Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
g SPORTS. i THE EVENING 8 All Grid Classic Seats Reserved SPECTACULAR AR BATILE PROMISED 0Old Liners Have the Making of Another McQuade and Grove Combination. VERY seat for the Navy-Mary- land foot ball tilt at Griffith Stadium is reserved. They may be had at the ball park or at Spald- ing's, 1338 G street. ‘The prices are as follows: Box seats, $4; grandstand, $3; grand- stand, on field, $3: center field, bleachers, $2, and right fleld, lower stand, $2. ‘The corps of midshipmen will occupy part of the tem; grand- stand on the south side of the foot ball fleld. BY R. D. THOMAS. - OR the first time in its foot ball history, Maryland Uni- | F versity, when it meets th Navy Saturday in Griffith Stadium, will enter combat with a big-time team conceded at least BERTONI T0 LEAD | e (ARDS TOMORROMN Black may rank a slight (avorite,iHead of C. U.’s Senior Class perhaps a decided one, among i - Wins Captaincy on Eve those who bear in mind that Maryland will send back the same cf Gallaudst Game. line-up, but more seasoned and probably better co -ordinated, which outplayed the Navy a year ago, but lost on a sensational touchdown. | today boasts still another Wonor. The Maryland foot ball record fs When the Cardinals lock up dotted with upset_victories. Yale a | with Gallaudet in tomorrow's game at couple of times, Penn, Rutgers and ; Byracuse notably have fallen amexpeet. | Brookland, 2:30 o'clock, the big fullback edly before the teams of Curly Byrd, | officially will lead his eleven into action. who seems gifted in pnmingas foot bali| One of the hardest workers on outfit for one particular battle. And |« ” 's varsity, Bertonl seldom have the Old Liners been on | oo Bersmams varsity, fertol’ edge for & contest as they are for that | this year seems destined to reap laure to take place Saturday,” Washington's | previously denied him. Not only does outstanding game of the year and one | he geem assured of his numeral this that promises to establish a record for | season, but he also likely will see much attendance. —— | service in crucial games. LTHOUGH it has shown little 80| "uon 5 basis of improved play, team e inE abillty, e PTeeN | cpirit and sheer gameness, Bertoni well the strongest since that of 1923, which | merits his _selection.” Head Coach beat Fenn by 3 to 0 and held the cham- | “Dutch” Bergman declared today. "He's | pion Yale team to a 16-14 score. in | one foot ball plaver whose standard in both instances knocking all calcula- | the class room matches his Peflorm.n ! tions screwy. on the gridiron. Also, he's a fine ex- And just as in the Yale game of | ample for fellows who. like Bertoni, are 1923, it may be & great forvard pass- | forced to battle uphill to achieve the ing combination that supplies the fire- | prestige and standing they desire— works against the Navy. It was Jack | athletic or otherwise T McQuade and ~Johnny Groves who| With three exceptions. himself, Right played toss and catch Wwith the pigskin | Halfback Francis Donaher and Edgar | to give Maryland two touchdowns in| White, ~center, the starting line-up the 'Yale encounter, and their equals | Berton! captains tomorrow Is to may be found in several combinations made up exclusively of Washington now possible. boys who first copped recognition in MER; holastics here. Gonzaga High gradu- Pl D :’e‘x’rg""“r' Rav| ated five of these performers, while opplem: czey . stern_ developed three. veteran backs, are capable of break- | e OUIS BERTONI, president of Catholic University's senior class, | VARSTY ATN.Y.0. PERFECTS DEFENSE Repeatedly Checks Reserves, Who Use G. U.’s Rushing and Passing Plays. EW YORK, October 8.—An air of confidence permeated the atmosphere at the New York University foot ball camp, at Ohio Fleld yesterday, following = lengthy dummy -scrimmage in which the varsity checked Georgetown plays as employed by a reserve team. The session lasted more than two hours Realizing the seriousness of Satur- day’s engagement, Coach Chick Meehan ordered the sham battle yesterday de- spite the vigorous scrimmage with Co- | lumbia the previous day. | Utilizing Notre Dame plays, similar | to the attack which Coach Tom Mills | has installed at Georgetown, the Violet | reserve team fired one play after an- | other at the varsity, only to be rebuffed with a monotonous regularity. | Time and again, the reserves were stopped at the line of scrimmage and | often for losses. While on the defense | against aerials, the work of Joe La| Mark, quarterback, and Bob McNa- | mara was outstanding. | Prior to the dummy scrimmage, | Coach Meehan sent the squad through | a passing and punting drill. Tanguay | and Bob McNamara figured in the kicking session, while Hugret and Leflt featured the pass workout. No changes were made in the varsity line-up which started with Joe La Mark, quarterback: Bill Abee and Bob McNamara, halfbacks; Jim Tanguay, fullback joe Hugret and Joe Lefft, ends; Capt. Ernie Concannon and Dick | Murphy, tackls Basilio Marchi and Meyer Firstenbe: guards, and George Chalmers, center. | COUNTY HIGH SCHOOL TEAMS ARE LINING UP | Soccer, Field Ball Title Series Get Under Way Tomororw in Prince Georges. The Nally brothers, Tom and John, ing up a tight battle with a brilliantly | and Dick Moffett. Eastern’s mntflbu& " executed pass play or plays and with |tions, hold down left tackle, left end | any one of the four on the throwing or | and right tackle, respectively. Gonnl"- | receiving end. And adding greatly to|claims the remaining five, mm{‘g: Maryland's potential strength in the | John Maley and Bill Hepburn, zulrl d air are the two rangy ends, Jack Nor- | Denny Pyne, right end. and Ch:’r ;‘t ris and Al Pease. Of the six who very and Bob McVean. quarter and rigl likely will stage a scrt of basket ball- | halfback, respectively. i ity like offensive against the Middies dur-i During the absence of “Bus’ Y| ing some stage of the big scrap, three are taller than six feet. Norris taps that point by three inches, Berger by two and Pease by one. Woods is a “ scant inch under six feet and Popple- man about the same. Chalmers' 168 pounds are bunched into 5 feet 8 inches. The Navy frankly admits it fears the Maryland overhead attack and Head Coach Rip Miller has drilled the Mid- dies assiduously in tactics to stop it, at the same time building up such an of- fensive of their own. All of which promises lots of excite- ment. It is not improbable that Satur- | day's battle will be the seascn's most spectacular. GRID MEETING CALLED ANGovaIIEoE s o iBrAc S Tonight. Hall Is Out of Line-up. C be held at 8 o'clock tonight at the Ar- lington Volunteer Fire Department's engi{n; house. A workout will follow the confab. It has been announced by Manager | Glen Hall, | Charley Deuterman that backfield star, will be out of the line-up for the remainder of the season, X-rays Tevealing an injury suffered in Sun- day's game with the Palace A. C. to be & broken collar bone. GONZAGA CONQUERS BUSINESS HIGH, 6-0 Stenogs Hold Strong Purple Team Scoreless Until Last Period. Pass Effort Fails. Business High School's foot ball rl De Mello, regular kickers, the | ;3215& will be taken care of alternate- | lv by Charley McVean and Donaher. McVean also will be the spearhead of the passing. being an accomplished | perial propeller while with Gonzaga a few years ago. | s Tevamped its line-up | (nlq:i‘:‘l‘:“ld;;(‘h:’flh Cfllhp:“f University. | Both line and backfield has been torn | apart and reassembled. Here's how the Blues probably will stack up against Cards: | B ek center: Antila and Alexander, guards; Grinnell and Delp. tackles: Capt. Monaghan _and _Yoder, ends: | Hnatow, Roop. Walnoha, Gamblin, | Williams, Bradley, Jensen, Travis and | " CAPTAIN | | 'CAVALIERS | Thomas Ends Lay-off Which Began With & Minor Injury in Maryland Game. UNIVERSITY, Va., October 8.—Bill Thomas, Virginia captain, is back in |uniform ready to lead the Cavaliers |into action against Sewanee on Satur- day in what will be the last varsity foot ball game on Lambeth Field. Since the Maryland game Thomas | has been allowed a little well deserved rest in order to recover from a minor sprain. Now he is keen to be in action against the Tigers from Tennessee. ‘With his running mate of last season, Frank Sippley, idle because of a cracked shinbone, Capt. Thomas has not had an easy time keeping up his average of ground gained. In the three games played Thomas has been “spotted” whenever the Cava- IS BACK IN UNIFORM ;= eleven went down to defeat before Gon- |llers had the ball. That is the penalty raga yesterday, 6 to 0, but Stenog sup- | porters are smiling today, for only last week this same Gonzaga team sent Western High School, an arch-rival of Business in the high school series soon to start, back across the creek on the short end of a 24 to 0 count. The usual light and green Orange team put up a good battle and it was not until in the last period that the Purple was able to cross Business’ goal. It was a 35-yard drive that consisted of a forward pass and three line bucks, | the latter featuring Carly Mills, Ernie Viau, Jack Carr and Joe Mills. A pass for the extra point was grounded. Business made a bid to tie the score in the closing minutes heaved a 55-yard aerial to Sherman, but another Stenog pass was grounded on Gonzaga's 10-yard stripe to snuff out Business' final threat. Positions Business. o Sherman Mastramarino “vive... Donnan *.. Cooke Kalinsky .. Haring . Flynn I3 o Gon- for 0 o 0 0 . . Substitutions. Tor ' Mulcare. Hall M zaga for Mills, T Kregan “Toomey McKinley_ for Referee_Mr. Mr. O'Meari Mr. Farrin fudge—M:. 1ing e: est e Washington). mA on (G Field Barbr: TIP FOR FISHERMEN. ‘HARPERS FERRY, W. Va. October 8—The Potomac and Shenandoah Rivers were clear this morning. — PRO FOOT_-BALI.. Portsmouth Spartons, 6; Cleveland dians. 0. TROUSERS To Match Your Odd Coats EISEMAN’S, 7th & F ) after Harris | 6! 0 an outstanding back has to pay. But |in spite of this Thomas has managed | 1o cover gains of 252 yards from scrim- |mage in 46 attempts to advance the ball and he has accounted for an addi- tional 100 yards or so carrying kicks. It is at kicking that Thomas has Leen especially valuable this season. His punts have not always been long. but they have been high and placed with remarkable accuracy. ‘Thomas gets off his kicks in a hurry, too. The Virginia captain is always of great value on the defense, for he is a deadly tackler. | Coaches Will Air Grid Game Plans NZW YORK, October 8.—The plans and tactics which Coaches Chick Meehan of New York University and Tom Mills of Georgetown will depend upon in the foot ball game at the Yankee stadium Saturday will be discussed frankly by the rival mentors over Radio Station WABC of the Co- lumbia Broadcasting System, it has been announced. Coach Meehan will go on the air from 6 to 6:15 p.m. today. and on the same program will be John Col- . former Notre Dame star and now first assistant coach at George- town Mills will speak on Saturday 30 and 12 noon ' DINNER, 50¢ 11:30 to 8 P.M. BLUE PLATE 25¢ to 2:30 P.M. 2 = 11:30 No Cover Charge Tables for Ladies 518 10th St. N.W. OPEN SUNDAYS | | | UPPER MARLBORO, Md., October 8. | —With the opening games in the Prince | Georges County High School cham- pionship soccer and fleld ball series scheduled tomorrow, coaches of most of the teams today were still in doubt as' to_their starting line-ups. In a majority of instances. however, they had a good idea as to the players that would take the fleld. | Headlining the card will be the soccer game between Maryland Park, last sea- son's champion, and Laurel, at Laurel Other contests will bring together Baden and Brandywine, at Baden. and Oxon Hill and Mount Rainier, at Mount Rainier. | ‘The field ball teams will follow the | soccer schedule, making all the cards double headers. { In informal play Hyattsville and | Upper Marlboro soccer and field ball | teams will_clash at Upper Marlboro. | Mount Rainier and Brandywine are the lone teams whose line-ups have been announced. | Here are the starting Mount Rainier arrays: Soccer—Miles Timke, goal: Tillie Scott, left fullback; Bill Gray, right fullback; Charlie Rocker or Melvin Mueller, left halfback; John Quill, cen- | halfback; Raymond Hayhoe, right halfback; Foster Mathias, outside left; Charley Sheppard or Charlie Callow, inside left; Bob Emory, center forward: Bob Mathias, inside right, and Gus Chakalakis. outside right. Field ball—Marie Miller, goal; Ber- nice Hoover, left fullback: Mary Rolfes, right fullback: Ann Rolfes, left half- back: Vivian Walters, center halfback; Eleanor MacGregor, right halfback; | Mabel Wynn, outside left: Louise | Crump. inside left; Julia Lankford, cen- | ter forward; Marian Miller, inside right, and Grace Click, outside Tight. Brandywine line-ups: Soccer—John Underwood, goal; Ralph Bond, left fullback; George Blandford, right fullback: Leonard Furgang. left halfback; Earl Hindle, center halfback; Norman Hurley, right halfback; John Furgang, outside left; Roscoe Tippett, | Inside left; Woodrow Townshend, cen- | ter forward: Julius Townshend, inside right; and Walter Smoot, outside right. | Field ball—Josephine Tayman, goal; Bessie Garner, left fullback; Elizabeth Roberts, right fullback; Shirley Jerbert, left halfback; Anna Quade, center half- back; Rae Cross, right halfback; Mary Ruth Boutwell, outside left; Mary Dy- son, inside left; Dorothy Thorne, cen- ter forward; Anna Lusby, inside right, | and Hilda Higgs, outside right. CHILDRESS TO COACH Former Central Athlete Succeeds | Ribnitzki at Devitt. Don Childress, former Central High | and North Caroiina State gridder, has | been_appointed Devitt School foot ball coach to succeed Fred Ribnitzki, who has resigned to take a position in Baltimore. Childress, who is a former lineman, attended Devitt but did not try for any of its athletic teams, Bill Childress, 2 brother of the coach, is the only seasoned player on the squad. He is an end and is show- ing decided improvement over last year, when he was a reserve, | LIONS TO PLAY SUNDAY. Lyon Park Lions will open their foot ball season Sunday against Temple Baptists on the Washington-Lee High School field at Ballstan, Va. Play will start at 2:30 o'clock. The Lions will drill tonight at 7:30 o'clock. PRICE: Nobody'’s i alone. Everybody’s interested in price—in relation to value. We have some new slants on both price and value worth any and attention. Want to hear them? HUPM SIXES AN FREE-WHEELING AT MOTT MOTORS, Inc. 1518-20 14th St. N.W. ®We believe the Hupmobiie to be the best car of Its class In the world® e e S ——————T) | fared in a correspondence test. AR, WASHINGTON, D. C, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1931, ‘Maryland Given Even Chance With Navy Saturday : Dixie Reserve Carries Grid Punch HE MAY BE MARYLAND MAN TO STAR AGAINST NAVY. CHARLIE MAY. He was the boy who directed the Old Liners' drive that pulled the Virginia game out of the fire Jast week, and he’s rarin’ to go against the Middi NEW STAGG ATTACK SET FORMCHGAN Chicago Coach Hoping to‘ Make Little Material | Go a Long Way. By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, Oct. 8—Coach Amos| Alonzo Stagg's fortieth University of Chicago foot ball team is not rated as capable of defeating Michigan's power- ful eleven when they renew their rivalry for the twentieth time Saturday, but the “old man” is figuring on giving the Wolverines a surprisingly tough after- noon. Stagg has just about enough men for one team, with a few left over, and he is teaching his tiny squad & new offense—a system far different from anything a Maroon eleven ever has used. What it accomplishes against Michigan depends largely upon whether | Pat Page, Jr. and Lou Kanne, & pair of regular backs, are eligible, Page had a Germn examination to pass today, while Kanne is still waiting to learn how he Wolverines Big Favorites. Chicago’s “mystery” offense, how- ever, has done nothing to make the Wolverines less than a huge favorite. Coach Harry Kipke has a veteran line, well fixed for reserves, and his sopho- more backs have done so well that lettermen will be sitting on the bench | when the contest starts in Michigan's huge stadium. Northwestern suffered a cruel jolt to its hopes of ending Notre Dame's reign when Reb Russell, the fullback who battered the Irish line for important yardage last year, was declared out of action yesterday. Russell suffered a cracked vertebra and a rib fracture against Nebraska and probably will play no more this season. Coach Dick Hanley moved Ollie Olson, a sopho- more. to fullback, and his starting backfield, when the Irish are met in Soldier Field Saturday, will include only one veteran. Halfback Pug Rent- ner. George Potter and Ken Meehan, another pair of sophomores, will be the other starters. Reports from Notre Dame's secret practices indicated that things are not 50 well with the Raiders. The reserves used Northwestern plays yesterday and shoved over three touchdowns against the varsity. Coach Hunk Anderson was disgusted, and said in so many words that Notre Dame looked like a sure shot to take a beating. Your Old Felt Made New Again Cleaning and Blocking By Modern and Sefentific Factory Methods. Vienna Hat Co. 435 11th st nterested in price, car owner’s time OBILE p Ei1cHTs @ NO EXTRA COST ‘Decatur 4341 C. U. Big-Hearted To Scholastics OCAL high and prep school stu- dents will be admitted to the Catholic University - Gallaudet foot ball game tomorrow at Brookland at 2:30 o'clock upon pres- entation of an athletic ticket and 25 cents, Athletic Director Dutch Ber- man_has announced. SPORTS EXPANSION 1S POTOMAC'S PLAN |Boat Club Names Athletic Director in Effort to Broaden Program. OTOMAC BOAT CLUB, contem- plating an expansion of its ath- letic program, has created the Pposition of director of athletics of the club, and President Francis Fahy has named for the new office E. L. Mil- lar. The director of athletics will en- deavor to further the club's interest in several sports new to the organization with the idea of launching a broader program next year. In addition to the aquatic sports such as rowing and canoeing, fostered by the | club for years, the Potomacs hope to engage in basket ball, foot ball, swim- ming, golf, hand ball and horseshoe pitching and place representative teams in competition in all. Ultimately the club may crganize a track and fleld team. At a meeting last night the Potomacs GEORGIA FACES Ll IN BIGREST CLASH Many Intersectional Games Slated for Southerners, G. U. Has Big Chance. BY H. C. BYRD. ESTS of Southern foot ball will come this week on widely separated gridirons. At Atlanta, Ga.; at Dallas, Tex.; at Madison, Wis.; at Colum- bus, Ohio; at ithaca, N. Y., and at New Haven, Southern elevens are | due to line up against opponents | that should bring out the best of |the vaunted prowess of Dixie | teams. Undoubtedly the most important of the games scheduled is that in which Georgia_faces Yale. The Dark Blue went to New Haven last season and won and fully expects to have at least an even chance to turn the same trick again. Georgia has a much better team | than it developed in 1930, according to | those _familiar with its strength. Other long trips to be taken by South- | ern schools are Alabama Polytechnic | Institute to the University of Wisconsin, Vanderbilt to Ohio State University | nd Richmond to Cornell. Two South- | 2rn schools entertain big opponents from | other sections, Texas A. and M. having | | Towa at Dallas and Georgia Tech enter- | taining Carnegie Tech at Atlanta. It may be that Alabama Polytechnic | Institute will make a better showing against Wisconsin than most of its sup- | porters look for. That school has much | better material this year than last and has been showing signs of a return to that high state it once held in South- ern foot ball. Vanderbilt probably has pretty close to an even chance to whip Ohio State. This time a year ago the Commodores went out and gave Minne- sota a trimming, and now they are much better than then; and there is not much difference in the strength of Ohlo State and Minnesota in any year. Richmond is likely to lose to Cornell by a fairly wide margin, but Texas A. and M. and Georgia Tech ought to do pratty well in their games. The Atlanta school | lost to Carnegie Tech last season by a | | big margin, but the former is stronger | and the latter apparently is weaker. | Texas A. and M. ought to have about an _even chance against Iowa. | These excursions of Southern elevens | are getting to be rather regular features of every foot ball season. Against | Northern schools the South has been | making better and better comparisons, until ‘now some Southern teams are conceded to have an even chance against any opponent from another sec- tion. In fact. so much o is this true | that the Yale-Georgia contest should be rated as one of the most important of the day. And Vanderbilt's tilt with | | Ohio State should not. be far behind. | Last year, as has already been men- | | tioned, Georgia won from Yale and Vanderbilt gave Minnesota a one-sided | trimming. i JAS far as this part of the country is concerned, Navy and Maryland in { |, their game at Clark Griffith | Stadium will hold the center of the | stage. ~ As far as foot ball is con- | cerned, the game is likely to shape up | with the best, and it seems assured that the biggest crowd that has ever watched a foot ball struggle south of the Mason- Dixon line, with the exception of the Army-Navy game in Baltimore some years ago, when 76,000 persons attended, will turn out. Apparently the Navy- Maryland tilt is generally regarded as one of the two or three most important of the day, with the whole country con sidered. | Coach “Rip” Miller of Navy will bring to Washington a typical hard- fighting, hard-playing Navy squad. Two teams of Navy players, the second of almost equal strength to the first, | are ready to take the field. Those who watched the Navy whip William and Mary last week, and whip that school | much more easily than the score indi- | cated, are convinced that there is a | better team at Annapolis this year than last. That means that Maryland has its work cut out for it, as Navy won last year by 6 to 0. However, Maryland also may be stronger. The Oid Liners have in their line-up now about the same kind of plavers Navy has. Every one of them took part in the contest at Annapolis last year and in all probability vir- | tually_every man who starts for Navy will have back of_ him some little experience gained against the Maryland squad the Saturday before last Thanks- giving day. Both Navy and Maryland have a rep- utation for sportsmanship second to none, and they should put up the kind of game that makes coliege foot ball & YOUR CAR == | WASHED 750 IN 15 MINUTES i game distinct from all others. How- ever, the spirit of that p imbues both schools nolo{m&:: tea variety, not by any means. play about as foot ball as it is possible to . From ove‘l"n point of view, it is the game will take its K the greatest the South as ever known. 'EORGETOWN'S game at New York Unlversity is not any the less im- portant to local people because it is to be played at New York. The Blue and Gray has a chance to earn a good place in Eastern foot ball if it to do just that. Coach Mills will take three elevens to New York, leaving tomorrow. The squad is to return Sunday. Mills thinks his ‘men have a good chance and did not hesitate to say 80 this morning, “I believe we have & good chance to win from N. Y. U., if we play our best foot ball,” said Mills, “and we are sure (olns to New York with that idea in mind. New York University is stronger now than it was last season, but so are we, considerably so. Our play last week was disappointing in some particulars, but as a whole the game we put up ‘was very satisfactory. Anyway, it had & very satisfactory ending, and, after all, I suppose it is the result that counts.” IRGINIA and Virginia Military In- stitute play this week despite the fact they meet each other next Thursday at Charlottesville in the dedi- cation of the new stadium at Virginia. Virginia meets Sewanee and V. M. L plays Citadel. Fortunately for both schools neither Sewanee nor Citadel, ac- cording to past indications, is up to its usual standard. There is a strong probability that both Virginia and | V. M. I will be victors this week, which should make their game next Thurs- day even more attractive. Virginia ex- pects by far the biggest crowd in its history. University of Minnesota takes an ex- ceptional journey for so early in the season, being listed to go to the Pa- | cific Coart to play Stanford. The Gophers have not been in the habit of making trips of this length at any time during the season and it may be that this marks a change in policy at the Minneapolis institution. Last year Pittsburgh took the meas- ure of West Virginia and it expects to repeat Saturday. ‘The Pitt-West Virginia contest is one of the most bopular games in the Western Pennsyl- vania section, and it always is well played, no matter which team wins. pROBABLY the two strongest teams meeting in any game will be North- | western snd Notre Dame at Chi- cago. This should be one of the great_ est contests of the whole season. Right now it is doubtful if there are two stronger elevens anywhere, and the type | of foot ball they play ought to stand | out at any time and any place. It w be Notre Dame's first test before a | real strong foe since Rockne's death. University of Chicago goes to Ann Arbor to meet Michigan and Illinois to Lafayette for a game with Purdue. | Chicago is not likely to defeat the Wolverines unless it is stronger than it has been in recent years. Purdue, it is said, has a powerful combination and a chance to beat Zuppke's eleven. SPORTS. Elevens Are on T ridl Charity Contests Carded for D. C. FOOT BALL gams, the procseds of which are to be used for the rellef of the unemployed and other charitable purposes, is planned for Washington on December 13, with two picked teams from the North Le 5 John Q. Slye, head of the local or- g.ulntlon. has announced that Lou ittle, head coach at Columbia, will select the two teams. SEMIPRO CHAMPS FIGHT FROM START Apaches Tangle With Crack Irvingtons Sunday In League Opener. W ASHINGTON'S independent foot ball champions, the Apaches, may find them- selves with their backs to | the wall right from the start of the season Sunday, when they stack up against Baltimore's standout profes- sional eleven, the Irvingtons, in the opening game of the -South Atlantic Foot Ball League. ‘The Apaches have been drilling earnestly for this tilt, however, and despite that it will be their opening game of the season, the Southeast boys | hope to make a good showing. The unlimited and 135-pound St. Stephen's teams will practice tonight |at 7:30 o'clock at Seventeenth and B | streets in preparation for their open- ing clashes in the Capital City League Sunday The Battery F, 111th Field Artillery, team of Predericksburg, Va, challenge all 150-pound grid teams in this city and Northern Virginia to a game. Tex Houston, care of the Free Lance-Star, Fredericksburg, is handling the schedule, Northern Red Birds will drill tonight at Seventeenth and B streets at 7:30 o’clock. A game with a 125-pound team is sought by the Mohawk A. C. Call North 1000, Apartment 129, between 7 and 8 o'clock. A drill is scheduled tonight for the Dixie Pig gridders starting at 8 o'clock. Lyon Park Lions will open their foot ball season when they oppose the Temple Baptists at 2:30 o'clock on the field at Washington-Lee High School. A drill for the Lions is slated for 7:30_tonight DOES YOUR CAR While Yale is meeting Georgia at New Haven, Princeton will be tackling | Brown at Princeton and Harvard work- ing out against New Hampshire at | Cambridge. Princeton will not have its | hands so full as Yale, but it may run into more trouble than it anticipates. Harvard ought to whip New Hampshire without too much difficulty. For the second consecutive week Florida tackles a North Carolina school. Last week it wiped up the North Caro- lina State College, and this week will | try to repeat the dose against North Carolina University. The Tarheels are likely to prove much more of a stum- bling block than Bachman's team found North Carolina State to be. Dartmouth and Holy Cross, Colgate Dartn i BRAKE_LINING el ng. | Bill Ingram's California eleven may | s}yl{Alle-lGINnggKN S gv& t.roublles mln‘r.hls ‘week. It meets e saiic QLD of Skn Eranctca;and | 111410/ Chicek 81 N:W. DE'G840 Between P and Q St SPRINGS NEED ATTENTION We Can Make Them RIDE LIKE NEW Springs Manufactured, Repaired, Installed While You Wait For All Makes of AUTOS, TRUCKS, BUSSES Quick Service For High-Class that team Stanford. California | may consider itself lucky if it gets away | with the long end of the count. | a cigar for the discrz'minatz'ng smoker HABANELLO ! f { SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS. GREASING 956 Motor and Ch cleaned by steam, simonizing by expert: at proportionately Low Price. also elected float officers for the 1931~ 32 season. Norman Marden was made captain and James J. Nutwell lieutenant of the oarsmen. Millar, the new director of athletics, was named captain in charge ¢f canoein; COMPLETE g. LAUREL RACES October 5 to October 31 INCLUSIVE Thirty minutes to Track by Spe- cial B. & O. R. R. trains leaving Union Station, Washington, at 12:15 and 12:40 P.M. FIRST RACE at 1:45 P.M. General Admission $1.50 Super Auto Laundry Que Block 2312-20 Qpasite Bail park Georgia Ave. Bakers Phone North 1010 AUTUMN SPECIAL $49.65 ALL FOR YOUR CAR WASHED—GREASED VACUUM CLEANED ENGINE CHECKED POINTS CLEANED CARBURETOR ADJUSTED BATTERY CLEANED & FILLED 5 QUARTS OF STANDARD REXOLINE or AMERICAN OIL Amoco, Betholine, Richfield, America: Pennsylvania Tires—Duco Products—General Electr Lots of Free Parking Space 4 Courteous, Expert Service—Not Just a Gas Station ProTexU-Service Station Georgia Ave. at V St. N.W. Gas—Champion Plugs— ic Lamps Union od OPPOSITE IAL.I., PARK : tuz 1050 - A WELL BREWED LAGER ~and honor their presence.. You owe it to your guests to serve the best. Ordinary “near beer” simply will not do. Esslingers’ is REAL—brewed the same and aged to maturity. Drink it all eve- ning without a regret. From Your Dealer—or From Us LEIBMAN BROS. Por Your Nearest Dealer 474 Penna, Ave. NW, Nat. 2400