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S POWER AND SPRI ARK TEAMS PLAY Real Strength of Irish Is| Unknown—Rentner Great Back for Wildcats. BY FRANCIE J. POWERS. HICAGO, November §.—A great machine at the out- set of the season, Notre Dame by now has achieved a perfection of play equaled by few teams in the history of foot ball. Behind almost perfect blpcking— that extends far down feld—of the first, second and third strinz lines, one Notre Dame back runs almost as well as another, and in results there seems to be no great difference between March- mont Schwartz, the famous star ard Frank Labourne, the sopho- more striving for his first atoms of fame. Pittsburgh, Carnegle Tech, Drake or Pennsylvania; thay are all ti:e same. No one can surmise the score Notre Dame might make if Heariley Anderson were willing tc sacrifice an opponent to the full fury of the COcrssacks for an entire game. Pennsylvania was a toam that came out of the East unbeaten and, in the minds of many, with a chance to lay the Ir'sh a close game. Penn may a good foot ball team. Those who &aw it against Notre Dame had little oppcrtunity to jusge. For it was broken oh the Irish spears and in full fligat before a quarter wes finished. Notre Dame should not bz the yardstick by which mortals are measured. Great Power in Line. In ccmparison with the national champions of 1929 and 1930, this year's “Notre Dame team has more great line- men and more backs with all-around skill. The powsr of the line recom- P ns-s the Inss of Orrides’s cunning 2nd Brill's klocking end opens roeds that are tha kin~s h'ghways of fost ball. And Hoffman, who succeeded B-rt Met>g:r at right guard, has gone far beyond the mighty midget. He has all the speed and ruthlessness of Meteger 2nd carries 50 pounds more weight than Bertram ever mustered. Hoffman is one of the great guards | of the year. Mention any guard assign- nt*nt and Hoffman will do it just a littl> bet'er than any possible rival. A irear ago Al Culver was a Yegular tackle on Rodkne's team, now he is a second- tringer. From end to end, through. the first, second and third lines there's not a leak or weakness. Behind that sort of PORTS, Steadiness Wins | | i WILLIFE. MACFARLANE. Some Side Lights On Kenwood Golf ICK ALTROCK and Wifty Cox con- U ited no small bit to the amuse- | ment of the gaileries who watched the Kenwood open yesterday. Nick, | playing as the private golf professional | of Clark Qriffith, holed a 28-foot putt on the fourteenth green and then the honor from two of the pros on the next tee. Cox, who has a habit of clowning over the golf course, amused the gal-| leries on_every green with his funny | sallics. His ball hit short of the water | hazard on the twelfth hole, ran.along the concrete coping and ended just off | the green. Had Tommy Armour had the same break a few moments lal!‘ri he might have saved three strokes. Clarence Clark, the New Jersey pro- | fessional match play champion, refused | to take the unplayable ball penalty when his ball lay in the rocks below | the eleventh tee and claimed a 4 on| the hole, when his real score was 6. | The Marines did a fine job of han- dling the crowds around the putting greens and were particularly useful in directing the big gallery which fal-| lowed Armour, Turnesa and Farrell | Temmy, playing in a red striped tam-o- shanter, was a big favorite with the galleries. Gene Sarazen announced that he and John_Farrell are going on a tour of the Orient after the big events on the Pacific Coast. Farrell is to be mar- ried in New York on November 24. GEORGETOWN CHURCH | BASKETERS ORGANIZE - THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., MONDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1931. How Prizes Went In Kenwood Golf TOUGH LINKS EASY FOR MAGFARLANE |Scot's 214 Over Strange Fi: . Willle Macfarlane Sal D1 “Buono Kenwood Course Beats Armour 6 Strokes. | BY W. R. McCALLUM. | NCE again it has been|for Macfarlane, and when the score\is | i | analysis his O proved that & asmooth-|disiected down to B Sht sntives BB swinging golfer gent, who| John r"?;," and Joe 'Efl\;u flpt;}:‘:: 1 | far outside the money, Neither of | knows his drives, pitchea.uu" was able to get going during the | chip shots and putts, can whack | tournament. his way arounid any golf course| The amateurs were led by Ernie Cald- 1 N | well, while Billy Howell, the Middle At- within halling distance of par fig- | jantic champnion, finished far down the ures, even though he never before gst, after taking a 10 on the thirteenth 1 has seen the layout. | "White final returns on the tourna- Willle MacFarlane, the Scot from | ment have not been completed, it is | oak Ridge, Tuckahoe, N. Y. who won believed the Kenwood Club more than the National Open Championship back | cleared expenses on the money taken in 1926 after a play-off with Bobby in by sale of tickets for the two tour- Jones, knows his golf so well that with- | nament days. The club deserves great | out even so much as a look at the course | credit for the efficlent manner in of the Kenwood Golf and Country Club | which the tourney was handled. The prior to the tournament which ended | arrangements for the event, carefully yesterday, he stepped out and played mapped in advance, worked without & three rounds in four strokes above par. | hitch, and the tournament, so far as MacFarlane thereby not only picked | the players and the galleries were con- up $700 in bona fide American currency, | cerned, was an_outstanding success. but he spread-eagled his fleld. The rest The prizes, in the form of checks of the bunch could have had another 18 | for the pros and silver bowls for the holes to play and they never would have | amateurs, were presented by Gen. John caught the smooth-swinging profes- | J. Pershing, general of the Armies of slonal from Westchester County. {the United States, who made & grace- To win the first National Capital| ful little speech in which he inter- Open championship at Kenwood Mac- | spersed much golf humor. Farlane played the tough layout in| Tommy Armour’s card of 68, which 72—170—72 for a total of 214, which is, Set a competitive record for the Ken- exactly what we picked as the winning | wood Course, follows: score before the tournament started. | Out par.... 4 Armour Six Strokes Back. (a3 3 {In par Bix :h‘nko? back of him, deadlocked | Armour for second place, were Tommy Armour, | scores £ b ho' JOVINIF Bkob eom ' DRLEIb AMHANED] et oics: 0 YMIEECAY by MAo- | di _Buono, another Italian-American golfer from the Bonnie Briar Club of | Larchmont, N. Y., both tied at 220, | out—Par— 4 Ot.e shot back of this pair came Tom | nracFarlane. .4 Kerrigan of Siwanoy, N. Y., who was|In_par— 8 winning tournaments when most of the | MacFarlane..3 4 4 youngsters were learning how fo cad- d,le: Paul Rlunyln. the hard-working lit- | Afternoon Round. tle metropolitan P. G. A. champion, and | Out— | Wifly Cox of Dyker Beach, Brcok.yn,};’lfl“pflfllm“ 55444443437 N. Y., who is known around New York | In— " as “the common people's pro” because | MacFarlane..3 4 4 5 3 5 3 3 5—35—72] his course is a public fee affair. | It will be scen that the last nine was | This trio was deadlocked at 221, and | kind to MacFarlane, who played it split fourth, fifth and sixth money, | yesterday in a total of two better than while Gene Sarazen shoved his stubby | par. Armour played it in 35 and 41 for little Italian nose into seventh rlace.|a total of four over-par and six above The next spot went to Frank Cunning- | MacFarlane’s total, which is exactly the ham, the little sorrel-thatched Burning | margin between his score and that of Tree assistant pro, who led the field | MacFarlane. | for the opening round with a card of! 70, took 79 for the second round and then steadled down to shoot a 74 and collect eighth money. Cunningham was 444 433 455 4556 4 3 5 5 e HE WAS DRUNK WHEN HE STOLE TH CAR. YuH CAN'T BLAME HiM FER THAT \F T SENSE A KEPTHIS PLANTIFF HAD ANy WHAT IF TH DEFENDANT WAS DRUNK WHEN HE DROVE TH CAR UP ON T SIDE WALK? TH' PLAINTIFF HAD NO p\| BUSINESS BEIN THERE ; HE D\ -TaT Time OF NIGHT. €9ES OPEN FOR DRUNKEN DRIVERS. HE WAS LUCKY TO GET OFF HE SERvES oN — -y — HE DESERVED ALL HE GOT. \ DON'T LiKE TH 'GUY'S EADY FOR BASKET BALL the only golfer from the Midatlantic area to collect a slice of dough, al- though Ernie Caldwell, the Hillendale amateur from Baltimore, led the stmon pure brigade with a total far outside MISS WETHERED TO WED | R British Golf Champion Betrothed Talented S8quad Will Turn Out at to Maj. C. H. Hutchinson. | Mount Rainier High. LONDON, November 9 (#).—The en- | a wall any good back can run and the Six Teams Open Play for Title Next Irish backs do. Notre Dame scored seven touchdowns against Pennsylvania and seven different men were the | authors. A year ago the forward pass was not a major weapon' in Notre Dame's scoring plays. Now Notre Dame | uses the air frequently and with ef- fect. Anderson's teami not ohly is pow- crful, but versatile. i Penn Never Had Chance. 1 Pennsylvania was at_an obvious dis- | advantage with Cngt. Paul mgm. its | fetar end, out of the game. - But one an could not have altered the out- ‘come. Ol offensively and defensively, Penn ntver had a chance Carl Perina fought valiantly, as did Robinson at center; 2 men against 35 ‘Pennsylvania's EE operated 100 slowly, Spinners were crushied before the ball carrier reached the line of serimmage. Reverses were hurled for losses and _tackle plavs smashed to splinters. Pennsylvania made only 30 nn’;e l;om scrimmage :hzd th its best avenue, was not filled with Koskys, Kurths, Hoffmans and . Still Penn may not lose another game this season for it meets no other foe comparable with Notre Dame. While Notre Dame was sacking Pennsylvania, Northwestern was giving l its followers an mgsérmon of thle ::lfl:- | ing spirit possessed by every real cham- p:gn No front runners, those Wildcats: | t-ailing, 14 to 0, before the first period | v'a5 finished, Northwestern fought back 15 teore 32 points against a Minnesota t-am that was far better than ever an- tictpated Rentner Flaming Halfback. Ernest Rentner, the Wildcats’ flaming talfback, was the man who drove | Northwestern to victory. Unable uoL pass because of a broken thumb that | was incased in a drum splint, Rentner still could carry the ball. His 95-yard return of the kick-off for & touchdown, to open the third period, and 70-yard scoring dash after catching a punt, in the fourth quarter, were two of greatest runs of the season. When Rentner left the game, late in | the final period, Northwestern and | Minnesota followers alike arose to give him the most thunderous ovation that has echoed across the midlands since Harold Grange made his last collegiate | Tun Piaying as sensationally as Rentner | was Clarence Munn, the Gophers’ cap- | tein and right guard. He blocked pow- | erfully for Manders and Somers when the Gophers were on their way to score; he punted and passed and carried the| ball and recovered Olson's fumble that paved the way for a touchdown. On defense he was just as heroic. Michigan completed only two out of 11 forward passes against Indiana, but both went for touchdowns. as the Wol- verines rolled up the largest score ever made against a conference foe in the new Ann Arbor bowl. Bob Zuppke almost staged his upset when Illinois held Wisconsin to a point victory. Ledbetter Backs Chicago. Just when Chicago was cheering for its first victory of the season against 2 major opponent a young fellow named Ledbetter started driving from full- back and his charges gave Arkansas two touchdowas and a tie with the Maroons. Ohio States three touch- | downs against Navy were all made by ends; one a forward pass, one on a blocked kick and the other on an in- tercepted pass. The Buckeyes, led by Carl Kramer, were superior to the Satlors, but could not make their run- ning game score. Nebraska's superiority over Iowa was greater than its single touchdown in- dicates, but the Hawkeyes put up a great battle and are showing an im- proved defense from week to week. Purdue slaughtered Centenary, that came forth to annihilate the Boller- makers. HAS “ATHLETICS FOR ALL” Facilities for 2,500 Have Been Pro- vided at Columbia. Facllities for 2,500 athletes have been provided this year at Columbia Uni- versity, where a new regime has set a goal of “athletics for all.” Dr. Edward 8. Elliot, director of ath- letics, has outlined a program that re- qu! the tion of every able d ireshman and sophomore. i ! S COWBELL AS GRID EMBLEM. A historic ¢ rl " is_the :lmléllen of College-University of Akron foot ball contest, Saturday—AQuints Are. Beek- ing Games. Georgetown Church _ Intermediate | Basket Ball League for teams of boys from 12 to 16% years has been or- | ganized. League play will start next Saturday night, with all six teams pa.ruclnltlxfl. Action will begin at 7 o'clock. games will be played in Peck Memorial Chapel gym. es Peck Me- In the opening gam morial Chapel will meet Bt. John's Episcopal at 7 o'clock, Georgetown Lutherans and West Washington Bap- tist will face at 8 o'clock &nd Congress Street M. P, will engage Georgetown Presbyterian at 9 o'clock. Wilson Avenue Baptist basketers of Colmar Manor, Md., have reorganised and are after games with 130-pound quints. Practice tiits for any night this we*k are sought. uam‘er Hudg- ins is booking at ttaville 652. Bethesda, Md, Fire Department’s unlimited class basket ball team is c games through Business Man- P iy Bariey at Bradiey. 661 the_money. The story of the winning of the! tournament 1s compressed into & sizaling | last nine holes collected by MacFarlane. | who was Old Man Steadiness himself | over the firal stretch, and tne bad golf | of Tommy Armour, who, by shooting & new course record of 68 in the second | round, had pulled himself up to within striking distance of the leader and then had picked up four strokes to become level vith MacFarlane with nine holes €. gagement of Joyce Wethered, noted | British woman golfer, to Maj. C. H. Hutchinson, also a golf star, was an- nounced_today. ’ Miss Wethered is 30, her flance is 54. He reached the final round in the amateur champlonship play in 1909. Frank Cunningham Blows. At the end of the second round the layout was like this: M. Cunningham had blown withga 79 for a total. of 149, MacFarlané had Mdded a 70'to his 72 of the first round and was-lead- ing, with 142. Eddie Dudley, the West- ern open champion, had shot a 71 to ease himself into a ti¢ for third place at 146 with Tommy Armour, who, after an opening round of '3, shot the works to score a 68 for a total of 146. Eddic Williams and Paul Runyan were tied at 148 and Sarasen, k Cunning- ham and Di Buono were bracketed at 149. The tournament lay between these players. 3 lane, who resembles & peda- gogue and plays with the delonair grace of a college kid, went out eafly ing ager bgtween 7 and 8:30 pm. Fendall Alexander is coaching. Practice for De Molay tossers will be held this afternoon at 2:30 o'clock in the Laurel, Md., National Guard Armory. Al candidates will be wel- comed. BIKE TEVAfiglNVTIE Italian-American and French Pairs Bet Pace in Chicago Race. | CHICAGO, November 9 (#)—Reggle McNamara and Learco- Guerrs, &e Ttalian-American team, were tled for first place with Alfred Letourner and Marcel Guimbretiere, the French team, in Chicago's twenty-sixth international six-day bicycle race here today. Seventy-five laps were gained in the first night and early morning of rac- ing. McNamara celebrated his 44th birthday anniversary with the start of last night's race and it alto marked the start of his seventy-third six-day grind. Trailing the field by two laps was the strong Italian-Belglan combination of Franco Georgetti and Gerard De- baets, while three laps: back were: Cecil Walker and Harris Horder, Bobby Walthour and Norman Hill, Frank Deulberg and Bill Grimm. MISSES NURMI MARK Argentine Runner Beats Ruro- peans, However, in Hour Grind. KOSICE, Czechoslovakia, November 9 (M) —Jose Zabala, star Argentine dis- tance runner, falled yesterday in an attempt to beat Paavo Nurmi's one- hour running record of 19,210 meters, but casily outdistanced a field of & hait dozen European runners. After covering 18,600 meters in an hour’s running over a heavy track, Za- | bala was too exhausted to continue his attempt to break the record for 20,000 meters. [SPITTER HOLDS HIM BACK | Leading Coast Pitcher | Is Barred From Majors. | Frank Shellenback led the coast | league pitchers with 27 wins and 7 | losses, but cannot be promoted to the )l:lzlleaxues because he is a spit ball urler. League TROUSERS To Match Your Odd Coats EISEMAN'’S, 7th & F PIMLICO RACES November 2 to 14, Inc. First Race 1:15 p.m. Admission $1.50 W, B, ana 9 Pt RE o nqrn| the afternoon and played the firs§ nine | of the last round in 37. Five holes be- hind him came Tommy Armour, plitting lie an inspired man and gettifig out in 33 strokes to completely erase Mac- Farlane's lead, while Di Buono, almost unattended by the gallery, also almost caught MacFarlane. | But the tall Willie set too bligtering a pace over that last nine holés for | Armour and Di Buono to matc¢h, while |in the meantime Ed Dudley blew him- | self right out of the tournament with | ghastly 8 on the par 4 ninth hole, | where he wasted three shots in traps. MacFarlane picked up three birdies | in the first seven holes of that last nine and with a 5 on the eighteenth, fin- | ished with a 385 for a 72 and a total of 214. Tommy Armour, who was kept informed of ‘the progress of events by a group of friends, knocked his initial tee shot out of bounds at the tenth and took & 5 on this par 3 affair, where MacFarlane had scored a par 3a few minutes before. Twelfth Ends Armour. That_hole won_the tournament for,| | the tall Willle. But the real end of | the Armour hopes came on the long twelfth, where Tommy's No. 3 iron shot missed carrying tae water hazard in front of the green by & bare foot and instead of a putt for a 3 and a probable 4, he carded a 7 on the hole. | He added a buszerd 6 on the long thir- | | teenth and after that, knowing he was | out of a chance to win first money, he | | settled down to a grim struggle for second place. A birdie 3 went down at the four-| teenth, and he got 4s at the fif- teenth and sixteenth. But he was trapped at the short seventeenth and | took a 4, one over par, and came to the last_hole neem;lz s 4 to tle with Di| Buono. He put his second shot in & trap | at the edge of the green, and putted the ball out to within 2 feet of the hole, sinking ‘he putt that meant a split. of | second and third money. Di Buono had | finished with a last-round card of 71 a | few moments before and Tommy had | that putt to split. | | " That blazing last nine, where he| | picked up birdies on the twelfth, four- | | teenth and sixteenth holes, and twice | | went, over par, had won the tournament | FREE WHEELING INSTALLED §20.50 COMPLE’ L.S. JULLIEN, Inc. 1443 P St. NW. North 8076 Colder \Weather Comingl Use PURITAN ANTI.FREEZE SEALED IN MOIJS MOUNT RAINIER, Md., November 9. — Basket ball practice at Mount Rainfer High School will start next Monday, it has been announced by Coach Perry Wilkinson. With all mem- bers of last season’s n | | g;‘mgtecu for a successful campaiga “ei SPORTS. UH - | THINK YOoU ARE QUITE RIGHT. (T wWAS STUPID OF ME NOT To S€€ 11 YourR wAY INTHE FIRST PLACE. ILL NVOTE NOT GUILTY K 11 "lm' I lU‘”“ School among teams representing vari- olis rooms. One logs eliminates a team. | ilkinson now is arranging a sched- | Room 14 defeated Poom 12 in the only ule and is seeking games Wwith high match that has been played. The schools of Washington and vicinity, in tourney is scheduled to end this week. either the senior or junior class. He | may be reached by telephone at Hyatts- | ville 46-M after school houts or by ad- | dressing him at the school. | Mount Rainier will fight it out for the Prince Georges County champion- ship with Hyattsville High. | plernd |. An intra-mural soccer tournament PAY HIGH FOR ROOKIE Stanley Hack, Sacramento's the Cubs. | star | third baseman, will get a tryout with, TECH FACES SEFAP INEASTERN LEVEN lSize of Score Only Question in Game Thursday—Cen- tral-Western Meet. Y Thursday evening Tech High's foot ball eleven probably will have only the lowly Business team between it afd its fourth ctraight undisputed public high school title. The Gray meets Eastern Thursday | In Central Stadium at 3:30 o'clock, the game having been postponed from | Tuesday because of the death of H. | Dale Davis, assistant prineipal of Tech | High School. It appears that the only | question is the size of the score by which Tech will win. McKinley last year walloped the Lincoln Parkers, 31 to 6. | Tech will meet Business, again the | door mat of the series, in the final game of the set a week from tomorrow, with the proceeds going for relief of the District unemplsyed. { In the other public high game this | week Central and Western will clash Friday in the lone remaining match of the serles expected to produce interest- | ing competition. Gonzaga and St. John's, old rivals, | will face Friday in the Gonzaga Stadium |in another game of more than usual interest. ENTRAL and Western seldom fail to put on a great fight. This r Western, th‘a recently has g:e-n strengthened y the addition of a | group of seasoned performers, figures it has a great ciince to conquer Central, which has been shorn of several main- stays, for the first time since 1926. That year Western was a 6-0 victor. Central has won since, each year after a bitter struggle. In 1927 the score was 13-7, in 1928, 7-6; in 1929, 6-0, and last season it was 14-7. IONZAGA s visioning sweet re- venge for the 15-0 defeat handed it last seascn by St. John's. The Pur- ple was handicapped then by lack of seasoned material. This season Gon- n goir g great guns, having e game, while the Kaydets have rot becn so imoressive ar a year ago. St. John's has been without seve eral mainstays who have failed in their studies. Emerscn is to figure in two of the cthes games this week involving scho- lastic elevens of the District ares. The P Btreeters will face George Wasking- ton freshmen Wednesday at Griffith Stadium and will travel to Wiillams- burg Saturday to meet the Willlam and | Mary yearlirgs In cther engagements Georgétown Prep will ccme to grips with Loyola High Friday at Georgetown Prep and ‘Budameu and St. Albans will face Sat- | urday. PREP MIDGETS SCORE. | _ Georgetown Prep Midgets conquesed The Cubs paid $50,000 and will later Sacred Heart Midgets, 21 to 19, yes- at hand, has been started at Mount Rainiet High dcliver & player. terday on the Garreit FPark gridiron. Friendly to the Teeth Just ask any Old Gold smoker! TURE- p&i PROCF CELLOPHANE smoke pure-tobacco OLD GOLDS “What's become of those ‘smoke-stains’ on your teeth?” a dentist asked one of his regular patients. “Have you cut down on your smoking?" “Guess again!” was the reply. “I've simply changed to OLD GOLD Ciga- rettes.” Many smokers tell us that O. Gs. are friendly both to the teeth and hands. That's because it's a pure-tobacco ciga- rette. .Free of those oily, added flavor- ings that burn into staining fumes. Convince yourself. Try OLD GOLDS for @ week. Not only will their better tobdc- cos win you; but your teeth and hands will show the benefit of the change. NOT A COUGH IN A CARLOAD €