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Sports News Che Ly WASHINGTON, D. C, WITH SUNDAY MORNING EDITION ening Staf. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1929. Features and Classified PAGE 33 Devitt School to Form Wrestling Team : Hoyas Grooming for Homecoming Game GRIDDERS TO FILL FIRST SCHOLASTIC MAT SQUAD Training for Grappling Sport Will Begin at Close of Foot Ball Season—Gonzaga Eleven Seeking Game—Basket Ball Fives Organizing. BY EDWARD A. FULLER, JR. SCHOOL has decided to organize a wrestling team, which, it is believed, will »z the first schoolboy mat combina- D& tion ever to be formed here. i Much enthusiasm for the grappling game is manifest at the Upton street school and indications are that a sturdy team will be developed. William Bullis, a member of the Devitt faculty, who formerly was a member of the Naval Academy wrestling team, will | coach the squad. Though a graduate of the Naval Academy, Bullis now holds the rank of a lieutenant in the Army. Among the promising candidates for the Devitt wrestling team are Paul Tangora, tackle, and Glenn Suddarthend, on the gridiron team. In fact, it is expected that the bulk of the aspirants for mat honors will come from the foot ball eleven. Training for the wrestlers will begin after the close of the gridiron season and it is expected that most of the candidates will be in good shape, as the result of their activit; A manager will be appointed for the wrestling team and will ar- range a schedule. Some consideration also had been given the organization of a boxing team at Devitt, but it has been decided that the school will not undertake this sport. It also has been decided that Devitt, after all, will be represented on the basket ball court. Because the court game did not seem to go so well at the Upton street school last Winter there had been some sentiment for giving it up this season. Charles May, manager of the court team, is now busy on a schedule. Gonzaga is still without a foot ball game for November 29. Coach Orrel Mitchell said today that the Purple ‘would like to book another contest with the Catholic University Freshmen for that date or thereabout, if it could be arranged. A few weeks ago the Cardinal yea lings took the measure of Gonzag 24 to 6, and is the only team whi has vanquished the I Streeters this Fall, the latter having taken the measure of Business, Western and Georgetown Prep In other engagements. Bo far as activities for the first team are concerned, foot ball at St. Alban’s for this season is over. Handicaj by inexperienced ma- terial, the Wisconsin avenue scholastics have not a deal of success on the gridiron this Fall, but are hopeful of doing better next year. In four games St. Alban's was vie- torious ‘only over St. Paul's School of ore, which it defeated, 26 to 6. The Cathedral School boys fell victim to their old foes, St. Christopher ana Church School of Richmond, ch':.}! d, 0 to 54, respectively, and , an 3 2 2 to_Marstons School Iti- of Bal more, 0.to 13. ywever, just.about every student -y A ble has been works this season at St. ‘indications are that from elevens turned out by that school will be markedly . Un- der the direction of Rev. H. Lucas, who_became at the Wis- consin_ avenue school the past Fall, there has been unj ted activity and enthusiasm in the great Autumn Though the first eleven as such 1 through for the season, a 130-pound eleven representing the school is plan- ning a few games and has booked an th the Episcopal High 130~ for November 22. his season’s eleven lost by duation. The fback, ;hohwllil enter n; Eddie Crouch, hall- back; Willett Benit, captain and tackle; Raymond Dougherty, center, who also will enter Princeton; William Willlams, guard, and Weedon, end, Who plans to triculate at Yal o ?he dependables who are listed nd again next Fall are Bayne -:’d mlx‘lk Sterrett, halfbacks: Bits Chesley, quarterback; Bob Lorton and Ned mgn, ends; Bob Booth and | 4 kles, and Raymond Bil- ‘Candidates for the St. Alban's basket eam are to begin practice in two i oee Hardman and Rev. James ector of athletics, court squad. Both are former Evans has been elected manager ot"t‘;i.ehquln'. and has begun the draftin; of a schedule. Aapumw\ubeelema‘ by the squad when practice gets under way. Students Eric Rafter, Jey, guard. of St. John's College de- sirous of gaining nhou on their class team in the interclass basket ball tour~ nament, which will start at the school in about two weeks, are beginning worl this week. An interclass court tourn ment was held last Winter and was & | decided success. | Candidates for the regular school five will begin work after the close of the gridiron season. Bob Maloney is manager of the team. He plans to book games with all the b]E: high school quints, Gonzaga and | Various other schoois. The Cadets will | not formally open their season until after the Christmas holidays. Gonzaga and St. John's gridders are down to earnest preparation for their foot ball game Priday. There is still some uncertainty as to where the game will be played. It is scheduled for the new Gonzaga Field, on Thirty-fourth street near Benning road northeast, but St. John's authorities are hopeful that it might be switched either to the Grifith or the Eastern High School Stadium. It would appear that St. John's for the first time, at least in recent years, | has a chance to conquer Gonzaga. Un- der Paulie Byrne, former Georgetown | and Loyola of Baltimore athlete, the| Cadets have shown to decidedly better advantage this season on the gridiron than in some time. ‘That the uam& :rehwellnm‘;whed would appear evident when con- mt recer‘n.l“y‘h %c. John's =nd Georgetown Prep fol to a scoreless draw and last Priday Gonzaga was a victor by only 6 to 0 over Georgetown has lost only 1 game in 4 an even breal to & 7—8 victory in one of their d ats. Their other reverse was at the ands of the La Salle Prep eleven of Cumberland in & 19—0 game. Victories have been scored by St. John's over George Mason High and Landon, and the tie was the 0—0 game with George- town Prep. Both teams are listed tn enter Pri- ¢ay's game somewhat handicapped. Gonzags probably will be without the gorvices of Danny Pyne, cleve; d. who in violation of school rules plaved re- contly with a sandlot team, while the Cadets probably will have to get along without Mike Scanlon. nd Don Daly, guard, who have suffered leg injuries in drills recently. the has not r‘ml"'l m’hll t5 go to Cumberland Sa y sage the La Salle Prep been | men basket ball and base ball teams | ies on the foot ball field. Saturday La Salle Prep had been un- beaten, but on that day it bowed to the undefeated Catholic University Fresh- n;e&; 4}: to 0, hlln;m:le of the le-tu'l;‘es of the Home-com! ay program at the Brookland school. sl Despite that several members of the Devitt eleven, particularly in the line, are comparatively inexperienced, the team has shown well. e average of members of the team is just a e under 18, 17 and eleven-twelfths to be exact. In five games the Devitt eleven has suffered just one defeat. That was at the hands of the strong Mercersburg Academy eleven early in the season. The sgore of that game was 13 to 0. Since then the Upton Street School eleven has vanquished Eastern by 19 to 0, Washington-Lee High by 12 to 0 and Mount St. Mary's Prep by 26 to 0. In the game before the Mount St. Mary's contest Newport News High was held to a 7-7 tie in the Virginia city. La Plata (Md.) High School athletes have won both the boys’ soccer ball and the girls’ fleld ball championships of Charles County. The soccer ball title was won over Lackey High in an over- time thriller, 3 to 2. At the end of the regulation time the score was at 2-all and two 10-minute extra halves were played, with the La Plata booters ;;arlnz the deciding goal in the first of ese. La Plata girls conquered the Glasva gt‘l'h girls, 6 to 2, to win the county e. Play in the Soccer League for former junior high school booters will start next Sunday, according to plans of George F. Youngblood, athletic director of Stuart Junior High School, who is sponsoring the new loop. Teams made up of erstwhile members of the mley‘ ine, Jefferson, Colum- bia, St and Macfarland Junior High Schools have signified their desire to enter the loop, the games in which will be played each Sunday at 1 on the Monurent fields T e e ‘oung| e league aroused much interest. This is the story of a young fellow who didn't use to like foot ball, but now—well, try to keep him out of a gridiron suit. > . Sh Louls (Bozey) Berger, former Tec! High School basket ball and base ball luminary, is the young hero of the yarn. When at Tech Hap Hardell, director of athletics and head foot ball coach, noting Berger’s fine physique and his particularly large hands, sized him up as a fine gridiron prospect and urged him to come out for foot ball. But Berger was not interested. He did not care for the game. Entering the University of Maryland last Fall, the coaches there also urged him to try the gridiron game, and though he did not want to he finally capitulated. n the Yale game Saturday when Maryland came back to tie the Bulldog at 13-13 in a dramatic rally it was this same Berger who scored both touch- lowns. After the game Curley Byrd, Mary- land coach, asked him: i g “Guess you feel pretty good now, don’t you?" e “Wouldn't you?” Berger answered, his face beaming. No, he probably will not be ready to give up the gridiron game for a good while. Incidentally, Hap Hardell believes that the ball-catching ability shown by Berger against Yale (ho caught - one pass on which he scored a touchdown and another that put his team in po- sition to count its other touchdown) can be laid to his basket ball training. This training, Hardell dates back to the time when Berger, the son of an Army man, fooled around in the gym at Fort Myer with a basket ball. Berger starred with both the Presh- during the past season at Maryland. Central and Western elevens were to clash this afternoon at 3:30 o'clock in a public high school championship foot ball game in Central Stadium. Should Central win it will gain a second-place tie with Fastern at two victories and one defeat in the series race, and Western will be relegated to fourth place with one win and three reverses. A Western victory will give it a chance to finish in a triple tie for the runner-up position with Ges tral and East: KENTUCKY INVITED T0 PLAY ON COAST By the Associated Press. LEXINGTON, Ky., November 12.— S. A. Boles, athletic director, announced today that the University of Kentucky foot ball team has been invited to play Pacific Coast game on December 25. 5 ‘The mvmtm“wu received Saturday from St. Mary's College, Oakland, Calif., \:hflch held California to a scoreless tie this season. The athletic authorities do not con- template accepting the invitation, how- unlgn héo v{flduu. - the Southern nference Ta dlEy by Alabama, should defeat both Virginia Military Academy and Ten- nessee in their remaining games. Even in that event permission would have to be obtained from Southern Conference officials, and there was said to be doubt that it would be granted. VANDY-TENNESSEE FRAY TO PRESENT STAR BACKS A duel of star halfbacks is prom- ised at Knoxville Saturday when Van- derbiit and Tennessee clash in a game which will have a lot to do with de- | ciding the conference title. Tennessee will pit Gene McEver, who rules the Dixie roost, against Red Leon- ard, brill young t of the Commodores, who has run wild w0 far nllbw 2 o'clock | . the GONZAGA BERNARD ALLMAN- Halfback EDblE. FeERRIS- Lef+ G vard Frep BREW- Fullback. Hawks Face Irvington Sunday, But Apaches OHAWKS, city unlimited class sandlot foot ball title holders, will entertain the Irvington A. C. eleven of Baltimore, champions of the Monumental City last season, at Grifith Stadium Sunday afternoon starting at 2:30 o'clock. Apaches, the Hawks' only formidable rival in their battle to re- tain their title, have yet to book an op- | ponent for Sunday, but are hopeful of arranging a contest with the Defiance | . C. eleven at Wilmington, Del. | Apaches have lost Union Park, their | home field, and are hopeful of obtain- ing the new Gonzaga Park in Benning for future games here. | As the annual Mohawk-Apache battle, | to be played Sunday, December 1, nears. | it is becoming increasingly evident that the Apaches have a real chance of van- quishing the Hawks and regaining the | city title, lost in 1927, Both teams have clean records so H this season, the Hawks having won al six of their games and the Apaches having taken all four of their conwau.i In. the game December 1 the Apaches | for the first time since they started | meeting the Hawks in 1923 will not be | outweighed by the Indians from tackle to tackle. Northerns, who put up a plucky fight | before bowing to the Mohawks last Sun- | day, 0 to 12, have listed a game with | the Waverly A. C. eleven to be played | Sunday at Silver Spring at 2:30 o'clock. | ‘Waverlys will drill tonight at 7:30 | o'clock at Seventh and O streets. | In their opening game two weeks ago | erlys drubbed the Fort Myer soldier team, 32 to 0. They have booked a tilt with the Virginia A, C. for November 24 at Alexandria and with Irvington A. C. for December 1 at Baltimore. Despite that they were nutweuhed.] Palace A. C. foot ballers of this city fought the Frederick ‘A, C. eleven to a | 6-t0-6 draw yesterday the Maryland city. It was the second game as | many days for the Palace team. | Divers, halfback, scored Palace’s touchdown in the second period when he got off on a 35-yard end run. | Preps have hooked a nme‘d' Arlington with the National Press Building Ca: dinals for the Arlington, Va, gridiron for Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock. 1 Drills will be held tonight and Friday ! mfi-.m by the Preps on the Arlington Schecol grounds, The Preps boast a clever backfleld comprisin arrison, Scheffell, Blue and Tudo Pr Cards will practice tonight Il‘ 7:30 o'clock on the Foxall field, The Centennials' manager is asked to call Johnson of the Cards at Cleveland 6687. Centennlal gridders will work tonight at 7:30 o'clock at the New York avenue P A drill for the Kennedy eleven is Still Seek Game slated tonight at 7:30 o'clock at the Sixteenth Street Reservoir field. Peerless eleven is to meet Thursday night at 7:30 o'clock at 601 K street northeast. The team has recently been strengthened through the addition of new players, FOOT BALL YESTERDAY Western Maryland, 33; Loyola of Bal- imore, 7. Milligan College, 13; Concord, 0. Loyola of New Orleans, 6; Loyola of Chicago, 6. Central College, 14; Penn College, 13. | North Carolina State Freshmen, 46; ‘Wake Forest Freshmen, 0. nllugnolll Aggies, 12; Louisiana Nor- mal, 0. Spring Hill College, 35; Marion In- stitute, 0. Howard Payne, 31; St. Edward (Texas), 7. Carthage, 7; Eureka, 7. Montana State, 13; Wyoming, 0. Guilford, 6; Catawba, 0. St. Thomas, 7; St. Bonaventure, 7. Oklahoma Aggles, 0; St. Louls, U, 0. St. Francis, 6; T. Vincent, 0. ‘Waynesburg, 7; Geneva, 0. Bates, 7; Colby, 6. Arkansas Tech, 7; Ouachita, 7. McMurry Colleg i Daniel Baker, 0. Trinity (Texas), Simmons, 0. Emory and Henry, 28; King Col- ge. 13. Willlam and Mary, 19; Roanoke Col- lege, 6. Texas Christian College, 7; Texas ech, 3. West Texas Teachers, 27; New Mex- ico Military Institute, 0. Platteville State Teachers, 52; Uni- versity of Dubuque, 0. Eveleth Junior College, 46; Bemidji State Teachers, 6. " Intermountain ~ Union, Poly, 6. Occsdcntul College, 28; Whittier Col- lege, 0. . West Virginia Freshmen, 19; Broad- ns College 0. Willinmette, 52; Linfield, 0. X Nfl':’ River Normal, 31; Salem Col- oge, 7. Brigham Young University, 25; Col- orndo Teachers, 13. West Coast Army Service, 6; Na: Buera V'sta, 54: Nebraska West Liberty Normal, Harvey College, 0. Weaver Collegs All-Stars, 38. STUART WINS AT SO0CCER. su’fln u.' 'eulvlr e'gn“:lted loecuunme. un! conquered Gordon Junior H'gh, 2 to 0, e on Monument field. ley , 7; American Legion | to Cornell. Billings | BULLDOG TO MEET TIGER IN 530 GAME Yale Favored to Score Its 28th Win—Many Rivals in East Clash. BY HERBERT W. BARKER, Associated Press Sports Writer. EW YORK, November 12.—With only one intersectional game of any consequence on the pro- gram, Eastern foot ball fans on Saturday will turn to the re- newaleof & half dozen ancient rivalries. New York University’s clash with Missouri of the Big Six heads the inter- sectional slate on the Atlantic Sea- board, but there will be more interest in such games as those involving Yale and Princeton, Cornell and Dartmouth, Penn and Columbia, Colgate and Syra- cuse, Willlams and Amherst, and Tuf's and Béwdoin, all of them rivalries of 30 _years or more. Yale, with little Albie Booth for a spark plug, will be a decided favorite | over a Princeton Tiger able to win only two games this year, both of them over minor opposition. In this rivalry, going back to 1873, Yale has won I7 games, Princeton 16, with 9 ties. Penn’s twentieth meeting with Co- lumbia looks like another triumph for the warriors from Philadclphia, who have beaten Columbia 15 times since 1878. Columbia has won three games, and one was a tie. Williams and Amherst have met 45 times since 1884, with Williams the vir- tor on 24 occasions and Amherst on 17. Four Jlm“ ended In ties. Comparative records this year indicate a closely fought game. Colgate appears to pack too much power for Syracuse’this year and ex- peciu its seventeenth victory of the series. Unbeaten Cornell may not be that way after the thirteenth meeting with Dartmouth, which has won 7 of the 12 previous meetings, the other five going In the last eight meetings tlie two teams have scored an aggregate of 378 points, an average of more than 47 to a game. Tufts looks good enough to record its nineteenth victory over Bowdoin. Pittsburgh's unconquered Panthers take on a hardy city rival 'n Carnegie Tech. Harvard may find the Holy Oross_defense hard to pierce. Davis and Elkins, unbeaten thus far, tackles Harry Stuhldreher’s crack Villanova outfit. One of the toughtest games of the day will bring together Bucknell and Penn State. Georgetown should win from West Virginia. Although the score may be close and Lehigh will be favored over Rutgers. Boston College invades the Mid-West again for a Friday game with Marquette. ATHLETIC “PEP” MEETING TONIGHT AT WODRIDGE An athletic mass meeting is to be held tonight at the Burroughs School in Woodridge by the Burroughs Citi- zens' Association, which plans to per- . | fect an organization that will contrel ) activities of Woodridge young- sters. The meeting will be called at 8 o'clock. Walter Johnson, manager of the Na- tionals, and athletic authorities of the Capital are expected to attend. gl s Ay (L JANNEYS TO MEET. Jmut 1s to be hel n.‘hlw anns C. at 4430 0d w;. road, starting nq:ad o'clock, ™~ LARRY FREUND- Halfback COMMUNITY FIVES ARE T0 BAND AGAIN Center Basket Ball Teams| Meet Tonight—Tossers Get Together. To reorganize the unlimited and senjor class lops of the Community Center Basket Ball League a meeting will be held tonight at the PFranklin School at 8 o'clock. It is planned to have eight teams in each loop, and those first applying for franchises will be_given initial consideration. anagers or representatives of all teams playing or planning to play in | community center gyms are asked to attend the meeting. ‘Washington Grays and Tivoli Whirl- | winds won the unlimited and senior class loop titles, respectively, last Win- ter, when the league had a highly suc- cessful year, | Pullman A. C, which won the week- day base ball league champlonship series here the past season, has organ- ized a basket ball team which will com- pete in the 145-pound division. Players signed include Stead, Brewer, Winchester, Payne, Dennihan, Hall, Smith Melchoir, Bengel and Lay Manager R. G. Payne is listing games at Georgla 0687, Washington Grays will open their court season tonight, entertaining the Comparfy K quint of Fort Washington in the Central High gym at 9 o'clock. The Grays last season, in addition to winning the senior Community Center League title, were victorious in the un- limited section of the Amateur Athletic Union tournament here. Tivoli Whirlwinds, who this season will be known in basket ball circles as Walter's Whirlwinds, are completing their schedule at North 9365. All of last season's dependables are available in addition to a trio of new- | comers. Potomac Boat Club basketers will scrimmage tonight with the Dixie Pigs at Langley Junior High gym at 9 o'clock. Games are being booked by Moseans, senior class basketers, through L. Feld- man at Potomac 1708, \CELTICS TO ENGAGE | RICHMOND GRIDDERS ALEXANDRIA, Va., November 132. St. Mary’s Celtics, who battled the Ir ington A. C. to a scoreless tie in Balti- more on Sunday, will play the Ginter Park A. C. of Richmond here Sunday ll,fl.e:m)cm. at 3 o'clock, in Baggett's ark. The Ginter Park eleven is ranked as one of the Old Dominion’s best, and Is made up of former Virginia college stars.. The team is undefeated this sea- son and has been scored on in only one game. The Celtics have been strengthened considerably by the signing of several new players, including Bussinck and Johnson. Del Ray A. C. will hold its regular weekly meeting tomorrow night at 8 o'clock in its clubhouse on Mount Ver- non avenue, Potomac. Battery A of Fort Myer defeated the Iroquois A. C. by a 6-to-0 count in & game played here in Baggett's Park. A meeting of the Clover A. C. has been called for tonight at 7:30 at the home of Lester Scott in Cottage Park. St. Mary's Celtics will work out to- night, Thnrsdnz‘ and Friday beneath electric lights tt's Park. The drills have been set for 8:30 o'clock by Ceaches “Rubs” Hayman and ‘“Mike” Goldman. R (o PURDUE-IOWA CONTEST WILL BE A SELL-OUT| LAFAYETTE, Ind, November ().—A sell-out crowd of more n 20,000 spectators will watch the struggle between Purdue and Iowa Saturday, in which Purdue's chance of a Western VET G. U. TEAM TO MEET WEST VIRGINIA SATURDAY Battered Hilltop Players to Get Hard Drilling for Contest—Mountaineers May Not Be Able to Use Glenn, Defensive Star, in Tilt Here. BY JOHN B. KELLER. ITH Georgetown's foot ball team it's' just one strenuous week end after another these days. Past contests with New York University and Navy on successive Saturdays, in which it erformed bravely and to no little success, Lou Little’s team is to face West Virginia, another formidable foe, the coming week end. And with Saturday’s engagement being the big feature of the Hoyas’' annual homecoming day program, extra preparations are in order in the grooming of the eleven that the old grads returning to Washington for the event will see on the field a Georgetown team at its peak. The coaches at the Hilltop have planned a heavy trainin grind for the few days left before the Mountaineers are encountered, de?ite the battering the players took in the battling with the Violet and the Midshipmen. 18] Beating West Virginia never has been a particular'lg easy feat e for Georgetown, and, despite some surprising reverses team at Morgantown has suffered this season, it still is accounted powerful and dangerous. ¢ In all likelihood the Hoyas will take the field Saturday with virtually the same line-up that opened against the Midshipmen last week. While several who wore the Blue and Gray in that fruitless encounter are nursing bad bruises, all are able to be out for practice, and should improve considerably physically during the week. If any changes in the line-up occur they undoubtedly will be in the back- fleld. The line played superbly inst Navy, giving about the best exhibition a Georgetown forward wall had in sea- sons. From tackle to tackle ‘t func- tioned admirably in defense and bad the Hoya backs been better able to run their plays probably would have bLeen more impressive in offense. The George- town ends, too, were alert and agile and smeared many Navy plays. Backfield to Be Groomed. More smoothness in the play of the Georgetown backfield is needed, though, to make it efficlent at advancing the ball, and it is this department of the team that will get the special atten- tion of the coaches in preparation for Saturday’'s conflict with the Moun- taineers. Georgetown has plays that should net gains, but little advanta may be had of them until the backfleld ‘:hehcomu more proficlent in executing em. Reports from West Virginia say it is feared the Mountaineers’ captain, Lit- tle Sleepy Glenn, may not be in the line-up that faces Georgetown. Glenn, considered the outstanding defensive gridder produced at West Virginia, is also a corking attacking player, being a fine leader of interference and re- celver of passes. But he was severely injured in the Defroit gaine last Sat- . and is likely to be out of sction e fime, it appears. ‘With Glenn out, the Mountaineers ex- to have to change their style of attack.. Much of the West Virginia of- fensive was built about him. However, in his older brother, Big Sleepy, West Virginia has a very capable halfback who should fit well into any scheme of offensive Coach Rodgers may devise. Other than Little Sleepy Glenn, the West Vi jans have no badly bat- re| . Their line is said to be in especially good trim, considering the hard battles it has been through. In fact, Morgantown should send to Wash- ington for Saturday's affray a team quite fit to give Georgetown a much more than mwreafln& afternoon. wn and West Virginia have been tussling on the gridiron for some years, with the former generally suc- cesstul. The Hoyas were triumphant, 12 to 0, last year, and they are favorites to win this year on the 1929 records of the two teams. Georgetown this Fall has won five games, lost one and tied in one. It has scored 99 points to 7 for the opposition. All the scoring against Georgetown was done in its lone defeat by Western Maryland. West Virginia has won three games, lobt as many, and been in two ties. It has scored 71 points and its opponents 96. The foot ball game Saturday will not be all the entertainment for George- town's alumni and guests at the home- coming celebration. * Festivities will start Friday night with the smoker and | alumni meetlnLu the Willard Hotel, and there will be class reunions Satur- day merning. But the game, of course, will draw the crowd. Tickets alr have been placed on sale, and desirable ooty n Spaldings sport. goods st agency in Spalding’s spor on G street near Fourteenth, or at the athletic office at Georgetown University. NEARLY HALF MILLION TO WATCH ARMY PLAY WEST POINT, N. Y, November 12 (#)—Maj. Philip B. Fleming, graduate manager of athletics at the United States Military Academy, has estimated that a total of 464,000 persons will have seen the Army foot ball team in action when the present season is concluded. This figure breaks all West Point rec- ords for. foot ball ‘The of s s e ing’: tes 40 It West Paint, Boston_ University Gettysburg at Davidson l" admissions for te with Maj. Flem- the four games re- Point, 14,000. '80,000. REG. U.S. PAT. OFF. SMOKE TALKS by the DUTCH MASTERS Fortunately for the man who likes Dutch Masters, this popular brand moves so fast that it is most unusual to find a Dutch Masters in anything but fresh, first-class condition. L We often hear men speak scornfully of “pipe dreams.” We don’t know so much about pipes, but—many’s the great enterprise that was thought & out with the help of & good cigar. - “Hello, Dutch Masters, where have you been all my life?” ‘That’s what you'll say when you smoke your first one. Or have you already said it? Tune in the MASTERS MINSTRELS BES T, Erint w York, Statior A 1 C. Stations