Evening Star Newspaper, September 26, 1930, Page 44

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SPORTS. THE EVENING ‘STAR, WASHINGTON, D. .C., " Gridmen Turn on Heat Tomorrow With Four D. C. | | WHEN EMMITSBURG, MD. LOOMED LARGE ON GRID MAP | YALE S FEATURED EASTERN STARTER Bulidogs Take on Maine, but Look to Georgia and Mary- | land Games. BY H. C. BYRD. OMORROW foot ball again comes into its own. North, | I East, South and West grid- | irons will hear the crash of lines of men in close combat, know | again the dodging, twisting turns | WHEN EMMITSBURG, MD., LOOMED LARGE ON GRID MAP of elusive backs, the slap of| hard hands against leather head | guards, the exhortations of men to other men to put forth even| greater effort than tired, sweat-| ing bodies seem capable of, and produce again the elation of vic- tory and the deadening effect of defeat. The strains of music from col- | lege bands, the ringing cheers of countless thousands and banks of color against the gray of concrete expectations for a tough, grueling battle are borne out, it pictured here, the Mount St. Mary’s team of 1892, which earned the title -of champion of Catholic celleges. In this Wwhich defeated Georgetown that year by a score of 6 to in two 30-minute haives, are pictured Donovan, O'Reilly, O’ Roker, Lenney, Ferguson, McTighe, W. Cashman (captain), Burkhart, Rice, Perault and McGinnis. Mount St. Mary’s foot ballers help Georgetown lnl:furllc its season Saturday at Griffith Stadium. 1f the Hoyas' 1l be only a repetition of one staged 38 years ago by the athletes oup, g v C. U. Faces Brand-New Gridiron 3 i 2§ 88 & H £y sk P Lt 58; é’i;g& - ul e tomorrow is with should win by as big -xewunltmmmtomnu. rmy agal versity, a team it :awu-na will ‘defeat again tomorrow y_possibly a margin. For years Columbia, one of the biggest universi- ties in the world from a standpoint of students, has only held its own in foot ball with teams far below it in hutthhfiy’-ru ? 5 EE § % i 55 § aa" il 1 §§é d i it ;i ] i i} I §§ !“ S 8 A 1 443 ] i | ; il i gz g meets Geneva and Washing- ton and Jefferson entertains Bethany, Besides the game with which Yale ©op:ns its schedule, Dartmouth, Brown and Holy Cross, usually the next strong- 4 teams, sta teams in the games they all should mm Southern Methodist against How- ‘Texas Mines, Texas A. and M. and South: L At least two contests scheduled by Southern Conference elevens may be close. The first is that at Durham, in which two conference elevens, Duke and South appear. It is unusual for a conference game to open the sea- son, but that is what is happening in this case. Very little about the Duke squad has come out of Durham this year, and that may mean that Jimmy Dehart i3 working to make his team on the field instead of having others work- ing to make it in the newspapers. It -would be a great joke on the Duke le if Dehart were to turn out & . Teal foot ball team in his last year there. And that may happen. The writer knows of two coaches who were slated to lose their jobs two years ago, but they won the games, were retained, anc both last Fall came through with grnt teams, mbly much better eams than ve been developed had they not been held. Oglethorpe Confident. ‘The other Southern game that in Georgia hearts ever has rankled since. It has no desire to have the bit- But, and herein les ter dose the big question, Oglethorpe claims to have a better foot ball team than it last and indicates it has a RACES TODAY. Havre de Grace SEVEN RACES DAILY Special B. & O. train leaves track, Eastern § Time, Bus leaves 1416 F St. N.W. at 19:45 am. Payne, University of Texas vs. |mi OSTON, September 26.—When Catholic University lines up| against Boston College in the opening college foot ball game of the season here tomorrow, the boys from the Capital will be facing plays never before seen on any gridiron. They will include variations of the famous ‘Warner attack, and a new system in- stalled by the boy coach, Joe McKenney, ‘who three years ago was captain n’?hh u:::t time as coach here, Mc- Kenney has used the Rockne and ‘Warner lyi;eml, but three years of Eagles’ daily practice say | soon become nationally famous. Agaiust C. U., Boston College will use its strongest eleven, a team composed for the most part of rugged veterans. The line will average close to 200 and EE%EEE i E88 i 13 and he has led the scrubs a merry cliase in every practice game at the heights | this year. He should be watched closely | by C. U. or the boys from- Washington are 2pt to get a glimpse of his back as he streaks for the goal line. Kelley and Mallett, veterans, will start at the halfback posts. They are line uggers rather than broken field run- ners, but both are strong defensive Vodoclys, fastest runner of the team, will be at fullback. He chance to whip Georgls than it Then, " What will happen? of the other games, in fact, P all, in which Southern Con- ference schools are to take part, should be comparatively easy, unless Davidson puts up a much harder battle with North rolina State than might ordi- narily be expected. Of the four or five teams that are generally being picked as the strongest, Vanderbilt ought to have little trouble beating Chattanooga, Tennessee should wallop Maryville about as it pleases, North Carolina is Hkely to administer another drubbing to Wake Forest, and Tulane probably will encounter very little difficulty trim- Southwestern Louisiana Institute. meets Southern College, while Kentucky pnd Georgia Tech do not be- gin until next week. In the South Atlantic section Vir- ginia, Washington and Lee, Virginia Military Institute, and Virginia Poly~- technic Institute, and Maryland have games that should not be so very diffi- cult. Washington and Lee may hit the strongest combination of the op- ing elevens when it faces Hampden- ey at Lynchburg, although it is ossible that V. M. may have the rdest contest with Richmond. Vir« ginia should beat Randolph-Macon by 40 points or more and V. P. 1. ought to gain that many against Roanoke. As far as local schools are concerned, suffice here to say that Catholic Uni. versity to Boston College for a real battle, but feeling it has an out- side chance, while Georgetown thinks it should win without a whole lot of llfleuuz’ from Mount 8t. Mary’s, but i3 afraid it may not, and American University and Maryland should de. feat Shenandoah College and Wash. ington College. FACTS New Low Time Deal Prices wn Monthiy Payments. Vayments, Do Std. Coupe.$186.25 $36.00 ‘| in the first night scholastic in System Evolved by B. C. Coach is ,of the Boehner type, & sensation around the ends. In reserve for the backfleld Coach McKenney will have Joe Shea, Chessy Antos, Johnny Marr and George Col- bert. Colbert is the player who threw a 50-yard pass last year for a touch- down and kicked the goal to tie Villa- nova, 7 to 7. B. C. is not f¢ ting the scare it was given by Catholic University last year, winning by only 13 to 6, and from the preparations the Eagles have made, it might well be one of the season's ob- Jective games. TEGH ELEVEN OPENS WITH A NIGHT GAME Travels to Baltimore Tonight to Play Poly—Seven Devitt Men on Hospital List. Hap. Hardell tonight will take his ther | Tech eleven, public high school cham- on, to Baltimore to play Baltimore lytechnic Institute, st le Park, the his- tory of the Monumental City. The Manual Trainers will return to i | Washington after the game and will leave early in the morning for Win- chester, Va., where ]t-hty loorhead, =~ center: ; Hains, left tackle ; Rhodes, righ guard; Capt. Kolker, right tackle Stehman, right end; Nelson, quarter- back: Sachs, left half; Venags, full, and Reichman, right half. Coach Jim McNamara is having his troubles at Devitt now. Seven of his most promising aspirants have been laid low by injuries and McNamara has been: forced to abandon the daily scrimmages and take his squad incoors, Charley Rose, Noble Cooke, Jack San- ford, Buddy Moore, Turner, Geo! Nagroni and Rotleo Connol will be unable to don uniforms for at least & week. Other prices on application. Our beautifully decorated salesrcom is of sufficient size to show all s and colors of the Ford line. A cordial invitation is extended to see this display. Steuart Motor Co. (Center of the City) 6th at K St. N.W. Games Sized Up By Grid Experts BY W. W. (BILL) ROPER. Princeton Coach. East. Army-Boston University—Army. Brown-Rhode Island—Brown. Bucknell-Geneva—Bucknell. Carnegie Tech - Buffalo — Carnegie ‘ech. Colgate-St. Lawrence—Colgate. Columbia-Middlebury—Columbia. Cornell-Clarkson—Cornell. Dartmouth-Norwich—Dartmouth. Franklin and Marshall-St. John's— Franklin and Marshall. Lafayette-St. Thomas—Lafayette. Lehigh-Ursinus—Lehigh. New York University-Hobart—New York University. Penn State-Niagara—Penn State. Pitt-Waynesburg—Pitt. Swarthmore-Drexel—Swarthmore. Villanova-Lebanon Valley—Villanova. Yale-Maine—Yale. Syracuse-Rensselaer—Syracuse, % South. Alabama-Howard—Alabama. Centre-Bowling Green—Centre. Clemson-Wofford—Clemson. Duke-South Carolina—South Caro- lina. Hampden Sidney-Washington Lee— ‘Washington Lee. North Carolina-Wake Forest—North Carolina. Sewanee-Tennessee Polytechnic—Se- wanee. Southern Methodist-Howard Payne— Southern Methodist. Tennessee-Maryville—Tennessee, ‘Texas-Texas Mines—Texas. BY HOWARD JONES. Ooachi, University of Southern Califérnfs. Pacific Coast. California-Santa = Clara — California should win. Oregon State-Gonzaga—Tough for Oregon State. tstl.nlordvolympu: Club—=8tanford too rony s Southern California—U. C. L. A— ‘Trojans. Washington - Whitman — Easy ‘Washington. Washington State-Co! of Idaho— A warm-up for Wash! State College. Oregon “U."-Willamette—Oregon in a walk. Idaho-Montana Btate—A shade to Idaho. Montana-Mount .8t. Charles—Mon- tana favored. BRITONS IN GOLF FINAL. OXHEY, England, September 26 (#) —Two members of the Younger School Charles A. Whitcombe of Enfield and Thomas H:m& Cotton of Beckenham, have ed the final of the “News of the World” golf tournament for pro- fessionals. T for “Call a spade aq a cigarette is only as good as it tastes FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1930. Teams Among Those Playing: C. U. 15 ONLY ONE FIGURED T0 LOSE Georgetown, Though, May Have Tough Job—Maryland, A. U. Also Wil Start. BY R. D. THOMAS. OUR Washington college teams will start their 1930 foot ball campaigns tomor- row and only one figures to lose. Catholic University is up against it hard in meeting Bos- ton College in Beantown. Georgetown should whip Mount St. Mary’s, Maryland looks for something more than a workout with Washington College and American University, is favored to beat Shenandoah. Of much*interest here is the George- town-Mount St. Mary's contest which will be the first for the Hoyas under the direction of Tom Mills, formerly of the Notre Dame cosching staff. ‘The Mountaineers are billed annually by the Hilltoppers for warm-up pur- poses but this time they come with hope of victory. Material at the Hilltop hasn’t been up to standard, a new sys- tem has been installed between seasons and a question mark best describes the team’s prospects. Least optimistic of Georgetown folk, at least outwardly, is the fighting Mills. He has roared himself hoarse and ex- ercised the patience of Job by turns in an effort to give the Blue and Gray an honest~to-goodness foot ball team. T w's game will be an ordeal not only for Mills and his aides, Johriny Colrick and Clipper Smith, but the en- tire squad. For most of the Hoyas it will be a baptism in Notre Dame foot . Action at Griffith Stadium will start at 2:30 o'clock. Six players who got their gridiron starts in Washington' schools will be in the Mount St. Mary’s squad. They are: Mike Tracey, Tom Brew, Pranklin Hol- land, Jake Farrell, Dewey and Soens. Joe Alenty, Georgetown halfback who was hurt in training camp, has return- ed to practice along with Marcell Gillls, fullback, but neither will play tomor- TOW. ALTER YOUNG, coach at Ameri- can University, thought he was blessed by fortune when none of his dependables was seriously hurt in preliminary training, but the blow finally came. Red Olsen, fractured his wrist yesterday and Ed Parke, regular end, was an- nounced scholastically ineligible for the Shenandoah game. Fred Johnson, center; Russ Lambert, tackle, and Forrest Diehl, end and full- back, will be the only letter men to face Shenandoah, 'URLEY BYRD expects victory, but I“o,oks for more in the contest with chieftain isn't sure he has a “real” team, but hopes to find out something to- morrow. Excepting center, all positions are well filled apparently, but several of first stringers of practice are doubtful under-fire prospects. The matter of courage isn’t considered. The question is whether the lads have genuime foot ball temperament. YARN by this reporter the other day, quoting Dutch Bergman, Cath- solic University coach, to the effect '.hnkt he had “nine m‘:nu,whn w'?;;ld make any college team e country,” was refuted by Bergman. A plea of gulilty is entered here of not having observed the newspaper man’s axiom of “believe nothing you hear and only half of what you see.” But we have ascrow to with a Cardinal. Bergman has no reason to be opti- mistic over the Boston College game. ‘The Eagles are sald to have one of their strongest teams in years and C. U. has been .hard hit by injuries. It lacks His only veteran back, | book College. The Maryland | Moha reserves, t00. For a while there was talk at Brook- | land of beating the Eagles who were iven all they could handle last year. ALF a dozen of Gallaudet's best players failed to show for practice | yesterday, leading to the thought | that the Blues are getting cocky, prob- | ably because of recent praise im the | press. Tilts Tomorrow For D. C. Colleges Georgetown vs. Mount.St. Mary's at Griffith Stadium, 2:30. v lef'llnd vs. Washington College at College Park, 2:30. e American University vs. Shenan- gosla’l College at Central Stadium, Catholic University vs. Boston Col- lege at Boston. SANDLOT GRIDDERS LOOK T0 BATTLES Early Training Grind About Over—150-Pound League Opens October 12, HE training period is almost over for sandlot gridders now, and followers can expect the real stuff shortly, for the industrious managers, with a& good line on the strength of their clubs now, are busy compiling schedules. Only & couple of weeks more and both independent and league seasons get under way. ‘The Capital City 150-pound League will start play October 12 with at least nine teams lined up. At a meeting last night at the French Sport Store the Palace-D. G. Brentwood Hawks, Del Ray, Northerns, Centennials, North- east Columbias, Petworth Pennants, ‘Wolverines and Mardfeldts posted fran- chise money, but still another berth is open for any team wishing to join the loop. Interested parties are re- uested to call Bill Flester at the nch Sport Store. A final meeting will be held October 1, at which time players will be weighed and the schedule made up. Wolverine A. C. is after a game for this Sunday with a strong 1 -mund team to be played on Potomac P ianager Grse Gord be reached T lon can Teache: at Lineoin u'fl-; between, 5:30 and 6 o'clock. ‘The G. P. O.-Federals, 135-) 3 will work out tonight at 7 omldm the fleld at Seventeenth and B streets. Sunday the Federals meet the. Del Ray team at 3 o'clock on the Mason High School Field and would like to @& game for the following Sunday. Charlie Deuterman has been elected manager of the Alcora Motor Co. eleven this season, and is anxious to book games with 150-pound teams. ‘The Alcoras, who are coached by Sey- mour Henson, will practice Sunday morning on the Arlington field. The Irvi A. C. of Baltfmore, which annually plays the Apaches.or the tons ey they agatn Tave a gregations n have a strong team this year by defea th lowne eleven last night at hr}!uh!on 3,000 fans in a night game. “Hap" ht, former Gonzaga ath- lete, starred along with Hughes, Hamil- ton, Moret luminaries. and Spring, Knickerbocker C. is scheduled to meet this eve 1355 Wisconsin avenue at 7:30 From there TROUSERS To Match Your Odd Coats EISEMAN'S, 7th & F ormer Navy'| " SPORTS. will travel to the practice field for a ‘workout. b SPRINGFIELD IS LEADING bt 8t | ODANVILLE, I, September 26 (M), —Springfield, Central League cham- plons, last night defeated Danville, | Three I League champions, 7 to 3 It was the fifth game of the sertes for the class B championship and gave tsyarln:fleld an edge of three games to wo. . TAUBMAN'S Centennials will practice 7:30 o'clock on the New York Playground. ‘The O'Rellly A. C. of Richmond, Va., is on the lookout for local opponents to come to Richmond. Manager D. M. 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