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HovAS FAI}E;FIRST | EASTERN. CENTRAL, FORMIDABLE FOE Maryland Is No Set-up for|.2 Powerful Tarheels—C. U. Hopes for Big Score. EORGETOWN vs. Mnryllnd. on the Hu.ltap. 2: 30 Muyund vs. North Caro- lina, at College Park, 2:30 p.m. Catholic anl:leuldtyz ;a Mount 8t. Mary's, at Brookland, p.m. g’eom n:wn vs, Mlnhl".ln, at_Central Sudlum. :30 Gallaudet vs. Fort Meade 'rlnk Corps, at Kendall Green, 10 am. American anvenlty vs Shenandoah College, at St. Alban's,"2: . 8ix_foot ball games tor today and something especlally interesting -bour. each. ‘Western Maryland is counted upon to give the Blue and Gray its first stift mm'l:l’ldml:d”w!: halt the rush of ves in_histo Mount St. Mary’s decisively enough to rove there was nothl.nrn approaching rha flukey about its feat in nearly tying the touted Boston College eleven. George Washington plays its first game under v,hehdh'ecuon of Jim Pixlee, new head coac Coach Youn, gl tAmcrh:m University also makes a debu Gallaudet, with a team r,cmlderlbl! rengthenede since last year, tries . out on the soldiers. Despite his thre to shake up the Georgetown team after it failed to sat- in the game with Mount St. Mary's last Saturday, Lou Little planned on one change for today. Johnny Scalzi instead of EAQ Leatry was to start at quarterback. Recent prac- tice indicated Georgetown was to use many passes. M.’ land is not at its stronge: est, due %o injuries, but, should be anything but a pushover for the North Carolina giants who average 192 pounds. Catholic University’s squad is in great lhape physically and its morale is im- W n, Gallaudet and Axneflun Unl ty are of unknown strength. THREE GAMES BEAR ON PACIFIC HONORS By the Associated Press. SAN FRANCISCO, October 5.—Far Western gridirons resumed today to the_thunder of great coast conference conflicts and lrldflinmlly Dbitter battles between old-time foot ball rivals. ‘Championship hopes of six coast con- ference teams will be.raised or lowered akbcording to the results of three en- counters. Ranked first in importance !rom a conference standpoint is the game that will bring a reputedly powerful Univer- sity of Oregon eleven to the stronghold of sunflmf 's Cardinals. Not in many years have Oregon followers held out * such high hopes for a Lemon and Yel- low squad as the 1929 creation. Stan- ford, too, has a team of many possibili- ties and much power, as evidenced by its vlcmry over the Olympic Club squad wmle the Cardinals are the general favorites, Oregon is conceded far more chance than Oregon State and Mon- tana, who meet Southern California and ‘Washington, respectively, in the other conference engagements. Southern California’s Trojans over- whelmed U. C. L. A. last SlturdlY. 76 to 0, and figure to treat Oregon S in somewhat milder fashion. ton's Huskies, powered by a modern oflenn, are expected to have no diffi- culty nunlnl aside Montana's Griz- flr as interest is concerned, no e tomorre res with the Olmwnh-!l. Mary’s cl at Berkeley. Since 1915 these rivals have fought for gridiron glory 'with & fury seldom equaled. Prom its student registra- tion of less than 700 St. Mary’s has pro- duced another strong team this year and there are some critics who believe it will defeat California. Seventy thousand persons are expected to see the contest. Other games include Washington State and Mount St. Charles; Univer- sity of California at Los Angeles versus Fresno State; Idaho and Whitman and ham Young against the California ALEXANDRIA RED MEN FORM BOWLING LOOP| seams ALEXANDRIA, Va, October 5.—A four-team bowling leagus has been or- ganized by members of Seminole Tribe, llu. l:l..wmvrovnd Order of Red Men, hes will be rolled each Tuesday | V- nl‘hl at 8 o'clock on the Health Cen- m k?wlinl Alley drives, starting next llormln Roberts has been elected president of the new duckpin lonn. with J. A. Sullivan serving as secretary.and treasurer. The rosters of the four teams that | P8 will compete for the Seminole Tribe title are as follows: P Smith, captain: Dave an udson. v G in: er, llrl Cronin, Robert basket ball ‘Washington and Lee, 27; North Caro~ lina State, 6. Guilford, 24; Ru'.hmord 0. Roamke Oollm, 31; Bridgewater, 0. College, 3; Arkansas State 'l'eumn. e, 36; High Poin u- m les, 7; Tenrnm Junior Hll 9; Birming % *zgm. College, gham. -!lenunwn, 6. Monticello, 2. Abilene Chrmhn llege, 10; John Tarleton College, 0. Okishoms ~Baptist University, 6; Arhnul Tech, cclflmm Teachers, 96; Decatur Baptist ege, 0. Elon College, 50; Atlantic Christian, 0. Southeast Missouri State Teachers, West Tennessee State ’l‘nchen Pres| College, 6; Dc University of Da; Oklahoma Aggles, Hlnover. 32; Lindsey-Wilson, 0. Findlay, 7; Concordis, 0. !:v-nsvllle. 6; Oakland, 0. Occidental, 14; Santa Barbara, 0. TSouthwe:wm University, 20; North ‘exas East Central Teachers' College, 7 Northwestern Teachers of Alva, 0. Schreiner Institute,” 38; Blinn Me- morial College, 0. Haskell Indians, 13; North Dakota University, 6. Yankton College, 28; Wayne (Neb.) Normal, 6. t Aberdeen Nflnhem Normal, 45; Val- ley City (N. Dak.) 'l‘etchen. 0. Friends ol Wichita, 3; Southwestern Teachers, 0. . Newberry, 0; Lenoir-Rhyne, 0. Ottawa U., 14; Bethel, 0. ucolam of Emporia, 13; Westmin. ster. 0. DIXE TITLE HOPES MAY BE WRECKED Some Southern Conference Games Today Bear on Championship. BY EDDIE BRIETZ, Associated Press Sports Writer. HAMPIONSHIP hopes of six Southern Conference teams are likely to be wrecked following today's doing¥ on Dixie foot| hi ball fields. Alabama can eliminate the University of Mississippl, which already has been beaten once, by a victory at Tuscalooss, but Coach Wallace Wade's team is badly crippled, and if the Tide downs the young giants coached by Homer Hazel the other outfits on the Alabama sched- ule can prepare for plenty of trouble, Coach Chuck Collins is so anxious to trim Maryland that he will start 10 North Carolina veterans against the Old Liners at College Park. Lipscomb, cen- &enr, will be the only sophomore in' the e-up. Clemson looks & couple of touchdowns better than Auburn, even with Gresham, the varsity center, on the sidelines with lime burns. ‘Well Matched Teams. On the basis of their showings last Saturday, Virginia and South Carolina, which meet at Columbia, appear to be an even bet. Florida is liked over V. M. I at ‘Tampa, but the always tricky Cadets are pointed for this game, and Coach Bill Raftery hopes for a close score. With Pappenheimer, their backfield ace, going strong, the Mississippi Aggies are hoping to give Georgia Tech an in- teresting afternoon at Atlanta. ' The ‘Tornado is favored to cop its first 1920 start with room to spare. Visiting scouts prohlbly will get a line on the real strength of the Duke Blue Devils in their game with the Pitt Panthers at Durham. It is no secret that Coach Jimmy De Hart ex- pects to keep the score down to 9 or 10 points. ‘The other conference aggregations meet less formidable opponents, but some of them are loaded with high explosives. Billy Banker and his colleagues of the Tulane Green Wave c¢an count on a busy afternoon with the Texas Aggies at New Orleans, and the University of Chatf Moccasins, 1928 cham- pions of the 8. I. A. A, would give their collective right arm to take a fall out of the Tennessee Volunteers at Chat- tanooga. Gets Another Test. Georgia gets its last test before the Yale game mmn the Purple Hur- ricane of Purman University. Furman hopes to do what Oglethorpe did last mk and um the Athens Bulldogs. other games in which conference are more or less in the tun'of-" wm: Minnesota ‘Hampden-Sidney game to overhaul the Gobbler attack from to bottom. In the 8, I A. A. interest centers around the Oglethorpe-Citadel game, at Charleston. Last week the Petrels trim- med Georgia and the Bulldogs showed a real oflem\u by -mnl-ln' 59 poiats inst Both teams are leading chnmpmuhlp contenders. INDIANA, WISCONSIN GAMES TOP BIG TEN By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, October 5.—The call to enmln( Knight's Bm Five, formerly the Hoff- b man clouxle Virginia C “Gridmen will hold a signal drill mum at 7 o'clock at Kin‘ nother tomorrow 8t. Mary's camu base ball perform- uested to report at Bagget! 1. xr.u.suen SUCCEEDS DUBUC AS BROWN COACH home. primed niversity of Kansas ‘and ting Bo McMillan’s Kansas chhlnnmumdurm:nnuu tussle with Michigan State College at Towa. ‘| day were TECH TAKE GAMES THE SPORT ~By: GRAN‘!‘LAND Rlcfi——lG H T , Nebraska:8, M. U., i e at um—m Al Show Well in Downing| e, Outside Foes—Emerson Playing Today. IIIRSON was ::rc Mount ’s Prep fternoon E at’ ubur‘. Md,, in the only game of the day l.nvomnl schoolboy eleven of the Disf group. X ‘Three of the four Was! public high elevens which saw m - victorious. Easf ed lnyoh mg:.‘olmumore ou:r? in the o o Pk s, Y an( ‘ech - cont w e Business, however, w\\'lly in a 13-0 game at Manassas, Except East tern. all the District uumn were opening their seasons. ‘That Charlie Millar, Eastern quarter- back, whose broken field running before last was a feature of the public | 508 high series, but who was forced to idle most of the 1028 campaign because nl an injury, has lost none of his cunniny is m-nuut It was a 20-yard ofl-uckle sally by Millar that brought Eastern its win over Loyola yesterday and when Eastern downed Calvert Hall, 19 to 0, in t Lincoln Parkers' opening game :flnnr scored two of their three touch- lowns. Millar's victory-producing run yester- day followed a’ sustained Eastern of- fensive, during which he and mley aq most of the ball carrying. One pllyer of each team wu banished from game when roughness developed in the late stages of the battle. Ben McCul- lough atfempted to rush l.h. ball atross lor zm extra point following the East- idown, but was smeared W] t.he to him was L Coach Hap Hardell of the Tech el:ven was pleased with the way his ymlnl bunch performed in defeating Episco) lhm.ll)l he is still by no means. nmnsd with the team's attack. Defensively, the McKinley eleven shapes fairly well according to Hardell, but he is not op- timistic as to its chances of ltlllnlnt the offensive smoothness which has been characteristic of most Tech teams be- cause of the preponderance of players o( llmlted experience. nner's accurate plnmunt klck (ollawln‘ ‘Tech’s touchdown gave is team its margin of victory over Episcopal. Each team leored its lone touchcown in the second coming when the centers fell on uu ball behind their opponent’s goal line as the result of blocked Kkicks. ‘Tech in its starting one player who won Dunbar Goss, fullback. Here was the array. Stehm: left end‘ ‘Wolfarth, left tackle; Mayer, left guard; Heflin, ter; Hl!eock t guard; Hahn, right tackle; MacCa right end; Minor, quarterback; Reichman, left halfback: xelklms. right halfback, and Goss, full- ck, letter last year, Larry Pinckney was the ace of the clever line-plunging attack which car- ried Central to_its victory over Forest Park High at Baltimore. This husky boy scored both the Blue and Whl(" touchdowns. Central showed plen;.{l of’ wv:l" ;:a but mr tumbln less W ive won larger margin. Gene Colella, Ccntnl quarterback, kicked & phcement for tht extra point following the first touchdown, but his try following the second score failed. Like Tech the starting Central line- up was shy of seasoned material. Here is the way Central took the Clus.!l left end; Bicholts, Jeft tackle; Mirman, lefl guard; l‘wlnly. center; Tl T t end 2 e rand e e 5 it Pinckney, mnb-cm m of the home eleven. The defeat was & nt.her bitter pill for Business, which has been trimming Swavely each year ‘“R:Ieh tl!t Ji d Dll sl ichar one- and best for Business, which EH line-up: = Hazelton, left end; Willard, left tackle; Biondi, left guard; Shapiro, center; Carn, right lulrd. !‘lnley, right : smm'l’:. right e end; Jones, , lef halfback; gghn-m. Tient Dalfback, and Reichardr, nflvieu from Oalvert Hall that the eleven of n{u school -and line-up used just h'l bowed _to | 8994 8. M. U. coach, wi g:me will show what two of the ve to expect. be | Saturday victories stadium strong | Pennsylvania usually has at least & h.\r /arthmot louu\ern c-momu-oruon State, at s—Another high-class battle. share of trouble with Sw: Y. U. and Fordham eully and stand set for their clash . | season games. over N. Y. U. last Fall, Bot.hnrel&ronx but Southern California should stronger, with enough power to hammer out & victory. California-St. Inry'l. at Berkeley— ‘The West Coast puts on more real ac- tion than any other section today, and no small part of this action will be seen in the California-St. Mary's party. ‘. is always a hard man to teams hold a | on ia is good again, lflm great, and m. game should give a line on what Pennsylvania is to ex- two weeks away, California should hen mnefln BY WALTER R. McCALLUM. ROFESSIONAL ifers of the Midatlantic section will hold a match play championship u the Chevy Chase Club, 14 and 15, as the main event nr their Fall ing to an- nouncement wdny by Bob Barett, Chevy Chase & former presi- and both | dent ¢ ot the Middle Atlantic Professional | Eeem. Golfers’ Association. This tourney will' come three days after the Maryland | % n ch-mphmhlv. scheduled for de- lon at the Elkridge Hunt Club next | The pros of this section are to play the afternoon of October 14 in a senior- professional medAl play evem ‘with combined scores coun! On the morning of Ochber 14 l,hey “will qunmy at Chevy Chase for the match play rounds in the event to be played the !ollowlnt day. this coming unlor-moimlonnl evnt one of the strongest pairs is cer- tain to be the G. H. Chasmar-Fred Mc- Leod combination from Columblia. Chasmar, who is chairman of the greens committee lt columbil has been get- ting .around his home course regularly around 75 or better, while McLeod is good for a 'fl over Chevy Chase almost any time he starts. The ancient jinx of responsibility toward the home club still rides in the saddle, and Harry G. Pitt of Manor is on the sidelines today watching strangers to his own club fight it out in the final rounds of the first annual Manor Club invitation golf tournament. Picked as a probable victor in tourney before it opened, Pitt found tartar yesterda; ated per- i B porst but was able only xo h&lve when ley-laid him a dead stymie. Shipley won the fifteenth with a birdle, the sixteenth when Pitt missed a short Pmt and at the eighteenth, with Pitt’s second tonnu'mn and the Manor Club ace 1 down, ley laid a long iron shot within eigl l feet of the hole. One of the Anest shots ever uncorked under a similar situation, this shot won the match for Shipley. mcwummtwmkush&l:y mmdomycru:kmc for Pitt had played his second shot from & trap to the had a hard green, Shipley. very shot left to get home. He played it in masterful fashion, and Pitt took three puts, giving Shipley the hole and the 2-up margin by wi he won. met Miller B. Stevinson of rate player from Beaver Dam, matched strokes with John C. Storey, who still | ¢] is suffering from the same brand of shanking iron shots which hurt him in [ nje ts yes- | o the tournament at Bannockburn. ‘There were two startling upse mn‘ m nne round had hardly when \nmuln.hn.v !.ll putter “r?- wu R epinilins it o G P [ To Reach Appalling Dimensions ; 1 ot | E sEH ot !?gzs § ? il 5} g E it i E g 7 ! " 1E for-any real upset, 50 far as the teams are concerned. D¢l West and South—Outside of the con- | 3U4¥ tests already mentioned, outstanding games on the bill. and Centenary should come closer to hard competition, as both have been strong for several seasons. Few of the Conference teams, outside of have any tough grind to face, although Kansas é good enough to keep Illinois the jump; lnchlgnn lhould rove its strength ' against Michiga S and Minnesota ‘is umm o through. Putdue will have her u'oublu with v.hz Kansas Aggles, another strong Missour] Valley line-up. are few ‘Texas round, the ba contiriued to bat- tle vm-nuy, until he had closed out the fighting naval officer on the seventeenth green. Then came. that stirring Pitt-S match, with the crucial wl.nt m; it Du!t that Pitt missed on the sixteenth . Doubtless Harry lel'. the re- gonslmmy of carrying the burden for Manor Club, and it must have 'el'h!d on him, for he did not play it durln. that round. Neither dm [} p|e£ but the Argyle chlmpkm played tight golf, and came through with the winning ?unch at_the end, when it seemed possible that Pitt mlfil.t squnre the match and force an ex! stevinson won the first four holes against Martin P. McCarth) ol Beaver Dam, and won the match and 2, while Shorey was down to llurphy over the first nine, but outsteadied the Co- lumbia veteran over the last nine to win %)", 3 dlnllcfl. gothld lltt:e gouble with mdr. C. T. Lynes of ‘ashington, whom he beat 4 and 3. Mrs. 8. P. Collldly of Columbia ,won the low gross prize in the women's tour- ney held yesterday at Chevy Chase, scoring an 89 to lead Mrs. Frank R. Keefer by five strokes. Mrs. Keefer turned in a card ;l‘ 94. Nineteen woman t,| ed State of California, Mrs. :Tigers See Tmuble: | Associated Press Sports Writér. Y Joot ball to- ir second and last wpofl-unlty of ml sesson of tering & gamie. withoyt par- ticular rm of the outcome, ‘Today’s batch of tune-up' ‘contests in- cluded only a few the outcome of ‘which was in doubt, but starting with next will come; much T schedule bereft of real th- &nmw&:nmm should slip uwun ey bu % foresaw_same little trouble with Ambherst. Lafayette was .a heavy favorite over nberg. Army, Navy nnd New York Univer- Euur opposition = plw:ky little Niagara eleven to make trouble. Pennsylvania hoped for a blg score lnbt Bwarthmore and the Columbia- Union game ranked as a pure prac- tice contest, as were the encounters hnd. l'ofdhlm-st Bonaventure, Holy ence, Willlams-Middlebuty -nd lnlylnd-!hr!.h Carolina. Virginis, Geo wn and Buck- nlu n!l ‘were matche lege opposition that v.hre-mad trouble. Wut Vl.r"lnh. benen by Davis and another tough w cnck in’ Duquewe Bucknell entertained a powerful small eallml team in Alhfllm and Western Maryland was no pushover for rgetown. Pitts] h, Colgate and Davis and Bismurgh,was Bitied spuint Duke snd | Pittsi was pitted aga! and | and Elkins against St. Louis. To Do]tlu fell the hardest task—that stopping the Wisconsin array at mn. Rockne Heis Tough ~Foe in Pat Page 383 Eiégz g2 &x B fos » going to be the cut in run by No. 4. mght end, No. 6, runs out wide into the defensive nm, u:e left end, No. 5, working opposf of the field. '.l'hu! !l\z defensive half- backs ‘can take their choice and still be out of the play. If they come up to st the threatened run they are out of it just as much as if they cover the decoying Notre Dame ends. Of course this move of No. 6 frees the defensive left tackle. No. 3 back smashes as he comes across. No. 1 fakes m take the defensive end, then swings downfield and into the cleared area back of the de- fensive center. Here he gets the pass from Na. 4. Look out, Indiana, or this pass will end your fondest hopes this season, Tomonow—Yuc 's strong off-tackle run. (Copyrisht, 1929.) Mrs. Audrey Grubbs of Santa Monica, Calif, is the new champion woman archer.of the United States. Her win- ning score was 95 points better than that-of any | previous feminine record. Glenna Collett, Mrs. Pressler Opposing for U. S. Golf Honors~: BY PAUL R. MICKELSON, Assoclated Press Sports Writer. ETROIT, October 5.—Glenna Collet, ml(hty charmer of par from Pebble Beach, Calif., to- it to add a new d:l?— ter to the history of women's 1{ b‘; lAchum capturing her fouth national The last pbstacle in her path was wveteran from her own udopt Leona Pressler of Los Angeles, the two being the mm-mmhfirfimmu- Evening Star Cup competition, sched- -| uled to start Monday at Chevy Chase, until Monday morning. All the entrants have not yet sent in their names, and members of the women'’s committee said 80 to the player with the by Winifred Faunce of the Manor Club, hole final at Oakland Tradition of golf alternately favored and disfavored the comely champion. who stood out as an_ overwhelming favorite. So sound is her game over a long stretch that, Ilke Bobby Jones, she was regarded as unbeatable over 36 holes. Against her stood the f: u:nm'omhub&nthlemun tarynrl'lt.hw success accomp! the feat, and this year, as before, they | have been stopped. Miss Collett, an exceptional - stylist Pitcher With Cubs Three Years Voted Chance By the Associated Press. HICAGO, October 5. virtually nof about at i 5. fesehs el md etme( i 233 » o gs E EEEE? r..own-d to Start a Gamé CORNHUSKER, MUSTANG ~IN NORTH-SOUTH GAME I Eé SEVEN RACH DAII.Y Octobir 4 to October 30 5 - hch..“ Bt h her the champl shlp in "fi Inll (ollorwed it up '\!h triumphs in 1925 and 1928. The years she was blocked in her march found her eliminated in pre-final mnds once has she been conquered in Not. the 36-hole final. Last year she had |that an easy romp to the throne, defeating Virg Van Wie, 13 and 12, in the final skirmish at Hot Springs, Va. Mrs. Pressler never before has reached the final round in & national cham- pionship, although won _ her share of golf titles, including the West- p in 1927 and- 1928. ‘This year she m dethroned in that field in the second round at Cleveland by Mrs. Lee Mida of Chicago. slnce her dethronement, however, turned to her game, mnchlng thnm.h the lower chmpicmmp bracket with victories over Mrs. Gregg Lifur of Los Angeles, 2 up; Marion Turple of New Orleans, 4 and 2; Mrs. Dorothy Camp- *umd over Bernice fmht the greatest uphill battle in the tournament’s thWYY by coming back from a 4 disadvantage to defeat Mrs, Harley Higbie of Detroit on the nineteenth hole in the quarter-finals lowed through by eliminat- S._Hill with par-breaking ANCIENT “POKER ALICE” GOES TO CHEER BRUINS RAPID.CITY, 8. Dak., October 5 U#). —*“Poker Alice” Tubbs, who used to deal faro in’ mining camp gambling houses | man, and st enjoys a good cigar, started for Chicago today to see the world serles. “Most women of my age,” said “Poker A!.Iee," ‘who has spent more than three ars in Western camps, bly be packing up to attend vic club mee but not for icago and I J Cubs win hnlgma "luohlummtfl‘ht nn fildnm misses/ & good card BABE WOULD WHET INTEREST IN SERIES Jack’s Selling Sense Shows Even When He Radios Round of Fight. BY WALTER TRUMBULL, manship se: Jack’s hu.hin( evasion of the tion whether he might some day return w the was merely salesmanship for torial ventures. He hun't fln !lln.at jdea of returning to the ring. But he is too clever to ruin the dream of many of his admirers who hope some day to see the tiger the see another fighter in the same with the Dempsey who fought Wl.ull'd, but that was many suns ago, and no- budy knows it better than Jacl k I think the reason Dempse: & hold on-the mmnlcum ot h!-l n!ublu: is not only because of his punch and his co\lnc! but because he al! gu his ‘When Dempsey climbed an. there never was any doubt about vhzuur there was going to be any ac- Everybody knew that even ll the h"-le 'was shert, it would be interesting. Dempsey always gave his competitive best. He has the re-l spirit of a cham- pion, the spirit which ref: any cause as lgst; which ne the possibility of defeat. When he fought Sharkey, there were many who wondered whether he had anything E‘e’med to see llow shell. losing. “Maybe X haven't my old speed,” he said to me at his training camp, “but let me get in a few body punches and we'll both be slow.” ‘The lmmoon before the Sharkey bout, Dempsey spent on a putting green. The Arst putt he tried was one u( sixty feet and the ball rattled in the cup. He went to bed at 11 o'clock that night and slept unu.l 10 the next morn- he d in, crowds ’ to er admits But Dempsey never con- to_his automobile. “Have you seen Rickard?” he asked. “No,” I said, “but I will see hlm DD want to send him a “Just say that I'm ln nnd shlw. said Jack, “and tell him not to worry about this fight.” It never occurred to Dempsey that he was the one who perhaps should WOrTy. Didn't Lose™ Confidence. phia, n" b&t hlmwy ?t sonnd:ll; Was s ly e wonld win &t He just really could trim him. I doubt whether he admits to himself that there is now, peed. nmt again, but if he was crowded into a ring with Sharkey, he wouldn‘t fight like & man who expected to His idea would be that he "ml.m be lucky enough to get one good mk at lhm" Some boxers ap roppe« Sharkey fought wi against Loughrai Boston battler self as stron, Manassa mauler. But Sharkey, as yet, is no such show- man as Dempsey or Ruth. (Copyrieht, 1029, by North American News- : MILLAR IS’ RE-ELECTED - POTOMAC CLUB CAPTAIN Ernfe Millar was re-elected ca) Pu.m for athletic and social activities for the Winter were discussed. TODAY AMERICAN LEAGUE PARK Washington vs. Boston TICKETS ON SALE AT PARK AT 9:00 AM. ’ SWIMMING POOL Mixed Swimming at All Times - Life Guards .. . Swimming Instruction Membership card, without charge, on application OPEN TO THE SAMTONPM PUBLIC DAILY SAOUNTRIN o K ST