Evening Star Newspaper, November 30, 1930, Page 74

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THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGILON, D. C. NOVEMBER 30, 1930—PAKYT FLVE. 2 TH SUNDAY SPAR WASHLNMON, D O NovRMbeR 80 wo_wawy VB “Famous Coaches Pick All-America Team : Open Match Play Tourney G olf Novelty. STARS NAMED BY M’GUGIN, | McGugin, Zuppke, ZUPPKE, ROPER AND JONES Carideo and Schwartz Give Notre Dame Half of Mythical Backfield—Ticknor of Harvard Named at Center The all-America foot ball selec- tions for 1930 are presented below, with the reasons for the choices. The selections were made for The Star and the North American News- paper Alliance by the four famous coaches whose dispatches have ap- peared in The Star throughout t foot ball season. They are Bod uppke, Illinois; Howard Jonmes, Southern California; Bill Roper, Princeton, and Dan McGugin, Van- derbilt. McGugin’s nominees repre- sent not only his point of view but that of a group of Southern coaches with whom he conferred. 00D foot ball once was con- fined to the East, but that was long ago. Now the game stretches from coast to coast and hundreds of teams play every week end. Strength no longer is_confined to any one section. There are good teams everywhere. It is rea- sonable to suppose that on each of these good teams there is at least dbne good man, so when it comes to selecting an all-America combination the task presents constantly increasing difficulties. All schedules are becoming hard. The result is that few olayers can hope to go through the seeson at top speed. A xood phyer may have one great day. reat player may have one bad after- fn watching players, you must lud e them on their general averages. oreover, foot ball is so fast today nnd so specialized that it no longer is & game of an eleven, but of a squad. In putting ther a team you must have power, ins, speed and heart. You must have men who will work to- gether, men who are smart enough to size up the opposition and to diagnose | plays on the field; men who can stop | any style of attack, and break through any style of defense. With all these things in mind we weighed the -merits of many players and finally decided on those we *have chosen for the first, second and third all-America teams. All-Round Experts. With sny eleven picked from this|Sime squad, we feel that few replacements would be necessary, but that they could be made without weakening the team. ‘We have men on this squad that can do anything that can be done with a foot ball; great runners, blockers, tacklers, kickers, passers and receivers. We be- lieve this team of qurs is equal to any that could be selected and any of us, Bob Zuppke, Bill Roper, Howard Jones, or Dan McGugin, would be amply satis- fled to coach such a squad and would have no fear of results. Every man on this squad is a real foot ball player whose skill and person- ality both would be an- inspiration to hl.l comrades. Every man is capable of playing his individual position su- perbly and of giving that aid to his mates which makes a great foot ball e. No back, however great, unless he has a stalwart line in front of him. This team has such a line. For center of the first team we have plcud ‘Ticknor of Harvard for the sec- year in succession. Let us state rllht here that none of these men has been picked on our own judgment alone. We have consulted with many other coaches, with scouts and with old foot ball players and these selections are t.he result of many concolidated opin- ‘Ticknor appears to be almost the unlvetul choice for center by those who have seen him in action. Few men at his position ever have been ahle to do as many things well. Hein and Morrison also are great centers. Star n-quu Handieap. Koch and Beckett are all the more remarkable as guards in the fact nm their work has stood out so shiningly on teams which were not otherwise nmnnL the strongest. Adam Walsh, Yale line coach, says that Linehan is one of the best guards he ever coached; | a comparmvely little fellow with the | speed of a deer and the heart of a lion. Woodworth and Bromberg have played splendidly all season. Sington of Alabama weighs 225 pounds, is & wonderful blocker, a fine oflc ve lineman &nd leads most of plays. He has been a pnt captain and a great tackle. Yet, werful and fast as he is, there is ttle to choose between alnnon and such tuklu as . Price, Edw: Lu- bratovich, Culver and Van Bibber. Any 'nrmm&ulnmurmlwh' dream. Fesier and Dalrymple probably are the two finest ends in the country, but Maffett, Baker, Wilcox and McKalip, are wi men of tremendous ability. Carideo certainly would enjoy direct- ing plays from behind this iine. This Notre Dame field general has been called by many the greatest quarter- |sin back of all time. The assertion has been made that he is the most valuahle \ single player on any team in the coun- | try today. Yet, fine as he is, the South con- can go far |ing for Second Year. Both are ‘great hlocken and lpllndld runners with the ball Each is magnificent kicker and good delenslve man. Both can pass and each is a fine defender against this type of play. Dodd probably has intercepted as many forward passes as any man who ever and a splendid offensive man. The backs we have selected for these teams _have been outstanding all sea- son. Pinckert, Schwartz, Russell, Brill, Mohler, Swartz, Weller, Moffatt and Macaluso can do anything and every- thing which may be expected of play- ers in their position. one of them can run interference so well that & ball carrier following them would have little to do except run, but any one of them can take ample care of himself if a tackler looms ahead. This is one of the greatest backfield col- lections that any All-America squad ever contained. ‘There are many other fine payers in the country, men of might and speed, but we are willing to stand by the 33 whom we have chosen for the first, second and third teams. (Conyright, 1930, by North American News- paper Alliance.) EAST, SOUTH HAVE EDGE IN THIS ALL-STAR TEAM Supply 8ix Players for New York Post All-America—Others From Midwest, West. NEW YORK, November 29 (#).—The New York Evening Post's All-America foot ball team announced today, lists two players from Northwestern, two from Alabama and two from Fordham, with one each from Southern Cali- fornia, Washington State, Notre Dame, Colgate lnd Georgia. ‘The team Arbelbide, Southern Cailfornia Ahlshog, 'Washington State. . Left end Quarterback Left halfback Macaluso, Colg; Russell, North: DEFENSIVE PLAYERS GET ALL-AMERICA POSITIONS| New York Bun Selections Based on Ability of Gridironers to Block, Interfere. NEW YORK, Noyember 20 (#).—The New York Sun's All-America foot ball team comprises two Southern Cali- fornia players, two from Notre Dame, two from the Big Ten, two from the Elst ;lnd one each from Alabama, Texas State. Thn Sun made a tpeclfl point of giv- recognition to the interference and defensive players. ‘The selections follow: . ‘Baker, Northwestern. Washington State. e Di 't hal Pinckert, Southern California. msm alfback Macaluss, ‘Colgate.... Fullback ROVERS WIN IN START Berkeley Springs Basketers Down Martinsburg Firemen. BERKELEY SPRINGS, W. Va., No- vember 29.—The basket ball season opened here with the Berkeley Club Rovers defeating a team from Hosé Company No. 5, Martinsburg, 29 to 20. Stuckey was an outstanding point | getter'for the winners. Mellott carried off_honors for the losers. The score: | Rovers (20), Martinsburg_(20). | Kin sm:ien | ixzers atfott.’ Ambrose, Totals COUNTY LEAGUE 'READY Montgomery Basketers Will Start Play This Week. Play in the Montgomery County, Md., Basket Ball League will open this week with four games, two tomorrow night and two Tuesday night. Takoma Firemen will engage Ken- gton at Kensington and Sandy | Spring will face Rockville at Rockville | tomorrow. Stewart Brothers will tackle | Damascus at Damascus and Woodside | will battle Silver Spring at Silver Spring | ‘Tuesday. PP 3 1 1 [] 2 ol o.‘uu&‘ Bl wwaes slders’ Dodd of Tenhessce his equal. BY EDWARD A. FULLER, JR. TTH foot ball over, except for the Tech-Gonzaga game Fri- day, schoolboy basket ball squads in these parts will get down to hard work this week. It will be a matter of only a couple of weeks before the scholastics open their schedules. It looks like a bang-up court | season ahead. Plenty of time to talk about that, though. | Let's see about this Tech-Gonzaga | id tilt. Tech, of course, is a big| favorite. m record is for the better. walloped Eastern, 31 to 6, ame of the public hlch u:hnol title serles some two weeks ago. Then Swavely, over whom Tech mnm hed, 14 to 17, Thanksgiving day, Fed Gonzaga, 19 to 6. Yep, it lmh Tech in a walk. IVE players will be taking part in ys | regular forwards 2aga, however, will retain st around which to groups build their 1931 ma- | fullback. This youngster is one of the lmmumummm- season. A choice, however, probably will | not be made for some time, maybe not before June. For the first time Gonzaga may select no all-season grid captal Athletic authorities at the I Street School have about become convinced that it is better for team morale not to pick a leader of this type. A pilot will be chosen for each game and an honorary leader may be picked after the close | of the season by the Puxple. HERE 1s one boy on that Gonzaga eleven that Tech will do well to watch PFriday. He is Ernie Viau, most promising gridironers to sport the Purple in some time. A rangy boy, ideally huilt for foot ball, he is fast developing into a dangerous triple threater. Viau, who is a8 sophomore, 15 17 years old. ESTERN is another school that plans not to elect a regular grid | captain for 1931. The G | towners had no all-season leader duri the cnmpnun now elosing and Colch Dan Ahern is satisfled with the way the plan worked. If there were any ouu(pndin( player left on the squad, Ahern sal might llvor mm as unu.ln, but llne- there l- tn M players of any dur graduation a ONZAGA'S basket ball uptnnh will buckle to rigorous work this week. Mnm at hand lncludl Dickey Pitzgerald and Tomm: though small, m clever. Hester, reserve Ceach Orrel mumu phnl Roper and Jones Pick All-America First Team. End—Fesler, Ohio State. Tackle—Sington, Alabama. Guard—Koch, Baylor. Center—Tlcknor, arvard. Guard—Beckett, California, Tackle—Price, Army. End—Dalrymple, Tulane. Quarterback — Carideo, Dame. Halfback—Pinckert, Southern Notre California. Halfback — Schwartz, Northwest- Third Team. Notre played. Bennett is a fine fleld general | Dam e. Fullback—Russell, ern. Second Team, Maffett, Georgia..E Lubr'tovich, Wis. Linehan, Yale Hein, Wash. Baker, N'1thw'n. .., Dodd, Tenn.....Q. B..Benn'tt, Princ'n Brill, Notre D...H. Weller, Haskell Mohler, €. Cal...H. B...Moffat, Stanford Swartz, W. 8t...F. B....Macaluso, Colg. Alexandria Notes ALEXANDRIA, November 29.—Inde- pendent basket ball will get away to an impressive start here next Saturday wlth the A{&hu Delta Omega fraternity cagers meel the Central High School five of w-ahlnqum in the Armory Hall at 8:30 o'clock. The St. Ma girls’ basket organized v's Buddies, the only team that has been season, will play preliminaries to the St. Mary's Lyceum five this Winter. Miss Margaret Gor- man, 216 South Royal i scheduling games, A benefit dance will be held at the George Mason Hotel Priday night for the Alpha Delta Omega fraternity basket ball team. Jarboe's Nighthawks wm furnish the m\uh: for dancing from 9 p.m. to midnight. The new game bolt, purchased by the Virginia State Game Conservation Committee, for enforcing State laws along the Potomac river has arrived and been Jreued into service by Game ‘Warden Harry Johnson of this district. street, tes ' Johnson operates the craft out of the Old Dominion Boat Club dock in this city and is accompanied on all trips by ‘Warden Herbert. Ayers of Maryland’s game body. E... McKalip, Ore. 8t. | all CALIFORNIA MOSES DIFFICULT T0 FIND R Bears May Need to Wait for Right Man to Lead Them From Grid Morass. BY LAWRENCE PERRY. EW YORK, November 30.—The entire country is filled now with eminent coaches who have received bids to go to the Uni- versity of California and escort her foot ball prestige back to those heights .| which it occupled in the golden days of Andy Smith. At least this is the " | iImpression one gets from the stories one hears, directly and indirectly, from uarters. Dick Hanley of Northwestern was named a week probable successor to Nibs Price, t both he and the athletic authorities at Berkeley made immediate denial. But this wu before Price resigned. What has m} d since, if anything, in regard to ley has not been vouchsaf Later news is that Bill Roper of Princeton has been approached, But this is & mere rumor and not a bit more substantial than the one the writer heard at West Point Wedn!ldly that Knute Rockne had been ‘knd name his price. Waited for Warner. As a matter of fact, there are not too many coaches of great reputation in the land who would be immediately avallable; but, for that matter, neither was Glenn Warner when Stanford in- vited him to Palo Alto. He had to ait two years and fill out his contract. ut he sent Andy Kerr, now of Wash- ington and Jefferson, ahead of him to magnificent job of it. So it is likely that California could get almost any coach in the ecountry were she willing to wait for him. And there are two or three she could hire without the necessity of waiting any length of time. It is rather an inter- esting fact that while turning J‘nut great players year n(ur year, Pacific Slope has yet to develop a genius as companion for Babe Hollingberry of Washington State. But this is perhaps because graduate players out there have a clearer idea f things than elsewhere and the enter the marts of trade, thus becflrninf useful factors in the worka- day world. ROD AND STREAM BY PERRY MILLER. OD AND STREAM at last has recelved word that the rockfish are schooling. Each Fall these fish, sooner or later, get together in large schools, and when feeding can be seen chasing smaller fish on the surface of the water. Sometimes acres and acresof water are churned up. We have waited from week to week for a report that these gamesters were schooling in Chesapeake Bay, but in- stead of word coming from the bay it came from another direction—the lower l¢ | Potomac River. George King, well known angler, says he has never seen so mnny rock- fish as he observed recently in three days of fishing off the red buoy on what is known as Island Bar, just off St. Georges -Island. King, with his yuung son Preston, and Joe Turner is son Joe, jr., motored down last week end, and what a time they had. Their best catch was made last Sun- day when they landed 18 rock, the largest weighing 23%; pounds and the smailest 634 pounds. These rockfish stay in the lower Po- tomac all Winter. This is not a guess, but a known fact. Last Winter when the ice formed in the lower river large numbers of them were caught in the ice pockets and taken by commercial fish- ermen. In our opinion, there will be good fishing for these gamesters until ice forms, at which time the fish get | numbed and are inactive. HE most glowing reports reach us from anglers after large-mouth black bass. The best reports come from Gunston Cove, where last Sunday | the anglers had the time of their lives. Some of them caught their limit and others returned with 10, 20 and 30 fish, weighing from 1% to 214 pounds. One angler who fished in Gunston Cove last Sunday, and who, by the way, is a Vis- ginian, informs us that the best time to catch them is on the first of the flood tide. A few anglers are using live bait, but the big majority are resorting to artificial lures, with the shimmy wiggler leading in results obtained. RNEST MUELLER and Russell Wal- lich, fishing at Gunston Cove last Sunday, caught 30 bass, the largest weighing 213 pounds. They used arti- ficial lures. Dr. R. T. J. Barker, place down on St. Georges Island, has placed more than 200 spawning bass in his own lake, at Valley Lee, Md. Dr. who owns a | Barber 1§ one of the local lnglers who All 'leliue games will start at 8 o'clock. | made a wonderful catch of blues when | rabbits and other game. Scholastic Basketers, Facing Big Year, Turn Out This W eek | they were running wild off St. Georges Island the latter part of August. CONFERENCE of importance to local anglers has been called by Commissioner Henry O'Malley of the United States Bureau of Fisherles PRESTON KING, < Son of George King, well known local . |angler, and a chip off the old block. He is shown with the two reckfish he land- %mum cl ely to captatn the \ , is figured team next pho‘“ of some-of his hi yers, notal Viau m Eppard. ed on a-trip last Sund: Joe Turner and Joe, Potomac. 'llhllll.ul. » in the lower i on Monday, December 8, at 10 am. at the bureau. Fish commissioners of Maryland, Virginia, West Virginia and Pennsylvania will be present. The sub- Jects to be presented are: The closing of the Maryland and Pennsylvania markets to the sale of black bass, aboli- tion of purse metting in Chesapeake Bsy, a license fee In fresh tidewater in | Maryland the same as in Virginia and ! the matter of pollution in all its phases. | P7ALBOT DENMEAD, assistant United States game conservation officer of the Department of Agriculture, has returned from a three weeks' tour of the wild fowl haunts from Boston to Vir- ginia. Denmead reports he observed great flocks of broad-bill ducks, ap- proximately 20,000 or 30,000 birds in groups of 500 to 2,000 each. Off Salem, | N. J., on the Delaware above Cape May, | he reporu having seen approximately 12,000 black ducks. Although no canvas- backs were observed by Denmead, he attached no unusual reason to this, saying that it was too early for the huntsmen’s “pride water fowl” to make its appearance. ‘The wild turkey does not come under Denmead’s observation or study, but as & sportsman and a hunter he has more than usual experience with the habits and haunts of this bird. He predicted that within the not distant future the wild turkey, except in re- gions protected by private persons or by the State, will become a thing of the past. The cutting down of forests, the killing off by hunters and the “open season” allowed by many States in the | Spring, when hunters are permitted to sheot the male turkey, is a grave factor | in the decrease of wild turkeys, Den- | mead reports. Following closely on Gov. John S. Fisher's proclamation against smoking or building fires in or near any wood- land of Pennsylvania, issued as an emergency measure to puvent forest fires after the drought, the Board of Game Commissioners has asked hunters to leave their tobacco behind and take sweet clover seed instead. “A profitable solace to smokers at this pressing time of pipeless bereavement,” quoth the commissioners, “can be found in a few handfuls of sweet clover seed. Costing no more than the same amount of tobacco, this should induce even bet- ter hunting dreams, while at the same time, if properly used, insuring their realization, “By scattering clover seeds over likely places in the open woods, the hunter will be providing choice and much- \neened food for deer, turkeys, grouse, | ""“This plant, although eaten each year, will spring up again and seed the surrounding territory. And if 500,000 hunters distribute a half-pint of seed | apiece, they would place a great amount of food in the woods for our game birds | and mammals,” the commissioners said. ‘The Sportsmen’s Luncheon Club, an auxiliary organization and an offspring of the Washington, D. C. chapter of the I W. L. A, held its first luncheon at the Raleigh Hotel Monday. Twelve at- tended, which is encouraging for a starter. The object of the luncheon club is more or less a social gathering to get the members better acquainted, but at the same timé, according to the president of the local chapter, matters coming before the open monthly meet- ings will be briefly discussed and dif- ferences ironed out. The luncheon club will meet twice a month. FINISH LATE ON GRID Three South Atlantic Teams Help Ring Down 1930 Curtain. CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va., November 20.—Three of the South Atlantic teams will be among the scattered few of Southern Conference members who will help to ring down the curtain on the 1930 foot ball season. North Carolina and Duke, meetin, prepare the ground and Kerr made a “ [STRAIGHT OFF THE TEE] i FE[) IRAWN ECORD.BREAKING low tem- peratures with their accom- panying frozen fairways and putting greens do not stop golfers from golfing around Washing- ton. At every club about the city yesterday a few hardy souls were out, smacking the festive and elusive golf ball down frozen falrways, and warm- ing frozen hands to permit of the deli- cate putting strokes. Out at Columbia Senator Smoot, well known on Capitol Hill, but not so well known on the golf course, ven- tured out and found '.he weather so bracing and the goin, ood he and Pyke Johnson playe: oles, while Jack Powell, the club junior champion, decided it was a good day to practice. Jack practiced near the golf shop, how. ever, and every once in a while eased over against Freddie McLeod's stove to warm his cold fingers and tootsies. Meanwhile McLeod and®his satellites, the impressive D'Arcy Banagan, an “Sep” Collins and Billy Malloy, at- tempted to prove superiority at bridge and_all they succeeded in doing was sppiling a lot of time-honored con- ventions. T Congressional Archie Clark, as- sistant to Sandy Armour, came blowing in from the eighteenth green with Jim Maloney, with the two of them trying to keep warm, even though they were bundled up in mul- tiple sweaters and wind.breakers, while enndy Arumur sat in his cold golf hop, muffler around his neck in Ecomnh fashion, t g to kee] and dreaming of the days be! ore thz war when he wuc the kingpin amateur around Edipburgh. Y sald Sandy, “I think uyogl kno,v.l i to haj next something going ppen_ ne; .year, with this new ball and Bobby Jones refusing to playing in competi- tion. I think what is going to happen is that my_brother Tommy is going to be just aboit the kingpin golfer of the land next ye: He might be with Jones in, anyway, but with Jones out l md it _is particularly susceptible to flnmy Tommy can be quite a flat- terer, as you know, and he can talk sweet words to that new ball and make it do parlor tricks for him like no- bod business. t I mean is that Tommy is a master of shots. All the boys agree that Tommy is their boss at making It shots, and this new ball will bring g:ck the half-shot and the three-quar. Tommy seldom plays a full iron shot. His fron shots are mostly half-shots or three-quarter shots. He seldom stretches an iron to its ultimate limit. “Now the reaction with this new light ball will be that Tommy, with his half and three-quarter shots, will have - more control of that big ball than the other boys. He will be play. ing an easy mashie, where the other boys hit a spade shot hard. And he will be playing an easy No. 1 iron or a spoon where they force & No. 2 iron, It seems to me that Tommy's control of the present ball is going to be im- proved about 25 per cent by the larger and lighter ball.” You see, Sandy does not think very highly of his brother Tommy. “You should see him hit that ball at Pine- hurst,” Sandy said. “Faugh, man (and he accompanied this with a deprecatory wave of the hand) “it's a shame to knock a golf ball so far. And so straight. And he is putting better, stroking the ball better. He is going to play at Los Angies and Agua Caliente, and watch hi: smoke. He'll knock ‘em cold with that big ball.” MEMBIRB of the Manor Club are to meet on December 8 to choose six members of the board of gov- ernors. Polls will be open for four hours. Fifteen candidates have been put in nomination by two nominating committees and six will be chosen. Those who have been nominated are F. A. Birgfeld, James A. Cosgrove, T. Howard Duckett, A..W. Hall, Herbert L. Lacey, E. M. McClelland, William A. 'ge J. Schoeneman, James A. Soper. wum Barrett, Curtis Cecll, Charles H. Gerner, J. R. Patti- son, Samuel L. Shanks and Walter W. Talcott. ELL, the weather man promises that this unseasonable streak of cold weather will end MII mak- ing conditions more acceptable for golf. And by the way, just for the record, did you know that yesterd: was the coldest November 28 in Wi ton in something like 50 years? CAVALIERS WILL PLAY TEN GRID GAMES IN 1931 Special Dispatch to The Star. UNIVERSITY, Va., November 39.— The University of Virginia foot ball schedule for 1931, announced last night by James G. Driver, athletic director, includes 10 contests, five at home and five away. Harvard will be played in Cambridge and Columbia in New York, and Se- wanee will come for a game at home. These contests take the place of those with Duke, Pennsylvania and Kentucky during the season just ending. All other '30 rivals will be played in '31. Columbia will be played for the first time in Virginia's athletic hist . The series with Harvard wlll be picked up where it was left off in 1 Virginia's complete 1931 uheduh fol- 4 swumtm- 19—Roanoke College at lome. 26—Randolph-Macon at home. October 5—Mary1u.nd in College Park. 10—Sewanee at hom 2 17—Virginia Mumry Institute at ome. 2¢—Washington and Lee in Lexington. 31~Hnrv-rfin Cambridge. November 7—Columbia 1n New York City. 14—Virginia Polytechnic Institute at ome, 26—North Carolina in Chapel Hill. ter shot. You may have noticed that |lows Links’ Governing Body Okays Sort of Event Net Folk Would Frown Upon. BY WALTER R. McCALLUM. UT in California, where it seems they always are starting something new, the golf authorities have lnmated an affair that would be ain in the neck to the tennis au horities, but apparently is sanctioned by the golf powers. This week an aggregation of the D. |leading golfers of the country, most of them professionals, will start play in a_tournament billed as the national open match play championship. 1t starts next Thursday with a 36-hole qualifying round, with 32 to qualify from the stellar fleld, and if the ama- ter 5 entered in the event make the ~-ade in the medal round, we may find the unusual sight of amateurs battling pro{emonsls in a big match play tour- { The thing never has been done before in a big way, but if the San Francisco Junior Chamber of Commerce has its way it will become a yearly fixture. Prizes totaling $7,500 have been put up for the tourney, with w\nmnr amateurs to receive plate and the to pass up the plate and take the dol ars wherever they may roll, Draws Fancy Field. Quite a notable fleld will gather in San Francisco for this ambitious initial attempt to match the amateurs and professionals in a match play tourney. The event has not had the most en- thusiastic kind of response from the simon pures, Brown and possibly Dr. O. F. Willing and Fay Coleman, Pacific Coast ama- teur stars, may start in the tourney. Otherwise the affair savors of the P. G. A. match play championship, for a fine field has been drawn from the professionals, which includes Walter Hagen, Tommy Armour, Horton Smith, Harry Cooper, Abe Espinosa, Charles Lacey, John Farrell, Joe Kirkwood, Bill Mehihorn, Al Watrous and that golfer who is neither fish nor fowl—George Von Elm, the “business man golfer.” Never before have amateurs and pro- fesslonals met in a match play tourney of any importance, but quite Ppln-nuy the affair has the aj }mmvl! of the na« tional golf powers, for the tournament sponsors are proceeding _ with their , and have announced the entries Of several good amateurs. These same amateurs would not risk tmplirln( their standing if there was to be official dis- approval of the event. In tennis such a0 affair would not be sanctioned, for BY FRISCO AFFAR'E but Don Moe, Francis be it amateurs Easterners Shun It. h’l‘he f'mnlh ern'fldl Teceive & are of the prize h, gett for his share, while s T ik runner-up will get $1,000. The losing semi- flnplllll‘ will get $500 each, and the prizes shade down to the men who quallfy but are bumped off in the first round, getting $100 aplece for their efforts. Match- a}l{hm\find‘? Arebnell ‘f be at 18 holes up e final, to layed next Sunday, at 36 holes. 2 s Inasmuch as some golden trail of dollars on the coast has been obscured this year, what with cancellations and failure of interest, the pros are flocking to this latest novel tourney. It will be interesting, but far from conclusive, for although we do not deprecate the strength of the Western amateurs, not a single one of the strong simon pures of the East has entered this ambitious match-play tourney. Jones, Ouimet, Homans, McCarthy, Sweetser, Volgt— all have passed up the event, which probably wlu be won by a pmreuloml HOWARD BASKETERS LOOK FOR SUCCESS Arthur Waller, New Coach, Takes Over Squad, Including Many Seasoned Performers. With & flock of experienced players on hand, Howard University is looking for a highly successful basket ball sea- son. The Bisons have begun practice under the direction of Arthur Waller, newly appointed corch. Waller, who s well equipped for the post, takes the place of John Burr, who tutored win- ning quints the last few seasons. ough the Bison schedule has not been complete, it is known that it will tough. Coach Waller, however, is confident of developing a quint that "{}’t:w'“ufllllbk include Beasley, ‘eterans & Include K center: Hall, Syphax, ".?""'a"’mm n’?%’mmm da, guard, an e, guards. Hall and Taylor are membe: foot ball team. Harris :nnduwol b regulars last season, are not on the court squad this year. Edwards, forward, and Lee, guard, are among promising phyen from last season’s en quint. De Priest, Jones and Davis are the new men who have reported. ward uyen its schedule around the middle next month. BOUT TO McKENNA. Sailor McKenna, Washington boxer, defeated Phil Roselll bv dscision in an the national tennis organization spe- | Patsy Don eight-round bout at , Md,, Prie day night. MeKenna 1s munnufl by ovan. This Is the Last Time This Ad Will Appear Rush Your Slogans In! FREE PRIZES H. B. Leary, Jr., & Bros., Chrysler Dealers, Will Give Valuable Prizes Away for a Suitable Busu}ess S}%gsaln to Be Used Through the ear First Prize $50 . ~ $200 Credit Voucher Second Prize 325 Goia &' SI 50 Credit Voucher Directions First prize goes to the person who sends in the best slogan. Second prize for the next best, and so on. Here are five examples of slogans which are now in use by other firms. They will give you an idea of what to send in: “Be Modern—Drive a Chrysler.” “It’s a Short Street That Has No Chrysler.” “The Place Where Value and Service Meet.” - “A Square Deal Behind the Wheel.” “Chryslers Rule the Ways.” It is not necessary to use either the name of H. B. Leary, Jr., & Bros,, or Chrysler in your slogan, although one or both may be used if desired. Send as many slogans as you wish, The judges who will decide this contest are: Edward A. Krause, M. D. 1624 I St. N. W, Si. Grogan The Washington Post Henry Bailey The Evening Star Chapel Hill, and Maryland and Western Maryland, playing in Baltimore Stas,| dium, will furnish the finale next Sat”| urday. There also will be the Georgia- Georgia Tzch game in Atlanta and meeting with Florida in Carolina State began away looz bsll uqu\pmml & week ago and all followed lult yester- dny )lo' as l.r as foot ball is con- cerned, they are looking ahead toward 1931 and are considering what sort of schedules fluy‘ll DII}' then, THOEPE DU’UTY SRER!F! l The gieat Jim Thorpe is a ity sheriff in Los Angeles County, 3 SEND ALL SLOGANS TO "~ 1612 You CONTEST DEPARTMENT H. B. LEARY, JR.,, & BROS. Chry: St. N.W. Distributer d Dealer - ST Third Prize $15 . =~ $125 Credit Voucher Honorable Mention $100 Credit Voucher Why We Do This It is a well-known fact that high-grade advertising is the life of business. In advertising, short, catehy phrases and sentences, called slogans, are very valu- able. We need them and will gladly pay for them and are taking this method of getting a number of sug- gestions. Most slogans which have brought fortunes to business houses were thought of by someone house. not connected with the Gold and credit vouchers will be given to people who least expect them. Only a’ few minutes’ work s 1 it takgs. In case of a tle, full prize will be given each tying contestant. All prizes are given free. Successful contestants will be notified by mall. Credit vouchers are transferable. More than one honorable mention prize will be issued. Any one credit good for face value, not to exceed ome-half the purchase price on any new current model 8, 70 or 66 Chrysler or used car in stock. Credits expire 9 p. m. Decem- ber 6, 1930, No employe of this firm may enter contest. Use coupon or plain white paper. All Slogans Must Be in the Mail by 9 P. M, Monday, December 1, 1930 COUPON I hereby submit the following slogan for the judges’ con- sideration. I agree to abide by judges without question: the decision of the Setesiestetieiiiittetatees i mar et e s smetmEs ety Street and Number......... @messese.mesateesouy TOWR civeviensrerescsassscsssscssssssssnssancee (Write with pen, pencil ar typewriter) H. B. Leary, Jr., & Bros. Wn\shln;ton, D. C.

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