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z 50 —SPORTS. SEES IRISH AS SUPERIOR TO SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA 'Also Feels Hawkeyes Will Take Measure of Purdue In Big Ten’s Big Game—Names Minnesota to Score Over Michigan Eleven. BY BOB ZUPPKE, University of Tllinois Foot Ball Coach. THINK Notre Dame will defeat I scoring from a distance. By this somewhat cumber: probably have more Southern California at Chicago to- morrow because-I believe, the Irish have greater possibility of some expression I mean that they ability to gain by long runs and passes instead of by a succession of “first downs” or slow stages. Where Jones ! at one time Rockne will Pacific Coast foot ba of the country, teams there in the top class—Califs fornia. . Before Southern California played Stanford it had won three games, with 48 points the lowest score, and had been held, 21 to 7, in another. Some of Notre Dame's opponents were weaker than expected, but Saturday, in and out, I believe the Irish have had & tougher seasoning. l{ockne and Jones probably have equal man power, but I imagine ‘Rockn has played more men in games than Jones. Notre Dame is a smart team, and your smart players who do the right thing while the other fellow is hesitating win ball games. Towa Is Better Tested. TN string along with Iowa to beat Purdue in the most important Big Ten game, which wim hha’ve a strong bearing the championship. onPurdue, with Hatmeson, Welch and Yunewich, probably has. the best all- around backfield in the Big Ten and a line that has worked nicely with them. It has been a better passing team than Towa, but the Hawkeyes uncovered & good aerial attack against Minnesota. ‘Glassgow and Pape, Towa's backs, are as as the best and Towa has more brute strength, you might say. Pur- due’s great asset was a rest last Satur- day, while Towa was playing Minnesota. ‘How good Iowa is tomorrow depends upon the amount of punishment the Hawkeyes took last week. Coach Phelan has had a better chance to pre- pare, for Ingwersen probably has had to work his men lightly. Phelan is a smart coach and the Hawkeyes shouldn't count on many lapses by Purdue. ‘With no intent to put poison on Pur- due’s fine showing, the fact remains that Towa has been tested in tougher contests. Purdue has defeated Michi- gan, Chicago and Wisconsin. Iowa has met Ohio State, Wisconsin, Chicago, Il- linois and Minnesota. Iowa is the first of the topnotch teams this season that Purdue has met. Gophers Are Powerful. T select Minnesotg to beat Michigan, Zor the Gophers so'far are a more co- hesive team, but Michigan probably will have its opportunity to win and I shall not be surprised at anything. Indiana, with a rest of two weeks, will be in condition to give Northwestern a brisk battle. T wish we were as certain of winning from Chicago as the experts are. This is one of those traditional rival games in which the alleged underdog can be inspired to play above his head. Even when Chicago has been weaker in the last few years we have had a peck of movpbll!.ht 1920, by the North Amerl 1929, e Nor e (CoPyHIRRE ewabaper Aliiance.) ¥ HARTNETT TO TRY KNIFE TO RELIEVE WEAK ARM CHICAGO, November 15 (#)—Leo “Gabby” Hartnett, Cub catcher who was out of action all last season with an injured arm, has gone to Minneapo- lis, where he will undergo an operation which he hores will put the member back in condition. Visits to bonesetters and rubbers fail- ed to help Hartnett's arm, and he de- Perry Picks Princeton To Conquer Yale Team BY LAWRENCE PERRY. NEW YORK, November 15.—Re- ports from New Haven say that the Yale Bowl, capacity 80-odd thou- sand, could be sold out twice over for the Princeton game Saturday. This is high tribute to the finest element that exists in sport tradi- tion. As to the winner, since the pub- lic demands what in these days of modern foot ball is an essentially hazardous and uncertain indulgence on the part of a foot ball critic, the writer yields and picks Princeton. Princeton has had the material and resources lie within the coach- ing staff wherewith to produce & fine outfit, powerful, hard hitting and versatile. This observer believes that Yale will face such an eleven, a team in a mood and able to turn in one brilliant game as its contri- bution to Princeton foot ball history. Yale has been weak on defending against the forward pass and Nas- sau is likely to prove able to make capital of this weakness. With a passing menace, Princeton can with effect produce running plays. ‘Yale has not done well with the pass and so it would seem the’ Tiger defense may concentrate to a fairly large degree upon stopping Yale's running game. With Abie Booth in the game, Yale's rushing attack will be dangerous and effective. But how long will Booth last? He has been limping since the Maryland game. He is light and durable, but when 140-odd pounds get bumped around by 180 and 200 pounders there must come a sag. The writer is willing, though, to allow two touchdowns to Booth. More would seem excessive. Since, with Booth out of the game Yale is an in- effective_outfit, fhe writer has a hunch that Princeton can score more touchdowns when Booth is not in the game than Yale can when ) JUNOR 3 g 1 The BEST usually costs the LEAST, be- cause in the long run, there is MORE satis: faction, B LESS service and worry. That is why so many thousands of drivers insist on FIRESTONE Tires and Tubes. We Install ]! ’Em €T MopEaX oMo STATI sTA® SERYICE STATION 12th and C Sts. NW. A Block'Below the Avenue at Twelfth —_— OUT OF THE CONGESTED TRAFFIC AREA is able to put one open-fleld runner on the gridiron resent three. 1 may be just as good as that in the rest but, to my mind, it is no better. There are only three | fi ornia, Stanford and Southern Cali- PICKS NOTRE DAME T0 BEAT HIS TEAM Jones, Southern California, Says Charges Have Shown Less Than Rivals. BY HOWARD JONES, Foot Ball Coach, University of Southern California. ability, have no appreciable ef- fect on the race for conference honors. What in normal years would be con- sidered a very important game is the California-Washington contest at Berke- ley. This year, however, Washington showed little until last Saturday, when the Huskies displayed unexpected strength to hold Stanford 6 to 0. Despite this, I do not look for Wash- ington to be particularly dangerous in the California game, provided Coach Price’s men realize they have to play foot ball to win. California has good reserve strength, and Price will no doubt use it, provided the Huskies do aot makes things too warm. California_is the only undefeated team in the Coast Conference and prob- ably will go into the Stanford game with a clean slate. This has been a season of remarkable uj however, and it won't do for California to count the Washington gamé won in advance. Oregon State College and the Uni- versity of Oregon meet in their annual classic for State honors. If the uni- versity wins, and it should, it will have a right to share Northwest honors with Washington State. The game between the University of Southern California and Notre Dame in o will attract national atten- tion. Notre Dame is one of the few this with a great record Irish can any eleven in national ndns. Notre Dame has a backfleld compara~ ble to the famous “Four Horsemen,” ;'&du' line capable of taking care of Southern California should be in good condition to meet Rockne's team, but will have to play much better than re- cently if the Trojans expect to make 1t a close contest. If the fleld is dry the spectators will see a game of . On the showing of the two teams to date, Notre Dame is naturally favored to win. Washington State, which has lost only one this year, plays Montana in a game which should result in another victory for the Pullman team. Stan- ford has a letdown before the California contest, meeting Santa Clara in & gmt the Cardinals should win as they please. St. Mary’s appears in Los Angeles for the first time this season, playing the University of California at Los Angeles. St. Mary's has not been scored upon or defeated this year. This is the team that held California to a_scoreless file and outgained the Golden bears both In yardage and downs. “Slip” Madigan, former Notre Dame player, coaches St. Mary's. His team should defeat Uni- versity of California by several touch- downs. (Copyright, 1920, North American Newspaper Alliance.) TURNER LOSES DECISION TO DANVILLE WRESTLER Joe Turner, veteran Washington mid- dleweight wrestler, lost the decision to Dick Gravely, 23-year-old grappler from Danville, Va., last night at the Strand ter. Dan Koloff easily defeated Abe Kap- lan of Pittsburgh, in the headliner. George Romanoff downed Al Joss in the custain-raiser. OT BALL games by Pacific Coast | G teams tomorrow will, in all prob- . : THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1929. ELIGIBLES NAMED FOR BASKET LOOP Prince Georges League Will Start Monday—To Stage Four Games a Week. H first half of the season was adopted at a meeting of the board of managers of ince Georges County Basket' Ball League held last night in the National Guard Armory here. League play 'nm open Monday night with two games. All contests will be played on the armory YATTSVILLE, Md, November 15.—Eligible players were pass- oor. There will be four games a week—one each Sunday afternoon, two each Mon- day night and the other Thursday night. The Sunday aftern and ‘Thursday night engagements will be played as preliminaries to contests in which Company F will ehgage teams outside of the league. All Company F league games will be played Mondays. Company F and Hyattsville Southern Methodists and Maryland Collegians and Mount Rainier A. C. will clash in the opening games Monday night, Aside from_these teams, four other quints make Wp the league, including Dixie Pig A. C., pennant winner last season; Brentwood Hawks, which were runners-up: Dor-A and A C. ‘The eligible list: pDixie Pie, A Bob = k. _Smith, Wiegel, ~Nicholson, s Radtke, Waldrop, Keefer and Ham: on. Brentwood Hawks—John Wanley, man- ager: LaVere Kopp, Claude Simpson, Ber- nard Beale, Stanley O'Donnell. Dean Win- chester, Charles Bailey, Albert Lewis. Doc Hessler, Joseph Canavin, Fraacis wWiler. Roland’ Atkins, Wiliis Fisher, 8. Harrls' and y. Company F—R H. Vincent. manager: Jeft ix, J. B. Troy, J. W. Shanklin,_ Sammy Crosthwait, C. J.'Lauer, L. Ruche. F. Cogar, L. Bassford, Churles Parish. F. M. Richard, 8. Chase and W. Dor-A—Payne Hunt, H. Dobbs. Williams, S. Lewl land. W, Robinsoa, Berwyn A dings. H . Werber, Penn. T. Carroll, Loftus and Rosenthaw. Mount Rainier—Hobert Bellman. manager: Howard _Smith, _Albert ~McClay, William Noack, Edward’ Goodwin, Kenneth Clayton, Louls 'Barns, Alfred Bellman, Heury Bell: cDowell. ollegians—Robert Middleton, uck Middleton. Alvin “MeDevitt. Kitehin, = Dolphin Lyles, manager; 00! Zahn, fig mi anage D. M. Fauntleroy, J. Troy. J. J. Mayhew, Fiddies Hol- P. Brown F. Gld- w. J. Hamilton, Paul ~ Reeley, Weber, Herbert Kelser, dette Cogar, Edw: Anthony Burke, John Middieton and Tom thern, Methodiste—W., T. Connors. Hyattsville Luman, mana ard Smith, Leonard Sm an Garne: Rolph Jarrell. Adomar Winegartner, Walter Burdick, Ardley Hart, Vernon Clark, Walton Arnold.’ Ralph Pistol, Morris Flory and Lioyd Contes. The First-Half Schedule. November 18—Company F_vs. Hyattsville Southern ~Methodists, Maryland Collegians vs, Mount Rainier A. November 21—Brentwood Hawke vs. Dixle Piz A. C November 24—Dor-A vs. Berwyn A. C. November_256—Company P vs. Maryland Colleglans, Dixie Pig A. C. vs. Mount Rain- fer A. C. November. 28—Hya odists vs. Berwvn A. C. Decemier 1 —Dor-. r 3 C.. ; ins Sqythern Meihodists, Decomber 5—Berwyn A. C. vs. Brentwood Apéce'mber 8—Dor-A vs. Mount Ralnier ‘December 9—_Company F vs. Brentwood awks, Dixle Pig A. O. vs. Maryland Col- Tane. Mk%‘:mhfl 12_Hyattsville Southern Meth- ‘December . 15-—Berwyn A. C. vi. Mount Rainier A. C. Decembér . 16—Company ¥ vs. Mounf Rainier A. C.. Hvattsville Southern Meth- odists vs. “Brentwood Hawks. December 19—Dixie Pig A. C. vs. Dor-A. 23—Maryland Collegians vs. 3—Company F vs. Dor-A: Hy- attsville Methodists vs. Mount Rainier A Dosember " 26_Maryland Collestans Brentwood Hawks. December 29--Dixie Pig A. C. vs. Berwyn A.C. r 30—Company P va. Berwyn A. lle” Southern Meihodists ~ va. ‘Brentwood Hawks vs. Mount Rafnier A. January 5—Maryland Collegians vs. Dor-A. - K. OF C. BOXERS ENGAGE BALTIMOREANS TONIGHT Six interclub boxing bouts are listed tonight at the Knights of Columbus Hall when the Casey glovemen will entertain the Federal A. C. battlers of Baltimore, starting at 8 o'clock. It will be the first appearance of the season wy) Decem vs. for the K. C. boxers. There also will be seven bouts among members of the Catholic Boys’ Club and the Ne-Hi Boxing Club, and four others between glovemen of District organizations. Making up the K.-C. line-up will be Mickey Harris, flyweight; Miles McLean, bantam; Nevin Barber, feather; Leo Coveleskie and Rooney Collins, light- welghts, and Joe Madden, welterweight. TROUSERS To Match Your Odd Coats EISEMAN'S, 7th & F ed upon and a schedule for the | 8 t | hole at Rock Creek Park. VIRGINIA MIDGETS TO PLAY AJAX A. C. e ALEXANDRIA, Va, November 15.— Virginia Midgets have booked the Ajax A. C. of Washington for a game Sun- day at 1 o'clock on Shipyard Field. The contest will be staged as a pre- liminary to the Seamen Gunners-Vir- ginia A. C. game, which will get under way two hours later. Del Ray A. C. is without a game for Sunday and would like to hear from some 135 or 150-pound eleven willing to travel to Edward Duncan Fleld in Potomac. Phone Manager Guy Cam- den at Alexandria 726, between 7 and .m. '614 Dominion Boat Club members will hold an oyster roast Sunday after- noon at Fort Foote, Md. Episcopal High foot ball squad will leave here ®arly tomorrow morning for Winchester, Va., where thé’ Shenandoah Valley Academy eleven will be played in the afternoon. St. Mary's Celtics will report at Baggett's Park at 8:30 o'clock for thelr final drill before facing the sturdy Ginter Park A..C. of Richmond here Sunday in the park at 3 o'clock. FEELS TEAM WILL RISE T00CCASION Princeton Needs Victory to Brighten One of Worst Seasons in History. BY W. W. ROPER, Princeton Foot Ball Coach, HIS week ends the Princeton foot ball season for 1929. It will close as one of the most disastrous Princeton has had for a long time unless the Tigers can pull themselves together tomorrow and come back with their old-time fighting spirit. Princeton-Yale games nearly always have been close and the winner uncer- tain up to the last whistle, and no doubt the game tomorrow will be like- wise. Yale, with Booth, looks invincible. STRAIGHT OFF, THE TEE T I8 not often that eagles are scored on the golf courses about Wash- ington, even in these days of the lively golf ball and ‘the lengthy wallop from the tee. But yester- day, on two widely separated courses, two of these elusive birds were bagged, one coming at Washington from the spade mashie of S8am Rice, the Pld; dock of the Washington ball club's outfleld, and the other from the trench- ant blade of G. C. Todd. Rice made his eagle on the eighth hole at Indian Spring, holing & spade shot of 145 yards for the deuce on this par 4 affalr and thereby becoming little less than & pain in the neck to Bill Smith, Joe Judge and C. F. O'Connell. Todd's eagle was an ace on the th hole at the Washington Golf and Coun- try Club, a hole on which not more than a few 1s have been scored since the hole was opened for play about seven years ago. It came, strangely enough, from & full shot played with a No. 1 iron into the bank short of the green, the ball bouncing up with Just enough force to roll over the elevated edge of the green and into the cup. Todd was playing in_a game with Dr. E. E. Huffer and Dr. W. J. Snow. That ninth hole at Washington has been singularly unproductive of aces, perhaps because of its character, for the hole rates as one of the most difficult one- shotters about the Capital, even though it is but 190 yards long. The front edge of the green is raised above the fairway and a ball struck on the green itself often goes_over, while a ball which hits into the bank stops short. Todd’s ball had just sufficient run left to hop the short bank and roll into the cup. Rice's eagle 2 on the eighth hole at Indian Spring came at a time when the ball player, who probably is the best of the many southpaw golfers about ‘Washington, was not going so good. But Rice got himself all pepped up by vl e the, deuce .and proceeded to make a par 3 on the ninth hole to get out in 35, and finish the round with a fine card of 73. Rice's ball hit about 10 yards short of the pin and rolled true to the hole, dropping in without any qQuestion of the merit of the shot. The hole is 385 yards long. And day before yesterday John Leo Coontz scored an ace on the thirteenth Playing in a two-ball game with James J. N. Mil- ler, Coontz holed his iron tee shot on this 174-yard affair. The ace did not aid his score very much, however, for he played the last nine, holes in 46 strokes just the same. That fitth green at Rock Creek Park, which has been a trouble maker for many years because of inadequate drainage, has been entirely rebuilt and made into a green which would delight any greenkeeper's eye. The greens force yesterday completed resodding the putting surface and today are filling with sand ‘a deep and large bunker which will catch shots played short of the green. ‘The level of the entire green has been raised several feet and 17 drain ‘yl»es put in under the sod to,carry off the water. The hole will remhin the same length—slightly more than 100 yards. Manager Harry Graham of Rock Creek says the fourth green may be recon- structed this Winter, with the front edge of the putting service scheduled to be cut away so the entire green may be seen from a good tee shot. Heretofore it has not been possible to see the surface of the green. ‘The *oily boids” at Rock Creek Park continue their golfing peregrinations early in the morning, notwithstanding the fact that they have to get up long before dawn to reach the frost-covered ond round with the following results: First round—Stoddard defeate: . Par- sons " defented Dickinsons Inrvis - defented fented B Tasior, White deféated BKinner. Bryant - defeated "Knott, Bearce defeated en. ond round—Stoddard defeated Parsons, 3: Jarvis defeated Green, White de- ed Taylor. 1 up in 19 holes; Bryant de- feated Bearce. Fred McLeod needed 3, 4 on the last two holes to score a 69 and finish in the money in the Midsouth open, and in trying for & 3 he took a 5. The little Columbia mentor, who led. the Washington entrgnts in the tourney which ended at ehurst on Wednes- day, scored a 70 for his final round of the 36-hole event, but he felt that a 3 on the eighteenth hole would give him a shot at first money. In the attempt to secure the birdie he half-hit his second shot and took & 5. A 4 on the hole would have put him in a tie for last place. At the time McLeod fin- ished Willie Klein, the ultimate winner, 'was far behind, and n® one knew he was to score as well as did. So McLeod went boldly for his 3, believing that a score of 143 might get him into a tie for fitst place. He says he played bet- ter golf on his morning round of 75 gll;nn in "Tn afternoon when he mfl fact it he‘mm three good putts in the afternoon, while he was unable Wl in morning to hole & putt of any considerable length. All the men who made the trip to play in the professional tourney, were enthusiastic in their praise for the condition of the course at Pinehurst and the manner in which they were received by the management. ‘The_trip to Pinehurst was the first time J. Munro Hunter had played on the course, and he said he was unable to judge the distances, particularly with the medium iron shots. Invariably, he said, his mashie shots and longer irons shots were short qf the green, leaving him a lengthy run-up shot. —_ ——— * More than 200 students at Princeton are playing foot ball. —~SALE~ New Dodge Cars NEVER BEEN DRIVEN Displayed in Our Showroom Only New Dodge Brothers Sixes D R 4-Door Sedan, Standard............. $995 4-Door Sedan, De Luxe................$1,065 Business Coupe ........aueooomeenns $895 Coupe, De Luge. ...cmisooiicmmssocss S99 Standard Victoria .........commeenes Roadster (6 wire wheels)............$1,020 ale Price Regular ver Delivered Price $1.080 $1,130 $1,200 $1,080 $1,160 $1,160 $1,255 $975 New Dodge Brothers Seniors 5-Passenger Sedan .................$1,49% cerseesneesanm. < $1,495 Roadster (6 wire wheels)............$1,495 Landau Sedan ... Standard Coupe ... $1,760 $1,810 $1,760 $1,900 All Cars Fully Equipped Wire wheels and fender wells available on all models at slight additional cost The Trew Motor Co. JOSEPH B. TREW, Pres. 1509 14th St. N. W. Phone Decatur 1910 Open Daily Till 10 P. M.—Sunday 9 A. M, Till § P. M. 1. C. Barber Motor Co. 1805 14th St. N. W. Kaplan & Crawford, Inc. 2329 Champlain St. N. W. It has won from Brown, Army and Dartmouth in succession, a_.record any team would be . Even though Maryland tled the score last Saturday, tfi:t was after Booth had been taken To date Princeton has don€ very lit- tle. Except for the Navy game, when the boys produced enough come-back to tie the score, and flashes of power in the Lehigh game, they have shown nothing, Princeton will have to show tremendous improvement to make to- morrow's game close. The meeting of these traditional rivals is the outstand- ing.battle of the week. Harvard Victory Is Seen. Harvard meets Holy Cross at Cam- bridge. Last year they had a 0-0 tle. Holy Cross always puts up a good game at Cambridge, and Harvard has had little time to recuperate from the trip to Ann Arbor. However, I pick Harvard to win, as it has a good, fast team. It ut up a good game against Michigan, osing by only two points, and showed a splendid passing attack. The Cornell-Dartmouth game should be interesting. Cornell has one of its best teams in several years. The line charges well and Wakeman's a great tackle. Dartmouth has a strong team and seems to have found a capable substitute for Marsters in Morton, who played a great game against Brown, Penn plays Columbia in New York, and should win. Last year Penn won, 34—7, but if Columbia can stage a come-back after the Colgate game I look for a close battle. Colgate and Syracuse play at Syracuse. Colgate has & good ali-around team and a line with a splendid ohar[e It should defeat E Pltt!lsreu. h, still rgh, undefeated, Carnegle Tech, and I think Plfil.n::lll win. The game will be interesting. So far Notre Dame is the only team that hu‘ onn rmg;u%flnegle, though W. and J. tied. as splendi Uansa and Parkinson. i ke i Cravats, in The Men’s Store. SPORTS. Zuppke Picks Notre Dame, Iowa : Roper Thinks Tigers Will Give Yale a Battle Tech and Business Will Lose Number of Their Grid Players IVE games were listed today for schoolboy foot ball teams of the District area. ‘Tech and Business were to meet in a public school cham< pionship battle in the Central Stadium at 3:30 o'clock in a game which the McKinley team was expected to ‘win easily and gain an undisputed title for the second season in succession; Gon- zaga and St. John's were to clash on the new Gonzaga field at 3 o'clock in & battle that was expected to prove close; Georgetown Freshmen and Dev- itt were to mix on the Georgetown Uni- versity fleld at 3 o'clock in another con- test figured to be well contested; Lan- don and Woodward were to try con- clusions on Monument gridiron No. 1 at 3:30 o'clock, with Woodward the fa- vorite, and Georgetown Prep and Swavely were to have it out at Garrett Park at 3:30 o'clock, with the home eleven given the edge. Tech and Business were to play their last games in the championship series, and it also was to be the last title game for several members of both elevens. Before another grid season’ arrives the McKinley team will lose such re- liable players as Capt. Willis Benner. left end; Lawrence Stutz, left tackle; Austin Winston, center; Mufius Gelger, right guard; Hubert Hoy, right end; Aubrey Spencer, quarterback, and Dun- bar Goss, fullback. Luther Goldman, left’ guard, probabiy will be available ts ;un}y a part of next season because of age. Clever players who will be available again_include Sid Kolker, right tackle, and Dick Nelson, Joe Yznaga and Al Reichman, halfbacks. Coach Hap Hardell, despite these losses, says that Tech should have a better eleven next Fall than this year, when the McKinley outfit started with only two letter winners, Goss and Ben- ner, but he doubts whether his team #1ll'be as good. He fears that its mental condition will not be conducive to the best playing. Realizing that it was handicapped by inexperience and was at other disadvantages the Maroon and Gray has put everything it has in its play this season, but next Fall the Tech boys will start with the knowledge that they are better off as to experienced material, and this may react against them. At least, that is the way Hardell dopes it at this time. He will lose two specialists in Benner, a finished ball receiver, and Spencer, & consummate heaver of the pigskin. Business expects to retain must of its leading players, including York Mills, end; Vernon Johnson, halfback; Harry Hyman, right guard; Sam Levy, left tackle; Linwood Jones, right end; Jack Reichardt, right halfback; Allen Ham, tackle; Alec Biondi, left halfback; Bob Cook, center; Duryee, fullback; Stuart Donnan, left guard; Plant, guard; Mar- golis, guard; Louis Jenkins, left tackle: Charlie Furr, tackle; Ivan Koontz, right ard; Jacobson and Oddone, guards; juck Harding, fullback, and Strasser, back. Capt. Fred Finley, right tackle; Abe Shapiro, center; Lester Jones, quarter- back; Joe Weitz, guard; Willard, right tackle, and perhaps Loftus, left end, are the dependables the Stenogs are listed to lose. It would seem that Coach Lynn ‘Woodworth should have considerably more to work with in 1930 than he had at the start of the current campaign. WoopwARD & LoTHROP Tue MENS STORE, SECOND FLOOR' JOIN THE RED CROSS Men’s Winter Overcoats $24.75 Far Below Regular Selling Price. A very timely purchase enables us to offer a limited number of new and authentically styled Overcoats, at this unusually low price. Tai- lored of this season’s most wanted fabrics . . . in medium and dark patterns, as well as plain blues and grays . . the same coats one will find in our regular stock at a much higher price. Men’s and Young Men's models, in single and double breasted effects. THr MzN’s StoRE, Sxconp FLoos. SILK CRAATS $2 to $8 ‘THE MEN's StoRE, SEcOND FLOOR, Tomorrow is the last day to visit this special exhibit of Resilio Silk Tailored of richly colored silks from France, Switzerland and Italy, with the patented Resilio construction, that makes them tie better and hold their shape longer. Whatever your favored. color or pattern you will find it in this exhibit.