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S PORTS. * THE ’ EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. MONDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1926. SPORTS. 23 One World Series Run Worth $50,000 : Georgetown to Face Grid Test Saturday MAKES HUGE DIFFERENCE IN PLAYERS SERIES’ CUT W nning Cardinals Get $! Receive Alexander for By the Assocl EW YORK 1. Ath cowbells of Louis a a feared they were to be forev day, figuring how much an represents the money to he paid eac for winning the world series The New Y Yankees are $3.417.75, and reflecting that the diti determined by one $30.000 run he ( game of the world scries, 3 10 2 A $50000 strikeout was e plavs and a hit by Thevenow @ costl in the final pulsating under leaden skies thre with the Yankees at and youth showed th Cleveland Alexande Thevenow, ated Press Octoher St o me contest ning 1o W Toient way. Gr nd Thomas claimed be plaved °D in the sun they | would: have had if had been sun When each Cardin to thank an ers go. there . way his che reflect that he wan ball 1 iy old Alex No Alexander h: nal cast for t started on the bench with the forting thought of a well pitched v tory Saturday and another the previ unday to comfort him offerings of Haines for the in- n of Yankee hatsmen were just one knuckle ball after another, and in the seventh inning. wiih the bases full and the score 3 to wi shocked to discover that tically knuck 1 himself out of the ball game lad rubbed the skin off his fin and hix control was slipping. Rogers Hornsby de that the big fellow from Phil- Ohio, needed some court obtainable only in the club Figured On. 1 no place in the origi enth game. He cid lipsburg, plaster house. The great Alexander, growing great er as the se wore itself out. shuf. fled in from the bullpen to fill it. He threw four times to Tony Lazzeri and three were strikes, and the chumpion- ship was almost in St. Louis. Ale: ander was quite willing to finish the game. He turned back all Yankee but Ruth, who was sent to first in a | peeve when he refused to strike three balls, just missing corners the plate, in the ninth {nning. Thevenow on Job. 3.417.75 Each—Great Credit Is Due BY BRIAN BELL. gineered com of Interesting Facts About Eah Captains of Big College 5,584.51, While Yankees| | Louis Triumph. [ not too warm to have good fox in the State is that turned out b leader on the gridiron is Lamar | versatile athlete in the school rra. who has letes whose vim and vitality gave the uce to ring again when Missourians er mute, were bound for St. Louis to- can buy with $5.384.51. b member of the St center. wher, cola, Fla., although h Gainesville High School. He is a plucky and ugsr culating the purchasing power of | SPIFit in his teammates 10 exert them e 1 the size of the checks was | 0D & gridiron are catching ardinals won the seventh and deciding | "' pdemitanie tighting b bise 1 and basiet ball t he has any spare tn This Louis Cardi sum als ive lead F ing spirit | 1 alsu. COA UCH credit for the fine showing o Muster Alexander. Two | and Yaukees miscues were by Old ant money head coach |ing his fourth vear of active service. Coach Sebring's best eleven was eleve: 0 nado, and T two of the best eleven to be content with a tie. Mercer and A the long end of scores with Florida_tha PRO FOOT BALL RESULTS, , ts. Chicago Bulls LEAGUE New York Guants. 0 Hartford Blues. 0 vton. 6 ankee. 13 ardinate: 15 Green Bav sifience Stean Rotlare 1hec (5 . 0; Canton. 0 o1t Panthers. 10 bovs. 0. Clicazo Bears Brooklvn member of the foot ball team while | coach at Florvida. e has deveioped s N umbus son. all of w given all-Amer; Couch The schedule of Florida for this s September “lorida, 24: Souther October 2—hicago. Florida, 6. October B-—Mississi lorida October 16—Merc n. Octoher 23 October 30— niversi November 6 November Novembe | Kansas City Cow- mention by critics. C. U. YEARLINGS TO PLAY. | Catholic University | ders will open the on Friday | entertaining Calvert Hall of Balti- more in Catholic University stadium. " opening vearling grid- v of Georgia Clemson at (iainesvi 18—TUniversity of Alaba; +—Hampden-Sidney at | il Gridiron Leaders of 1926 No. 38—TFlorida. CAPTAIN. LORIDA, although a warm State in the Fall, is, nevertheless, spanish blood in him, is a lineman. his work is above reproach. in the South some tough bhattles. been here. aniong them being Jones, Sebring i also coach of the varsity trac Foot Ball Coaches and | Flevens for This Season i § ot ball teams, The leading eleven v the University of Florida. Its Sarra, a youth who is the most ife plays at! He resides at present in Pensa- | received his preliminary foot ball learning with the | er, and should be able to instill enough to their best efforts. His pep and vim | ile embues the other members of his eleven with major-letter performer, being a rvegular on the | He goes in for track and boxing when | . | CH. f the University of Florida elevens in | the past three vears is directly traceable to the efforts of . L. Sebring, t this institutlon for the past three vears. and who is now enter- that of 1924, which gave some of the Georgia Tech, the (Golden Tor- 18 in the Southern circles, were forced rmy being the only teams to finish on t season, both by a scant margin. Coach Sebring is a graduate of the Kansas Agricultural College and was he was there. He played at end. He 4s connected with Army foot ball before he accepted the position of head ome sterling performers while he has ‘Irish” GGoldstein, Newton and Robin- om are all-Southern selections, and in some cases ‘have heen and boxing teams. ason follows: 'n College, 0. University of Kentucky at Jacksonville at Athens, Ga lle. ma at Montgomery, Ala. Tamp: November 2i—Washington and Lee at Jacksonville. | | | | CARDS CAPTURE HONORS BY THEIR STEADY WORK| Prove Right To Wear Base Ball Crown With Alex and Thevenow As Main Cogs—Difference in | ! i Shortstops Is Deciding Factor. SCHOOL GRID SERIES WILL START FRIDAY Seholastic foot ball will come into its own Friday when Business and Western face in the opening battle of the interhigh series. Both elevens are looked upon as serfous con- tenders for the title. Stewart, May. R. Jones und hreve of the Stenographer squad Mountainee Elevens, Except EORGETOWN probably will the country when West Virgi represented by a combinatior eleven it were to idce. And no doubt to a far stronger foe than it encounter West Vi cult the Tiger a 7-to-7 battle. Allegheny ( 7-t0-9 contest, vet West Virginia on gheny by 54 to 0. West Virginia se and experience. Last year Georgetown had Lehigh | here for its home.coming game, the | day for the gathering of its alumni | and former students with students | and faculty. and it was a foregone | conclusion” hefore the contest began | that Georgetown would win by a big score. This year the situation is dif. | ferent, and instead of being favored to win by a big score the Blue and Gray may consider itself extremely | fortunate if it wins at all. | Tt has been said many times that | any school that has a chance to beat Georgetown will draw @ big crowd. | and if that be true then a great | throng ought to wend its way through the gates at Griffith’s ball park Satur- day. Uses & Shift Play. West Virginia uses a shift play that is said to be very effective. In fuct, the record of the team for the last several years and for the three games it has played this Fall is suffictent proof of the effectiveness of the shift- ing attack it has. Georgetown is| much concerned over that shift. Al- ways there is the question in the| minds of coaches that the shift is not | within the rules, and just as often it | is not within the rules as it is within. | The rules this year have been made ear in regard to the shift t ly is no excuse for an official | s it. The rule regarding that even goes so far as to say that when an official is in doubt about the shift he must penalize the offensive team. But under Georgetown y will be up against a _real foot ball team. West Virginia has experienced men, big men, fast men, all combined into an effective unit, and should provide some of the best foot hall seen here BY H. C. of games played so far indicate that the Morgantown school is | ginia beat Washington and Lee, 18 to 0, without much diffi- | yet Washington and Lee last week went up to Princeton and gave foot ball team should have in the way of power. vgrsatilit 'WEST VIRGINIA TO BRING " GREAT TEAM TO CAPITAL Rank With Best in Country—Number of Upsets in Last Week’s Games—All Local 1 C. U., Do Well. ‘ BYRD. ce one o the strongest teams in nia comes here Saturday. The scores | n that should stand an even chance in any contest in which it might take part. no matter what kind of an {the afternoon Georgetown will find itseli opposed | ed at Pittsburgh. ollege played Pittshurgh a desperate Saturday completely swamped Alle- ems to have everything that a fine agility, speed | touchdow ! of play. its own 8- punt was made it W only about 5 yards of scrimmage. Chicago scored that time. Then Maryland received the kickoff, made two first downs and on an attempted forward pass Snyder missed the signal. ran into Kessler and the result was a fumble which Chicago recovered after the ball had rolled and been bungled back to the 20-yard line. On the first line-up, with a minute to play, a Chicugo back broke through and dodged his way | the distance for a score in the last four minutes and held for downs on rd line, and when the us bad and went over the line Mau . Harvard got another downfall, this time at the hands of Holy Cross. The Crimson did not seem able to cope h the Worchester eleven at any time or in any way. It begins to ap- pear that Hartard have the worst season In i E Washington and Lee made the best showing of any Southern eleven last week. The Generals went to Prince- ton and, by all press accounts, really had the better of the to 7 draw It was only by the margin of a few inches that a Princeton back was able to block a forward pass in the last few | minutes of play that would have given the Southern eleven a touchdown Ned Hannegan, who s doing such ellent work in the Navy backfleld, a Washington boy and former Western High athlete. He left Western to prep at the Severn School for the Navy, and entered the Naval Academy from there. He plaved fine foot ball ugainst Pur@ue and Drake. He also fs a member. of the base ball team WOMEN IN SPORT BY CORINNE FRAZIER—— OSEDALE DIVISION basket ball teams will swing into action on October 19 in the elementary school basket ball series for the play ground department trophy. according to the schedule which has been announced by Ruth Britt, director Eight teams will compete for the Rosedale champior Maury. Blow. Pierce, Benning., Madison, Wheatiey. Kenily including and Rings | man Pierce won the cup lust year for the | Wi third successive time, thereby gaining | 3y permanent possession. A new trophy | Mad will Le offered by the piayground de-{ partment this year Y Blow will meet Maury in the open- || ing-game. which will be played on_the | Rosedale playground field at 3:45 in ‘The complete schedule: |41y p e The two clafes aen s Wheatley tice. One week the ju 20, Maury xe field and the next t it Anna Heide Kenilworth | Knaebel coach the grou ve. Madi- | Only the two up, classes are leligible for hocker at Central “five jun=irs and forty senfors for fivs ive las WAVERLYS SPRING UPSET BY CONQUERING MOHAWKS AVERLY moleskin warriors surprised vesterdiy trimmphing over the heavier Mohawxs, 1925 District unlimited champions in a stern 3-to-0 battle at American League Park Failure or the part of the Indians to give their runners ade e ference on several occasions and their perchant for fumbling at critical stages told. The game's lone score came in the [ over Pirate fuot ballers of first quar‘er when Helary Clark drop- | 12 to # kicked from tne 2i-vard line. Just | a moment before Clark brought the | Shov ball to scoring position by returning | Juniors vanquished « a Mohawk kick-off 40 vards. Kiattl, {1? to 6. vesterday. Donalue and Tullback, and Hunt, end, were other | Jacobs were big guns of the Trinity Waverly performers who had a con. | ttack. ‘Trinitys. who will drill this spicuous part in the victory, and Col- | afternoon at 4:30. in_ George liere, Deekins and Bush. the last town Hollow, are more op named staging several end dashes | Ponents in the 125 pound class. Call for substantlal gains, played best for | Manager Buscher, \West 4. between the Hawks. {5 and 6 o'clock. ) Scoring in every quarter. Apache | downed Marine Barracks gridmen at | Union League Park, 23 to 0, vester- | day. Ted by Joe Sweeney, Gooch and Myers, the Indians were the ag- gressors throughout. Wi LV Kings hey enthusiasts at Cennal High 1 will meet for practice Wed ¥ v gro and the ser Hese October—19 . Kenilworth Madicon nilworth in prac ive the November— 5 Pierce Ve Wheatley - Blow ve. Wh by Alexandria offense Trinity rdinal Juniors A 6406 deadlock resulted from the Jash of St Stephen's and Chev: Chase vesterday. All Saint players are asked to attend a meeting to | morrow night at 8 o'clock at Twenty | Afth and Pennsylvania avenue. In a keen battle N nal Preps went down before Mercury Juniors | vesterday, 7 to 0. Bush taliied in the third quarter. The winners carried the fight to thelr opponents for the most part. T. Kilroy., Mercury full back, played a fine all-around game With Qapt. Houston scoring thres Stanton foot ballers, making their debut in unlimited ranks yesterday struggled to a scoreless fie with Georgetown A. in Knickerbocker Hollow. Greater offensive strength was shown by Stantons, but fumbles hurt them. Snail, fullback, and Jones. halfback, together with Carlo, who played a stalwart game at guard, Han touchdowns to lead their drive. over A. ('. pigskinners opened their |season yvesterday, routing P’enna | gridders, 31 to 0. Ilanover plavers lara to meet tomorrow night at |o'clock at the home of Manager Otte and all players are nsked to report | Next Sunday Huanover will meet (o lonials on Reservoir field at 1 o'clock POPE'S PITCHING TELLS. Pope. pitching for Clifton Park ves | have been injured, but every effort {will be made by Coach John Paul Great are | Collins o have them in action riday Western has lost the services, per- haps for the season, of “Peewee” Walker, who suffered a broken col- larbone Saturday in a scrimmage | with_the Maryland yearlings. Cha |ley Walker, another valuable mem- ber of the red-clad squad, was forced 10 the sidelines with an Injury in the jrecent encounter with Georgetown in years. The game ought to be at- tractive from every point of view, and certainly ought to leave nothing to be desired in the way of good competi- tion. Georgetown will place against West Virginia an undefeated experienced eleven. It will have on the field an aggregation that will battle to the Hmit, and when Georgetown goes into the stress of an important struggle determined to do, then Georgetown usually does better than anybody ex Thevenow, who was born in Illinois | but lives in Indiana, drove in runsand | with_two great flelding plays turned the Yankees back when less efficient work would have spilled the beans and gold for the men who were to take_the first world championship to the Misslssippi from the Hudson. Records proved scraps of paper in the serfes. Marks for attendunce and receipts went by the board with a complilation of 328.051 cash customers who pald §1,207.864. BY FREDERICK G. LIEB. EW YORK., October 11.—Great is Alexander the Great 2 the St. Louis Cardinals, one of the steadiest teams to go into the i" b deciding game of a world series. The new world champions are worthy wearers of the imperial mantle, the first won by a St. Louis team since Comiskey's Browns whipped Cap Anson's old Chicago White Stockings in the world series oi 1880. After Alexander evened up the series for St. Louis Saturday. winning his second victory, it was thought that the 39-year-old star had done enough for his cause. But his greatest effort was still ahead. With the bases full of Yanks in the . Pennock, rushed in starred ~for the Northeast eleven, { while work of Cashell and Goldsmith | were brightest spots in Georgetown's play. KENILWORTH CLOSER PROMISES FINE BOUT Young Anacostia Eagle Preps offered Ale |andria Firemen little opposition ve: terday in the Virginia_ City and the Firefighters were to-0 victors. | Scores were registered every | perlod 1 'k Dempsey. welterweizht contender. but not to be confused with Sddie ¢ Dempse who faced Joe Bashara here earlier in the Summer, in for the la Babe Ruth crashed his way to seven records. His three home runs in one game and a fourth in the closing struggle made editing of the record books necessary. Making four runs in a game, driving in as muny. receiving 11 bases on balls in the series and other minor efforts marked his activi- ties. He made six hits and lifted his batting average for geven world series to .253. Money Records Fall. All told, 19 records fell and others were tled. For the third year in succession, the classic was extended to its natural limit of seven games and for the third time in as many sons the ultimate winner came from behind. The Yankees moved out of the West with & onegame margin, 3 to . The Cardinals wiped it out Saturd The Yankees spent the series seée- ing advantages lost. They were off in front with a_ first game victc The reries was deadlocked in th nd game. St. Louis forzed ahe first appearance hefore the home folk only to see the count knotted azain, and then the fnvaders go n tront. Rabe Ruth did his best to win the final game. He got i home run on his only chance to hit the ball. a was passed four times. IHe also n a hair raising catch, making his sational fielding feats for the serles three-—a marvelons catch and perfect throw (o retire a runner at the plate having made base ball history in pre- vious game Waite Hoyt pitched well his mates did not fleld so well he pitohed, and after . pinch-hitter ap- Pennock fimshed a game al ready lost without further damage to his reputation. The Vankees blasted the supersti- ton that the team scoring the first run wins. Ruth hit his home run in the t 1 the Canlinals were abs results stand three but as wits the lead to Fourth Tells T The ar als were uy in the fourth With ou ley sent left-handed s Lester B Koenig, with Lt and his head a hands, failed to hold the hands were safe. Hafev's i tween Koeniyr and Meusel been easy for cif Aear charmer re a hit under the bRSes were ! Iy to Meusel The ut throw ( them > to left shortstop. enily tried to \ the plate hef ppedd. alter ran home what His the ha Tvevenow for proved singie home enough The Yankees ! the sixth throu Dugun's single When Alexader entrance in the s t T runs another in combinal of ererd’s double run th the bases had Combs, and ith outs ween ninth w the plate pitch by Lenser. s called by Koeniz Two were Ruth broushi Alexande: for a strike . scorned by t Bal nal Then a foul :!w‘d‘.x ball. Alexander tried three siow \l outside the extreme cor- ner of the plate. Ruth could not hope ‘0 hit one of them out of the park to so walked to first. T id. He tried n to score He fatled And it w With tw tie the score Babe then made his 0 place himself in a posi on & hit by stealing second and St. L 8% vemrs of waiting WILL VISIT FITZGERALD. Joe Pitzgerald descing of hasket lall o ar the board of dired at the Y. M. C. A will be s much us possible. 1 hoard's first meeting of the vear and a1l officials are invited. especially those not registered with the District board roomn rtened nt ot offensive | Botton- | | series as the “Little Boy Blue” poor | strik-| de his dramatic | ne into its own after | dangerous Yunkee Alexander made a about the most in the pinches. four pitched balls. Alex” Meets the Test. Then, with the Cardinals hanging grimly to a onerun lead the great Grover turned back the Yanks in the eighth and the ninth with fast balls and fadeaways. The most dramatic moment of the series cume when Ruth came up with two out. Would “Alex” pitch to him? He did, but Ruth eventually walked after a count of two and three. While Meusel was up the Babe went out stealing. Meusel had fallen down repeatedly in the pinch and was due, think that was good strategy. The break through with a long hit. The difference in_ shortstops meant | the big slices of the melon for the Cardinals. Next to Alexander, little Thevenow. emerged from the series |as the outstanding hero. It is an [ other case where the weukest hitter of the flock has carried off the batting laurels i i Thevenow Great Player. No world series shortstop, Wagner, Barry, Tinker or Bancroft, ever has played better all around ball than Tommy Thevenow, the .261 hitting | rexular of the St. Louls team. The Yanks fielded atrocious behind Hoyt in the fourth inning, but it was a timely single by little Thevenow, com- ing after Hoyt had two strikes on him, which drove in the two runs which meant victory in the game and the series for the (‘ardinals. In the fleld, he was a demon. With Gehrig on se {fourth, Temmy made a | of Severeid’s hot liner. veritable md in the ping catch Thevenow's jump was perfe could not have caught the ball. That | cut off « sure run, as the bull was |headed for left center. Thevenow mad: three other magnificent stops. It Thevenow emerged from the or he Mark Koenig finished as the officia gout. The Yankees of 1926 were cked by their shortstop, just as All{ were their American League predeces-!and F. 1. sors, the Washingtons of 1¢ Hoyt Starts Well. 1oyt pitched beautiful ball for thiee nnings. much better than Haines, his National League rival. With one out in the fourth. Bottomly singled. Les- 1 followed with a hot grounder at Koenig, a ball made to order for a double plav. Again Koenig butchered it. Then, as on two pr | vious oceasions. u missed Koenig doubie | the way for thres The Yanks tumbled through the abyss, Immediately after that Koenig and Meusel couldn't agree on ! dinky fly to short left and it dropped | safe. Then Meusel dropped O'Farrell's ! Ay after Combs ran into him. | no wonder that Hoyt was in the air by |that time. He did get two strikes on Thevenow. when with the infleld plav ing in, Tom whacked u Stinging liner to right, which was good for two runs It was the hit which gave St. Louis its first world's championship in 49 yeurs ext to Koenig's failure, which was partly expected, the thing that threw off the Yankee play more than an; |thing else was Meusel's inability to |hit. Three vears ago Meusel set a | new record by driving in eight runs |in the Yankee's lone world series vic- tory Ruth Walks Four Times. But in this series Biffing Bob has heen Bob the bust. In the seven zames he has collected only five hits and has not driven in a run. Today Ruth was walked four times. but only in the fist mning could Bob advance h'n He had Combs on second and Ruth on first in both the fifth and <eventh inmngs, and each time he tapped weakiy to the infield. Ruth wound up the serfes gloriously with another home run, establishing a new series record, with four. It |was the eighth of the Babe's world serics career. seventh inning, and Haines slipping |three innings, again gave “Alex” was called in to throttle | exhibition. Lazzeri, who during the season was 1 do not | dying chance was that Meusel would | The timing of this time it was| Hafey's| 1t was | beautiful it up with three scoreless roun but the New York lads could not tie it up for him. As the series winds up there is only He . wound nice throttling job, fanning Tony on {one suggestion I should like to make | Sturdy 1 to the Cardinals. They should vote Joe MecCarthy, (‘'ub manager, a full share of thelr world series spoil: How all been broken in the last three years will be told in the final summing up tonorrow | Copyright. 1 world series precedent has | | Preps, but is expected to be in Fri- day’s gawme. | iSustern High, that plays its first { titular game October 19 facing Central. will meet Winton A. C. pound sandlotters, in a | practice brush ‘Wednesday, and Fri- will visit College Park to tackle Maryland's first-year combination. Clashes between Iimerson and Georgetown Preps and St. and Stuyvesant on Friday are other games carded for the week for the local schoolboy group. ITH two clubs’ championshi, the golf title of another wa: defeated John C. Shorey in i try Club titular event by 3 event later in the week. Sasscer. who ix a_former member | | of the Maryland Country Club. a | brother of Tom Sasscer, former Mid- | dle Atlantic champion, and a well | known golfer in Baltimore, outputted and_ outplayed Shorey through the final match at Argyle. e was dor- | mie 6 up when Shorey started a. rally to win two holes that was cut short when the sixteenth hole was halved. Shorey 18 a student at Central High School and recently won the Ban- nockburn tournament. John 1. Power, chairman of the house committee of the Washington Golf and Country Club thought the | men he invited to play in his golf tournament yesterday and Sunday couldn’t beat an ege. So he bought | an egg beater as one of his prizes. Yesterday ‘George T. Howard accept- | e the challenge and stepped out to | win the egg beater. He won by heat- {ing Power, the donor. | The semi-final round In the tourney was concluded yesterday when the team of Charles H. Doing, jr. and| | A. W. Howard defeated Dr. J. T.| { McClenahan and Eugene Goff, 1 up, | Paxton and R. G. Hunt| | defeated J. Logan Hopking and J. M. | Willis, 1 up in 19 holes. The final | was to have been pluyed vesterday, | but was postponed until next Sunday [ because of insufficient time. Washington yesterday announced | club championship for October | 28, 29 and 30 for the title now held ! by M. R. West. The qualifying round will he held on Thursday, ' | Octoher 8. with match play rounds | | Friday and Saturday, the final to be | plaved the afternoon of Saturday, October 28. It was postponed from | ! in earlier date heca of work he[nz( |done on the putting greens. All |l\e] greens at Washington are mnow in 1use, with the exception of the six- | teenth. 1 - 1 R. G. Davis, who led the fleld in the !first round Saturday, continued his | |good golf in the second round of | the competition for the Tatum Cup | at Congressional yesterday, winning | the first leg on the trophy with a 36- !hole net score of 142. Davis had a | of 84 3 on Saturday and yesterday scored —3. W J.| | Richardson finished second with & | net card of 130, while I*. £. Johnson | was third with a net i5l. S. M. Tatum of Miami, Fla., donor of the trophy, presented the cup to Davis at the conclusion of the tourney. George J. Voigt retained his title | of Brightwood champion vesterday in | a resume of the annual tourney heid | | at the Argyle Country Club. Voigt | scored a ish five shots in front of the 82 registered by R. CIff | McKimmie. _The latter. who donated TROUSERS To Match Your Odd Coats | |EISEMAN'S, 7th & F| | GOLFERS AT TWO CLUBS TO CONTEST FOR TITLES ps scheduled for decision this week, s won yesterday when Leroy Sasscer the final round of the Argyle Coun- and 2. Town and Country Club will art its women's championship tomorrow, and Columbia will stage its club | the second-place trophy, refused to tuke it and the prize went to M. A. Shipley. who had 83. The low net prize was won by Emmett lHeltmuller with 85-—10--7! Thomas Pitt with 80 and Shipley with 88--8 80, second place. Fred C. Clark, with 87—14—73, and W. B. Vogel with the same score, tied in the President’s Cup competition at Indlan_ Spring vesterday. The event 18 a 72-hole handicap affair, being played during October at 72 holes medal play with handicap allowance. Vogel also won the class A sweep. takes tourney, with Norman B. Frost, 871275, runnerup. C. B. Allen, with 2-18--74, won the class B event, with Jules Iendersor at 97--10--78 runner-up. Thomas O'Con. nor and R. M. Moulton tied for first place in class C with net scores of 77. | Dr. B. W. Baker turned in the low- eat card in the senior's blind tourney which ended at the Chevy Chase Club Raturday. Dr. Paker had a card of $2- 9-83. Dr. Baker was defeated by B. . Minor by 4 and 3 in the final round of the defeated four in the Letts' eup tourney. Tom Armour, pro at (‘ongressional and a leader among the paid brigade, had some very complimentary things to say after he played the Indian Spring course last Friday. Armour said Indian Spring was a great golf course which could be made better and which is worthy of a big cham- pionship. W. €. Fow president of the United Statea GGolf Association: W. D. Vanderpool and several U. 8. G officials are planning a visit to Wash- ington later in the month to visit the Arlington experimental farm and several of the golf courses about Washington. Congressional is in for & busy week. : Today a tourney !s being staged by ! the officials of the Southern Railway, | in which two score officlals of the | Baltimore and Ohlo have been invited | to play. The club will entertain the | memibers of Temple Noves Lodge of Masons tomorfow, and on Wednes- | Y members of the paint industry will hold their annual tourmey over the course. Wives of the paint men ' will play on Thursday, and on Friday Wallace Motor Co. NASH Sales and Service 1709 L Street N.W. Just Fast of Conn. Ave. Main 7612 Alban's |ynd West Virginia. pects. Witness for instance the game of a few years back with Lafayvette, hen with the greatest teum in the ast, as it was hailed, it came here to take the losing end in a great game with the Blue and 5 No game here this seas as much in the way of xood foot ball | and_possible thrills as will the im- | pending set-to hetween Georgetown n will offer Probably the biggest surprises in South Atlantic foot ball last week were the defeats of South Carolina by North Carolina and of Virginin Military Institute by Roanoke Col- lege. North Carolina, after its 34- 10-0 defeat at the hands of Tennessee, was not thought to be strong enough to beat anybody, but it probably ha much greater potential strength than it has so far shown. South Carolina has a good foot ball team, and if North Carolina could win from it, then the Tarheels have a squad of much greater possibllities than has been dreamed by some of its op- ponents. M. I got a jolt that comes once in a while to a foot ball team. It started its second play and when it found it w against a stronger proposition than it looked for its regulars never were able to find themselves and get started until too late to pull the game from the fire. Georgia played good foot ball against Yals, following the 27-to-7 whipping it gave Virginia a week ago, and had one of fts players stand out as the star of the contest. Morton. who formerly was a brilllant halfback at Episcopal High School, played one of the best games a back has put up in the Yale bowl in years. He kicked, ran with the ball, forward passed and did everything else connected with foot ball in a way that was just about as perfect ax human ability could make it | at the | ity's defeat hands of Loyola was unexpected. The Brooklanders evidently ure not as strong as they expected to be when they first got their «quad in training. Loyola's performances this Fall have not been such as would indicate strength enough to beat the kind of team that was expected to represent the Brookland school. George Washington and Maryland lost to stronger teams. The Hatchet- ites gave Bucknell a hard battle and had nothing of which to feel ashamed at its concluston. Maryland played Chicago to a standstill, but just did not have the stamina to go through the fourth qua it had | battled the At that, though, Maryland mistakes. the iis tak of a g en team, gave Chicage its chances to get those two last | will meet Billy Drako, an cham pion, 12 rounds to a des ion, in the final bout of the yvea enilworth tomorrow night Dempsey has beaten welters in the game. standing feats is a vietory over neg welter. Dempsey proved his class in New York when he beat George Levinle, who had a crack at the world titla v in the year. Drako has beaten vbody he has ced this vear ex- cepting Jimmy Ryan. Listed_among the preliminaries is Mickey White of Baltimore. Wash- ington fans will recall the sensational battles he put up with Jimmy Water- man, although getting knocked out in two rounds on three occasions. White rlash with Billy Strickler. Sylvan Bass of Baltimore meets Eddie de Simon In a six-rounder. Jackie Nelson, Oriole boxer, mingles with Johnny Walker. Sammy Walker < Willie Manley meets Paul Bruen. Charley Short will referee. LAMAR INJURES HAND. k¥ the greatest One of his out- four-round kayo MeVey, the great vas expected that Henry Lamar, hington scrapper, would today the Pennsylvania State Boxing Commission for a postponement of his engagement slated tonight in adelphia with Murray Gitlitz of York. Lamar, in his profes- sional debut at Madison Square Gar den last Friday, scored a knockout over Tom Wickman in_three rounds. Northerns triumphed over ilart fords. Ineor. the victor's streaked yards for a touchdown in the first | minute of play and then kicked for the seventh point. Imen of the World batsmen to five hits fanned 12 and the Parkers wer 1o 1 viel T. Clark got three hits in four times at bat for the winners. Scharff go {two of Woodmenis bingles With Ball, McCatharan, Helvesteln | and Brudder leading an offensive that | gained almost at will. Wintons handily | defeated Linworth gridders, 49 to 0, vesterday. Linworths held the victors o one marker in the opening quarter, but thereafter Wintons had little difiiculty in advancing the ball Opening their season Marion grid men overcame Emerson A. (".. 15 to 0. vesterday. The first half ended 0 to 0. but Marion pushed over two markers in the final half as the result of line plunges by Barry and Southworth. Games with Marions may be arranged by calling Lincoln 1011, V. M. I. NOT DISCOURAGED. LEXINGTON, Va. October 11 V. M. L's surprising 13-to-7 defeat at the hands of the Roancke College Saturday i anything but dishearten !ing to Cadet coaches and plavers. It | means harder work than ever this | Week in preparation for the home |coming duy clash with Virginia on Alumni Field RADIATORS, FENDERS BODIES MADE AND REPAIRED LW KADIATORS FOR AUTOS WITTSTATTS R. & F. WKS. " 319 13th N.W. . REAK Southern Preps Greatest Value / esterday scored Cc PACKAGE RED TOP—ihe bhest and strongest malt ex- tract made. Try Iti TOMORROW A Laurel, Maryland October 5th to October 30th, inclusive Seven Races Daily Special Baltimore & Ohio R. R. Trains nfon Station at 12:25 P.M. Teave Union Station at 12:40 P.M. Direet to conrse Returning immediately after last race overnment First Race at 1:45 P.M. Hob FLAVOR Liebman Bros. Distributors 474 Penna. Ave. NW. PANETELA 9*