Evening Star Newspaper, September 20, 1928, Page 46

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WOULD STOP WAKE FOREST IN OPENER Meets Maryland in Second Battle of “Wrecking” Schedule. U opening with Wake Forest as the first important point in its foot ball season. The Tarheels have for the last four years lost to Wake Forest on their opening date, twice by one point, once by six points and once by thirteen points, and those defeats have devel- oped a situation more than trying to Carolina I‘Llumn\hnnd players, to say nothing of coaches. Nortgx Carolina is rushing its team harder than usual for this early in the training period mainly because it wants to cure its situation with Wake Forest. The Tarheels are good and tired of losing to the Baptists and if real effort means anything they intend to wipe cut the sting of four consecutive beatings. And after North Carolina gets through with Wake Forest it has any- thing but an easy prospect in front of it. The next Saturday it comes here to meet Maryland, and after that Las Harvard and Virginia Polytechnic Insti- tute on the next two Saturdays. A look at this list of games is suffi- clent to indicate that the Chapel Hill eleven, even if it does make good and become”’ one of the best teams ever turned out there, has few soft if any spots: Sept. 29—Wake Forest at Chapel Hill. Oct. 6—Maryland at College Park. Oct. 13—Harvard at Cambridge. Oct. 20—Virginia Polytechnic Insti- tute at Chapel Hill Oct. 21—Georgia Tech at Chapel Novi—North Carolina State at h. Nov'.‘l‘e“l—South Carolina at Chapel il Nov. 17—Davidson at Davidson. Nov. 29—Virginia at Charlottesville. Dec. 8—Duke at Chapel Hill ytechnic In- BY H. C. BYRD. NIVERSITY of North Carolina. while it plays a schedule of hard games, is looking to its recent seasons, Wi and Atlanta schools bid fair to have have worn And the MiKe Photos By LOCAL COLLEGE COACHES HUSTLING GRID CHARGES ITH the weather improved Head Coach Lou Little of Georgetown University foot ball squad planned to re- sume heavy work today, in- scrimmaging. Little announced today that Steve Barabas and John Hudack, latest addi- tions to the long Blue and Gray casual- ty list, which is bigger have had altogether during the past according three seasons, be out of the opening season cluding game against Mount St. Ma September 29. Despite the unfavorable weather, Lit- brisk tle sent his proteges through a signal drill yesterday. time by t! wasted, & With _the ope: Head Coach ning of the university H. wnuon{mud) of College team of this city and the Cardi- relieved. Held conducted by Crum. Catholic University squad is putting forth his best efloru‘rtl:davemp a sturdy line. It ngl.)un that the Brookland will have a strong backfield with eleven a nucleus of & half dozen or so seasoned lormers. Raiche, . end, also of the 1927 eleven; Moorehead, is likely to be felt, the many forwards of apparently ex- 'ceptional worth now on the field. To sum up North Carolina’s prospects at present, it seems that it should have a good team, perhaps a much better one than has worn its colors in the last two of three years, but it also goes without saying that it is likely to need just as good a team as it may |have, no matter how good "i‘:e is, A 'stack up successfully against AITa) ‘of competition with which it is faced. ————e 'LOTT, HENNESSEY SEEK INTERSECTIONAL TITLE By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, September 20.—Those two young futurists of American tennls, George Lott and John Hennessey, the first players ever to bring the national doubles championship to the Middle West, were home today in quest of new honors. | The occasion of their return was the opening of the United States inter- sectional team championships on the turt courts of the Chicago Town and Tennis Club. Aside from Bill Tilden, Frank Hunter and the French Davis ‘Cup team, virtually every player of note ‘was here to compete for the Sim Cup, won last year by the Middle States’ representatives, Tilden and ‘Wallace Johnston. International flavor was added to the tournament by the presence of the Australian team of Crawford, Cum- , Hopeman and Young. Seven sections of the United States, in addition to the Australians, will vie for ‘top honors during the four- day elimination tournament. KEITH FOUND INELIGIBLE TO RUN FOR OKLAHOMA NORMAN, Okla., September 20 (A).— Harold Keith, captain-elect of the Uni-} versity of Oklahoma track team, who climaxed his track career by winning the 3,000-meter steeplechase at the Penn relays last Spring, has been de- clared ineligible for further competi- tion at the university because he par- ticipated in athletics at a State teach- ers’ college in 1925 before entering school here. Keith was a star half-miler and mile Funner in his junior year last Spring. PECKS AND CORINTHIANS WILL PLAN FOR QUINTS Amateur basket ball plans are in the making. Peck Memorial and Walter Newman's Corinthian teams are listed for meetings. Pecks will meet tonight in Peck Memorial Church at 8 o’clock. Corinthian Insect, Midget and Junior athletes are to meet tomorrow night at 8 o'clock in Immaculate Concep- tion Hall. Newman plans to organize 85 and 100 pound quints. . i of last Fall's team; Gerth, than, the Hoyas to Little, will of the ’s here 'h | Promising Eddie Lafond front wall include Mike Durso, who is being tried at center; O'Brien, 185- pound Freshman fullback, who is being groomed for a tackle job; Smith, an- other tackle candidate, and Mullin and Devin, who are out for guard assign- ments. Jean Murphy appears to have the edge in the battle for quarterback. Schmidt and Healy are battling for one halfback job. Champa has clinched the other halfback position, and Capt. Malevich has a strangle hold on full- back. Sheehan and Conveigh are a pair putting up lively battles to gain a place in the backfield. Loss of several men through ineli- gibility and other reasons has hit the Brooklanders hard. have been arranged for with the St. John’s nals also will see action against the % ‘k’l.lnmnmde “zn. !ncldflllut&llg,. the rool TS 8 Wi ve a cleven, strong yearling bunch having registered. will coach the freshmen doors yesterday for the first ‘nhznlnth:dlzmmnwnnot blackboard skull drill being who will get together for their first ; | drill next Tuesday. t is certain that a tentative first I + | University of Maryland foot ball eleven will be picked by Head Coach H. C. (Curley) Byrd before the end of this week. e Old Line mentor still is unceriain as to who will be placed at the tackle ?osu. one guard station and one backfield berth. , an McCabe, the only | tackle, who transferred from the Phar- Keenan, Fisher, McDonald and Lom- bard are leading tackle aspirants. Crothers probably will hold down one guard , but Wondrack, 1927 regular, is being furnished a lively fight for the other guard assignment by Heintz, a reserve last season. Finding another regular backfield man and reserve ball carriers offer Conch Byrd a task. Maryland’s squad was swelled to 33 yesterday when three joined the Old Liners. They are John Allen, end or macy School in Baltimore to take chem- the | istry at College Park, and John Pitzer Quick Punt Smart Play Speed Needed BY SOL METZGER. ‘Those who saw the last two Army- Navy games saw what a wonderful play is the quick punt. Two years ago it led to the Navy’s tying touch- down. t season it gave the Navy the ball within striking distance of the Army’s goal at the start of the game. California also uses the quick kick from the semi-punt formation, the ;om:!on from which come all mnn‘; er of runs passes. Speed the keynote of its success. This kick is gotten off so fast that none are bl . If the punt is to the right the quarterback, No. 6, rushes to the right to block. "If to the left, the quarter runs to the left and blocks there. is is pictured in the accom- FiTies prossetion 1s le protection is needed by the kicker on his left, so ltnemenyNos. 2, 3 and 4 and the right end, No. 1, break right down the field to cover the safety man. The others block temporarily. Then they are off to down the receiver should he escape the first wave of tacklers. On a quick kick he rarely does, as few opposing size it up in time to block off opponents rushing down field to make the tackle. The play is especially effective if the safety man 1s caught too close to the scrim- mage line or the ball so placed as to pass him. A long, rolling kick recovered by the kicker's side under such conditions will gain as much as 60 yards. ¥ For more than 20 years Sol Metz- er has been identified with foot T wDick "and eaiing for Foot an lor Bul."“l:: ’lll‘zm'lv‘rhht a necessary part ys success on th e el env n care repuest this leaflet. gagiimcn (Copyrisht. 1928 and Bryant Hanback, halfbacks. Pitzer, who scales 170, may do well. Though slow, he is rugged and heady. He played with the freshmen last Fall and also with the yearling basket ball five last Winter. Hanback was on the var- sity squad in 1927. ‘There are now four on Maryland's injured list, including Jack Keenan, ‘Warren Rabbitt, end; John Clary, guard, and Jack Le Roy, center or half- back. .Keenan is the only varsity vet- eran of the lot, the others having played with the freshmen last season. Georgetown University may be rep- resented by another Bozek in athletics. Emile Bozek, younger brother Johnny, who is at present a member of the Hoya gridiron squad, is out for the Hilltop Freshman eleven. Like his brother he is a halfback, and it may be that the Blue and Gray will have a brother - combination behind the line next season. th‘I‘housh 'g‘l’ghinz boonly “tba pounds, \the younger Bozek, who came to George- town from Manchester h_ School, New Haven, Conn., earned land prep quarterback honors last Fall. is a capable basket ball and ball player. ANDLOT foot ball teams are fast being whipped into m. ‘While coaches are busy ling their charges into first-class machines, managers are as busy al schedules. Most of the elevens will nol begin the active campaign until the first Sunday in October. ‘Manager Boyer of Seat Pleasant Fire- men and Sam Ormes, Northern A. C. manager, have secured dates on the Mohawk A. C, schedule for their re- spective teams. Firemen meet Mo~ | hawks at American League Park Octo- iber 5 and Northerns will meet Manager Patsy Donovan’s Hawks on November 18. Northerns have booked a scrim- mage with Fort Washington's eleven September 30. Mohawks, who have been having trouble finding a successor to Doc Hag- erty, who coached the eleven last sea- son, have about decided to name Craig | Wilton, former Central High and college 1 backfield star, as mentor. Wilton is expected to take charge of the team this week end. He has plenty of collegiate e‘)fl)erlenm under several coachs and should prove valuable to the Indians. He served the Maryland Fresh- men one year, later going to (proved valuable at George Wuhln{ton. l Mohawk Ehyerl are to report at their club tonight at 6 o'clock for practice. Practice sessions are scheduled to- m&m for several squads. Northerns will report on Hoover Playgrounds at 7:30 o'clock and Waverlys plan to work- out at 7:30 at Seventh and O streets. Clarendon , Lyons, 150-pounders, are to gather at the home of their manager at 7:30 o'clock, and Wintons will drill Gy PERKINS — CHICAGO HAS THREE GRID |ROCKNEIS “CRYING” * GAMES ON ONE SATURDAY | FOR SPEEDY GRIDMEN Notre Dame Plays Navy, Chicago Meets Iowa and Northwestern Faces Ohio State October 13. Stagg Is “Wonder” Coach. BY LAWRENCE PERRY. HsmAOO. September m.—Monhn;; tagg, now entering uj thirty-seventh year ox"'é'.fm. has seen many changes cago, in the great Autumn game since first he came to the Midwest from Yale, but he said today that the gridiron situa- tion which Chicago will face on Octo- ber 13 is the most significant and startling reminder of foot ball expan- |’ llonfllucheh:am;nmmmmme expansive years ‘war, On that Saturday foot ball enthusi- asts of this metropolis have three major games at their elbows. Chicago plays host to Towa at Stagg Field; Ohio State visits Northwestern at Evanston and two outside elevens, Notre Dame and the Navy, come to Soldiers’ Field for one of the important intersectional games of the season. May Hurt Some One. Question arose, when this conflict of dates was made known, about which of the attractions would suffer. From the unanimity of opinion that the con- ference games would show a falling off in attendance it would appear that the South Benders. and Middies have lost none of their appeal. Had not one Conference university al- ready arranged to attend to the gate re- ceipt menace involved in these inva- sions of Chicago by Notre Dame, it is possible that something strenuous might be done to keep the fighting Irish and the service institutions in their own back yards. As it is, however, Northwestern, through deft diplomacy, has met the is- sue by booking late season games with Notre Dame over a period of years, a clause in the contract holding that WOMEN IN SPORT | |Princeton Has Some Clever BY CORINNE FRAZIER. NIVERSITY of Maryland co-eds will gather for the Fall session at College Park next week and will begin to lay their plans for the four-sport program which features the work of their physi- cal training department. ! Rifle, as usual, will head the list of activities, this being the only sport in which the Maryland girls are groomed for intercollegiate competition. They engage annually in a full program of telegraphic and shoulder-to-shoulder range encounters with the sharpshoot- ers of the leading universities of the country and in addition participate in the annual national intercollegiate in- door rifle championships conducted by the National Riflée Association. At oresent they hold the runner-up position for this title, having shot second to Geo) ‘Washington University last year. Several years ago, the College Parkers won the championship and are going to work hard to regain their Iaurels this season. ‘Tennis probably will be the first sport to get under way, with practice matches layed on the university courts prelim- ary to the annual championships. Swimming is a minor sport at Maryland, classes being held during the Winter months in the Y. W. C. A. pool here in Washington. In the past, no official meets have been staged. Basket ball is a Winter and early Spring sport at Maryland. An inter- class series will be staged as a climax to the season, under the supervision of Adele Stamp, physical training director. The series was won last year by the Sophomore squad. Fall schedules went into effect this week on all.of the municipal ‘play- grounds with the opening of the el mentary schools. Two new school pl: grounds. were opened, one at Filimore and one at the Congress Heights School. Eloise Hess will serve as director at the Fillmore Center, while Mrs. Virginia Palmer will act in this capacity at Congress Heights. Congress Heights girls’ dodge ball l?llld celebrates ir o te) 10 victory ove team in a pre-league contest staged at the latter ground. A second game will be played Satur- 4ay morning at 10:30, with the Congress Heights lassles playing hostess. . PRACTICE FOR EASTERN COURTMEN BEGINS TODAY Candidates for Eastern High's basket ball team were to hold their first drill this afternoon, under the direction of H. P. Sanborn, newly appointed coach. Future practices will be staged Monday, Wednesday ‘and Friday of each week for the time being. Aspirants for Light Blue and White's track team, also to be tutored by Sanborn, will hold their first work- out next Tuesday. Coach L. P. Banfield of Emerson In- stitute’s foot ball squad has announced that he expects his bunch to be aug- mented next week by McKalg, Gonzaga backfleld star last Fall, and Nelson Colley, former Central H'fih base ball and track 1 . Colley did not play foot ball at Central, but is pected to show gridiron ability. ex- Sandlot Grid Squads Speedily Getting Into Trim for Battles at the same hour at Virginia Avenue Playgrounds, Seat Pleasant Firemen will drill to- morrow night at 8 o'clock on their fleld, and Southerns will start practice at 6 o'clock on Hoover Playgrounds. National Preps are slated to meet at the home of Manager Dalglish at 8 o'clock. Colleglan A. C. 115-pounders have about_decided upon a first-string line- up. D. Delavigne and Don Grist, ends; J. McKenzie and 8. Delavigne, guards; L. Gladden and B. McKenzie, tackles; D. Gladden, center; P. Risler, quarter- back; A. Johns and B. Amidon, half- backs, and C. Waldenback, fullback; comprise the regular team at present. Collegians are to practice tonight and hold a meeting Saturday night at 655 B street northeast at 7:30 o’clock. Don axit:t is scheduling games at Lincoln Clarendon Lyons are ready to meet ‘Tech for several seasons and in 1026 | west the best 150-pound teams. Dates can be arranged at Clarendon 211. Manager Louis Plzza is now making & schedule for St. Stephen’s 85-pound elevm’ ;‘x;d will accept challenges at e . WRESTLER BADLY INJURED. LOS ANGELES, September 20 (#).— Nick Lutze, Chic nheavywels wrestler, injured last- night mv!w"(-hf tling match with Joe Malcewicz of Utica, N. Y., was in a serious condi- tion at a hospital today. Physicians sald he was suffering from concussion of the brain and torn neck ligaments, Material, BY EDWARD J. NEIL, (Associated Press Sports Writer.) RINCETON, N. J.,, September 20. —Bill Roper, master in the school of applied foot ball, has formed a habit of molding into champions the lithe young ath- letes who wander down to Princeton in the Fall. This year he’s none too sure that he won't be broken of the habit. Yearly, when the tang creeps into the September air, Bill calls the young men of Pninceton around him. Sometimes there is weight, speed, power and, best of all, experience. Sometimes there's just numbers. But always, despite wor- risome reports, the old grads calmly order their tickets for the late Fall classics, confident that the Princeton Tiger will again be clawing at the champlonship gates before Thanksgiv- rolls around. Rarely, indeed, has Bill failed them. Faces Big Problem. ‘This time Bill Roper has a definite problem on his hands, one a bit dif- ferent from any he has tackled in re- But It Is Limited Barfleld will play one tackle again. but | Hiainly his running mate last year, Jack Whyte, is waiting for a.brokén wrist fo heal. Substitutes of last season and sopho- mores must fill the line holes. Have Two Fine Ends. To offset the problems rising in the center of the line, Roper has two sterl- ing ends in Johnny Stinson and New- man Lawler. The substitutes on the wings are fast, rangy and powerful. Given an accurate passer, the nucleus is there for the kind of aerial game that swept the boards clean in 1925. There will be no radical the Princeton system this year. huddle, best method of imparting nals to eleven excited youngsters in heat_and din of conflict, has come to the Tiger lair to stay. Roper was among the first to use that system and he can see no reason for changing it. “My material is spotty,” he said with a smile, “and not well balanced. There is individual strength, but a lack of in the quality. We're pretty 1l fixed in some positions and badly off in others. The job ahead is inter- cent years. He has weight, speed, pow- | esting. er and experience, but in such small quantities that when it is spread out as far as possible there is just enough to go around. He hasn’t even numbers. When the Tiger marshals a full eleven men on the field this Fall, there will be very lit- tle of weight, speed, power and experi- ence left sitting behind on the bench. Last Fall a great sophomore, Ed Witmer, stormed into Roper’s backfield to “make” the team. He had in Mike Miles one of the finest defensive backs in the country. Earl Baruch stepped into the quarterback role to , kick and think his way to_ equal ranking with any fleld general in collegiate rln.lkl It was a combination that wore well, Baruch has left college along with “Red” Owen, a fine fullback substitute, but the remainder of Roper’s young stalwarts are back. Phil Strubing can sceflnlnw the quarterback post, but only Holmes Bennet, a prospective Wittmer from the SopHomore ranks; Scarlett, Jones and the fleet but fragile Requardt, seem capable of first string work. With this backfield, the Tiger must face a schedule one game more rugged than last year, between October 27 and November 24, Princeton must battle Cornell, Ohio State, Washington and Jefferson, Yale and Navy in that order. It has been many, many years since a Nassau eleven, shooting its all against Tthe El, has had to turn and face & team of Navy's caliber. Usually the Tiger helps himself to a Bulldog hide or goes down to glorious defeat and calls it a season anyway. The line prospects at Princeton are not calculated to lighten the tension round the building of this new Tiger team, Captain Chuck Howe must switch from center to fill a guard berth. Bill Aging A Full shape ting.” It can be added that there is danger in that smile for opponents who take those words literally. Bill's smile, like the dee?ecz part of the darkness, comes e Jjust beforg, dawn. o SOCCER OPENS HERE EARLY NEXT MONTH 1In the first round of the United States Foot Bclh“ Auocl:lunn Nal Famer lenge Cup competition October 7 on Monument ids field No 2, Clan MacLennan an soccer cl will clash. 2 This tilt, which will open the local competitive season, will be a preliminary to the national championship, and as it brings together strong teams should prove interesting. Both Clan MacLen- nan_and Concord Club are entered in the Washington Soccer League . PR OUAFI IS ON HIS WAY TO SCENE ‘OF CONTEST NEW YORK, September 20 (#).—El Ouafi, little Algerlan winner of the Olympic marathon, is on way to Oklahoma to make his professional racing debut against Andy Payne, champion bunion lifter of C. C. Pyle's cross-coun derbyists. He left here Ele!md“ for ‘Tulsa, where the race will take place on Sep- tember 28. El Ouafi concluded his training for the event last Monday, when he covered, the full marathon dis- tance over the Columbia University track in 2 hours. 55 minutes. Year...Creates Jits mellow Derfection of flavor!? SLOi.Y‘nd‘"carét‘fifly. , the process of natural ripening mellows Admiration’s choice 1004percent Havana fillers...while the excellence of ‘skilled hand work adds the final touch, of perfection. “The Cigar that Wins™ The Hand-made Admiration PERFECTO, a very popular , 15¢ each. Other sizes 10¢, 2 for 25¢ and 3 for 50¢. ing at the University of Chi-|°*8P Notre Dame may not, while the contract is in force, play either the Army or the Navy in this city. So it won't be “the Army and Navy forever,” so far as Chi- X unes:leel;rrfi: ber,” sald Stagg ember,” Stagg to- day, “when no coach in this city had to worry about conflicting dates. If we could get a small crowd for one game ::ut‘._houxm we were doing extremely And what a grand man Alonzo Sta Today he was out on the field, lglg shock of tousled gray hair flashing in and out among the formations his va- rlous backfield candidates were prac- tising, his step as energetic, his voice as et a8 th-ail he‘seers ho s et al e years has '&lschlng,:oot ball he’x”e. N tagg is a man of whom no one ma; say that he has ever told a lie, or done K mean act or stooped to any deceit what- ever. He has lived up to the letter and spirit of the various rules designed to keep foot ball an amateur game—a col- lege game in all that the term implie: Scrupulous in teac clean foot ball, :13“ ::lr‘e;r‘ é)xé l:!he nd::l nlstnbee tive side of icago has been a credit to his university as to himself. Stagg Is Great Coach. With not more than five or six hun- dred students eligible, or available for foot ball, Stagg in the past decade has annually had to face rivals whose teams have been formed out:of student eli- gibles numbering from three to seven thousand. Give him the material—and neither Stagg nor any one associated with him has ever reached out for ma- teriai—and there isn't a coach in the country who can beat him. With the exception of, say, two Stagg never turned out a team merited the term “poor.” And those two exceptional years were marked by ma- terial so far below par as to be hopeless even for Stagg. Many a proud eleven has gone proudly against a little-rated Chicago qutfit and awakened to find it had walked into a real foot ball game. This year, Stagg and his_assistants, Crysler, Norgren, Rouse and Henderson, have a tremendous lot of work to do with light line material and heavy but inexperienced backs. But the Ee e e y other s; of which e e e ve most o - ing team in her history. ThQIP:n wm. lyn passing years, tha tion Stagg is using the flyer back con- stantly, working some very elusive ma- neuvers out of it. BRITISH EMPIRE PLANS ANNUAL OLYMPIC GAMES HAMILTON, Ont., September 20 (#). —The British Empire is to have its own set of Olympic games. M. M. , manager of the Ca- nadian Ol ‘Track and Field Team, announces that a British Em| sports federation is to be f for this The first track and fleld meet of the athletes of the Em will held Hlplnfl!on in 1930. i b * every even includ tin; Hoped to ‘make ' the affair. meet an annual HULBERT TO neunoiusn PRESIDENCY OF A. A. U. GRAND RAPIDS, Mich., Septe: 0 “”e;m‘l,‘m!m% Hulbert, four t‘:fi‘: Union, here in his e exalted ruler of the Elks, nounced that at the bring the presiden A.v.mmmmgwm.q“m"' i S FIGHTS LAST NIGHT. By the Assoclated Press. DAYTON, Ky—Joe Anderson, Cov- ' outpointed Jack 'Willis, Leonard Sedbrook, halfback star Phillips University, Enid, Okl:.. h:: ae’e‘:t:lned to play for the New York uto Bodies, Radiators, Fend Repaired; also New Radiators Harrison radiators and cores in stock Wittsatts, 1 ittaatts; 1809 14th North 7177 TROUSERS EISEMANS, 7th & F STAR SERYICE STATION 12th and Sts. l.'? Ky Special B. & O. train leaves Union Station 11:45 AM. Special Penna. train leaves Union Station 12:00 noon. (Eastern Standard Time.) ADMISSION: Grandstand and Paddock, $1.50 T _RACE at 2:15 P.M. Learn to Fly CLUB-WAY FLY-SOLO-AT $5.50 per Hour Write National F'lylu" Ass'n For Free Catalogue and Plan 1009 B ilding wum.or;o!?.mlla. C. Washington, D. C. By the Associated Press. 5 HICAGO, September 20.—Wiia: the 1928 edition of the something that is not only teresting the foot ball populace but®ic something that Coach Knute Rockn® is seriously considering. For this Fall the Notre Dame -“master mind” is faced with the problem of constructin: from two veterans and a host of green material a forward wall that will fit in with his hair-trigger offense. Rockne will get the first glimpse oi his work Saturday when he sends the varsity against the freshmen in their annual tussle. The public, however, will have to wait until September 29, when Loyola of New Orleans invades South Bend, as Saturday's scrimmage will be pehind closed gates. More speed is the dry of Rockne and his assistants as they attempt to whiy the six newcomers in the line into the system that has carried the Rockne- trained teams far in the past. The Notrc Dame mentor has set about the task of finding three sets of ends. Five wing- men received monograms last year, and of the five four were graduated, leaving only John Colerick. ‘The first scrimmage was held yester- day and the action of the regular squac against the reserve eleven was none too pleasing to Rockne. Jack Nannon, lead- ing candidate for guard pogition, was not included in the regulars, as he has an injured foot that will slow him up for about a week. Jack Elder, outstand- ing sprinter of the Middle West, is be- ing grcomed in kicking and passing to replace Johnny Niemiec at left haif when the occasion demands. The hunt for more and better line- men .s still going on in the Western Conference, with several of the coaches inserting their backfield candidates int the line in hopes of building a stron: forward wall. Scrimmaging has started in most of the camps but Fielding Yost is holding off from sending his 200-pounders against each other at Michigan. t Page, who deserves five elevens, is Pa t still crying for more men at Indiana. After Dinner full - volumed, 2 for 25c. “What more could any man want _ in a cigar ? that has the pure, mild flavor of good-quality tobacco that’s full{n::fle, properly cured and age-mellowed . . . and you have my idea of a perfect smoke. I've found it—in Bayuk Philadelphia Hand Made. *No bitterness, no flatness. Sipetobacens Nodhng but iy ripe . i ully- ripe leaves from heart to \,vn;- . I recommend Philadelphia ! Mades to my friends without reservations of any kind.” Washington Tobacco Co., Distributors _ * 917 E St. NW. Phone Main 4450-4451 “Its Ripe Tobaccol

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