Evening Star Newspaper, September 21, 1931, Page 30

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

S Cavahers Look Good in Opener : CADETS, W. & M. HAVE TOUGH TIME Four D. C. Colleges Look to Starters Saturday, With Three Listed Here. BY H. C. BYRD. NIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA showed up by far the best of the three Old Dominion schools that opened their Bchedules last week. Not only did it defeat Roancke College easily, more easily even that the score of 18 to 0 shows, but its play indicat- ed a sound type of development which presages trouble for its later opponents. Virginia Military Institute had s rough time defeating Hampden-Sidney, barely winning by 6 to 0 by scoring a touchdown late in the game. William and Mary did not give evidence of any- thln(flkeumtsmnnhuhndbeen anticipated, being held to a 6-to-6 tie by Langley Field. It was e that Hampden-Sid- ney might be ;m, enough to give V. M La b.tfll. but it was thought that ‘William and Mary would win about as it pleased. Fred Dawson showed a style of line play at Virginia that x\md-menuuy is very different from what has been taught there the last two yem ineidentally, it is a lounder more_ef- fective style. The by Slaughter, former Umverslty of Mich- o aathe bess ne iay . the Mic! it line play h"’u’ln The offense Dawson is using is almost exclusively of a kick forma- tion type, along the same line that he aflectlvely at University of Ne- in twice taking the measure of Notre Mt Virginia noz only is lolna be a hard team to gain but also a hard one to stop. Mlu I-I‘Iuliyl.l uvvlz; some - exceptionally cl out its plays. ~Virginia 50 per cent nmngar season and the mar. PORTS. 20 YEARS AGO xxnwm'u for Washington t Jim Scott of chlnm Catholic University may not uvo a foot ball team this season. doesn’t ar to be much Inceren Tech High has some fine grid for the include xochlu Mudd, Kemp, Posey, Augustus, Johnson, Trax, Bowland, Jeff, Worch, Hoffecker and White. 8 FAIR GOLFERS START TITLE PLAY 2 Enid Wilson, British Cham- pion, Center of Interést in Event at Buffalo. By the Associated Press. UFFALO, N. Y., September 21.— The thirty-fifth annual wom- en's United States golf cham- plonship today attracted 85 | ford contestants to the Buffalo Country Club. Mrs. Glenna Collett Vare, five times winner, is defending her title. The course was drenched yesterday by rain. Bighteen-hole medal play today de- termines 32 qualifiers for match play, beginning tomorrow and ending Satur- day. her tournament bow in this Miss Enid Wilson, young and towering British champion, unhr of interest. Maureen Orcutt of Englewood, N. J., 'I'-hl'll,hldthemeno(ml re-tournamen pmmumuwmmmum Orcutt’s ‘long-iron game and likewise favors Mrs, Vare, Miss Hicks and Miss ‘Wilson. The eoun“u.lu'll yards, with a ‘woman's par . former champlom entered— Curtis_of Boston, llr;. an |C. U. SHOOTS WORKS IN FOOT BALL DRILL games | Boroman Gives Squad Final Stiff be played here, an nb'e of course, that emur the visiting elevens will prove strong enouzh to carry away a scalp. However, is certain that Washington vll.l m-mncmwcun-muchbez- against Maryland than if , a8 lh (wt College Col games u:"w benlgelt 2:30. Davidson did not have any walkaway | againt Elon College, winning by only two touchdowns nr\mt a safety. How- is about all that any of the larger teams scem to care about in their opening games. University of Mississippi and Sewanee | ‘were two other Southern Conference schools that began their schedules last week. The former won by two touch- downs against one and the latter by three touchdowns against a shutout. ‘The two opponents were normal schools. ‘The Quantico Marines opened their schedule auspiciously, trimming the Newport News Apprentice School, 32 to 0. The Marines have at Quantico & team that is not as strong as that Wwhich represented them a year ago, but which will play a lot of good foot ball before it winds up the season. In the backfleld it has Robertson, Bauer and | O'Neil, the last-mentioned pair having | been members of Navel Academy elevens | of past 1“!’3, and in any gime in which | their line is not completely outplayed | this trio will gain a lot of cidently, O'Nell is one of the best de- | fensive players in foot ball today. l Out in the Far West sunroru\ opened its season by Wl Coast Army eleven by Al Stanford did not meet as much from the Army as it has ound. In- | he is developing in of offense. Probably a bit of MD.L WML GRID xlmnms FATAL | Septeuber 2 | HOLT wnu !OAT ncn i | game. around lege | preparatory period tomorrow and nesda; TEITEELE, the mhm Danlell P Cup ‘Workout:Before Battle With B. C. Saturday. workout of Cath- training ‘The most strenuous olic University’s 1931 foot ball was the | this week. THE EViuininGg | SATURDAY T0 StE REAL GRID START Foot Ball This Week Gets Under Way in All Sections of Country. BY HERBERT W. BARKER, Associated Press Sports Writer, EW YORK, September 21.— America’s colleges will start saying it with foot balls in large quantities this Saturday. And they'll be saying it steadily from now on until lats in November. As usual, & score or 50 teams already pd the gun and opened the 1931 campaign and a few others will postpone their initial games until Oc- tober 3, but for the large majority, Sevtember 26 will be the official open- vmh tune-up gemes the rulé, out- standing, attractions are hard to find, but they can be found If a search of the foot ball slates is carried out diligently. ‘The west coast, for instance, pro- vides a clash betwcen Utah, perennial champlons of the Rocky Mountain Con- ference, against Washington of the Pa- cific Coast Conference. Southefn Cal- ifornia- will play Slip Madigan's strong St. Mary eleven, the Oregon Aggies tackle another Rocky Mountain Con- fsrence team, Colorado University; Cal- lifornia takes on Santa Clara and Stan- layl the Olympic Club of San Pnnc t.hern Conference games will nnm e battling South Carolina ne playing Mississippi, while most of the other conference teams will swing into action, although against non- conference ition. The Colorado Aggies will travel due East from their Rocky Mountain strongs hold to meet the strong Kansas s Ol the Big Six; while Texas Christ! orned Frogs will play host to uuhhm suu of the Southern Conference. the Ten cnly Indiana, llhme— lo'.l and will start the season 3 plays the strong Ohlo Uni eleven; Minnesota cago playe. Hilindase o r’uuh‘x:-‘hcm' and Carnefi College of lowa in a doubl heade: lnthnluthlenenl ld The although a few teams, such as Yale, Harvard, Princeton, Penn and Navy will wait another week. THOMAS CHIEF C0G OF VIRGINIA ELEVEN f |@reat All-Around Back to Weigh About 178—Sippley Is Out for Some Time. The punting of Thomas is going to be llmnn as important to the Cava- liers as his passing and his ball carry- ing. Fred Dawson, Virginia’s new head coach, has been much time at the Brookland | rather At 2:30 o'clock toll carefully last prior to Saturday’s Boston College Much lighter work, centered tundamentals, is to wind uj ::e myCouh George Volk will be par- ticularly active, Selection of & -uhsu- tute wingman to replace Vincent Fraaf veteran dependlbh 'IL‘) is limping on sprained | il-ll. INTRA-MURALS 'S BOOSTED | Bladensburg Principal Goes Easy on Representative Teams. BLADENSBURG, Md., September 21.| —As was the case Jast year intramural | this year 1. No repre- by organizing m: school play rather than by giving much attention to representative school teams competition. Pointers in Golf BY SOL METZGER. ‘The lowest point of the arc of the golf swing is off the left shoulder, and not off the left heel, as some suppose. As often stated In these articles, that is the point where the ball should be teed for wood shots. Stars differ in the spot where they tee the ball for iron shots. Some play it off the left shoulder; others an inch or s0 back of this spot and toward the it foot, Those fol- lowing the method pick the ball orf LEET | SHOULDER [ ' Q ' % PILKS BALL, CLEAN OFF- TUR™ HITS 1T OA(K CcF eln.noflv.heturt'bml Those adhering to mm stroke it on the downswing and seen many sound much stop with the Are you season is with Mnrybl‘!n , & Conference rival, on October 1 ;BRENTWDOD HAWKS GRIDIRON HUSTLERS for Capital City League Race. 23 in Squad. | Gl | | the | | back tee. Three Drills & Week Prime Team | _ S1TAR, WAB . waun, THE TIMID SOUL. HERE, YOUSE CARRY D 8AG. | GOTTA GO BACK AN GIT sOMe MuiiaxX, Do D, C, D. C. Schools ALL RIGHT. MIND, CIGARETTES, SEE YA ON TH' NEXT JOE @ 1931 My TRBJuL - 'UST because you miss a shot from the tee, don't let mtmm on the golf course, That is the modern philosophy of Ralph A. i Drain of the Washington Golf and | Country Club, who belleves that golf does not lie wholly in the tee shot, and proves it. Playing in a four-ball match yesterdsy with Henry D. Nicholson and R. J. Wise, he almost completely missed his spoon tee shot at the eleventh hole of the Washington course, barely knock- ing the ball off- the wooden tee. The hole plays about 165 yards from the As he knocked the ball only a few inches from the tee, it rolled into & bad lie, in a divot hole. He called for hllhito 3 shot that ENIOR golfers Club today m?n'?""?uf"{u following first , Wi ollo Dr. G. Brown Mfller vs. Col. E. A. Hickman, J. J. Hamilton vs. Dr. Du J. D, Beuret, E. O. Wagen- t. E. S. Kellogg, Gen. D. C. A. Gillis, W. G. Brantley M ‘Savage, Col. Willlam Morrow M. Talcott, G. H. inel.\n.l.- L. Nicholson, jr. ITH the first round scheduled to be tomorrow, the following ot oe beent made for the Regula outs are held each 'meld:y and Thurs- day nlghu on the same field unflcn Twmcy-!hm are striving for berths, | including Tex Holte, Dan Histon, F., Casey and G. Thompson, ends; Joe S nelli, G. Aldee, O. Traver, E. | Onm and Williams, tackles; John Joe Robey and P. Traver, guards; 5 Folther ad Bosmebe, centers, and Joe | Healy, W. PFellner, Claude Simpson, E.! Abbott, B. McManus, H. Hatstact, P, ‘rW er, J. Sorrell and L. Herbert, backs. TEN GRID TILTS LISTED {Alexandria High to Play Half Its, Games at Home. ALEXANDRIA, Va., September 21— | Ten games have been scheduled for Alexandria High School’s gridmen by Athletic Director Maurice Given. Five gett's Park. | The schedule: | ber 26, Devm Preplntary‘ | School, at Was] ‘October 3, Ohatiokie Hall School: 9, { | Western High School; 1 v High, at Hopewell, Va.; 23. St. ' | High' School; 30, Chester High B:hool at_Chester, Va. November 6, Washington and Lee High School; 13, Culpeper High; 20, n—mucubuu High_School, at Fred- , Swavely School, at Eight of lut yurl lars, includ- Hu Capt. mfie‘flm Studds, | ackson, 'nm Jennier, ‘Routshan and Bruin, give Given and “Prex” Wil- { son, assistant coach, a fine foundation y which to nald tlulr new club. RACES TODAY Havre de Grace SEVEN RACES DAILY smhl Penna. R. R. leaves Union Station 11:55 a.m., direct to track, Busses leave 1416 F 8t N.W, at 10:45 a.m., direct to track, Eastern Standard Time. nett, W. H. Wi Pairings | another A. C. Reed dr vs. N. 3 l.\lb 'l vs. Th R. Colwel V Chenery, O. L. G. K. Nutting dfiw | ing medal was wn.h - urd of 7 lfly. lum, cCarthy and Henry Phipps md :e 19 tor l-he gul-lflylu medal in the Beaver Dam yesterday. Pairings later. 'AURY FITZGERALD won Kenwood country Club title yes- terday, beating A. ‘Williams by 2end1 mthenmlmund xhibition match yesterday on the . | detea! of the contests will be staged at Bag- | i mont and Mel Shorey of East Potomac Park by a score of 5 and 4. Houghton had a score of 70, 2 under par, to lead. the | fey eea eom n, .‘w;..a i ".-,’.u 21 21, st DR 1931, —BY WEBSTER UH S\WRHY= QR, | | DON'T BT AN M- \\ S SEE R 'I~‘|\ i lnd 1 E:" ion, ¢.h-hd eated T. ach defeated avers de- Stonier, By detautt: "C. ¥ Buty geinii: Georpe H Hamition déteated. G HINRY BURGDORF and A. E. Steinem must replay their match in the handicap club champion. ship tourney at Woodmont. Their first round mat L"d yesterday, resulted in a tie, and t y tied again in a play- off in the afternoon. Here are the re- sults of the other matches: F’l t "mgt‘m ".z‘ofa lr‘h'l}l. B a- doubl tie: Mar ) 16, b'yn:ei': bt Bose, E. K. Campbell v. | Gefonte foated “Jack shifman, " 34, tie, 1 up: Jeff Abel. 30, Dy detauit: Robert: Bay, bert Glasser, 25, 1 and 6. ARRY G. PITT, District champion, and George F. Miller, club cham- plon, both survived through two matches in the Manor Club champion- defeated Hor- . | ship yesterday and are the favorites to meet in the final round. Yesterday's . | results: 3,:-:."1.?.1“., Tker vs. mEllazd. mot 'and 4: Moore de- 1 round_-Parker or e) :{-A M Boilic de- Aar;.,.,, i \.',‘ufl..m etested s igott d detent- lub Champlonship hnun ‘. llmnd h }Y. ot Gt 88 G ":}'%;f z::,..ga e ey, T 3 u u-?uun ¥ 5""" or. uax- Second-round Tesults in the Artyh Announcing! the association with us of W. Berkley Jeffress gmmm&sm“«ms&mum —in a Sales Capacity. Mr. | H. B. Leary, ADMISSION : Grandstand 1 and $1.50 FIRST RACE 115 P.M. 1612 You St. N.W. friends and customers to visit him at his new location. CHRYSLER and PLYMOUTH MOTOR CARS &.rround—hthn vs. oL 0 on Ve, Jeffress cordially invites his Jr., & Bros. ’ - Washington Cricket Club downed Philadelphia British West Indies team, 109 to 89, in their gmo yesterday at Taft Mcremon Cen Y, W. Va., Septem- ber 21—The Potomac River was rnllddy and the Shenandoah very cloudy this morning. EMERSON ELEVEN WILL PLAY TWICE Displays Wares Tomorrow. Four Tilts Friday and Pair on Saturday. BY EDWARD A. FULLER, JR. HRIEKS of the referee’s whistle, the thump of rugged toe against C Bert concern. s lone seasoned behlnd-t.he lln. performer available. ‘Wells, and . | loom now as !mum will play twice during the week, eeting National Training School olcvgn wmorrow on the latter’s dA'fl; and Mn to Orange, tur- Devitt's wl at Alexandris Friduy is the other on the week’s list. lost to Poly last season, 0 to 7, plenty of h-class Central .ndhltm are Campbell and ades, are INTRODUCING THE NEW BALTIMORE EDITION AMERICAN " RACING RECORD America’s Fastest Growing Racing Publication—The Favorite Turf Paper of Chicago and Cincinnati—An Accurate, Readable, Convenient Track Tabloid, offer- ing: Handicapping by the World’s Foremost Selectors ~Superior Past Performances—Official Result Charts ~—Coniplete News, Comment and Information. Free Result and Scratch Service by Telephone ON SALE EARLY EVERY EVENING Oc EVERYWHERE 20c 2

Other pages from this issue: