Evening Star Newspaper, November 6, 1930, Page 42

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SPORTS THE - EVEx D0, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1930. FEast'Has Chance to Calm Midwest Adherents : Bands Overshadow Some Elevens TRID OF INVADERS BIVES OPPORTUNITY Notre Dame, Ohio State and Jllinois Come to Meet Sturdy Rivals. HICAGO, November 6 (P).— ‘ All the shouting by Big Ten adherents over the superiority of their brand of foot ball over that of the East may be stilled to a discreet whis- per by Saturday night. Michigan, Illinols and Ohio State carry arguments of the Big Ten to Eastern sallents and all of them may find them inadequa! Desplte the reputation owned by Illi- vel into one of the strongest teams in the Nation, the Illini have experi- ‘worst. losing m\r!icmnmmu;nl:‘ strictly Big Ten games, between Indiana and Non.hwutern and Purdue and Chicago, this week, because of the I i g 1t missing rrnfn the Cadets’ Hne—up George™ Talbot, varsity guard, is the Intest Harvard player hurt, He slipped and strained & muscle while running HAVE TOO MANY PATRONS Tickets, Regret Slips Used Up by Northwestcrn-Irish Fans. xvnxsmn i, Nmbu € w)~ l!:{rn as scarce for uu Nofl.hvsl-'n-l!un Dame foot ball game, to be played No- Vember 22. wmnmanwlsvd“mwmbe- ,000 regret slips were ive been used up, too, must work overtime typing regrets. COLLEGE SOCCER. Navy, 5; Syracuse, 2. TROUSERS To Match Your 0dd Coats EISEMAN'’S, 7th & F mm‘m ¥ You Are Goi -« Used Nol Have the Best? MOTT MOTORS, Inc. 1520 14elwSe. N.W. Tan | - FREDERICKSBURG HIGH| o | 8t of the ' locfllhlmb'delufied Them— and | roon an | “BIG"” FAULKNER. OPPOSITES” WHO WILL FACE MARYLAND | |6éG im0 Old Story Nothing New.” . b GENE MARTIN. Faulkner, pho plays tackle and tips | the scales at 205 pounds, Is the heftiest | player Washington and Lee will send against the Old Liners at College Park tomorrow afternoon. Martin, a 160- 3 the Generals, is the }‘.':;'..:‘:..:""“m to perform for the invaders. TO VISIT ALEXANDRIA | Has Chance Tomorrow to Clinch Sectional Title—Warrenton to Play Washington-Lee. LEXANDRIA, Va., November 6. ~—Fredericksburg High, leader in the race for the third ath- letic district of Virglina foot | ball championship, will invade this city | tomorrow to battle Alexandria High at 3:30 o'clock on the gridiron at Baggett's Park. A victory for the Yellow Jackets from hm‘lcbm will clinch the district nod deal more interest is bel shown in the contest. i Wuhinmu-l« High will entertain ‘Warrenton High on the former's field at , Va., in another series game 3:30 tomorrow. Washington-Lee should have no trouble with the visitors. ‘Traditional rivals will clash Sllurdly h mhpeglule(d > g of Lyncl Fleld. and Black has won three game in Wnll prep uhool ranks nnd hu red three triumphs against out- ‘opposition. Columbia A. C. ol ‘Washingten and filt Del R«l! A wfll meet Sunday " _Ig‘oun ipital City League wnust e fray is leheduled for Ed- ward Duncan Field at 2:30 o'clock. copal High on Hoxton Fleld at 3:30 o'clock. cuuunh of the 'Lm Park Lions is anxious to his grid- fron schedule and uh lls-pound teams o BISONS PRIME LINE FOR TARHEEL GAME Verdell Plugs Hole That Caused 5 Loss to Virginia State. ‘White's Case Up. Coach Verdell of Howard University is devoting much of the remaining time | before the North Carolina game next fi;mrd;y wmm demulv‘: 'beo’rk of‘hu' e. Special attention ing given the left side of the line. &l“ beat ns last week ishing off-tackle 3 lads opened up eorridors ard's left tacl l-'rliury, State’s shifty fullback, darted time and again. Unless injuries are incurred di the remainder of '.be week & pun- The ‘where gmlndl. through ception of Percy White, first-string quarterback, who still is on the ineligi- | ble list. White was out of last Satur- day's game because he played two | n;nes last ye:r n Virginia se;nmm officials to I.\r the situation. substitute center, drew the varsity as- signment yesterday. He played a bang- up e against State, te-m indulged in & hard signal drill and will have another today with a -off drill scheduled for Prldl A seeking contests to telephone Clarendon 786-W-2. Bill Hammond's PiratesA. like to book some 125 team for cuwbre“u Heldcdsu:.l ntmn;%l;g may lephoned at Alexandria between 5 and 6. s, O 'S at 8 o' gpnnfim for Sunday’s game ©. would in it in the l Apaches, Hawks Battle It Out T'S the same old story—Apaches vs. Mohawks for the District cham- plonship: ‘The rout of the Knickerbockers last night and the Northerns last week at the hands of the Mohawks and four in the 150-pound class are on the Oapital City League books for Funday. Unlimited Section Mercurys vs. s-t Pleasants, Seal unmun 3 zaga md cnn- Apaches, respectively, proved one thing |dall. —even a winning sandlot team cannot be gathered together in one-half a season. ‘There were some real foot ball players in the Knick line-up, but the Mohawks mv.d waming to the Apaches that 're ready. They worked smoothly for u- first time last night. ‘The Knicks lacked the experience of ylnl So did the Northerns, fiuy lost nmy of their mainstays. ‘The Apaches and Mohawks still include in line-ups many of the pl who were with those clubs from organizat h\lmhlh‘ the Knicks last nl:“'-. a fine brand of consistency was - played by the Abbey-coached club. In each quarter one touchdown was regis- tered. The two extra points were made {in t.he first half. ting of two of the city's best, m Golliere &nd Hoole ley Gass, was une of the features of the evening, while !.ha lay of Al McAlwee, center, was eature of the Knick play. 'l'hn champlon Apaches Sunday will uvtontlv-tref-thl“nwm\h- tons, who are expected to play & NLM toward the Mlnl fight to in their title. They are Ty Blll- ber, football coach at Central High, an Eddie Dufour, formerly of c.umuc University. ‘The Irvingtons held thl Mohawks to a scoreless tie last Sun and an idea of the eompanun stre th of the | Indian n&h probably gained | tions with the O'Reilly A. C. have been closed by the who will play the Islan Vir- d. Wolverines will drill wm and Sat- urday at 7 o'clock on the Virginia ave- nue playgrounds, A lfllwn is on tap for Pal- ace-! gridders wntxht at 8/ a'clock u e gridiron at Seventeenth | and B streets. it Pleasant will work out umum. at m Stadium in prepara- their game with the Mercurys Trinitys pmuce wnl(h'. at 7 o'clock | at Georgetown Hollo Coach_Artie Wondrack' has called a | drill of his Northern Preps for tonight on the Georgia avenue and Piney Branch road gridiron. Games with 100-pound teams are being ht by the Arcadians. Call Manager in at Columbia 4340. An unlimited out-of-town ‘opponent is being sought by the Quentins for rite Manager Cole, 621 A trio of unlimited class A and Old Ti Liberal Allowance 3436 14th .“f. N. I\.Vm b Piald; Spm.; Sarions Ve, klands, Field, 3 pm.; J. m{eholl Aipha_ Delta phere. el Ray i, 3 and Ed Stevens. 150-Pound Section. Palace-D. G. 8. vs. Northern Preps, Pleld, 2:30 pm.; Mc- Stevens. mnants vs. Centennials, Gonzags Hvld 1 p. m.; J, Mitchell and Crandall. Brentwood Hawks _vs. Wolverines, Mount Rainier Field, 3 p.m.; Cobean. MAINFORT WINS ON MAT. Tosses Thompson in Feature of Show at Alexandria. ALEXANDRIA, Va., November 6.— wing “Cyclone” Thompson of Kan- sas City after 19 minutes of tussling, lobby Mainfort of Wi n won the feature of a three-corn ‘wrestl! mfimnm&uhfl ht. for the it of the chn.my fund of the Alex- nuhun bested his omnnent with a body lock after the two had battled on fairly even terms. Thompson faced Mainfort as a substi- ;:M:LXDX‘ Mario Giglio of Italy, who was o Lou Groggins of Baltimore rallled after losing the first fall of his match with a fellow townsman, Lew Myers, and took the second and third. The preliminary between Johnny Beck of Alexandria and Billy Cunnmg ham of Washington was won by the vs, St. Ste- pm.; Dufour local boy with a double arm lock that| Michigan o owered his rival after a 12-minute battle. WOULD ENJOIN PLAYER. LONDON, Ontario, November 6 (#).— Manager Roy Brothers of the London Tecumsehs, International League hockey team, has announced that he would ask injunctions to prevent Gordon Bryson, hold-out on the local club, from | playing with the Chicago Shamrocks. GIANTS BEAH SPARTANS. PORTSMOUTH, Ohio, November 6. | P —Benny n and his New York Giants were too much for the Ports- mouth Spartans yesterday, winning 19 to 6. Father Lumpkin was effective through the Giants' forward wall. BIG MUSIG OUTFITS LIFE OF FOOT BALL &2 Job as Bandsman Eagerly Sought—nPistol Shooter Is Important. BY FRANCIS J. POWERS. HICAGO, November 6.—|P! ‘ Foot ball in the Western Conference and, Middle West has become some- thing considerably more than a contest between 22 running, whirling and clutching young maniacs. A game in the Big Ten resembles a combined athletic event, Elks’ parade and music festival. The pageantry attendant upon a game is becoming more colorful and intricate each sea- son, while the marching and toot- ing | ing of the huge bands is almost as important to the customers as the final score. The East will be initiated anew to the color and importance of Midwestern college bands, Saturday, when the mu- sicians of Illinois, Ohio State, Michigan and Notre Dame follow their gridiron a juads over the Alleghenies for games ith Army, Navy, Harvard and Penn- lylnn Some 500 musicians will perform in the role of Pied Pipers for the Western elevens, and if the family radio fills up with static don’t blame the tubes or loud speaker. It probably will be the ocompah player cracking a sour note or the Ohio State trumpeter working on the wrong key. “Making” Band Real Task. To be bandsman at one of the Big Ten institutions requires almost as much practice and certainly more foot work than is demanded of a tacklé or halfback. A fellow earns his place on the band in exactly the same way as a foot ball player wins a posi- tion—through competition. And then if he is real slick with the oboe and knows all the marching formations he's in_heavy with the for the year. Illinois with 160 pieces has the larg- est of the Big Ten but Ohio and Michigan are not far behind with 120. Notre Dame’s band that is more mili- tary in appearance will number less than 100, but is a capable outfit. You can find almost every sort of an instru- ment in these bands even down 1o | bells and the young men render a | fair sort of music. Until recently most of the hnd; nmlud thelr re(ronory to their own | of those of their ep- ponents. But Tow they can sna PRttty Coed. “March’ of the bonds, coul o\n trike up the Band” and, of , Hall, the Gang's All' " which 'ls good for either victory | or defeat. As an innovation this year the bandsmen also sing. Next season they may take up dancing. Drum Majors Strut. A Prussian drum major used to be considered the Alpha and Omega of | fwank, But if an old_Prusian unly. could see one of the Big Te majors, wearing & high Mrllln shako md polished Hessian boots, goose-step- | g down the field, 'lth his back | ed into a question mark, and fiip | the baton over the gold bar--well, then any old Prussian would take to the nuren river. { The drum major has his picturesin | the Papers at least once a week: al- ways is mentioned prominently in ac- counts of the game and is just about as important as the coach and entire foot ball team. Next to being drum major the best | on the Big Ten band Is pistol shooter. | The pistol shooter marches well in the rear Tanks of the band and guides its | formations by firing blank cartridges. | ‘The drum major canmot see where he is going, once he gets his back prop- | erly arched, and the musicians are too h!lll So the pistol shooter is the pilot | ‘there is much competition lor the | ob since it is easier to fire a .45 than learn how to finger a tuba Another much-sought-after position | is first assistant drum beater. All of the conference schools go in for big | drums. Purdue advertised the fact | that it is owner of the largest drum in | the world—one with a 7-foot diameter | that just barely can be trundled into a freight car. These drums ride on a small cart that is pulled by a crew of | four boys. The. regular drum beater often gets tired hammering the huge goat hide and that's where the first | ?llh!lnl beater gets his chance for ame. NINE TO BE BANQUETED | Spengler Post Members to Get Cita- tions From Judge Landis. Members of the Spengler Post, Amer- ican Legion, base ball team, which won the Legion title in the Capital City League and also captured the cham- plonship in the Sport Mart League the past season, vm be tendered a banquet uet Club wmom:w evening by Watson Miller, habilitation Citations from J\ld‘e Kenesaw Moun- Landis, high commissioner of base ball, will be distributed among. the players and gold base balls will be pre- sented by the Washington Post. Is This Happening To Your Engine? Bethasline's Benzol Blend Prevents Destructive Piston Shock . . . . and Lengthens Car Lifel WHAT DOES “8B. P.” MEAN TO YOU? TO SOME IT MEANS BAFFLED PROSPECT « « « the Bewildered Procrastinator who has been smoking one brand of cigars so long he can’t quite decide to switch to “BAYUK PHILLIES’—which Is what “B.P.” really means. But one day he joins the Big Parade. And is he Bountifully Paid for Being Particular? Don’t Be Puerile. (Good word, “BAYUK PHILLIES” are made from the tender heart-leaves of sun-ripened plants. Under-ripe or over-ripe leaves can’t get Into “PHILLIES,” even with a police- pass. And your smoke-appetite is thank- ful. Are YOU on the fence? Come on over. eh?) Try a “PHILLIE” right now. Three likeable sizes. Protective, Cellophane wrapper to better pre- serve the flavor and freshness. Perfecto . . 10¢ Longfelio . 10 Aftor Dinner .2for 250 L 917 Distributor: The N BAYUK A TYNTOT “pHILLIE g~ T ARSIy W- Wasbinfion D, G E Street N.W,, F YOU could only look inside your engine I while it is running! Vaporized fuel enters through the carbureter . . . the piston com- presses it . . « a sudden sparky . . a blinding flash as the fuel ignites and suddenly expands against the piston. At 40 mies an hour this happens 100 times each second . . . like a mighty trip-hammer, steadily pounding your car to pieces. But Betholine’s Benzol Blend smooths out these Destructive Piston Shocks. Instead of ex- ploding with damaging violence, Betholine ETH BENZOL : BLENDBD VIRGINIA'S E[EVEN " PRIMING FORY.P.1. Team Gets Good Polishing for Saturday Tilt—End Job for Gravatt, NIVERSITY, Va., November §.— Virginia's line and backfield have both been getting & good polishing this week in prepars- tion for the game Saturday In Blacks- burg with the Virginia Polytechni¢ In- stitute. Through the first part of the season the Cavalier linemen received criticism and the backs praise for their play in early games. Against mryhnl this | situation was reversed. The forwards gave a first-class exhibition, their best of the season, but the ball seemed to lag. Earl Abell, head coach, and his staff | of assistants want to have all their ele- Carolina in the two home games that are to follow. The Tech contest is the last of the season away from home. Segar Gravatt, a halfback turned into an end, has been giving a fine perform- flcemme'{lhmnm'fllh-hold lown one of the wing tions V. P. 1. Saturday. roe o Virginia was faced with the loss of three veteran ends, Dick Turner, Bill Byrd and Bill Paxton, at the start of the season. Gravatt starred as a back at the out- begin. In the Pennsylvania game Gnvm found himself in the mmu line-i an end. He played an nmevn Jng a l;eek lnktcr in un victory over iness L when the Cavallers mfieh‘gc g Kentucky, but he recovered to dmlnml;h himself by his play against N 1830 PlMIJCO AUTUMN HEE"NG ovember 4 to 15 Ine. Il,‘nlllnnlll ". JBC.‘I SK-IU i ! St iR l'n'-nlfnlnh.nl-l.l.-ll w. B burns progressively. The special Benzol Blend distributes Betholine’s vast energy over the en- tire piston stroke, building up a mighty s-w-e-e-p of power. No sudden, jarring crash! Instead a mechan- ically perfect, follow-thru power stroke! No won- der Betholine cuts repair bills and lengthens your car’s life! Learn the many other advantages of its Ben- zol Blend. 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