Evening Star Newspaper, September 28, 1928, Page 46

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POSSIBLE CHANCE FOR 198 BATILE | Navy, It Is Said, Will Allow | Army to Adhere to Its Present Rules. By the Associated Press. EW YORK, September The now historic Army-Navy | break in athletic relations, it develops on_the eve of their 28.— | latter’s policy may retard the prospect 1928 foot ball seasons, is likely to be patched up much sooner than has | generally been expected. % | It is even possible, though not likely, that the two service schools will effec a reconciliation and get together on the | gridiron this season, in spite of the fact that both have arranged rugged and in- | dependent schedules as a result of the | rift that occurred last Winter. If not, it is now considered certain that they will resume foot ball relations in 1930. Navy to Capitulate. ‘The primary basis for this unexpected outlook for peace, it is understood, will be a complete reveflal of the Navy's | stand on the three-year varsity piayer | principle—the rock on which the acad- emies split. The paramount motive, however, will be to restore harmony and regain public confidence in the abl of the Nation’s foremost service institu- | tions to get along together. In other words, as the situation is outlined authoritatively to the Asso- rizta mesoo Apmanolis authorities, hav- ing failed to effect any compromise agreement on the issue of athletic . L2 Shvs, Wil concede West Pomnt’s Tigat to play its men. re- gardless of how much previous college experience they have had. Just waen these prospective develop- ments may take definite form is specu- lative. Officially, neither academy has committed itself to a positive move toward peace. In fact, West Point, standing pat as it has from the start, has permitted the impression to go out that it sees no immediate hope of a re- newal of relations with Annapolis. « Sentiment Is for Game. ‘This much, however, is certain: That an overwhelming sentiment exists at both academies, -among officers as well as cadets and midshipmen, for a speedy peace and renewal of athletic relations in all branches of sport; that the new heads of the two institutions, Maj. Gen. Smith and Rear Admirai Robison, both are sympathetic with this sentiment, and that both will seize the | SPORTE: THE EVENING STAR, - WASHINGTON, D. ) first appropriate chance to effect a rec- | onciliation. It is understood, in fact, that Gen. Smith and Admiral Robison =already have had some discussion of ways and | means of bringing this reconciliation | about | The path for quicker action appears | to have been cleared by the retiremént of the two superintendents who figured in the break, Maj. Gen. Winans. at West Point, and Rear Admiral Nuiton, | at Annapolis, but consideration for the | of an immediate move. Army Sure to Agree. Since the outlook is for the Navy to | take the initiative, yielding to the Army’s stand, there is small doubt West | Point would respond quickly to peace | overtures on its own terms. The Army has held all along that it was ready at an time to go through with the foot ball contract, under last year's game was played, whenever the Navy withdrew its in- sistence upon playing against men lim- ited to three years of varsity foot ball pictured, the N; adherence to the th r is a sound principle, but that | it is outweighed by the advantage of maintaining harmonious relations with West Point and thus serving notice that the two academies can get along togeth- er, no matter how much they may d bate an academic issue. - Undoubtedly much pressure has been brought to bear on the authorities of both academies by those who feel that the two schools have been put in an Bm‘n{iuna!c light by their athletic reak. WILL SWIM IN JAPAN. BERLIN, September 28 (#).—Erich Rademacher, former champion breast- stroke swimmer, left for Tokio on the Transsiberian Express today. He will compete in the international festival on October 13 in henor of the formal coro- nation of the Emperor. ANGLERS’ GUIDE HIGH AND LOW TIDES FOR SATURDAY AND SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 20 AND 30, AT CHESAPE POTOMAC RIVER POINTS. High ..Saturday 7:37a.m. 8:23a.m. Washington Sunday Annapolis ... .Saturday Sunday Chesapeake Beach..Saturday Sunday . .Saturday Sunday .Saturday Solomons Island Benedict . Duckpin Marks Due for Rough Season, Early Scores Indicate UDGING from the individual and team bowling performances for the first two weeks of the 1928-29 are likely to tumble at frequent intervals throughout-the indoor season. Stanford Paper Co. pinmen furnished further evidence last night that a sea- | son of high scores and record-breaking | performances is in the offing. Rolling a District League match at the Coliseum last night, the Newman-Walker-Bill- himer - Mandley - Ellett combination dropped 1,851 pins, including a 643 game. Two nights before the King Pin five spilled 1,804 to better the mark set by ' B Convention Hall's team on the opening night. District League bowlers are not the | only ones who have set an unusually season pace. Higlr scores, both i dual and team, have marked the first week's bowling in nearly every league. Veterans of the alley sport are pre- dicting a banner season. Most of the alleys have just been conditioned for the season’s opening and are faster than they will be after several weeks of bowling. ~If sensational scores are being produced now, what will they be in January? they ask. Western Union employes, both men and women, have organized six-team circuits, which opened the campaign on Lucky Strike drives. Equipment and Automatic teams of the men’s loop made a clean sweep of the opening matches, while Accounting, Automatics No. 2 and Independents swept three games in the women’s section. Beamer, with 123 and 318 scores, and AKE BAY AND LOWER tide. Low tide. Sunday Piney Point . Sunday .Saturday Rock Point .. Sunday Colonial Beach ....Saturday /—;T'V\’- 'y 4 campaign, local duckpin records | had 102 and 294 scores. were the i dividual stars of the opening night. | Team Standings. MEN, = Eq P 0 Automs '3 0 100| JOHNSTOWN, PA—Bud Gorman, |} Bauches . 3 1 8% Chicago. and Ike McFowler, Johnstown, Delivery S0 8§ 000 drew (10). ST HEEE 0 3 00 gANSAS CITY, MO.—Young Dillon, ‘WOMEN. W L Pk Louisville, outpointed “Tiger” Johnny Accounting . % & 1 | Kline, Kansas City (10) Gimplex i 3000 f | "% ROUTIS GETS CHANCE ANGLERS WILL TAKE OUTING TOMCRROW The ninth annual outing of the Po- tomac Anglers’ Association will be held at Chesapeake Beach tomorrow, and a large crowd of fishing enthusiasts are expected to attend. A special train will Yeave the Dis- trict line at 8:30 am. returning at 6 p.m. Twenty boats will take the fisher- men {o choice angling spots in the bay. Fish will be weighed in on the pier at 5 p.m. Ten prizes will be awarded: Ten dol- lars in gold, offered by The Evening Star for the largest fish caught by a woman; $19 in gold for the largest fish caught by a man, a salt-water rod and two tips for the largest trout, a Temco 200-yard, free-spool reel for the second largest trout, a canvas bait bucket for the third largest trout, a Kingfisher salt-water rod for the largest hardhead, a Sea King 100-yard reel and line for the second largest hardhead, a bait bucket for the third largest hard- head, a salt-water rod for the largest rockfish, and a $5 order of fishing tackle for the largest tailor, John C. Cole, chairman of the enter- tainment committee, is in general charge of arrangements, Officers of the association, which is a chapter of the Izaak Walton League of America, are Paul McKinney, president; C. A. Burmeister, vice president; F. D. Bars- town, treasurer, and R. A. Wilson, secretary. Auto Bodies, Radiators, Fenders Repaired; also New Radiators Harrison radiators and cores in stock. Wittsatt’s, 1809 14th- -North 7177 Also 319 13th, 34 Block Below A By the Assoclated Press. Sioux Tigue, New York (1). ne Palmer, captain of Simplex, who | Wannetol - and Mickey O'Neil, Milwaukee, drew | | pointed Tut Seymour, Biloxi, Miss. | Kid Koke, Chicago, knocked out Larry | 176 | Feltz, New Orleans (1). By the Assoclated Press. other son of France jumps Fights Last Night CHICAGO.—Jerry City, Towa, Tufty _Griffiths, stopped Mike M- Marty Gallagher, outpointed Bud _Doran, Eddie Ballatin, Chicago, | (6). Norman Brown, out- | + hicago, (6). ! AT FEATHER CROWN NEW YORK, September into the prize ring tonight and hopes to come out with the featherweight champion- ship once held by a countryman, Eugene Criqui. But Andre Routis, who meets Tony Canzoneri, the title holder, in a 15- round battle at Madison Square Garden this evening, hopes to have better luck with the championship, if he wins it, than did Criqui. Criqui won the 126-pound crown from Johnny Kilbane on June 2, 1923, and surrendered it on July 26 to Johnny Dundee after possession of less than two months. But the boys who do the betting are willing to wager two to one that Routis will not defeat the game little champion. It is Canzoneri's first defense of the title he won last Winter by defeating Benny Bass, slugging Philadelphia con- tender, but Tony appears to be in good |~ shape. He already holds one decision over Routis, defeating the Frenchman on points in a sizzling battle at Brook- lyn two years ago. LABOULIE, France, September 28 (#).—Cyril Tolley, former holder of the British amateur title, won the French open golf championship with a score of 283 for 72 holes. with a rhines A high as $60! COME for yourself ors. Realizet is not a catc bring you h $22.50. 941 PENN kS and never in Northwestern's gridiron | history has it faced as hard a schedule | as this season. Ga e ARG ST MR ¢ FPORTS. By the Associated Press. HICAGO, September 28.— ‘ Schedule makers have burned the bridges behind Coach Dick Hanley and his Northwestern University glogubnll sq:ad thk£54 2@, Qut he is fighting and work-| gr:;—nmt%‘slt against hope—to developa | winning combination. Not in years has so small a squad‘ reported for duty in the Purple camp. | Beginning October 6 when Butler College of Indiana invades Dyche Stadium, the varsity will clash on suc- cessive Saturdays with elevens of great potential strength. In addition to Butler, the schedule calls for games with Ohio State, Kentucky, Illinois, Minnesota, Vurdue, Indiana and Dart- mouth. . Scarcity of line material is Hanley’s chief problem. He has 14 letter men back from last year, but eight of them are backfield men. Several sophomores have shown well in early practices, but each day the line problem becomes more acute. Many of the backs have been shifted to the line in an effort to plug the wall. Tom Verdell, a 160-pound wingman, is the one veteran end back for practice. “Rut” Walter, basket ball and track star, has responded to a plea of the. coaches and is out for the other end position, but his future has not been determined as yet. Only one center, Mickey Ericson, came back from last year's reserve squad, but several sophomores have bobbled up, lightening Hanley's worries there. So far there are only three good-looking tackle prospects. Several TROUSERS To Match Your Odd Coats EISEMAN'S, 7th & F tone! into a Bell Clothes Shop. See the hun- dreds of new styles, new patterns, new col- hat $22.50 h-price to ere. We have only ONE PRICE ---and that is the re- markably low price of Northwestern, With Smallest sophomores have helped out the guard situation. With Capt. Holmer at full, George Levison at quarterback, Bill Calderwood Johnny Haas, Archers, Kent and Bergherm, halfbacks. Coach Hanley has a good backfield. “I'll agree with you there is a dearth Squad, Has Toughest Schedule, 2 i o s g backfleld” Coach Hanley, a former Washington State star. remarked to newspaper men. “We'll give our op- ponents plenty of trouble on the offen- | sive if only our line holds. It is the |line that is our chief worry.” s o # " package two pouches Every pipe smoker knows that the better his tobacco the better his smoke. That's why so many men are turning to 12 Briar Tobacco “THE BEST PIPE SMOKE EVER MADE!” United States Tobacco Co., Richmond, Va. are showing would take a full page. But--- if there’s a new, good style in Men’s Clothes N that you’ve seen or about, upon it that you’ll find it here! If it’s only to satisfy your curiosity, why not COMPARE! BELL CLOTHES 0 list every style we I 3 i read ONLY 2 STORES IN WASHINGTON A. AVE. NW. 916 F ST. N.W. 1d you ever try to pawn a OF course you didn’t. It’s one of those things that can’t be done. And yet---there are some men who try to palm themselves off on a dis- criminating world as well-dressed men, all the while wearing a badly-made, shoddy suit that was bought only because it was cheap, at $16.50, $17.50 or $18.50! It can’t be done. You might just as well try to fool a pawnbroker GOOD suit of clothes, or a good Topcoat, Tuxedo or Overceat, cannot possibly be sold for less than $22.50. To borrow a phrase from Moran & Mack, we found that out! But we also learned that with our chain-store operation, our economies of management, our policy of taking what we believe to be the smallest retail clothing profit in America---we could offer you, at $22.50, clothes that might be the pride of men used to paying as INTO Bell Clothes at $22.50 enter the same fine woolens often found in $60 clothes. The careful tailoring. The progressive styling. The durable trimmings. The splendid fitting. The same hard-finish worsteds that hold the press! U.S. 4. depend wrappedtogether * ¢ |

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