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~ “THE EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON 70,000 to See Harvard-Yale Classic : BRIMSUN FAVURED jEvanstjlas?'YZ Round, But Loses TO DOWN BULLDOG Carnegie-N. Y. U. Battle at C Pittsburgh Other Big Eastern Match. BY HERBERT W. BARKER, Associated Press Sports Writer. EW YORK, November 19.—Tradi- New Haven for the annual Yale-Harvard battle next Satur- day, but Pittsburgh will be the plonships are concerned Carnegie Tech’s red-jerseyed Tartans, outstanding Eastern nominee for na tion will take 70,000 or so to pivotal point so far as foot ball cham- tional titulag honors at the moment. have only one more obstacle to hurdle | the gigantic Hunter holed a birdie and | as before ringing down the curtain on an undefeated season. But that obstacle To Indian Sp BY WALTER R. McCALLUM. HICK EVANS of Chicago | man from the Windy City as somewhat | of a senile old veteran. That there stili | remains very much of a kick in the | youthful and lissome swing of Evans was demonstrated to the full satisfac- tion of J. Monroe Hunter and George | Diffenbaugh_yesterday, for it took all | the good golf the famed Indian Spring | duo could master to master Evans in a hastily arranged best ball match in which we were fortuna have been chosen as Evans’ partn went along more to marvel at the making of the Chicagoan than to be we could give him real aid in the match. | Hunter and Diffenbaugh won by 2| and 1, their winning margin coming on the fifteenth and sixteenth holes, where an eagle on successive holes. But they has been a prominent figure in the game of golf so long .h?.(‘ many of the younger generation of golfers look upon the smiling | te enough to, ring Pro Golfers | the seventh, from the back tee, with the same combination. He is using steel shafts all the way down to the and, curiously enough, all his cli have square grips. club to the ball better. | Chick used to bz called a short driver. But if he is short we know a short. Chick Evans today is full s long as 85 per cent of the leading | golfers of the world, and vesterday he demonstrated that he is putting better than the man who once had the repu- tation of being the world's worst putter. 5 Likes Indian Spring Course. terday was spent in_autographing golf balls for the fair golfers who watched much pleasure in doing it as his ad- | mirers had in having it done. After; the match Chick, who as seen many golf courses as any living man, raised the Indian Spring course high- v, comparing it with Burning Tree for He claims it cnables him to face the | lot of men who would like to be XulLV‘ Most of his time between shots yes- | g the match, and he seemed to take as|c, knew they had been in a golf match, or | Aimenty and fine: Condition. He said | Team and individual records of Dis- | while McConnville did the best bowling | further down in the team standings, | | trict League released today by Charles S. Quant, official scorer, show Glenn !Wolswnholme as the outstanding in- | dividual performer, Convention Halli | team two games in the lead and both | | team marks held by Stanford Paper Co. Records to date are held as follows: individual average—Glenn Wolsten- 116-15: Brad Mandley. 118-8. ! h individual set—Jack Whalen and G. | ic! | Wolstenholme, 405 (sHish individual garle—G. Wolstenholme, | 5 847. | 51 High holme, | “High team game_Stanford Paper C | h team set—Stanford Paper Ci | strikes—Mandley and” G. | 5 73; Ellett ares—TIrvine Billhimer, | & = | Mos! and Whalen, 72. Team Standing, W. L. | convent. § fon Hall. Pin .. 10 1 i 1 1 1 1 Petworth 1 MASONIC LEAGUE. Team Standing. & Gophers Block Badgers’ Path to Title for the Shops team. In a closely contested match the Ac- counts five took two of the three games from the Plant Bureau bowlers, shoot- ing 1,574 as against 1,568 for the losers De Glantz of the Plant Bureau quint led the individuals with a set of 344. wiile Ruppert and Raake did the bes® work for Accounts. Interbureaus pulled up into second place by winning two games from the Economics shooters, with Hank Conklin and Bill McCarthy supplying the fire- works, Capt. Barber put over the best set for Economics, but his team was considerably off its stride. However, th> Ints have always been a jinx for Bar- ber’s outfit. TYPOTHETAE LEAGUE. Team Standing. % Joyce Engraving Co. D C. Paper Mfg. Co.. National Publishing Co v zton Printing Co. Potomac Electrotype Co Big_Print S| H 5 | Cordell of Centennial No. 1 a 335 set, | Adams of Ingram No. 1 a 334 set, W. making an mum;lnz race. Centenmial No. 1 won two from Douglas No. 2, | while Ninth No. 1 was losing th:e:k closely contested games to Gorsuch. | Waugh ran the steam roller over Ninth | No. 2 and took the entire set, rolling 571 in the third for a new record for | high team game. Second Baptist took | thtee from Ingram No. 2, while In- gram No. 1 won a forfeited set from Second Baptist Mission. Douglas No. | 1 won a couple from Epworth, Keller took two from Fifth Baptist and Cen- | ennial No. 2 handed the same dose o First Brethren. | Harry Martz of Keller was the high | man for the week, rolling 134 for the | game and 365 for the set. Centennial No. 1 had the next best game with 131, the next best set, whica | furq was 350 rolled by Joe Kaufman, a mem- | ber of Waugh team. Others rolling good games or sets were Mathews of Ninth No. 2, with a“127 game. Price of Waugh, a 129 game and 339 set, Donalson of Gorsuch with a 332 set and Hughes and Jennings of Ninth No. | 4 |1 with sets of 330 and 329 respectively. | Hall of | Iow MINNESOTA TEAM LEADS CONFERENCE IN SCORING (#).—Rout: CHICAGO, November 19 (#).—] o ing the Haskell Indians, 52 to 0, Satur- | day, Minnesota took the lead in the | Big Ten foot ball race for team scoring | honors from Iowa and Wisconsin, bring- ing its season’s total to 172 points. ] Its star quarterback, Freddy Hovde, | scored one-of the Gophers' eight touch- | downs in thé game and took undisputed possession of first place in the chase for | individual scoring honmors. 1In seven | games, Hovde has scored nine touch- | downs. | The team scoring starMings, showing | number of games played, touchdowns, | field goals, points after touchdown, total | points and opponents’ totals. | G. Td. Fg. Pt. Tot. Opp. 7 26 18 172 36 bt 25 1 32| 15 1 ‘eam. Minnesota 27 a1 | 83 | 54| 5 Chicago Indiana Northwest Michigan Bersonooms! A fgias | A.A. U, TITLE MEETS | AWARDED T0' DENVER | WISCONSIN DEFEAT - WOULD CREATE TIE Three Other Teams in Line for Lead in Big Ten if Minnesota Wins. BY PAUL B. MICKELSON, Associated Press~Sports Writer, HICAGO, November 19.-—After 16 years of chasing, Wiscon- sin “had the Golden Fleece— the Big Ten foot ball cham- plonship—cornered today—but just as in the fairy tale, a dragon blocked its way. Minnesota's_thundering horde, which has crushed its way for an average of four touchdowns n game this season. was the menacing dragon which Badgers must conquer to land their long-sought treasure. The battle, to be held at Madison, is the outstanding LEAGUE. | | Clbn i Gl L L By the Assoclated Press. event of the Big Ten's five-game pro- Team Standing. is a formidable one—the not. shrink King_Solomon. .. ing Violet aggregation Chick Meehan | described their struggle to beat Ev he was very much impressed with the | King, Solo has turned out at New York Universi If the Tartans, ecpecially in view of their brilliant feat in crushing Notre Dame at South Bend on Saturday. can cceed in stopping Ken Strong and his mates, their claim to the mythical | ational title will be strong. Only Boston College, in that event, probably would be in a position to di pute Carnegie’s right to Eastern honors. Boston College, which has met neither | defeat nor tie so far, should defeat the hitherto unbeaten Connecticut Aggies next Saturday and will be favored over Holy Cross in the annual battle December 1. Harvard Is Favorite. Most of the color next Saturday will be found at New Haven. Despite de- x feats by Army and Pennsylvania and a | with Roland MacKenzie, and yesterday | scorcless tie with Holy Cross, probably will be favored o Bulldog chewed up by Army, Maryland and Princeton. Princeton tackles N: in another outstanding game at Fhiladelphia. The Tigers, although tied twice, have not been defeated, nor is it commonly be- lieved the Navy, even though greatly improved, can do it. Nebraska, held to a scoreless draw by Pittsburgh's battling Panthers, trav ¢ls East to clash with the Army at West Point. Nebraska's tie with Pitt and the Army's defeat by Notre Dame | are the only bad spots on two fine rec- ords. and the result of their duel may have some bearing on the national championship question should Carnegie Tech or Boston College fall by the way- side, Lafayette Picked to Win. Lehigh and Lafayette will renew their ancient rivalry at Easton, Pa., with Lafayette a favorite. Especially since its victory over Penn State, Georgetown, beaten only by Carnegie, will be highly favored to give Frank »Cavanaugh’s much-mauled Fordham Maroons another licking. Dartmouth, with confidence restored through its overwhelming defeat of | Cornell, goes West to battle North- | western of the Western Conference. | DOZEN BOXING BOUTS ON CITY CLUB'S BILL Twelve 3-round boxing bouts have been arranged for the first appearance of the City Club boxing team in the club ballroom tonight. Knights of Co- lumbus, Fort Washington, Jewish Com- munity Center and Washington Bar- | {gcks fighters will furnish the opposi- ion. Heading the card is the scheduled | battle between Joe Lesser, captain of the City Club.team and former bantam ace at Jewish Community Center, and | Jack Freeland, pride of the scrappers at Fort Washington. Frank Taylor of the City Club team and Leo Coveleski, Casey 135 pounder, will engage in an- | other battle that promises plenty of | action. | All members of the City Club team are qualified and registered under A. A. U. rules. Admission will be con- fined to club members. 2 i Bouts scheduled follow: 112 pounds—Charles Moran vs. Hugo Stellabotta, unattached. 120 pounds—Joe Lesser vs. Jack Free- | land, Fort Washington. | 126 pounds—Joe Tamagni vs. Mike ‘Tardugino, J. C. C.; Ken Schroyer vs, Pvt. Frank Clarke, Fort Washington; as one of the best matches they have had at Indian Spring. Pk from the back tees Hunter knocked the ball around Indian Sprir pressive score of (9. Eva Diffenbaugh 76 and Evan ner brought up the rear with Busy on Courses Iere. Chick is in Washington to testify in the trial of Robert W. Stewart, cited by the District Supreme Court for con- tempt of the Senate, and Lrobably will leave the Capital late today for New York. But during his stay here he has | been busy in a golf way. On Friday he | played a few holes at Indian Spring, |after the Gevernment had rested its case in the Stewart trial. Saturday | afternoon he played at Burning Tree John Barton Payne, chairman of the | American Red Cross | Interior Roy O. West and C. Bascom | Slemp; former secretary to the Presi- | dent. Judge Payne, according to Evans, | registered an 83 over Burning Tree, {one of his best scores. Evans started the fireworks in the afternoon yesterday by holing a 15- footer for a birdie 3 to win the third hole, and he and his partn | the first nine holes 1 up on Hunter and Diffenbaugh. But little George played a great iron shot to the eleventh green |and holed his putt for 1 2 to square the match. We were fortunate enough to play a mashie shot to within 10 feet |of the hole at the twelfth, but the | putt hit the back of the cup and refused |to drop. The next two holes were halved, and the way was paved for those tremendous clouts of Hunter to get in their deadly work. Hunter Sinks 40-Footer. He reached the edge of the fifteenth | green with a drive and a light iron {and holed a good putt for the birdi> | 4 to win and put his side 1 up. At the | sixteenth he hooked to the rough, and from a rather poor lie in the high grass, knocked his ball onto the green, Wwhere the others, from positions in th2 fairway, couldn't get close to the gree. And then he holed a 40-foot putt f the eagle 3. The seventeenth hole was halved in 4s and the match was over. Somewhere in that abbreviated back- swing of his, Chick Evans has con- trived to get more distance than he ever had before. Yesteraay he was knocking the ball only 10 to 30 yards behind the gigantic tee shots of Hunter. d as any. man who has seen the Indian Spring giant, hit them when he is right knows that is hitting the ball from the tee. Chick was over the fifteenth green with a drive and a spoon and was on ' Secretary of the | ¢ | Spirit of the club members. everal of the Washington s Is are arranging to go to Baiti Wednesday to engage in a 36-hol medal-play tourney sponsored by th Middle Atlantic Professional on at the Woodholme cour Monumental City. The tour- probably will be called the Wood- oven championship. A dinnet prof; n; ney holme and meeting of the P. G. A. will follow | 3i the tourney. 1 The new Harp cording to A. L. Houghton, professional, now has some 600 mem- s and is developing to the point where it is assured the golf course will be in good playing condition next year. Houghton says a clubhouse is to be is assured | of success. | and tale: speaking of believe it or mot who remembers the day, four or five vears ago, that Fred McLeod holed | his second shot at the twelfth hole at | Columbia, which measures 502 yards from the back tee. S | James W. Beller is the winner | of the ringer contest for women at | Colufnbia, which closed a few days ago. | Mrs. Beller won the tournament with a lected score which many men | might envy for a season of play, turn- | |ing in a best ball card of 70 for the | | tourney which started last Spring. She | pressed by Mrs. Stephen | v, Who registered a card of 71. | The second flight of the tourney re- sulted in a tie for first place between Mrs. W. A. Marr and Mrs. Herman Stabler, both with cards of 83 for the 18 hole competition. Gelting “off the hook” seems to be la favorite pastime of several of the golfers at the Washington Golf and Country Club. That is what they call it when they are apparently beaten and by some miraculous shot or by a let down on the part of their opponents manage to halve the match. John I. Power, the genial chairman of the Washington clubhouse committee, is the latest to “get off the hook.” In the | presence of a gallery gathered in front | of the grillroom entrance late yes- terday Power holed a 20-foot side hill putt to square the match, after he and his partner had come to the last hole dormie 1 dow: Mrs 1 Front tees are in use at all the holes at Indian Spring because of a fertiliza- | It makes the course considerably short- | | er, /but not a great deal easier to scorc | on. Ba;ket Be;ll_ Practice Begun By Many of BY F. G. VOSBURGH. Associated Press Sports Writer. NEW YORK. November 17.—The foot ball season is in full blast with the all-America frenzy and the award- ing of the laurel wreaths still ahead, but already the sounds of practice on many a college gymnasium floor have announced that the baskét ball season is right on its heels. From all indications its coming will mean the introduction of a different set College Squads | winning the title. Colorado_College, whose star forward, Simpson, broke all conterence records for scoring, will bear watching, and so will Wyoming. In the South—this is the hardest sec- | tion of all about which to prophesy, as | was shown last season when the Uni- versity of Mississippi jolted the experts | by winning the title. " “Ole Miss” beat out Auburn, another combination which | deci dark horse. teamy which scored its victory largely Golfers’ L " Country Club, ac- e the club | constructed at a cost of about a quar-| Harvard | morning he began a full day of golf ter of a million dollars, and that the r a Yale| With a round at Burning Tree with |proposition in cvery way | sweep of the set and moving into sec- tion process which involves all the tees. 5 The Mississippi | H. Coluinbia | Harmony” ... ising David Petworth . ... | New Jerusaiem No.'283.... SEENEEE | Naval . | Enst Gate Hiram | Sily Federal ... Roosevelt ...’ e 8 High_team game—La Fayette, mony, 59 5. Hizh team set—La Fayette, 1,740; mony. EECEERnNEES, ©SEEEDSESRE 00 267 5; Har- Har- v, 9. igh individual average—Walker (King | Solomon). 115-3. Watson (La Fayetie), 12-20; Motyka (Dawson), 110-17. individual game—Armiger (La Fay- ette), 168; Koehler (Barrister), 157 Mont- 7ouris (Harmony), 154; Stoner (Singleton), 154, High individual set—Stoner (Singleton), 405; Willlams (La Fayeite), 393; Koehler (Barrister), 384, Hizh strikes—Stocking (King David), 21; Kuehler_ (Barrister), 17; Watson (La Fay- High spares—Motyka (Dawson), 82; Wat- son (La Fayette), 72; Urban (La Favette), 1. Trigh sames for last week—Tuesday, Evans and Campbell (New ' Jerusalem), 138 each. Thursday, Ellis (Harmony), 140. St. John's improved its position 4t the expense of Roosevelt by making a clean ond place, only one game behind tha‘ leaders. Joppa after a miserable start | has won 15 of fts Jast 18 games. Harmony dropped back a notch when it met unexpected opposition from the games after’swamping its opponents in the first game. Ray Cross proved to be the man of the hour in this match by coming through in the last boxes of each game with heavy marks. La Fayetle took two games from Co- lumbia, No, 285, despite some weak roll- ing by the former, and the latter slid down to third place. COLUMBIA HEIGHTS LEAGUE. Team Standing. L Welfe's Market. Lun] Cafe. Barker's . Snellenberi’s ", 16 H. F. Disimer 4,50 High_individual average--L. Pantos, 116: J. K. Simmons, 113- High individusl game—L. Pantos K_Simmons, 147 High individual set—M. Wood, 387; P. Mc- urdy, 383. , igh “téam gare—Bernard's Cafe, 593; Jimmie's Lunch, 589 High ~team set-Bernard's Cafe, 1,704; | Jimmie's Lunch, 1,698 High strikes—H. Wolfe and Woldrop, 12. | _ By taking two of three games from | Bernard's Cafe, Wolfe's Market held the |lead. These were the most exciting | games to date. Wolfe's took the second | game on a roll-off. 17 [ m nch, NATIONAL CAPITAL LEAGUE. Team Standing. | Mever Davis Kiig Pin.. Parkway Fiiiing '8t . B. Denham _Co. | Ncw “England Cafe.. weak Hope team and lost the last two | | Knoliman_Spidel G ISttt Rans nc Standard Engraving Co Charles H. Potter Co...... . High team ame—Big Print Shop. 574, gh team set-—Judd & Detweiler. 1.631. h indi Dern, Judd & Det- 15 vidual game i individual set—Johnson, Big Print 380, strikes—Tyirell. Joyce, 14. pares—Mischou, Nationil 3 Yngividual and Mischou, tied with Led by Herbie Dern, whose 156 game | established a record for the season, Judd & Detweiler swept into undisputed | 2 leadership of the league for the first time this season, downing Charles H. Poiter team in ali three games. Fellow- ship Forum remained on their heels, however, by winning two in three from Washington _ Printing Co. National Capital Press was also a two-time win- ner from Washington Typographers. Ransdell, Inc., climbed out of the cel- |1ar by drubbing the D. C. Paper Manu- | facturers three straight, while Big Print Shop continued to show increased strength, winning three from H-K Ad- vertising Service and making high team game for the season and second high team set with counts of 574 and 1,601, respectively. Johnson's rolling in this match was exceptional. knocked off the previous individual three-string record made last week by Ennis of Standard Engraving Co. by one pin. Remaining matches were divided by | two-to-one decisions as follows: National | Publishing Co., Columbian Prlnu}\g Co., M. Joyce Engraving Co., the winners; Lew Thayer, Standard Engraving Co. z’nd Potomac Electrotype Co., the vic- tims. AGRICULTURE INTERBUREAU LEAGUE. Team Standing. L. Plant Bureau, Interbureaus Central Sto Economics Soils-Chem}: Accounts Blister Rust. hops ... 3 4 1 5 5 6 6 7 High team sets—So-Kems. bureaus. 1,651: Accounts, 1.640. High team games—So-Kems, 631; Interbu- reaus. 579; Shops. 579. High _individual sets-Ruppert, 379; Gor- man. 376: Hevener, 367, gh individual’ games—Adams, 156; Donaldson, 149; Palmer, 149. 1,680; Inter- BUILDING CONTRACTORS' LEAGUE. 9 Team Standing. - [ORTEPH. D. C. Butcher Co, ans R. P. Whitty, Inc resoasaesed Rudolph & West. High team set—Stone High ‘team game—George P{flg&glnmvmunl set—Faunce (G. A. High individusl game—Faunce (G. A. F. P.), 136, lfl:""':‘ average—Hough (James Baird Co.), EAST WASHINGTON CHURCH LEAGUE. Team Standing. Centennial No. Keller ... SRR cnmnnnat e—Lyos kame—Liliey, 156, 1 sel—Stephenson, 377. 1 spares—Hughes, 5 Cupital | averaze—Fox. Johnson, vith 107. | set. rolled against Bureau of Mines to His 330 total | 20 00 | with the readjustment of the Paint | rolled by Young of the Rosshourgs, who 3 | | announced. nt, 1.490. | A Fller Co., 537. P, 8. = L Pet | 350 | 108 ‘619 | 54 500 | 421 woeREGSE lice & Domestic Commerce cau of Standard Foreign _Service Commereial Intelif 143 | High teamn_games—Patents No. 1, 578; Pat- s No. 2. 567 nts . 567 High team sets—Patents No. 1, 1,637; Bu- reau of Mines, 1,625 | High individual_games—Sperling (Stand- | ards), 154 Van Dusen (Standards). Rice | (Forelgn Bervice) and Patrick (Patesits No. | 5 ac | High individual sets—Lansdale (Secretary's | Office), 372; Hargett (Bureau of Mines) and | Fahey ' (Patents No. 1), 365 each. | High individual averages—Hargett (Bu- | reau of Mines), 113-1: Patrick (Patents No. 2 1011 Linsaale (Secretary’s Office), [ 7 8 11 12 . 12 16 18 e Patents No. 1 won two games of the retain the lead with Patents No. 2 still a close second, Bureau of Mines third | and Secretary's Office fourth. Fahey, Patents No. 1, rolled the besf set for the week with a count of 365, and Moeller, Patents No. 2, high singl¢ | game with 131. | MARYLAND ALUMNI LEAGUE. Team Standing. Buzzards Roost Diamondbacks Rosshourgs Terrapins ... ell, Blackstraps, Individual set—Coster, Blackstraps. team game—Blackstraps. 565. High team sct—Blackstraps, 1,570. The result of last week’s bowling brought about a triple tie for first place between the Buzzards Roost, Diamond- | backs.and Rossbourgs, and a tightening up of the race all the way down the line. Teams are all well bunched, and High 8 High 367, High individual : Branch team the interest in the league is at its height, and many hot matches may be looked for from now until the season closes. High game and set this week was hit for 94, 139 and 110, making a total of 343. BIG NIGHT GAME LISTED. DES MOINES, Iowa, November 19 (#)~Notre Dame and Drake University foot ball teams will battle in the big- gest night foot ball game ever staged, at Soldier Field, rhicago, next Novem- ber 9, athletic officials at Drake have Mannie Fox, a six-year-old maiden, is the smallest racer in training, being less than 14 hands high. NEW YORK, November 19.—The | gram Saturday. question whether an athlete can per-| Defcated, but still hopeful of sharing | i hi) ie, Illinois, form up o standard when transterred | 3, 1€ champlonship, pie. were Illinols to an altitude of 5,280 feet above sea | which was pushed out of the race by a evel came in for discussion by the|Dair of onc-point defeats, should upset | Wisconsin, at least one of them would Ammx\:: Athletic Union track and field | yos"on the pinnacle with the Badgers, committee. It finally was answered in | who so far have nothing but a tie to the affirmative, and Denver was named | blemish their record. | after the first quarter as a result of 'RAY AND as the committée's choice for the 1929 | championships, senior and junior, to be | held about July 4. Dan Ferris, secretary-treasurer of the Amateur Athletic Union, favored Den- | ver on the grounds that an athlete is an athlete no matter how high you take | him and also in view of the fine per- fermances of the Denver district stars | themselves. This side of the case al: was taken by J. Lyman Bingham, grad- uate manager of athletics at the Univer- sity of Denver, and B. F. Stapleton, | mayor of the “Mile-High City,” as well | as by members of the Nebraska delega- tion, who said their athletes had parti cipated at Denver without being ham- | pered by the altitude. On the other side, it was contended that in foot ball games teams from lower altitudes have wilted the rarefied air. ‘The Denver University Stadium, slatad to be the scene of the games, has a_ capacity of 33,000 and when com- pleted will seat 60,000, the emissaries from Colorado said. EL QUAFI T0 RACE SATURDAY | By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, November 19.—Joie Ray, one-time taxi driver, now turned dis- | tance runner, today had his eyes toward | Boston and a chance to show whether he can cover the regular marathon dis- | tance in faster time than El Quafi, his Algerian rival. The two will race there Saturday. Last night “Chesty Joie” defeated the Olympics marathon champion by a third of a mile in a special 16-mile run. Ray knocked more than five minutes from the previous record for the dis- tance, which he held. It took Joie 1 hour, 21 minutes and 50 seconds to cover the distance over the -rumbling boards of the Coliseum track. In Phila- delghh his time was 1:27:18. als announced that 1,000 persons paid® admission. The meeting was the fifth for the two runners and it was Ray's third victory. ‘The board track seemed to bother El Quafi, whose trainers have been unable to accustom his feet to indoor | Purdue _clashing Tllinois and Ohio State, which have been defeated but once, will clash for their big chance in another important game at Champaign Saturday, while ITowa will tackle the lowly but danger- ous Michigan eleven at Ann Arbor. If the Gophers defeat Wisconsin, Iowa de- feats Michigan and Illinois wins ovar Ohio State, or vice versa, three teams | would be deadlocked for the title, a con- dition which has happened eleven times since 1896. Other Big Games. Two_other games are on Saturday's card, Dartmouth's big green team in- vading Northwestern and Indiana and in_their traditional battle at Lafayette. None of the games have any jmportance in the champion- ship standings. Rising from a sea of mud and slush at Towa Field, Wisconsin, pushed its way to undisputed possession of first | place in the title race Saturday by de- feating Iowa’s heretofore undefeated machine, 13 to 0. Doped to fall before the Hawkeyes' relentless line attack, the Badgers outplayed their heavier oppon- ents. Bill Lusby, Wisconsin's' sophomore kicking and open fleld genius, was the star of the game, out-kicking Mayes McLain and sprinting 63 yards for the first touchdown. Casey, a substitute, scored the second touchdown when he fell on McLain’s fumble behind Iowa's goal. Illinois found its long-lost scoring punch Saturday when it humbled Chi- cago, 40 to 0, on Stagg Field. The Chi- cago team, which ended its season with the game, was helpless before the Illini attack. Many Play to Form. Ouside of Iniana’s 6 to 0 triumph over Northwestern, other results Satur- day were as expected. Minnesota rout- ed the Haskell Indians, 52 to 0; Ohio State defeated Muskingum, 39 to 0; Purdue coasted through to a 14-to-0 victory over Wabash, and Michigan had all it could to to defeat Michigan State, 3 to 0. Saturday's game between Minnesota and Wisconsin promises to be a battle of smashes against passes unless the field is soggy, and if Wisconsin wins, Coach ‘Gloomy Glen” Thistlethwaite will have brought the Badgers out of the foot ball wilderness in his second running. year. | befe ?Lhe season was looked upon as a | Howard Smith vs. Bobby Goldstein, J. C. of colleges and universities to athletic | " gh the efforts of the redoubtable | SCrLice, Caf 135 pounds—Stewart Ball vs, Leo Fisher, J. C, C.; Frank Taylor, vs. Leo Coveleski, K. of C.. John Burke vs. Henry Slaughter, unattached. £ 145 pounds—Angelo Marletta vs. Pvt. | George Drumtroski, Fort Washington; | Jack De Prato vs. Sollie Wisooker, un- | attached. | 160 pounds—William Stanley vs. George Solomon, J. C. C.; Kenneth Bryan vs. Pvt. F. B. Bennett, Port| ‘Washington. CROSS-COUNTRY TITLE | IS CAPTURED BY MOORE NEW YORK, November 19 (#).— ‘Willie Ritola’s national senior A. A. U. cross-country title has passed into the | hands of Gus Moore, youthful negro| star of the Brooklyn harriers. | Moore defeated a field of 59 run- | ners, chiefly from the Metropolitan | district, in the annual six-mile grind | at Van Courtland Park yesterday. He | finished 200 yards ahead of Verne Booth of the Millrose A. A, former Johns Hopkins star. Franklin T. Os- good, New York A. C., was third, fol- loyed by Russell Payne, Millrose A. A.; salles Zinck and Jinmy Henigan, both | of the Dorchester (Mass.) Club. i Moore’s time was 31 minutes 20 1-5 seconds, as compared to the record of 29:27 set in 1925 by Ritola, who cap- | tured the championship in five of the past six years. Ritola did not defend the title this year. ! The national team champlonship | again went to the Millrose Associa- | tion with the Shanahan Catholic Club | of Philadelphia second, and Dorchester Club third. DISTRICT GUARDS WIN PAIR OF RIFLE TESTS| Rifiemen of Company A, 377th In- fantry, District National Guard, de-| feated’ a combination of Maryland | ardsmen yesterday, taking both in-! dividual and team encounters. | Sergt, Oscar Blue of the District won | g the individual mateh and with Lieut, F. S. Blacklell, Sergt. Slaughter, gt. | El G. Davis and Corp. Davis ook the | team match, 318 to 287, | AMERICANS WILL RACE SWEDISH BOAT IN 1929 NEW YORK, November 19 (#).—The | r:h American Yacht Racing Union | as accepted the challenge of Charles| Cahler of the Royal Swedsth Yacht Clup, for a race in the 22-meter clnss“ next Summe: { @xcept for the site of the event to, be held on Long Island Sount, details| of the race remain to be decided upon. The union announced acceptance of 1he challenge last night at a meeting which saw the re-election of Clifford D. Mallory of New York as president; George H. Gooderham of Toronto, as vice president: Fred D. Porter of Chi- cago, and James W. Alker of New York, sccretary, s fame, as those which are supreme in |’ . foot ball rarely scale the heights in | PDillips twins, appears to have less basket, ball as well, A good example is | chance to repeat than any of the other Carnegie Tech of Pittsburgh, which at | Sectional championship aggregations. present is riding high as one of the two | iy, ol ey 5% FORMER CHICAGO PILOTS record on the basket ball court last AlD'NG STAGG THIS YEAR Winter by losing every game it played. Stars of other years are assisting Judging by the results of last year ) the basket ball world can look ahead | Amos Alonzo Stagg in his thirty-seventh from this pre-season date when the | roolv, ball season at the University of Chicago. coaches are just beginning to think | about issuing their calls for candidaies | Al the assistant coaches are former Maroon_players, who learned the sport and cast its eyes on the following teams | in the seven major sections of the country in the expectation that they will supply a big share of the fireworks if not the championships. In the East—Pittsburgh, Pennsyl- vania and Princeton stand out. The Pitt Panthers played a 21-game schedule last season without losing a game, in- cluding five Western Conference teams and Dartmouth of the Eastern Inter- collegiate League among their victims. Several veterans from that squad, which include some star sophomores, are back this year. Pennsylvania won the East- ern “Big Six” championship and has Joey Schaaf, the league's high scorer, back again, while Princeton, runner- up, can bank on Mike Miles and Eddie Wittmer, its foot ball-basket ball aces, again this year. In_the Middle West—Both Indiana | and Purdue, which wound up in a tie for the Western Conference champion- ship, had young teams and start the new drive with most of their veterans on hand. Loss of Carrell, all-confer- cnce guard, is the only real blow dealt Indiana by graduation. Purdue with the 61;-foot “Stretch” Murphy at center and a full supply of experienced men around him will take a lot of beating before the race is over. In the Far West nia has what advantage goes with be- ing the defending champion, but its margin over California in the southern half was pretty slim. Stanford had an exceptionally good freshman team and must be reckoned in on what looks like a repetition of the tight race of last on. Washington was the class of the northern section of the conference and hopes to repeal ther In the Missourl Valley—this will be the first year of basket ball competi: uon in the new “Big Six.” Nebras now the dominating factor in the foot | ball race in this group, will be a marked cutsider on the court, as it has a loag way to come from last year. Okla- homa’s towering team pivoted ‘around Vic Holt, who is an inch taller than Murphy, won the last championship of | the old Missouri Valley Conference in 1927-28 and must be made a heavy | favorite, although Kansas, under “Phog” Allen. js always dangerous In the Southwest—Arkansas, another lofty team unbeaten in_winning the| champlonship last year, has the mak- ings of a strong quintet. In the Rocky Mountain Conference— it will be the Montana State Bobcats dropped only 2 games in 38 starts in L3 outhern Califor- | against the rest of the field, as tho; | other 11 colleges are determined to halt the “wonder team,” which last season | | under Chicago's grand old man of the | gridiron. Four of them were captains. They are Nelson Norgren, leader of the 1913 | champions; James Pyott, captain in 1y23; “Bub” Henderson, pilot of the 1925 team, and Kenneth Rouse, last year's captain. By Perr | OSTILITIES in Chesapeake Bay | between the purse netters and the rockfish, trout, taylors and other denizens of the deep were called off on November 1 under the laws of the -State of Maryland. Purse netting under the Maryland law is permitted from June 15 to November | 1, and the purse netters are required to pay a license fee of $25 for each net | operated. | But, another form of attack on the game fish of the Bay starts in when the | tormer stops, for now the drift nets are | , in operation. The drift net is almost | but not quite as deadly an enemy to the fish as the purse net. The drift net is { just what its name implies, a long net { which is allowed to drift with the tides, | one way or the other, usually with the incoming tide, Large pieces of cork | keep it afloat on the top rope and the Lottom rope is weighed down to prevent the escape of fish. These nets are | allowed. to drift until they are pretty well filled with fish, some times remain- ing in the water only for a few hours | and again staying in the water prac tically all night, the time it is under- stood the majority of, these nets are operated, | It may truly be sald that fish life is | just one darn’ thing after another, and the stern battle against the depletion of | the supply by fishing fleets and other i methods of reaping a harvest from the seas causes a stirring chapter at every | turn, | Al anglers, no matter where they re- | side, either in the District, Maryland or Virginia, are up in arms over the methods employed by the purse netters | A fight has been started to get som: remedial legislation at the coming ses- ision of the Maryland Legislature. To further that cause, a meeting will be held in the Board of Trade rooms in The Star Building on the evening of November 27, at 8 o'clock. All anglers are invited W We present, Swepson ROD AND STREAM Linwoods | People’s Li | F. H. Smith Co. Chevy Chase.. High team set—Service Cafeteria, 1,790. High team game—Mever Davis. 633. gual set—Mendley (H. B. Den- 1 game—Mandley (H. B. | Denham Co.). 159 High individual average—Campbell (King man (King Pin), 122-6. Piny. 123030, Weld Central Stores put oyer its seventh | successive win and made it 10 out of the last 12 by sweeping all three games with the Soils-Chemistry outfit, Cen- tral Stores has climbed from eighth to a tie for second in the past month. Frank Donaldson’s count of 322 was | best for the winners, while Smith had 335 for the So-Kems, Blister Rust shot one of its best sets of the season and won all three games from Shops, shoving that quint into the cellar. Martin and Avery, with sets of 321 each, contributed most to the wins, y Miller. | Earle, Maryland's conservation com- missioner, has accepted an invitation to be present and will make the principal address. The United States Bureau of Fisheries will be represented by Deputy Commissioner Radcliffe and Glen L. Leach, and Representative Gambrill of | Maryland has been invited to be present. | | The larger the turnout the more impres- | | sive it will be. Not only will the purse- ‘)nettlng in Chesapeake Bay be attacked, | but_the necessity of Maryland passing | a black bass law also will be stressed. On account of the prevailing high | winds during the past week, fishing hiy been at a standstill both in the bay and i the Potomac River, and no reports have reached this column. Lower Potomac | rivermen say with the good weather of the last few days the fish again should commence 1o attack the many different lures offered. Aunglers, who have placed away thelr +tackle until next Spring, should be care- ' ful to place thelr bamboo rods where they will not be subjected to too much heat. Reels should ‘be cleaned of all dirt, a few drops of oil given to all gear parts and a thin coatiug of oil spread over the nickel to prevent rust from- ing, Lines should be tested, and if found weakened by the action of the water— especially those used in salt water— and easily broken by a quick snap be- tween the hands should be taken en- tirely off reels and reversed. . The 1928 fishing is almost at an end in so far as the actual catching of the fish is_concerned, but a bigger battle looms before the anglers if they wish to continue to catch their favorite zcies of fish. The fight might be call- cd the “Battle of Chesapeake Bay,™ and all anglers should be in the front line ! trenches and ready for the zero hour,| now at hand. They “have seen in each succeeding year the fishing in the Bay grow more Scarce, and the past season has been the straw that broke . the camel's back, 1 57, h individual strikes—Cady,’ Lilly and High team game—Waugh, 571. High team set—Centennial No. 1, 1,636 Centennial No. 1 still holds the lead in the East Washington Church cir- cuit with five teams tied and fighting it out for second place, and other tics Hagen Uses a Putter To Get Out of Traps BY SOL METZGER. Watch Walter Hagen play a course where there is no overhang to the traps and it's a pretty certain bet he will use his putter to get out of the sand more often than any other club. Such procedure often puzzles a golf gallery. They look upon sand traps as hazards that must be over- come with a niblic. They are amazed when Hagen putts out of one up to the cup. Few golfers can control an explo- sion or chip shot from the sand. ‘The danger of error is great. Thus Hagen, when he finds the way to the cup from a sand trap barred only MOST WEIGHT ON LEFT LEG by & strip of rough that inclines upward to the green, depends on his putter with amazing results, Hagen's putting stroke is back with the left and forward with the right. His weight is mostly on his left leg. All good putters as a rule play the ball off the left heel. The reason is this position enables them to stroke the ball as the putter is starting to rise from. the turf. Stroking it in this way imparts a bit of top spin to the ball. Top spin makes a ball hold its line better than it otherwise would. Why continue to slice when the fault can be absolutely ‘cured by following a fcw simple insiructions? Write Sol Metzger, care of this paper, and re- quect his Mlustrated leaflet on “Sticing.” In writing inclose stamped, addressed lope. . - - "w.e be (Copfright, 1028.) . wame. Why net save - that EXTRA dime? ‘What is the use of paying 30c¢ for 3 cigars when White Owls—at 3 for 20c—g ve you a rare, fragrant flaver and all the cool, mild 'smo]fiing enjoyment that you expect in a good cigar? Try White Owls. They’re foil-wrapped—~fuctory-fiesh. And'you save a dime on every three, White Ow 3 for 2O¢ OVER TWO BiLLION SoLD