Evening Star Newspaper, November 29, 1927, Page 38

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e ‘SPORTSS THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. ¢, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1927. . SPORTS.” Wilson Made Great Record Against Midshipmen in Seven Years of Foot Ball ‘ ‘ SGUREDMP[]'NTS GEORGIAU. ANDTECH |Welch, Pitt Star, Ends Grid |YANKEES RELEASE AL EKHINE NOW VIRTUALLY WILLIE HARMON STops SAILOR IN THE SIXTH EVEN IN 20 GAMES| Career in Coast Holiday Tilt SHAWKEY-RUETHER| WORLD CHESS CHAMPION | rireevrcn s 2 o York : —_ i welterweight, stopped Y IN NAVY EUNTESTS Ry the Associated Pross. By the Associated Pres ot el et d g SR s i s | ATH a., November 20.—Geor- By the Associated Press. S7. PETERSBURG, Fla,, November By the Associated Press. The contest would be for $10,000 with 10-round bout here last nis — cl. -|,:"'~‘:n((=|‘(‘:-‘.:5m ::r\h M::«;"“{v:,"hh;’,‘. PITTSBURGH, November 29.—One of the outstanding gridiron —Bob Shawkey and Dutch Ruether, BUENOS AIRES, November 2 expenses, the winner of six games in | Harmon hammered s . s . ames since foot ball relations were performers of 1927 will find a fitting climax for his foot ball career veteran Yankee twirlers, have been \“I"-"\ mm-\.\n-mm‘w‘ '_f‘f old I ,s(» ;n’\n:mhm!t-rl series 1o take the title 1'\\”(} \;;.' ..1‘:" Was Big Factor in Six Of tatabiished between the two institu:| when he leads the undefeated University of Pittsburgh eleven into leased (o make room for vounser |y’ (i vietually cisss chanipidn of | KheTReARRE niktoly befpany Reptemiber | (e SHSRer POy tions 1n 1893, while two games result- the Tournament of Roses game at Pasadena, Calif.,, January 2. Gilbert twirlers. Miller Huggins, New York i Worlt todas ? o g e itions. Capablanca in 1§ for P ed in ties. Welch, captain and halfback, having played three years on the Pitt | manager, fhat’ several mewl U o B Canatiatic, L O e Ih tross Y. B Eoee i T Seven Games for Penn Record of past games: ot iaglor g ol o 4 |y O ets Toot Ball i thin moundsmen will join the champions|Master, who has held the title since | won it from Dr. Emanuel Lasker in ia Tech s R s oo I ERIREIANE, FPY ey begin Spring training here | 1921, announced after the eighty-first | Havana 6 vears ago. After he won Tech New Year clash with Stanford University. next year. IHe declined to identify | MOve in the thirty-fourth game with | the title, was challenged by Akiba 18 State and Army. o reja Toch 80 “Gibby" Welch this season has drawn unto himself attention | ., | Alekhine that he would likely resign | K. Rubinstein. Polish champion, and och . when the game fs resumed tonight. | Alekhine. These two met in 1923 and Tech! 3 that places him among the leading candidates for all-American The pilot had words of pr A : “ seorgia Tech. 0 recognition. for Shawkey, right-hander, who h: rI“ the present series the winning ihnll'!v‘xssbm .x\':»n the !l;n[\m'lllrnx(\' ;.r ociated Press. # a . O v relch® " o or Wil thiestenin. stnce: 1915; .| of six games is necessary to gain the | contesting with Capablanca for the Pech, Fast and a good broken-field runner, Welch’s play has been fea. been with the team since 1915. Hug championship. Alekhine has won | championship. W YORK, November ) i Toch, i it § - |gins declared that Shawkey played a gun that has thundered with H tured by long runs. In Pitt’s eight games this year, with only Wash B vt In the pennant-winning drives | % Capablanca 3. and 25 have been | 1 ffect against the Navy e rRin. m’ztnn and Jefferson gaining so much as a tie with the Panthers, of the @ e b S awn, | o N dveadnaught through | 11 : §4: Corel Welch gained a total of 1213 yards. in several of the games he [0fiie Gotham siukers nd his work 'Sy e present game was a0 | fARVARD-MICHIGAN seven long Autumn engage- played only a few minutes. In the game with West Virginia he took 'As for Ruether, Huggins said: “He |10Urned Saturday night after 40 moves ments hax been silenced by the pass- i a kick-off back of the goal and ran 105 yards to a touchdown. is passing on, and we must build for Alekhine A the advantage of a TO MEET ON GRID ing of time. SRS i K ! Against Nebraska he ran 97 yards for a touchdown. the future with new material. Lot Ll T L L s I But the memory ‘af 19 LTSt R, eoreia Gearsia 0. Welch’s yardage record in 1926 was even better. In nine games He added that next year's hurling | f, f8torable position to win. At the e L \ : B0t o anged and the adjournmen o kienal ints after Prior to entering Pitt, Welch attended Bellefonte Academy and ETUSS L ADRUOLES S GUIE S aftor fhres hours of play found Alek. | 7 ' Asnclated Prex g t ball craft that no lonzer 0 e ] e L wil VeIt ied on to face “Lighthorse” | | starred in his high school foot ball days at Parkersburg, W. Va. Shawkey may be retained as a coach.|ping «till with the advantage of a| NEW YORK, November 20.—Har = R vard and Michigan will play a two- | Harry Wilson, Army leader and half- | Capablanca, after the adfournment, | game home-and-home foot hall series back extraordina | - | 9 ) E, DX o o ophomors | 3 e o 11 e e e o “DUKE” KEATS, HOC¥"Y (847,915,828 BET IN '27 | “PERFECT” ELEVEN GETS il "ol i b Kbl 1o, Mmoo Lot o ot Penn State, Wilson fired st | o) on the Convention Hall drives alvsis of the situation hefore com 48 REG 1990, the g salvo against the Middies in the shape |y, woman duckpinner, was registered STAR, FINED, SUSPENDED| ON CANADA RACE TRACKS 411 POINTS IN SEASON in definitely to a decision. He added | S2¥% today. Correspondence between of a rd off-tackle dash that PUt| il niche by Mary Hamm of the Miz ¢ k that he felt there was not the slight. |{he athletic directors of the two the famous Killings ehtner 1ot | 1 Lo of the Kastern Star League | MONTREAL. Quebec, November OTTAWA, Ontario, November 29| After piling up 411 points in eight | et possibility of halting Alekhine's | "Niversities has all hut sealed a con ward passing t'»vrv‘l\ivtn=inn . l";‘;:“)““':: | bowling against East Gate. | P.—“Duke” Keats, member of the |(P).—A fotal of $47.915,828 was wa-| consecutive victories, and refusing m:]n:h to victory, - ml' f;,:",:‘;,::, Pq\p:e‘::;‘ to be signed , st Saturday, as ca Ty 3 o ; : kg ety 7 Sxperts Do T on, - asserts. to score, Lant Sotur e nd half:| Team No. 1 of the General Counsel | Detroit Cougars in the Natlonal Pro-|gered on race tracks in Canada during | {o allow any apponent to‘score, the f e e ernat Capablanca Brob: |~ iforts to arrange a Harvard-Michi Pack Ted an apparently beaten squad | League occupies just that position in | fessional IHockey League, has heen|the racing vear of 1927, the Depart.| Pratt High School foot ball tpam | making another move. They consid- | AT Series in answer to demands from Dk o Blo Grounds into a second | the race together with Team No. 5. |Suspended indefinitely and fined $100| 00 o Agriculture announced today.| of Praft, Kans., was looking for |ered his position hopeiess. Midwestern graduates of = Harvard Palf that saw it hammer out two|These combinations are tied at 10 wins |by IPrank Caller, president of the civ-j, L5 P N o i al ew worlds to congu: i s tatA e el | were begun in the Fall of 1926 by Wil e hfiowns and a 1409 victory over |and & losses each. |eutt. for “misconduct” in a game at|This is icrense of more than a| s THEE ok 1'n':_ no alternative but |ijam J. Bingham, director of athletics at the Nation's future admirals | — | Chicago last Saturday. million and a halt dollars over g‘hu Scores in the various games | [ b o ~u;nm «aid he would | Harvard, but were abandoned whea it In the seven years that he has |GENERAL ACCOUNTING OFFICE LEAGU E.] Calder announced his ruling follow- | amount wagered in 1926, The 19 iged from 200 to 1080, All ex- (i o [’l' to the Argentine Chess | hecame apparent that Princeton would layed against the Navy, three at Team Standing. Ing upon receipt of the referee's re.|racing vear consisted of 354 days, 10| B es icially resigning the adjourned | have to be dropped from the Crim- play = cept one of the regulars made at me without resuming play and an-|sor. schedule for a vear in order to en- | g 4 four at West Point, s port of the game. After being ruled | more than in 1926. | e [ e s mame has figured in the finai | Post Office Ot the ice for rough play, Keats be-| For the four districts in which | least one touchdown. In the clos. |other letter to Alekhine congratulating able Harvard to abide by a faculty | analysis of every game but one, and |Indin No 3. 237 11 8% came incensed at remarks made by a| Canadian race tracks are divided,| ing games, linemen who had not ‘lh’n l""l:‘r on his victory. restriction limiting the team to but that was during his first appearance | [vesticators .- 3 spectator, and in attempting to strike Quebec, Ontario, the prairie | 18 G Lt o e theill of | pih, Ajegase he it proclaimed cham: | one game away (rom home a vear. S n ATy UBHOE o eck “Accounting - i 3 | M with his hockey atick marrowly | provinces and British Columbia, only | hreviously experienced the thril of | pion. Alekhine announced that Capa-| Harvard's suggestion that Princeton leg injury ! ide lines | Bookkeepini 0. d hitting Mrs. Frederick Mc-|Quebee showed a decrease of the total | (RIS CAE PR TG JUCL | blanca would have the first chance to | step aside for a year, followed by the early in the second period, af! and, ‘Trovel d Laughlin, formerly Irene Castle, wife |amount wagered this year in compari-| ."0va) contend for the title again in any city [announcement that only the Yale Sppointing . showing in the firs i S 3| e owner of the Chicago team. so8 - With: 1096; B s e Js. |0 the world under conditions similar | gnme was regarded as a fixture on the | quarter AP et PRI | ""’"'-"mmn & the ‘I'_‘:_"“ :" “';f;":’llm’:' _'(vl ':Iv-s«- governing the present match. | Crimson schedule, was a big factor in > . - dian No. " < . g | £ H oo - | Alekhine s he considered his vie- Harvard-P rea Faced Navy First In 1921, i ; 38 | Anacostia Eagles want a crack at| Kennedy A. C. and Northeast Co-| chine, which admiring fans hail as | tory assured. : e I:l’::pll:l:::d :12::;:2: :)Ilnhr!:yrnll‘\! ?»'fo' e faced the Navy first on a muddy ¥ : pout | the Brooklyn Boys' Club to declde the |iumbin elevens mix Sunday at 2 o'clock st high school team He added that he would not be ready | Princeton game number of the Har-| FOR d - o | Call 2 at the Tidal Basin i Valley end his litle until at le Lampoon, Crimson funn: OR years and years Ba Philadelphia Hand Made fleld at Baltimore on ;?,I,H.I T, Covart ssigntora); | 115 title. lantie 5 i o e i gy TSl ingicidun) sste—flersor, (Indian o, for the first touchdown and a 58-y: e 2 edin . Petfecto has been one of the march for the second that gave Penn i i ves—Chapoell (Check " . f State a 13-to-7 victory. The next year s “Murdogic (Post Office) largest selling brands in the at Washington the v won 14 to 0, gh _spares—Hawley,” 76: Warfield, 73: . 3 but the name that stood out in defeat |Stone, 63 Bllaworth, 88. | (C " country. Now, in addition to was Wilkon. : o | aim S T RGN i S, 48 the famous Perfecto, you can 924, playing as a senior o L igh flat cam. 2 rf (ndian No. s . . i} ORS, DY I ; obtain this mild, mellow, fra. home field at State College, W j1):95: Auoker ¥ eame into his own. In the second | . otk : Sic o p Setind e nthrcentald s Neye e SH0 | R AR grant cigar in two new sizes, raced 35 vards for a touchdown. From Longfello and After-Dinner— the following kick-off. bhehind perfect A 5 % a » interference, he galioped 95 yards | Ofice it § both wrapped in foil. You through the entiye Annapolis team | Burean of Mines 2 s 5 can buy your favorite size and for a score, and capped that in the |Patents No. : ” final period by breaking off tackle on |Const Surve 3 shape at any cigar counter, a double delayed pass for 70 vards BuforCom Jo.. 4nd his third touchdown of the After-| “Hign teum set—Patenis noon. rean of Standards. 1.636. The next veer. his first with the | High 'L-}"J'.'..u..'w'n':'?;'fl""" No. 1. 584: Bu- Army, saw his disappointing showing| = High_ individual set—Clements. “Burean of and inju n the service clash at Bal- i Mipes. 368: Sevmour. Patents No. 2. 360, timore, which the Army won, 12 to 0. | High individual ame-Clements. Buresn The figures showed he gained nine High individual = ave - " i row - | reau of Mines. 108-11: Jermane, Patenis No. ::":,;’":0::1::‘9" N Wi Sheoire Tox 1 J06-15:"C L. Came, Bureau of Standards. e 99 0 G o A e i en'ny| Standards increased thelr lead to two g 3 ohor games when they won three games a booting a goal after touchdown and | o, "patents No. 2, while Secretary’s meampering through the Navy left g0 aqvanced to second place thiough fank for 42 vards to the Nn Y mewnns | & triple win from BuforCom No. 2. 0 e o e e encid Trio ot | Mines dropped two games to Coast running mates that ncluded Tiny | S8 “alinis Kol 3, Tatents No. s l r e < | wi Patents No. 1, Patents . Hewitty Trapnell and Harding. e . Coast_Survey, 2 “an Great Work at Chicago. BuforCom No. 1 trailing in order. The vear 1926 saw the 21-21 tle game at Chicago before a then record IR et ‘erowa for all time of 110,000. Wilson CUE CHAMP PLAYS. missed a chance to break the deadlock > Py the distance his try for a place.| George Kelly, defending champion, ment field goal went wide o the left | meets Phil Bray tonight at the Arcadia of the uprights in the gathering gloom | N @ match of the District champion- of & November dusk, but it was his | $hip pocket billiard tournament, start- rushing with that of his running|ing play at 8 o'clock. In last night's “mate, “Red” Cagle, that pulled the | tourney match, Fred Reynolds defeat- Army’out of a 14-0 hole at haif time. | ©d J. B. Maynard, 100 to §0. Wilson’s own part in the running e e game consisted of ‘148 vards in 14 Grow 'Em Big in Ohio. lays. including a 16-yard dash for a Towehdown and runs of 25, 17, 13, 24| Twenty-one of the 43 members of “and 28 yarde. He Micked af: three | the Ohio Wesleyan foot ball squad are A e T et s atios |6 feet or more in height. The 1327 SSendown. squad held the altitude record for the | Last Saturday saw Lighthorse Harry | School. “end his career by again pulling his e team out of a hole with two touch-| Chevy Chase foot ballers meet to- downs that spelled victor: morrow night at 4324 River road. through the additional - power and smoothness supplied your engine B by Standard”Motor Oil N .. Longfello 10¢ After-Dinnes 2 for 25¢ i Both foil wrapped “STANDARD" MoT1OR OIL & GASOLINE fl(lnll!‘lz'li'l.:‘l':“'rfllll"'n Co. W hington, B €. Washington Tobacco Co. 917 E Street N.W. +. Main 44504451

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