Evening Star Newspaper, November 12, 1931, Page 43

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he o WITH SUNDAY MORNING EDITION ening Star. WASHINGTON, D. C., THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 193L : PAGE D—: Georgetown Primed for West Virginia : Whelan Likened to Gipp as Ball Toter STANLEY, SHIMMINS WIL START GAME Promoted Substitutes Give| Team Punting Strength, Missing All Year. BY H. C. BYRD. EORGETOWN is in better shape physically for it game with West Virginia Safurday than it has been | Pro Grid Eleven Planned for D. C. ASHINGTON will have a fran- chise in the National Profes- sional Foot Ball League, ac- cording to advices received here. Joe F. Carr of Columbus, Ohio, presi- dent of the league, is quoted as hav- ing announced that the franchise heid by the Philadelphia Yellow Jackets will be shifted here next year, with Sunday es to be played in Griffith Stadium. According to Carr, the Washing- wn“u-m ‘would be well backed finan- clally. 10 START MIXTURE for any other this year and stands | e far better chance to win than| at any time since it met Western| Maryland. And this statement is, made because Coach Tom Mills says that he honestly believes this to be the situation. | As a matter of fact, the Blue and | Gray coach is more encouraged over his team right now than at any other time since practice began in September. | One factor now present, which has| been sadly lacking, is good punting. Both Stanley and Shimmins can boot the ball and boot it well, and both ere ready to go at top speed. In previous games Georgetown's kicking has been little better than miserable, and a foot ball team can be at no greater disad- vantage than to be cutkicked by yards en_every exchange of punts. It is likely that both Stanley and Bhimmins will start Saturday, the first time they have got in the beginning of ® game together. On this pair Mills banked heavily at the beginning of the #eason, and that they have been on the side lines practically all Fall has been & sore disappointment. That they have been missed on the fleld goes without saying. Stanley was in the Bucknell | ame last week for a few minutes, his rst play of the year, and will be certain | to start against West Virginia. There | is a possibility that Bordeau may start | at full, which would keep Shimmins on the bench. However, present plans are | %o send in the latter. | other two positions in the back- | fleld are to be taken care of by | Leoni and King, the former at| quarter and the latter at left half. It 4s in the backfield that Mills now has teal reserve strength for the first time season, as he can place two sets of ball carriers on the fleld without | much difference between them. The line as it will go into Saturday's game is likely to be about the same as it has been in most of the contests 8o far. Hudson and Carolan are to be | on the ends, Dyer and Katilinus et/ tackles, Dubofski and Danner, guards, and Callahan, center. These men bave made up a strong forward wall since the season began, and there has been little wrong with their play at any time. And they ere not likely to be found wanting during the 60 minutcs of the game this week. “We are in beiter shape than at any previous time, this season n‘yd stand a good chance beat West Virginia,” is the way Mills Wkiefly sums up his view of the game y. “Naturally, I'm pleased to get my men back where they can do what I know they are capable of, and Saturday you will see a hard- fought game against a rugged West Virginia eleven, no matter how it turns out. But, as I said before, I believe we have a good chance to win, and I wouldn't say that if we had not been up and coming in the last few days.” Most foot ball followers here will be glad to see Georgetown beat West Vir- inja. The Blue and Gray has been raveling a rugged road and not with- out credit to itself, despite discouraging . It is said that all the world loves a lover, yet it is just as true that all the world loves a fighter, and dur- ing this season the Blue and Gray de- serves the respect of all for the game | way it has been making its fight. HIS West Virginia team Georgetown i to meet undoubtedly will prove tfoublesome in more ways than | one. Not only is it a rugged outfit, but | is pretty sure to be more or less tricky. | Earle Neale, former Virginia coach, is | noted for his development of ‘“sucker” plays, plays that for their success de- pend almost entirely on drawing the defense out of position, on tricking one | or more players. Down at Virginia one year, Washington and Lee was Neale's opponent, with supposedly a strong team. The chances seemed about even, t Neale, largely through tricks, won {; a big margin. Neale developed one great play he called his dance play, and while nearly all his opponents had a pretty fair idea of the play, about the only one of them that_ever stopped it was Virginia Military Institute. Neale is fairly sure to have two or three such plays on tap for Satyrday. Incidentally, Neale played on a West Virginia Wes- | Jeyan eleven that whipped Georgetown, back before the war. He was an end. Kellison, now head coach at Willlam and Mary, held down a job at tackle and Harry Stansbury, now director of athletics at West Virginia, was quarter- back on that same team. N the last five years, Georgetown and West Virginia have won two vic- tories each, and one game was a tle. ‘West Virginia's two victories were by scores of 13 to 10 and 14 to 7, while Georgetown's were by 25 to 0 and 12| to 0. Neither team scored in the other | game. West Virginia took the long end of the score last year, 14 to 7. but that was its first victory since 1926. Some of the strongest *cams in_this section of the foot ball world have been turned out by West Virginia. In the | Jast two years it has not been 5o near | the top as it was fcr several years fol- ( Jowing the war, but even so has been | strong enough to give its opponents tough battles. West Virginia usually | has a big line that combined with its weight more than average speed, while its backs generally are shifty as well as heavy. In other words, West Virginia nearly always presents an eleven well able to take care of itself in the best of competition. | ATHOLIC UNIVERSITY plays its game with St. Francis tmorrow night_at Clark Griffith Stadium at 8:15. The Brooklanders think they should chalk up another victory, but realize there is many a slip ‘twist cup and lip. One big encouragement to the local school is the return of Johnny Oliver to his position at quarterback. He was injured in the game with Du- Qquesne two weeks ag. and it was at first thought that he had a brcken an- However, the injury apparently y a bad bruise, which has healed rapidly. Oliver is mot only a good quarterback, but the best forwyard passer on "‘;,;3“‘" which meaps a deal in lern foot ball. for a real fight. the visiting eleven who last year was halfback on the Western Maryland College team. Brubaker is & good ground gainer, but not by any ‘means a star on defense. TIP FOR FISHERMEN. HARPERS FERRY. W. Va., Novem- ‘ber 12.—The Potomac and Shenandoah g Rivers were clear this morning. INGAMEWITH C. U West Virginia Eleven Will Include Seniors, Juniors and Sophomores. ORGANTOWN, W. Va., Novem- ber 12.—1If+ he wanted to Coach Neale could choose & starting line-up for his Moun- taineers against Georgetown Saturday, at Washington, almost entirely from the senior members of his squad. He also could use a predominantly sopho- more cleven. Either combination would be strong. However, he likely will nominate five juniors, four seniors and two sopohmores. Here is one possible line-up: Ends, Hamilton and Sortet; tackles, Lewis and Beall, guards, Brown and Anderson; center, C. White; backs, Doyle, Marker, Sebulsky and Dotson. Every man in this combination is a | letter man, or will be at the close of | this season, and only Sortet and An- derson are not seniors. Now to consider the young blood— mainly the sophomores: Ends, Karr and Sortet; tackles, Forte and Schweitzer; guards, Mazzei and Anderson; center, ~Wright; backs, Stone, Drobzck, Canich and Tovey. All but four of these are playing their first year of varsity foot ball, and every one of them has seen service during the But Neale believes he can find the strongest combination’ by mixing the new with the old, and he probably will use a few veterans, a few sopho- mores and more juniors than either. Sortet, Karr, Schweitzer, Schwartz- walder and Drobeck are certain to start, and all are juniors. Anderson and Covey are sure to start, and they are sophomores. Lewis and Doyle are sure to start, and they are seniors. A toss-up exists at the er jobs. Brown or Mazzel for one guard posi- tion and Sebulsky and Canich for right halfback. The seniors seem likely to get the call for the George- town game, however. CASEYS FACE AVIATORS Bolling Field Host at Basket Ball | Game Sunday. Knights of Columbus basketers and Bolling Fleld's court team will play Sunday at 2:30 oclock in a practice The “Casey” squad will drill tonight at 8 o'clockion its home court. | The Delaware & Hudson Coal Co.| tossers will hold a practice session in the Langley Junior High School gym tomorrow at 6:30 o'clock. Newark Is Sold To Yank Owner By the Associated Press. NEWARK, N. J, November 12.— Paul Block, owner of the Newark Bears base ball team of the Inter- national League, announced today he had sold the club to Col. Jacob Ruppert, owner of the New York | year. SITTING ON TOP OF THE WORLD. ALUMNI ViEwsS COACHES, THESE DAYS, ARE WALKING ARQUND ON A SEA OF TACKS, WITH A BAG OF EGGS (N THEIR HANDS... EvEN N | GRANDPAPS DAY A RINGER WOULD MAKE- THE MIS TAKE OF CoMiNGe ONTO THE FIELD WITH SIGNS QF HIS OccuPATION et g U GIVING Him AwAY FOOTBALLS POPULARITY 1S DUE TO BOXING'S AND WRESTLING'S UNPOPULARITY ~IT!S A MONEX'S= WORTH PEAL .. Must Save Fo ot Ball Again Faculties Fret, Fume as Frog Skins Replace Mole Skins. BY TOM HIS is a sort of check-up | period in the silver flask carnival business. It is the moment in the autumnal pastime when some one .| notices that attendance figures are soaring, gate receipts are ris- ing to confusing heights and that a coterie of big elevens is holding a dominant influence in the sport. Some one lifts a noodle from the crowd to ask what is going to be done about it. And then sits down to ponder that mnothing is going to be done about it, nothing can| be done about it, because why| snould something be done about it. To the din is added the grumbling of the alumni assoctation, as they call for | the head of the coach, and maybe, his | feet and his extra collar. ~School | papers demand that the game be Te- turned to the students and the students | demand to know what they will do with the game should they get it. Then the cash customer, whose dol- lar speaks, edges in with his yodel, and the bedlam is terrible to hear. delight to carnival. It frequently furnishes more good amusement than a burlesque show. And neither Eddie Cantor, Will Rogers nor Joe Cook can wisecrack well enough to compete with some of the funny explanations furnished by the griddle enthusiasts as they try to ex- plain foot ball's presence among the Yankees of the American League. big money shots of sports. Big Grid Tilts This Week End Local Teams. Tomorrow. ‘Teams. Catholic University vs. St. Prancis 1930 score. Place. Grifith Stadium, 8:15 p.m. Saturday. Georgetown vs. West Virginia G. U. Freshmen vs. West Md. Freshmen Griffith Stadium, Gallaudet vs. St. John's Griffith Stadium, 2:30 o'clock 7—14 12 o'clock 20- 6| Arnapolis East. Saturday. | Navy vs. Notre Dame Harvard vs. Holy Cross Pennsylvania vs. Georgla Tech Dartmouth vs, Cornell Fordham vs. New York U. Pittsburgh vs. Army Columbia vs. Brown Temple vs. Carnegie Tech Syracuse vs. Colgate Princeton vs. Washington-Lee Williams vs. Amherst Tufts vs Bowdoin Lafayette vs. Penn State Rutgers vs. Lehigh Bucknell vs Washington-Jefferson South. Georgia Vs. Tulane Tennessee vs. Vanderbilt Texas vs. Texas Christian Florida vs. South Carolina Auburn vs. Sewanee Southern Methodist vs. Baylor Virginia vs. V. P. L V. M. I ¥s. Kentucky Alabama vs. Clemson Rice vs. Texas A. & M. Oklahoma City vs. Haskell North Carolina vs. Davidson Duke vs. North Carolina State Mississippi 1s. Louisiana State U. Midwest. Northwestern vs. Indiana Purcue vs. Iowa Wisconsin vs. Ohio State | Ilinois vs. Chicago Michigan vs. Michigan State Detroit vs. Villanova Kansas State vs. Nebraska Missouri vs. Oklahoma Iowa State vs. Drake Washington U. vs. Kansas Minnesota vs. Cornell College (Iowa) Creighton vs. Grinnell 2-26 0-27 34- 7 19-13 7- 0 0- 6 13-32 7-36 | 16-13 Baltimore Stadium, 2 o'clock Cambridge Philadelphia Hanover New York Pittsburgh New York Philadelphia Syracuse Princeton Williamstown Medford Easton NewBrunswick Lewisburg Athens Knoxville Austin Tampa Birmingham Dallas Charlottesville Lexington, Ky. Montgomery Houston Oklahoma City Chapel Hill Durham Jackson Evanston Lafayette Madison Champaign Ann Arbor Detroit Manhattan Columbla Ames St. Louis Minneapolis Omaha (night) Far West, | California vs. Idaho Southern California vs. Montana Washington vs. Washington State Stanford vs. Nevada . Oregon vs. Oregon State Utah vs. Colorado 5'1' u‘exleo vs. Arizona olorado ies vs. Utah Aggles Denver va. College | in “Saturday's game against West Vire. DOERER: That $4,000.000 was taken from the| cash customers at last Saturday's grid | gates should excite neither proponents | nor opponents of the game. That's & lot of frog skins. But foot ball is a| great game, too. Where else could the customers have received more health- | ful amusement for their gilt? | Foot ball is up at the top of the sports money makers because it is giving the customer what he wants and the cus- | tomer is none too particular about the | matters which seem to concern the faculty. Yet the faculty, on the other hand, I'm quite sure, would not be so squeamish about this and that if the | public did not get too nosey and nolsy. | 1t is a peculiar situation. | T'S a great time in the pastime. Old | little Lambang College, suffering with bad plumbing in the dormi- tories and worn rugs in_ the prexy's tent, sees Boomtwaddle School of Min- ing build a new stadium, and yells. Lambang charges Boomtwaddle with everything but counterfeiting nickels. It points with scorn at Boomtwaddle's paid tackles, underpaid halfbacks and time-and-a-half ends. It asks that the great game of the boys be saved from professionalism. “It appears,” Lambang's perplexed and indignant prexy explains to the press, “that some schools are catering to the game rather than to the minds and morals of the youth of the land. This game must be saved for the boys and given back to the students.” But Lambang did not give the game back to the boys, rather it hired a | bigger and better coach and awakened | one morning to find a lot of strange foot ball players roaming the campus. From then on it was easy to keep the plumbing in good shape and the butld- ings painted yearly. When dear old Scoof School of En- gineering learns that Ruff Ruff College of Dentistry has secured a backfield man for whom it had failed to bid high enough, it demands to know why Carnegie Foundation does not come out of hiding and stop Ruff Ruff from kill- ing foot ball with professional actions. But before Carnegie Foundation has had time to get the late afternoon newspapers to learn of Ruff Ruff’s con- | temptible act, Scoof has hired 11| stevedores for its freshman team and | 9 truck drivers for its second-string | eleven. i But don't take that too seriously. The gridders today are adhering to a clearer, more honest code of ethics than your | grandpa’s little boys played under. Bet an ear on that. I'll grant that the players of today may be better business men, the tutors more astute in money matters and the faculty more apprecia- tive of a dollar, but scholastic rules and athletic agreements are respected, Come to think of it, have you ever sc(e;\r a (IE‘}IOW cfim for himself a wad of frog skins, who was not all wi somebody’s estimation? el R. TOM MILLS, coach at George- town University, cone i difficult task because hgulgrn“f{w; coach, says that Ben Gellis will not be ginia. Information that he would enter the game was published during the week. “Gellis is not in shape. His ankle has not improved sufficiently for me to put him in the game. It might stand up and it might not. T think too much of the player to endanger his future.” Nothing more than you would expect Mr. Mills to say. Certainly not after listening to what several smart coaches have to say of his methods and his ability. Mills has a mean task, but is handling it with gentlemanly dignity, courage and patience. Gellis' appearance in the line-up would mean much to Mills, I believe. And he needs much to bolster his hopes at a time when fate has tricked him with so many injuries. “Dutch” Bergman. Catholic Univer- sity foot bull coach, labels Tom Whelan the “greatest running back in the East.” That’s & lot of praise. And Tom's a lot of back, too, when you look up his marks. . And thmlmidlll: ‘;Jnhllny Oliver is a ar more important part of my team than I realized until he was o:l with an injury. He is a great passing back. probably one of the most valuable I have come across in a long while. He is 50 per cent of my offense.” Mr. Bergman can tell you in a few words and using a few names to ghow why Catholic University is a llanglw! in its class. But he will not forget to tell you —By TOM DOERER WELL,WeLL THE ANNUA - FIREWORKS Central and Western (;; Edge ' For Scrap, With Second Place In Gridiron Series at Stake ‘ BY EDWARD A. FULLER, JR. ENTRAL and Western are ex- pected to put on their usual battle to the death when they square off tcmorrow afternoon in Central Stadium at 3:30 o'clock in their annual public high title grid clash. The winner will clinch second place in the series with three wins and one loss. The teams now are tied with two vic- tories and one defeat each. Last year Central finished third and Western fourth in the race. Western followers figure the boys in red have a great chance to beat Central tomorrow for the first time since 1926, when Western was a 6-0 victor. The Georgetowners recently were bolstered by the return-to eligibility of a group of capable players, while Central has suf- fered through scholastic failures. True to tradition, though, it probably will be a struggle all the way. ‘While Central and Western are mix- ing it Gonzaga and St. John's will be going after each other in their vearly battle. The game will be played in the Eastern High Stadium as soon after 3 o'clock as it is possible to get it started. Gonzaga is expected to win and get back at St. John's for a 15-0 defeat the Kaydets handed the Purple last season. This year the Purple’s record is decidedly more impressive than that of St. John's. Gonzaga was handicap- ped in 1930 by lack of experienced players. Loyola High of Baltimore will in- vadeyGarretL Park tomorrow to do battle with Georgetown Prep. The Garrett Parkers have a green but fighting team. which has shown improvement lately and may offer the Baltimoreans a stout argument. Eastern and Tech were to meet in their postponed game this afternoon in Central Stadium at 3:30 o'clock. Me- Kinley was a heavy favorite to win and get a firmer hold on first place, which it already has virtually clinched. School's 75 and 95-pound Ioolfrizdl?{‘ teams traveled to Baltimore the other day and took lickings from McDonogh School elevens of their class. Landon's 95-pounders were drubbed, 0 to 32, but the 75-pound youngsters put up a lively fight, losing only 0 to 7. Incidentally, the 75-pound McDonogh eleven swamped the 75-pound Gilman School team recently, 108 to 0. ‘Landon started these players in_the 75-pound game: Carroll Marbury, John Sands, Joglln ‘Tom Vance, Hammond Bennett, Blackstone Smith, Carlos Ar- | "“Neville Hope, Paul Cunningham, g:’;\.ungo Segovia, John Lee and John Hull. Bennett, who weighs only 55 pounds, was the star of the game and layed well. s‘&“taemflg-pgund encounter Landon started John Talbot, Billy Marbury, is good only when go0d backfield gt o “Give me ‘only line is very good. ?lir backfield and line and I'll roll along,” he says. Then concludes: “No backfleld is good without a great line.” In other words, a player is only as good as his team. Billy Thorne, Hubert Leitner, Edward Tierney, Fendall Clagett, Tom Titus, Streit Cunningham, Sam Hope, Mackie Hulbert, Dan Doherty and Frank Dun- ham. Marbury and Cunningham played strongly. Headmaster P. L. Banfield and Thomas Sloane and Edward Water- house, other members of the faculty, are coaching the Landon gridders oth- er than those on the first squad. There also is a grou& of players weighing less than 50 pounds. HORNSBY TO GIVE WAY. Rogers Hornsby will step aside and give Herman, recruit from Louisville, a chance at second basing for the Cubs next year. Battles; i‘laming Gridiron Express By the Associated Press. LARKSBURG, W. Va., November 12—ClUff Battles, tall, fair- haired halfback sensation of the West Virginia Wesleyan foot ball team, who last season hung up a national record for long runs, went on a rampage here yesterday that swamped Salem College and sent sports writers and fans thumbing through record books. Battles carried the ball 463 yards before he was pulled out of the game near the end of the final quar- ter and he scored seven of his team'’s eight touchdowns. The final score was 51 to 6. Battles made 378 yards from scrim- mage and he added 85 yards on re- turned punts. Meanwhile, he was doing about ‘everything the rules show a halfback can do. last long. SI XES hup 1518-20 14th St. N.W. The world has never seen such bargains as are available today; and our showroom is bargain head- quarters. This situation won't mobile MOTT MOTORS, Inc. “We believe the Hupmebile te be the best car of its class in the werld” CARDINAL COACHES “SWEET” ONTOMMY Backfield Comet Has Made: Long Runs Against All Foes This Season. BY R. D. THOMAS. THE great George Gipp of| Notre Dame has been re- ferred to so often as the| acme of all to be desired in | a foot ball player that to mention,| him in the same breath with a halfback on an obscure team, who has never shown his stuff in big time, may seem unreasonable. But in this instance the speaker is Arthur J. Bergman, head coach at, Catholic University and the man who paved the way for many of Gipp’s long runs and himself lugged the oval with uncommon success. Bergman and two members of his staff who are ex-Notre Dame top- notchers and as youngsters saw the Gipper in all his almost legendary glory make bold to compare with him as a ball carrier one Thomas J. Whelan of the Cardinal eleven. Your foot ball coach ordinarily is careful not to heap praise on one of his own, and Bergman is not an ex- | ception in the case of Whelan. His appraisal of that worthy leaves the “Galloping Gothamite” far short of the | versatile Gipp, but not in the specialty of toting the oval over great distances. "‘Y!:s." said Bergman when queried | oa the subject, “Whelan is one of the greatest running bLack: I've seen, and quite as effective in a broken field, I believe, as Gipp. There, of course, the comparison stops; but this boy is just finding himself. He has come along remarkably, not only as a runner but as a blocker and tackler.” ‘Whelan has scored 10 touchdowns in six games this year, and nearly all with sensational runs. His gallops across the goal line have averaged 59.1 yards. A sprint now and then of such en- | sion is sufficient to make a campus idol, but Whelan has managed to get in one or more in every game, and some of them have been iital to victory. R instance, when Catholic Univer- sity defeated North Carolina State, 12-7, Whelan caugh Johnny Oliver and skip) 60 for one touchdown—the play gained a total of 83—and for the other six P‘glnn he intercepted a pass and ran 65. A week later he made 30 yards on fourth down for the touchdown that started the Cardinals on the way to an upset triumph over Duquesne, which has been a consistently tough er. He ran 76 from scrimmage to give C. U, the marker that turned the tide against' Manhattan shortly after the New Yorkers had been held on the 1-yard line. { ITH three passes taken from Oliver he traveled from deep in his own ter ry across the Boston College goal in the first two minutes of play, and if the Cardinals had owned the manpower his touchdown would have gained the day and C. U. at this time would have a clean slate. Eagle reserve ;téruh:gch won the game in the final riod. ‘Tomorrow night in Griffith Stadium Catholic University will meet St. Fran- cis of Loretto, Pa., and the Saints will be “laying” for Whelan. But all the Cardinal enemies since Tommy flashed against B. C. in the season’s opener have done that, and out at d any freshman will wager his Eugenie on Whelan to get away at least once tomoirow night. Olm hero is 20 years old, weighs 175 pounds and hails from New York City. He showed promise, but little more, as a sophomore last year until Bergman, serving his first campaign Brookland, took a fancy to Tom's man- ner of running. His ability to change direction in a flash at full speed caught the coach's eye, and Bergman, singling him out as a sterling prospect, “went to_work” on him. & Tom.turned out to be what coaches pray for. Hear what Bergman's aides say of him: oy Whcian is dog-grea elan e test run- ning back I've seen since the days of George Gipp. His blocking and tack- ling have picked up amazingly since the beginning of the present season. pace s rest, 3 noe as great, not greater, than that used by his present teacher, Dutch Bergman, who in his day was a past- master of that particular dodge. I ought to know. I used to try to tackle Dutch in Notre Dame scrimmages when he was a senior and I was a freshman.” “Tom test run- ning back I've seen in yn‘;“ He is on a par with left-halfbacks such as Chris Flanagan and Jack Elder. His tack- ling and blocking are far from mediocre and there is no halfback in the East who can better his change of pace and ‘cross. over.'” Eddie LaFond, freshman coach: “I believe Tom Whelan to be the greatest running back ever to enter Catholic University. Eddie Lynch, Ra Foley, Harvey and Bobby Deneault all had splendid ability and possessed qu: ities that made them outstanding, but none of them had the all-around class of Whelan. “Tom 1is big, fast and has a wonder- ful change of pace, which combined | with his elusive hips and a great love | for foot ball, makes him, in my opin- ion, the greatest back I've ever seen at Catholic University.” So come in today. A N'D EI GHTS Decatur 4341 Gridiron Results By the Associated Press. H by, 6. Mt. St. Mary. 33; Baltimore, 0. West Virginia Wesleyan, 51; Saiem, ¢ St. Vincent, 20; St. Francis (Loretto, Pa), 0. Concord (W. Va.) New River, 41; State, 0. All Coast Guard, 44: Seton Hall, 0. American Legion (Philadelphia), 14! Quantico Marines, 0. . SOUTH Murray (Ky.) Teachers, (Fla.), 0. Birmingham - Southern, Hill, 0. Howard, 6; Southern, 0. Millsaps, 19; Stetson, 7. 3Nevmen-y, 19; South Georgia Normal, 13. Tuscullum, 6, Milligan, 2. Union (Tenn.), 12; Louisiana Col- lege, 6. Catawby, 16; King, 0. Lambuth, 26; Freed-Hardeman, 0. MIDWEST. Central, 20; Penn (Iowa), 12. Adrian, 44; Assumption (Ont.), 0. North Dakota Reserves, 14; Moorhead Teachers, 0. Rio Grand, 27: Urbana, 13. Peru (Neb.) Teachers, 18; Chadron ‘Teachers, 6. Sioux Falls, 19; Eastern (8. D) 33; South 15; Miam} 6; Spring ‘Teachers, 2. ‘Wayne (Neb.) Dakota Mines, 0. SOUTHWEST. Wichita, 7; Southwestern (Kans), 6. Westminster (Mo.), 6; Tarkio, 0. Arkansas Tech, 0; Ouachita, 0. McPherson, 14; Ottawa, 6. Hendrix, 13; Arkansas College, 8. Monticello A. & M. 22; Jonesboro A &M, 6. Northwest Missouri Teachers, 17; Northeast Teachers, 0. ROCKY MOUNTAIN. Mt. St. Charles, 6;: Montana State, 0. ca'l’ondo Mines, 12; Colorado Teach~ ers, 0. Idaho (Sou. L State, 6. FAR WEST. U. C. L. A, 12; St. Mary's, 0. ‘Whittier, 21; Occidental, 0. Southern (Ore.) Teachers, 13; Chico State (Cal), 6. San Diego Marines, 13; San Diego State, 0. ‘Tempe (Ariz.) Teachers, 7; Fresno State, 0. ‘Willamette, 19; Linfleld, 6. College of the Pacific, 6; Sacramento Junior, 0. “Normal, Branch), Western e DAVIS IS PROMOTED IN NAVY BACKFIELD Gets Nod Over Denny for Notre Dame Game—XKirn, Tschirgi, Campbell to Start. ANNAPOLIS, Md., November 12— Navy's backfield Saturday Dame in Baltimore will of Davis, 3 K and Tschirgi, halves, i according ‘0 with the . “Nevy did not deserve to lose to Ohio State, and I think the boys awed at their HARLEY TO COACH PROS. CHICAGO, November 12 (P).— “Chic” Harley, Ohio State’s all-Amer« ica star of 12 years ago, has been signed to coach the Chicago Mills professional foot ball team. Excessive Choking Before You START Excessive choking in cold weather dilutes crankease oil, increases carbon, shortens the life of your motor. Beat win- ter at the start—switch to Betholine TODAY | | Starts IutaulyI“E Even in Coldest Weather BENZOL-BLEND

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