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42 SP ORTS. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER él, 1928, SPORTS. Volstenholme Out to Clear Pin Title : Racing Switches to Baltimore Tomorrow DUCKS STAR SEEKS | Phil King Is Only Player Ever to Make Camp’s |F[RET DAY SPECIAL All-American Team in Two Different Positions OFFICIAL’ LAURELS ill Get Chance at Crown in Tests N. D. B. C. Will Hold in Winter. BY R. J. ATKINSON. OME duckpin bowler will be the official world champion at the close of the present season. Too long has the unofficial title clung to Glenn Wolstenholme and the National Duckpin Bowling Con- gress will conduct a thorough elimina- tion during the Winter months to de- termine whether Big Glenn shall wear the official title. The Convention Hall anchor man is lto be pitted against the best the country can send against him. Paul Pohler, the Macsachusetts and New England cham- plon and his little running mate Archie Walsh: the Spinella Brothers of Brook= vn, the best around Manhattan; George iange and Ray Von Dreehle, the Balti- more stars: Maxie Rosenberg, Jack Whalen, Al Work, Perce Ellett and a half score of other local pin maulers are possible contenders for the title. Why not a world duckpin champion? The title has been claimed for Wolsten- holme and others in other years, but never before has an -official title been awarded. Although Wolstenholme has been enerally rated the best in the country or the past five or six years, he never as officially been proclaimed the Bam- bino of bowling. Last ¥ Campbell copped the National all-events crown and in doing so he copped the highest individual award offered by the National Duckpin Bowling Con- sress. Brad Mandley, was rated No. 1 in 1926-27 and Jack Whalen in 1927- 28 by the Washington City Duckpin As- ociation. Glenn got no recognition as even the best in the city. Glenn and his manager, Al Gardner, the Convention Hall boss, mean business his year. Glenn is out to cop the first Mcial world title. While Gardner is making arrangements to match the big cllow against the best in the country, nn is grooming for the big test. He is rotually training and taking his duck- vins more seriously than at any time ince he stepped to the front as the sremier man bowler. In recent years Glenn has been con- tent fo anchor for the Convention Hall team in the District League, add- ing pins wherever needed to put his am over. His league average has n among the best, but not where it should have been—at the top. That he means business this year is ‘ndicated by his District League aver- age to date. His 121-9 average is not only high thus far, but one of the highest recorded at: this stage of the District League race. His 405 set tied of Jack Whalen, and his 158 game e best recorded to date. Brad Mandley's 413 set and 159 game and Howard Campbell's 124-11 a age in the Athletic Club League are the only records 'that overshadow Glenn's to date. ‘Wolstenhol probably will find his chief rivals for the world title here in ‘Washington. At present, Campbell, ‘Work, Ellett and Mandley loom as his chief rivals. Pohler, Barney Spinella, Lange and Von Dreehle have been van- quished by the Convention Hall star in previous meetings. Likewise, the lo- cal stars have been defeated by -Glenn in the real tests. | If “Wolst” really wants the world | title, and he has assured his friends he does, it is very likely that he will be the first world champion duckpin | bowler. | >LAPPER, COLONIAL BACK, JUT OF SATURDAY’S GAME Babe Clapper, clever back of the| eorge Washington University foot ball team, who has been out for sev- | eral weeks with injuries, will not be able to get into the game with Willlam and Mary in Central stadium here Sat- urday, as was at first thought possible. Mike Goldman, fighting guard, will “2 back in the line for the Colonials. is LOT NumBER ONE' A GENUINE HOME-LOVING [ HUSBAND IN GOOD CON- DITION, GUARANTEED Although Walter Camp is dead and his famous annual all-American seiec- tions ceased after the season of 1925, they still are frequently referred to by students and lovers cf the gridiron game. As time goes on they will as- sume somewhat of the Homeric tradi- tion, dealing as they will with long-ago heroic figures. In several authoritative books on foot ball the teams he chose from 1889 through 1925. are given as a valuable appendix, and an occasional ?cruutlny thereof brings out interesting acts. It appears that Washington claims the only player native to the National Capital who ever made Camp's first team in two different positions. He is Philip King, the old Tiger captain and backfleld star. th the posts for which he was chosen by Camp were in the backfleld, but whereas today all four backs run with the ball and the four positions are more or less inter- changeable, back in King's day the duties of the quarterback and other backs were quite different, the former being entirely a ball feeder and e field general. King was chosen as a sub- stitute quarter by Camp on the all- American aggregation of 1890. He made the first team as halfback the next two years, and the following sea- son, 1893, he was shifted over to quarter and again made the grade. Eckersall, the famed Chicago quarter, made the team one year as end. There was no room for him in the first team Leading Grid G (With scores when same Central Stadium—George Washi backfield, but Camp knew he was qual- ified to play end if needed. The next two seasons he was in the right posi- tion, the one which he always played. But King actually changed positions twice on the Princeton eleven. Three men have made the first team four years in a row, a feat which later became impossible owing to the three- year rule. These were Hinkey, Yale end; Hare, Pennsylvania guard, and Gordon Brown, Yale guard. The terms of the Hare and Brown were simultaneous, so that the seasons frem 1897 to 1800 saw the two guard positions menopolized by those two giants. Daly, quarterback, made Camp'’s “varsity” from two dif- ferent institutions. He was chosen as first-string quarter from Harvard in 1898 and 1899. He made the second all-American team from West Foint in 1900, the first in 1901 and the third in 1902. By that time Camp was selecting three teams instead of just one team with first substitutes. It often was said of Camp that he had no college affiliations choos- ing his teams; that if the Vander- bilt or the Yale team might seem to have the eleven men best quali- fled he would stoutly pick those. ‘This pretty nearly happened with the Yale team of 1902, nor was there any criticism of Camp's choices. Five of the all-American line Lhat year were Yale men, and so werc three out of the four backs.. The list included such outstanding figures as Shevlin, then a ames Saturday ams met last year.) n vs. William and Mary. ingtor Kendall Green—Gallaudet vs. Shepherd College. St. Alban’s Field—American University vs. Bridgewater College. Yankee Stadium, New York—Georgetown vs. New York University. Ball Park, Norfoik, Va.—Maryla; nd vs. Virginia Poly. New Brunswick, N. J.—Catholic University vs. Rutgers. East. Amherst, Mass. . West Point, N. Y ..Amherst (20) vs. Mass. Aggies (0) Army vs. De Boston College vs. Manhattan Pauw Brown vs. Holy Cross Bucknell (28) ‘vs. Villanova (12) Colgate (0) vs. Wabash (7) Columbia (0) vs. Cornell (0) Dartmouth (0) vs. Yale (19) Cambridge, Harvard (Undecided) Orono, IliVle“ 5 Annapolis, 1 rmux:lpm 3 Pittsburgh . New Brunswick, Schenectady, N. Maine (! vs. Lehigh Lafeyette (0) vs. Wash. & Jeff. (14) 0) vs. Colby (17) Navy (26) vs. W. Va. Wesleyan (0) Penn State vs. Notre Dame. Pittsburgh vs. Syracuse Rutgers vs. Catholic University Williams (0) vs. Union (0) Midwest. Chicago askell Tllinois Towa vs. Chicago .. St. Louis. Ann Arbor, Mich Iowa City, Iowa. Ames, Towa. Lawrence, Kan E:ls:““;lfllrln"‘ml h East Lal , Miecl Lafayette, Ind. Evanston, Ill Columbus, Ohio. Madison, Wis. Delaware, Ohio. Columbia, Mo. Brookings, S. Dal Purdue Princetol Missouri Northwestern vs. Minneso! (13) vs. Pennsylvania ( Indians vs. Washington (14) vs. Michigan (0) South Dakota 7). “y” St. Louis Towa State vs. Oklahoma Kansas (13) vs. Nebraska (47) Marquette (31) vs. Grinnell (0) Michigan State vs. Mississippl Aggies vs. Case ta n (20) vs. Ohio State (0) Wisconsin vs. Alabama < Ohio Wesleyan (14) vs. Wooster (9) vs. Drake 'Tun pla; freshman; Hogan, Kinney, Chadwick, Rockwell, Holt and Glass. On the 1889 team, Camp’s first effort, three of the four backs were from Princeton. Probably the smallest college ever to be represented was Centre, with Mc- Millin, Weaver and Roberts. Three aboriginal Americans made Camp's first teams. These were Seneca, Johnson and Thorge. Jim Thorpe, by the way, dur- ing the period from 1912 to 1925, when Camp kept a record, scored the most touchdowns in one season of any player on a college team cf anv imvortance, 25 in all in 1912, He led in points that year also, with 198. GENERALS TRAINING TO MEET CAVALIERS By the Associated Press. LEXINGTON, October 30.—With sev- eral regulars out recovering from in- juries, the Washington and Lee Gen- erals are down to intensive practice in preparation for the foot ball tilt with Virginia next Saturday. Groop, regular guard, and Barnett, fullback, are yet absent from the field due to injuries. Williams, end, who has been out of uniform for three weeks, was out yes- terday afternoon, but was unable to ys. Lott, halfback, forced to lay off last week, gave his mates an agreeable sur- rise by running signals yesterday, but e is still partly incapacitated from his early season injury. Captain Fitzpatrick, while not fully recovered from injuries which kept him out of the West Virginia game and al- lowed him to play only part of the Tennessee battle, is at his tackle post this week. PROCTOR AND BENNETT ..South Dakota State (0) vs. Creighton (14) South. Sewanee vs. Florida Georgia Atlanta, Ga. «. Georgia Nashville, 'l‘c':n. . vs. Auburn Tech (19) vs. Oglethorpe (7) Kentucky (6) vs. Vanderbilt (34) ..Louisiana State (0) vs. Arkansas (28) Mississippi vs. Clemson North Carolina (6) vs. N. Carolina State (19) 0) Texas (0) vs. S. Methodist (14) Texas Aggles vs. North Texas Teachers ..Tulane vs. Millsaps. Virginia (13) vs. Wash. & Lee (7) Y. M. L (20) vs. Davidson (0) Far West. Berkeley, Calif. Moscow, Idaho. Corvallis, oreg.. Sacramento, Calif. L Calif. Idaho ( California (16) vs. Oregon (6) 7) vs. Washington State (7) State Utah vs. Calorado College Washington vs. College of Puget Sound Arizona vs. New Mexico Colorado College vs. Colorado Mines Colorado Aggies (6) vs. Utah Aggies (0) Montana State vs. Brigham Young SoLd To THE LITTRLE LADY ‘WITH THE BIG BROWN EYES! THREE ! ONE Lov ADVERTISEMENT BILLED IN RING MATCH 1n the feature eight-round bout of the Relee Club boxing card to be staged November 8, at Arlington Beach, Va., Joe Proctor, District light heavyweight and Biff Bennett, of Fort Monroe, Va., will clash. Proctor recently won a technical knockout over Len Hoffman at the Relee Club and Bennett is the light heavyweight champion of the 3d Corps Area of the Army. Jack Cafoni and Frank D’Angelo, both of Washington will meet in the semi- final also at eight rounds. There also will be three six-round encounters. TICKETS HERE FOR THE NOTRE DAME-PENN GAME Notre Dame Club of Washington has at its disposal 10 choice seats for the Notre Dame-Penn State foot ball game to be played Saturday in Philadelphia. Persons desiring the tickets should communicate with J. D. Hayes, 5115 g-:lght‘r'x street, or telephone Georgia 491 -, Good fo the hair! Men like the clean, healthy fragrance of this better liquid hair dressing. It's not. sreuy or oily. And it fights dandruff. It's good for the scalp. Use it con- stantly. If you can’t get Glo-Co at your favorite store, write to Glo-Co Company, Los Angeles. Sold in two sizes, 50c and 75¢c. GLO-CO LIQUID HATR DRESSING cAs necessary as the SOLD To TuE GENTLEMAN THE HANDSOME GENTLEMAN WITH THE BALD SPOT CORN BesF AND CA NUMBER BOWL OF NOODLE SouP ONE INRIGGS HANDIGAP Each of Twelve Days in Meet- ing Has Feature Event on Program. P the year tomorrow, with the Monkton Steeplechase as the initial attraction and the Riggs, a $25,000 Handicap, as the feature of e day. Pimlico is the mecca of hundreds of the horse-loving public who seldom, if ever, visit another American track. It universally is recognized among turf followers as the paragon of the sport. This track pays out more money in purses for the short time it runs than any other American course. It attracts a greater number of higher-grade horses, its races are conducted with less complaints and criticisms from the public and it has done as much to ad- vance the breeding industory or more than any other association. While it is true that many so-called “long shots” win at Pimlico, it does not follow that this is caused by other than the fact that the public, in the mutuels, makes the favorite; and, as a famous entucky horseman once said, “The phblic usually is wrong.” These long shots are caused by the unknown quality, or condition, of horses tossed together from New York, Canada, Illi- nols, Kentucky and Maryland tracks. Few Cheap Horses In. Cheap horses will find little oppor- tunity to earn their oats during the next 12 days. And race fans will not get gray-haired trying to separate 15 hides, in three or four races a day, which should have been covering base balls in Babe Ruth's sandlot days. ‘There are but three races at Pimlico for $2,000 horses and but four races, IMLICO, home of the Maryland Jockey Club of Baltimore, will open its final 12-day meeting of times; Blossom Time, Fair Star and Glade. The Saturday attraction will be the Manley memorial steeplechase, with $14000 added maney, at two miies and a Nalf. Monday the Master of Foxhounds Assoclation steeplechase, over the three-mile route, for hunters holding certificates from the National Hunt Assoclation, to be ridden by gentlemen riders, will be the center of interest. Features Other Days. Tuesday, the Bowie, a-mile-and-a- half race, for 3-year-olds and up- ward, with $10,000 added, is the feature. ‘Wednesday, the Helpful, for 2-year- old maidens at the time of closing of entries, over the six-furlong will be the principal race. Thursday, the seventh day, will be featured by the Pimlico weight for age race, for all ages at six furlongs, with $4,000 added. Friday, the Baltimore, a handicap for all ages at a mile and seventy yards, is listed as the chief event. Saturday, the ninth day, brings out a field for the Walden, a handicap for 2 year olds at a mile and a sixteenth, with $10,000 added. Reigh Count stamped himself best of his division in this event last year. Monday, November 10, will be featured by the Pimlico Graded Handicaps, a series of three races, original at this track, in which a committee of three divides all the entrants into three divi- sions, and the track handicapper than assigns the weights in each division, with 126 pounds as top weight. Tuesday brings out another innova- tion of Pimlico origin in the ‘“Home Bred,” a race at six furlongs for 2-year- olds, which is for starters that have been the absolute property of the owner since time of foaling. Wednesday, the closing day, is fea- tured by the Pimlico Cup, a handicap at two miles and a quarter, with $10,000 added. NATIONAL BOXING BODY SEEKS NEW MEMBERS CHICAGO, October 30 (#).—A cam- paign to draw non-member State com- missions with legalized boxing into the National Boxing Association has been started by Paul Prehn, newly elected in which $1,500 platers will have a7 President of the national organization. chance to parade. It is unfortunate that the location of Pimlico within the city limits of Bal- timore has made it badly cramped for room. The course is old and anti- quated; the grandstand, betting ring, clubhouse, paddock and lawn are sore- ly inadequate to handle the crowds which throng there. So many “big” races are given that there is an attraction every day. The Riggs Handicap, the opening day spe- clal, will be worth around $30,000 to the winner, and this event is but three years old.. Crusader won it the first year it was run, in 1926, and Bostonian last year. The distance is a mile and a half and there are 52 nominations this year. The second day attraction, on Friday, will be the Pimlico Futurity, for-2-year- old colts and fillies at one mile, and will be worth over $50,000 to the vic- tor. In the eight years it has been run, fillles have garnered the laurels four Under his plan each State commis- sion which is a member of the National Boxing Association will communicate with the non-members— New York, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, Califor- nia, Wyoming, Idaho and South Da- kota—urging them to join. “If it is impossible for these States to come in,” Prehn said, “the Illinois commission then will attempt to ar- range a working agreement whereby suspensions and other rulings will be respected by Illinols and the State where the agreement is made. If this can be accomplished, the ring game will be advanced considerably.” GRIFFITHS VS. ANDERSON. CHICAGO, October 31 (#).—Jerry “Tufty” Griffiths. Sioux City, Iowa, light heavyweight, has been matched for a 10-round bout with Joe Anderson, Cincinnati 160-pounder, at Detroit No- vember 9. Sally's Alley, | course | HOYA ATHLETES STAGE CLASS MEET TOMORROW Georgetown University track and field athletes were today getting in final preparatory licks' for the annual inter- class meet to be held at the Hiltop to- morrow starting at 10 a.m. 3 Each class appears to have a deal of fine material and indications are that the battle for points will be spirited. Entries follow, the number following the name indicating the year of the stu- dent: 100-yard dash—Whalen (1), Willlams (1), Introcosso (2). Nolan (2), Vanderbeck (4), Fricke (1), Fredell (1), dash—Whalen E Hriges (1), | 1) dash—Shotter (3), Carlin Kilgallen (1), Burke (2), O'Shea Picco (1) . Kelley (1) iyh (1), Halpurn (3), Fitzgerald (1), ), 1), One-mile ' run. (1), Auguitine (2), Sullivan (2), Bolt (1), Powers (4), Hen- (3), Hickey (2), Howe (2) Two-mile run—Lamy (1). Kennedy (1), Julicher (3), Carney (3). Hazard (2), Hogan @), Baby (1), Mara (1) jump—Farrell " (4), @), . | 8H0-y Diachy: Uldrick Sexton ) Discus throw—Sexton (3), Adelman (4), | Funcke (2) Pole vault—Sexton (3), Bonniwell Lingle (3) Shot put—Adelman (4), Sexton (3). Don- ), aldson (1), Stout (1), Goodwin (3), Wenzler | ) Low hurdles—Farrell (4), Liberman (2) Hish burdles—Donaldson (1): HIGH SCORES ROLLED BY WOMAN BOWLERS ‘Washington Ladies’ Duckpin League BIG BATTLES CARDED GN COAST SATURDAY By the Assoctated Press. SAN FRANCISCO, October = 31— Closely guarded maneuvers, reception plays and_tactics developed since the opening of the season no longer will be secrets after this week end when an | array of battles is to be offered Pacific Coast foot ball followers. Stanford University journeys to Los Angeles to confront the University of Southern California in a game that will decide the trend of coast championship honors. As yet neither defeated nor tied, a victory will virtually cinch_th title for the Cardinals. Southern Calie fornia_and the University of California battled to a scoreless tie two weeks |A win over Stanford would give the Trojans a claim to the title, Coach Glen S. (Pop) Warner of Stanford will display his newest in foot ball tricks, the “B" formation, while Coach Howard Jones' men of Troy are heralded for their deception plays, re= verses and fake reverses. For more than a week Warner has kept the gates of the Stanford Bowl locked to spece tators while Jones has adopted similar | tactics at Los Angeles. | _ The University of Oregon comes to Berkeley to meet the University of Cali- fornia. The Oregon Webfooters have developed an unexpected punch during the last few weeks, and Coach “Nibs" Price of the Golden Bears is expected to offer chiefly a defensive game, wait= ing for breaks to win, ‘Washington State College tackles the University of Idaho, at Moscow, in & game that is chiefly of local interest. Oregon State Coilege and the University of Montana meet at Corvallis, Oreg., in the remaining conference tilt. experfenced the wildest night in its |= history at the Coliseum last night, as every season record fell before the ter- rific assault launched from various quarters. Commercials registered new team marks, Marjorie Bradt continued her sensation bowling by recording new in- dividual game and set marks and Lor- raine Gulli hung up a new flat-game score at 94. Commercials, with Bradt setting the pace, recorded a 552 game and 1,546 set. Bradt's individual efforts resulted in a 145 game and 347 set. Marjorie had four successive spares in her first game, getting nine in the three games, in ad- dition to a pair of strikes. Margaret Miltner and Billie Williams each had 341 sets, the former getting 28 pins in the last box to bring her team from behind. Willlams had a 138 game and Gulli a 135 game. League officials believe it was the first time in the history of local bowl- ing that all league records were broken in one night's matches. GEORGETOWH'I STUDENTS PEP FOR N. Y. U. GAME Father Murphy, Georgetown Univer- sity faculty director of athletics; Jerry Carroll, captain of the eleven, and Babe Connaughton, the Hoya 1926 All-Amer- ica guard, spoke at a pep rally of Hilltop students held last night in Ryan gymnasium in preparation for the battle with New York University U.S.TIRES No Red Tape No Embarrassment Bring Your Car Registration Card Get Your Tires On the Spot 1234 14th St. NW. * 2250 Sherman Ave. N. 634 Pa. Ave. S.E. Saturday in Gotham. AND THE PINK WiiSKERS ! PL %5”‘"". 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