Evening Star Newspaper, November 15, 1930, Page 22

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WITH VET PLAYERS| Van Bibber Is Boilermakers’ Greatest Loss—Wildcats Are Hard Hit. BY FRANCIS J. POWERS. HICAGO, lNovember 15.— Another week and 10 Western Conference foot ball coaches will regret- fully say farewell to veterans who have served three seasons on the collegiate gridiron and make their exit as the curtain rolls down on the final scenes of the 1930 Big Ten campaign. As the coaches say adieu with the one hand, the other will be busy checking the crop of sophomores who have won the first rowels on the spurs of stardom and will re- turn next season to fill the spac- dous shoes of the departed seniors. ‘The sophomore foot ball crop has been plentiful within the boundaries of the Big Ten and as the season travels into the twilight zone there scarcely is a coach who cannot point to four, five or six huskies who will be the bulwarks of his 1931 team. Purdue Is Blessed. Purdue is perhaps the most fortunate of all Big Ten teams. It has had a successful season, marked by only one defeat and will be able to place an al- most entirely veteran team on the field in 1931. The passing of George Van Bibber, gigantic and polished tackle, constitutes Purdue's greatest loss. Of the great backfield crops that still wear the old gold of the Boilermakers, , Purvis, Riske and Yune- vich are rs, while Kissell, Horst- are among the ’Oz‘.‘lflfy his needs and is worrying not 80 much about 1931 as the one-point dptnt his young men received from wasurn. another of the front runners in the conference will be hard hit by the passing of seniors. The ‘Wildeats lost cwt Henry Bruder, Griffin from the — SON OF ONE— THERE GOES YOUR KID - FUMBLING /) AGAIN | OF MICHIGANS IMMORTALS, 1S NOW A HALFBACK.. AT ANN ARBOR ¢ A O 1000 The 4. P ‘AN Rights Reasrve? HEJ éLMosr AS AD AS NouR ooy WHEN DADDY H#ESTON AND DAVDY Yosr G£T - SUGGESTED TROJAN PROBE STIRS COAST. ot | Stanford Track Coach Thinks Action Needed for Good of Athletics. By the Assoclated Press. and MacDougal in_the{ nesota backfield will permit Fritz | Crisler to view the passing of Win Brockm with few tears, and the eyer of Wells at tackle will make play oY Huffman among Ohio has found some fine sopl backs in Lew Hinchman, Bill Carroll and Vamer and splendid guard in Bill wmlen But, te their develop- | t, Williaman still will miss the ever- | Pfi Tilinois finishes with Capt. Olaf Rob- | inson, Schumaker, Stan Bodman and | | Hills and has only Gilberry and Hunter | a_ halfback, and Dickey, an end, to offset the deparbure of Ross, Hug! baker and a number of | P* other seniors. Neither Towa nor Chi- | cago found any one likely to cheer them over the next two years. GALLAUDET QUINTET LISTS 15 CONTESTS | Six Local Schools Are on Schedule, Including Catholic, American end Maryland. ATHOLIC UNIVERSITY, Amer- ican University, University of Maryland, Southeastern Uni- versity, Columbus University end Benjamin Pranklin University- are teams of the District group listed on the 15-game Gallaudet basket ball schedule. The Blues will open against Haverford College December 12 at Haverford, Pa. ‘The Gallaudet schedule follows: December 12—Haverford College at Haverford. December 13—Drexel Institute at Philadelphia. ‘December rl—saut.h.uwm University 8t Kendall Green, -lllr’ at College Park. i :r‘.::n ‘vmvcmty at Jmflumm University. January 16—St. John's at m 23—Maryland State Normal Jm 31 Umvflflly of Ball e Catante Sniversty 8¢ | men the 1930 Trojan foot AN FRANCISCO, November 15.— The proposal of R. L. “Dink” Templeton, Stanford University track coach, for an investigation to determine “why the University of Southern. California gets the best foot ball players and othier athletes” threw the coast foot ball situation into a tur- moil today. , “The future of Pacific Coast athletics depends on an investigation,” Temple- ton told a gathering of California and Stanford alumnus and officials at Oak- land yesterday. Coach Howard Jones of the Univer- sity of Southern California, at Los An- geles, issued a quick reply, asking the Stanford coach to “prove his insinua- tions or shut up. ‘The turmoil ewdmu)' centered around the 74-to-0 defeat handed California by Southern California. “Until Stanford and California get & break on athletic material there is no chance for them to with Southern California on an even basis,” declared. Templeton L “It is high time that Stanford and California should get together and find out why this situation has arisen. has U. 8. C. such athletes and foot players? Maybe it is ifornia climate, the the U. 8. C. campus buildings. “All coaches know that {he first principle of success is man power, re- gardless of miracles or magic up their sleeves.” ‘This is the first time in history, since |the New Zealand All Blacks l(llntd Rugby team that toured the United States several years ago) that the Pa- . foot ball team.” Coach Jones declared the veiled ch.ms of subsidization demanded 00f. “If either Templeton or these Cali- fornia supporters with their velled re- marks on subsidization have anything to prove, I'll be more than glad to listen,” he said. “They've made a lot of accusations. Now let's have some wm( “Don’t both Stanford and California | get a large percentage of their athletes | from Southern California? How many | players do we get from Northern Cali- fornia?” Coach Jones said except for three 1l team was | the same eleven which lost to California, 15 to 7, in 1929, after which no hints of subsidization were heard. W. B. Owens, Stanford professor and president of the Pacific Coast Confer- ence, sald Templeton's remarks were his personal opinions and did not rep- resent Stanford’s attitude. TULANE KEEPS GOAT Georgia Tech Talker Cannot Up- ' set New Orleans Kicker. ATLANTA, November 15 (#).—It seems that Tulane University gridsters 80 _in for wit, During a game with ‘Tech here Name Felts got off a miserable punt—one of the few no-good boots he makes. A Tech lineman, thinking to get the goat of the young sophomore and nltle him, exclaimed: sophomore back and kicker, Felts. was it2” over, Unabashed and grinning all Felts waved his hand and with mock eekness “Here ) WALLACE QUINT WINS. as their leading scorer, downed 8t. 14—Southeaster. University | Wi ‘allace Paul's, 20 to 21. Hancock counted 11 points. | Grid_Struggles On Card Today College. l;:e;o'n VB. Nz’: Ycrk anvenlw ulryllnd vs. V. P. L st Notlolk Va. Catholic _University vs. Manhattan College at l!u York, N. Y. Georxe ashington vs. Albright at oflhum vs. Langley Field at Lang- Fleld, l. ley 3 ‘George Freshmen vs. St. John's Prnhmen at Annapolls, Md. Howard Unlvemty vs. Hampton at Hampton, Va. Scholastic. Gonzaga vs. St. John's, Griffith Sta- dium, 2:30 o’clock. Georgetown Prep vs. Swavely at Manassas, Va. LISTS GRID TWIN-BILL Alpha Delta Omega Books Alcovas. Also Will Be Preliminary. ALEXANDRIA, Va., November 15— Alpha Delta aludl Fraternity has booked a game Alcova Motor Co. of Arnnm , for 2:30 o'clock tomorrow in ’s Park, ‘The Capital League 150-pound game between the Del Ray A. C.and the Palace-District Grocery teams has been scheduled as a preliminary at 1:30. Episcopal High School'’s 135-pound foot ball team defeated -the Washington and Lee High School's “B" team, 21 to 0, yesterday. Bluebirds are after games Alexandria with 135 and 130 d teams. Call Alexandria 1773-W between 6 and 7 p.m. WOULD PLAY FOR CHARITY Marine and Coast Guard elevens are to stage their annual foot ball game December 6, for the benefit %ch;ruy, bulmmhuubem g secure & sponsor, according to David L. 8. Brewster, athlectic officer of the Marine Corps. TIP ON FOOT BALL BY SOL METZGER. Here is the way Penn's double wing back formation lines up. A balanced line and two backs some 47; yards back. ‘The snap is to No. 2, who breaks w the Jeft rear. Note how wkndld- y the passer is protected. No. hlfl the defensive right end, No 7 the opposing right tackle. No. 1 unable el AT g = i g - §§ F;g i BE 4 =i i 5 g *'i% EE LU H .} lsigi sl o E ANCIENT RIVALRIES SPOT EAST'S CRIDS Yale-Princeton Tilt Tops Bright Card of Foot Ball Games. By the Associnted Press. N though there were & few inter- sectional games, renewals of ancient rivalries provided the foot ball. A Princeton eleven, bounced around wind up a disheartening season with a victory over Yale at Princeton. Harvard entertained Holy Cross, Dartmouth, tied only by Yale, hoped to maintain its undefeated stride at Cornell’s expense and Colgate's high- scoring array was favored over Syracuse. Columbia, weakened by the absence of Ralph Hewitt, had slight hopes of stopping Brown, but New York Uni- versity was favored to beat Georgetown and gain revenge for reverses suffered in 1928 and 1929, The intersectional list was headed by the clash of unbeaten Fordham and the powerful St. Mary's eleven from Oakland, Calif. drew a in Southern llethnga l’u and wida for its lp'ctumu.r g attack. Two teams which have m uulr ups and downs this season, Penn and Georgia Tech, were matched at Phila- delphia, and Villanova faced the fairly strong Oglethorpe outfit from Atlanta. Army picked an easier one in Kentucky Wesleyan, BALTIMORE, November 15 (#).—The wild passing Mustangs of Southern Methodist University of Dallas, Tex., meet the Navy today in the Tars' sec- ond intersectional contest in as many weeks in the Municipal Stadium, A partially revamped Middie line-up will face the Methodists, Joe Tschirgi, Navy running back, being out of the in the Ohio State battle last Saturday. He was replaced by Johnny Gannon, a regular halfback last season. Coach Ray Morrison of 8. M. U. was more concerned over the weather than anything else. Rain for the last two days had made the stadium turf soft, and with rain forecast for the after- noon, his greatest offensive strength, passing, was threatened. The game was expected to draw be- tween 25,000 and 30,000, PRINCETON, N. J, November 15 | (#).—A throng came to Princeton today | to see the ffty-fourth game between | Yale and Princeton and to bid farewell | to Bill Roper, Princeton’s famous coach. Princeton’s poor record caused most g{verybody to expect a walkover ~for ale After a dozen years of coaching Princeton teams, Roper has decided to retire and this game marks the end of | his reign. On him rested one of the | few hopes for a Tiger team which has ’been beaten by Brown, Cornell, Navy | and Lehigh and tied by Chicago. | . The famous Roper inspiration, which | has carried former teams to feats which seemed beyond their powers, and the chance that a wet field would hamper the Eli attack alone remained to com- fort Princeton’s supporters. Yale has been beaten only by Otorl'll and has tied Army and Dartmouth. | . . NEW YORK, November 15 (P).—Slip | Madigan’s ?t Mary's eleven from Oak- LONDOS TOSSES MANISH. PHILADELPHIA, November 15 (#).— 8t. Louls claimant of the w. & EW YORK, November 15.—Al- keynote of today's slate in Eastern | Harbe; unceremoniously all season, hoped to|W. battle with an ankle injury sustained | g S(}H[l(ll GRIDDERS FINISH NEXT WEEK Games Monday and Tuesday Will Wind Up Public High Tussle. ball championship series will end next week, when both the re- maining games will be staged. In addition to the title-deciding East- ern-Tech match to be played for the benefit of charity ‘Tuesday afternoon, starting at 3:15 o'clock, probably at Grifith Stadium, Business and Western Puvmmmmhmum will meet Monday afternoon in Central | Michigan Stadium at 3:45. Business and Western, which are staging a race for last-place “honors,” were to face yesterday, but the unfavorable weather forced a postpone- ment. Gonzaga and St. John's were to bat- tle in Griffith Stadium at 2:30 o’clock, and Swavely and Georgetown Prep were to have it at Manassas, Va. in games today involving schoolboy elevens of the District area. Two District prep school elevens suc- cumbed to strong opponents, and & third was a winner in stubborn compe- tition in grid matches yesterday and last night. ]f)evm went down before Columbia University freshmen in & 6-0 game at New York; Emerson was & 20-0 victim of Willlam and Mary freshmen at Wil- liamsburg, Va. and Landon scored a 7-0 win over !pmcopo.l High Reserves at Alexandria. The Emerson-Willlam and Mary game was phyed at night. Ray Millard, Devitt right halfback, grabbed a Columbia punt and ran 70 yards to cross the latter’s goal line, but it was no score, Devitt being ruled off- side. Millard again put Devitt in scor- ing position in the final quarter, when he brought a punt back to the Colum- ird stripe, but Devitt could get no nearer the Columbia goal. Newt fullback, scored Columbia’s touchdown early in the first quarter, when he smashed over in three consecu- tive bucks from the 20-yard line, where the freshmen had recovered a Devitt fumble. Line-ups: Positi . pSosition. Devitt Prep. (0 %¢ | the “realm of flying feet.” ubstitutions: z for Diam! —Wuer: e Barrack Tor Mig- liore, Mflmln for Phillips, Dbckery for Me- well, Devitt—8t John' for Millard. JDegan (George Wishing. S mpiree W, 5. Dudsk lmorntom) Linssman—Harry Wane (Fordham An effective aerial game carried Wil- liam and Mary (ruhmen to its win over Emerson. The en _scored one touchdown in each quarter except the third. Palese and Chnlkn for the win- ners and Hccanhy and Draper for the losers played bes . Quarterback Fullback . gy —20 R =] Substitutio Emerson—Williams. Wil- lam and Mary_Chako. Referee—Mr. Umpire—Mr. Grash- . L ire Auen: nesman 3 Al Seccombe, fullback, scored the touchdown that gave Landon its win over Episcopal Reserves. The tally came in the second quarter. Positions. Epscopal Res. (0) Left end.. Tucker tough foe | Lando omal” Cooagde o I o e hg BRI B e it o BUCKEYES UNDER DOGS 40,000 Expected to See Last Home Game Against Pitt. COLUMBUS, Ohio, November 15 (). —Unde again after one week of rating as favorite over Navy, the Ohio State eleven set its back it_the charge of Pittsburgh's Panthers in Ohio tadium today. A crowd of 40,000, a large percentage of it from Pittsburgh, was_expected. Ohio’s more versatile attack and su- perior forward passing was matched against a better Pittsburgh line and harder running offense. 1t was Ohio’s last home game of the year and the last in Ohio Stadium for rleduley Eugene Fesler, its all-American nd. Local Teams. Columbia Freshmen, 6; Devitt, 0. Willam and Mary Freshmen, Emerson, 0, Landon, 7; Episcopal Reserves, 0. East. Bmtoon College, 19; Loyola of Chi- cago, 0. St, John's, 26; Johns H Manlius, 6; Greenbrier South. University of Mississippi, 37; South- western of Memphis, 6. Maryville e, 13; lanoh’ -Rhyne, 7. Presbyterian, 1i Murray State 'rnchen' Coune‘ ko Southeast Missouri Coll Elon College, 42; Appre! Unlvenuy of Miami, 6; Southwestern Institute, * College, 20; Bethel, , 22; Lynehbur;, ; ‘Simmons U o, w;yl:nd College, 26; Panhandle A. con:n'mshmn 14; Sewanee Fresh- 20; , 6. . 1, 0. . | matted vines and scrub Big Ten Title Scraps Feature F t Ball Program in Midwest By the Anomud Press. (HICAGO, November 15.—The Middle West was well supplied with foot ball amusement to- | '™ day, but Big Ten ohnmplummn struggles at Evanston, I, and Ann Arbor, Mich., shoved others into the background. At Evanston, Northwestern's unde- feated and untied eleven had its final test of the conference season before 48,000 persons—a battle with Wis- . A triumph for the Wildcats would mean a title, or a_ tie for the champlonship at least. Northwestern, with its six straight victories, was f vored over the powerful, but incon. sistent Badgers. The trldltlnnnl rivalry between Mich- igan and Minnesota, with the added importance of a championship hope at stake, attracted more than 60,000 to Stadium. Michigan faced Minnesota fortified with three confer- ence triumphs against no defeats. Tllinois and cmcnfi;a were paired up at Stagg Field, nothing except their ancient rival'y and a chance for either to gain its first conference victory, over which to contest. They ‘were rated as about even in power. Purdue had a minor workout with Butler at Lafayette, while Ohio State and’ Towa furnished the intersectional attractions. ‘The Buckeyes were matched with Pitt's powerful eleven, while Towa had Penn State as its opponent_at Iowa City. Notre Dame was not expected to ex- rience much difficulty in making its seventh straight victim in its last home game of the season, The University of Detroit was at Mllwnukce to try a comeback at the expense of Marquette’s undefeated eleven. EVANSTON, Ill, November 15 (#).— Northwestern's victory-sleek wildcat today crouched for its biggest effort of the Big Ten gridiron season—an as- sault on Wisconsin, victory in which meant no less than a tle for the 1930 champlonship. The game attracted a capacity crowd of 48.000. Although lacking the expert passihg services of “Pug” Rentner, Northwest- ern had Hanley and Bruder to throw aerials and was a sizable favorite to u overcome the Badgers. Wisconsin, however, has been on the verge of go- ing somewhere ever since its last big tory over Pennsyl ‘was 0 vanis, counted upon to give Northwestern an teresting _afternoon. % November 15 lnd mm on here _today, hnm:g lor “the little mwn the Wolverines for the champion- IHD of the W—um Conference. victory for Michigan would leave only the dnwn trodden Chicago Ma- roons' in the way of at least a tie for the Big Ten title. Minnesota needs a win over Michigan to make an other- wise disastrous season a success. The Midwest's most famous foot ball trophy, “the little brown jug,” now is in - sion of Michigan. but will travel back to Minneapolis if the Giants of the North are successful Both teams have been drilled for the game by former pupils of Felding H. (Hurry Up) Yost. Tad Wieman, mw assistant coach for the Gophers, was a star fullback and tackle at Mich- igan. He assisted Yost for several yoars and then became head coach. He was replaced by Harry Kipke before the start of last season. With warm but cloudy mlhur, lbouc 65,000 persons are expected to see game. IOWA CITY, Iowa, November 15 —M&rklng the first time an Eastern eleven ever has played in Iowa City, the “Nittany Lions” of Penn State were the homecoming opponents of the Uni- versity of Iowa y As thousands of “old grads” returned to pass judgment on Burt Ingwersen's 1930 creation. Showing remarkably improved form in the last two games, the Hawkeyes were slight pre-game favorites over their lnn sectional rivals, who have found trouble winning games in their own territory. SOUTH BEND, Ind., November 15 (#)—Today appeared to'be just another Saturday for Notre Dame, as Knute Rockne's amazing Irish and others {T‘:l:d It)‘r";.ke‘ W:an?‘:mg the Missouri ey title for s t year, Dr:t;: Dame fludlum‘ e seascn pu a e that lasted to wmun eif r‘:'zpmtnuu“t;-“ofi the finish, - with Notre e winning, u)’l butnoth like this wes an- It was the nnnl of the Notre Dame home season, bun no more than 16,000 were expected to watc THE SPORTLIGHT BY GRANTLAND RIC TODAY’S GAMES. Fordham-St. Mary's—Proving that East and West can meet—at least in Fordham has the stronger line; St. Mary's the better backfleld. Two evenly matched teams, where it is largely a matter as ‘d whether or not Fordham isn’t border- ing on staleness after five hard ones in & TowW. Northwestern-Wisconsin— Northwest. ern should win despite the loss of Pug Rentner, her best passer. If North- western does win it will bring two unbeaten teams together the (ulluwln( Seturday for the Notre Dame tussle. The one Wisconsin chance is that Northwestern will be focused 100 per cent on the Notre Dame test. Georgla-Tulane—Two of the best of the Southern teams, with Georgia fa- vored if the Red and Black schedule hasn't taken away most of her steam. ‘Tulane is unbeaten in the South and t | Tulane is strong, but Georgia has the greater scoring force on a normal day. Yale - Princeton—Bill Roper's last stand in college foot ball after 25 years. He will need a miracle to hold Yale > | under two touchdowns. Michigan-Minnesota — The unbeaten Michigan team should remain unbeaten with too much power for Minnesota plus Newman’s passing at! Cornell - Dartmouth — Another _old- fashioned classic, where again Dart- mouth’s man power should be more than Cornell can ward off. Colgate-Syracuse—Two good teams, with Colgate out in front through a better attack. There are few backs better than Hart and Macaluso. Another old-fashioned rivalry that means hard, smashing fcot ball. Nebraska-Missouri—A Big Six classic, 1 | where Nebraska is favored after tieing 'y | Pittsburgh and beating Kansas. N. Y. U. -Oeoruwwn——Ons of the best mg‘:f th(;eg;‘yé with N Y. U. gu.m is good, but N. Y. U. looks better, Harvard-Holy crou—fllrv‘rd about due if Horween doesn't save up too much for Yale. If he does, Capt. McEwan and his Holy Crou outfit may turn in another Crimson jol vundex‘bflt-Tenneueo—one of the top-notch contests of the day between t,eum that_have only been beaten once. essee has a t quarter in Dodd, one of the best. Not much to spare. ‘Texas-T., C. U—The Southwestern blue ribbon. Texas has lost one game, but beat 8. M. U,, 2610 7. T. C. U, has o those P“:n‘;‘"w‘e‘:"“rm‘.‘"&""‘m‘”‘° of nip at a championship upon its decision. Columbia-Brown — E has imuch, with Hewitt uneerh.l.n and not quite ready. “Methodist—Both -Washington— Washington Sta nmnmns GAME 1S FRA[IGHT WITH BAD BREAKS Few Short Putts Prevent Macdonald Smith From Winning Two Titles. BY 0. B. KEELER, (Written for Associated Press.) RGUMENT over that now A famous maneuver whereby Barres of Yale picked a Georgia fumble of a kick- off out of the air and continued across the Georgia goal line for an “illegal” touchdown has served one interesting purpose. It has brought a conjecture from Fielding H. Yost as to what would have happened had Yale been given the ball ~ at the point of recovery, 1. Geor- o e oo me thing everyl X o Rt \vnu}d have been changed by flut rul- in {'fle might have scored. Or, if not scoring, sufficient time and b might have been used up to prevent Georgia from putting over _another touchdown, Anyway, the whole game, from that immediate moment on, would have been different. The Big “It.” Consider how immensely true this is in golf; and consider further how many tiny breaks constitute a round as it is, and not as it would be, if one of those breaks went the other way. perhaps, these performances, For, these are the two big tests of season. Now it is morally and even strably certain that in the 72 play at Hoylake and in the 72 play at Iaterlachen, Mac Smith, one . the best and steadiest of putters—had two, and a mnnymoununm ¥ putts of a reasonable a};‘ from ‘th': 10 teeb—v t up to remd mud:k b:‘cl: their wlrked tle feet IM Also Mac Smith, the same as & num- of 72 holes each. Chance for Breaks, In a word, it would have only three more pueu in the Wfin—m& medium ones, or the occasional long uue which barely stayed out, or the * American champion, instead of Bobby Jones. On such tiny matters—on blades of grass—do still unbeaten, should | play, remain in that Pl with little to spare. leasant situation, but Some others—Marquel will have a hot scra) favored; Temple, wl& after a fine year, should be too.strong for La Fayette; mlnoh has it on Chi- cl[o Pltubn has an edge on Ohio § wulmndnpncfinnnl'udchnfl Today's Golf Lesson. ‘Two leading pros were discussing the chip shot recently, They both agreed that the average golfer makes the mis- take of using too much in the way of body and arms in playing this stroke, rather than a greater dependenne on hands and wrists, which should be in almost full control. There 1s some help u) not too far away. le'. the hands and wrists control (cg:gmm, 330 by the North American Newspaper Alllance.) Along the Water Front By Carrol ONE is the stretch of marsh and trash heaps that was the en- trance to old James Creek Canal. Gone are the aban- doned rusting frames and battered bodies of defunct automobiles. Gone are the tin shacks of squatters and dis- reputable characters. Buzzards Point has had its face lifted. A year ago, when the Corinthian Fleet hastily moved from its old quar- ters to avold being inundated with & sea of mud, many predicted the finish of this long-established club. The fleet scattered, every boat yard had its quota of Ooflnt.h!m. some went down river, others to wmh on the bay. Things looked Now the nm 1s together again. Not only together, but augmented by the addition of a number of new craft, each month seeing the addition of more. What once seemed to be the club’s un- doing has proven its making. They moved from & site none too convenient, wnur, a prime essental, was hard to dirt from two bridges swept over them, traffic on their route was heavy at just the times that boatmen would be found making for the club. Their quarters were limited and filled to capacity, and the club pro- hibited from further expansion. Now look at ‘em. A’fine new basin, the club house moved and revamped, new members ing to get in, new berths, new walks, ample space for continued expansion, freedom from dirt and dust from railroads and highways, protection from Winter ice, isolation, water, electricity. ‘The club grounds are mulgimntx a railway is being installed, pro is belnc made for ample parking space for cars, what was once a Juu:; ‘:x g mfidflanmfimhfllm .mmhm—. usual proceeding in Winters” are ‘Klotzbach. the Corinthian Club has done it. This column suggests three hearty cheers and an aye, aye, sirl. It is observed that one of Uncle Sam's woolen Navy is visiting at the yard. Every time it gets wet it shrinks. Just when there's an unemployment BALTIMORE ELEVEN BEATEN BY DUNBAR ¢ Mimms, Qum- and lohinm w as Ball-Carriers in 27-0 Vie- tory Over Douglas. Dunbar High School downed Doug- las High of Baltimore y Howard University Stadium, 27 ‘The second score was( the result of a series of Dunbar gains, /.. including 2 35-yard end run by Rebime son across the goal. Mimms accounted for the second touchdown of the in the second period by a hard afl uckle after a steady 'nm third period was scoreless, Wi the ball always deep in Douglas terri- tory. Starting the fourth period with the score 15 to 0 in its favor, Dunbar// Fimans Intereepted r':'&fuu'.“";. imms intercep! a and dashed for a touchdown. score was made by Queens, who M up a fumble and crossed the line for the score. The Dunbar nne"‘ was & stonewall, * Line-up and Summary. crisis the Navy Department announces | i a decrease in personnel. get flat feet w: them looking for work. ‘The Abel Upshur is turned over to the Frohib!lkm fleet. As our In;luh cousins might sly “It's & rum go!” Surveyors have ‘been seen along Water If theéy don't | Doy, decks they'll get | Cu Jackson street. Another golf course is suspected. | Dou; Just what connection there is be- tween yachting and the Field Arull:;z we don’t quite make out, but there two or three fleld plecee abreast the | p flag staff at the Corinthian Club. Man | M the guns, men, here comes a new high- way. Rod and Stream advocates a law against purse-netting. A glance at g el T ey vince at a law o GET is in order. e Have you changed and overhauled your mooring as yet, or do you wait for a November gale to make up minkr Thew S oo o wine g] that' every- b Py )t The annual scramble for Winter quarters will mon ho on, the scrimmage will the increased mnnbor of boats' in ume waters. It might be your ouija board now. By the time Capt. Giannon! of the Anm of Panama finishes his wrangle newspaper men writing of the Potomar ‘The dnnual predictions of “har-r-rd 1 t xpe’:'ledltvm;‘e e urns out as e to drive a team of horses —i a team can Touchdowns—Mimms (), Robinson, Point After touehaow Ao " oingy o ‘Safety-Dougins. mmunx Bin atempt, | sttt g:\m?! e for ugias, bsitiutions —Dous ise “for | ror. i Washington for B, Ve T Referse—tir. Ooniee. Umpire—M Contee. Um Yg-l“:enmln—ln Lyons. Field Judses LEWIS FAMILY BOSSES Boys Help Handle Affairs of Two Auburn Teams, ANBURN, Ala., November 15 (#).—/ The Lewis flmfl threatens to get a ‘monopoly on t.he athletic erial duties at Alabama Pol

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