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SPORTS. Dempsey to Speed Up MORE HITTING ACCURACY | IS SOUGHT BY CHAMPION Jack Aims to Tal;e ‘:;zin.essj’a; of His Muscles and Believes Three Weeks Remaining Will Afford Just About Enough Time. BY JACK DEMPSEY. HREE weeks to go—and I'm going to take advantage of every day ! that's left. ce coming to Atlantic City and New York, once knowing the fight is a certainty, T've thrown myself into training with all the earncstness and the sincerity that's possible. I'm almost at fighting weight now—only a few pounds of real fat left on me. So for the rest of my training days I am going to concentrate on three things: (1) Greater speed. (2) Greater hitting accuracy. (3) Full development of the muscles. o The rest of my time here will be devoted to taking the last bit of “laziness” out of the muscles, snapping my punches, rather than throwing them and getting the old zip into the flash of the fists and the movement of the legs. 1 recognize in Tunney a man just about as fast and as shifty as any 1 ever faced. He's a speedy, tricky, moving fellow and the only way I'll vatch up with him is to move a little faster. 1 think that I naturally have it on him in ‘he matter of «peed, but I'll make sure of that by stepping around until 1 can do a nice imitation of # rubber ball. Up to this time I've not been do- ing much of what'scalled <harpshooting. T haven't tried to hit | threw most of my punches around their necks, or shortened them so they Just missed their mark. Now I'm out to level. be much more of this swinging. I'm going out to sock with the short, in- side punches which in the past ruined the complexions of a lot of my op- ponents. I figure they’ll come in very handy against Tunney. For he likes to counter—and this countering thing really isn't being done against short punches. 1 haven't tried my shift much, either. | Have had that packed away in moth | balls. Tl trot that forth and give it a good workout, too. I guess it| will be mighty useful in this affair | { with Tunney—provided Gene gets past | the first round. Three s:ecks to go—that' right. If it were an - X might he danger of the “button” with | too much training; if it were shorter every fistic shot I DEMPSEY. | I might not get tuned to exact per- | ve fired. My | fection. And"I want to be “in the rring partners weren't trained | pink” for Tunney so I can polish him | selves to a point where I figured [off in a hurry. I don't want to have | could stand much of it. So I'him around suffering. | There won't just | longer thers | ing stale from | R . s 1 | tion and cheer him on his arrival to |iine had not Lecn FROM THE INSIDE | CHAPTER XLIV. { BY JACK KEARNS., i HILE I had made up my mind to get my money somehow, I never did intend to call off the Shelby fight entirely. That much was known confidentially by the newspaper men mentioned yester- day. no matter what the other writers were sending out to the world. Many a fairy story found its way to the wircs. | i Those were exciting hours—it was getting close to 2 in the morn- ing. Finally T took the promoters into the bathroom for the final show- down. By this time the crowd had overflowed the rooms of the two news- | paper men who had turned them over to me as temporary headquarters. | The only secret chamber, therefore, was their bathroom. and it was there that the promoters agreed to let me take the bout out of their hands, turn over all the money in the box office as well as the tickets. 1 was to get all the money that came in up to $100,000. The fight was on! When we came out of that bathroom and announced our plans you'd have thought that Teddy Roosevelt had just come back from the Spanish- | American War. They tore the roof off the place. Men came: running | eye, took a vacation today. sparring partners is responsible, and |teft eye is decorated with shades of " THE® EVEN'ING‘STAR. WASHINGTON, D. €, WEDNESDAY, Sk liMSLLR DEMPSEY’S LEFT EYE IS WELL DECORATED By the Associated Press. ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., September 1.—Jack Dempsey, sporting a black He does not know which one of his none of the eight will confess. His blue, purple and green. The champion was so well satisfled with his condition that he figured to- day’s lay-off would put him on edge for the resumption of work tomorrow. He has taken on a pound since last week and now scales 196. When training is resumed tomorrow a New Orleans light vweight, will be ready for work with Dempsey. Burke picks Dempsey to defeat Tunney.- Burke boxed Tun- ney_twice. “Dempsey looks to be in splendid condition right now,” Burke said. “I favor Dempsey to win because of the difference in hitting between them. Tunney isn’t the puncher Dempsey is. “Tunney makes it a practice to lead with his left and, in doing so Is open to a right cross. Dempsey is a mur- derous puncher with either his right or left. The bout, however, may go the Itmit, as Tunney always is in good ronditio: Johnny Saxton, a welterweight of Bridgeport, Conn., was knocked cold yesterday by Dempsey with a left hook to the jaw. Dempsey said he was not trying to hit Saxton, but that Saxton ran into the punch FOES MEET TONIGHT, BUT NOT TO SCRAP By the Associated Press. PHILADELPHIA. Jack Dempsey and Gene Tunney prob- ably will meet in a Philadelphia ring tonight, but merely as friendly ene- mies. Both have accepted invitations to attend a boxing show at Shibe Park. Tunney will be here en route to his new training camp at Stroudsburg, Pa. Scores of marines planned to | September 1. | meet their former buddy at the sta- be the city's guest. Requests for tickets for the cham- pionship contest are belng recefved in such volume that Tex Rickard has ordered the erection of additional seats to bring the capacity up to 140,000, He thinks the receipts may pass the $2.000.000 marlk. | i S N AN EMBRYO GRID STAR. | The family of H. W. Crum, George | Washington University foot ball coach, was increased by one vester- | The young gridiron candidate | d the beam at & pounds on his | arrival. | FINISH NE{' EVENT TODAY. ! Filipino netmen plan to conclude their annual tennis tourney today, darkness having halted play vester | day in the final of the doubles. Hess | and Del Rosario were leading Lan | sang and Coronel two sets to one. i | opponents Training : Shortage of Sparring GRIDIRON LEADERS of o6 o= =k Ball Coaches and Captains of Big College Elevens for This Season No. 5—Michigan. i CAPTAIN. OT BALL fans need no introduction to Benny Friedman, captain of the Wolverines this Fall. Benny last year was rated as the best and headiest quarterback in the country, and was an almost unanimous choice of all the critics for the mythi- cal All-America team. The New York Sun, in making its se- lections, chose him as captain of its honorary team. | Friedman hails from Cleveland, Ohio, and is a product of Glenville High School in that city. Last season he led the Big Ten Conference in scoring honors. Although never calling his own signals within the enemy’s 25-yard line, he nevertheless piled up enough points to give him the leadership at the end of the campaign. He does all the kicking after touchdown, the place- ment kicking, at which he is very proficlent, and the forward passing for the team. It is in the Vatter re- spect that he has gained most of his fame, although he is far from being a poor performer in any branch of the sport. He generally is credited with being the most accurate thrower of passes in the country. He is on the | shipping point of the famous *‘Friedman-to-Oosterbaan” combination. Friedman also is an excellent man in a broken field, and has several long runs to his credit, most of them against Big Ten rivals. Frledman is an infielder on the base ball team. COACH. | IELDING H. (HURRY-UP) YOST, generaily consid- | ered to be one of the best coaches in the country, | has one of the most remarkable records of achievement | credited to any mentor in the game. Year after vear | he has produced winning teams, among which are some of the greatest of all time. His team of 1901, which many followers of the sport claim as the greatest that has ever stepped on a foot ball grifdiron, was the best aggregation that he has ever molded together. This eleven compiled the astounding total of 501 points to 0 for its| and is still known in foot ball history as the famous “pointa- | team. This record is all the more remarkable - = | when one remembers the fact that he developed this ; 3 team in his third vear as foot ball head at Michigan. | He has been assoclated with Wolverine foot ball -for | the past 26 years. Two seasons back he acted as an LR | advisory coach and placed George Little, a very capable % i man, at the head of the team, but when Little accepted the position offered him at Wisconsin Yost decided to take up the reins again, with the result that last year he had been mentor of the Ohio Wesleyan and Stanford ed. 4 ost attended school as an undergraduate at both West Virginia and Lafayette, and played at guard on the foot Lall teams of these schools. He also has had coaching experiences other than those at Michigan, as & he has been mentor of the Ohio Wesleyan and Stanford | Untversity foot ball clevens before he hecame a fixture at Ann Arbor. s w develope Benny Friedman Captain | il minute’ | by, . Fielding Yost Coach of foot ball material Yost has few, equals urteen men who have played under his leadership hive heen chosen to All-American foot ball positions, amuig them being the incomparable Willle e s Heston, called the greatest plaver the game bas ever Michigan produced: Germany Schultz, Allmendinger, Kipke, Benbrook, Smith, Blott, Slaughter and Oosterbaan. This record speaks for itself. Yost is a busine: man and & very smart one. Twenty-six corpora- | located in various parts of the United States, claim him as one of He also in big demand as an after-dinner speaker. Michigan for this season follow Oklahomie A. and M. at Ann Arbor. October 9-—Michigan State at Ann Arbor. October 1 Mlinnesota at Ann _Arbor. October 23—1llinois at Ann Arbo October 30--Navy at Baltimore. November 6-—Wisconsin at Ann Arbor, i ovember 13--Ohio State at Columb ovember 20—Minnesota at Minneapolis. | Vick, | tions, their October 2 from all floors, sleepy-eyed scribes, concession managers, left-over cowboys, | oil magnates and a Blackfoot Indian or two. It was the strangest scene o a”i\r fl;a;fltl;'ave ever seen at !I;A]al hour in the morning. ost ' newspaper men had to|the traces again. - wer i recant on thelr “no fight" story. and | fed . ther rar Lk g‘:)'z‘:l‘;x;m«huol';: | soon the outside world knew that the [ While they were arguing, I sent my Snelby fght was on. men along the barb-wire fences and L explained the we ®old tickets like hot cakes, right LI through the entanglements. We had | toimEmaTaEel a good crowd on hand when it cam S time for the preliminares. Nothing | o Timart e had been done about getting them into | Sl L Sy the ring, so, selecting the toughest | b SISt looking “of deputies, I put them in SR A charge of the dough bags and I rushed (e off to get the fighters going. e The crowd had grown dangerously amen ] hostile toward me. There were open | pere e threats everywhere I went. Lvery- e T o body had a gun and a grouch. 1| e e never saw a meaner looking congraga- e tion and I've heen among some hard | e e ones. I had absolutely no assistance e | in getting the fights started | they already had ynch Kearns,” V Cry. sold §300.000 | As T rushed here and there order worth ‘eftickete. {ing this fellow to do that and that vet the only thing \r.-lllm\- to d.; this, the crowd growled ! i i . il o and moaned and cvery now and then | hat's all. Nobody knfl“g"\»‘“‘”‘F}.cnm« leather lunged galoot would | about anything, —especially MONEYV. |, ) wpynch Kearns, lynch that blink- and when T asked for an explanation | Tl 1 1nch Hearns, Though All T got was “the high cost of bulld-{} ghivers may have trickled up and Ing an arena. | down my spine, I didn’t weaken out- got first the KEARNS. to show for it was NORTH CAROLINA STATE SHY OF BACKFIELD MEN Eleven Must Be Built Around Five Men in Center of ‘Line, as Regular End ing Coach Tebe BY H. C. BYRD. N developing its foot ball team th has a real problem in that it mus member of the regular quartet of it is considered that the four men together for threc consecutive seasons it ma what the loss means. And, to add to also was lost. W. Shuford, fullback: (. Shuford and Johnston, halfbacks, and Jean- | ette, quarterbzack, are the four backs whose absence will be greatly felt. Both ends also are gone, and the | | Chapel Hill. ! | November 6—Ienoir at Rale November 11—Duke University at | Raleigh. 20—South November Carolina at 25—Wake Columbia. | _ November | Raleigh. Gus Tebell again will serve as head | | coach. This makes his third year at | Sorth Carolina State, his first having been as an assistant to Shaw. When | Shaw left to return to Nevada, Tebell { was made head coach and last Fall | @i excellent work in that capacity. | He will be assisted by Dr. R. R. Ser- imon of Springfleld, Sam Homewood. | | former star end; W. Shuford and Tal | Stafford, all of North Carolina State. In addition John F. Miller, director | of athletics, expects to give consider- able time to foot ball. He has had world of experlence, as he was ch at University of Missouri for several yvears prior to coming to North Carolina State. Miller Doing Good Work. John Miller, in addition to knowing | a_good deal about foot bail. has done | | one thing at North Carolina State | that was not easy and that was not | accomplished by anybody prior to his | taking up the reins—compose the Forest at Also Were Lost, Giv- 11 a Real Task. is Fall North Carolina State College | t build an entirc new backfield, every | f 1925 having graduated. And when | who comprised that backfield played | he more casily realized just that, th@only substitute quarterback man eleven a year ago will not return to college because of failures in their scholastic work. The men lost from the freshman squad who are likely to he missed to the greatest extent were the end: it seems that the | | mother. FOREMAN FIN AHEARN IN MINUTE| The much-talked-about *Battle of | the Potomac” last night at Kenil- worth ended in a total rout for the local - force—"Goldie’ Ahearn—after arena was literally packed, and there was considerable wagering on the re- sults at even mone; Ahearn never even got started. the gong. Al Foreman. former Myer bandsman. sprang from his cor- ner and practically swept Ahearn off his feet. Left to the jaw and right to | the midsection. then clinch. At in-| fighting Ahearn was agaln helpless. and the soldier lad administered real | body punishment with telling effect. | Four or five more smashes to the jaw | and Ahearn was out on his feet. solid right to the button toppled him | over the ropes, and it was fully five | minutes before he came to. | Each welghed in at 131 at 7:30 o'clock. Jack Cafoni of Walter Reed Hospi- tal won all the way from Hal Steven- son, New England flvweight. in their six-round semi-final event. Stevenson fought the entire route with his right | hand, never once using his left. The left was bandaged and evidently com- pletely out of commission. The fans wondered why the club physician per- | mitted the New Englander to enter the_ring. ick Repoli swarmed all over John- ny Conroy for two rounds. Conroy flghting back desperately, landed sev- eral extremely low blows, and finally Referee Charlie Short stopped the bout and awarded the decision to Repoli on a foul. Johnny Amato, Quantico marine comedy fighter, took the long count in the fourth round at the hands of Billy Strickler, Shenandoah Valley mittma The Leatherneck took the first round | his rushing tacti but after that | trickler. lker of the Mohawk A received the decision ver Blon Ponion after four rounds | Manuelo Radam. native of Philippin wed a technical knock- o llie Deek of Berwyn in the fourth round. Deek absorbed consid- erable body punishment and decided | to call it a day and walked to his cor-| ner. SUZANNE TO START TOUR ON OCTOBER 9 At it was all . | pl let W YORK, Septembers| (@).— | Mr. Shark of | be Detter Lenglen's Mexico of Madison it has been tour and Cuba, el Mile. Suzanne America, Canada, under the direction Pyle, will open at Garden October 9. nounced. She will arrive in New tember 27 ompanied Lenglen, m for ocean trav an- York Sep- by her owing to| an ave, main in France. Pyle, before leaving for Chic said Mlle. Lenglen will participate at | the Garden in a singles match against A noted American woman player, and in mixed doubles in opposition to an- other Amerlcan woman star, with two | of the best male players in this coun- | try in the game. Several foreign | players of reputation also will ap-! pear. i “For obvious reasons I do not care | at the present time to name the per- | sonnel.” Pyle said. “I am finding it much easier to land American play- | |to [ ers of ability and note, both men and | tember 1 women, than 1 experienced in signing | doah River, Mile. Lenglen.” m ; Challenger Finding It | one minute of the first round. The| to work with me—but he has ime and they are helpful in developing speed and defensive work 1 really need—and haven't ha i who will step up and slug it rattle punches off m under some of those shocks I figure I may get when Dempsev gets lucky and lands a wild one. |me—and come back for more. By the Associated Press. against Tom Sharkey in 25 rounds at | age with | Coney Tsland November 3, 1899, in afof submarine bout n. | either principal. Jeffries saying the challenger should | have been disqualified, and the loser paints. the | Sharkey pulled the glove from Jeffries call a halt until several been lights throughout the bout. shgpe. the [ e | de Grace nine pitched a no-hit, no-run | Who aren’t afraid to slug it with me game vesterday in the first half of & [&nd who always have a standing in n double-header with . will ve-|five innings in the second game be- | £0. | won hoth contests, 1 to 0, and 6 to 2 | star: 1, Partners Worries Tunney | FINSHES | GENE. PRESSED TO OBTAIN WORTHY MEN FOR DRILLS Difficult to Line Up Big Men on Whom to Practice Wallops He Plans to Use on Dempsey in Title Battle. BY GENE TUNNEY. HE toughest part of a training camp siege is to get sparring p ners who really are worth while. [I've certainly had my trou! on that score up to this time. Billy Gibson has been scouring the country to get good mer 't had much luck. He can get little men But w four big men e d so far—is a <taff of three « ith me. I want men_who can sock—and the harder. the better. When they ¢ chin and body, it gets me used to standing up nicelv nd 1 want men who can take a punching from Beyond the times I have worked | with Bud Gorman, who is big and | powerful and can take a good beating. | I've had to pull my punches in mos: of my works. And | that's not so good Likely to get a fellow into a bad | habit 1 figure on pul- verizing Dempsey with short right | hand crashes and o do a lot of dam. a sort Famous Battles for Heavyweight Title Ni 5. { James J. Jeffries defended his title to | punch. It's not a hook, nor is it an uppercut, but it's a halt-breed. I've studied Dempsey’s style. studied all this weaving in and out, this duck ing and bobbing. and I think he'll be a boob for just that sort of lifting right-hand hook exchanged Up to the present time I haven't ns one glove. done much in developing that blow 0 more picture machines for me," | hecause I haven't had the big men a_pronouncement from Jeffries|to try it on. These are days different protested the from the old one8 when Sullivan. Cor high-powered bet, Fitz and Jeff were able to gel _|such great sparring partners. For Sharkey was in superb physical| yow any heavyweight who is worth So fmpressed was i writer of | while hardly can be Influenced —unless period with the challenger's con-|jy friandship—to become i sparring n that he penned: “Had a King's | partner, and the fellows who will take om or his own life been the stake. | the job usually are green novices o could not have asked to! punch.dizzy veterans. fitted for the battle. i Gorman and the others have come {to work with me because of friend ship. Nothing else would have in- tluenced them. And they have given | me some great works. But I need plenty of them—hig men that was not satisfactory Both criticized Referee George Siler. cturing himself the winner on So much speed was developed when P ft hand that the referee could not blows had with the champion heat | had | Klieg the he hy HURLS NO-HIT GAME. HARVE DE GRACE, Md.. Septem r 1.—Hurler Budnick of the Harve |more men nd went | vitation: Bel: tati N Knock me out if you can. re being relieved. The home team i | TUNNEY IS ON HIS WAY YANKEE POLOISTS WIN. | TQ NEW TRAINING CAMP b Rr‘,):f_"‘:{'“h\','“: .w:;; NEW YORK. September 1 (). defeated the Arxen“n‘” "Ia to|Gene Tunney left New York this ; . S | morning for Philadelphia on his way in the Herbert Memorial cup polo | fOThing for Uhiadeinhia on his war UEHATIEN: burg. Pa., where he will complete his !course of preparation for his hout with Jack Dempsey September 23 The challenger was accompanied by only @ small part of his camp per sonnel, his trainer and sparring part ners having gone direct from Npecu llator to Stroudsbur. TIP FOR FISHERMEN. HARP RY, W. Va., Sep-| ‘he Potomac and Shenan- were very muddy this orning. A Supreme Qffering w(Chancellor Everything was turned over to me. | 1 was in line to get at least part I““ mine. T'd get it all if there was a wardly. * They'd have to produce the ropes and the tree before they stopped me. 1 made my mind that I'd squad must begin practice prac without flankers, | McDowell cally and Hunsucker, substi ;tana turn over a flat possible chance. I hadn't been in up Uharge five minutes hefore the Gov. | srument officials came in and wanted | SO0 5 SRS L0 Lo Whehed 1 fake 1t | ke nid of the aifelr. ey @len i ST O the cxnerlente. I ithic | SaRiEd” toiet aneits. - Thestumber) U NS LOERERL OTNEm phL Of I e manciome - with bis attorney | e “out, “iheke bark i worss et 0.~ Lraiihels ttorneya)cian Ghelt ibite| Slin fignito Asilic, came in with the big blue papers, when they saw that there wasn't @ jough in sight, they thought it Tet me try and untangle it them through from first to last and if 1 was to be lynched I'd take it | have stampeded that mob on any sort | of crime. It's the way of mobs far | removed from law and order. There nd le it wasn't _enough opposition to check | them Government men &l | them had they decided that Jack | lowed that was the ProPer| gearns and hie man Dempsey would | caper. " have looked better as dang! ruit | Tt came 11 o'clock of fight day. T : o rmEineRnaL || from some lone tree. thought I'd hop out and see how | “p™ operylly bandaged things were going at the arena. If{p.,q. " Y10 \vas in great they had bungled in the ticket | fought one of the greatest rangements they'd do the Same rUn-|pigivhole career, in my opinion xm‘u itself U WAS & phong was at his best vight then and he | relusion made it hard for Jack by not fight- | When I got there, 1 found hatting hack. He clinched and huntz‘.-,';xi ad provided for a single gate-{ang “wouldn't open up. Dempsey | . not_an er or @ man in an¥iyyined him just the same. \When Capacity. 1 g ot of hangers-on | jpck had finished with him, finish | together and we of ' was stamped all over Tom Gibbons, the rubbish the He wasn't worth a What a mess { quarter after that, as subsequent bat Sherifl Was a Pippin. He proyed The Shelby sheriff was a pippin He ! Dempsey Leaves in a Hurry. tutned over a lot of deputios to me. | 1 feared trouble if we won and 1 I mworn in for the occasion and with | warned Dempsey. “Get out of the Mlesn fellows I started to battle con- ' nrena and Shelby assoonas it's over, fusion. ; ithe quicker the better. Lose no time. | The first thing 1 did was to close [ Just pick up and get,” I told Jack. Dempsey shape wnd | battles of | Gib- | lea; builders - 1926, ‘hree or four gates that would have | “Win or lose, Juck. get out of her bip ‘main gate and started to sell {and won. As soon as Jimmy Dough-) Petin Tt had never occurred to them | no more of him until we met later "Fiokers e |OUSTED PIRATES GIVEN was that we didn’'t have many at that a8 EheYck down $20 and $30 tickets | Barney Dreyfuss, owner of the Pitt { was dolng & land office business |veteran players dismissed from the | he | T stopped myv circus barking long would not issue a statement I'd have | club officials in charge of the team to pay the face value 'known that the plavers had asked Then 1 made a dicker with against them would not be! H 10 per cent for Veen golden gates for anybody who|No telling what might happen.” happened to be on them. T opened ai” With that final warning he went in | iicets. There were thousands of jerty raised Dempsey's hand the char people outside the arena, ull eager topion whisked himself away and I s B g0 to headquarters for tickets. | Great Falls They were seeing their first bout and | (Copsriglt Tickets went at §10. face value. at ihe start. The sad part about that ! e tha we dlant b ot ow man _ HEARING BY DREYFUSS as they were willing to go so I started ! "pITTSBURGH, September 1 (#).— ! to_them at $10 | Lurgh Natlonal League Club, late yes- | The visitors were keen for that and | terday heard the story of the three when along comes the revenue men. |team several weeks ago, but follow- | They stopped me right in my stride. |ing the conference announced until | enough to learn that if 1 sold $20 jafter he had conferred with the three | and $30 tickets for §$10, revenue on | when the trio was ousted. | them. Not so-good ! The club owner, however, made ! Jack Makes a Deal. him for & statement clearing them of the | any wrong and he also said the ac- the revenue men. 1'd sell the remain- | tion ing tickets for whatever I could get jaltered. Federal and State tax. That seemed 1o satisfy them for a time and in an MOHAWK PREPS T0 MEET. | center men, tackles, guards, and cen- tute backs of a year ago, seem to be the nucleus around which a backfleld will have to be built. These men played good foot ball at times and they |are looked upon as being worthy suc cessors to the individuals not return- ing. However, the remainder of the | backfield matertal does not seem to be so good. Ridenour, who was on the reserve squad, and Melton, Outen. Eatman, Albright and Morris, of the vearlings, constitute about all the | backfield material available. In Donnell, Bynum and Fountain, | guards; Evans, Nicholson and Lambe, | tackles, and Capt. Logan. center, the squad is well fixed as far as the heavy part of the line is concerned. In fact, s0 capable are these players that the Raleigh people are showing very little concern over their forward wall. It seems to Le the general opinion that the development of a good line is a certainty, but that the whole ques- tion of how well the school is to be represented on the gridiron in the next three months rests on the progress made with the backfield. | Has Two Big Rivals. North Carolina State has games for which it prepares nervous anxlety and with the elaborate care—with Wake Forest and North Carolina University. The most_important thing in the vear to the Raleigh institution is the annual game with the university, which makes its home just 30 miles away at |Chapel Hill. Last year the uni- versity won_ by to’ 0, and, to go back little further, it has been some vears since the State college took the long end of the score. | North Carolina State is one of the {fow big Southern schools that con- | fine their schedules exclusively to { Southern teams. Here is the entire {list of contests to be played by the | Wolfpack: ptember 25—Elon at Raleigh. October 2—Furman at Raleigh. October 9—Clemson at Clemson. October 14—Davidson at Raleigh. October 23—V. M. I. at Richmond. Carolina__ at ON CREDI Phelps Auto two with most Top—Coach Tebell. In center—Capt. Logan. Lower—Athletic Director North Carclina State finds | is that of having the five ' Hler. position itself in differences between certain elements of the alumni and get everyhody pull ing In the right attitude toward everything is well ex- pressed by a statement he made at a { Southern Conference meeting last Winter when he said, “The one thing T want to do is to get along well with | everyhody.” o sum up the s | Raleigh squad takes the fleld next | week for its first practice it will have back nine of the 19 men who got letters last Fall. The prospects for an -excellent line are bright, while the outlook for a strong backfleld s anything but that. The end positions also seem weak, unless some members of the squad develop more rapidly as flankers than ordinarily might be ex- | pected. , The squad begins practice next Y'Monday, September 6, the first day | allowed by the Southern Conference rules. It will not train at Raleigh this vear. but at Lake Sega, near Brevard, N. C. Two weeks will be ! spent in the training camp, after which the squad is to return to Raleigh in time for the opening of | school September 22 and for its firsf direction. Miller's { game September 25 | S g { LEWIS THROWS ROMANO. | VERNON, Calif., September 1 (). — | Ed (Strangler) Lewis, claimant to the | s heavyweight wrestling cham- | pionship, won his match here last night with Mike Romano. Lewis threw Romano in 33 minuteés with a headlock and Romano failed to ap. | in the ring after his 5-minute | pear rest | Wire and Dise Wheels W.S. Kenworthy & Co. 1617-19 14th St. N.W. North 441 Service and Parts _Tires, Tubes and R_e.L ring _ |Wallace Motor Co. 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