Evening Star Newspaper, November 26, 1929, Page 33

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- [swene | The Fpening Shar. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, WASHINGTON, D. C, 1929, PAGE 33 Cornell May Come Out of Foot Ball “Wilderness ITHACANS ARE FAVORITES FOR CONTEST WITH PENN Figure to Get Revenge for 49-10-0 Beating of Last Year and Other Reverses—Local Squads Look to Thanksgiving Day. BY H. C. BYRD. ORNELL and Pennsylvania attraction for Thanksgiving day. ill the stands are to be played, but none offers as much that is attractive as the one in which the Ithacans are to meet the from Cornell’s view, as it has better And, in remembering that 49-to-0 debacle last Thanksgiving, the thought that their team should be Quakers. Especially is this true than an even chance to win. the victor this Fall is as manna Cornell alumni. rison of the two elevens so far this Fall, Cornell seems e a Hlont It has lost only one game—that to Dart- to have a slight margin. mouth—and it really should in its have wn territory, and Dartmouth intercepted one and turne o : To put the situaion in a little different way, Cornell should be facing Penn Thursday as an undefeated eleven. g of a proposition. into a touchdown. Penn is not a set-up by any means, as its victory over Navy roves, but that it can be beaten gy teams that are not champions is proved by its defeats at the hands of California and Penn State. Penn has a good team, but has hardly shown as much strength as Cornell against Dart- mouth. The fact that the two teams are of such caliber that a great game is in prospect, wauld in itself be sufficient to fill the stands at Franklin Field, were nothing else involved. But with the long rivairy between Penn and Cor- nell there is involved just double the interest. Any game between Penn and Cornell is a great game, no matter what the pre-game calib>r of the team, as the long rivalry between them gives the game about the same glamor,that attaches to the Yale-Harvard contest. ‘Many_people from Washington will make the journey to Philadelphia to attend. Alumni of both schools, antici- ting & great contest are likely to put orth unusual eforts to be among those present. Cornell has not had the edge on Penn so often in the last few years and this makes the game unusual for Cornell alumni. Notwithstanding that North Carolina “has a_ brilliant record and one of the most brilliant of all Southern elevens, Virginia is working away with a will to break that record. Word from Char- Jottesville mdicate that there is some hope of winning from the Tarheels, al- though a comparison bstween the two teams on a basis -of their showing egainst other schools would not seem to offer much reason for it. Virginia will meet a team different from any that it has faced all season. ‘The Tarheels will play harder foot ball than any of the teams Virginia has played and they have a backfield that actually is better than the grouo of ¥ Virginia's line. . However, infa in a frame of mind to do or die, it may be that a great upset will be provided. And a victory for the Cavallers would be an upset, the most remarkable of the year in the South. Virginia Polytechnic Institute and Virginia Military Institute are getting ready for thelr battle at Roanoke. Both schools have strong teams, but in all probability V. M. I. will start the game ‘with a slight edge, because it has besn a little more consistent. V. P. I has three defeats charged against it and V. M. L. two. The. former lost to Penn, North Carolina and Maryland, while the Jatter dropped games to Florida and Kentucky. On the other hand V. M. I has no such fltl} battle to its credit as V. P. L staged at Philadelphia against Pennsylvania, and it has no such over- whelming victories to its credit as V. P. | 1. won from Washington and Lee and Virginia. The two teams seem evenly enough matched to provide a great foot ball game. V. M. I has won the last two years and it may be V. P. L's turn, even if it may not seem’ quite as strong as it has been at times. The game should be a good exhibition of foot ball and probably will draw by far the largest crowd that has watched a con- test in Virginia in years. Maryland's varsity foot ball squad went through another hour of scrim- mage yesterday afternoon, or rather last night to be more accurate in the statement. The scrimmage was staged under the flood lights and all 30 men who are likely to see service against Hopkins Thanksgiving day took part. ‘The scrimmage was held against a combination team of freshmen and varsity squads, and that eleven offered a good deal more opposition than any other team that could have been put on the fleld. The game has always been something of a nightmare to Maryland, as it seldom knows what kind of op- position it must face. At times the College Park eleven has gone to Balti- more with the odds overwhelmingly in its favor only to find that it was against favor and only two minutes to go, forward passes were tried the leading Eastern foot ball offer Other contests that should to the starved foot ball minds of been victor then. With the score d it the toughest kind Usually it has required about all that Maryland has had to put out to win from the Baltimoreans and sometimes that has not been enough. The Colgate-Brown game at Provi- dence ought to be well worth watch- ing and probably will be just as good a contest of foot ball as the Penn-Cornell clash Thanksgiving. Both Colgate and Brown have been playing consistently good foot ball all year. Penn State is not likely to stop Pitts- burgh, but may put up a far better game than generally is expected. Pitt has a great foot ball team, so great that one man who watched it play said that he could easily pick the first and second strongest elevens in the United States, the first being Pitt’s first team and the second being Pitt's second team. Catholic University and George ‘Washington are preparing for their an- nual struggle, although to class the forthcoming game at Brookland as a struggle may be adding a touch of dignity to it that it may not deserve. However, George Washington is mak- ing every possible effort to get in sha to put up the kind of game that reflect credit on its season, while Catholic University is striving to pre- vent just that. The Brooklanders have 2 season behind them and they have no desire to see it ruined by hav- ing the Buff and Blue do something entirely unexpected. \CELTS TO BE HOSTS T0 SEAT PLEASANT ALEXANDRIA, Va., November 26— St. Mary's Celtics, who startled the foot ball fans hereabout by their bril- 's Park. will drill toni ‘Thursday at 7:30 pm. in Park and tomorrow and Priday nights at 8:30 pm. in the same inclosure. Iriquois ‘A. C., of this city, and Del Ray A. C. of Potomac, have ed negotiations for a second contest for | the 135-pound championship of North- | ern Virginia and the two teams prob- | ably will mest again Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock on Edward Duncan Field in Potomac. The two elevens battled to a score- less tie in their first titular game the past week end. Virginia A. C. will practice every night this week at 7 o'clock bepeath electric lights at King and Lee streets. Manager | Pat Gorman has not obtained a game | for Sunday as yet, but will bring some spesdy eleven here. “Hack” Wilson, Chicago Cub outfield- er, will bring his Hose Co. No. 5 eleven from Martinsburg, W. Va., to this city Thursday for a holiday game ‘with the Virginis eleven in Baggett's Park at 3 o'ctock. of Potomac, will werk- Del Ray A. tomorrow night on out tonight their Turkey day contest with the Fred- ericksburg Collegians at Fredericksburg, Va., Thursday. . IOO-POUNDEil.RS MAY PLAY BIG GAME PRELIMINARY CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. Novem- ber 26 (#).—Holy Name Midgets of Co- lumbus, Ohio, have accepted the chal- lenge of the Fives, Charlottesville's midget foot ball team, sponsored by the University of Virginia, for a game to decide the national 100-pound class championship. Negatiations are under way for this contest to be played next Saturday, either in New York before the Army- Notre-Dame game or in Philadelghia before the Navy-Dartmouth scrap. Well Drilled Emerson Team To Tackle Baylor Saturday the Baylor eleven of Chatta- nooga, Tenn., Saturday after- noon in Griffith Stadium at 2 o'clock has Jost four of its nine games this season, three of the four defeats have been at the hands of strong college freshmen elevens. Woodberry Forest School of Orange, Va., is the only team in the prep or high school group which has conquered Emerson, the Old Do- minion scholastics having turned the trick in the Capital City team's opening game of the season, 8 to 0, at Orange. After bowing to Woodberry Forest, Emerson drubbed Business, 27 to 0, and St. John's Junior Varsity of Annapolis, Md., 26 to 0. Following a 12-6 defeat at the hands of Catholic Universiry Freshmen, the P Streeters came back to down Eastern, a sturdy opponent, 21 to 0. Willlam and Mary Freshmen and George Washington Yearlings, both sturdy combinations, then polished off Emerson, 13 to 0 and 23 to 0, after which the latter took La Salle Prep of Cumberland to camp, 20 to 0, and Cul- peper, Va., High over the hurdles by the same score. Bulky Prep Team. HOUGH Emerson Institute's foot I ball team, which will entertain Emerson will send an eleven against | Baylor which has a line averaging 165 pounds and a backfield averaging 150. Its attack has speed, deception and force. Buck Kilroy, fullback, is a triple threater, while Ellet Cabell and Jackie Lewis, quartesback and left halfback, respectively, are speed merchants, and form the pass combination. Pug Shugrue, left guard, and Jack Macdonald, right guard, each of whom scale 185 pounds, are the heaviest of the Emerson players, © ‘ Emerson’s probable starting line-up for the Baylor game £ Paul Albert, left end; Russell Sutton, left tackle; Pug Shugrue, left guard: Doty Trilling, center; Jack Macdonald, right guard; Bob West, right tackle: Jack Forney, right end; Ellet Cabell, | quarterback; Jakie Lewis, left halfback: | Ray Davidson, right halfback, and Buck Kilroy, fullback. | Reserves include Joe Longest, guard; Dick Kelso, Fauntleroy, Red Simonton, centers; Jack Scanion, right halfback; Francis Taylor, right guard, and Jack Clifford, left tackle. Emerson is practicing hard | for the game, eralizing that in Baylor they will be meeting an, unusually strong team, Experienced Coach. Harley Page Sanborn, coach of the Emerson eleven, has had a varied ex- perience in tutoring athletic teams. In 1926 he was coach of the University of North Carolina basket ball quint that won the Southern Conference cham- pionship. Before that he coached at Virginia Polytechnic Institute. He also| has tutored various sports at other| schools here and this Fall has developed | at Emerson what doubtless is one of the sturdiest elevens that has representgd ine P street school in some years, | Music will be furnished at Saturday's game by the Boys' Independent Band and arrangements are being made to give the Chattanooga boys a fine time. | Paul (Maggie) Magoffin, regarded as one of the best referees in this section, | will handle the game, according to an- | :muncemem today by Emerson authori- | fes. Though the Baylor game is the lutl scheduled engu-mem on the l:merwnl card the P Streeters may endeavor to book & post-season’ clash with the Staunton Military Academy eleven of Staunton, Va., which has won the prep |achool title of the Old Dominion. ¥ Edward Duncan Field at 7 o'clock for | da; THE GREATEST OF ALL - EG MURRAY oF HARVARD. 3~ ERE is a roll-call of gridiron immortals, all-time All- America backfield stars. » These are the boys who. made the runs and threw the passes, who crashed over the goal line for the touchdowns that meant victory. The eleven men \shown above all thrilled crowds with *their speed, their skill, their daring and their strength, and don't forget that many of them were not just born foot ball players, but only reached perfection after years of perseverance and practice. ‘Who was the greatest one of all? Jim Thorpe? Perhaps; though Pop . .. Warner, who “peached Thorpe at :'Notre Dame-Army Game Heads of JLLNoo. Carlisle, rates Ernie Nevers of Stan- ford a little bit higher. Why? “Thorpe was just a little bit lazy,” explains Pop. Coach “Hurry-Up” Yost likes Willie Heston best. (Funny, isn't it, how these coaches pick some star that they have coached as the great- est player of all time!) Yost's all- time All-America backfield consists of Eckersall at quarterback, Heston and Thorpe at half and Ted Coy at full. You've got to go some to beat that quartet. Coach Howard Jones of Sounther California is a great bo~:.er for Ted “He vuu#r;&pahu" Jones "OfiTe, Al doubt 1if he Some Old Rivalries This Week BY HERBERT W. BARKER. Associated Press Sports Writer. number of fine old Eastern foot ball rivalries will be re- newed this week, most of them on Thanksgiving day, but one of the most important—Army and Notre Dame—on Saturday. Before the Cadets and the Ramblers from South Bend, Ind, put on their spectacular struggle at the Yankee Sta- dium, such ancient feuds as Cornell- Eenn, Pitt-Penn State, Washington and Jefferson-West Virginia and Brown- Colgate will have been fought again. Added to the program will be such com- bats as Carnegie Tech-New York Uni- versity on Thanksgiving day and the Dartmouth-Navy, Villanova-Temple and Boston College-Holy Cross frays two ys later. Of traditional meetings this week the Cornell-Penn duel is the oldest. With the exception of the war year of 1918 the and Blue and the Red have battled annually since 1893. Penn holds a decided edge in the series with 26 vic- tories in 35 games. Cornell has won 7 and 2 were tied. Cornell, with one of Varies Strategy Against Tigers BY SOL METZGER. ‘When the Navy scored its first touchdown against Princeton, it used a scheme in taking out the defensive end who was flanked that strikes me as new to foot ball. As the method of disposing of this end differed a great deal from the way Navy had taken out the Notre Dame end two weeks before, Princeton was decided- ly fooled on the play. No. 4 back, the man in motion, S e Frageas e T = took the ball from center and cut at top speed around the defensive left end. Backs Nos. 2 and 3 led him, running shoulder to shoulder at the Princeton end. As they neared him No. 3 cut him down, in- stead of No. 2, as against Notre Dame. The effective part of the play was the way back No. 2 cut down field and took out the defensive half on iiat side. This cleared the way for the runner, who dodged the Tiger safety man and scored. Undoubtedly Navy will use this play against Dartmouth this week in an attempt to match the end run- ning of Marsters, one of the great backs of the season. Next we'll take a look at a very clever play that has featured the work of strong Syracuse team this Fall. (Cowyrisht, 1929.) EW YORK, November 26.—A | | lengers. the best teams in the East, hopes to gain its frst victory over Penn since Pitt’s unbeated and untied Panthers, meeting Penn State for the twenty-fifth consecutive year, should gain its seven- teenth victory in the series with the Nittany Lions, who have had an in-and- out season this year. Penn State has beaten Pitt only seven times since 1904 and has to go way back to 1919 to point | with pride to a triumph over the Pan- thers, although the games of 1920 and 1921 were scoreless ties. ‘The Syracuse-Columbia battle is the ninth in & series. that began in 1901. Columbia has only one victory and a tie to show against Syracuse's six tri- umphs and the chances are all against a Lion win this year. Colgate seems to pack enough punch to avenge a number of defeats Brown has pinned on the Maroons’ record since 1917. Of the nine previous games, Brown won five; Colgate one and three were tied. The annual turkey day l\),l“\‘:ule‘bet;lien W. and J. and West ‘ginia’s Mountaineers finds - dents decided favorites. it Notre Dame will be after its eleventh victory over the Army when these rivals of 16 years' standing get to- gether in the outstanding game of the week on Saturday. Knute Rockne's Ramblers have won 10 of the 15 previ- ous meetings; the Army four with one tie. - Notre Dame, unbeaten and un- tied, will be a heavy public choice over the Cadets, who have yet to win a major game this season. Notre Dame will be handicapped by the absence of Rockne, who is ill, and Moynihan, star center, who suffered a broken leg in the Northwestern game on Saturday. ‘The other four outstanding games of the week are more or less toss-ups. Carnegie Tech and New York University each have been beaten twice by strong opponents but the Scotch from Pitts- burgh look a trifle stronger. Dartmouth, even without Al Marsters, figures to pack more punch than the Navy which has experienced a disappointing season. Any edge that may exist between Bos- ton College and Holy Cross on the one hand, and Temple and Villanova on the other, lies in the eye of the beholder, There's nothing in the records to indi- fl:::enlny marked advantage for any of GIRLS’ HOCKEY TEAMS TO PLAY DECEMBER 7 Mount Vernon Seminary varsity hockey eleven will play the Madeira School team on Saturday, December 7, on the Alaska avenue fleld at 11 o'clock in the morning, it' was an- nounced yesterday by Miss Jean Pear- son, the new hockey coach for Mount Vernon, ‘This game will mark the only ap- pearance of Miss Pearson’s squad on the interscholastic field. Madeira will play several other schools, including Holton Arms, Eastman and possibly an’ out-of-town opponent. Mount Vernon is drilling hard in the hope of gaining revenge for the trim- ming received at Madeira's hands last eason upon the occasion of the firsc clash on a hockey field between the | two schools. Six of the 1928 squad are back to bolster the defense of the chal- Madeira has a ftw timers” as a nucleus, too. Neither team thn.s announced its starting line-up as yet. QUITS ATHLETIC BODY. COLUMBUS, Ohio, Novémber 26 (). ~~Whittenberg College of ‘Springfield, Ohio, withdrew from the Buckeye In- tercollegiate Athletic Association at if annual meéefing because of un- justified attacks made by other members of the association. . ' “‘old- NGTON- Metropolitan Newspaper Service ever really extended himself to the limit. He wasn't so very fast, but he stayed on his feet. He never side- stepped a tackler, he just ran right over him!" (Nice feller!) ‘Well, let's see what we have now. Eckersall, great fleld goal artist,” brainy quarterback, fast as a streak, fearless, tricky. Yes, he’ll do. Half- backs: Jim Thorpe of Carlisle, he could do everything we'l, the great- est all-around athlete in American college history. A fine broken-field runner, line breaker, kicker, passer and defensive player. What more could you ask? Now for Locomotive Willie Heston. Td leave him off, because how do-'we know he’c be just as great in the modern game. Put him on your pre- pass era team, certainly. for he was great in those days. Let's have George Gipp in there instead, a smart, strong, fast, all- around Notre Dame wonder. Or superlative Eddie Mahan, Keep Coy at fullback. No room for more now. If you want Yost's backfleld of Eckie, Thorpe, Heston and Coy, I'll match it with Pfann, Grange, Mahan and Gipp. Or how do you like Friedman, Oliphant, Nevers and Harley, or McMillin, Owen, Wilson and Drury? Ouch! We'd better call it & day.—- SEVEN CONTESTS LISTED FOR SCHOOLBOY TEAMS FOOT BALL. ‘Tomorrow. Devitt vs. Central, Central Stadium, | 3:15 o'clock, annual C Club game. ‘Thursday. Georgetown Prep vs, Newman High School of Lakewood, N. J, Garrett Park, 10:30 a.m. Tech vs. Staunton Military Academy at_Staunton,, Va. Eastern vs. York High at York, Pa. Emerson vs. Wenonah Military Academy at Wenonah, N. J. Saturday. Emerson_vs. Baylor School of Chat- tanooga, Tenn., Griffith Stadium, 2 | o’clock. BASEET BALL. Tomorrow. Business vs. Hyattsville High, Busi- ness, 3:15 o'clock. FIELDS TO FIGHT LIGHT. CHICAGO, November 26 (#).—Jackle Fields, world welterweight champion, and Bllly Light of St. Paul have been matched by Promoter Jim Mullen for a 10-round bout at the White City Arena December 2. S A $28.00 Winterfronts now $21.00 $25.00 Winterfronts now $18.75 $22.50 Winterironts now $17.00 M43 P St. NW. | - BUSINESS TO MEET HYATTSVILLE QUINT In the opening game of the schoolboy basket ball season hereabout Business High will entertain Hyattsville, Md., to- morrow afternoon at 3:30 o'clock in the Business gym. Both teams probably will use many | D players in order to get a line on their B ne material under fire. Leading Business tossers include Capt. Natie Newman, Bob Lucas and Harold Kotzin, forwards; Spencer Chase and Bill Duryee, centers, and Milton Sing- man, Linwood Jones, Fred Finley and Pete-Loftus, guards. Both Newman and Lucas were regu- lars on last season's clever Business team and most of the others have hld‘ court experience. Coach Lynn Wood: worth, while reluctant to express an| opinion as to how his boys will fare this season, naturally is rather optimis- tie. | Hyattsville will pick its starting line- up from the following: Rolph 'Jarrell, Jimmy Carr, Woodrow Hurd, Marvin Lewis, Curley Byrd, jr, and York Hollingsworth, forwards; Warren Evans and William Morris, cen- ters and Elmer Mostow, Heyser and Pettit, guards. 5% REDUCTION LE of Genuine PINES Automatic Winterfronts Subject to Prior Sale ERE'S your chance to get a genuine Pines Automatic Winterfront for your car at an amazing low i shutter ‘that over a million now use to protect the motor against rapid temperature changes. But you must act now. Pines Winterfronts will go fast. only for a limited time. Remember! is a vital engineering necessity. 20 leading cars are now equipped at the factory with Pines Automatic Winterfronts. Installed in ten minutes. The Stock Includes Winterfronts for All Cars 'Up to and Including 1929 Models L. S. Jullien, Inc. e. The' same At these prices Sale lasts Automatic motor protection More than North 8076" G CLUB GAME APT T0°BE HOT TUSSLE Central and Devitt Teams o in Fine Trim for Grid Tilt Tomorrow. ICKETS for the Central-Devitt foot ball game to be played to- morrow afternoon in the Cen- tral Stadium, starting at 3:15 o'clock, under the auspices of the Graduate C Club of Central High School, are going fast, it was announced today, and a big crowd for the e is assured. In addition to Spalding's, tickets may be bought at either Central or Devitt. They also may be had at the gate at the game. Sylvan King, former Central grid captain, is chairman of the committee of the C Club pushing plans for the game, other members being Robert Acorn, Eugene Casey, Dick Newby, Louis J. (Ty) Rauber, coach of the g;ntrll eleven; Bob Newby and Irving rter. Paul (Maggie) Magoffin will referee the game with Ed Towers as umpire and Carl Davis as linesman. There also will be a fourth official, but he has not yet been announced. Line-ups Are Picked. Each team has virtually decided upon its starting line-up. Central plans to take the fleld the same way it begun against Eastern last Tuesday, when Central was a 13-6 win- ner in the final game of the public high school championship series. The Blfie and White is in good shape physi- cally. This array comprises Cassasa, left end; Murray, left tackle; McGinty, left guard; Bannerman, center; right guhrd; Eicholtz, q Capt. Brandt, right end; Cumberland, quarterback; McGill, left halfback; Hinkel, right halfback and Pinckney, el vin lelvin Viner, 16-year-old right guard, will be out of the Devitt line-up because of an injury, but otherwise the team is all right physically. Charlie Rose is listed to be at Viner’s place with Millard ‘White at center. Devitt Is Ready. Devitt's probable line-up will include: Olmnl?:l mh. lef H gora, lef le; Kaspar Beatley, left guard; Millard White, center; Charlie Rose, right guard; Ted Soens, right tackle; Jim McAlear, right end: Mil- ton Abramson, quarterback; Francls . left halfback; Tom Keefe, right halfback and Capt. Francis Knott, fullback. * Everything- points ta 8 bang-u game. Both Central and Devitt have formidable teams and the keen rivalry existing between them will add a real zest to the battle. i 1t will be a homecoming day for both Central and Devitt alumni. i MICHIGAN’S GRID TEAM PLAYS BEFORE 464,000 ANN ARBOR, Mich.,, November 26 (#)—University of Michigan's foot ball team drew an average crowd of 58,000 for all games this Fall. Total attend- ance was 464,000, which was 70,000 short of the Wolverines' record season of 1927, wHen the team played before 535,000 people. year there were capacity crowds at the Ohio State, Harvard and Min- nesota games. The 1929 attendance figures were: Alblon-Mt._Union_ (double-header). Michigan State College. 250 00 000 000 60.000 89,000 38.000 50. 40 23, 8 ”: Landon Takes Up Basket Ball QUINT WILL START DRILLS NEXT WEEK Coach Kessler Has Capable Material—Six Contests Already Listed. BY EDWARD 2. FULLER, Jr. ANDIDATES for Landon School's basket ball team will begin practice December 2 at_the Epiphany Church gym, which will be the scene of the team’s home games. Gordon Kessler, former University of Maryland athletic stal- wart, who is director of athletics at Landon, will tutor the quint. Eddie Tal- bert, who played right guard on the school’s foot ball team, has been named manager of the basket ball combination and plans a schedule of 20 games. Six games already have been arranged, including home-and-home engagements with Georgetown Prep, Charlotte Hall and St. Alban’s. Two matches also are IJ:;XI-l'ledt w“hlthwmrdl :nll:h with others, two 'wi pal and one each with Central, Sherwood, Md., High and Warrenton, Va., High. ‘Those expected to prove formidable candidates for the quint Boucher, Ken Smith, Charlie Hill, Bil gl\lénn, Jim Sands and Donald Cran- Games arranged so far follow: December 20-~Georgetown Prep at Garrett Park. January 10—-Charlotte Hall at Charlotte Hall. Janudry 22—Georgetown Prep. 8 January 28—St. Alban’s at St. Al- an’s. February 12—Charlotte Hall. February 25—St. Alban's. Foot Ball Team Does Well. Landon School's foot ball team has Just finished dts season, during which it performed in highly creditable manner in view of the fact that it was the first ;%leg:fl':“lum to re) t the school, e lon opened its doors for the all four ts ‘without t two games the eleven, coached by Gordon Kessler, was unable to overcome the handicap of ine: 5 ence and lost to St. John's and &r- lotte Hall by decisive margins, but in the last two contests showed to much better advantage, taking the measure of Woodward, 7 to 0, and furnishing an Episcopal eléven a tough fight before losing, 0 to §3. 4 Members ©f the Landon eleven who D | played throtighout the schedule were: Jim Sands, left end; Gordon Boucher, left tackle; Al Hopkins, left guard; Bud Hitcheock, center; Eddie Talbert, right guard; Charlie Hill, right tackle; Barry Hopkins, right end; Bill Baker, qua Guini: rght haltback, and Diek Siock- n, , and Dick Stock- ton, fullback. & Academy, and Hitchcock, who might enter Washington and Lee. - After the basket ball season Landon may organize a boxing team. SHOOT WILL BE STAGED AT BENNING THURSDAY ‘There will’be a pigeon shoot Thurs- day morning at the Congressional - try Club, starting at 10 o'clock. It wil be a turkey shoot with members of the Congressional Club's gun §roup as well | 2 members of the Washinglon: Gun | Club expected to compete. “ R aclean, mild, mellowcigar \\\\\\‘ —smoke King They are Edwanrds. made from the choicest tobaccos grown. And they are wrapped in foil-to pre- serve freshness. King Edwards " AN \ D. Loughran & Co., Inc. Distributors Washington, D. C. Phones Natl. 0391 and 4292 have the distinc- tive taste and the delightful aroma found only in good cigars. You'll like King Edward.

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