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SPORTS. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1929, SPORTS. Ruth and Bob Jones Join Duckpin Army : Zuppke Balances Offense and Defense GOLF KING TO CHRISTEN BLICK ALLEY AT ATLANTA Governor of Georgia and Host of Other Notables to Take Part in Ceremony—Bam Drops Three Pounds Shooting Twenty-five Games. BY R. D. spotlight Saturday. T christening in the game’s history. be Gov. L. G. Hardman, Mayor I. N.-Rag! Candler, Howard Candler and Williim Candler of the famous soft drink family and a galaxy of business and professional leaders. From Washington will be Blick, J. P. Morgan and George Isemann and the Arcadia girls’ bowling team, which will roll an exhibition match. Blick, Morgan and Ise- mann leave tonight and will be joined on the way by W. A. Has- kins, bowling and billiard mag- nate of Richmond and a partner in one of Blick’s enterprises, and C. C. Hudson, North Carolina mil- lionaire, who lately has become in- terested in the game. ‘The girls, led by the redoubtable Lor- raine Guili, are due in the Georgia metropolis Saturday. Tentative plans are for them to roll against a team com- posed of Gov. Hardman, Mayor Rags- dale, Blick and probably two of the Candler brothers. ‘The new alley is the largest in the South and the second largest in the world of its style. All the drives are on one floor. Only Convention Hall here has more. The manager, Frank Stan- ley, and his assistant, Jack Whalen, are ‘Washingtonians—or, rather, were. They have adopted Atlanta and are shouting its praises. On December 10 another Blick estab- lishment will be christened at Rich- mond. It has 32 drives. ‘The five high-ranking girls of Nor- folk will visit here December 14, taking on the Convention Hall team of the District Ladies’ League at the hall. ‘Tom Haines, newspaper man, has been assigned to make the selections. STRAIGHT OFF THE TEE OOD news for public links golfers is forthcoming from S. G. Loeffler, concession- naire in charge of all the public courses about the Capi- It is that the uptown course o] !flted by Loeffler in Rock Creek may egt open during the Winter to give mlr ugs who use the public courses a place on which to try their skill in wintery winds and over frozen fair- ways. It is not yet dennluly decided as to whether Rock Creek will remain open after January 1, which is the usual closing time for repairs and new construction work, but if the Wintcr is not too severe and the. overhead costs do not run too , Loeffler hopes he may be able to keep "the uptown course open during most of the Winter. It has been customary for years to close both the public courses—those in East Potomac Park and Rock Creek Park—on January 1. keeping them closed until March 15, or thereabouts, in order that repairs may be made, This is the slack period of golf, and over] costs mount high when there L& little play, and Leoffier has not felt in past years that operating expenses merited keeping the courses open in view of the small number of persons who use the layouts. But Rock Creek Park is uptown, in a thickly settled por- tion of the city, and is protected from the biting winds of Winter by the trees which border the fairways. Therefore, Leoffler believes, the course might get enough play during the Winter to tify keeping it open, and if this can be done, he intends to dn lt. Leoffler, how- ever, is a business man, and the busi- ness of runing the pubuc links de Wldl on whether the cost is merited by the returns. If he can come anywhere near breaking even, he will feel that he Bas been of service and has been able to do another good deed for Washington's public links golfers. In case of heavy snows or protracted cold weather, Rock Creek Park may be closed during the bad weather. But ‘Washington's Winters usually permit golf to be played during most of the cold weather, and Leoffler hopes the Winter will be such as to permit keep- ing open Rock Creek Park until around the middle of March, when it may be closed for a short time for needed re- pairs. He still is considering building up the fourth green to make the entire green visible from the second shot, and has in mind other improvements, all designed to make the park course a bet- ter test of golf. Public links’ golfers of the Clplul may not realize the truth of the matter, Mackenzie One of Stylists of Game “ROLAND MACKENZIE H15 LOWERED RIGHT SHOULDER AND BENT IN RIGHT KNEE PROVE THERE 15 SLIGHTLY MORE. WEIGHT ON LEFT LEG )A‘( S‘TA':(E =t Tl > BY SOL METZGER. Most golf instructors, among them Arthur Goss, whose ideas concerning the golf swing we are now report- ing, think Roland MacKenzis, Wash- ington youth and U. S. Walker Cup team, one of the stylist of the game. His swing is orthodox. It is interesting to note his stance. As he addresses the ball you will find that his right shoulder is lower than the left. This is due in part, of course, to the fact that the right hand must reach farther down the shaft in order to grip the club. It is also due to one other cause. Mackenzte, if you will notice my sketch of him, ‘slightly bends his right knee inward toward the left. ‘This gives him the orthodox stance, a stance that puts a bit more weight on the left than the right leg at address. Add yardage and accuracy to your drive by writing Sol Metzger, care of this paper, for frez leaflet on Driving. Inclose stamped, addressed envelope. @SepyTicht, 19283 HE greatest figures in two other sports will step into the bowling Babe Ruth will shoot an exhibition in Bos- ton, and at Atlanta, Ga., none other than Bobby Jones will fire the first ball down John 8. Blick's new bowling alley. Ruth has gone into duckpins, it appears, with the same whole- heartedness that characterizes his play on the diamond. With a Washington man, George Isemann, for his opponent, the Bam rolled 25 strings the other day and dropp!d three pounds. Attorney Jones will be only one of several hundred leading citizens of Atlanta and Georgia at probably the most pretentious bowling alley THOMAS. Taking part in the ceremonies will ale of Atlanta, Walter T. ‘Washington is noted for its expert girl bowlers, but Baltimore threatens its supremacy, judging from the averages of the maids who will oppose the Recreation team of the District Ladies’ League Saturday night in the Monumental City. Ollie Ford has an average of 103, Viola Welnberger, 105; Mae Schneids captain, 107 and Frances Kleig, 101. shlrley ‘Wigley and Emily Disney are the only members of the team, the Regent, with marks less than 100 and they are close to this figure. Representing the Recreation will be Rena Levy, Anna McCormick, Pauline Bradburn, Billie Williams and Catherine Quigley. It becomes more and more assured that a record average will win the National Capital League championship this season. Raymond Ward of Mount lblnier and Howard Campbell of King are leading now with an average elch of 124 lnd a fraction. Ward has an advantage of a few maples. A half dozen others are holding a sensational pace. Jack Wolstenholme and Paul Harrison, both of the leading Grand Palace Valet team, each is 0. Sam Benson of George- ‘town Recreation and Arthur Logan of Lucky Strike each is breezing along at a 119 pace, and Clem Weidman and Bernie of King Pin and Brad Mandley of Smith Co. and Carroll Daly of Parkway Filling Station each is shooting 118. It's almost & cinch that one of them will finish the season with 120 or bet- - | cided to forego the usual tournaments. ter. All the National Capital League games are rolled at the Lucky Strike. but the fact is that they are getting better golf and cheaper golf than any group of municipal linksmen in any city of size comparable to Washington. Greens fees are much smaller than those in any EMERSON, BAYLOR Day in Intersectional —Tilt Saturday. N the only schoolboy athletic attrac- tion hereabout Saturday Emerson Institute's sturdy eleven will enter- tain the ' Bayl Chattanooga, Tenn. in an inter- sectional game in Griffith Stadium starting at 2 o'clock. Tickets for the game are on sale at spaldlngs and other downtown sporting stores Baylor’s squad left for Wnshlnztan this morning and will hold a final tuning-up drill here tomorrow. Emerson’s team was to get in i last preparatory licks today in a gami against the Wenonah Military Academy eleven at Wenonah, Pa. Baylor's squad is reported in fine shape physically and co-ch Harley San- born of Emerson hoped to get through the Wenonah game without any of his players suffering "injury. Walter | C. Johnson, manager of the Wnshmgwn base ball team, has been invited to at- tend. Nick Altrock, coach-comedian of the club, also has been invited. In addition to the Wenonah-Emerson game four gridiron contests involving scholastic elevents of the District group were carded today. In contests hereabout early today of the I street school were to clash on the Gonzaga Field, and Georgetown Lakewood,' N. J., were to fight it out at Garrett Park, Md. ‘wares on out-of-town flelds. Eastern was at York, Pa., to meet the York High eleven and Tech was at Staunton, Va., to face Staunton Military Academy’s team. e MISCHOU AND NOACK IN TIGHT PIN RACE Frank Mischou of National Capital Press and Augie Noack of Columbian Printing Co. are having a nip-and-tuck race for individual honors in the Typothetae Duckpin League, each at The individual averages follow: INDIVIDUAL AVERAGES. POTOMAG xucmo-r"s co Beatt: other city of the size of | Goodin the Capifal,” the courses are far better | & than most and are egz in better con- dition. The public situation here, for example, is very much better than it is in :B-m.more where the main m ipal course is poorly constructed and poorly maintained. And Baltimore is a city almost a third again larger than Wi n. Leoffier, by the way, is said to be casting his eyes toward Baltimore as a ukely spot for further public links ventures in the ambitious network of public courses he has built npdnnng'.thastnvmynn He has |} course in Rich Fhflndzlphh in addition to his interests In golf in the Capital, which are the backbone of his enterprises. To the Westwood course at Richmond, which is under his supervision, he has recently = ldded 8 new nine-hole layout. ontrary to usual custom, none of the golf clubs about the Capital were scheduled to hold Thanksgiving day tournaments today. While in past years a few of the golf organizations have held informal events for their members, mond and another in | Be; this year none of the clubs have events | B! scheduled. Washington and Indian Spring usually hold tourneys on Turkey day, but this year these clubs have de- Automobile Associa- tion is doing, without ostentation or preliminary announcement, a fine piece of work in marking with sturdy signs the highway a) the various’ gol The American f clubs about Washing- fww es and routes to | Ac ton. On most of the principal traffic | O arteries at some point where a wrong turn might be made, the association has placed substantial iron markers desig- nating the correct route, and again at the turn of the road into the club i=ore markers have been placed. This move is sure to be of considerable aid to strangers in finding their way to golf clubs about.the WAshlnan area. Bill White, genial chairman of Beaver Dam'’s golf activities, feels that this year has been a howling success. White recently shot a 74 in a match with Martin F. McCarthy, which is the lowest mark he ever has recore on the Beaver Dam course, and is- only one over“par. The fact that Winter rules were in force didn't make Bill feel the score was not a good one, for while the ball may be teed in the fairway, it does not get the carry and roll it gets in the warm days of Summer. TENNESSEE- KENTUCKY GAMES TOPS DIXIE LIST By the Associated Press. ATLANTA, November 28.—Fifteen Southern Conference foot ball teams to- day make their final appearances of 1929. ‘The other Con- ference pace-setter, the Tulane ma- chine, tried conclusions with an ancient intra-State foe, Louisiana State. ‘The Virginia-North C.rnlma combat was the feature at Chapel Vanderbilt and sewnnee meet at Nashville. Auburn came to Atlanta for a tussle with Georgia Tech's Tornado. The twenty-second Georgia-Alabama | g, contest at Birmingham ranked with the Virginia Poly and Virginia Mlll'.lry clash at Roanoke in traditional inter- est. Washington and Lee took on Florida at Jacksenville in another yearly feature and the University of Missis- sippl was arrayed against the Missis- sippt Aggles at Oxfoid. ready for Purman and Maryland and Johns Hopkins had an old score to settle. Duke engaged Davidson. Oglethorpe hoped to unseat Chat- tanooga, last year's champions in the Southern lnzereol!egllu Athletic, Asso- clation. BOWL IN BAL‘I.‘IKORE. Al PFischer, former national singles ch.mplcn. and Jack Wolstenholme, oung King m-y for a bowling battle with Ray von Dreele and Ed Rommel, two of gfiumoru best, at the Recreation ley. | WILL LEAD WOLVERINES. ANN ARBOR, Mich,, November 28 (A —James O. H. Simball, Jr. of Lex- ington, Ky., has been named captain of the 1930 I(lchinn foot ball team. He Reynolds Anderson, i M. JOYCE ENGRAVING Jenking &'Bkien" Tyrrell [ Hammer Cole .. Burgess Mellon Merrillal Thayer . ‘The once defeated Kentucky Wildcats | u; threatened the perfect record of Ten- e | nessee at Lexington. aum Nowell " Walters Smith Morsell Fabrizio Outside. the Conference Clemson was | Miller Brenna |\ Collins Pin star, are in Baitimore | ¥ THREE D. C. AMATEURS LOSE IN RING TOURNEY ‘Three Washington boxers were home today nursing bruises received in the tri-State amateur tournament at Madi- son Square Garden in New York. All three lost. Russell Wolstram was beat- en by Chester Matan in the heavy- 15 & junior in the literary college. He did all the kicking and some of -the in games this Fall, weight final, Prank Orange lost to Artie Weinberg and Douglas Swetman took & lacing fram Jerry Stef, HAVE CLEAR FIELD = r School team of D- Prep and Newman High School of 3 Eastern and Tech were to show their | B this time having an average of 111. A M WITH THE BOWLERS NATIONAL CAPITAL LEAGUE. Record l_:_rpllnl Sertex. . “Pai. Valet 24 us' 7 ki King Pins 27 634 1 Present Lone Grid Game of ke, kuinisr Lucky Strike Bervice Cafet *Packwood Pr. Sver. Bethesda Inttes nad forfeited: First Series Records. tesm game—Grand Palace Valet m set—King Pins, 1,824, igh_team average—Grand Paiace Valet Shon 581-20. individual game—McGolrick (Meyer igh’ “individual set—R. Ward, Mount Rainier, 435, High 'individual average—R. Ward, 124-18. High individual strikes—R. Ward, HiEh individual Spares—i. Campbell, 88. Individual Records. GRAND PALACE wu..l'r Name, G HOHSS: s . (Rosenbers.. 12 183 397 11 3 olstenhme 21 15 1854 3 21 . ranchise after Hi powshSal! u==I=2=H 2 12¢ 327 112 624 107 Naples 27 133 361 14 49 2,892 MEYER DAVIS. Gooding Gonzaga and an alumni combination | Lyos 8 12 57 2,745 FH [ it 48 2,344 1 113 387 843308 20 126 340 4 37 2,071 Btevens . 119 307 115 877 974 ci-uml.u w. BM"fl'fl co. 24 142 408 1. 27 153 -MOUNT RAINIER RECREATION. 27 185 423 27 82 3,363 131 1, 10 €2 2,85} 53 110 e 2 ! Crawies. '3 116 308 PAHKWAY FILLING STATION. 4 £ i 3 ™ ook’ 1ot onen $BR82Re 2o a1l sEEbBEaE 3 S5a8SERs Za¥§ ubutBou BeaEs - -E 5 coacacs Fd ooconcunanoabaSus ConrY RS AR comatuniR SE8E258 i¥ 853 o 523 g : a8 RN e SLH e e $o safons 3358 §83853 HB8233853288! 5 : cooonBuHI~ALRs o SEEEEE Eaiiiesiss BREENE RS youn 8 tEERR aauauus § muna ] waunoon Q 0om. 5 S 2 PANTOS SHOOTS 120 TO TOP PIN LEAGUE |3 With Pantos shooting for an average of 120, the District Line Garage team with a slender margin over the Bear- cats. Latest figures Rt‘allow g 3 Team Standings. District Li District Line Garage. Pops. Strollers Bearcats .. District Lin Pantos Schecter iser, 28 134 349 PATENT ATTORNEYS. 12 144344 13 22 1337 11 730 1, 0 45 9 11 47 2,29] 9 41 8 6 45 2,327 1 2 139 341 5 43 2,310 105 10 KO SERVICE. 23 143 345 10 55 2.830 l fl l ‘ 'Igg ‘M R E ] PATENT OFFICE. 18 135 3¢7 verage men—Pantos, Kelly, 116: Cox, 113-; z. Lol ‘WOMAN'S ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION LEAGUE, UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND. High individusl game-_Fresemann, High individual artenstein, h individual av team xllfl'h team set—Kappa Kappa Gamma, High team average—Kappa Kapps Gam- ma, 380-6. UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND FRATERNITY LEAGUE. Team Standing. L w. Phi Sigma K. Alpha G, RO a G team game High team set—Sigma Tau Om: (ol team average—Nu ‘steme “omicron, Valliant provided the sensation of the week by rolling a 168 game, but two 90 games in the same set ruined his chances for m.h set. Plummers Hkvennlz ifters Beae Bai O Cluh Columbia. ost Office.... 5 Raymond Ward, the Dlstrict League's newest member, who boasts of the highest average in the city in the National Capital League, holds high individual game of 161 and also high set of 407. Recreation is at the top with high team game of 632 and team set of 1,724. 23 27 21 LUTHERAN LADIES' LEAGUE. 'n Christ-Refor. Trinity No. 1. u SEES ONLY A HALF TRUTH IN HEAVY ATTACK THEORY }|Illinois Coach Varies Style to Conform to Foe’s System of Advancing Ball—Strong Resi ance Is Aid to Morale. BY BOB ZUPPKE, Foot Ball Coach, University of Tlinols. down through generations of foot ball coaches and it has up- holders today. THE best defense is a strong offense—this is an adage handed The theory is that with your strong offense you hold the ball most of the time and are certain to pile up a winning score, ever: | field. if the other feliow does worry you when he has his chance to attack. When Warner and Rockne go, they GO. 843, | nUMber of touchdowns. They often win by a Percy Haughton of Harvard believed in this idea, trusting that his strong offense would insure him the break sooner or later. On the face of it the strong offense theory sounds entirely plausi- ble, but in my opinion it is only half-trath. Everything depends upon your opponents and your own material. The moderns who proceed under this theory get along finely until there is a slump in their material. To me it seems wiser to rely upon ;| a balanced diet, and to put just as much time on defense as offense, 29| except when you have such ho) DE less material that the only thing possible is to make it a purely de- fensive team. We have had teams at Illinois whose offensive repertory’ consisted of only a few passes, and whose defense was con- structed to block a punt in the hope that this might turn the tide sometime. 1t js silly to try to have complicated ball-handling plays withod men who can run and handle the ball. v ‘Yost Defense Versatile. Fielding Yost always had a flexible | BU! defense, arranged for the benefit of the 5| team he was meeting, and you could 15 Incarnation First ten individuals—Selander. nie. 93-18; Reyn e st 86, Most strikes—Hennig, ares—Reynolds, ndividual games mmllgmvmm sets—Selander, 320; Kauft- High flat gameBieber. o1, High s — Trinity No. 1, 491; e c!:fl'cfln’n Reformation, 1,374 team el 3 and 1368 POST OFFICE LEAGUE. Team Standing. Mailing Checkers . Postmaster Gentral, o. Derifery Money ~ Order. Bareer Posi i Brightwood Cast Offs High individual average. Osborn. 108-20. dual game. Jolliffe. 141. 3oL, Webn, 383 T ostmasters. se1. gh team sel 47 Greatest numrer ot ?-m Van Greatest " sumber of" strikes, Scheaf and Osbron, ach lel Season's records were broken when ‘Webb of Brightwood rolled a set of 385, with games of 127, 132 and 126, and Mailing hit the pins for a set of 1,647. All this occurred when Mailing e countered Brightwood and despite ef- fective bowling captured only two games. c‘heckeru the surprise team of this season, hung a triple on Money Order and tied Mailing for the lead. BETHESDA LEAGUE. n, 150. Van' der Indepe ts took the lead by mak- ing a clean sweep over the strong Post Office team, while Carl’s slipped a little by dropping the odd game to O'Henry’s. ‘Terrace, Gardens, Olfl Boys took the odd game from their opponents, Ma- sons, Gaithersburg and Question Marks. FRIENDSHIP CHURCH LEAGUE. 're Ps the Recreation Duckpin League |Lee-Je 15128 '8 Tnlesnn LEE-JOE. L. Balduccl ... 13 1.183 4 17 Marcellino ...\ 12 1,188 2 20 'ro-rmz. 12 1.201 4 18 119 312 100-1 Bl f1 18 %8 10t BAL-JOE. 12112 2 l‘ 12 1,193 7 1 Records. High team games, Jim-John, 256; To-Pritz, High team sets, Jim-John, 725; To-Frits, High individual games, Nicro, 143, 142. High In sets, Nicro, 388, Rl[h ltrl:’ Nll‘.m. “‘ l. Bllflll:tl,z;l. Nicro, 27; J. Ferrarc es, Nicro, J. Ferraro . Nicro ... Leone . F. Perraro 106 308 94-1 LaScols . B. Balducc 127 317 99-5 i 103, ‘The maple-mauling Jim-Johns con- tinued thefr terrific pace, sweeping the set with To-Fritz, tal high game of 256 at the same time, which was for- merly held by To-Fritz wllh 255 Nicro kept up his timely ma: high game of 143 and hhh ut of 388, beating out Pbmml e of 136 and his own%set of 383. other o g E e of oe's jus ly to take two from Bal-Joe. 0 TROUSERS To Match Your Odd Coats EISEMAN'S, 7th & F BOWIE RACES Nov. 18 to Nov. 30 Special trains on W. B. A. leave White House Station 11:45 a.m., 12:00 m., 12:15 p.m. direct to Grandstand. First Race, 1:00 p.m. ¢ Auto Bodnn.d Raduton. Fenders R-pnnd~ ew Radiators Cores in Steck North 7177 % Block Below 1928 Chrysler (62) Landau Sedan Also 319’ 13th. " Price, SGOO WALLACE MOTOR CO. 1709 L St. NW. Decatur 2280 / be sure Michigan would be spoiling some of your pet plays. At Illinois we constantly change our defense. It is determined every week, and may be a seven 'dlamond, a six- two-two, a six-three-two or a, seven- block, all depending upon our next op- ponent. ‘When Pennsylvania brought the “hid- den ball” offense to the Illinois Stadium in 1926 there was nothing to do but spend the entire week on defense, for our offensive stréngth was not high. Our only hope was to smash that dan- gerous “hidden ball” play and leave the rest on the laps of the gods. Day after day we scrimmaged against our freshmen, who staged the Pennsyl- vania play -in effective style. This en- abled us to prevent Penn from scoring, although they gave us plenty of worry. In the last period our passing attack t us in a position to have Prosty Peters drop-kick the goal which won. I always think of our defense as our home, to which we can retreat in time of danger—a safe refuge and shelter from which we can operate. The time that we will spend there depends upom the strength of our opponent's defense, If it is not too strong we can take chances with our defense and make it appear spectacular. You can afford tq take some chances then. J Defense Helps Morale. ‘The team that has been well schooled on defense is likely to have more morale than the team which has spee clalized on offense and minimized des fense. Nothing is so dhem.lrl‘ln’ o a yain halfback as to find himself uj against a good defense which sto) him without a gain time after time. Iy hurts his conceit and makes him doubt«+ ful about his ability and the ultimate success of his team. It is important to have your players imbued with the idea of resistance ag well as the thought of attack. Defensq develops the combat fiber necessary fod a real team. And defense is taugh§ when your players make the going tough for each other on the pract! A coach may have more fun teaching offense than defense, for the latter is less inspiring, but if he neglects it he is riding for a fall. MOTOR BOAT BOAT CHALLENGE BY BRITAIN AND ITALY] NEW_ YORK, November 28 (P).— Great Britain and Italy both plan to challenge for the Harmsworth motor boat speed trophy, now held by the United States, next year. J. Lee Barrett of Detrolt said upon his return from the Brussels confere ence of the International Motor Yachte ing’Union that Sir Henry Segrave, Brit= ish holder of the straightaway autoe mobile speed record, as well as Betty Carstairs of England and two Italia Prince Carlo Russpoli of Venice an Marquis dal Pozzo of Milan, expect to be entered in the Harmsworth races at Detroit. next August 29, 30 and Sep~ tember 2. Gar Wood, present holder of the trophy, and possibly James Tale bot, jr., of Los Angeles will defend the cup for the United States. . e HOCKEY RESULTS. St. Louis, 3; Duluth, 2. Boston, 9; vaidg x Kansas_City, 1 Mlnnelpolk, 0. 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