Evening Star Newspaper, October 30, 1930, Page 46

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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGT ON, D. C, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1930. SPORTS. Heston Named Most Valuable Gridder : Rockne, Star Agonizer, “Fears” Trojans THE SPORTLIGHT BY GRANTLAND RIC FROMNAMING TEAM Thinks Differing Qualities Would Make It Unfair to Pick an Eleven. BY DAN McGUGIN, Vanderbilt Foot Ball Cosch. 0 is the best foot ball player you ever coached?” I suppose I have been asked that several thousand times. It is doubtless the ques- tion asked most often of coaches, and it is one none can answer. I coached at Vanderbilt thrée years before the forward pass was introduced, and the rule permit- ting the forward pass has changed the game more than any other modification of rules. ‘Without the pass we tried to get men of strength, power and speed. For all positions we still try to get men of strength, power and speed, but under the old rules certain power was neces- sary. Under the present rules you can sacrifice strength and power in one or two backs for speed. « relative value under the present rules, and no doubt many fast running men who are now stars under passes would have failed to make the old-time team. Qualities Are Different. I doubt whether -ny! man whodm coached & quarter' century shoul reasonably just in selecting his best all- time team. If I were to undertake that, and start, say, with left end, the names of half a dozen men or more would at once come to mind. Here's an end Who was absolute ---ME LEADING ScorER. OF THE COUNTRY ~“AND THET MAIN REAS CLEAN ReCoRD ./ LIKE To SAVE ACOUPLE OF THESE FOR ALABAMA CoBERTS A FOCTBALL. OVER. TE GOAL LINE 1Z Times Tus SEASON FOR. A TotaL. oF 72 Poinks | Northerns’ Grid Title Hopes Sturdy Apaches |2 ESES g E_Ee.: B 8 S from ) bly the most valuable player in foot ball. Heston, Gregory and 1 were mates. We entered Law School Michigan mem of what was known as the “Point Minute” team, winding up a in covering short | in foot ball, with wer with & stiff arm, equal | of an army mule, and with the ablility to change, pass, sidestep, ‘whirl and do all any good halfback can do, Heston was almost irresistible. In | easy games, at defensive halfback, he would look ordinary. But when the hard games came around he was as good defensively as offensively. Heston went through his four years | of college foot ball undefeated. In 1903, Michigan was tied by Minnesota, 6-. 1 was assistant coach at Ann Arbor, and I had gone over to Madison to scout Wisconsin and Chicago. We were un- able to get accurate information on the Michigan-Minnesota score, and I stayed | up until 4 in the morning, when the Michigan team came through. | I went into the sleeper, and there was | Heston in his night clothes in the smok- ing room, singing to himself. He had been unable to close his eyes. He showed me scratches and bruises on every part | of his body. Michigan had taken the ball on its 20-yard line, had used Heston on every play, and had march the remaining 70 yards, the distance then provided by the rules, for a touchdown. His longest gain was 5 yards. Minnesota that year had one of the greatest de- fensive teams in the history of the game. Heston would have been as good at | the new game as at the old, because of speed, strength and power. (Copyright, 1930, by North American News- paper_Alliance.) Now Grid Tutor, Not Illustrator 'LARKSVILLE, Ark, October 30 (P).—It's one thing to teach and entirely another thing to demonstrate, George Cole, foot ball coach of the College of the Ozarks here, has found. Cole, University of Arkansas star, s former broke to his From Blasted by 8 in preceding years, the battle | Spring, 1 o'clock. for the District sandlot foot ball champlonship will be be- tween the Apaches and Mo- eliminated last night at Grif- fith Stadium when they bowed before a heavier Apache machine in a 20-to-6 game. The final score does not tell the story. | pield, The Apaches were stronger than the 2- | touchdown margin, but at the same | time, were forced to put on steam all | the way. As was feared by Northern supporters, the Birds found the wet fleld 'otdlwllyhl"t.n' glwed*flnrfl:! g e point try ':: then it was all Apaches, who in each of the remaining three UR clashes are carded in the 150- pound class of the Capital City League and & trio of uniimited of games are booked for the same loop, | |every one promising | Following is the complete card and the referees: Columbia, BY SOL METZGER. ‘You can't trust a foot ball player any more, even if he wears the true Blue oh‘:ddm old Yale. They every but wind by ‘That's deception, and it's a big factor in the game. It will play an impor- tant role at New Haven Saturday when the big Green team of Dart- mouth steps into the bowl keen to revenge the odd upset of last sea- son, when Dartmouth, with a\:flme in hand and Booth on the s ines, cut loose with a last-minute forward pass which Yale converted into the winning touchdown. ve of doing one thing, doing another. Yale’s power and speed are un- questioned this year. Add deception “ | Bisons nd you can see why Coach Stevens' are going strong. Here is one play, a spinner. Ball comes to 0. 1, who spins as if to hand it to & back running to the ?-!lmn‘:r.nsun\reeocmbuhfl spins No. 3. The get the defensive d off his turn he darts straight inside the o] ing left tackle, bited flelds just yright. 1290.) | Gonzaga Silver | (Dufour). Centennials vs. - Palace-D. G. S, 01 Fleld, 1 o'clock. (McClure and O. Mitchell). Northern Pri . Mardfeldts, ep Vs, hawks. The Northern Red Birds were | Mount Rainier, 3 o'clock. (E. Stevens). Unlimited, Class. - - Pleasant Field, 3 o'clock. and R. Stevens). Mario (J. Mitchell Mitchell). Brookiand vs. Alpha Delta Omega, Silver Spring, 8 o'clock. (Dufour and McDonald). with prospects of spending this ball and are on the watch for games. Every class of team, from 115-pound to the unlimited, is ready for action. Navy Yard Marines are out for the lu!g of some 145-pound team that n an opponent. Call Manager Barr at Lincoln 1360, post exchange. | e Company, No. B, Alexandria | Fire Department, has a 150-pound team which thus far has found difficulty in carding games. Telephone Cleveland Shaw at Alexandria 311. Litfle Northerns, who have won two games in as many tries thus far, are willing to take on any team rangi weight from 115 ds to 130. Manager Bob Leverton can be reached ing | at Columbia 4899. Iroquois are on the lookout for & 150-pound opponent for Sunday. Call Manager Ruocco at Alexandria 2377. ‘The 125-pound Comets are without a game for 3 Manager May at Lincoln 3375, 'ORTHERN PREPS are to drill to- night at Georgia Piney Branch road at practice is carded for night for the Columbia A. C., which meets the Wolverines Sunday. The Columbias are to Teport at Seventeenth and B streets at 8 o'clock tonight., A session under the floodlights is on | tap for the Seat Pleasant Firemen. All players are requested to report at the | fire house, Mercurles _are to report for a drill tonight at Seventeenth and B streets | at 7:30 o'clock. avenue and 8:30 o’clock. A special meet! has been called for the Trinity A. C. for 7 o'clock to- night at 368 O street. 'HOWARD IS PRIMED FOR VIRGINIA STATE | . Howard University will enter its con- { test with Virginia State C. I. A. A. | champions ~ at Petersburg Saturday thoroughly primed. if the stiff serim. maging given the Bisons by Coach Ver- dell has the desired effect. The squad | will leave tomorrow afternoon. | Coach Verdell was pleased with the | general work of the Blue and White | players in their scrimmage yesterday. Not only did the Bisons continue to | show strongly on defense, but stepped out and gave an exhibition on offense that was decidecly heartening to Ver- dell and his assistants. | Virginia State presents a well bal- | anced line, averaging 6 feet in height and over 190 pounds in weight from | end to end. Scouts have brought the plenty of information from | Petersblirg, resulting from the last three | games in which the Staters have per- | Virginia State quarterback, is the lad Howard will have to stop. “He's a real triple threat, sistant Coach Y | ball team to down him.” has a t fullback, who also is a Zip was out of the Hampton game be. fob Saturday. Cropp and Dabney, play- ing the other back , are first- Ington 'y recelve training under Westmorela: strong Tecke Seat Pleasant vs. St. Stephen’s, Seat ns vs. Quentins, Gonzaga 3 o'clock. (McClure and O. ANY sandlot grid teams are faced | comir.g Sabbath minus some foot- | | formed. | Virginia State is reported to have a whirlwind backfield. Zip Johnson, the said As- oung today, “and when he_ gets the ball it uk_es a whole foot hy running mate in passer | The University of Maryland will send In States defeat cause of an injury, but will be on the o\ FOR, GEORGIAS HAS CARRIED Foot Ball Games On Air Saturday By the Associated Press. (Eastern Standard time throughout.) N. B. C. Chain. 1:45 pm.—Dartmouth vs. Yale— | WEAF, WEEL WTIC, WTAG, WCSH, WLIT, WGY, WGR, WCAE, | WTAM, WWJ, WOW, WJAR (an- | nouncers, Graham McNamee and | | Ray Perkins). | 2:45 p.m.—Princeton vs. Chi | —WJz, WHAM, KWK, WRC, WIOD, | WFLA, WSUN, KGO, KECA, KOMO, WBZ_(announcer, Bill Munday). =~ | 2:45 p.m—Princeton vs. Chicago —WABC, WCAO, WNAC, WKBW, WKRC, ' WXYZ, KOIL, WCAU, WEAN, WSPD, KHJ, KFRC, WPG, WWNC, WGST, WLBE, WBCM, | WBT, WAIU, KRLD, WREC, WTAR, | WLAC, KFJF, WHEC, WDBJ , KSCJ, KDYL, WIBW, CFRB, KFH, WORC | (announcer, Ted Husing). Among_individual broadcasts by various stations will be these: 1:45 p.m.—-covl;x(r’nbln vs. Cornell —WOR. 1:45 p.m.—Ol%.i‘Shlu vs. Wisconsin W, WTAM, WTMJ. 2:16 pm.— Intercollegiate 'rugby tch—CKGW. YW, WMAQ, WON. 2:45 pm.—Northwestern vs. Min- nmu»—o -WBBM, KSTP, ‘WCCH 2:45 p.m.—Pittsburgh vs. Nebraska —KFAB. 2:50 pm—Iowa State vs. Oklahoma —WOC, WHO. 2:45 pm.—K. 8. A. C. vs. Missouri —WDAP. 2:46 pm.—Kentucky vs. Alsbama 3:00 pm.—Alabama va. Kentu — oky 5:00 pm.—U. 8. C. va. Denver—KFL. 8:00 pm.—Montana vs. OCalifornia 5:00 p.m—Oregon Btate vs. Wash. ington. - g MIDDIES PRACTICE ON MUDDY GRIDIRON | Tackles and Ends Are Drilled Hard | in Defensive Tactics—Tschirgi Hits Hard. ANNAPOLIS, October 30.—The Naval | Academy gridders practiced on a| | muddy field yesterday, one of the few | times this season they have had the opportunity of playing under such con- ditions, The team was drilled in defensive tactics against the running attack, first the plebes and then squad B furnishing the offensive. In particular, the tackles | and ends were drilled in breaking up heavy thrusts in their vicinity. Capt. Bowstrom and Bryan were the | first-string tackles, with Byng, the | Washington lad, and Steffanides on the ends. The four are well grounded in | their places at present. The backfield had Bauer at quarter, Tschirgi and Williams at the halves and Hagberg at fullback. This is the first choice combination at present except that Kirn would be in place of Wil- \]lun.s. Kirn has been called upon to | do the huék of the carrying in ueem‘ es, an Intrlmfl\mlfiht'.hltlrfi | would do him good. Williams, who did | some good running part of last season, | again attracted attention by his 40- | yard sprint in the Mé“m of the i | Princeton game. He played only a | short time, but made the longest run | of the game. | Tschirgi, a recrult to the Naval ‘Aca,demy from the enlisted ranks, has developed into the Navy’s hardest line- hitting back this season. He has an- other year at the academy. ‘With four events at the Naval Academy and two at St. John's, lis will a fine and varied athletic pro- gram Saturday. At the Naval Academy, the foot ball team will oppose ,flfln. Wal]e?'ln and the plebes meet the reshmen of Western Maryland College. its varsity and first year cross-country | runners to meet corresponding teams of the Naval Academy; also, one Naval Academy team the soccer squ meet Harvard. ays away from home, going to Cambridge to 1 Miller and Crowley as “climax runners,” | ball. | fullback the compariso: | voldi ‘into_one uniform they might be | but the rules will not permit that. e the rsity, try KNUTE TILTS ANTE ON SKIBO FORECAST This Time He Sees Defeat for Irish by Dozen or More Touchdowns. BY FRANCIS J. POWERS. OUTH BEND, Ind., October 30. | —“Whew! My, oh, my! Did you see how Southern Cali- fornia ladled it on Stan- ford?” groaned Knute Rockne, the main monkey wrench of Notre Dame, as he thumbed a ragged newspaper that showed the result of much reading. “Why actually I am just afraid to think what Southern California will do to our boys when we go out there in December. “How much did I say Carnegle Tech would beat Notre Dame? Six or seven touchdowns, I believe. Well, the Tro- jans may score & dozen or more. I just dread thinking about it.” Rockne has started to fear Southern California. The way Amos Stagg used to fear Purdue was just child’s fear, compared to the way Rockne is going to fret about the Californians. Usually Rockne only frets from week to week. But after looking over his schedule he found it next to impossible for a high- class fretter like himself to enjoy & thorough exhaustion about Indiana, Pennsylvania or Drake. Mavbe, when his games against Northwestern and Army come along he can enjoy some moderate worries. But an old agonizer 1ike Rockne could not go through weeks | and smile all the while, so he is taking | time b$ the pompadour and getting well ahead on his Southern California wor- One of His Best Teams. “What about this team of yours? 1s it the best ome you ever developedfi asked the interviewer. “Well, one of | the best, at any rate,” replied the great man, who is not going to be definite on | that subject until the season is over— if at all. “How about the backfleld of Carideo, Schwartz, Brill and Savoldi, or Mullins? | Is it as good as the Four Horsemen?” | Rockne ducked that one and probably always will, but Notre Dame supporters are having a merry dispute about the respective abilities of the four horse~ men and five cowboys. The argument never ends and arrives nowhere in par- ticular, but does }e‘xhlu!l ;:umeroux ad- jectives and much cracked ice. 9 On one side you will hear that the tre Dame backfield of Ca- rideo, Brill, Schwartz and Savoldl or Mullins offers more power than the horsemen. But the proponents of Steuhldreher, Miller, Crowley and Ley- den will argue that for all-around, fin- ished power there never has been their | equal. There is no real ‘method of com- | parison unless you wanted to match | Carideo against Steuhldreher, and then the findings would not be definite. Ca- | rideo kicks where Steuhldreher did not. Steuhldreher was & great passer an Carideo is only & good one. As fleld generals they are on & par, each one deftly probing the weakness of oppo- nents and striking hard and fast with the ammunition st his disposal. Types Are Different. You cannot make a fine comparison between Brill and Schwartz and Miller | and Crowley, for they are distinctly dif- ferent types. Rockne always refers to meaning they were potential touch- down threats any time they took the Schwartz is developing into that type readily. For detailed information “kB };}“;l;‘-"fi'e speciall more on r] n blocking and feeding the ball to other backs, but there was not one of the Horsemen who could not block well. ‘::, men, Savoldi and Mullins agall Leyden. Neither Mullins nor Savoldi punts, and Leyden was a brilliant kicker. Also he was much faster than either of the 1930 stars. Savoldi is more power- ful and versatile on offense and a me- diocre defensive player. Mullins is & great and analytical defensive star, but | lacks in certain defensive qualities. If you could wrap Mullins and Sa- a workable comparison December, and foot ball followers prob- ably will be saying: “There never were two backfields like the Four Horsemen and the 1930 group,” and that is & good enough solution to the argument. Penn Game ‘Spot’ For Marty Brill SOUTH BEND, Ind, October 30 (#)—Notre Dame a foot ball game with Indiana Saturday, but it's not Saturday and Indiana Marty Brill, one of Knute Rockne's very best halfbacks, is thinking about. Marty's thoughts are 100 per cent 0i. & week from Saturday and Notre Dame’s engagement with Pennsyl- vania at Philadelphia. Brill is s Philadelphia boy and he went to Pennsylvania for two years —without getting anywhere as a foot ball player. Then he transferred to Notre Dame where he has made considerable progress in foot ball. Now he is waiting for the chance to show the boys in Philadelphia just how good a foot ball player left to Notre Damt Pennsylvania g FOR HIRE Tuxedos Cutaways Full Dress Suits Also Dress Shirts, Silk Hats, Shoes, Spats, etc. Waldorf Dress Suit Co., Inc. Largest Formal Clothes House in the Country 1311 G St. N.W. District 7066 DON'T BE FOOLED! "Ba: Philadelphia cigg::'—lika all good things—are imi=- tated. But you can be sure of getting |two of Southern California’s b Almost Any College Song. Fight—uwhile the flag is flying! Crash where the joeman wait— Just one song of the battle throng From Maine to the Golden Gate. PFight, fight, fight—forever! Crash, crash, crash—and then— Fight, fight, fight—and crash, crash, crash— And fight and crash again. The Battle to Go Through. F the untied and the unbeaten teams to date, which have the| better chances to slip safely through without a dent? | Notre Dame still must plow her way by Pennsylvania, Northwestern, Army | and Southern California. Fordham must still tackle West Vir-| ginia, Detroit, St. Mary's and Bucknell. | Dartmouth has ¥t Cornell and | Stanford to overthrow. Cornell has Dartmouth and Pennsyl- vania in the way. Northwestern must_duck by Minne- | sota, Wisconsin and Notre Dame. Georgia must stop Florida, Alabama, N. Y. U. and Georgia Tech. Kansas moves against Penn this week. Alabama must whip Kentucky and Georgia. Kentucky's main obstacle is Alabama. mvl]lahmiwn State should get by ely. Marquette's strong team has a tough one Saturday in Boston College. Western Maryland looks fairly safe. Notre Dame undoubtedly has the roughest’ road to travel, with North- western, Army and Southern California on successive Saturdays. That's enough | for three teams to grapple with. Ford- | ham's two hardest spots will be St.| Mary's and Detrolt—especially Detroit, | with a team ranked as the best Coach Dorals has ever sent into action. If Dartmouth gets by Yale and Cor- nell, there is Stanford waiting on her home field, all steamed up after the terrific_beating from Southern Califor- nia. Alabama and N. Y. U. are the two main bumps in front of Georgia’s able delegation. If Notte Dame can finish her long march unbeaten, it will be a record in modern foot ball, in so far as heavy schedules go. “Fiddle” and the Kid. IDEL LA BARBA of Stanford says there is no connection between foot ball and the ring. In meeting Kid Chocolate next week at the Garden, Fidel takes the stand that the Kid is far from being a Duffield or a Mohler, acks. In addition to this the Stanford entry says he isn't using Pop's formations. ‘Whether or not Kid Chocolate will reach out and absorb a few of the formations | used by Howard Jones of Southern | California“is still a guess. It is understood that La Barba and Chocolate intend to prove there are one or two fighters left who are still willing to fight. If these two, Mickey Walker and Jimmy McLarnin flop the species will be almost extinct. That Army Touchdown. PISTLES continue to arrive con- cerning the status of the Army touchdown in ‘the Yale game. over the goal line missed by less than six inches. In the Dartmouth game Ben Ticknor fell on & blocked kick back of the line just a span away from touchdown territory. ‘The better teams may have won both es, but this takes nothing away from the facts that in any close game it is the break, one way or another, that so often decides. Right and Left Hands. SOMEWHAT baffled duffer wants to know how he can keep too much right hand out of his golf swing. One way, and one of the best, is to first build up the use of the left hand, left arm and left wrist. This An be done by left hand prac- tice around the house or the apart- ment. It is only natural for the strong hand, the right, hitting forward to overpower the weaker hand hitting backwards, unless the weaker hand is uught. to go to work and is strength- ened. It is impossible to come into the ball the right way with the right hand starting the down swing. Make a habit by practice of the left hand starting the back swi and the down swing :mtlu it has a feel of power and con- rol. (Copyright, 1930, by North American News- paper Alliance.) Punts and Passes By the Associated Press. ITHACA, N. Y.—Gil Doble's system of shifting his players around from one team to another during practice has caused a flurry of real excitement Cornell. When Les Handleman was missing from the first team for a while, there were reports that he had been ousted from the squad, but he turned up on the second eleven. NEW YORK.—A call for the flood- | lights that are being installed on Co- lumbia’s practice fleld came earlier than ted when a dark, rainy day came g yesterday. Lou Little's in- genuity came to the rescue, however. He brought up his car, turned the lights on the fleld and sent out a hurry call for ntore automobiles. ~Unless North Al rise Saturday, Army ought to run up a big score. The Cadets have been drilling entirely on crack | their attack this week. LEWISBURG, Pa.—Bucknell has been playing Penn State regularly for & many years and has won the last games, but Saturday’s visit by the Bisons will be the first appearance of a State | team on the Bucknell field since 1909. NEW HAVEN.—Yale will be missing two regular ends when it faces Dart- mouth Saturday. Lindenberg has been out since the Geol game with a wrenched ankle, and yesterday it was learned that Barres had an infected leg, which would keep him from playing. NEW YORK.—It takes more than a| keep a Murphy | slight concussion to from playing foot ball. Jim Murphy of Fordham, who was put out of the ree | BRYANT OF VIRGINIA FILLS PAIR OF JOBS Playing Tackle and Fullback as Cavaliers Get Ready for Maryland Contest. CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va., October 30.—Rain interfered with Virginia's foot ball practice yesterday for the sec- ond time this season. The Cavaliers continued their preparations for the Maryland game by working in the wet both on offense and on defense. Herbert Bryant i getting to be a man of mystery as far as his gridiron ac- tivities ‘are concerned. The first day he is a back, the second he is a line- man, the third he is & back again. ‘The truth is that Earl Abell, head coach of the Cavallers, is grooming this 200-pound veteran to fill both places in case of need. He probably will be worked in the backfield in most of the remaining games, but it will now possible to use him in the line shi replacements be required. 2 Gus Tebell and Johnny Sloan, the Cavalier coaches who scouted Maryland in the V. M. I. game, have been work- ing their charges overtime on defense. The Virginians have heen reading what some sport dopesters have writ- ten about Maryland being a heavy fa- vorite. But they are not convinced they are licked yet. Fall festivities in connection with the Maryland-Virginia game are starting tonight. First comes the production of the Virginia Players in Cabell Hall and Iater the dance in the Memorial gym- nasium. This order will be repeated to- morrow and Saturday eveni; The climax of the week will come at 2:30 o'clock Saturday when Old Liners and ‘Sl“l:“en face each other on Lambeth eld. SCHEDULES GRID gPECIAL Train to Navy-S. M. U. Game Will Be Run Over B. & 0. Arrangements are being made by the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad to handle {1n a special party all Texans and others | in Washi n who wish to take in the Navy-Southern Methodist University foot ball game in the Baltimore Stadium | November 15. The train will leave Union Station here November 15 at 11:15 a.m. The return may be made on any traim. The ticket for the round trip is $1.50. ‘The train will arrive and depart from Clifton Park Station, which is less than a mile from the Baltimore Stadium. A large delegation from Texas will attend the game. Southern Methodist's squad will stop | in this city November 14 for a limi | drill on the Terminal Y. M. C. A. Ath- | letic Field at Union Station. Information regarding the B. & O. L@, , division nger t of the B. & O. Woodward Bullding. | this city. SRS DE MOLAY QUINT DRILLS | Pointing for Sunday )nhg: Ball “You saw it,” writes one non-combatant. “How did it look?"” It Kilday went across on his first rush it was a touchdown. If he didn't, it was not. Stecker drove into the Army back and carried him about 2 feet. Yale Game at Laurel. ‘The De Molay basket ball hutm vfl'l session tonight at Easte: High School N. Y. U. game by that injury, was back | for practice yesterday. PITTSBURGH.—Bob Waddell has | | broken another Carnegie*Tech foot ball | tradition. he handed out a | £y, Sunday the d | officials say motion pictures show Kil- day was stopped just short of the line. If this is true the ensuing aid was il- legal. It is getting to be difficult to tell whether a touchdown is a touchdown or whether it is a pomegranate. JRIMO CARNERA arrived back home in Italy amid many loud huzzas. Any home boy in this day and time who can put in a few months in mother country and entice nearly a mil- lion dollars through the turnstiles is entitled to all the huzzas there are. There is a suspiclon that on his next visit he will have to prove whether or not he can fight, a detail overlooked on his first visit. Foot Ball Breaks. 'ARVARD has lost her two big games to date—Army and Dart- mouth. Yet in the Army game Yesterday second scrimmage of the week to the Tartan squad. It was the first time in years they have scrimmaged twice the week before a big game. PHILADELPHIA.—No matter how many disputes go on in the Penn team, Lud Wray intends to keep his job. His contract for three years is “interference proof and removal proof,” he said yes- terday, and rumors that he intends to resign mean nothing. SYRACUSE, N. Y.—Brown may have a heavier line than Syracuse, but Coach Vic Hanson thinks he has a way of com- bating mlz. J‘dvmbg':‘ 8 and more speed e keynote for the Oran forwards this week. 75 CAMBRIDGE, Mass.—Harvard evi- dently expects an easy victory over Wil- Uams and Mary this week. Only one regular got into yesterday’'s practice, and not many more are expected to start two forward passes to ends | the game. rm | De Molays are slated |to play the Grifith Consumers in the Laurel armory at 2:30 o'clock. Mai r Ray Fuge is booking -pound teams. Cull.m 3478 or write 642 K street northeast. e —— The Safest Buy in W-.I;- ington isa Used Hup- mobile from MOTT MOTORS, Inc. 1520 14th St. NW. Dec. 4341 We Are Heavily Overstocked Therefore This Sale of Custom-Made OVERCOATS Choice of Fabrics up to $75 "S45 Also a Fine Selection § Regularly $50 35 Delivery Within One Week Sure! send Fine Fabrics Designed by Albert i(amn : Tailored to Your Measure. Don’t wait for the next cold snap to you rus hing into some store for the “best you can get in a hurry.” The reductions are great—we've too much stock and this sale is the best the cigar you want by asking for "Bayuk Phillies"—and seeing that the mame "Bayuk" is on the labele *B.P." means Bayuk fginiu—to avoid mitationyinsist om the name . way to reduce it. Our Mr. Sol Love would be pleased to assist you Ieassan- 510 11¢h*Street N. & ) \ ), Stgin Inc. -

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