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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1931 SPORTS. —BY WEBSTER is one of the finest centers in the East. the going for them today was expected 'men will meet Thursday night at the PL2 SPORTS. ] ol (] ° eeas a rowerju even if It o Meet Wit ucce 3 = X) ason THE MAN WHO HAS ol Join Merry Gridi Thr y briairon () JUST BEEN MADE A —— IM MCALEER has resigned os ? VICE-PRESIDENT manager of the Washingfon base ERNEARS SOME — ball team, having acquired con- ers Are e vance OVERH trol of the Boston American League CONVERSATION club. His uccessor will not, be 2 p r_ 50 e. ent 4 Team Certain to Be Strong ON THE TRAIN Miller Doesn’t Plan Many| RNives ssid MoAleer made no recom- | HEY'RE all at work now. hurt in an sutomobile sccident before . N\ mendations as to a man to succeed ‘ e figured to be for About Toughest List : S Plays, but a Few of Them | him Gossip mentions George Mc. | Inudet oot ball squads §0L Ot | imnt S back shac worao, G- ; MEN ASKED FOR \ A e T | today for the first time. Squads | yesterday. of Games in South. MORE MONEY SO \ Well Perfected. lon s possible choices. of the other institutions have been at \ b o Georgetown University's grid squad | work some time. — — | MADE ‘€M VICE | e} was to begin practice today under | BY H. C. BYRD. PRESIDENTS, i By the Associated Pr 4 Coach Donnelly and Faculty Di- |ber 15.—One mor 1t dded | GOGD desl of optimistic TIAT'LL KEEP A WEEK. WE NNAPOLIS, Md. September 15| yector Richardson are pleased with |t the Georgeiown sauad's 1t vester- A opinion has been expressed ‘€M SATISFIED HAVEN'T HEARD the prospects of the Maryland |day, when the Hoyas had their first| ALEXANDRIA, Va., September 15— in the past two weeks re- FOR 5 OR 10 action this Fall, gambling with | O'Neill, sophomore tackle, suffered & SINCE , gt h P limited diamond race will arding foot ball prospects OF RiM the wide open, all-or-noth | . ’ | broken’ nose. will meet in the e 13 WE MADE AIM A Knute Rocne bunt ot rotag systerm| WANNAN LEADS ROLLERS | Hcad Goech Tommy Mills was grati | crucial battle for the championship considering the kind of schedule | scrimmage, in which 35 players took | Vester A. Breen Trophy will be closed it is to play, the team represent- coach of the Midshipmen, and his as- | Chosen Head of Interlor Loop.,part. Fifieen men remained out o‘{“gzl- program of three games. ing that institution will need some sistants from Notre Dame, Christy| Deputy of Masons Bowls 367. | the going with injuries or minor ill- um] ngine Company, defending a half game, will meet the second-place ! “shoot the works” from the start on lected| 0 Del Ray A. C. at 3 o any other school in the South is the teachings of their old instructor | Champion Secretary team, was e.ecmd‘Cng?;gmalio‘xr&mr:l‘;:l’;y -N e:{’fi’»'i"vdmc:;i PR s ::rlnne“orm: guwna:,: slated to go through such a diffi- and the results even Miller can't guess. president of the Interlor Department pragts nor Johnny Jankowski, who sut- | eader to be opened by a clash between cult list of contests. From the ‘We may have a world beater or We | Bowling League, while Henry D. Billings | fered a hurt ankle and shoulder, are | the Dey Ray nine and Cardinal A. C going to gamble. It will be a speedy, tion-Wide G il the wind-u Sacontive omm it o e saske i oy; | TWo gerles will be Tolled by the elgnt|John Nally are wbout okeh aguin | Havimonds Golonial A G il eerL) opening sacrf]lek ‘;flf e e wind-up and we will take more chances than |teams which comprise the loop. Open-|the Cardinals yesterday, with blocking |3 0'clock on Heydon Field. there is not likely to be one oppo- stressed and rather than a lot of plays | | nent that can be classed in the there will be & few highly perfected | lumbis. espectal attention, «h Bergmann ex-| 2" CABSECment with St Mary's Geltics. ; e sitsouE ones. Wo can run, kick or pass With| john Deputy of Hyattsville got off | pressed gratification at the way the| Thirty-five candidates are laboring Georgla opens its schedule ' with Virginia Polytechnic Institute, and ml:’)!‘l‘l’lx;lm gA:n;:’ l:s.‘s: u!lm}ru :‘:’ Jfangy “gfl, P -‘,"‘1‘3}’ r‘:u&,:g p,_!,‘: ‘:A ;,1:,::‘ system. e ‘y"mh R U ST that school is expecting to have the Rockne style of play, and his tackles, | Bowny rolting for. Betworth. tolied &| _Impromptu scrimmages with the | a0 *5, Whitestone o e its second game, Octcber 10, the Jour- oo of by Dinderwood, Fovrpeon, | Vi, Jaxt; while Hare and Litchield |} od B kY iie’ raghs e was,in | CmOTTOw aad Fridsy nights. ney to New Haven to play Yale is to be Reedy and Johnson, while Mal Tuttle i it order vesterday for the Old Liners, but | _Alpha Delta Omega Fraternity grid made. And, while Georgia won from 4 s o e CHURCH PINNERS TO MEET | 2,2 pic fough. | Bome o sfunager R Z ph Scrivener, 1012 Hkely to'be planty rough andihard, Jon oy = oI R athineion 2 M Bt ML o e T e October 17 Georgla goes to Chapel Hill 2 Erinceton at' Princeton: 31, West Vireinia | ¢ Will Be Re - it e = — 1o meet North Carclina, and Georgia- 5 7 clliprmesse st oo SO T e Beor-| CAMP LETTS M4, September 15— TODAY, years have been among the closest in K ae o] ganized Thursday Night. 7 the middie of this week 1ead coach | BASE BALL 3:00 P.M. the South. = December 5, Pennsylvania at Philadelphia. The Georgetown Church Bowling|squad hopes to have something of a o 2 ———— League, which will open Wednesday. | definite line as to the gridders upon Vanderbilt, and Vanderbilt is standing 5 : h gia right now as having hold a reorganization meeting Thurs-| Johnny Fenlon and Lee Carlin are Washington vs. St. out with Georgla right no VAN HARPERS FERRY, W. Va, Septem- | aay at the Peck Memorial Chapel at 8 | the only casualties in camp. Fenlon, gt s. St. Louis It would not be a great surprise wers TICKETS ON SALE AT PARK this game to determine the champion- Z A ‘!nd the Shenandosh slightly cloudy this Church teams desiring franchises are | pected to be ready for action again in ship of that section of the country be- A / Ding. asked to have a representative present.!a couple of d: but Carlin, who was . 20 YEARS AGO ||American U. and Gallaudet American University and Gal- | he Teported here, is not direction of Coach Fred Neflsen. | REHOBOTH BEACH, Del., Septem- Alexandria Notes R GURWIK OUT Navy foot ball team will go into | Aggles for & winning eleven. | scrimmage of the training camp. Joe | Leaders in the Alexandria amateur un- YEARS | at the University of Georgia, but, | fied at the work of his proteges in the | Sunday, when the struggle f: - VICE-PRESIDENT - Edgar E. (Rip) Miller, new head S illfve cions s champions, who are out in f real strength. It is doubtful if Flannagan and Johnny O'Brien, will| james R. Wannan, captain of the meet the secondplace first blast of the whistle in the may have a bust,” sald Rip. “We are | yo4 re_elocted secretary-treasurer. | serfously injured and Danny Payne and | , In the other game scheduled the Ng- TS ast ol he whistle the old Navy team. The offense will be ol = ing night will be Thursday at the Co- |and other fundamentals coming in {07 | Dixie Pigs wil come here Sunday for category of a set-up. n any of them. to & flying start in the Masonic League | squad is catching on to the Notre Dame | for places on the gridiron squad of the strongest combination in its history. In Lou Bryan and Jim Chambers, are Vet- | st of 367. Charlie Phillips, with 360, | Quantico Marine gridders were sched-| praciice sessions will be held onight. Yale lasy season, the game there is October 3. William and_ Mary: 10. Mary- eet. North Carolina contests of the last three 1, Southern | e | Jim Pixlee of the George Washington ‘After the North Carolina game comes =2 AMERICAN LEAGUE PARK TIP FOR FISHERMEN. September 23, at the Arcadia, will| whom he will have to count most. D hools. tHe besb ool c Il BoUi i eol ey ber 15.—The Potomac River was clear | o'clock. who has & badly swollen ankle, is ex- AT 9:00 AM. low the Mason-Dixon line. University of Florida follows Vanderbilt, and then another trip north to play New York University at New York City. On No- vember 14 Auburn plays at Athens, and this year it is expected that Auburn will Kave another of the teams that in former days made it one of the most feared opponents in southern foot ball. | HE big game is with Georgia Tech at Athens on November 28, the | Saturday after Thanksgiving. And | let Georgia win every other game on its | schedule and lose that with Georgla “Tech and the season would be 2 failure On December 12_Georgla is to take the longest trip it has ever made for a oot ball game when it goes to Los An- 1 California. And anybody anything about | foot ball records of the last four or five | years 15 fully conversant with the fact | that Geocrgia has not picked a soft spot | to wind up its season. | Georgia is depending almost entirely | on veteran material for its first string | and reserve elevens. Woolfson and | Batchelor are said to be the only men ARGENTINE POLOISTS | . PLAYING HURRICANES |t Ball Tipe —— BY SOL METZGER. Injured Stars of Invaders to Get“ Rockne, clever strategist of foot i i, ball, made his forward passes look Into Semi-Final of National ‘ like sweeping end runs, and often Tourney. i sweeping end runs looked like passes. | For example, in the pass shown here, o = right end (5) would cut through the By the Assoclated Prest 5 WESTBURY, N. Y., September 15— "“eu':‘dt:':"m“"' = °"‘:’“:z db::n Stephen Sanford's Hurricanes, defend- 85 If to take him out on an SANDLOT GRIDDERS | START LOOP PLANS Will Hold Another Confab Next Week—Various Aggregations Are Getting Busy. | Following preliminary meetings last | night at French's Sports Store, repre- sentatives of teams wishing to play in | coming up from the freshman eleven of [ing champions, drew the Hurlingham | around the opponents’ right flank. the 135-pound, 150 and unlimited last year who have the kind of ability | Club of Buenos Alres as their opponents | _ The other backs, except No. 1, aiso | classes of the Capital City Foot Ball sf - | ran to their left as if on an end that a chap needs to make a Georgia |in the first semi-final of the national next week to thoroughly discuss team. Both men weigh 200 pounds and are good all-round athletes. As one Georgia man recently put it, “Batchelor is our best all-round ath- lete, being good on the track as well as in foot ball, while Woolfson looks like a real prospect, 200 pounds and tough.” | Georgia’s offense is likely to center around Downes, star ground gainer last | year. He plays quarterback and is in | his senior year. Roberts at fullback, | Stoinoff, Gilmore, Whire, Moran, Sulli- | van, Young, Dickens, Mott, Chandler, | Brown, Harden, Key and Gaston are| the other outstanding backs. Harry Mehre, formerly of Notre| Dame, is head coach, and he will have about’ the same assistants he had last | year, with the exception of Frank Thomas, his backfield coach. Thomas has gone to Alabama to be head coach, to take the place left vacant when Wallace Wade took charge of athletics at Duke. EORGIA has done lttle this year| in the way of adding new equip- | ment, as it, according to its own statement, has plenty to do to pay for that which it alrcady has. In the last three years Georgia has constructed a | fine bas ball building, a stadium to seat 30,000, & new track and during the past Summer has completed a polo | field. open polo championship today. Tun, when the ball was snapped back The Hurricanes, a 31-goal combina- | to No. 4. No. 2's job was to check tion, made up of Sanford, Winston | Guest, Capt. C. T. I. Roark and Ter- rence Preece, opened the tournament last Wednesday with an 18-9 triumph over Sands Point. Hurlingham, handicapped by injurles, to the Miles brothers, John and David, was given a first-round bye. Both were to play today, John at No, 1 and David at No. 2. Lewis Lacey, leader of the Argentines announced a shift in the line-up | whereby he would move up from back to | No. 3, with John" Benitz playing back. | Capt. Roark and Lacey both are rated at the maximum of 10 goals, the only other star handicapped at the maxi- mum being Tommy Hitchcock, leader cf the American international forces. Hitchcock's Greentree four will play the Santa Paula outfit of Argentina in the second semi-final tomorrow. | e | SOCCER SQUAD TO DRiLL | . | Hyattsville High Has 18 Report When Call Is Issued. HYATTSVILLE, Md.,, September 15.| —Candldates for the Hyattsville High | School soccer team were to hold their 2 u:-g:m will gather at the same place ag! rules and post franchises. The 135- | pounders will gather Monday night, 150-pound teams will have their in- nings_Tuesday and the unlimiteds will meet Wednesday. Several teams wishing to enter the | various loops were represented at last night's meeting. A proposed rule to bar unlimited | class players from the 150-pound divi- | sion aroused much discussion. | | Northern Red Birds will drill tomor- row night on the Tidal Basin Field at 7:30 o'clock. Candidates for St. Stephen’s eleven will gather tonight for the first time this year at Seventeenth and Constitu- tion avenue. Many members of the 1929 squad will again play with the; Saints. | A reorganization meeting of the Al- | cova squad will be held tonight at the Arlington, Va., fire house at 8 o'clock. All 1930 players are asked to Teport, as are Frank and Jerry Augustine and C. D. Nelson. A field donated by James W. Head | will be used for games. It also has | been’offered for base ball. | | A drill for Mercury A. C. gridders is slated tonight at Sixth and B streets | southwest at 7 o'clock | ‘Selling Out All USED CARS Regardless of Price WASHINGTON’S LARGEST, % NASH | DEALERS 9 RECONDITIONED AUTOMOBILES T T T e 5. ™. T~ T . I3 49 LT | ) — e In connection with Georgla foot ball, | first drill this afternoon on_the school 1 1t seems more than appropriate to men- | field under direction of Coach Stanielgh | Tomentarlly the charge of the op- lion that Dr. S. V. Sanford, who, for | Jenkins = The school field, however, will | Ponueson Tils sweep around the end s been managing athletics at | be available only a few days, 88 it is to| L. | ihe tinivcriy. ‘and who Is dean of the | undergo extensive grading and leveling, | i, Bis No. 3 back There tfey | To Match Your Odd Coats institution, has virtually recovered from | an e squad will have most of its g ] & serious operation he had last Spring. | preparation for the season either on | °“§;‘c’k‘“&1)°'§n‘$.§?§n'f"35;:3“,‘}:; EISEMAN'S, 7th & It is doubtful if any other man con- | the lot opposite the school, on Arundel | charge of the apposing left tackle nected with athletics in the South has | avenue, or in Magruder Park. —— A< many {riends as Dr. Sanford, and | Approximately 1 aspirants reported| S0d then bore off to ‘the Ysht to | 77, Trousers | Six Big Days of Value Giving THEN IT’S ALL OVER YOU DEDUCT they all are delighted to know that he |to Coach Jenkins yesterday when the| gidc" ot of the piay. No. 4, taking has regained his health and again is at the helm he has for many years han- aled so ably. ARL SNAVELY, coach of foot ball | at Bucknell, which plays George- | town here, did not get his squad out as early as some of the coaches did | at other institutions, but he cerlamlyi kept in touch with his players through- out the year. Beginning last Spring | right after the practice sessions, he ad- dressed a letter to each member of his squad every week. And he kept that up all during the Summer, with the result | that he had constantly before his men Bucknell foot ball problems as he saw them. | He wrote his men about conditioning themselves, then started giving them the plays they are to use this Fall, and | then got down to telling them just what he expected of them in the first few | days of practice, which telling included | hints on blocking, tackding and other | Ifundamentals. i In other words, Snavely gave his men | a compendium of foot ball informa- tion that should be very valuable. Not only should it give them real informa- | tion about how to do things, but it probably served to build up a high morale. ! scdis i | HE Naval Academy has assisting | Rip Miler, head coach this Fall, | one of the greatest backs Notre | Dame ever turned out—Christy Flana- gan. Once Flanagan beat the Army | almost single handed, again in another game with Northwestern University, | with the score standing 10 to 0 against | Notre Dame, Flanagan took the ball on | every play for two consecutive touch- | downs. He turned about the same trick against Southern California. If Flana- | gan can teach the Navy backs to side- | step as he once sidestepped would-be | tacklers, then some of Navy's oppo- | nents are due for many anxious mo- | ments on more than one occasion this | Fall, TEN IN BUSINESS LOOP } League Will Start Attack on Pins Wednesday Night. ! ‘Ten teams will compete in the Busi- ness Men's League, which will roll at Convention Hall, starting Wednesday. | ‘The teams follow: American Ice, | Colonial Ice Cream, Call Carl, Brodt's, | Inc., Briggs Supply Co., C. & P. Tele- phone Co., Washington Press, 8. Kanns & Son, Hecht Co. and Convention Hall. | squad got together for the first time. [ the pass from center, ran fo the rear Teddy Glasgow, catcher of the State| 8 if to pass to 2 or 3. He then championship 1930 - Hyattsville mghl whipped “the ball into the out- base ball team, has transferred to Tech| Stretched arms of the No. 5 end run- High School, Washington. | ning diagonally down and across the s - | field Right gusrd (6) protected TO TEST GRID OFFICIALS | back (4) from the rear. Applicants for admission to the wash- | SOCCERISTS TO GATHER ington District Foot Ball Officials’ As- | sociation will be required to uncdergo an examination, it was decided at a meet- | Washington and Southeastern As-| ing of the association last night at the | Rgrl‘u:n Club. The date for the usci sociation Meets Tonight. will be announced later. ‘Applicants must apply in writing to | A mMeeting of the Washington and B. L. (Dutch) Eberts, 407 Machinists' | Southeastern District Soccer Association Building. o to make plans for the coming campaign It was decided that foot ball interpre- | tation meetings would be held Mondays | "L b2 held tonight in the Playground during the grid season. A committee | Department office, room 313 of the | was named {o consider assignment of | District Bullding. offictals. - | Confidence is expressed that the S i - | campaign wiil be the most successful in PEGGY WEE LEADS YACHTS. |the annals of the city. Three leagues PORT WASHINGTON, N. Y., Sep- | will be organized, according to tember 15 (#)—The Western Long | Washington Socdéex. Capital c&; and Island Sound sloop Peggy Wee, sailed | Recreation. by Arthur Knapp and Newell Weed, to- | Election of officers and delegates to | day had taken the lead in the inter- (the national body and selection of rational star class yacht racing serles |dates for meetings of the various | and was favored to retain the title she | leagues will, it is expected, occupy won in Maryland waters a year ago. |most of tonight's session. FELT HATS §5(0).. Cleaned and Reblocked Leave your hat at any of our offices listed below or phone Metropolitan 0200 1723-25 Pennsylvania Ave. 1006 15th Street 1201 Connecticut Avenue 1122 14th Street 1737 F Street WEST END LAUNDRY Quality—Service—Safety NOTHING HEALTHIER THESE GLORIOUS INDIAN SUMMER DAYS AND NIGHTS THAN SWIMMING IN THE ; CRYSTAL POOL AT GLEN ECHO PARK THIS MAGNIFICENT “SWIM PLACE” WITH ADJOINING BEACH WILL BE OPEN UNTIL FURTHER NOTICE From 9 a.m. to 11:30 p.m. “SWIMS" INCLUDING LOCKER AND TOWEL zsc FOR CHILDREN AND 50c FOR ADULTS i | | Your Favor: > Car FORD MOON PONTIAC OAKLAND CHRYSLER CHEVROLET HUDSON—ESSEX BUICK—DODGE STUDEBAKER HUPMOBILE GRAHAM WILLYS NASH Save 50 to 300 Low Down Payment Save $50 to $300 Phone Decatur NASH 27-28-29-30-31 Sedans, Coaches, Sedans NASH-ORR MOTOR C0. ownrver NASH DISTRIBUTORS 1522 14th Street N.W. Ask the salesman for a pad and pencil and figure the reduction from the price tags vourself. For Instan Cars Selling for $450 You Take off (-3 Which Makes the Sale ice to You Only $300 DOORS OPEN TODAY 8 A, M. 6 BIG DAYS OF VALUE GIVING THEN IT’S ALL OVER L Top Price for Your Old Car Regardless of Gondition Nite Till 10 P.M.