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Sports News [ 4 WITH SUNDAY MORNING: EDITION - @he Zoen * WASHINGTON, D. C o FRIDAY, ny Star, | NOVEMBER 20, 1931. Features and Classified PAGE D-—1 George Washington, Catholic U. and Maryland Appear in Big Grid Tilts Here e | BUTLER T0 0PPOSE COLONIALS TONIGHT Booz, Triple-Threat Leader, Makes Indiana Eleven an Even Bet. B ball invasion of the Nation's Capital, will meet the| strongest team to represent | George Washington in recent years in Griffith Stadium tonight in the final nocturnal game of | the season. It will start at 8 o'clock. Due to the outstanding ability | of Kenneth Booz, captain and { triple-threat halfback, Butler will enter the contes§ conceded an even chance to win it. George Washington's hope of vic rests in the fleetness of its backs combination of Carlin, Carter, Fenlor and Parrish, chosen for speed, will an- swer an opening whistle for the first time. - If the contest is close, it is the plan of Coach Jim Pixlee to keep this backfield intact throughout on the chance that one of the four will break loose for a decisive gain. diana, making its first foot OTH teams are hefty and rugged and defensively are rated even. The Bulldogs are coached by “Smil- | ing Harry” Bell, whose equability is said to be matched by his foot ball acumen. In its last game Butler lost to Mar- quette University, which is having a big | year, but went down fighting. The Colonials two weeks ago were beaten 7 to 0, by Towa, and haven't played since, & minor game last week having been canceled. | Pixlee has pointed his charges care- fully for tonight's clash, and for once will have his full manpower available Heretofore George Washington has been weakened by injuries. It will be the first game for Johnny Fenlon, a versa- | tile and highly capable back, in which | he'll be without a hindrance. N Thanksgiving day the Colonials will be hosts to probably the strongest eleven to appear here this season, North Dakota Universit; and on their showing tonight will de- pend in large measure the attractive- ness of the turkey day game. Foot ball was uppermost in their minds, but the B gridders, only five of whom have been east of the Alleghenies before, appeared thoroughly interested in sights of the Capital to- | day. They were introduced to Presi- dent Hoover by Senator Watson of Indiana. NS NL W e SCHUYLKILL IS SELECTED National Regatta and Olympic Try- | outs Dated July 1 and 2. WORCESTER, Mass., November 20 (/) —Henry Penn Burke, president of | the National Associaticn of Amateur | Oarsmen, has announced that the executive council has voted to hold the 1932 national regatta and Olympic tryouts on the Schuylkill River at Phil- adelphia July 1 and 2 of next year. EMERSON ENDS GRID SEASON AT STAUNTON| TTot Rated Powerful Emough to | Stop Cadets Tomorrow—Several ‘ Games Today. | Emerson’s foot ball team will closo | its season toMOITGW against Staunton Military Academy at Staunton, Va Emerson took a 38-0 walloping from | Staunton last vear and is expected to absorb another trimming tomOrTow. Emerson is not £o strong as last year. Staunton always Las & group of capable gridders. A battle between Central and Gon- vaga this afternoon at 3:30 o'clock Teadlined the last big day of the sea- | son for scholastic elevens of this area. It was Gonzaga's final game of the| campaign. | St. John's and Georgetown Prep, old | foes, were to face in Eastern High Stadium at 3:15 o'clock and Devitt and National Training School at 3:30 o'clock on the Training School's field in other cncounters on District gridirons. West- rn_was to meet Washington-Lee High at Ballston and St. Albans and Christ Church School, ancient rivals, were to face at Christ Church, Va, in games away St. John's, Netional Training School, western and St. Albans were to close their seasons. SCHEDLUE IS REVISED | BY CITY GRID LEAGUE New Fields Named for Two Games and One Tilt Is Postponed (; W:Ka‘n(lr B.l;rer— Line-Ups Tonight No. Butler. 61 3 68 G. W. No « Mulvey 14 Nielson 52 Stewart 3 74 69 72 66 Dayton, Raber, 59; Zimmerman, 64: Conrad, 67; Blinn, 70: Kealing, 75; Compton, 76: McManamon, 78; Reeve, 1 | Elser, 10 Mozingo, George Washington—Hoffman, Doyie, 16; Edmonds, 15; Hickma Matia, 27; Lanmun, 28; Asher, 30; M Donald, 31; 33; Payne, 34; Clark, 35; Conn, 36; Farrington, 40; Galloway, 41; Murray, 43; Wilson, 44; Hale, 45; Littleton, 46; Olverson, 47; Hendrickson, 48: "Kriemelmeyer, Chestnut, 50; Usnik, 51. Officials—Paul Magoffin (Michigan), referee; Bernard Eberts (Catholic U.), umpire: Ed. Towers (Columbia), head linesman. Record of Rivals. Butler, Geo. Washington. Franklin. 53 Shenendoah 0 Ohio U.. 43 Elon. .. 0 Ball State Louisville Dayton. Wabash. ... Marquette. . 21 101 162 G. U. PREP MIDGETS WIN Finish Grid Season With 12-to-0 Victory Over Episcopal. ALEXANDRIA, Va., November 20.— Georgetown Prep midget foot ball team downed Episcopal High School's mid- gets, 12 to 0, here yesterday. It was the winners' final game of the season, Line-ups and summary: G'town Prep (12). Position, Q,"‘;_“;hh° L. . Weller . Molina Keeler Kenuha Mayock . O Connell Scatuorschio oley . 13; 26 Eviscopal (0) Dillard 1o 3t : Gay! Carter . Washington : en Van' Bibber +. Bibles Center. . G Moore McCray EERRELE) LEELTR] Hannon' Score by perio Georgetown Prep 0 [ Episcopal ..... 0 0 012 % : 0—0 Touchdowns—O'Connell, Mayock. Referee ones. AR GAME AGAINST HEFT, CARDS' PLAN JMcVean May Make Debut as Passer Against Strong * Providence Team. ATHOLIC UNIVERSITY, | winner of six straight foot C ball victories, will meet Providence College at Brookland tomorrow at 2:30 o'clock in what sizes up as its Itoughest home assignment of the | year. Providence, too, is in a winning streak and, like Catholic Univer- |sity, has taken several prized | scalps. The New Englanders likely | will be on the long end of short |odds at game time. The Carcinals will trust to the bril- liant aerial game that has featured most of their performances, but feel that if this is stopped they still will have a victory threat in Tom Whelan, who has made 10 long runs for touch- ' HOW LOUIE, THE BARBER, SEES downs this season. OHNNY OLIVER, C. U’s expert passer, will have an understudy in that phase of the game in Quarter- back Charley McVean. McVean has shown to such advantage in recent games as a ball runner and kicker that Coach Arthur Bergman has decided to make him a triple threat. The field general has come along rapidly tossing the oval in workouts, and if Oliver is hurt tomorrow likely will be given op- portunity to try extensively his wing in regular combat. The Cards have | half a dozen skilled receivers. The C. U. captain tomorrow will be | Hugh Flynn, 6 foot 2 tackle, who | started his varsity career as a back. Flynn is the second junior appointed to | Cardinal leadership this year. ROVIDENCE will have a weight ad- vantage of more than 10 pounds to the man, and the Cardinals are | making no secret of their plan to over- come this by passing. Catholic University already has sur- passed pre-season cxpectations by far, and if it gets past Providence and then Loyola without defeat the Cards will have the finest season’s record in Brookland history. Six Local College Grid Teams Play This Week End, Last Time All Will See Action This Year BY H. C. BYRD. OR the last time this year all six local college foot ball teams have games the same week end. And in these six F contests is likely to be seen as good play as in any of the previ- ous struggles in which local elevens have played a part. Op- posing teams bid fair to be fully as strong as those that have their homes here, and it may be that more than one scalp will be car- ried to foreign territory. Beginning tonight with George Wash- ington's game with Butler at Clark Griffith Stadium at 8:15 o'clock, in all probability there will be some wild scrambling and brilliant efforts through- out every contest until the last whistle blows on the other five games tomorrow afternoon. Here's the complete program fo the week end: George sWashington vs. Butler at Clark Griffith Stadium tonight, 8:15 o'clock. Georgetown vs. Villanova at Villa- nova tOmOrTow. Catholic University vs. Providence at Brookland tomorrow, 2:30. Gallaudet vs. Shepherd at Kendall Green tomorrow, 2:30. American University vs. Randolph- Macon at Ashland tomorrow. Maryland vs. Washington and Lee at College Park tomorrow, 2:30. Much already has been written of these games—so much that there seems very little more to be said. However, the one thing in connection with them all tnat seems to be uppermost in the minds of those that are in close touch with foot ball conditions is that the local schools uniformly are up against | difficult opposition. GEORGE WASHINGTON has its best foot ball team in years, but that is not the same as making a state- ment that it has better than an even chance to beat Butler University, which itself usually turns out mighty credit- able teams. All that George Washing- ton people care to commit themselves on is that they expect to go on field at its best, both mentally and physically, and that at their best they Teel they have an even chance to win. But the Colonials make themselves dis- tinctly understood that unless they are at their best they may take a trimming. the | by Agreement. | o EORGETOWN'S feeling about the game with Villanova is not far from | Changes have been made in the Capi- that of George Washington about | tal City Foot Ball League schedule for Butler. The Blue and Gray knows that | Sunday. up at Villanova is a team strong enough | |game with Marines, they may get | away with the Shepherd eleven. A vic- tory for Gallaudet would not be a big surprise. Maryland always has found Wash- ington and Lee something of a jonah team, except last year. Washington and Lee brings here a team that has been making special preparation for Maryland for some time. ‘The pre-game outlook is that things are pretty evenly balanced, with pos- sibly Maryland seeming to have a little bit of an edge it may not have. HATEVER success it may have against Butler tonight, George | Washington has one play that seems to go against every team it meets. 1t is a short side play, with some fake and some strength, with the front back carrying the ball. From the stands the | play does not seem to carry any great | | amount of deception, but it nearly al- ways catches the defense unaware. Last year it was used with telling ef- | fect against Catholic University and | North Dakota, and this year it was | about the only G. W. play that gained much against Tuisa. N the Notre Dame system of play the left halfback is the gentleman depended on to make things most uncomfortable for the defense, and it position for C. U, will be the most watched man on the foot ball fleld this adternoon in the C. U.-Providence con- s | Whelan is a fine foot ball player, es- pecially in the matter of ground gain- |ing, and his reputation unquestionably | has gone to Providence to such an ex- | tent that Providence players will be {“on his neck” from start to finish. If Whelan goes well tomorrow, it will be | a true test of his greatness, because a | foot ball player who can play brilliantly under such stress, measures up to cverything that should be expected of | any ‘man. NE of the most amusing incidents | that have taken place in connec- ‘ tion with a local foot ball game in years was the aftermath of some- | thing that happened in a Washington | |and Lee-Maryland game six years ago | Maryland was leading, 3 to 0, until |the Iast two minutes of play. It had |the ball on Washington and Lee’s 20- | yard line and seemed certain of victory |over what really was a superior team. However, the Maryland quarterback | was_not content to win by 3 to 0, 50 he tried a forward pass, and the ball went right into the arms of Palmer, Washington and Lee back, who then | was among the two or three best bro- | ken-fleld runners in the South. When Palmer was downed he was on Mary- land’s 2-yard mark, or thereabouts, and | in two plays Washington and Lee had a touchdown and kicked goal to win, 7to 3. Later that Fall, when the Washing- is likely that Whelan, who plays that | & In the unlimited division Dixie Pigs and Grifith Blue Coals will clash at 2:30 o'clock at Seat Pleasant, and the Del Ray-Marion game has been post- poned by mutual agreement Palace and Brookland Boys' Club, in the 150-pound loop, will face at Silver spring at 2:30 oclock instead of at Seat Pleasant. McMillan Park will face St. Stephen’s at 1 oclock and St. Paul's will engage Mount Rainier at 3 o'clock at Taft Rec- reation Center Sunday in the Bur- roughs 125-pound league. Mohawk Preps downed Potomacs, 13 to 0, yesterday in a 125-pound class game at the Tidal Basin. Dasher and ‘Thorn scored the touchdowns. Teams seeking games include: Alcovas, 150 pounds; Clarendon 1078- J-1 after 7 p.m. Mereurys, 115 pounds; Bill Collins, Metropolitan 5056. Mercurys also want rs. Some teams listed to practice: Dixie Pigs, at Seat Pleasant, § o'clock tohight. Hyattsville Business Men's Associa- tion, at Hyattsville, tomorrow at 3 p.m. Ceéntennials, New York Avenue Play- ground, 7:30 o'clock tonight. Griffith Blue Coals Unlimiteds, Vir- ginia Avenue Playground, 7 o'clock to- morrow night. to give any of the schools in the East afternoon and consequently is not trying to fool itself one bit about the kind of game it is to play and the standard of play it must attain to win. Georgetown, like George Washington, is in excellent physical conditicn, and its victory over West Virginia has given it | the mental stimulus so essential to real success. UT at Catholic University is to play & team that earlier this year gave Holy Cross a struggle, and there are few better foot ball teams in the East than Holy Cross. Providence Col- lege is bringing here a big, fast line, be- hind which is a clever and heavy bac fleld, and the combination of these fac- tors usually is what makes a formidable eleven. Catholic University is hoping to get away with the long end of the score, but knows that it must go better than it has in almocst any of its previous | games in order to achieve that end. | (YALLAUDET and American Univer- sity probably will wind up with de- feats. That seems almost certain in the case of American University, un- |less a big upset takes place, as it will meet in Randolph-Macon one of the best small college outfits in the section. In the case of Gallaudet, this does not hold so true. If the Kendall Greeners have improved considerably since their ton and Lee Athletic Committee met | to award letters, a faculty member of the committee offered the suggestion that a letter be given to the Maryland quarterback. When the Maryland quarterback heard that, he wanted to shoot somebody. And probably this might not be written now if that quar- wg:ck were in any other place than a. | Tnsor!, who is guard for Washing- ton and Lee on offense and backs up the line on defense, against Princeton last week gave one of the grandest exhibitions of individual play that anybody would care to see. performance behind the line, especially tackling, was superb. It would indeed be difficult to find any man anywhere who could back up a line as well as Tilson did against the Tigers. Another rather unusual thing that Washington and Lee did against Princeton was to make just one for-| ward pass and on that score a touch- down, the only score of the game. Al Woods, Maryland halfback, will be on the fleld tomorrow to start his first game since he was “knocked for a loop” in the first quarter of the Kentucky game more than a month ago. Weods is Maryland's best bet on defense. In fact, there are not many better defensibld backs, “ANO AROUAD THE CORNER (S ONE THAT WILL NOY CE PIE / HE ouGHT To CATCH THIS ONE Tomw, Dosrer ’EM THIS WEEK. THATH PASS OUGHT TO TRIP THE GENERALS FROM WASHINGTOA AND LEE VILLANOVA WiLDCAT SAND 1Tl —By TOM DOERER AW, IT SNT AN EAGLES YEAR, THATS AL GOING TO BE A HAPPY DAY FOR. NAVY -~ Johnny Will Sit On Old Eli Fence AMBRIDGE, Mass., November 20. —A picture of John Harvard sitting on Yale's historic fence will greet the purchasers of the Yale game issue of the program of the Harvard Athletic Association. Attempts to keep the frontispiece a secret until game time failed when a truckload of programs en route from Andoyer to Cambridge met with an accident and the books spilled. The Harvard Athletic Association offices felt sure that Yale would not object to John Harvard sitting on the Eli's historic fence, despite the fact that John Harvard never cap- tained & Yale foot ball team. 17 BASKET BATTLES SLATED FOR EAGLES Game With Navy Is Highlight. Gallaudet Only Local School Booked. American University will play a 17- game basket ball schedule the coming season. Fifteen contests have been arranged and the other two soon will be announced. A high spot of the card is the an- nual game with Navy to be played at Annapolis January 20. Gallaudet, to be met in the A. U. ym February 13, is the only District institution listed. Villanova, to be engaged February 20 at Villanova, is a newcomer to the Eagles' card. This game will be played on a Northern trip. Early th January the Methodists will take a Southern jaunt. Maryland State Normal will be faced here December 9 in A. U.'s opener. The A. U. basket ball schedule December 9—Maryland State Normal. December _11—Hampden-Sidney. January 7—Randolph-Macon, at January 8—Virginia Medical College. Richmond 9—Hampden-Sidney, Hemp- alem Coliege. -St. John’s of Annapolis, 20—Navy at Annapolis, -Macon. at January Pebruary February ge. February 8. . at Annapolis. February 19—Penn Military Colleg: February Chester. 20—Villanova. at Villanova 26—Virginia Medical College. at February February SOCCERS CLASH"SUNDAY British United, Teams in Feature Engagement. British United and Newport News teams will clash Sunday afternoon on Monument Ficld No. 2 in the feature ame of the soccer program hereabout that day. It wul be in the United States Foot Ball Asso- ciation’s elimination cup tournament. Ed Kruse will reteree. In other encounters, Capital City League matches, Rosedale, which has been reinstated after a two-week sus- pension, will face Columbia Heights on Rosedale Field, Concord will meet Marl- boro at Marlboro in & game originally carded here and Rockville will engage Brandywine at Brandywine, Newport News Ashland. | third-round tilt | !L est sports prognostigator in | the District, took a little brushing on his alabaster chin last week. Yes, sir, that Loule went gun- ning for 14 selections, and when the smoke cleared he had picked but 9 of the lot, taking 5 notches on his beard. But don’t hold that against the head man. Remember he went shooting at nothing but unde- feated teams and a big race. The race was out when Mate scratched. Tennessee won for him, Tulane gave him another break, and when a handicapper |can come up with two shots like those Southern teams he is not ready for the grabber. Louje, the gabbing beard gardener, has a picking average of .671, 55 vic- tories and 27 losses, and few sap selec- | tions in the parcel. Louie hopped his | batting mark 53 points in the games playsd the week before last, but slipped five points when he went gunning for noth- ing but tough stuff. But that'’s the old bobber, hard and tough. This week the garrulous geek 1s feeling slick once more. He takes a squint at the local grid calendar and picks Villanova to take Georgetown. Beat that! The old chin scraper shoves his civic pride into his t pocket and figures Harry Stuhl- dreher’s wild cats to be feeling more than tough after the scoreless deadlock with Detroit last week. The Wildcat has been coming to the top with rapid strides, and it ought to reach its peak against Tom Mills’ boys. | “Georgetown shot its best West Virginia and its likely once more. t against to wobble George Washington University, warns Louie, is all set for the smart, burly Butler Bulldogs of Indianap- olis. Dr. Pixlee will rend a set of fleet backs to give the visitors a brush for their shinplasters, and when the votes are counted ought to be on top by two touchdowns. Catholic University, argues the head barber, is good enough to take over Providence while it is riding in its stride. And what a stride, Louie is telling the customers. Yessir, these Bergman boys have been riding with the engineer since they lost their “irst game of the season to Boston College. After that slip the boys took six in a row, and there is no reason why seven should not be tacked up. De Mello, Whelan, Sheary and Oliver form a set of backs powerful enough to keep the C. U. gridders riding success- fully into the Loyola game next ‘week. The old gabber likes Gallaudet. He thinks the Kendall Green lads ought to come up with a game against Shepherd College because | 1 | New Yale Plan Curbs Alumni Faculty to Control Eli Athletics Under Revised Association By the Assoclated Press. EW HAVEN, Conn., Novem- ber 20.—A plan for faculty control of Yale athletics, subordinating the power of alumni committees, has been an- nounced with revision of the Eli Athletic Association’s constitution. Reduction of the athletic associa- tion's board of control from 24 to 12 members and combination of the position of athletic director with that of chairman of the board are the principal c)u.nlem Constitution. The changes are viewed here as an outgrowth of efforts to develop intramural athletics under the resi- dential college plan, by which 11 undergraduate units, each in charge of a master, will be set up. The new board of control chair- man, who will have faculty status, will be “unequivocally at the head of the athletic organizal " Alumni representation on the board will be decreased from six to two members. advisory committees have taken an almost dominating part in the man- agement of major sports. Picks Most D. C. Teams to Win Louie, Though, Forgets Civic Pride to See G. U. Defeat. BY TOM DOERER: OUIE, the barber, the shrewd- | they are now riding as high as they will ever ride. Monoghan ought to get away with the ball to make the difference in scoring count for a win for the Hughes' lads. Maryland's home-coming ought to be something for its win column. The Old Liners should pass the ‘Washington and Lee Generals into a defeat. Byrd's well olled eleven ought to be sufficiently rested from its arduous con- flict in the Southland against Vander- bilt to make the Generals spin. Louie likes the Navy to take the South- ern Methodists, Harvard to beat Yale, Lehigh to take Lafayette, Army to mow down _Ursinus, Temple to defeat Denver, West Vir- ginia to take Penn State, Columbia to wallop Syracuse, the high-rolling Notre Dame outfit to wallop South- ern California and Fordham to de- feat Bucknell. And as the whisker snipper looks over the grid chart he has come to the conclusion that the South and the West are so far ahead of the East in foot ball class that it is no longer a race. Take Notre Dame, Northwestern, Tulane ‘and Tennessee and then pick out an Eastern aggregation tough enough to stop any one of the flock. And when Notre Dame clashes with Southern California tomorrow the Pacific Coast can be moved out of the picture. too. ! Men Political Rivals Pals on Gridiron By the Associated Press. PJ!W YORK, November 20.—The political battle for ghe office of district attorney of Brown County, Wis., will be shoved into the back- ground Sunday when Verne Lewellen, the Republican incumbent, and Lavvie Dilweg, leading Democratic _candi- date, lead the Green Bay Packers against the New York Giants in a Natfonal Professional League foot ball game at the Polo Grounds. Lewellen stars in the backfield and Dilweg at end. EPISCOPAL TO MEET WOODBERRY ELEVEN 0ld Rivals Face in Annual Tilt Tomorrow on Hoxton Field at Alexandria. ALEXANDRIA, Va. November 20.— Episcopal Higl gridiron team will bring its season to a close here tomor- row in its annual struggle with Wood- \Il;c‘rfiv Forest at 2:30 o'clock on Hoxton | Field. | 'Episcopal is in fine shape for the contest. Eddie Gorman, former St. John's High and Georgetown Freshman keteer, has been appointed coach of the Fraters quint. Gorman succeeds “Doc” Dreifus. Virginia Juniors haye scheduled a game with the Nortl it Trojans of ‘Washington for the shipyard field Sun- day at 2:30. Manager Bill Hammond has carded a game for his club with the Happy Val- ley A. C. of Fairfax County for Sunday at 2:30 on Guckert's Field. St. Mary's Lyceum five is seekin, games with unlimited and 145-poun clubs. Telephone Manager Lucas at Alexandria 2783. how would you like to save some money on new WINTER SHOES! Men’s Shops *3212—14th *Open Nights OLD LINERS PLAY HOMECOMING TILT Washington and Lee, Going Strong, Visits College Park Tomorrow. | ASHINGTON AND LEE, the only team that ever has beaten Maryland in its home-coming dav foot ball games, will try its durn- dest tomorrow to administer the dose for the third time when the Old Liners and Generals meet at 2:30 o’clock at College Park. Maryland {naugurated the home- coming affairs back in 1923, the year of one of its greatest teams of all time, and Catholic University happened to run afoul of that exceptional aggresa- tion that had beaten Penn and out- played Yale's championship team, onl to lose, 14-16. And the Brooklanders were trimmed, 40-6. Since that time Maryland has taken part in seven games for which the old grads have assembled and Washington and Lee has furnished the opposition on three of the occasions. Twice the Gen- erals have sorrowed the Old Line alumni by winning hectic battles, but last year the Terps gave them a good trimming to help make up for lost time. Generals Still Lead. However, Maryland still has to_snare a couple of wins to get even with Wash- ington and Lee in a series of games begun in 1924 and has carried on an- nually, with the exception of a break in 1929, when it was impossible for them to_find a mutually agreeable date. Maryland's record in its home-coming affairs stands at three wins, three ties and the two defeats at the hands of the Generals. ] ~ Scores of the home-coming games are as follows: 1923—Maryland. 40; Catholic University, 6. 1924—Maryland, 0: North Carolina State, 0. 1925—Maryland, 3, Washington and Lee, 7. 1926—Maryland, 6; Virginia, 6. 1927—M: land, 6: Washington and Lee. 13. iPmoManiand 13 Vs T 1930—Maryland. 41; Washington and Lee, 7. Other games with Washington and Lee had the following results: 1924_Washington and Lee, 19: Maryland. 7 (Central Hikh School Stadiuin, Washington): 1926—Washington and Lee, 3; Maryland, 0 ®1os8 3EPina. ¢; Washington and Lee, 0 (Grimen Stads ashington "o Battle Is in Sight. For a time it appeared as if Mary- land might have fairly easy sledding against Washington and Lee tomorrow, but recent wins of the Generals over Virginia, Virginia Poly and Princeton have put an entirely different aspect on the contest. Washington and Lee, with capable Jimmy DeHart back as mentor after five years at Duke, was not so hot in its early games, but once his work began to tell the team began to win, and it :li?:u not been scored upon in its last four Maryland, with only the defeat by Vanderbilt ®chalked up against it in seven games, is ready to put its best (ootk Ioofrwlrd tomorrow after a h.tlrld weel preparation. A good rest fol- lowed the Vanderbilt tilt of November 7, but the Old Liners were driven at & !utkpua the first four days of this week. The Old Liners will be favorites to- morrow, but the Maryland mentors view the game ag a 50-50 proposition, and a ‘Washington and Lee triumph would not be a distinct upset. {SCRIBES ONLY DEADHEADS All Others Will Pay to See Army and Navy Play for Jobless. NEW YORK, November 20 (#).— Newspaper men in the working press section will be the only cnlookers not required to pay for their tickets to the Army-Navy foot ball game for the benefit of the unemployed at the Yankee Stadium December 12. Army officials made this announce- ment after returning from a confer- ence with Navy men, when arrange- ments for the charity contest were completed. No “Annie Oakleys” will be dis- tributed otherwise, even for officials or TH'IS good Sale offers you that op- portunity. We gave one of our factories some' extra business (when they needed it) and secured a nifty price-concession in return. q 15 of the season’s latest styles— brown and black éalfs . . . square, medium and round toes. Just the shoes you were expecting to buy . . . at a lot less than you expected to spend! 14th at G 7th and