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s v EASYTLTS ON TAP FOR NEW LEADERS California Plays Bears and Stanford Meets Huskies in Bitter Battles. =Y RUSSELL J. NEWLAND, ~=octated Press fvorts Editor. AN FRANCISCO, November 3. S —Once members of the ex- A/ tinct exclusive foot ball set known as the “Big Four” of the Pacific Coast Conference. California, Southern California, Stanford and Washington, will square off for bitter struggles among themselves next Saturday while the actual leaders loll in the security of easy games. Two great traditional rivalries, one mtrastate and the other interstate, will pit California’s Bears against Southern Galifornia’s Trojans and Stanford's Cardinals _against Washington's Husk- fes. The Bear-Trojan clesh at Los An- geles will attract more than 80,000 per- sons and the Cardinal-Husky meeting should coax out between 40,000 and 60,000 spectators. Easy for Leaders. But while the South claims public in- terest and the crowds, up in the North the two undefeated survivors of the conference race, Washington State and Oregon, probably will be adding an- other triumphant lap in the dash to- ward the championship. Each meets # twice-defeated opponent, Washington State lining up against Idaho at Mos- cow and Oregon taking on the Univer- aity of California at Eugene. in tba light of t performances, ‘Washington State siould chalk up its Nfth conference victory and Oregon its third. ‘The gether annual classic_that brings to- California and Southern Califor- nia will find a rejuvenated Bear eleven, Which twice defeated new-found strength in trouncing Montana, 46-0, last Saturday. Southern California, too, showed a brilliant return to championship form by defeating Stanford, 41-12, two weeks 0. 8 Conterence standing: e oosommuELe PA ‘Wasnington State . 13 o e @ ——o o soscsooss0d Montana . 20 GAMES FOR QUINT AT WASHINGTON-LEE High School Basketers to Start Play December 10—Veteran Squad at Hand. BALLSTON, Va., November 3.—A schedule cf 20 basket ball games has Leen arranged for the Washington-Lee High School team and a few open dates are left. The schedule so far is evenly divided between home and foreign courts. It opens December 10 with Mc- Lean High at Baliston. Eleven members of last year's 5?;‘:,“ will be available, including Capt. T- don Ball, Harry Chase, Stanley Morti- mer, Corman, Go>dwin, Rosenberger, High; 12, 16, Central High h School. h at Washing- dria High. 3 February 6, Frédericksburg High: 11, Central High at Washington; 15, Ma- nassas High at Manassas, Vi Alexandria High at Alexandria Warrenton High at Warrenton, Va. JOLLIFFE IS ROLLING FOR AVERAGE OF 114 | Setting Pace in Federal Iagne,:‘B Kibby's Game of 160 Is One of High Points. Jimmy Jolliffe, crack Internal Revenue pinman, is leading the Federal League with an average of 114 for 18 games. Jolliffe’s high e of 154 is bettered only by Kibby's game for Treasury. ‘Walley of Treasury has a six-pin lead over Simon of G. P. O. for runner-u) n averages, with 113-9 to Simon’s 113-3. | FEDERAL LEAGUE AVERAGES. (Twelve or more games.) GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE. 18 1@ 393 127 153 122 120 105-1 PLEET CORPORATION 39 11 9 1 a 1 “3* | ment v 1 105-4 103-12 111-10 1 9 12 PUBIC P 7 Miiler ] Gartside | H Compton 2 Gist .. 19 346 6 INTERNAL REVENUE 156 373 133 154 131 Joliifte ... Bever E Lewis 6 8 3 R. Lewis 8 350 Litzau . Heine -3 16 93-10 104-2 1 111-6 105- 102-6 P“SIONEKS i'U'lT FOR 2c. LEYTON, England, November 3 (). —Old age ers of this munici- mltm to tendered the use of greens at the re- duced fee 3 cents per round. %’ T oot hll.hn'l e “men out this Fall. ol No. 7 |sustained mixed attack which resulted | vs. Lew Thayer, Potomac Electrotype 1 PORTS. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, MONDAY, NOV EMBER 3, 1930. SPORT S. - C3' ‘Coust’s “Extinct Big Four” Clash Next : Business’ Basket Ball Outlook Bright Play Miniature In Wheel Chair WARM SPRINGS, Ga., November 1 (P).—Now they're playing golf in wheel chairs. A miniature golf course has been built here for the use of patients in a sanitarium. Convalescents from infantile paralysis are devotees of the sport, and many of them chase the ball through the hazards from their wheel chairs. Others hobble around the course with the aid of crutches, canes and a putter, CENTRAL FAVORED 70 BEAT BUSINESS Blue Rarely Troubled on Grid by Stenogs to Be Met Tcmorrow. | ENTRAL is an odds-on fn\‘oritei to down Business in the public high championship foot ball | match tomorrow afternoon in | the Central Stadium. The Blue has | entirely too much power for the lighter Stenogs. Play will start at 3:45 o'clock. Central has usually found Business easy gridiron prey. For instance, in the last 10 years the Stenogs have not scored an official point against the Blue, while the latter has been piling up 191. In 1927 Business gave Central a terrific battle, the count being 19—19 at the final whistle. However, Central officially won the game, 1—0, as the Stenogs used ineligible players. At no other time during the decade | has Business been able to cross the Central goal. In 1926 it was beaten by only a 3—0 score, but for the most part | the Blue's wins over the Orange have been d-cisive. ‘This St. John's eleven just caunot seem to break into the win column. The Kaydets suffered their fourth defeat in as many starts yesterday when they went down before La Salls Institute at Cumberland, Md., 0 to 7. St. John's has no reason to feel ashamed over the showing at that. Gonzaga recently was beaten by La Sall>, 32 to 0. Until the final six minutes the Wash- ingtonians fought the home eleven w‘ a stand-off. Then La Salle put on a in Dehart finally plunging over for the game's lone touchdown. Dehart also | place-kicked for the extra point. Line-up and Summary. La Selle (7). Positions. 8t. John's (0). a Selle Pe 2 Quarterb; Conley _Left ~halfback. Fleckinstein. ... Right halfback. Counihan . Fullback .... Score by periods: st. John's. Ls Salle Touchdown—] down-—Debart (pl O'Neill for Flecki: stra. k for Cummines, [ L 3 after touch- cement). Substitutions— instein, Gerdeman for Sil- Bmith for | (Carnegie | ‘ashing- | County go hand in hand and the name | Hiser is synonymous with Hyattsville. | 108, respectively. | rocks won three from D. of 1. and Hill- | trio. | BY FRANCIS E. STAN. IGHT bowlers of the Hiser family are banging the little maples, all in three branches of the same league, and all are top- notch duck snipers. Hyattsville and Prince Georges Hence all the Hisers are in Hyattsville and Hyattsville is populously repre- ted in the Prince Georges County ez gues. ‘There's a deal among the Hisers, Oscar furnishing most of they're all good losers. Henry and Oscar, who, by the way, were a couple of well known ball p a little while back, are collecting sticks by the carload, with Henry leading section 1 of the Prince Georges County League with an average of 123 and 3 sticks to boot, and Oscar right on his heels with an even 122. Henry has rolled 12 games and Oscar 9. Henry bowls with the American Legion quint and Oscar with the Collegiates. Then there's Anthony Hiser of the Arcades. Anthony has rolled in only seven games thus far and isn't quite | warmed up, kut is pounding the wood to the tune of 104-6. He p omises to | give Older Brothers Oscar and Henry a run for their money. OW for the ladies of the Hiser family. There's enough of 'em to organize an all-Hiser quint, and, like the Prince Georges County Men's League, there is a Hiser (two, to exact) setting the pace in the Ladies’ League. Caroline Hiser is a member of, the Co-eds, as is Winifred and Helen, all sisters of Oscar, Henry and Anthony. Caroline’s 94-8 tops all fair pin spill- ers in the league, but Winifred is too of family rivaliy with Henry and it, ~ albeit Eight Members of Hiser Family Sock Maples in County League be | sons in Section 2 and a Balley to bal- close for Caroline’s comfort. Winifred is socking the maples for a mark of 94 even, only 8 pins behind Caroline. Then comes sister Helen on the Co- Helen Hiser is compiling a cred- ital average, her present mark being 82-3. Mabel Hiser is the leading light of the Hilltoppers, sporting an average of 91-1, a wee bit in the rear of Caroline and Winifred. The other Hiser is now a Hanson, Margaret Hanson. Margare(, like Brother Anthony, has yet to get her batting eye adjusted and as a result, her average for six| games is only 67-4. But Margaret fig- ures she’ll be up around the top ‘ere long. All in all, there's good material a bang-up all-Hiser quint, plenty of material for two or three mixed doubies | teams and meybe a miniature all-Hiser league. for | THE scorers of the three Prince Georges County Leagues, Section 1, Section 2 and the Ladles’, have a merry time keeping trace of plenty more corresponding names beside the Hiser. In the Ladies’ League, for instance, there are two Sampsons, and another one in Section 2; a couple of Turners, two Davidsons, a pair of Hilliards and another Hilliard in Section 1, and two Gudes, matched by three more Gudes in Section 2. The Gudes are the Hiser's closest rivals, but the brother-sister combination is broken up by & cousin | relationship on the part of a Gude. In Section 1 there are two Millers, and another in the Ladies' Ledgue; a pair of Wolfes, the well known Perce and Harry; a Parsons to match the Par- ance the Bailey in No. 2. For Section 2 we have a couple of Smiths (not hard to find), the trio of Gudes, E, J. and G, and the afore- mentioned balances to the Clarks, Sampsons, Millers and Parsons. at a trio of leagues! HIGH SCORES MADE BY WOMAN ROLLERS Game of 570 Contributed in Ladies’ | League and Many Individuals Do Well. Flashing a stellar brand of maple crashing in their second effort against | Veterans' Bureau, Columbians shot a| new season high-game record of 570 in | the Washington Ladies’ League as they swept gheir set. Double-header strikes by Catherine Forteney and Rena Levy peppzd up the team, with the result that these pin- ettes, along with Irene Scott, shot games of 113, while.Margaret Leaman and Peggy Babcock rolled 123 and Bertha Greevy and Bronson Quaites socked the pins hard to aid the Beeques to clean up on the Pollyanna: Uni- versity Park avoided the cellar with a clean sweep over the Cardinals; Sham- toppers topped the Agoes in Team Standing. D.of I Vet tico Marines). ON THE TODAY. -Arcadia, Federal League—Navy vs. P. B. & P. P., Treasury vs. Supervising Archi- | tects, G. P. O. vs. Veterans' Admin-| istration, City P. O. vs. Merchant Fleet Corporation, Post Office vs. Internal Revenue. Rendezvous. Fraternity League—Sigma Delta vs. Pi ., A. 8. L. Chi Sigmi Ch. Sigma Lamda Nu, Kappa Phi vs. A. L. Sigma Phi Ch,, Alpha Iota Kappa A. 8. L. Kappa Sig. Ch. Packard League—Used Cars vs. Body, Accounts Office vs. Quick Service, New Cars vs. Service Sales, Electric vs. Parts. Convention Hall. District League—Convention Hall vs. Hyattsville. Merchants’ League—Uneeda Bakers vs. Southern Dairies No. 1, Thompson ros. Furn. vs. M. Kapneck Elec. Co., | Coca-Cola Bottling Co. vs. E. W. Minte | Co., Skinless Franks vs. Southern Dairies No. 2, National Glass Shop vs.| Barber & Ross, District Grocery Stores vs. W. R. Winslow Co., Penn Elec. Co. | vs. Thompson's Dairy. Sanico League—Leffler vs. Mortimer, Mercer vs. Bradford, Fagan vs. Smith, EBremermann vs. Diehl, King vs. Willis, Gartrell vs. Roberts. Lucky Strike. ‘Typothetae League—Big Print Shop Maxwell Jones, Typothetae vs. George A. Simonds Co., Pellowship Forum vs. Engraving Co., Ransdell, American Electro- type Co. | men, National Publishing Co. vs. Ce tral Printing Co., H-K Advertis! | Service vs. Gibson Bros.,, National Ca) | ital Press vs. Charles H. Potter |Judd &, Detweiler vs. Standard En. | graving Co., Washington Typographers | Co. v We: Columbian Printing Co. rn Union Men’s League—Equip- | Automatic, Repeaters vs. Ac- counting. Delivery vs. T. and R. | - Western Union Ladies’ League—8il | ver 8ix vs. Orchids, Lucky Reds vs. Golds, Orange vs, Greens, National Capital League—Fountain | Hams vs. Packwood Ptg. ‘Temple. Eastern League—Isherwoods vs. Ve- nezkys, Bens Tire vs. Elites, Gardner- Stuarts vs. Freemans, Braves vs. Lin- colns, Peerless vs. Nomads. Hyattsville Arcade. Prince Georges League No. 1—Hud- | dleston’s Garage vs. Barbers. | Prince_Georges Leaguz No. 2—Chil- ium vs. Bankers. Prince Georges Ladies’ League — | Silver Spring. Avignone Freres vs. Geary-Johnson | wil] - 4| Construction Co. Commissioners vs. |tive, | o0 Colmbus also are ac vs. | Faulconer & Proctor, White Pig Manhattan, Frank L. Hewitt vs. Amer- ican n, Potter-Nash Motors vs. L. E. Breuninger Sons, John H. de Muth Construction Co. vs. Kensington. TOMORROW. Arcadia, Lutheran League—St. Matthew's vs. ‘Takoma No. 1, Incarnation No. 2 vs. St. Johr s No. 2, Trinity vs. Reformation No. Giace vs. 8t. Mark's, Christ Church vs. Reformation No. 1, St. John’s No. 1 va_Zion, Georgetown vs. Incarnation No.™1, oma No. 2 vs. St. John's Columbia Helghts League—Arcade vs. Dismers, Bell & Smith vs. Pioneers, Cool Drinks vs. Bwans, Liondale Shirts . | Barrister vs. King David. Pentalpha vs. Bu Poliyann: Univ. P DRIVES town A. C. vs. Georgetown Realty, St. Stephen's vs. Wisconsin Motor. Lucky Strike. District League—King Pin vs. Hecht National Capital League — Lucky Strike vs. Coliseum Specials. Insurance League — Metropolitan vs. People's. Equitable vs. Mutual Insur- ance Agency, Travelers vs, Y & Simon, Massachusetts Mutual vs. Con- | tinental Casualty, Prudential vs. Acacia Blues, Acacia Reds vs, New York Life. Convention Hall. Marine Corps League—Qu vs. Marine Barracks, Adjutant and In- spector vs. Paymaster, Commandant vs. Operations. ph’h‘wn\c ‘League—Seven o'clock squad, Singleton ve. Parker, Acacla vs. Po- tomac, St. John's vs. Pentalpha, Stans- bury vs. New Jerusalem, Lebanon vs. Mount Pleasant, Anacostia vs. La- fayette, Whiting_vs. Barrister, Bright- wood vs. King Solomon, Roosevelt vs. Petworth. Nine o'clock squad, Lebanon vs. Lafayette, Anacostia vs. Whiting, Potomac. Acacia vs. Petworth, Single- ton vs. Naval, St. John's vs. New Jeru- <alem, Roosevelt vs. Parker, Arminius vs. King Solomon. Silver Spring. North of Washington League—Wynne- wood vs. E. E. Gasch, J. Carey King vs. Langdon Woodworking Co. Coliseum. ‘Washington Ladies’ League—Beeques vs. Veterans’ Bureau, D. of I. vs. Polly- annas, Argoes vs. Cardinals, Columbians vs. Hilltoppers, Shamrocks vs. Univer- sity Park. Hyattsville Arcade. Prince Georges Lladies' ~League— W. 8. 8. D. vs. Lucky Strike. Prince Georges County Men's League— Section 1, Collegiates vs. Legion. Sec-, tion 2, Tomahawks vs. Dixie Pig No. 2.| COLUMBUS U. SQUADS SWING INTO TRAINING Basket Ball Quint, Rifle Teams and Girl Swimmers Begin Work This Week. With upward of 30 candidates, in- cluding four members of last season's quint and several newcomers of proved worth, drilling twice a week the Central High School gym, Columbus University is looking to a bright basket ball season. Aspirants for the rifle combination and the girls' swimming team which Capt. Bujt Mealy, center; Eddie Boyd, guard, and Frank Plant and Bob- by Tappan, forwards, are the vets from last Winter's team at hand. Promi- nen. among the new aspirants are M{ Morris, Ed Dolan, Roy Quigley, Jacl Curtin and Johnny Belt. Twelve players will be carried on the by Tommy Connor, former Aloysius Club basketer, Columbus _ will _meet Southeastern University Decembér 10 in the first game of the Washington Intercollegiate Conference series. Candidates for the rifie team will be- gin work tomorrow. Charles Savino, a shot of ability, is manager. vs. Ford Electric, Vincent Barbers Chaconas Market. Georgetown Recreation. Recreation va. rice Smif vzlryll Am. Miss Beat is ! AT RE A < e T i - Club of The annual Columl artermaster | b Columbus squad, which is being coached | wq, GAITHERSBURG IN TIE AT SOCCER LOOP TOP Surprisingly Licked by Rosedale, | Now Shares Capital City Lead ‘With Rockville, Rosedale soccer eleven today boasts | a coveted 4-to-2 victory over Gaithers- burg. The victory pulled Gaithersburg down to a first-place tie in the Capital City League with Rockville. In the feature game in the Wash- ington Soccer League British Uniteds conquered D. C. Kickers 4 to 2. Fashion Shop scored a victory, its first of the season, by 3 to 1 over Army and Rockville gained its first-place tie by besting Silver Spring 2 to 0 in other Capital City League matches. Gaelic-Americans failed to appear for their Washington League tilt with Marlboro but the game may be re- scheduled. Team Standings. CAPITAL CITY LEAGUE. . waweaa rusaaa® WASHINGTON LE, > B D.C Gaelic-Am. HECHT QUINT CLIMBS IN DISTRICT LEAGUE Jumps to Fourth Place by Taking Three From Davis Bowlers. King Pins Still Lead. orins 2 orrmund e [erann ouss Sweeping victories by the Hecht Co. and Convention Hall featured rolling in the District League. By downing Meyer | Davis, Roscoe Reichard's crew jumped | into fourth place in the standings, re- | lacing Cornell's Lunch, which was anded quite a surprise by the charges of Charlie Phillips. King Pin retuined the league lead when Hyattsville failed to stop its march | for a second championship. A timely | spare by Capt. Howard Campbell in his last box gave the Meyer Davis stand- ard bearers the odd game. Dutch Weid- man showed signs of returning to form with a set of 363. Henry Hiser con- | tinued his fine shooting with 366. | The pluck of several youngsters may | yet get Convention Hall somewhere in the race. Harold Hodges, with a ring- ing 392 set, and Charlie Jarman, with a | bang-up last game of 148, not to men- tion Capt. Phillips’ 360 set, gave the | “Hall” team its triumph over Cornell's | Lunch. Rendezvous moved into second place by winning two games from Northeast Temple. Both victories were close, the first, 566 to 561. Then Temple sand- wiched in the high team game of the ‘week, 651, when George Honey led the scoring with 150 to win easily. The last went to Rendezvous, 574 to 572. Hecht bowlers, led by Joe Priccl, whose 406 total eclipsed all individual per- formances for the week, had one of those winning nights. Meyer Davis gave fight in every game, but fell short each time the score was tallied. Team Standing. 8 John Blicks. ® Petworth . Season Records. High team set—Temple, 1.891. High fame—Hecht Co. 683, oHieh individusl set—J. Harrison (Temple), ofish individual same—Pricc! (Mecht Co.), NAVY GIRLS TOP LOOP Have Only Game Margin on War in Federal Circuit. Navy continued on the high wave in the Ladles’ Federal League with a two- | game victory over Labor, one of the games being decided by a single pin. War, tied for second place, only was able to take one game from Commerce, while Agriculture and Veterans’ Bureau made clean sweeps over G. A. O. and Commerce Juniors, respectively. Treas- ury won two games from Interstate, Census Stars grabbed a pair from Com- merce Comets, while Economics bene- fitted on a forfeit by Census. PIMLICO AUTUMN MEETING November 4 to 15 Inc. (Centennial Jockey Club Chi Admission [ Lv. Washington and W. e 70 (RS ) 50 UTAH ELEVEN NEAR THIRDTITLE IN ROW Sets Nearly Point-a-Minute Pace in Rocky Mount Conference Games. BY FRANK H. FRAWLEY, ENVER, Colo, N:ivember 3.— D The third consecutive Rocky | championship was just abcut in the grasp of Ike Armstrong's Utah The big crimson-clad Indians have ridden roughshod over four teams at their only remaining contender, the University of Colorado, has been having beaten class. Utah's heavy canncnading was away and the Farmers took one of the | t beatings in their foot ball his- | easy victory over which has won only one game this year, | with a 14-13 decisicn. Colorado and Utah meet at Boulder November 15, and will be decided then and there. Colorado Next Foe. week. Colorado plays Colorado Teach- ers at Greeley. unbeaten class by taking a 39-14 lacing from Brigham Young, the Cougars’ eight years of rivalry. Denver, smarting under a-33-to-13 Associated Press Sports Writer. Mountain Conference foot ball University eleven today. close to a point-a-minute gait, while a terrific struggle to keep in the un- too much for the Colorado Aggies lnsv.‘ tory, 39 to 0. Colorado, locking for an was more or less f-rtunate to escape it is altogether likely the championship Utah meets Colorado College this The Utah Aggies dropped cut of the second victory over the Farmers in defeat by Southern California, today began preparing for a Utah Aggie in- | H vasion Saturday. Colorado Mines scored | its first victory of the season by beating | Western State, 13 to 0. Wyoming tied with Colorado Weachers, 6 to 6. The Cowboys meet Colorado Aggies Saturday at Fort Collins and pr:bably will be on the short end of the score again. PARKWAY BOWLERS KEEP LEAGUE LEAD Win Four Games of Double-Header in National Capital Loop. Fountain Hams Second. ‘Winning four games in a double- header match held first place in the Na- tional Capital League for Parkway Fill- ing Station from the charging Fountain Hams. One-game margin separates the two teams that seem destined to battle for the championship. With three victories chalked up over Packwood Printing Co., the auto crew met a stubborn opponent in Meyer Colorado _College, | 55 Muny Golf Event Awarded St. Paul By the Associated Press. T. PAUL, Minn, Nove ser 3.— The national public links golf champlonship for 1931 has been awarded to the Keller course, St. Paul, it was announced today by the United States Golf Association. The dates are August 4 to 8, inclusive. Boston _was the chief bidder against St. Paul for next year's event, which will bs piayed over the same course whore the first annual St Paul 810,000 open last Summer attracted most of the Nation's lead- ing golfers. 1930 High-Prep Gridiron Scores Tech 0 Eastern’ CENTRAL. Gonzaga . 19 Alex. High. Eastern . 0 Devitt .. Western Tech I DEVITT. ST. ALBANS. EASTERN. Episcopal High 20 . & L. High. 12 8l ouBace TECH. 0 Nat. T. School 9 Baltimore Poly 0 Woodberry For. 36 G'TOWN 12 St. Alba 20 Gonzaga 0 Eastern » ‘WOODWARD. . B T 0 Landon ..o 3 18 14 NAT. T. SCHOOL. 3: 0 21 HEH SO0 TEAN MATERIAL CLEVER |Likely to Shine in Title Series—To Play Through Good Schedule. | BY EDWARD A. FULLER, JR. | O far as foot ball laurels this | season are concerned Busi- ness High School may be all washed up, but the boys who wear the Orange and Blue see brighter things looming in basket ball. The Stenogs put a quint on the floor last Winter that for un- | adulterated fight was simply the |last word. Heart-breaking hard 9/luck dogged Coach Lynn Wood- worth's boys, though. They lost several battles by the narrowest of margins. Business is convinced that 1t is simply 8! due to get some breaks the coming sea- . , and that if it can put a formidable | on the hardwood will have a real chance for the championship. 12| "Some of the basketcrs upon whom | the Stenogs will be counting started o| preliminary work today, but serious 6 practice will not begin until November 12117, when members of the foot ball squad | who also play the court game will be —ligol 20| available. Talent Available, Graduation has taken a heavy toll of | the Stenog basket ball squad, such de- Pinley and Milt Singman having been lost, but there are a flock of new play- ers of real ability just aching to get a chance at those vacant berths. Little Bobby Lucas, than whom there | was no cleverer forward in schoolboy | ranks last season, is the “big” shot of | the Orange and Blue squad. Bobby will graduate in February, but the Stenogs | moth balls ‘ere that time. Among the aspirants who now ap- pear to have the best chance of lan ing regular jobs are Bill Duryee, who will be groomed for center, and who, if ° | he shows anything like the form he dis- plays in foot ball and base ball, will d Then there is Vernon Johnson, quar- terback on the foot ball team, who gets | more out of his 115 pounds on the grid than seems possible. Vernon played guard on the corking Arcadian quint of the Boys' Club last season. Basketers vho get their instruction under the pendables as Spencer Chase, Freddy | hope to have the well known flag just | | about stowed in the equally well known | competent Boys' Club coaches are gene erally plenty good. Vernon is no excepe tion, they say. Other material intludes Nemerofsky, | Louis Chatlen, of the same Chatlens Who performed for Western on the hard« wood last Winter: Dick Bird, former Western athlete; Bernie Polinger, Sam | Levy and Mastromarino of the foot ball team, and Johnny Ingalls and Joe Sherman. There doubtless are others who will be in there fighting for places. They were all. though, Coach Wood- worth could think of this morning when we phoned him as he was downing & cup of Java with one iffnd and tying his tie with other. _Under the circumstances we think he did right well to recall as many. Doubt- | less he was thinking some things about | the brass of reporters who ply a person with questions the busiest and most annoving time of the day. that period | when or> “ =g to dress, eat break- | fast and attend to multiple other duties before rushing off t5 work | _However, Woody, was once & news- paper man himself and a good one. too. | Maybe he has done the same thing. Anyway, we doubt if he was much up- set. fact, if Lynn Woodworth ever | had an unkind word or thought about any one or any thing it has escaped us. He's sure one regular scout. That's the reason that this reporter and a host of others wish him success cn the basket | ball court and in every thing else. Bright Schedule. | But let's finish the story. Business | will play a bang-up basket ball schedule Sixteen games alrerady have been booked by Mzanager Bob Cook and several others are pending. ’ In addition to th~ public high sch title matches games have been arrani | | with Emerscn, Gonzaga, Maryla freshmen, Navy Plebas and Swavely ang negotiations are on for tilts with St. John's, Catholic University and George Washington freshmen and Greenbrier, | W. Va., Military Academy. Here's the card as it stands now: December 12-—Emerson. | January 6—Gonzaga. January 7—Emerson, at Emerson. January 9—Western. January 12—Maryland Freshmen, & | College Park. January 16—Central. January 20—Eastern. January 21—Swavely, at Manassas. January 23—Tech. January 24—Navy Plebes, at An- napolis. :;nnunry g-l«w“u anuary 30—Gonzaga, at Gonzaga. February 3—Central. February 4—Swavely. February 6—Eastern. Pebruary 10—Tech. @ @S POPULAR PRICED oh THILORS SATISFACTION GUARANTEED Mertz & Mertz Co. 405 11th St. N.W. LA PALINA Davis. The latter ran up a total of 643 to win by 98 pins. Not to be outdone, the Parkways shot the high game of the week to take the second, 653 to 535. Espey and Webb accounted for the Meyer Davis win in the last with good counts. Some fancy shooting by Heffelfinger, Guerney and Newman gave Coliseum Specials a two-game decision over Meyer Davis. The King Pin crew seem unable to work up even a slow trot. They fell easy victims to King's Palace in two games. Jack Wolstenholme rescued the middle tilt with 153. Clark, Phillips and Cox put fh some healthy counts for the winners. Rinaldi Tailors grabbed two from Judd & Detweiler when Capt. Leo Ri- naldi and his crack roller, Ollie Pacini, socked the pins consistently. Team Standing. W. L Pwi 14 4 Col. Specials. 13 5 Lucky Strike 6 P'w'd Prig. Co. 0 8 Rinaldi Tiors. 9 9 Judd & Det n Ree High team set—Fountain Ha High team game—Fountain Hal E High individus] set—Hokie Smith, 412 High individual game—Litchfield’ (King's Palace), 174. ay Pil. Bta. Hams. o KING PIN NO. 2 BUSINESS MEN'S LEAGUE. Team Standing. w. 10 10 H Chest. Farms. . Goldenberg's . Standard Oil shurgh’s Un. Wall Paper 8 Nat. Lith PI Kappa Pi... Ki E an King Pin No. 2 n fecht Co.... .. Wolcott Hotel. ausssmsr Lithograph, Hish team 1.661. High team set—King Pin No. 2, id me_Staley. —Staley. 386. rage—Needles, 113, ivid High strikes—Arm| High spares—C. 5 cardinals g Recreation [ Gallant Fox .. Dixie Pl BOUTS FOR D. C. BOXERS, and K. O. Reilly of Barry miner, in the main bout of that city and Reilly will face Cy Cruse of Charlotte, N. C., in a 10-round bout JAVA WRAPPED A CHALLENGE TO MEN WHO ARE HARD TO CONVINCE Day in, day out—year in, year out, more men step up and ask for La Palina than for any other high-grade cigar in America. 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