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Sports News 0 4 @he Zoening Star, WAS HINGTON, D. C, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1931. PAGE D—1 G. W.and Tulsa to “Shoot the Works” : Johnson Retained as Pilot of Griffmen GOLDEN HURRICANE: HERE FRIDAY NIGHT Hot Game, Nominal Tax and: Other Conditions Make | | | BY R. D. THOMAS. % for Big Attendance. EORGE WASHINGTON was G only piddlin’ when it ran| up 53 points against Shen- | anhoah and 43 against, Elon and barely got up full steam | to beat Boston University, 14-0, but Friday night the Colonials will muster all their power and open wide the throttle. In their first big home contest | of the season they will attempt t,o“ turn back the Golden Hurricane of | Tulsa University, surprise con- queror of Texas Christian. The game will be played under the arc lights of Griffith Stadium and will be a bargain. Reserved seats will sell at $1.50, general admissions at $1 and box seats &t $2 each. Maryland and | Navy charged $4, $3 and $2 and had! | about 16,000 customers instead of the |, 30,000 or so expected. ROWD prophets were 50 far wrong on the Middy-Terp elassic that none has ventured a guess on the pulling power of Geerge Washington's star attraction, but a merry tune on the turnstiles is promised. There will be no competition with the Maryland horse races nor a world series final game to keep folks near radios and scoreboards; no serious inroads on pocket money nor loss of time from toil. And the game offers much. | With the exception of two players, | Tulsa_will bring here the same line-up | that George Washington a year ago held | to & 14-6 score and might have beaten with a bit more backfleld speed. Twice a slow Colonial ball carrier was pulled down from behind with a clear field to the goal. | Tulsa_undoubtedly has improved, but 0 has G. W., and both have announced their intention to “shoot the works.” If nothing else, the battle should be spectacular. SON, the Tulsa coach, was head | foot ‘ball tutor at Southern Cali- fornia before Howard Jones, and in| his six years at Tulsa has brought the | Golden ‘Hurricane a long way on the | road to big-time success. He's a spe- cialist in trick foot ball, with little | regard at times for orthodox methods. | The big puff of the Hurricane at- tack is Ish Pilkington, captain and| fullback, who runs, passes and kicks | the oval with uncommon ability, if all | they say of him is true. Out in Okla- | homa they hail him as an All-America. | The Tulsa advance notices speak highly also of the other backs. Billy Boehm, Velmon Lentz and Ed Duble, and the | linemen, Potts, Howard, Volok. Rey- nolds, Grisham, Haubersin and Morris, as husky and capable. George Washington will show a flashy pair of ball runners in Joe Carter and Lee Carlin, & hard-hitting fullback and excellent punter in Otts Kriemel- meyer and a versatile back in Johnny Fenlon, who, however, is not in the best trim. 1f Fenlon is able to exert himself Friday, he may walk off with the show. The Colonials have a wealth | of backfield reserve, two big and active ends in Ike Chambers and Fred Mul- vey and sturdy performers in the other forward positions. Some Major Club To Get Sothoron OUISVILLE, Ky., October 13 (#).— Al Sothoron will not be man- ager of the Louisville American Assoclation team next year. He says he will accept one of three con- ul'agu offered him by major league clubs. Sothoron became Loulsville’s man- ager in 1929, won the association pennant in 1830, but his team crum- bled this year and ended in seventh place. He would not divulge the names of the major league clubs he said had offered him contracts. He was offered a renewal of his Louisville contract, but said the major league bids were more financially attrac- tive. FONSECA IS NAMIED AS CHISOX LEADER Managing Is Not New to Him, as He Once Ruined Loop by 16 Wins in Row. BY FRANCIS J. POWERS. CHICAGO, October 13.—Managing e ball team is not entirely a new n;.sk éor !Ae‘wu A. Fonseca, who today signed a two-year contract to (h& ghlcag? “llglte Sox. esd Vhen only years of age and off the sand lots of San }"ragc:sco‘ F!::! seca was hired to manage the Smith- field, Utah, team in an independent league. After dropping the first two games of the season, Fonseca's team won 16 straight and broke up the league. From Smithfield, Fonseca gradua to the Cincinnati Reds ln\'jg lflcl’tes varied career in both the National and American Leagues finds himself man- lxgegz of the White Sbx at the age of 32. Fonseca was appointed to White Sox less lt’l?fln two di Donfe Bush had tendered his resigna- tion as manager of the team to Charles A. Comiskey. The Old Roman, who is seriously ill at his home in Wisconsin. had admired Fonseca's hustling play from afar throughout the Summer, and immediately decided upon Lew as his 1932 manager. By giving Fonseca a two-year contract, Comiskey believes he wzlll :nlbl; the y:‘ew manager to con- struct a team that will first division. AR Fonseca is of Portuguese-Irish par- entage and a native of San Francisco, where, 2 youngster, he attended St. Mary’s College—now famous as one of the outstanding foot ball powers of the Pacific Coast. In addition to being a capable ball player, Fonseca possesses a fine tenor voice and spent several Winters in vaudeville, The new Sox leader always has been famous as a hitter. sistently over .300 for Cincinnati and Philadelphia in the National League and while with Cleveland, in 1929, led the American League in batting. In- Jurles several times have kept him from showing his real worth. He was ill during part of the 1931 season, but batted .312 in 147 games for Cleveland and Chicago. The showing of the White Sox in the Chicago city series, in which the eighth place American Leaguers de- feated the third place Cubs, has led Fonseca to believe the Hose have a chance to bid for a first division berth in 1932. Fonseca has left for his home at San Rafael, Calif., but will return to assume his managerial duties at the Winter meetings of the major and | minor leagues. THE SPORTLIGHT BY GRANTLAND RICE HAT with the world series running into the middle of October, one has a somewhat confused picture of a foot ball season that has been under way for some time. But certainly two of the most notable victories came out of the South when Georgia overwhelmed Yale and when Vanderbilt ran up 26| points against the strong Ohio State | Conference team. i ‘The Vanderbilt defense slipped a few | eogs near the finish, but you don’t| have to worry a lot with a 26-to-i lead, especially when you have a ter. rific schedule to face later. | Georgia and Vanderbilt not only have two of the best teams in the | South, but two of the best teams in the country—East or West, North or| South. They will both bear watching later on, as both happen to face two of the hardest marches of the year before they come to late November frost. i Both have strong lines, and strong | backfields, and when they meet at an | early date this will be one of the big games of the season. A Few Shocks.' HEN Southern California is beaten in its first game and Notre Dame is held to a scoreless draw in its second test, the old order is a bit out of line. But that is the way it is, which reminds us that we forgot to mention Maryland's victory over the | Navy. Southern California was beaten by a | high-class team and- Notre Dame had a well coached, rugged opponent in Northwestern. ' So neither of these | events could be classed as an upset. It was too big a game to come this soon in October and the heavy preparation made for such an important contest may prove costly to both later on. One of the big games of the coming week is Army and Harvard. Here are two of the strongest teams in the East, two of the leaders, The Army looks to have a shade with a well rounded, powerful outfit that can play a lot of foot ball, but Harvard is not to be taken lightly with a good line and one of tiie best backfields in the country. Few teams have such talent as Barry ‘Wood, Crickard, Mays and White to call on. This game will eliminate one of the leaders in the East. The victory of Dartmouth over a strong Holy Cross team shows what Yale is up against. After the Georgi: game Yale has the Army and Dart- mouth to handle in the next few weeks, which is like handling a nest of cobras or vipers with the bare hands. Yale has a smashing schedule ahead and more than her share of trouble, although the Georgia victory was expected. The Army had to beat a strong team in facing Michigan State ana that game tipped off the Army's reel strength. Short Stop Play. 'O world series ever saw finer short stop play than Gelbert of the Cardinals and Willlams of the | youngster. Athletics presented through this last seven-game series. It was a thing of beauty and joy to watch. They ac- cepted over 70 chances without & mis- play and many of them were along sensational lines. Both men covered a world of ground, took every chance and handled every brand of bound. They came up with half bounds and three-quarter bounds, with quick hops and slow hops. They were all over the lot, and yet neither let a prospective victim escape. Gelbert has now played through two world serles without, an error. He has handled every chance offered in 13 post-season games without making the slightest mistake. It is one of the finest defensive exhibitions ever given under fire, for most of the games were close enough to make even one error count. Willlams played great ball for a He was almost on a par with Gelbert. The two together were among the high spots of the series, two outstanding defensive stars. The same can be said of Frisch and Bishop at second. While Bottomley failed to set the world on fire with his | hitting, his play around first was un- usually brilliant. He had any number of killing chances to handle and yet he was always on the job, from a short bunt in front of the plate to a foul fly 30 yards back of first base. (Copyright. 1931, by Newspaper Alliance, Inc.) Mat Matches By the Associated Press. NEW YORK.—Ray Steele, 215, Glen- dale, Calif,, threw Sandor Szabo, 207, Hungary (38:44); Rudy Dusek, 215, Omaha, threw Norton Jacks 202, New York (20:03): Steve Znosky, 215, Poland, won a decision over Joe Toots Mondt, 240, Colorado (2:00); Sam Stein, 200, Newark, threw Babe Cad- dock, 198, Omaha (12:46), George Cal- za, 219, Italy, threw Gene Ladoux, 213, Montreal (10:23); Earl McCready, 226, Oklehoma, drew with Gino Gari- baldi, 214, Italy (30:00): Tiny Roe- buck, 248, Lawrence, Xens, Andy Zakeroff, 225, Russla (2:26). MONTREAL, Quebec.—Henri Deg. lane, 220, Montreal, defeated Charlie Strack, 220, Stillwater, Okla., two falls out of three (Strack first in 2:25; Deglane second. 19:40, and third, 10:55);, Pat McGill, 219, Omaha, threw Raoul ‘Simon, 230, France (24:30). KANSAS CITY.—Ed (Strangler) Lewis, 223, Los Angeles, won from Darna Ostopavich, 220, Lithuania, two falls out of three (Gstcpavich first fall, | Lewis second and third); Joe Savoldi, ! Hall, siarting November 21. a9 206, threw George Mack, 0, Chicego (19:10). He batted con- | the North American | - threw | BACK TO THE MO NAIAQT 1 FORMER. MAT CHA WHNO BELIEVES IN MONK MP, CHIPS FROM THE " MAPLEWAYS N these days when bowling averages count for little and records for less, your former fidgety alley owners, | apparently having finally erased the | | worry wrinkles from their brows caused by the furor over the raised gutter mania, are sitting back and awaiting the next | move of the National Duckpin Bowling | Congress, hoping that it is toward the complete standardization of the great pin sport. | since 1ate last season, when some of | the owners boosted their gutters at the | | pin end of the alleys to produce high | scores, which, of course, the bowling | public has a weakness for, & general | feeling of uneasiness has pervaded Washington's pin plant proprietors. | Self-defense, as these more back- | ward alley owners maintained, caused | them to raise their gutters also this | | season. | HEN,” as one of them remarked, ‘everything was raised, including | a few rocfs.” Some raised their | gutters an inch, others more. Those who raised them an inch raised & rum- | pus because others raised their guners‘ a little higher, which, as almost every | bowler knows now, helps raise scores what with the pins sweeping back on the alleys and knocking over those left standing, if any. And uthnsz who raised them a bit higher say they could find nothing in the N. D, B. C.s official rule book about gutter measurements. Hence the sky, or rather the alley level, os- tensibly was the limit. The contention is said to have start- |ed when a group of Washington's star pinmen went to New England last year for an intercity battle and rolled scores which, when published in local news- | papers, scemed remarkable to Wash- | ington's “bowling colony. They were, | however, only good scores for New Eng- | land, for the Northern alleys are | equipped with rounded gutters. Those | here, with few exceptions, are flat. George L. Isemann, who has worked tirelessly and most successfully since the N. D. B. C. was organized in 1927, is the man to whom the alley owners are looking to pllot them out of this difficulty. They have every confidence in the hustling secretary of the congress, for he probably has done more than any other mortal to elevate bowling to its present heights. OHN S. BLICK, the country’s biggest maple magnate, said last night that he was plauning to order rounded gutters for his 135 alleys in Washington. He already has instelled {them in Norfolk, Richmond and At- |lanta and is having them installed in Greensboro. _ Blick belleves that the Installation of rounded gutters will help remove the difficulty. One of the greatest surprises of the current season has been the strong showing of the Petworth team in the District League. Not in years has a Pet- worth aggregation made a bid for top | | place in Washington’s fastest dutkpip‘ loop and the showing of Eddie Cotter’s crew hlu bowlirx‘:g followers of that sec- tion all pepped up. Tomorrow night at Petworth the home boys will entertain Red Megaw and his band of Northeast Temple sharp- shooters. The Pets and Temple are| running a close race for the lead, the latter club leading by one game. Remembering that Lucky Strike was a heavy favorite to down them last | week, the Pets are non-pl by the | | general opinion that Temple will prove | { too strong for them and hope to deal | them the same hand they dealt the 1 | on Luckies—literally a tightly-closed hand | on the whiskers. e i i, Speaking of matches, that one tonight | at the Recreation between Lucky Strike and Hecht Co. is d to be a hum- | jmez. Neither t , albeit boasting | \crack line-ups, has hit its true stride| |and tenight mey be the night one or!| ! both will bust Joose. | | When a courle of teams, including the | | pinm these boasts ars three weeks overdue, anyth might happen. The Lucki e resting on the bot- tom of the league. an uniamiliar place for them, but as Capt. Howard Camp- bell said lasi night, “Eight of the nine | games we have had to match were over 1 600. You can't very well beat it [ kind of bowling.” IVE-DOLLAR prizes to bowlers who 1oll the high game and high set and make most spares and strikes | will be given on each of the three| Inlzhts of the Greater Washington | Sweepstakes, the first such event heid | here under the handicap system, when | the event, which is expected to dr&' | more then 200 bowlers, is held at the { Columbia, Arcadia and Convention | | | i i i Unlike the usual run of sweepstakes, a_handicap system will be employed. M NKEY FOR ATHLETIC AGILITY. e EVSHINES THE MONKEYLOPE , DICK'S CHIEF TRAINING STUNT, HE WALKS AROUAID ON HANDOS AND FEET TO ACQUIRE SUPPLENESS —By TOM DOERER HE APES ™E MONK 7O SHARPEN ARM mMuSCL GROADEA HiS' ST AND TO ATTAIN e SPEED. Unusual Grunt, Groan Man Shikat Still Wastes His Time Training for Matches. BY TOM DOERER: R. RICHARD SHIKAT, the|a monkey, from branch to branch of the | trees. His cat thrusts and parries in bone bender, still trains| y “lnc"are aped after the monkey. for his mat soirees, they And there are few matmen who are as tell me quick at taking advantage of oppor- Which 1 isnal tunities on the canvas as Richard. C! S unus . | That is, it is = out of the ordinary for a knuckle b‘:{hi‘:.‘: “Rfl‘g}?:f; twister to spend time developing| can explain today his muscles and his wind in the ;‘ume ;“,;’;',“.',’;’“; gym when he can do it on the mat vy F i antages at so much per grunt and groan. than he could have Mr. Jeems Londos, they say, tralns & few vears ago. for his title matches by getting a run- | Yet he may have ning start in New Orleans on a Tues. found the lope no day night and finished up in New York | equal to otnes on Thursday afternoon, having thrown, | methods and drop- en route, everybody but the railway en- | ped it. But he gineer and the president of the Cham- ber plodded around on of Commerce at Winston-Salem, {fls hands and feet N. C. here in Philadel- — |phia for many Mr. Londos wastes no time in & gym. hours before he Nor money, elther. Jeems always knows dropped Jim Lon- just how right his condition is by look- dos for the crown. es on a | — ing at his wallet. When 1t ke ol a! The Jutiand sailor, however, has time to wrestle for made enough money on the mat to have the title, some one else visit the zoos for him to —ee | get the latest monkey movements. For But Shikat likes @ banana and a handful of peanuts Dick to train. He did,|could learn more from one monkey anyhow, a few years | than he could from a quartet of wrest- ago when your cor- | lers. Yet I'll bet those promoters have Tespondent wa s | shown him more stuff than a zoo full of first introduced to | apes. him. At that time, | o v v Shikat has shown that 2 man can act in fact, Dick would 15 & Taonke have walked around | Byt only in wrestling. pire State Building | KNOWS HIS BASE BALL on his left ear for a position on a “Sonny"” Strset, Gabby's Son, Has ’Em Listening at Lafayette. wrestling card. JOPLIN, Mo., October 13 (#).—There’s 2 lad named “Sonny” who just about | has a correr on base ball yarns down |at the Lafayette School. | He is Charles E. Street, jr., son of |éGa:‘:y“!' Slrmf, pilot I,?l‘ the 1Sdt 1‘;"!’: ar v rid ses E';:X“n.ph{ e Al Hiaye Heen imitating & | 1P until he had to return to school in September. He is in the second storm at sea for a bewlldered audience | of basket ball players and fat business | grade. His teachers consider him a star ten who were there to become lean. | LUl But, gentlemen, Herr Shikat was trajning for a battle with Pat O'Shocker, | or Joe Grim or Tommy Loughran. Who | he was going to meet does not make much difference, but that he was train- | ing in a way entirely new to those ob- | servers does. | Yessir, Mr. Shikat will tell you to this day that he went back to the monkey to attain his wrestling agllity. When he stalks around the gym upon all fours Dick is imitating a monkey. For the monk, Shikat explains, is about &s sup- ple and agile as any denizen of the zoo. But Mr. Shikat did not explain in thosz days. His English stopped and started at “Yah.” Signor Ray Fabiani, the fiddling promoter of Philly, at- tended to all of that. And Mons. Fabby Jet it be known that the big German had studied the actions of monkeys for | years in an effort to copy their agility, speed and arm power. Which would have sounded like much melarkey and soothing sirup had not Dick's only claim to fame at that time was that he had fought in the battle of Jutland as a German sailor. And it sort of baffled your boy friend to find Mi. Shikat tearing around the Young Men's Hebrew Associa- tion indoor track at Philadelphia upon his hands and feet. Sailors never do that. Just what the good sailor was doing Ride fast and hit hard! and still be successful. | TOPEKA, Kens- Lee Wyckoffs 225, The maximum of 110 will be scratch Columbus, Ohio, defested Alan Enstace, | and bowlers whose league averages run 221, Wakeficld, Kans.,, two falls out of | under that will be given two-thirds. three. | These prizes are expected to main- STOCKTCN, Calif.—Ted Cox, 220, tain the interest of the bowlers who Denver, defeatcd Ad Terman, 210, New | get off to poor starts. The entry fee York, by default after each had won a | is $5, plus the cost of games. With at fall. ' Bill Beth, 225, Michigan, and Bill | least 200 bowlers expected to compete, Thornton, 225, Denver, wrestled 45 min- | the event may prove to be one of the utes to & draw without & fall, held. st ever the Nuremburg shin-breaker actually | gone through with the stunts day after day and still does, according to the boys who belicve in Santa Claus and wrestling. Dick, it was explained, spent much | Ger- of his early wrestling days near like 2 man forest, where he would leap, { | HABANELLO BUT SMOKE YOUR CIGARS MILD |DE ANGELD WINS OVER LANDERS IN FORT GO | Washington Boy Gets Decision | That Nets Even Break With | Foe This Season. Frankie De Angelo, District bantam- weight boxer, and Safior Billy Landers of Norfolk are even, 5o far as their activi- tles this season at For: Washington are concerned, following the Washington | boy’s 10-round victory over the South- | erner last night in the main bout at the reservation. De Angelo put on a whirlwind finish to conquer Landers. At the end of the | sixth round it appeared as if the District | battler was in for a sound walloping. At | the start of the seventh. however, De | Angelo rallied with a will and went on to gain a clear-cut decision. his supe- riority becoming more marked in the closing minutes. De Angelo and Landers now have met three times, with each winning once and one bout being drawn. Henry Irving, D. C. light heavy, who had scored knockouts in six of his seven fights until last night, proved easy for Joe Finazzo of Baltimore in _the | eight - round semi - final. Billy Hoe, Mohawk Club lightweight, was given | the nod over the veteran Jack Cody of | Fort Myer. Willie Essinger, Washington | lightweight, won over Marino Marini of Uniontown, Pa. Frank Vance, D. C. | 175-pounder, just missed knocking out | Harry Messick of Baltimore, and Fred | Shaffer, Washington middleweight, won | over Soldier Smith of Fort Myer. PLAN BASE BALL LOOP | ek | Managers of Colored Professional| Nines Will Meet Here Saturday. Managers of colored professional base | ball teams in several Eastern cities are | to meet at the Twelfth Street Y. M. C. A. Saturday afternoon with & view to organizing a league. Baltimore, Cumberland, New York, | Norfolk, Newark, Schenectady, Pitts- | burgh and Washington are prospective teams. S Sge S DERRINGER IS INJURED. FULTON, Mo., October 13 (#).—Paul | Derringer, pitcher of the St. Louis Ca | dinals, was injured in a motor car col- |lision yesterday. He suffered a severe |bruise on the nose, a cut over the left eye and other injuries. | | their inability to win as | they encountered during the closing WALTER IS SIGNED FOR 1932 CAMPAIGN Griff’s Action Refutes Rumors Nationals Are to Have New Leader. BY DENMAN THOMPSON, Sports Fditor, The Star. ALTER PERRY -YOHN—1 SON, manager of the| Washington ball club| since the start of the 1929 campaign, again will super- vise the activities of the Nationals afield next season. Announcement to this effect to- | day was forthcoming from Presi- dent Clark Griffith, following a conference with his pilot at lo-| cal headquarters. The agreement | reached was for a period of one| year and the contract will be formally executed as soon as it is drawn up. Pursuant to the cus- tom of the club no information as to the amount of salary involved was given out. Griffith's statement, made immedi- ately after he had gone into a huddle with his team le2der in his office at the ball park this morning, sets at rest re- ports current for some time to the effect | that Johnson would nct be on the job | when the annual trek southward for | Spring training gets under way next | February. Many followers of the team. unduly impressed with differences which have cropped up from time to time between the pilot and & few of his players, who conceived the idea that Johnson might be regarded as being deficient in dis- ciplinarian qualities. Rows Were Overstressed. Two run-ins with Fred Marberry, veteran right-hand moundsman of the | Nationals, one at the conditioning base | in Biloxi, Miss, last Spring and an- other during the progress of a game | here near the close of the recent cam- paign, assumed unwarranted impor- tance in the minds of some of the fans, who also made too much of a couple of flare-ups occurring between some of the players around midseason. Oon occasion of both of his brainstorms Marberry promptly and firmly was dealth with and the wrangling referred to between the athletes, in which Johnson was not involved, simply were conditions only to be expected among any group of high-strung players disappointed over requently as they had hoped. Virtual elimination of the Nationals as a pennant contender against the Athletics after the first six weeks or so of the recent campaign and the slump days which resulted in them being beaten out by the Yankees for the run- ner-up berth, taken in conjunction with the lack of harmony referred to, were regarded by some as sealing the fate of Johnson, but a preponderance of_ the team's supporters were convinced Bar- ney had done as well as could be ex- pected under the circumstances and his retention at the helm proves the club owner concurs. Johnson, after 20 years service as & pitcher in a Washington uniform, in which he set a number of records, some of which still stand, and became some- thing of a national idol, received his managerial baptism with the Newark club of the Internitional League in | 1928. Harrassed by illness that neces- sitated his absence from the bench much of the time, Walter failed to make an impressive showing that sea- son. ‘Walter Has Made Good. Signed to a three-year contract as manager of the Nationals the following | season, and in greatly improved health, | Johnson immediately demonstrated the | extent to which he had profited inl learning the intricacies of leadership Stays in Saddle TO BOSS GRIFFS AGAIN NEXT YEAR. WALTER JOHNSON. during his novitiate by landing the Nationals second to the A's in 1929, Tepeating as runner-up last season and finishing ahead of five rival outfits this year. Failure of his pitchers to function up to the standard expected of them, to- gether with the lack of the extra-base angle to the otherwise adequate hitting, caused the Nationals to fall short of titie class this year. With the Cardinals having conclusively proved the Mack= men are not invincible and with steps being taken to supply the indicated deficiences of the Nationals they may be expected to prove a stout contender in the 1932 jousting under the direction of Johnson, who will have the hearty ;upporz of a great majority of Capital ans. 20 YEARS AGO THE STAR. 'EORGETOWN UNIVERSITY'S foot ball team will get its first hard test of the season tomor- row when it engages the strong Car- lisle Indians, coached by Glenn Warner and featuring the famed Jim Thorpe at right halfback. It is the first big grid game here of the campaign. Coach Fred Neilsen refuses to predict the outcome. but is confident the Blue and Gray will make a good showing. G. U. ex- pects to start this array: Barris- cello, left ‘end: Hart, left tackle; Dailey, left guard: Cunniff, center; Bryant, right guard: Wymard, right tackle; Hegarty, right end; Costello, quarterback; Wagner, left halfback; Fury, right halfback, and White, fullback. A. B. Leet, Columbia Country Club, established a new record yes- terday in the qualification round of the annual Bannockburn Golf Club Fall tourney with a gross score of 76. Dr. Lee L. Harban, also of Co- lumbia, had the previous record at 78. Dr. Harban finished second yes- terday with 80. A. S. Mattingly, Dr. Thomas Brown, Percy Hall and Eddie B. Eynon, jr., were other lead- ers. Other players included Morven Thompson. C. C. Van Leer, E. P. Brooks, Allen Lard, Ed Harban, W. L. Hillyer, O. H. Wood, G. F. Pree- man, J. E. Baines, J. W. Brawner, Dr. T. J. W. Brown, H. C Cham- berlain, E. S. Marlow, W. W. Keb- linger, G. P. James, A. Winter. P. E. Brengle, H. P. Clark, John C. David- son, H. E. Wilson, G. T. Worthing- ton, W. C. Prentiss, J. L. Warren, S. L. Heap, G. H. Chasmer, E. B. Calvert, L. D. Underwood, J. L. Mc- Cammon. D. K. Jackson. F. W. Col- lins, C. A. Watson, H. H. Ferguson, H. H. Allen, W. A. Knowles, D. H McAdams. J H. London, E. D. Ca- rusi, H. M. Hall, L. P. Thompson, B. Alvord, F. S." Appleman, T. W. McReynolds, J. C. Moore, J. C. Walker, T. P. Moran, T. C. Libbald, J. K. De Farges, J. H. Gordon. Oito Luebkert, J. E. Egan, J. M. Sterritt, W. C. De Ravenel, Frank Govern, 1. E. Shoemaker and A. C. Wells. be Fooled Measure Shoe Value by the number of Days Wear WL FLORSHEI M SHOES give you more months of wear, more foot-ease an d comfort, more style and good looks at less cost per year than any other shoe . . . that’s the real test of value. 39‘"'4310 *Open N Men’s Shops 14th at G 7th & K *3212 14th ights