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0SS GIVES HovA INGENTIVE T0 TRY ¥Up-Against-I1t” Complex Hit His Team, Tom Declares. Md. Reserves Weak. BY H. C. BYRD. E lost to Western Mary- \ ;s ; land, but the defeat will do us a lot of good, and I have con- fidence enough in my team to feel that we will come through much better during the remainder of the season than ordinarily might be expected,” is the way Coach Tom Mills of Georgetown summed up his reaction over the defeat sus- tained by Georgetown Saturday. g, s o ot heln(o”!om frame of mind. He firmly greatest incentive to accomplish bigger, comes from a whipping. We § ; iR i it Nation’s Leading Gridiron Scorers By the Associated Press. ted Georgia fullback to the top of the heap in the battle for the nlthnll individual foot ball scoring Rcbem has scored 66 points in 1ou.r m leader in each of the major groups follows: P. G.TD.PAT.FG.Tot. Georgia..FB 4 11 0 0 Fordam.HB ViViens, Gorneil. .HB ific— Kitzmiller, Oreg..HB Hocky Mountain~— Specken, Denver.. QB Southw Leland. Texas poiristien Sixc pcluthera— l as 4 4 4 . Big Bausch, HB Niissoury Vaney. Saugelle, Wash- U.....HB 3 & Ton Beres, Northwest'n. B 0 BAKER, PURPLE END, TOP BIG TEN SCORER Tallying in Illinois Game Makes Point Total 24—Standing of Conference. By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, October 20.—Grabbing Northwestern end 24 points, to take the Big Ten scoring lead. Baker's first touchdown was scored a week ':efore last ] EEEERE i Big Ten foot ball standings in con- ference competition only follows: op. Northwestern r H L] cooctiiatyh BREBEE ooy 4 g3sshnasssd w. 2 2 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 ° [OITSISTRRRIR. Speeds to Defeat Of Tarheel Team GREENWOOD, 8. C., October 20 () —When President Frank Graham H] HH f . "§§az ik il S i H L g : fyek o i sssf sEiEY fu 1 i & | g2 E H g B E22 iz g BE I § - i g E i 3 siE 89 = la 3 in 1924 Michigan's 24-t0-0 defeat of in mdemmwmflnm-mdmtm- provement. Anl:f.‘t\mnh‘h fought & game at Delaware, winding up the first half with the Fiaing po 8o second half. ll'ulnfihelewndhl" that Delaware ran up its big count after having gre ly worn down the Kendall Green defense. EORGE WASHINGTON has in|Brown Carter and Wells two ground-gain- ning backs of much greater ability than they have generally been credited with. Their exhibition of ball carrying at times against the South Dakota | eleven last Friday night was far above the average, and olther would be hard to stop in any contest Incidentally, the Georle Washington- SouLh Dakota nnu indicated that when Michigan aj part luuonu!nowhlpohlosmhn&her previous of the University of North Carolina ONLY 43 ELEVENS UNBEATEN, UNTIED Heavy-Scoring Dartmouth, With Five Victories, Is Regarded Leader. By the Associated Press. EW YORK, October 20.—The national list of unbeaten and untied foot ball teams has dwindled to 43. Although outranked by four other elevens in number of victorles, Dart- mouth’s heavy scoring brigade has as- sumed the lead in total points. The Indians from Hanover have tallied 225 points in four games, holding their op- ponents scoreless. Clemson, North Dakota, Oklahoma City and North Dakota State all have won five games without defeat or tie. Ten teams on the list have permitted the opposition no points. The unbeaten and untied teams follow: Grove City .. New York Uni B N N N N N Y Yy . canaaBualiac By the Associated Press. Pacific Coast Conference standings are as follows: WITH SUNDAY MORNING EDITION D £ PRO FOOT BALL COLUMBUS, Ohio, October 20 (#).— Following is the standing of clubs in the Ball League with yester- day’s games included: Club. Tied. Fet, 1906 Chicago Cai Newark phee sl DR PEPSRRTrY | Results. Frankford, 0. mnnen;om, 0. Providence, 7; Stapleton, Chitago Bears, 32 Chicase Cardinals, 8. Saturdsy. Brookiyn, Frankford, 7. MURPHY AND VIVIANO IN SCORING LEAD TIE Top Eastern List With 60 Points Each—Tanguay Has 589—Scalzi Stands Twelfth. 14 By the Associated Press. In individual scoring, Jim Murphy of . | Fordham and Bart Viviano of Cornell -} o000 csecco} ‘Washington Stanford Oregon .. Southern M- eeooop 2 *University of mmoml. at Los Angeles. Mfi:’ Yi gm Harvard, Fo! ork University meet at New York. :m-, unbeaten by a sectional rlnl. rates consideration, as Wuwm Maryland, conquerors ¢ town. cause of illness from vaccination, th- western went down to Champaign an mve Illinois the worst trimming nn h&)i:fi:elmzhu zen forced to llllml | ce Zu| started coac there. meosgv.wunwo fih::g ’s eleven was loolted upon almost dismay, but it is likely that the M score of Saturday caused a Iot of blank looks of astonishment. pparently took & new decisively. The ‘Wolverines in contests had checkered wune with nothing to com- mend them particularly as a strong team. Against Ohio State, though, they were everything except weak, | much to Ohlo State’s discomture, IOME of the bll Eastern elevens fared well and some fared just the op- | nume Columbia took a real | lacing from Dartmouth and, if the score means anything, is not strong. Pennsylvania went out to the Middle West and ran into something similar Army's real test comes flfll week with Yele, as it wants | to make up for the kicking about it took at New Haven last year. Yale did not let the Georgia setback, nor the triumph over Pflnceton. WOrTy it in the least Saturday and Brown | went back to Providence three touch- | downs to the bad. Notre Dame's vic- | tory over Carnegie Tech tells nothing | more nor less than a story of another | great team at South Bend, a team that has manpower to waste. IOUTH ATLANTIC elevens did not fare so well in their games Satur- period, when it t wns regtmered against it to break a 14-to-14 t existed at the end of the third. Vl.rltlll.l and Virginia Polytechnic In- stitute won their ies, the former !mm V. M. 1. and latter from Wil- . However, V. P. L's vic. scant margin of a d:c-l How Foot Ball Is Stzmg Up On Fields Throughout U. S. BIG TEN.—Northwestern’s over- against Vanderbflt and Tech against Tulane. BIG SIX.—Kansas, as a result of victory over the Kansas Aggies, shares the lead with Oklahoma, beaten by Texas in a non-conference Oklahoma meets a tough foe les this week, while only two points by Nebraska. Mis- souri plays its first conference game November 1. PACIFIC COAST. — Washington State, Stanford and Orecon are the only unbeated teams. Oregon stopped sm”.los ,lnd Bhnlorg beat n - t this week is the metmg}:),f s:.pg_ ford and Southern California. Cal- ifornia takes on Washington, Wash- ington State tackles Montana and Oregon plays Idaho. ROCKY MOUNTAIN. ‘Utah, per- |Louisiana " State "Uriver: g'lnuedlormehnnorotlmlnlthz East's foot ball cohorts. Each has scored 10 touchdowns for a total of 60 points. Tanguay of New York University is pressing the leaders hard with a 59- point total gained from nine touch- downs and five extra points, while Eyth of Carnegie Tech, tied with him for sec- ond place in touchdowns, is fourth on the list with 54 points. Individual scoring leaders follow: Fos G TD.PAT.FG.Tot, J. Murphy, Fordham. HB ) Viviano, nell. 59 54 53 Handieman, Grossman, Rutgers. Sy, Col' Island. a3 4 43 42 42 41 P T N sasanancnaIIIIne0eSS! oococusatioos-ononao) cocorsorooccscssces aamaae;:saa:&?is: Dixie Conference Team Standings The standing of the Southern Con- ference foot ball teams, mcludmu games of Saturday, follows: Alabama ¥ Virginia Polytechnic Ins. North Carolina State Mississippl Tulang SISt 1 OO OO OO O §§§§§§§'§§§'§§ MONDAY, OCTOBER [ e | @he Zoening Staf. WASHINGTON, Mills Is Light-Hearted Over Defeat : Cornell, Army. 20, 1930. Curt GREVE_ OREGON REGARDED LIKELY | WEST COAST GRID WINNER Rest of Schedule Makes It Favorite Over Stanford and Washington State—Clears Hardest Hurdle in Beating University of Washington. BY HOWARD JONES. Poot Ball Cosch_Uni Southern | of Satitornte > OS ANGELES, Calif., October 20. —ASs a result of Saturday's games in the Pacific Coast Conference three teams remain undefeated in the race for the championship, Wash- ington State, Oregon University and Stanford. Of the three, Oregon has the best chance of remaining unbeaten, due to the fact that Doc Spear’s eleven in the games to come does not face the com- petition which ' will be sent against Washington State and Stanford. Oregon cleared her hardest hurdle Saturday by defeating the University of ‘Washington, 7 to 0, in a hard-fought % |game at Portland. The only touchdown | came soon after the start of the second 4g |half on a pass from Londahl to Kitz- miller, the play netting 50 yards. Ore- gon, according to all reports, had much mmmoxmm-umxm al- though was bitterly fought mdml:hl hnvabeenazd up had Wash- ington received-a break or two late in Stanford Under Wraps. Stanford, although of a scare, won over to 7. I saw this game, and the Stan- ford team apparently was in there with the idea of taking things as easy as possible. Coach Warner used largely second stringers throughout most of the first half, and it was apparent to all of us that this line outplayed Oregon | State’s first team, which indicates con- siderable reserve -f.remh at Stanford. Phil Mo very good halfback, scored Shn{m’dl two touchdowns just o | before the first half closed, racing 13 yards around end on a reverse lateral for the fiax;t llldd !allo'r'red t';l},!mu& b'z taking a 20-yard pass from e scamper 15 yards over the line. | Oregon State used passes and line plays to carry the ball 70 yards in the third quarter and then Little went over | from the 12-yard line. | Coach Warner told me before the game that he might be defeated, in- asmuch as little attempt had been made to fire the players with enthusiasm. It was evident that the Stanford men were mean only one thing—that the Cardi- nals are pointing for Southern Cali- ennial champion, is the only team in the conference unbeaten and un- tied, but gets its first real test Sat- urday agsinst Denver. Utah showed a great offensive against Brigham Young Saturdsy. Colorado College bowed to Denver in the other major game. Colorado Aggies, unbeaten in Aggles. BOUTHWEST.—Texas Christian, by vin.ue of a 3-0 victory over Texas M., sets the pace with \two conterence victories. Southern Meth- odist’s record hns been spoiled by a 14-14 tie with Baylor. The race is stili wide open, with Texas Univer- sity, which has not appeared in con- ference competition, a decided “dark horse” after a 17-7 victory over Okhhmnum):zlwhhn * lgm are on y's al Texas-Rice and Arkansas-Texas A. & M. both are conference games. S i e """:: GAITHERSBURG BOOTERS SURPRISE, LEAD LEAGUE Gaithersburg booters today are out in front in the Capital City Soccer League flag race as the result of their surprise | . 3-2 victory yesterday over Rockville, A fine defense materially aided the victors. In other Capital City loop encounters Rosedale came from behind to conquer 'has | Fashion Shop, 4 to 3, and Army tri- to 1. were vic- Soccer hed 3 e League, !mr Gaelic- Ancne-u.lwl and the latter de- feating British .a.,noo. Hawks Flash Good Foot Ball In 0-0 Game With Irvington supporters of the Southeast foot ball team found some consola- tion in that 0-0 game yesterday with Irvington of Baltimore, for the Hawks, after having looked w:ak in their first two games, flashed a semblance of their old fight. ‘The Irvingtons, with a line-up dotted with stars from the Naval Academy and ot.her nearby colleges, are the same who unced Lansdowne, the team which onee defeated the Hawks and later was held to a scoreless dr:: Hlt:l:.b hardly were expected win y rday and the pointless tie more than sufficed. The invaders tested the mettle of the Indians all around. Several times, with HOUGH the Mohawks have yet to. score a victory this season, n to do their stuff, while the llne duphyed great defensiye .uen:th umelbnctnlvnmnuunhnow otiu own goal line, ‘The Hawks will be out for their first victory of the season Wednesday when they again m the fleld at Orlflth Stadium to play the Catonsville, Md., eleven in a nocturnal game, starting at 8:15 o'clock. played the An With the Mohawks ha: to & scorelges d the Northerns losing to the same team, sandlot grid fans have a good chance to see what's what Sunday when Frank Kersey’s Knickerbockers take on the Orfoles, in Baltimore. ‘The Knicks, who have played and lost once this year, will start prep‘.\‘l-\ tions for this game tomorrow night | with a workout at Seventeenth and B | streets. Alcova Motor eleven of Arlington still has a victory to win. Yesterday the strong Northern Preps downed the Alcovas, 6 to 0, when Houston romped around end for a 15-yard run in the second quarter for the lone score, Northern Red Birds are due to get plenty of work from now on before tobe the champion Apaches on Oc- Manager Buck Grier plans a series of drills and a game for Sunday. He is filling out his November schedule and hl.;l“wm open dates. Call Columbia Marion A. C, in upsetting the Navy ‘Yard Marines, 24 to 0, yesterday, flashed some neat defensive teamwork, wruch, together with the offensive ‘play Southworth, Foff and R. Hughes, yuc the favorites to rout. Councillor ond yester- day soundly P. O. Fed- mn‘%flu, lg ey not extending themselves, and this can | bilt, Tackle (for next Saturday’s game with Wash- n. Fred Schlichting, former Cali- fornia halfback, now playing with the club, scored both touchdowns for the ers. Southern California an easy its merry way in the Rocky Mountain Conference, swamp- ing Brigham Young, 34 to 'I‘ Denver University showed strength b ming Colorado College, 6 to 0, whllg Colorado U won over Colorado Mines, 36 to 7. Cop; 1 North American News- (Copyright, no lry‘mm“‘ PAGE C—1 Yale Display Grid Power ROPER SURPRISED BY COLUMBIA ROUT Duke’s Defeat of Middies Is Upset—Temple One of East’s Strongest. BY W. W. (BILL) ROPER, Princeton Foot Ball Coach. RINCETON, N. J., October 20. —A well drilled ' Cornell team defeated a hard- fighting, but inexperienced, Princeton team, 12-7. Cornell, on the form displayed, deserved to win. The Ithacans had a decided advantage in the first half and gained rather consistently. Cor- nell used a single and double wing back formation, bucking in- side and outside of tackle. it as if Cornell was go! with the game. But econditions were reversed in the second half. this half Princeton showed to much better advantage. The fumble of & punt gave Princeton the ball deep in | Cornell’s territory, and in half a dozen plays the Princeton attack scored & touchdown. From then on Princeton had the advantage, but wasn't strong THE SPORTLIGHT BY GRANTLAND RIC! The Dwindling List. New ‘Iorklgnlvexmy, Fordham, Cornell ARVARD, Pennsylvania, Car- |and Tem| negie Tech, Ilinols, and J, Columbia, Syracuse and Colgate were among those who left the uplands on Saturday to walk for the first time this season through the valley of defest. It is an impres- llve lld. of 'lAutll. fortnight has nearly s &dmfl yet the list of unbeaten and u-m has dwindled to only & the leaders. In among uulhmrch-shepeflomnneaolu least four teams stood out They were and Georgia. Against such lmnl teams as Carnegle Tech, Pennsylvania, Illi-| nois and North Carolina these four | teams ran up 106 points to 6 scored by their opponents. When Notre Dame beat Carnegie Tech, 21 to 6, it merely added further proof to the idea that the South Bend citnd!l has one of its greatest war camps. There is an extremely good chance now that Natre Dame will not be stopped this year in spite of her | smashing schedule, It took a powerful Wisconsin ‘team wrunup 27 points against a Red and Blue squad considered the strongest in years, In the same way any team that can pile up 32 points against one of Bob Zuppke's ols combinations has something to spare. Georgia’s 26-t0-0 victory over North Carolina comes under the same class. These four teams have gone on from strength to greater strength, Wash- ington State, Pittsburgh, Army, Vander- Alabama, Florida, Kansas, Cornell, N. ¥. U, Dartmouth, Fordham, Temple and a few others still are with the parade marching through spotless town, but there will be more bombing this | week al another busy front. spi of the heavy casualty list, the war is just warming up, with the main offensive ltul on The Cagleless Army. THE Army has run out of Cagles, and it also is out o! the cage of & one- man att Sasse and his staff put the Pop Wlmer wing system into action against Harvard, but it was remarkable how smoothly this new method worked in an October game. | It was a well coached, aggressive, good | ali-around Army team that beat a good Harvard team, for Harvard had a good team, even though it was minus the | services of Devens lnd Mays, two os the best of the Crimson backs. Yes, with these mn missing, it took team to beat Harvard on Bat- with. The Army end to end and a set of first-class backs. Harvard, with Mays, Devens and Tal- bot back, will be one of the high-rank- ing teams later on. slip by Yale, it should go through un- beaten up to the Notre Dame party in Chicago, in which event, at least 200 spectators may be induced to buy tick- ets and come out. At least that many— if you multiply it by a thousand. Brown, | Tennessee, North Carolina, W. | Has & whale of a line from | 5 If the Army can | g3t ple. | In the Midwest the three strongest are Notre Dame, Northwestern and Wis- consin, and these two latter squads now have the inside whirl at a conference mlm although Michigan is g along. In the South, Georgia, Vanderbilt and Alabama have shown greater strength, with Florida also a member of '-he'mn. way West, Kansas has an array of talent that is pronounced ex- ptlunflbylll'hohlvsmfifllw aquldlnlcflnn. “Look out for Kansas” isa an you will hear later on. And State still maintains its Coast group, with Stanford and Uni- | versity of Southern_California only a | notch behind. The Southwest umnuon he'r jo;‘ml lite. Unlooked for. 'HE big scores run up against Car- negie Tech, Pennsylvania, Illinois | and Columbia were somewhat sur- prising, to break the news gently. ic can happen—once a strong team gets the jump. Duke’s victory over the Navy by such & margin also was among the unexpected turns. 6 It took some Southern team four years to upset Bob Neylands’ Tennessee array, but this time a strong Alabama team had the stuff, and with McEver, a star back, out for good, the volunteer star was about to find some cloud. Vanderbilt had an easier time, but this week Vanderbilt faces Alabama, and then the dust will be flying, Northwest- ern, minus Hank Bruder, ‘and Wiscon- | sin must be two of the best teams the conference has had in years. With Bruder back later on, even Notre Dame will have something to worry about. Cornell's victory over an lmpmvlnl Princeton team proved Ithaca is on her way. (Copyright. 1930. by North American News- paper Alliance.) Eastern Gridiron Team Standings Records of Eastern teams to date, uum{npfled by - the Associated Press, Pts. As; - g et CoBeagsSEEEnsEly otoohocoo! SERER the G. erals, .36 to 0, in the Virginia capital. ©90000--000000000000000~~00000000000 'pgu»un--—-.-.._-—___-—_-eeuaoeaoaeeee}‘ b I L reseaguiBseasss it will echo as far Eastward as Franklin | 80 Hfl‘! a close ' nmewlt.hhomnllilhflyhhmo{ Fordham. Pittsburgh showed wnsidmbh talent strength against by two touchdowns. Lafayette staged 2 fine comeback after the 414 defeat a' the hands of Colgate and & scoreless tie. One of the dny was Duke'’s derut of the len! dworln; power & t{mm- ‘Tech and Hobart. Villanova showed much improved form College. ‘Temple mmpefll teams in the East, Mfl“fll w. -running pmudimneinfronlottumm consin’s score against Penn. Penn had been hlndlappefl for the nm‘e“!‘vly”z‘wo is a hard T easy contests and the trip to one, too. (Copyright, 1930, by North American News- Paper Alliance.) D. C. CYCLISTS MISS TITLE BY ONE POINT BALTIMORE, Md., October 20— Victorious in four of the nine events, Century Road Club Association riders of Washington, D. C., falied Just one point to win the South Af e bicycle championships, held here - /terday. New York was victorious 37 points l‘ll’!llnd Bicycle Olllb 'lth was third and, the Bal One-lap novice—Won by L. Giagrands, O C. New York Division: second, P. w_York Division: i ne " Newman. New York. g, Dis- third, fourth, Conmbia. "Time, nm‘kn potnt «".f:n )—Won by R. Lip- ori “hisher, m”%}"‘éfli.m’-'fi' bmrm of ' a“'l'n':m.l'ax m:fim (cMichaels, FBorsen, Marviana Bicycle Glub. Time, e nandlcanWon by R. Lipgett, New York: ucord. Trick of c&lum- s B rty, New York. Prte T scimer, '3 s oo ¥