTHERS DEALERS SELL 600D USED CARS points with justifiable satisfaction to the success of {the invade | Washi | Baltimo vmnasium and next { Athletic Club opens its Normal: | won | Greatest Ever Staged—Events Were Well Distributed Over Country. BY LAWRENCE PERRY. its report of h came to h its stewardship of & nd tod: the A. A. U he senio; held in Louisville, Ky rs that these championships ha ay from the Atlantic seaboard, a: eet was conducted by the Louisville ¢ Indiana-Kentucky Association u 1 body in adopting a plan of nationa ¢ of these games. During the year of records w and swimm W amazing nur broken in track The total wa 122 in swin field records an track junior outdoor | Franci th | helc on ites. On the ing_competition, while, o part of th the visiting athletes were recelved and entertain ed on a scale of lavish hospitality. As showing the national scope of the activities of the A. A. U., the location of the championship meets in varlous sports will be of interest. They were as foll unior indoor track and field—New i suevlor “indoor track ad field—Louts- Junior and senior outdoor track and fieid—San Francisco, o fildonr track and Seld— snal g3 moastic—Brooklm, N. Y. Wi’y cinco. Men's ontdoor swimming—Seattle. National hand ball—Clevelans nash hand ball— Atlantie € <enior and junior Calif. indoor swimming—>san [t The understanding is that Cuj John W. McEwan, who has been ap pointed head coach in foot ball at the University of Oregon—he has resigned from the Army—will be permitted t 1 | name his own Does_this istants. esignatior from the natic not. Mc quainta n has ide foot ball ce through ut the country, E |to make satisfa me It five-vear co ol INTERCITY Cl]E MATCH ig into | LISTED FOR JANUARY 14 | h S.2 balkline billiard 1 more and Wa a nounced | " The opener {Krauss’ parlors on | with th return Monumental City Play i will be pi in 14 the nua match er will be 25 and STANFORD BOWLERS " TAKE LEAGUE LEAD | i place honors in the Distri went to Stanford ght when Convention Hall was defeated two games ont of | three Billheimer of the w turaed ir high game of the mateh with a score of High set honors went to Reds Morgan of Convention Hall, who rolled games of 134, 116 and 118, for a total of 368K, The Stanford bowlers scored 22 wins nst 11 while their opponents have won times and lost on 13 ocy | ALCO TOSSERS B;:;TEN‘ Alco tossers bowed before the supe rior play of the Philadelphia Flashes last night st the Lincoln Colonnade, to 35. Davis of the visiting team high scorer with seven baskets while Turner led the home five with a total of four. BICYCLE TRICYCLE ~VELOCIPEDE WAGON For Christmas For Your Boy or Girl Bicycles from. . . $29.50 up Fairy Velocipedes, $5.50 up Wagons .. .. ....$4.50 up 2-Wheel Speed Bikes $14.45 For Small Children Our Prices Are the Lowest in Town It Will Pay You to Inspect Our Stock ‘We sell the IVER-JOHN- SON -world-renowned bicycle, and DE LUXE, one of the rongest made bicycles, with a 2-year guarantee. Sold on Easy Terms Mt. Vernon Bicycle and Auto Supply Co., Inc. 1013-15 9th St. N.W. Near Mass. Ave. Fr. 2735 untll 10 am. and undsys