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/s " Sports News ’ @hg WASHINGTON, D. C, Maryland to Stress Building Up of Reserves we N - SECOND STRINGERS T0LD T0 GET BUSY Several Warned to Pep Up or Turn in Suits—G. U. Expects Victory. BY H. C. BYRD. NIVERSITY OF MARY- LAND, realizing the marked weakness and lack of “ ‘knowledge of foot ball of its reserve players, as shown in the game with St. John's last week, plans some intensive work for the next week or 10 days to build up the men who are to be called on to fill positions now held by so-called regulars. The work began yesterday with lectures by three coaches that lasted during almost the entire practice period, ¢ and not one of the men who spoke minced words in telling about one-half the members of the squad what they do not know about. foot ball. Against St. John's College last week the Maryland second-stringers, so-called, made & miserable showing. If they had gone on the fleld with the definite thought of doing as little in the way of good foot ball as possible they could not have carried out their purgou more - effectively. For about three quarters and part of the fourth quar- ter, the Maryland varsity held St. John's without much difficulty, but the last six or eight minutes was another story. For about two minutes, before the reserves really began to find out how to do their worst, they made out o fairly well. Then, after they had dis- fhe right places at the right time. ney at the e, they the kind of foot ball that is ple the other team. Coaches Talk Plainly. of the second-stri pening Stad. | [ Meaning Nothing. are two details along the line of foot ball records that mean exactly nothing. One is “the high scorer for the season” more points against weak opposition ‘l.:me than & star back can score in a wl valty. Onme fair team Seb-up 80 %o 0, where anogher team is doing a far better job in trimming a rival 7 to 0. 3 general proposition the “leading ’ a;’hi.;n Tass. compets cl competi- 5 of an indictment than whatever to _except in will be more fur flwylnl :‘hh next Saturday. Quite a delegation of the unbezwn will ‘be handed me%t may ‘l;nwd. here and there, 10 ote Dame has been beaten and neither has Pittsburgh. There is a chance that Notre Dame won't be 8, ntmrongly supplied with reserves, will tend even Notre Dame, a feat that only Southern Methodist has accomplished to date. “pm% only one case. An unbeaten téam moves against an improving ood | Yale team—a Yale ieam that is on its fefly the that Maryland and plaved has resulted in & . The frst in 1910 was & victory for V. M. 1. by 8 to 0, the next $n 1916 was won by Maryland, 15 to 9. the next was a tie, 14 to 14, the next two were won by Maryland, 7 to 6 and 10 to 6, the next was a tie, 0 to 0, and last year V. M. I. was victor by 7 to 6. Games Always Close. It is coubtful if any series of con- tests between any two schools could show any closer struggles. And the games have been just about as hard and close as the scores indicate. For instance that 0-to-0 game two years ago found Maryland g away at V. M. 1's goal line in the first quarter loging the ball on a fumble on just two feet from a touchdown, while the * last minutes of ‘u‘:e llou;lh qulyr:; found V. M. I. on Maryland's one-: 3 with three downs to put the ball ‘. 1. not seem to be as strong it_was last, although in which it has been meet- V. M. 1. generally was picked y three or four touchdowns. 1t is likely that a big group of Old Liner people will make the trip, as V. M. I Cadet Corps and the ‘bands of both schools will be present. EORGETOWN started its prepara- tion for the West Virginia game y night with rather a light yet y, Milis spending most 3 going over with his squad in Wevl&u comal‘t: and it plans to prove gen- his men ’: a team. Mills way forward—a Yale team good enough to it Brown, 21 to 0. A powerful-looking Dartmouth team, strongly supplied with reserves, 1 find Harvard walting, and Harvard hopes to have Eddie Mays ready and a much better line on hand than the Army had to meet. And the hardest game of the day may easily be the meeting of Stanford and Southern California. Here is one battle that is always closely and bitterly fought be- tween two powerful teams that can throw in high-class reserves as long as_they are needed. ‘When it comes to hard fighting, there no game on the schedule take the high note from N. Y. U. and Fordham, who put on their civil war in New York. Fordham has now won 13 games in a row since 1928. N. Y. U. has come back to her own. This will be a contest. Southern Strength. 'HE South from Carolina to Texas is moving up in a hurry this season. if those secondary men had been taken care of.” FORMER Pittsburgh High School player said yesterday: “Catholic University will face one of the toughest teams there is when it goes mfnn Duquesne this week. Duquesne has a lot of experienced foot ball %lly- ers and should win from C. U. by a big margin. And I believe that it is good h to stand a chance against almost any eleven in this section. It is better than some I have seen.” The Brookland team is getting its more or less shattered forces in the best shape possible to meet this Du- quesne outfit. Last year Duquesne came here and beat C. U. in a great foot ball.game, the score being 18 to 13. However, Catholic U. has not so far shown as mu'cls l&nnshmu it did a year ago, possibly due e numerous m;urfi-"’u has had to contend with, EORGE WASHINGTON meets Dick- G inson College here Saturday night and expect to win. The Buff and to play its first game ights. In order to get some practice under such conditions under which the game will be played, Gallaudet is to spend an hour of scrim- under the lights with Maryland this evening. The Kendall Greeners are not dil:: over thelr showing with Del thy fine their 3> Capr Rep GoRrDON- Goarad > THE SPORTLIGHT BY GRANTLAND RICE: Vanderbilt trims Minnesota, 33 to 7, and Minnesota holds Stanford to a 0-0 tie. On the same day 8. M. U. from Texas comes to Notre Dame and has the South Bend Simoon collared in an even blow up to the last two or B kmown Ghis Far.* Geargia. comes . known L comes North to_beat Yale the 'Blue an South Carolina beats 23 to 0, and Duke beats the Navy, 18 to 0. ‘Comparative scores mean little, but comparative performances on the field mean a lot. As good as that Arm backfield was against Harvard, wi Bowman, lter, Fields ‘and Herb, Yale 'flld find it ‘l’i:xl'l:‘t the wml;t:;: speed and savage power of Georgia backs, who strike faster and harder than any set of backs I have seen this year. Which brings up the thought that Vanderbilt and Alabama will put on a feature show this week at B ham that may have a dis- tinct bearing on the Southern cham- ip, especially after Alabama’s vic- tory over Tennessee. The Misfortunes of War. extensive this season. Harvard has had almost no use from Mays and Devens, two of her backfield aces and the main cogs in her lateral passing Northwestern has missed Hank Bruder, one of the best in the game. Tennessee has lost McEven for the year and there is no better back than this fast, shifty 185-pounder. In most cases it has been an affair of bad knees. And a bad knee is no help to any foot ball player. He could get by better with two bad necks—if he happened to be built that way. beaten at all, but here is another hard | joio0) Out beyond the Mississippi they are still talking about this big Kansas team. “For sheer size and power it has no equal in foot ball,” one veteran observer writes. “And it is far from being slow.” Notre Dame’s hardest job will be to keep ke up from one hard Saturday to ai , with almost no rest. N. D. has already beaten S. M. U, Navy and Carnegle Tech. It still has left a few such teams as Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Northwestern, Army and Southern California. Even these remaining to | games make a tougher schedule than most teams face. ‘When it comes to rugged schedules, however, few have anything on Yale. Maryland (pretty good), _Georgia, Brown, Army, Dartmouth, “Princeton and Harvard. It takes a flock of re- serve strength to handle this assign- ment. Notre Dame has it. Yale has yet to show how much the Blue carries in the way of spares. “Columbia’s defeat by 52 to 0 and Illinois defeat by 32 to 0 are good things for both teams,” writes an ex- pert. Explain that just a little more fully to Lou Little and Bob Zuppke. Fortunately they both have rebound! dispositions and have already prove their places in the sun. . by North American News- (Copyright, 1930 by North American News 'HE casualty list in foot ball has been | ‘ JAKE. SeBuLsSKY- Quarrerbsck- QUITS AS HEAD COACH Van Liew to Continue as Assistant at N. C. State. RALEIGH, N. C, October 21 (#).— John M. van Liew, head foot ball coach at North Carolina State College, has tendered his resignation. It was ac- cepted by Dr. E. C. Brooks, president. Van Liew, a graduate of Grinnell College, came to North Carolina State this Fall from Peru, where last year he directed & Government athletic program. Dr. Ray Sérmon, director of athletics, has been placed in active charge of the team, but that Van Liew will continue as his assistant. Dr. Sermon will con- tinue as coach of the team. —_— V. M. I. TUNES ATTACK | FOR MARYLAND TILT Feels That It Does Not Have to Pay Much Attention to Its Defense. LEXINGTON, Va, October 21— Disappointed at their failure to take the Virginia game Saturday after out- playing the Cavaliers in the first half, members of the V. M. I. team have set- tled down with redoubled energy to repare for their game with- Mary- and at Richmond this week. Coach Bill Raftery feels that com- paratively little work will check up on the V. M. I. defense, which weakened twice to allow Sippley and Thomas to score, and the rest of the week’s - gram calls for intensive drills in offen- sive tactics. ‘The Virginia game 'was almost a repetition of the Citadel clash of the preceding week, with V. M. I. almost doubling the opponent’s ground gaining, but slipping badly after making oppor- tunities to score. Coaches Raftery, Hess and Binish are confident that con- flnueld ht:,rd work on lhehoflmenl: - supply the lmflfli punc] been noticeably lacking this season. Plans have been definitely com- pleted for the corps movement to Rich- mond to support the Flying Squadron against Maryland’s Old Liners. The squad_will el by bus to the Capital City Priday, but the corps will leave Lexington by train Priday night, ar- riving in Richmond at 6:30 o'clock Saturday morning. _‘The Cadets will be quartered at the Blues Armory, with permission granted to individuals to stay with relatives and friends. The corps will entrain at 9 o'clock Sunday morning on the return trip. Though the = Cadets downed St. John's 6 to 0, and Maryland defeated the same team 21 to 13, the Old Liners are considered to have made the better showing in piercing the Johnnies’ stout defense for three touchdowns before. giving away to reserves, who allowed the Annapolis team to score twice. GAGE SCHOOL VICTOR. Gage School defeated * Eckington School booters at soccer yesterday, 2 Pizza, Kallas and Grasso s to 0. out for the winners. ship and BY LAWRENCE PERRY. . YORK, October 21.—High, serene, above consideration of victory or defeat, above all the thrilling chances and changes of the Army-Harvard game at Cambridge on Saturday, shone the star of perfect sportsmanship. Clean, precise, impersonal. Here were two teams of young men intent upon the scientific problems of of- fense and defense. Their minds were wholly occupied with the technic of what they were doing. ‘Two chess masters could not have , & crashing rely check- delivered and received. ect Fiteresting s ae """g.u o e writer has seen 2 Cadets, Crimson True Blue Grid Contest Is Hailed as Classic of Sportsman- Strategy. And the background of this fine struggle was no less impressive. You had the setting of America’s most ancient university domain with all the mellow flavor that this implies. The contrast of martial display, an immense Army band as swanky as all Army bands are, and a huge tering Harvard under- grads with their pipes and cigarettes, their slouch hats and roomy top- coats, all stamped with something that Harvard gives her sons, an you saw the West Pointers with their duao "uu prlyhn tamped, Har were s , Har- vard bearing in the main the hall- mark of crack New England - tory schools, West Point m- lipped, boned types of the Bouth and Southwest, the stal- Fhsternr. S, ARy mew, i TUESDAY, OCTOBER 21, MOUNTAINEERS WHO WILL FACE HILLTOPPERS HERE FRIDAY NIGHT LEO DOTSON- Fullback. VANDERBILT PREPS FOR STRONG BAMA Sees Difficult Game Ahead Saturday—Tulane Visits Georgia Tech. By the Associated Press. TLANTA, Ga., October 21.—Next Saturday's Vanderbilt-Alabama tussle at Birmingham stood out prominently today in the South- ern Conference foot ball championship picture. Wallace Wade, happy over his Ten- nessee triumph, lost no time in em- barking upon the formidable task of bringing Alabama to the peak agsim: And Dan McGugin, veteran Vanderbilt mentor, warned his troops to prepare to meet the “most powerful” outfit he ever saw. Satisfied with the strength of his big Red line, Wade was busy brushing up his forward pass defense for Vandy. Virtually the entire Vanderbilt Var- sity saw Alabama in action last Satur- day, and all agreed that intensive drills would be necessary to familiarize them- sielvu with the Crimson tide forma- tions. Kentucky is working out for a meet- ing with' Virginia. Tulane is making ready for a trip to Atlanta to try conclusions with Georgia Tech, always dangerous on Grant Fleld, and Georgia is preparing to engage the fast-climbing Auburn Tigers at Colum- Punts and Passes By the Associated Press. NEW HAVEN, Conn.—It appears the :";lefi'l will be :g‘cl! out for tg '.hrg e games year. crowds, of course, will see the mumue Army and Harvard, and indications are the Dartmouth contest also will fill the bowl. PRINCETON, N. J.—Tiger hopes of chalking up the first major victory in two years have soared a bit with the news that Lea and Purnell, injured ;‘uu. would be ready to play against avy. NEW ' YORK—When Fordham and N. Y. U. meet, Head Coaches Meehan and Cavanaugh will be matching wits for the seventh time. Meehan was a Syracuse when the Orange augh’s Dartmouth teams of 1915-16. Then, in 1924, Meehan’s Syra- cuse eleven beat Boston College, of|' which Cavanaugh was coach. Meehan has been at N. Y. U. and Cavanaugh at Fordham' for the last three meetings between these teams. PITTSBURGH—The Pitt Panthes clash with Notre Dame Saturday is ex- pected to fill Pitt Stadium for the first time since it was dedicated. CAMBRIDGE, Mass.—It’s time Ar- nold Horween got a break from the in- jury jinx. Barring accidents in prac- tice, Harvard will be at full strength for the first time this season when the Crimson battles Dartmouth. PROVIDENCE, R. I—Most of the spectators thought Brown gave Yale juite & battle t Saturday, but not %ou:h ‘Tuss McLaughry. He sent four regulars, Horton, Schneider, Gillies and Schein, to the second team. HANOVER, N. H—Despite Dart- mouth’s overwhelming victory over Co- lumbia the Indians have been warned they have no better than an even chance of beating Harvard. Four ol time Dartmouth stars, “Wife” Jenn! Prank Dorsey, Jim Robinson and Ji Donnelly, pointed out there was plenty of power in the Harvard machine. 6. U. GIVES UP BOXING Lack of Facilities to Handle Crowds Is Reason. Georgetown University will not be represented by a boxing team the com- season. 1930. OLD RIVALS CLASH - ON GRID SATURDAY Half Dozen Big Contests on Eastern Foot Ball Schedule. BY HERBERT W. BARKER, Associated Press Sports Writer. EW YORK, October 21.—A half dozen games, all of them re- newals of ancient rivairies and some of them involving sec- tional title hopes, top the East's foot ball program this Saturday. Not even so important an intersec- tional contest as that between Pitt and Notre Dame at Pittsburgh can- take away much interest from such duels as ‘Yale-Army, Harvard-Dartmouth, Prince- ton-Navy, New York University-Ford- ham, Brown-Holy Cross and Lafayette- ‘Washington and Jefferson. Army’s veteran line and youthful backfleld will invade the Yale Bowl in high hopes of avenging the 21-13 beat- ing it took a year ago. These old rivals have played 29 foot ball games since 1893, with Yale winning 18 and Army 5, with 6 ties. Foot ball fans will have to go back even further to discover the first meet- ing between Harvard and Dartmouth. ‘They inaugurated their series in 1882 and since then Harvard has won 27 es and Dartmouth 7, with 2 ties. the point, perhaps, is the fact ered Dartme have won five of the last seven battles Crimson. with the Navy Tackles Princeton. A somewhat similar situation pre- | Georg valls in the Princeton-Navy tangle. Princeton won all of the games played between 1892 and 1020, but since then the Midshipmen have held a decided The eleventh meeting between N. Y. U. and PFordham brings together two undefeated and untied teams in a bat- tle that may draw close to 60,000 spec- tators to the Yankee Stadium. Of the 10 games played since 1904 Fordham has won 6 and N. Y. U. 4. Holy Cross will attempt to shake a long-standing jinx in meeting Brown. They've played seven times since 1898 and Holy Cross never has gotten better than a tie, and that only once. Lafayette and Washington and Jeffer- son will renew a bitter rivalry in an indoor night game at Atlantic City. Twelve times these teams have clashed since 1898, and the Presidents have won six games and Lafayette four, with two_ties. ‘These half dozen games are the out- standing sttractions, but not far be- hind-in_interest will be the battles be- twéén Penn State and Colgaté and Temple and Villanova. Two more major teams, Georgetown and West Virginia, are matched in a Friday night game. Warner Scored By Rival Coach BERKELEY, Calif., October 31 (#).—Denouncing developments caus- ing Nick Bican, California tackle, to be declared ineligible, Coach C. M. “Nibs” Price laid the blame to Coach Glenn Warner of Stanford. “It was the most unsportsmanlike thing I have heard of,” Price said, in ref to what he termed Warner's petty sleuf Bican was declared ineligible on & transfer rule technicality. It was discovered he played freshman foot ball at Willlamette before transfer- ring to Sacramento Junior College, where he played a year before com- to California. made three years of foot ball, which with the loss of a season, be- cause of the transfer, made him in- eligible under a conference rule. G. U. AND WEST VA BOTH GREEN TEAMS Many Players Missing Who Took Part in Scoreless Battle Last Year. Special Dispatch to The Star. ORGANTOWN, W. Va., October 21.—When Georgetown and West Virginia Universities meet on the Grifith Stadium gridiron at Washington the flood lights Friday night the 1930 editions of the two elevens will resemble the 1929 teams which battled to a scoreless tie in only a slight degree. Seventeen etown men were used against the Mountaineers and 10 of them have de- parted. West Virginia used 15 gridders against the Hoyas, eight of them are not with this year’s eleven. Georgetown has only Capt. Morris, center, from the line which started last Taly nes EwG guaras, Capt, Gosdon and wo , Cap on an ;nr,e’n. fmm"':lrz 1929 forward wall which was in at the kick-off. La Rue and- “Little Sleepy” Glenn have been lost from the Mountaineer starting backfield, while the Hoyas will not have Huddk available. Morris is Alone. Morris will be the only Hoya lineman who saw service in last year's game available, for the two substitutes Lou Little sent in, Wynkoop, center, and Walsh, guard, also are gone. Barabas, their substitute fullback, is the other backs, Other hat ‘heduled O major elevens ve scl backs, ,” and one, Cornell, has open date. Purple, Michigan In Big 10 Fight .“BY FRANCIS P. POWERS. 'OLUMBUS, Ohio, October 21.— Northwestern and = Michigan, unless they meet with tremen- dous reversals of form, now must be considered the stand-out teams of the Western Conference, and likely the championship of the Big Ten lies between them. ‘Wisconsin, that is gaini mentum rapidly, still is a eat- ening power, and Pu ug, with one defeat checked against 1t¥an outside possibility. But for the rema elevens the season will be one. of M ichigan must be regarded an must be re as one of the surprise teams of the season. After a miserable start it was welded in th Purdue e and then func- tiol with all the smoothness of the greatest Wolverine teams against Ohio. Northwestern has triumphed over illness, accidents and ineligi- bility and now faces a period of comparative calm in which to nre- &'n for the roughness of its late ovember campaign. mo- Bartrug, of Bt ot e on L) , :nd‘olennhwt'ilhmm er. . Nevertheless, both have dependable reserves left over from 1929 and out- M other on ay ONE-MAN BACKFIELD Bethea Alone Gains More Than All Chicago Carriers. CHICAGO, October 21 (#).—On the basis of statistics, Leroy “Red” Bethea, captain of - the University of Florida foot ball team, is better than the whole Chicago backfield. Carrying the ball 28 times Saturday, Bethea gained 209 yards, 1 more yard than the Maroons s-l.ned all afternoon in losing by 19 to 0. FROSH GAME Sl IN ABEYANCE. Because of inability to get together on arrangements the foot ball game scheduled for Saturday between the freshman _elevens of Georgetown and George Wi n Universities has been indefinitely postponed. Leading Grid Games Saturday ‘Teams. Georgetown vs. West Virginia Gallaudet vs. Baltimore Univers Catholic University vs. Duquesne. Maryland vs. V. M. L. o George Washington vs. Dickinson v 1929 score. . 0-0 Richmond ... Griff Stadium (night) EAST. Yale vs. Army Princeton vs. « Prin Penn State vs. Colgate Pittsburgh vs. Notre Dame. New York University vs. Fordham Brown vs. Holy Cr Lafayette vs. Washington-Jefferson. R Gettysburg vs. Bucknell K New Haven ceton ce . Atlantic City (night) Gettysburg ....... oA CENTRAL. Purdue vs. Wisconsin North Dakota A. C. vs. Dakol South Dakota State vs.-South Dakof Northwestern vs. Centre Stanford vs. Southern Californi ‘Washington vs. California. . Oregon vs. Idaho............ ‘Washington State vs. Montana. California Aggles vs. Nevada. Utah Aggies vs. Wyoming.... Alabama vs. Vanderbilt vs. Auburn f accommodations to mm.&m«;-mwunfifimm .. Features and Classifipd | PAGE D-—1 G. U. Finances Hit by Defeat CHANGE IS RUINED FOR CLASSIC GAME Green Terror Might Be Made Great Asset or Heavy Liability to Hoyas. G to foot ball clashes with West Virginia and Mich- igan State, but the sting of its defeat by Western Maryland still is fresh and may be heightened. Leaders of the Blue and Gray might well take account of that whipping in a light other than the loss of a foot ball game. It hit Georgetown in a weak spot—its athletic bank roll. It was the second such blow dealt by Western Maryland in successive years. Next Friday night in Grifith Stadium Georgetown will meet West Virginia, and figures to win, but with a struggle. A worthwhile foot ball battle almost may be guaranteed and a goodly crowd will be there, but it would be larger could the Gray show off an unbeaten team. ‘Where Shoe Pinches. On the following Saturday. night Georgetown will face Michigan State, and here, if West Virginia is defeated, will be felt 'hebl:“n force of the West- BY R. D. THOMAS. EORGETOWN UNIVER- SITY looks ahead with zest ving less tie with Michigan, wi the Big Ten champion of last year, Plllrdue, and the strong Ohio State eleven. Here would be an intersectional at- traction of high order, indeed, could the Blue and Gray put on the fleld an un- beaten representative of the East. proper promotion such a game would bring the folk in from the countryside. It would be Washington's greatest grid show in many a year. Hoyas Are Worthy. y_be counted upon to dard with t, B ik Tl o of T, Md., on di o s & tive eye. The fascinating prospective battle between has been carry for warm-up pur- had all to gain | and Gray, m" been in the position of fouomr e g;mmumm&mm s acl i This chatter of Western Mary] gathering foot ball e the scholastic or o Terror authorities should take cogniz- ance of it. Certainly. some of schools it meets on the gridiron doing so. If Western Maryland can show a clean bill of health and continue to turn out first-class foot ball teams the oppcrtunity is at hand to give Wash- ington that which it has craved—an annual gridiron scrap between natural foes of high caliber, a game with lots 10 Green Tecror s ¢ e Green Terror is the little with the dam we ,_then Georgetown is hurting itself and -the 515 vuid up the o up the Hoy-Terror feud sole- ly for cial gain, less of uthér things, would be con to - ideals without which college foot ball might !upn(: t:o the level of other money-; ing QUARTERBACK ALLEN BACK WITH CELTICS Cox and Colossanto Also Ready to Play Again—Alexandria High May End Losing Streak. LEXANDRIA, Va.,, October 21— Dick Allen, St. Mary's Celtics’ quarterback, will return to the line-up for the Sabbath at- traction at Baggett's Park the coming week end, in which the “Saints” prob- ably will meet the Seamen Gunners’ eleven of Washington. “Bottles” Cox, end, and Nick Colos- santo, guard, who also were rested in the West Arlington ‘because of injuries, are also re to play Joe Bi and Sally Hanback been signed to play with the Celtics. Alexandria High School's Maroon d or-n!e eleven' may break _its streak of three straight defeats Pri- day. The locals will meet a team re- garded as weak as their own in play- ing Warrenton High at Warrenton, Va. Ds=l Ray A. C. will work out tonight e 4| ot 7:30 o'clock on Duncan Field. . | Fallon in 0 front { Manager Pat Gorman is endeavor- ing to arrange a game with unlimited teams of Washington, Richmond or ton, Va., to fill the vacant date Virginia A. C. schedule Sunday. St. Mary's Celties contest, with the Irvington A. €., champions of Balti- more, has been ed quest of the latter ber 9 to 16. The tilt is Baltimore. TRAINER GRID VICTIM Sub Knocks ‘Ont Tooth of Badger Conditioner at Game. MADISON! Wis., October 21 (#)— Billy Fallon, University of Wisconsin athletic trainer, has several appoint- ments with a dentist this week as'a result of the <rs’ vietory over Pemywmh mmhy. ALRRES allon qual as a . it time Jensen flwml Lusby for touel N next to the trainer let fly with a fist. his excitement over the -