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lire - Tapping Hiis Western Foot Ball : National League Would COACHES CROSSED BY SCOUT PHONES Both Sides Get Tips That Are Meant for One—Some Midwest Gossip. BY LAWRENCE PERRY. EW YORK, October 18.—If all is fair in war, all is fair— within reasonable scope — in foot ball, Or is it? Talk is that in some stadiums wires that lead from observation points on top of the arena to the sidelines go to the home team's bench as well as to the head coach on the visiting team bench. Explaining all this, it should be said that the practice of live coaches of big teams is to have an assistant perched high on the walls of a stadium who, from the point of vantage of a bird's- eve view of the game in progress below, can detect sins of omission and com- mission which the coach on the bench cannot detect. So the observer on high communicates frequently with his head coach and gives much valuable infor- mation concerning his own team and the rival outfit. 1t is valuable; that is to say, provided these observations are not picked up by the home team coach on his own bench. 1In such case the afternoon is apt to be filled with bmmerl.nss, Nefarious practice of this sort, or fears that such practice obtains, is beginning to cause certain Western coaches to lose in- terest in special wires to their benches. OME Western observations picked up on the writer's recent tour: Notre Dame in her new stadium has done away with players’ benches in the open. Foot ballers occupy dough- outs a la big league base ball There will be an opening for a good live coach at Minnesota within a year or so. Fritz Crisler, the new athletic director, is swinging the cmchh‘\fi Job now and doing finely; but he will not be able to hold two positions indefinitely inasmuch as the work of an a tic director in a great midland university is of itself sufficient for two men. Talk is that this is Pat Fage's last year at Indiana. The university pays some of Page's salary and alumni the residue. And alumni are often bother- some and unreasonable when it comes to_the matter of defeat and victory. It would not bo surprising if Page ‘were called back to Chicago, where his son is now an undergraduate. The boy was headed for Princeton, but at the last minute decided to follow in his father's footsteps. They say that when the Minnesota athletic authorities tacked 50 cents onto the usual $2 ticket cost for the Stan- ford game, a lot of foot ball enthusi- asts went sour and remained away. z"hul a 40-odd’ thousand crowd instead 60. All Stanford backfield men powdered their hands with resin before they went into the Minnesota game. Warner u{s it makes all the difference in the world in the matter of ball catching. But it did not scem to do so last Saturday. What Western eleven permitted a captain to play last week though he was known to have diabetes? And what ear. Be,pcuznt with Nebraska. Dana Bible, the coach, has a lot of new and inexperienced men playing for him. ‘P:'t:zunlly good. moh:‘ Pfli:n may run something W] Kansas ‘comes to Pmnl:‘l. ‘November 1. REGATTA TOMORROW FOR SAILING CANOES Three Races Scheduled for Course on Potomac Off Lincoln Memorial. A group of formidable competitors have entered the annual canoe sailing championships of the Sailing Club to be held tomorrow on the Potomac off the Lincoln Memorial. There will be the three races. the first beginning at 11 am. The other tests will be staged after Junch. ‘The program will end a season dur- ing which the Sailing Ciub has held & Competition 10; a point rophy bas been compe or & 6 y in progress all the season. The Sunday this class will decide winner of cup. E.S. McGuiggan of Washington Canoe Club now has most golnu on the trophy, 40, followed by ack Hazzard of the S: Club with 35; James, Hood, Sailing Club, 34; C. H. ‘Wagner, Washington Canoe Club, 30, and L. Von Culin, Washington Canoe Club, 29. In addition to the Class A race, which will be for craft of unlimited sail area, there will be a test for intermediate class canoes and another for those in race the Donald Watson, tackle. THE EVE In the group, from left to right, are: Herman Jarman, assistant coach; A. Robertson Middleton, Rev. James Henderson, former director of athletics and an active member of the board of strategy. director of athletics; UST how good are these kid ‘bowlers? ‘Tonight's the night when the out, for Ben McAlwee's young 'uns are due to oppose Mag Wood's collection of veteran and brilliant spare and strike artists on the Lucky Strike drives at 8 o'clock. Since the announcement of this # maple-minded public will findg Young ’Uns to 7Test AVefitrerans On Bowling Drives Tonight menu tonight should they take in the Commissioner-Bowling Center of Baltimore match on the Silver Spring mapleways. Lang has got his Bowling Centers determined to start off tieir out-of-town invasions with a victory. Thus far the Fountain Hams and Bethesda have made the Orioles bite the | dust. | Theyn line up as follows: Commis- | sloners—J. Saunders, Bernie Frye, Red KNICKS AFTER GAME Would Tackle Unlimited Class Grid Team Tomorrow. Knickerbocker A. C. eleven is after | a foot ball game with an unlimited | team for tomorrow. Challenges are being received by Manager Frank Ker- |sey, phone Metropolitan 4880, from | District, Maryland or Virginia teams. | His address is 908 G street. Knicks opened their season last Sun- day, when they fought Councilor A. C. to a 0-0 draw in Richmond, Va. G. P. O. Federals will drill on the Seventeenth and B streets gridiron to- night in preparation for their game to- | morrow with Councilor A. C. in Rich- | mond. The squad will leave for the Bome The athletes pictured are Capt. Ned Shippen, end (left) and Waldron O'Connor, assistant coach, and ING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1930. VASHINGTON, D. O, Ba Ry, O b ter Las PHILS AND BRAVES || STRAIGHT OFF THE TEE SORELY NEED HELP Their Strengthening Would Give Old Major Circuit Fine Balance. BY JOHN B. FOSTER. EW YORK, October 18.—Re- construction of the Boston and Philadelphia National League teams for the 1931 season will give a better balance to the National League circuit than it now has. This Is based on the probable present strength of Brooklyn and New York. Neither team seems likely to be weaker than it was in 1930. Bettering Boston and Philadel- phia will give the East a great front. Brooklyn has put a stop gap at sec- ond base in Fresco Thompson, whose skill Is more likely to be underestimated than overestimated. He did not have a very good season this year. The Brooklyn infleld, with Bissonette, Thompson, Wright and Gilbert, will be a surer infield than it has been; and if ‘Wright retains his speed, it should have a double-play skill that will be of help to the Brooklyn pitchers. O'Doul in the Brooklyn outfield adds more to the batting strength of the team than to its flelding strength. Criticism has been made of the Phil- adeiphia club for permitting Thompson and O'Doul to get away. The criticism will be sound enough when it is proved that the changes will be of disadvantage to the Phillies. Need More Than Batters. They began the season of 1930 with the best batting organization in the National Leéague and kept their pres- tige, but they proved to have only one pitcher—Phil Collins. Their great bats- men could not win a pennant by them- selves. Elliott and Dudley, pitchers, who went to the team from Brooklyn, are better than Willoughby and Benge if judged on their records. The team is not wholly without a strong outfield because it has lost O'Doul. What the Phillies do need is a high-powered catcher. ‘The Boston team has undertaken to put together a batting outfield of con- sequence, It needed that as much as it needed anything. Berger proved to be a valuable player. If Schulmerich, who comes from the Los Angeles club, is as good as Berger, Boston will be on the way to get into the first division, providing Richbourg comes through. McKechnie took Haid from the St. Louis Nationals and -did so because he knows something of the pitcher’s skill. McKechnie had him under observation l'ah:; the former was manager of St. Braves Good on Slab. ‘With Haid, Sherdel, Zachary, Frank- house, Seibold, Brandt, Cantwell and Cunningham to begin 1930 and per- haps_with a pitcher who may be even better, the Boston club will start next year much better equipped in the box than it was when it began the season of 1930. The infleld needs help, how- ever. If Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Cincin- nati and Boston are able among them to win 25 more games than they did this year and the other four teams lose correspondingly, - the Natlonal League n}n{ui,\;ve a race even tighter than that of 3 GET SIGNED BASE BALLS ‘Anacolfll Eagles, City Champions, Honored at Reception. Base balls autographed by Clark Griffith and Walter Johnson, president and manager, respectively, of the Wash- ington base ball team, were presented by them to members of the Anacostia Eagle nine, champion last season of the unlimited team section of the Cap- ital City League, at a reception given the team last night in Congress Heights Auditorium. THE LISTENING POST BY WALTER i 'HEN a team with a great kicker) comes to play us,” a coach said to me, “I offer a choice of three {:’I‘l’ “baUl: A soft, softer and softest He can't do this any more. The new rules provide that 'a foot ball be in- flated with not less than a 12'4 or more | than a 13' pound pressure. | the rule said not less than 13 or more than 14 pounds. | Passers like a ball soft enough to dig their fingers into and get a grip. Kickers } like a hard ball. TRUMBULI work for the Blue and, to my mind, Loeser and Linehan were the most ef- fective men in the e, 1 sometimes stop to wonder what so shifty a runner as Booth would have done with that old Yale line, consist- ing of Holt, Gass, Goss, Hogan, Kin- Tast year, | ney, Shevlin and Rafferty, in front of | him; or that other line which had Milstead and Blair at tackles, Lovejoy | at center and Luman at end. I think he would have done well. (Copyright, 1930, by North American News- paper Alliance.) . break 85 in a ringer contest on any standard course during a single season, but the prize mark for & selected score over one of the hardest courses anywhere in this sector of the bunkered land belongs, in our opinion, to Walter R. Tuckerman of Burning Tree, a former holder of the District and Middle Atlantic championships. Over & par 72 course Tuckerman has turned in a ringer score this season of 49, which is nothing less than 23 strokes under par. Tie that one if you can. His card contains no fewer than flve eagles and birdies on all the balance of the holes. ,One of the eagles is an ace, recorded on the fourteenth hole at Burning Tree during the Summer, after Tuckerman had played something like 33 years without a single hole in 1. This ringer score is almost & marvel for any man. Possibly Bobby Jones, if he were turned loose at Burning Tree for a season, couldn’t get near it, for it contains all those elements which ar a thing to laugh at. Tuckerman scored a 25 on the first nine holes and 24 on the second nine. Here is course: Out—Par... Now let's see if any other par chasers can better this mark. But remember, this score was made over & course meas- uring 6,400 yards long, whose par is 73. T new larger and lighter golf ball is well on its way, and it won't be long now before every one be playing it. ed Mc] , the Oo- lumbia pro now plays it almost ex- clusively, and believes if it is good for him it will be good for any other golfer. Even though Fred has not ged his ideas regarding its lack of push thro\ah a strong head wind he believes it will perform in every other way so much like the present ball that most golfers will find no difference in the two spheres. Fred played it at Columbia yester- day in a match with Robert; Stead, Jjr., vy Chase, and Emmons Smith of Columbia, and hit the new ball far on the twelfth hole that his shot rolled over where the ditch by " queriering. wing.irom. the. nordhc a’ qua ind from - west, but into the wind at ninth hole he was on the green with the n ball with a drive and a 2 iron. Fred thinks the new ball is ‘when that can be done. As to the putting, where some have an idea the new ball is to be so good, Fred thinks it no difference at all. He fin as easy to hole ’em or miss ‘e the new ball as it always has with the present type of ball. all, Preddy believes that except for the psychological factor, not even realize the the new ball when the time comes for its compulsory adoption on January 1. Three fine young golfers were hon- ored by the membership of the Wash- ington” Golf and Ceuntry Club last night at the annual club champion. form Roesch, the new District champion, and only recently winner of the club title for the fourth time. Roesch, Henry D. Nicholson, runner- up to him for the club title, and ‘Webb, the club junior champion, were eulogized in addresses by H. Doing, jr. president of the club, and L. C. Garnett, dent. Roesch replied to th his honor with a short talk, in which he related that he was “lucky” to win the District title, and hoped.he will be able to defend it properly next year. fi:re than 100 golfers attended the ner, Mrs. J. Marvin Haynes of Columbia Tty of g et staued yestorday ey _of the by the Women’s District Golf Associa- tion at Chevy Chase. Mrs. Haynes an 83 to win a sand wedge, presented to the competitors in e tourney by Robert T. Barnett, the Chevy Chase professional. Mrs. Haynes was out in 38 and back in 45 over the easlest half of the course. Eighty-three competitors played in the event, the largest entry in the history of women’s tournaments around Washington. Many of the entrants were from Baltimore, having been invited to play by the local association. Mrs, Hume Wrong of Chevy Chase won second low gross with a card of which included a brace of nines on the first and eighth holes. Mrs. Harrison Brand, jr., the new Chevy W. A. Angwin, W. A. Worley vs. C. . Cox, T. D. Osborn vs. W. R. Riter, J. L. Neftor vs. G. C. ‘Whittaker, T. W. E 3 ashdir, F. A. Greenwell vs. L, H. Brown, F. F. McNeil vs. R, A. Dawes, W. Hume vs. L. Coxe, A. J. Maxwell vs. L. MacDIll, A. F. Preston_vs. J. Washizu, F. McLeod vs. R. F. Paulette. Mrs. Charles wick and Mrs, L. F. Royce tled for first place in the women's tourney played at the Service Club yesterday, each registering & net score of 37. Thedn'lorthem was won by Mrs. Royce. Mrs. Denil and Mrs. A. F. Howard, with net qards of 39, tled for second place, == ARLINGTON, PLAZA SHOE HURLERS WIN Crane Beats Metro Cham- plon—Three Loop Matches on Tomorrow. Petworth and Pairfax County at Falls Chureh and Arlington County and Fiaza nost FOUSH i lows Leaders: Points won—.Crane, %‘u : euSinsle ringers—Quan ile and Orane, 82 Double ringers—Crane, Total l"-—fl'lfll. pil High ringer average—Crane, .343. Games won—Darr, 3. Single ringers—Edmonston, 56. Double_ ringers—Darr, 11, Total ringers—Darr, 75, High average—Darr, .268. aders: | Team totals. Chase_women's tifle holder, Sst‘x:d 1w1'thl Leaders: s Mrs. H. S. Knox of Congressional for | o i Diraa Tow ross botn Witk cards of 87, | Sinele ringere~Vonder Lancken, 62, Elizabeth Janney of the Green Spring Total ringers—Vonder Lancken, 3. ° Valley Hunt Club won the first low net | High average—Vonder Lancken, .391. | prize’ with a card of 91—18—73. Mrs. | e — . . A. St , al f G Spring Val- | ey won seeond net with & cara of| DUVALL GOLF VICTOR 9 Scores Over Graves in Central High School Tourney. low in the qualifying round of the Army, | Navy and Marine Corps Country Club | _ Edward S. Duvall, jr., won the annual championship, whose match play rounds | Central High School golf tournament begin today. The final round is sched- | with a score o1 79. He made 42 on D uled for October 24. course and 37 on F course at East Po- Here are the pairings in the six flights | -omac Park. | for the champlonship): | Harold Graves, who won the tourney | First flight—Capt. W. G. Clear vs. | last year, was runncr-up to Duvall with The card of 78 turned in by Capt | | W. J. Clear three days ago remained | Maj. P. L. Ransom, Maj. F. A. Mount- Conhelly with 83 was third. - . Class B with 80 square feet area. Entries follow: Intermediate race—Charles H. Wag- ner, Kanngiesser, E. 8. McGuiggan, L. Von Culin, E. S, Sheppard, B. Langford, ‘Washington Canoe Club; J. V. Hazzard and James F. Hood, Salling Club. Class A (unlimited)—Wagner, Haz- gard, Ganngiesser, McGuiggan, Von Culin, Hood, Sheppard and Mrs. J. H. Hurst. Class B (80 square feet)—Wagner, Megaw, Jack Wolstenhoime and How- | ard Campbell. Bowling Center—Pickus, Bradley, Askew, Blackney and Lang. | Virginia capital tomorrow morning at 8:30 o'clock. HIXSON’S BIRD FIRST Scores in Field of 191 in Race of 325 Miles. A young bird bred by W. . Hixson won th last pigeon race flown by the honest-to-goodness match was made al- | most two weeks ago, interest has been | running high, higher than that attend- | ing any other single five-game match | this season. -y ford vs. Maj. L. W. Hoyt, Capt. C. O. D PLAYERS |Thrasher vs. Cap. D. R. Luscomb, | Chaplain A. F. Vaughn vs. R. A. Theo | bald, Capt. Frank E. Stoner vs. R. P. | Batchelder, L. V. Steele vs. Maj. R. F. ITTSBURGH has kept its goal line [P Civioints st erven ios points, but| CELTICS AD Sutherissd SiT be s head s with utherland will be a hea W s Three New Ones Will Play Against o L B R LR d | Barr, Comdr. H. R. Hein vs. Comdr. | looks strong, but you ecant lose such | Ailhidions Piniriaw: i e SRR T players as Joe Donchess, Ray Mont- | | ALEXANDRIA, Va., October 18.—st. | Barrett. | gomery, Toby Uansa, Pug Parkinson, Al | | Dimeolo and Charlig Edwards without | Mary's @eltics have signed two local | Second fiight—Col. R. R. Glass vs | m!&?mzb them. | youths who played with Emerson Insti- ‘ Comdr. 1:'! % ‘;’;"B%“"' “‘,1' l\Il_ilm:}_zert Pittsburgh now plays Syracuse, Notre tut:'s strong eleven in Washington last | son vs. J. T. H. ear, Y. Hirote vs.| Deme, Nebraska, Carnegie Teci, Ohio | Fail & o A | bye, E. H. Young vs. E. Butcher, W. F. 'HE District’s top-notch feminine pin- spillers tonight. will go into a real | battle of berries in the Lorraine The Originals Juniors, who are or- § o, | Gulll Sweepstakes, the female bowling | ganized every season by Ben MCAIWee, " 1, o0ty pe inaugurated at the Arcadia | were being lauded to the skies by the aijeye’ | | organizer in the presence of Mag Wood, | According to Miss Gulli, all indica- FIGHTS LAST_PWI By the Associated Press. | ST. LOUIS—Mickey Walker, middle- | weight champlon, knocked out Tiger Johnny Cline, Los Angeles (2). Non- title. CHICAGO.—Gary Leach, Gary, Ind., Hazzard, Kanngiesser, McGuiggan, Von Culin and Hood, It is planned by the Salling Club to m}! a Howard Gretne Memorial Cup up the regatta next year. It is proposed to make it thc premier award of the club, carrying with it the annual cham- plonship. Greene, who died last June, won the Sailing Club championship lasi year. He was commodore of the club and a leading figure in the revival of cance sailing here. LOTT TENNIS VICTOR Beats Hawk in Final of Green- brier Autumn Tourney. ‘WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS, W. Va,, October 18 (#).—George M. Lott, jr., Davis Cup player of Chicago, defeaied Dr. P. M. Hawk, New York, in the final of the Greenbrier Autumn tennis tournament_here, 6—1, 6—3, 6—2. Mis. P. M. Hawk, New York, and Mrs, Barbara Duffy, Clevelgnd, defeated Florence Le Boutiller, New York, and Lee Anderson, Chicago, in the women'’s doubles final, 6—32, 6—2. and Mrs. Duffy will meet match of the women's WILL NOT PLAY TENNIS Bouth America Net Invitation Too Late for Mrs. Moody. SAN FRANCISCO, October 18 (#).— Mrs. Helen Wills Moody, women's ten- nis champion, has affirmed her inten- tion of remaining in California for the next few months and playing only ex- hibition She set. at rest published reporis she had intended playing in matches in Bouth America, snying she had received an invitation too late to accept. | Carroll Daly and Al Wori, who showed | & semblance of the grcen-eyed mon- ster. Both teams, however, will Jose | strength for the match as the Commis- | stoner's, who bowl George Larg’s Bowl- |ing Center team ight at Silver | 8pring, will draw Howard Campbell and |Red Megaw from Wcod's quint and | Jack Wolstenholme, ace of the Juni Wolstenholme's place, however, will b |filled by & capable pinman in Phil | Hefrelfinger, newspaper chempion; Ralph McReady or Johnny Anderson. Meg | Wood, who was prepared for such an | emergency, named enough on his team to fill the loss of Campbell and Megaw. | For the Juniors, Paul Harrison, Eddie Espey, Tim Dunworth and Hokie Smith are sure to start, with either HefTel- kids, mak'ng up the five. Al Work, Carroll Daly, Red Morgan, Glenn Woistenholme and Mag Wood, himself, will knock ’'em over for the | Vets. Not only will the latter quint be fighting for their reputations, but a neat piece of change will trickle into their hands should they emerge vic- torious. | All in all, it looks like a real battle, | with the Vets holding the edge. ES, sir, the yer Davis turned the trick on Rendezvous, In a match that was ied hot from beginning to end, the underdogs won two out of three from the ex-leaders, and the Howard Campbell-maneged King Pin aggregation, defending cham- pione, are in first piace for the first time since the District League season 2gaL. Net only that, but the twin sock-or the-nose shoved the Tad Howard crew back into a tie with the Temples for second , a great situation for some real battling’next week. ILVER SPRING pin fans will have a Jot of bowling act'on on their | finger, or one of the other two named | boys | | tions are for a record fleld, each bowler | posting & 2-buck fee, plus the price of ! three games. | 'HAT duckpin bowling is coming into | its own faster and faster is evinced | by & letter received by George L. | Isémann. _secretary of the National Duckpin Bowling Corgress | The letter, written by Frank Menke, a New York sports writer, who publishes all-sport record book, asks for the | complete N. D. B. C. reports for the | year. The demand for duckpin sta- | tistics, read the letter, has been so great that the request was necessitated. 'HE noise in the ldwer rt of the Arcadia alleys grows more and more in volume now when the Columbia Heights League bo The league, labeled as the scrappiest cver aggregated, has undergone a complete change. Last-place teams and set-ups have | | become the leaders and the erstwhile | leaders have become mired as the b ing importation comes on. Bell ation fac with no prospects of climbinz two weeks ago, are the leaders now, as several new | pin-epliilers were adced. Cool Drinks, which after the third week had not won a single_game, now |are in second place, while Ford Elec- tric, another taflender, did its bit in| taking Chaconas Market, deposed lead- ers, for three straight. As John Blick remarked, “What,a league!” HE third of the men's weckly sweep= stakes at the King Pin No. 1 goes on tonight, with Phil Goodall and Lawhorn, winners of the two previous stakes, faced with anything but 2 b ight prospsct of repeating, as the fleld, which has been growing steadily, now talies in virtually every topnotch pin- spiller in the District. D. C. Club from Bristol, Tenn., an air line distance of 325 miles. A total 0f 191 birds from 13 lofts competed. Diplomas went to the lofts whose birds finished first, second and third. Hixson won the average return diploma | with 8 out of 18 for a percentage of 44 Henry C. Hile won 2s to averaze speed for the young bird seri:s with 778.298 | miles in 25 hours 30 minutes 45 seconds. Order of finish showing the averdg speed in yards a minute of the first return te each loft for the Bristol race follows: W. S. Hixson, 675.20; Henry C. Hile, | 674.40, W. V. Holmes, 672.20; F. J.| | Voith, 666.10; Manor Loft, 659,10; | Bethesda Loft, 629.90: Buddington Loft, 582.00; Julig Soldano, 548.10; Ross & Schreiber, 513.00; Joe Turowski, 515.20, and Petworth Loft, Eagle Loft and Alvan C. Chaney, no report. | | * NINES 7§ TWIN BILL. | Pleasant P 5, Va,, and Wesley All~ | Stars and o “ville and Tenleytown A.| | €. Nincs wifl geet in a base ball double- | header Monday afternoon at Norbeck, | Md. The first two teams will open the program at 1:30 o'clock. On the Drives | out | e Lorraine Gulli Sweepstakes—Arcadia | atleys. Weekly | Men's Pin No. g | saturday Night League (Convention | Hall)—Downtown Parking Garage vs. Saturday Nighters, De Molay vs. Book of Weshingion, Cclumbus No. 2 vs. Capitl Wall Paper Co., Nationals vs. Rackc(zars, Palisade vs. Columbus Uni- vers No. 1. Spe_ial mateh--Original Washington Mag Wood's Vets. Lucky Sweepstakes—King Juniors vs. Strike, 8 c‘clckk. N State and Penn State, a very impos- ing list as foot ball teams go. Sutherland hates points to opposing teams, perhaps be- cause he was born in Scotland. Suther- | Jock | land came to this country when he was | Engineers player, who also plays haif- | C. H. Humphrey, O. C. Badger vs. C. O. |18 and attended Oberlin Academy 1n‘bagz;_ - o Ohio. When he entered Pitt, where Joe | Duff of Princeton was coaching, he| with the Celtics tomorrow when the | H. L. Krafi, H. Gilmore vs. C. W. Lewis never had played foot ball, but went | |out for the team and showed such| aptitude for the game that he played | in the third contest of the season| against Navy. From then on he was| a regular, and since then he has be- come a most successful coach. Three of the high-scoring elevens of the year to date have been Colgate, Cornell and Dartmouth. Colgate has run up 178 points, Cornell 174 points, and Dartmouth 173 points. That would | appear to be carrying the ball to good | advantage. Oberlin has scored 27 points | and had 27 scored against it. Fair| enough! | | | In the pariance of the ring, Georgia outboxed Vale. The Southerners feint- | ed the Bulldog into openings and then socked unprotected_territory. | Georgia also outboxed Yale in a real | | | foot ball sense—the boxing of linemen | to let a runner through. That's | | emart Georgia te I have been told of one coach this season wio apparently refuses to take boys until they are utterlr exhaust- That is a bad fault. Any time a | youngster shows signs of tiring badly, a substitute should be sent in. Not to| | send in a reserve man is to invite in- | | jury. | Some foot ball followers believe that | Yale should play Alble Booth at half- back. put two good interferers in the backfleld with him and play Heim ot auarter. One objection to this is that it. might weaken the secondary de- fense. Taylor is one back who did good ‘Fnll and & member of Patsy Donovan's ‘Washington Mohawks. They are Ellet Cabell, halfback, and to part with any| “Bottles” West, tackie; while the 'Hawk | Capt. Baldwin, Capt. J. performer is “Buddy” Houston, former Alexandria High and Fort Humphreys ‘The newcomers will make their debut West Arlington A. C. of Baltimore, is entertained at 2:30 o'clock at Baggett's Park. = OKUN TO FIGHT JOHNSON. CHICAGO, October 18 (#).—Yale Okun, New York light-heavyweight, and Larry Johnson, Chicago Negro puncher, will ‘meet in a 10-round bout at the Coliseum October 31. RACING LAUREL, MD. October 7 to November 1 Inclusive Twenty Minutes to Track by Specizl Baltimore & Ohio R. R. Trains Leave Union Station, Wash- ington, at 12:15 P.M. and 12:45 P.M. General knocked out Jimmy Moore, New York . 4 _NEW YORK.—Justo Suares, Argen- | tina, outpointed Louis (Kid) Kaplan, | Meriden, Conn. (10); Jimmy Slavin, ‘| New York, stopped Kolf Kola, Porto | Rico (5); Archie Bell, New York, out- | pointed Johnny Pena, Spain (8). .| ERIE, Pa—Larry Madge, Cleveland, rown mllépmnted Joe Trippe, Rochester, N. Y. | o). i HOLLYWOOD, Calif.—Cecil Payne, Fulton vs. A. J. Cooper, A. B. Jones G. W. Cunningham, E. W. Wildrick vs. ‘T. Menzies vs. | W. C. Rose. ‘ Third flight—M. R. Guggenheim vs. | Henry, B. Lear vs. H. T. Burgin, H. C. | Cocke vs. T. M. Shock, E. G. Doyle vs. | E. Hughes vs. Gen. Murray, A. E. B | vs. Gen. C. D. Rhodes. |, Fourth ‘flight—A. 'H. Chadwick vs. | . W. Scofield, J, C. Magee vs. M. H. | Kingman, C. G. George vs. A. Furlow, Louisville, outpointed Ignacio Fernan- dez, Philippines (10). | WANTED USED CARS $100—$100—$100 Above allowance MINIMUM on your old car, if accepted in trade on— New Ford Automobiles Ou; appraisal just as liberal on cars valued Please Bring This Advertisement OCT. 18th TO 21st ONLY CHERNER MOTOR CO. —Ford Dealers— 1781 You St. NW. North 8565