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SHIFT, WING BACK — 1 STYLES T0 CLASH Zuppke Gives Northwestern Good Chance to Win, but "Favors Notre Dame. BY BOB ZUPPKE, Tilinois Foot Ball Cosch. HE most important game this week end brings to- gether a Notre Dame team, believed by many to be the best in the university’s history, and a Northwestern eleven which has won all ite-games and a tie at least for the Big Ten cham- One $wo well known systems of offense, the ehifting backfield of Notre Dame ver- sus the double wing back style used by iwestern. The inference is that Victory by Notre Dame will prove the superiority of v’i::o lhflvt,o;‘l;n;ll other and Yy superiority of the double wing back. i The team that 50 8 S §EE§s efag z:ig & i 8 fits E §EE i gg 2 88 E 2 3 B i i i ] : EE y ! Indiana will struggle n;‘l:‘n:y axudl desperately inst Purdue, woul be a o for the Hoosiers BY OSSIE SALEM, Drake University 'Coach. ‘Written for the Assoclated Press. Pop W-nwruoi Stanford, guhr of ive ys, agal S i Zen e line of scrimmage. mnt;muummmh Bardin, right , comes out to the def ive right end out. end, teams with Heiser, push the defensive R Stanford .Appears Stronger Than Bears BY HOWARD JONES, Southern Californis Coach. OS ANGELES, Calif., November 21—~What has normally been on Eve of Game “Jlenice,; Oceldental. and Pomona meet in thelr annual. historic game. Neither J orther Spring Field, 3 p.m. (O. Mitchell and Donald.) Oregon State, which always omes Tapidly at the clods of the year, cgages West Virginia in Chicago. “Paul Schiss- ler’s teams have a habit of winding up each geason with an intersectional vic- tory and I rather believe the present Calliomia. Tech the" onsy for only unbea erente, plays Diego State ‘and ought to close the year twhx‘t.h a . THE SPORTLIGHT - BY GRANTLAND RIC Harvard and Yale. value of a traditional rival in beal Yale. But sport can hardly be better shown | unders . or proved than in the coming meeting of Yale and Harvard. Yale has lost only one game -this season after a hard schedule and that out | answer by and mere Jim would Il than beat Bobby Jones. Yale can finish & fine season by stop- ping Harvard abruptly and Harvard can has an | take practically all the poison from the im‘:;r.fintm in Missouri Valley is between Kansas Missouri. If Kansas wins the as and with r material should take this one. | B Oklahoma plays & non-conference game with Oklahoma Aggies. These teams played a tie last year. Okla- homa will be thinking more about the L G g £ virious of the season by hanging & wreath of thorns a”round 's neck. In addition to this, both 'Ylh ;x.lfi too [of duration is 'A. & M. Nebrask: now. TRADITIONAL RIVALS IN BIG SIX CONTESTS Kansas-Missouri . Tussle Heads Week ‘End Card—Two Other Important Tilts, ®y the Assoclated Press. KANSAS CITY, November 21.—Tra- dition overshadows all else in the Big Six Conference foot ball schedule this week. Heading the list of games in point the Kansas-Missouri contest in Columbia, renewed for the thirty-ninth time, but equally important is the Drake-Iowa State contest in Des Moines and the Oklahoma-Oklahoma battle in Stillwater. 8 resumes relations with d | Towa of the Big Ten in Iowa City in brought out the point recently that this has been largely a season of de- fense, wherein most offenses have been bottled up. A long list of 0-0 games proved this last Saturday. Then the series of s Harvard, Army, Yale and mfidu an average of only one touchdown afternoon, ;hlchhno&lmm\oflen!t«he'ly A ttack. It wasn't that the attacking power Was spongy, but that in each case-the lensive power was well above the rage. It seems to be easier to think up ways to stop plays than it is to think up’plays that can't be stopped. is all very welhin one of these old time traditional games to say one is the stronger. That ma . It was simple enoug an the season’s record gE fiiéig y g ] § H £ 2 HEy i g g 1 EEE ;fl i i =8 bt ifig i 883 i i i :EE ; H L gl Wwhat may become an annual affair. The Kansas Aggles have a game with Centre College in Manhattan, the first meeting of these two elevens, luThlfi fi.ml -h‘:moum ri Fln}e. with all old rivalry, e only titular of the week and is an im duh. Kansas can assure # tie for first by winning; Missouri, counted out of title consideration a month ago, can remain m.\m&mmmby would St o ‘woul urt both team’ chances th‘. would be‘hnrder on Muf souri as ‘Tigers alre: have one no-decision game in the .rflc,otda. 2 the title, but it hinges the nonxbimy of the Aggies vllnh'ip o: Texas in the big Turkey day duel. -B’:'lz is & remote roulbimy. however. Arkansas, its conference schedule be- hind, es for & Thanksgiving duel ywns | with munuy.cl_hm November 17 to November 29 Station & A am, 12:00 m, 12:15 3:’..3 I 115 pm. to grandstand. CRUGAL CLASHES - NGTY GRD LO0P Unlimit,pd Section Title May Be Decided in Two Games Sunday. 'O crucial games in the Capital City Foot Ball League involving Brookland, Seat Pleasant, Mercury and Marion head a heavy card Sunday, with _each -of the first three named teams ha & chance to win the title. between ?.rookhnd. Seat | 4, Brook- and Seat Pleasant, who clash, battle to a draw and M o wlmo;lefi Pleasant and s tie or victory for: the Marions will place either Brookland or Seat Pleasant on top. 5 and Grandail . Brookls Seat Pleasant . aitcnel E&'g"fif ‘Bevens.) Dreanll e Parrington: rioley S Peyeee— | cannanaat? Columbi: Palace-D. G. 8, Silve Pt P 4 (McDonald "and Mitehell) Northérn Preps vs. Centerinials, Stiver Me- Rainier Flld, 3 pom, &, Btovenas mma 2 les have mef the Bat- le] el or & game Sunday oni HM“I‘;{D- It starts at 2:30 o'clock, Manager. Lester of the Hess A. O.; 100-pound grid team, is casting for a game for Sunday. Call Lincoln 498. vmnaom oyer the Northern Red Birds, the Seaman Gunners challenge the Mohawks to 8 game November 30. 5:%! oyan is ed to call Lincoln MARYLAND PARK HIGH 'ADVANCES IN SOCCER In §fafe Quarter-Finals After 4.0 Win -Over Montgomery County Team. Maryland Park High School soccer team, Winfier of the Prince Georges County scholastic title, reached the quarter-final round in the tournament for State honors the Pla : High, on the Rosedale pla; n Silver Spring a rw@: Bcl:l!fl)'l Point High, scored over County ndard-bearer. Ability of the Maryland Park backs to consistently break up enemy attacks was & big factor in the victory of the Prince Georges County team. The win- ners" ,were Brown, Whittington, Schmidt and Morris Suit, It was an Stoffel, Willlam Stack, Sta head, Noble Ward, Francis McGuire, Dominic Palmer and Frank Pattison. Robert B. Wilson, a member of the faculty, coaches the team whose next lul':e %‘m‘?" Btate serles will be p).nyedI nex esday against an opponent to be.named. Raise for Grimes. Burleigh Grimes will receive $20,000 a year from the Cards in 1931, 1530 contract called for $18,000. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK.—Mike Firstenberg has been a reserve tackle and guard on New York University’s foot ball squad’ for two , but yesterday Chick Meehan led he was miscast. He put Mike in a halfback post during entire practice session and may use him there against Rutgers. LEWISBURG, Pa—Alumni of Buck- nell University will place a wreath on the Christy Mathewson Memorial Tab- let at the Polo Grounds tomorrow, when the Bisons clash with Fordham. Mathewson was an alumnus of Buck- nell and & fine halfback as well as the collége’s most famous base ball pitcher. ‘WEST POINT, N. Y.—Army’s coaches seem to have hit on an effective back- fleld combination to replace the one broken up when Cy lter was ropped from the squad. Maj. Ralph Sasse, head coach, had Bowman at quarterback, Glattly and Sebastian at halves and Stecker at fullback yester- day and the quartet worked smoothly. HANOVER, N. H.—Dartmouth’s foot ball squad has burned the tackling dummy and that means the Green's home practice has ended for another year. Coach Cannell and the squad of 38 prepared to leave today for the West Coast, where Stanford will be met at Palo Alto November 29. NEW YORK.—Columbia has an “iron man” in the line. Caarl Ganzle of Brooklyn, a tackle, has played every minute of the Lions’ last five games against Dartmouth, Willlams, Cornell, Colgate and Brown. 15 NEW HAVEN, Conn.—It looks like . | the Yale-Harvard game will be a wide- open affair. That Harvard will depend u] lateral and forward passes goes -Pl::st without saying, while Yale spent most of yutfl;duy‘n unrwu:e mslm lon rT- h passing play under the eagle cve ot ehmy Frelaman: ST. MARY’S BUDDIES STRENGTHEN SEXTET ||\ Signing of Bernice King Gives Alexandria Squad Two Sets of Forwards. LEXANDRIA, Va., November 21. —Bernice King, a forward at Warrenton High 8School for several years, has been signed by the St. Mary’s Buddies for the court season. With the acquisition of Miss King the Buddies have two sets of high- scoring forwards, the other ‘members being Mary Carne, Angels Bell and Leona Chisholm. Other members of the team are Ada Hicks, center; Helen Waddy and Helen Kraft, side centers; Frelda Mendelson, Mary Caton and Margaret Gorman, guards. Games have been arranged with an all-star team December 6 Spring Armory and December 16 with the Als A. C. at the Wilson Normal gym in Washington. Other contests are being sought by Ma nager Gorman | § at Alexandria’ 1671 between 6 - n 6 and 7 (R Eddie Gorman, former frshman, has" signed ith, e BE ry'’s Lyceum Five as a player and assistant coach. PFive former members of the St. Mary's Celtics quint—Zimmerman, McNena-~ min, Cabell, Brenner and Cronin—are candidates for the French's Sport S8hop Five of Washington. Pirates A. C. will engage the Northern Juniors here Sunday at 2:30 o'clock on Guckerts Fleld. Virginia Juniors have scheduled the Anacostia for a foot ball mmu. here November 30 on Shipyard Iroquois A. C. and No. 5 Engine Com- pany, 150-pound teams, who f it & scoreless battle recently, have ed & second game for December 7. No. 5 Engine Company is after a game for Sunday with some fast 150- pound team. Manager Cleveland Shaw may be reached at Alexandria 311. Pirate A. C. foot ball candidates w;ll meet at Pitt and Queen streets at o'clock tonight. DOG SHOW IS SLATED Entries for All-Breed Affair Will Close on Sunday. D. E. Buckingham, 21 street; Dr. E. E. Ruebush, 3622 Georgi avenue, and Mrs. R. O. Birney, Aspen Hill Kennels, Kensington, Md. TROUSERS ‘To Match Your Odd Coats s | EISEMAN'’S, 7th & F TODAY and TOMORROW WONDERFUL WINTER VERCOATS - Made for You in Washington FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ONLY 39 These Are All $60 Values Several $75 Coatings Included SUCH an overcoat opportunity you can't afford to overlook. Genuine kerseys, Scotch plaids, oxfords, meltons, herring- bopes, fleeces, and chinchillas...hand tailored to order by our own skilled tailoring craftsmen, gARLY ATTENDANCE SUGGESTED JOs. A. WILNER & Co. Custom Tailors Since 1897 * Cor.8th & G Sts. N.W. Down Harvard, Says Roper BETTER RESERVES | resecmn SPORTS. close score. I favor the Navy, - N.'Yol‘k”" mfi?‘: GIVE ELI AN EDGE s Tiger Mentor Bitter Battle, Though. Other Choices. BY W. W. (BILL) ROPER, Princeton Foot Ball Cosch. HE leading game in the East this Saturday is Yale- Harvard at New Haven. No matter what the prelim- inary season of each team has been, when they meet the battle is sure to be bitterly contested. I favor Yale because I believe they are the stronger all-around eleven and are much better equipped with reserve material. Good substitutes are very important factors. Yale has a second team nearly equal to its first. Harvard has a good first team pro- vided the regulars have gotten over their injures, but their reserve material is much vetk’;r. Hnrv:;godhu a !‘!lrl;; Yale zuu.l" fine ‘condition, and is eager to 1;fl.ny one of his great. . Th Lafayette-Lehigh game is always inter- :filmc. I figure it will be very close this e. There should be a corking game at Annapolis, where Maryland n:m Navy. Anticipates | > Alabama 3 win from Wash- erson, e iyt DEVITT IS LUCKLESS COAST CONFERENCE BATTLE ON TONIGHT Oregon State” Confident for Tilt With Southern Branch of IN CHARITY VENTURE| X = Devitt Sohool was trying today to | Oni arrange a foot ball game for tomorrow night in Griffith Stadium for the bene- fit of the District’s unemployed. Nego- | fory tiations with John Marshall High and the McGuire School, both of Richmond, have fallen through, but Devitt was hopeful of listing a game with another Virginia institution. Emerson will play host N. J, Military Academ; Stadium tomorrow cton-Lec High of Ball: ton, Va, in the annual “C” Club foot ball this afternoon in Central the uma-“‘ wfleld n::' a film urch School of Rich- , Va., weresto Albans in other schoolboy District gridirons. A game between Eastern and John's scheduled today was canceled. WE GUAI BLADENSBURG RD. AT 15th & H STS. N.E. Clearance of Foot Ball Helmets - Pants, Shoes Shoulder Pads An exceptional opportunity to save. Our original low prices deeply cut $1.98 Foot Ball Helmets; $1.35 - $3.98 Foot Ball Helmets, $2.65 $4.69 Foot Ball Helmets, $3.15 $4.98 Shoulder Pads, $3.35 All-Wool Jerseys, 4 Price for “Quick Results.” $3.98 to $5.19 Foot Ball Pants All Foot Ball $269 Shoes Originally Low Priced at $4.98, $5.45 and $6.98. Sizes 6 to 11. Reduced Sears, Roebuck offer ‘“right now,” at the height of the season, large savings on everything the hunter needs, Only a few items tised. are adver- have it out at St. |’ to Wenonah, | three Shouts for 40 Years. Humphries, Madison Square Clar- dc:“%gt .kmum N 8t. | old, with 40 years of announcing SEARS, RoEBUCK ano CoO. » ’ T [ % Our original low price on these decoys was $533. They are shaped and painted so ey look alive. Choi " Famous Ranger Sil:tl;luel-lBarrel $ l 928_ . 12—16—20 and 410 Gauge Everything the first-class gun should have is built into this Ranger . . . straight, tested barrels . .'. . and chrome vanadium steel working parts that last a lifetime. Has Jostam Anti-Flinch recoil pad. Sears’ price is $10 below other guns of comparable shooting Mallard Loads—12-Gauge. per- Xtra s : Sl ey 03 L