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[ 4 WITH SUNDAY MORNING EDITION @he Fnen ny Star, Features and Classified T — WASHINGTON, ¥ 1 ): FR IDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1931. PAGE D-—1 Griffs Gain in Deal With White Sox : Marines Are Underdogs for First Time REYNOLDS IS LONG- SOUEHT GARDENER Right-Hand Hitter and Kerr Cost Nationals Hadley, Jones and Hayes. BY JOHN B. KELLER. RVING HADLEY and Sam | Jones, pitchers, and Jack Hayes, utility infielder, of the | Nationals go to the White| 8ox in exchange for Carl Rey nolds, outfielder, and Johnny Kerr, second baseman—and, reasoning on a Washington basis, gives the National the better of the deal. Going right to the core of the barter- ing done by, Clark Griffith, president of | the Washington ball club, yesterday at the minor league conclave at West Baden, Ind, it really becomes a trade | of a seemingly veteran hurler and a very uncertain young pitcher for some- | thing the Nationals long have sought— | a high-class right-hand-swinging out- | fielder, The inclusion of Hayes and Kerr in the affair may be deemed nothing more than something “thrown in to boot For the second time in two years the Nationais have gone to the White Sox for that right-hand-hitting outfielder, and this time they very likely have done much better than in 1930, when they turned over to the Chicago club Red Barnes for Dave Harris. The North Carolina sheriff has plenty of power at bat when he connects with the ball but with the Washington club Harris has been rather uncertain in attack and quite 50 afield. EYNOLDS, although he dropped to & .290 hitter the past season after splurging in three campaigns, has looked in every way a clever sticker Carl has had four full seasons in the big show and has a major league career average of .322. His best batting sea- son was in 1930, when he slammed for the fancy figures of .359. d Reynoids hits for distance, too. Al- | though batting for just .290 in 118 games | the past season he collected 134 hits for | 204 bases. Of the blows 24 were doubles, 14 were triples and six homers. Sam West and Heinie Manush were the only ‘Washington outfielders to clout more | doubles last season, none of the Na- [ tonals' gardeners matched Reynolds'| triple total and only Manush hit as many home runs | That Reynolds has the punch with runners on the sacks is revealed in the number of runs he drove across the | plate in the 1931 campaign. In his 118 JUST MENTIONI s < SHORTY oF MAryLAND IF noT ™HE BEST BACK IN THIS BAILIWICK, HE WILL DO UNTIL ONE coMES ALONG ! IAORTY GOES FOR RIS LAST COLLEGE TuRosT [ TOMORROW * A GREAT PLAYER. f CHALMERS 70 PEASE A MASTER. PASS, WHICH HAS STIRRED THE SOOTHERN COLLEGIATE GRID WORLD, GOES FOR THE LAST TIME "'AGAWST WESTERN MARYLAND BLOCKING, PASSING games his hitting accounted for the registering of 77 White Sox tallies. Of the lot of Washington outfielders in the last season only West excelled Rey- nolds in this respect, driving over 91 | runs. And West was in 14 more games than Reynolds. EYNOLDS is an apt fielder, fleet on his feet and possesses a fair throw- ing arm. He covers a lot of terri- tory when in action and has revealed smartness in his throws after retrieving drives. Incidentally, Reynolds runs the bases with his head up. That's & fine recommendation of any ball player in these days of base running with anchors dragging. It has been said by some base ball wiseacres that Reyonlds is a player of the type known as “brittle.” They mean that Carl is too easily injured, which causes him to spend an excess of time out of action. As a matter of fact, Reynclds never has played as many | as 140 ball games in a big league sea- | son. But Carl will not be 28 years old until next February 1. Ordinarily he ars strong and perhaps with a new cm he'll overlook minor hurts that| have checked him before, 'R Reynolds the Nationals give Had- ley and Jones, pitchers, who were | far from satisfactory the past sea- | son. Although Hadley ranked high on | an earned-run basis in this year’s cam- paign, allowirg but 3.05 earned runs per nine innings, he finished with a record of only 11 wins against 10 de- feats and finished but 2 of the 11 games he started. Manager Walter Johnson gave up on Hadley early in the campaigning and employed him | mainly as a relief hurler. ‘That sent Hadley into more games than any other pitcher in the American League. He broke into 55 box scores. being in 28 games as a finisher and 16 in which he tried to help but couldn’t. ‘The 27-year-old Hadley had but one good season with the Nationals after coming up from Birmingham, to which club he was farmed after being yanked from semi-pro ranks in 1926. It was in 1927 that he won 14 games and lost | 6 and finished at the top of the Amer- | ican League hurlers with an average | of 285 earned runs ylelded per nine innings. 'OR the 39-year-old Jones the White Sox will be his sixth American League club. He started with the Indians back in 1914, then served with the Red Sox, Yankees and Browns be- fore coming to the Nationals in 1928, With Washington Jones had two good seasons, in 1928 winning 17 games and | losing 7, and in 1930 winning 15 and | losing 7. This year, however, Jones won | but 9 games and lost 10. He started 24 times, o pitch only 8 complete gam and he took over a relief role | Jones finished seven-man pit performed for past season, an enth at that credited with o 20 of the 92 games won by the Washington club and charged with 20 of the 62 defeats | HOUGH Kerr and Hayes do not fig- | ure prominently in the deal the Nationals probably get the better break in their exchange, t Hayes, | who came up from the University of | Alabama by way of Birmingham—for | which club he never played a game— | although a flashy fielder never | a hitter He batted but games the last season. Kerr, used fre- quently at second base by the White Sox, was no marvel at bat or afield, but he clubbed to a 268 mark in 128 games. Johnny is 31 years old, while Hayes is | as been in 38 ADLEY may figure in another deal as 'tis said the White Sox got him to use in a trade with the Yankees, possibly for Tony Laz- zerl. infielder, or Myril Hoag. outfielder. | That's nothing for the Nationals to | worry about, however, for they at least appear to have that long-sougit right- | hand swinging outfielcer of class PROCTOR IS V. P. I. COACH | RICHMOND, Va., December 4 (#).— QGeorge 8. (Gummy) Proctor, athletic director of the Richmond Rotary Boys' Club, has been appointed varsity basket ball coach for Virginia Polytechnic In- stitute. He will start work Monday as the successor to “Dusty” Rhodes. MONEY CHIEF TOPI. 0FBIG TENCONFAB Foot Ball Shrinkage Causes| Leaders to Focus on 1932 Finances. BY WILLIAM WEEKES, Associated Press Sports Writer. HICAGO, December 4—An alarmingly serious financial | situation, caused by shrinkage of foot ball receipts, absorbed the attention of Western Conference athletic directors and coaches as they opened their annual meeting today. Foot ball, the big brother which has paid the way for whole sports programs in Big Ten institutions, fafled to do as | much business as_expected, and sharp | curtailment of schedules was regarded as certain to result. Receipts were off from 30 to 40 per cent, according to | | Maj. John L. Griffith, Big Ten athletic commissioner, with schools represented by weak elevens suffering most. Only Northwestern, which had & champion- ship outfit right down to the finish, and Minnesota, which had an im-| mensely improved eleven, had good sea- sons financially Iowa's athletic department already has been notified that economy must be the watchword in making schedules, and the feeling apears to be the same at Wisconsin. E Tllinois, which | has built a great athletic and intra- mural sports system out of foot ball | profits, has abandoned the annual Southern base ball training trip and has planned to go so far af calling off the indoor relay carnival, the blue ribbon event of kind, to reduce | of expenses. It was considered highly likely that minor sports schedules would be sharp- ly trimmed and that base ball might suffer when the coaches plan their seasons. | The faculty Committee on Athletics | will meet tonight and later will meet | with the athletic directors. There has | been no indication that the faculty | group has anything out of the ordinary | to_consider. since Iowa was sus- | pended from competition in the meeting has hed for unexpected | but | ers, ball schedule making I m, the basket ball ball listings 'already having | been made. 17 GAMES FOR C. U. CUBS |& Three Local High Schools on Bas- | ket Ball Schedule. | Catholic University Preshmen face a | 17-game basket ball schedule, starting December 12 with Eastern High, at| Eastern. Eastern later will invade the | C. U. gym Business and Tech also have been booked by the Cardinal Cubs on a home-and-home basis, as have the Maryland Frosh, Gonzaga and Loyola | gs of Baltimore. Central, too, | will be met twice, both games to be played at C. U C. U. has some likely-appearing tal- ent on the Frosh squad and a good season is expected Here's the C. U. Prosh card: Bettmber J3-Rasiern, at Eastern. December 15_Tech JAnUATY 8—Maryland Preshmen at Collese January 14 Wilson Teachers' College. | January 15—Columbus ~ University Fresh- | 8—Loyola Freshmen. aga’ at Gontaga (night). | t Gonzaga. entral Loyola Freghmen at Baltimore. 11—Tech at Tech. —Central. astern. 8-Marsland Preshmen. L] | e Famed Grid Star Slated for Farm NTERNATIONAL FALLS, Minn, December 4 (#)—Bronko Na- gurski, All-American tackle in 1929 although he was an equally good fullback for the University of Minne- sota, is going to be a farmer—if his father has anything to say about it. Just now profesisonal foot ball is engaging the attention of the player who is regarded as the hardest tack- ler in Gopher gridiron history, but his father, Mike Nagurski, believes that will not be for long. “Bronko will be a farmer,” said the senior Nagurski on his farm here. “He is good around the place and I can depend on him to run it for me. He takes good care of the stock —the cows and the chickens. “If a cow is sick, Bronko can fix her. He knows just what to do and he likes to do things like that. He can fix a chicken with a broken leg. He will be a farmer and a good one. He may be a good foot ball player, but b 1 be better on the farm.” MARYLAND AND C. U. PLACE MOST STARS Five Terrapins and Four Cards Among D. C. Grid Selections Picked by the Tower. Players of Maryland and Catholic Universities predominate tn an all-star District foot ball line-up chosen by Tom McGrath, sports editor of The Tower, studs publication at Brook- land, and five Washington sports writers. The newspaper men who as- sisted McGrath were Jack Espey of the Post, Dick Moore of the News George Simpson of the Times, Al Cos- tello of the He of The Star. Five Terrapins and four Cards, two eorgetown and one George Washing- N players were named. The only unanimous choice was Tom Whelan, C. U.s sensational touchdown maker who leads the District in point total, A point shy of unanimity were Chalm- Poppelman, Hudson, Katalinas and Monaco. Krajcovic and Blackistone also were unquestionable selections. The selections Pirst team Pease. Maryland Katalinas, G'towr vic, Md G Second team. U Md Poppelman, Md Monagha n deau o . 2nd C: REas r (Mary- U.), backs. 1and), Wilmer Bradley Among Runners to Start Work Soon. Georgetown University's track candi- dates are expected to begin serious preparation within a few days under the direction of Coach Jimmy Mulligan, successor to John D. O'Rellly, Among the newcomers to the cinder- path squad is Wilmer Bradley, who was forced to withdraw from foot ball early in the season bezauss of a broken collar. bone. Bradl J,%as a sprinter and quar- er-miler of ability in b o days &t Connelisville. pp. 16 870001 Among other members of the Hoya track squad are Capt. Jim Kelly, Vic Burke, Chuck Carlin A] Kelly, Artle Briges and Jack Downing, ' L —By TOM DOERER T KEPT THE ENEMY GLUED To HIS TRACKS A SPLENDID DEFENSIVE BACK — A RUNNING, sack b No All-Team Hooey by Louie BY TOM OUIE, the barber, modest and L unassuming champion handicapper of foot ball | teams, gained further glory i today when he announced: “I refuse to pick an all-America leleven.” ! Whattaman! With a cloudburst of all-America, all-Eastern, all- | Southern and all-hooey selections showering upon a defenseless griddle public, Louie, the gar- | rolous gabber, prince of pickers :refuses to add to the general suf- fering. | “There should be a final selec- | tion to end all selections,” said the | great man. Loule’s name will go down in | history with the names of other ‘great public benefactors. 'phn greatest enemy of picking from a Iderby hat has spoken. UT the old chin scraper will con- tinue to pick winning teams while | the other experts are engaging in buffoonery. Loule, despite a whisper campaign di- rected against him, will call the winne in foot ball until the last game is played. What a heart! What a break for the public! | “Take New York University,” says Louie, “to win a close one from one of the smartest elevens in the 'pone belt.” | That's Loule, with plenty of nerve to buck the public's choice. The gabber chooses Meehan's men because they will come bounding back from the Carnegie Tech game with second wind and fight- ing for a chance to make the headlines Maj, Neyland’s boys peaked for Ala- bama and have been letting down in their stride ever since. Louie is sweet on Tulare to grab off a of touch- downs from Wash- | ington State's Cou- gars. Loie squinted these Cougars last year when they were, great. But it is not the same Cat eleven | this semester. Add [ to this disadvan- | tage the fact that | the Washington crew plays in far different atmos- phere from that to which it is_accus- it [ tomed when opens up in New Orleans. | '(i!\'l‘ g_’nmr two tickets on Tulane to | take the Cougar crew. AKE it Penn when you start to lay it on the line for the Penn-Navy tussle at Franklin Field. man’s Gates’ plan eleven is not too hol;‘,‘;ul it will be fighting to check the Navy again, and Rip’s boys will be all attention for the Army game which fol- lows. The only fly in the ointment is that Penn always slumps when it gets through with Cornell. But the chin scraper likes the Red and Blue. And in the scrapplest game on the cau-:fmr tomorrow Louie picks Coast | Guard to whip Marines in & close one at Griffith Stadium. 1It's kind of hard | back on ’em like this, but the great x‘fmn wears no man’s hat when he starts to ick ’em. - P es ‘Maynard is the barber's reason | for turning down his old Marine pals. He thinks the big boy will gallop, rain, hail or snow. Put down Marylind to lash Western Maryland _tomorrow = at Baltimore and you will be taking Louie’s advice. Mr. Curley Byrd can sit on the bench and munch his peanuts with only slight interrup- tion from Dick Harlow’s boys. Chalmers and Poppleman are due to scintillate, and fo redeem any pres: tige that Maryland may have ll’ls previous clashes with the Green Terror, OUIE has an average of .657 for the L season, 68 victories and 36 losses, 3 Big Public Benefactor, However, Will on the Quantico boys to have Louie go | Pick His Winners. DOERER with 13 ties which the big man has taken as losses. But Champ Pickens, the charity game promoter, fis heckling the shear snipper for picking Notre | Dame to lash Southern California | a few weeks ago. Champ said it was in the books for the Trojans to | stop the Nomads. | | the contest promises to be of et that Champ has seen Southern vens goyear after year to wallop the den Gate best, until Florida broke | up the record this year. | Champ can tell you of a game on he Coast four years ago when sea gulls soared down to nestle on a playing field inches deep in water. The ball skidded across the water | as an oyster shell skims over a pond, | | and the players were knee-deep in mire and moisture. That Mr. Pickens can tell you a lot of things, including the fact that the charity game here is going to jam the customers in at the last moment. | LIPPING fins with Loule over there is| “1i rine, and one of the fleetest little quarterbacks ever to Scamper across a playing field in Ma- | | rine colors. The er officer is now helping Wal- ter Ha Drexel I | ord shows, | McMains played with and against Goettge, Liversedge, //, McHenry, Vic Noyes, Art Rodger Smythe and a flo of other good 3d | Corps Area players | some few years back. Y Liversedge’s name recalls to Loule’s big mind that a few weeks ago he was tipped that the former Marine would | shortly leave San Diego for Quantico, where he would likely take over the foot ball eleven next year, relieving Coach McHenry, who would ‘be assigned else- where. If the big fellow comes to Quantico he undoubtedly will make an effort to give the post another title team, one similar to the great eleven of '24.” Me- Henry has laid wonderful groundwork for the man to succeed him. He has proved a good tutor. | Which is a day for the barber. 'BURROUGHS LEAGUE PUTS ON TWO GAMES| St. Stephen’s Faces Mount Rainier and St. Paul's Meets Burroughs | St. Stephen's and Mount Ralnier elevens and St. Paul's and Burroughs teams will clash in Burroughs Citizens’ Assoclation Foot Ball League games | Sunday afternoon at Taft Recreational | Park. " Play will start at 1 o'clock. | Colonials, who are leading the league, will idle. Apaches and Mohawks will end prepa~ ration tonight for their important game | Sunday afternoon in Griffith Stadium, | Dixie Pig gridders will drill tonight at | 8 o'clock at Seat Pleasant. Dixies will meet Alcova eleven Sunday. Notre Dame Preps are after a game | | for Sunday. Call Evry, Lincoln 1329 | after 7 p.m. Meridians will work tonight on the Towa avenue playground at 7:30 o'clock. They'll play Northern Preps in the Capital City Lesgue on Sunday. Centennials will practice tonight at 8 o'clock on the Terminal Field. Cents | will face Palace Sunday in a Capital City League tilt. ‘ St. Stephen's 135-pound eleven is| | getting ready for its game Sunday with | Virginia A."C. Mercurys will drill tonight at 7:30| oclock at Four-and-a-half and B| streets southwest in preparation for | ut.” McMains, former Ma- | | on Grid Tomorrow. é 1,300 WILL PARADE Coast Guard’s Undefeated Team Seeks President’s Trophy Tomorrow. BY R. D. THOMAS. WO big, hard-driving, con- fident foot ball teams, each with a proud record to up- | hold, will clash in Griffith | Stadium tomorrow, with the Quantico Marines defending the President’s Cup against the un- | defeated, untied United States| Coast Guard. The First Lady of | the Land, Mrs. Herbert Hoover, | will officiate at the presentation | of the cup. For the first time in the seven years of colorful strife for the trophy present- ed originally by Calvin Coolidge, the Leathernecks will charge into battle on | the short end of odds, but the margin | |of favor will be slender. The slight | |disparity will be a tribute to Leslie | Maynard, the Coast Guard's 190-pound | halfback who has been a scourge to all | enemies. | RAPPINGS such as attend no other foot ball game held annually in | the Nation's Capital will mark to- | | morrow’s. The Marines, of which there will be 1500 in uniform, are prepared to put on a show which will start, inci- dentally, before they enter the stadium. The lads from Quantico, led by their 110-piece band, will parade from the Seventh street railroad station, arriving | there at noon. They will march up | Sixth street to T, thence to Fifth and | up Fifth to the stadium. | Commanding the Leathernecks will | | be Maj. Gen. John H. Russell. | At 1:10 o'clock three battalions of Coast Guardsmen will march on the fleld, led by the United States Coast | Guard Academy Band from New Lon- | don, Conn., under Bandmaster H. O. | Jenks. It's'a small but crack musical unit. | In command of the Guards will be Lieut. R. V. Marron, who was & foot ball star some years ago and a coach of the all-Coast Guard team, True to their seagoing bent, most of the Guardsmen came for the game by | ship, arriving this morning on the cut- ters'Champlain, Mendota and the de- | stroyers Herndon, Welborn C. Wood, Hunt and Ericson. Others, including largely those from life-saving stations along the Atlantic Seaboard, are com- ing in their own conveyances, | AT 1:30 the Coast Guard will leave the field to the Marines, who will | " put on a fancy drill. | Mrs. Hoover plans to arrive shortly before game time, which will be 2 o'clock. From a strictly technical standpoint the first | | order. Both teams are made up almost entirely of well seasoned campaigners with gifted directors. As for individuals, attention will be focused on Maynard of the Coast Guard and probably George Robertson, the Marines' truly great kicker, and Andy Zeher who, the Gyrenes aver, will hold his own with Maynard as a ball toter. The scrvice teams, we have it from Comdr. Jack Bayliss of the Coast Guard, hold some very high ideals about. their position in the public eye. The commander is hcre from New London, Conn, as liaison officer between his service and the public, with Maj. R. W. 10 SCENE OF GAME Peard acting in the same capacity for | the Marine Corps. Seys Comdr. Bay- | rrei “The united services belong to the| public. The public looks up to men in uniform as representatives of the best Will Urge Rule For Kick-Off Tee By the Assoclated Press. BW YORK, December 4.—One change in the foot ball rules probably will come up before the governing bodles of the game as the result of the unusual number of injuries and deaths on the grid- iron this season. Tom Thorp, noted official, said yesterday that he and other Eastern coaches and officlals had decided, informally to recommend a return to the old style kick-off, where the ball was teed up on a high mound insteady of being held by a player. “When a kicker uses a mound,” Thorp said, “he gets a high, float- Ing kick that enables his players to get down the field almost with it. The recelving team doesn’t have time to form a flying wedge in front of the ball carrier and there is much less danger of injury.” in American youth. That is why inter- service foot ball and other competition must, be hard fought, our players giving all they have over and above the ‘dear old alma mater’ spirit of any college and also that is why the game must be cleanly fought with no unclean tactics on either side.” IN the matter of handing out informa- tlon about tomorrow's foot ball | game, or anything regarding the | Coast Guard, Comdr. Bayliss is good | for a first down on' every effort. A | socially prominent lass called him up | this morning and wanted to know, all in one breath, “What are the foot ball colors of the Marines and the Coast Guard and what are the mottoes of the two services?” Like nobody’s business and much faster, the commander replied: “The Marines' colors are scarlet and gold, the same colors that have always been the Marines’ since the days at Tun's Tavern in Philadelphia. The Coast Guard's colors are blue and white, em- blematic of the blue of the sea and the crested white of the rolling surf. The Coast Guard tackles both at their worst. The motto of the Marine Corps is “Semper Fidelis"—always faithful. The motto of the Coast Guard is “Semper Paratus”—always ready. The commander sold her a whole| box for the game; on the level. EASTERN HIGH FIVE MAKES GOOD START Shows Power in Easily Beating Boys' Club—St. John's Gains Double Victory. Eastern High's basket ball squad showed plenty of power in downing the Boys' Club unlimited class team, 55 to 34, last night in the club gym. Fineran, Courtney, Kane, Waters, Zola and Leib showed particularly well among the 15 players used by Eastern. Cole and Lassisse led the losers’ attack. Others who saw acton for Eastern were Hale, Hayes, Bayliss, Davis, Phil- lips, Bassin, Essex, D. Dean and Edelin. St. John's College basketers scored a double win last night over K. of C. quints. The Kaydet first squad downed the Casey unlimited class quint, 18 to 15, and the lightweights conquered the K. of C. 100-pounders, 21 to 19. Capt. Scanlon, Scheele and Breen for the Saints and Casper for the Caseys were leading players in the big game. Owens, Hannon and Keegin for the winners and Collins and Gilbert for the losers were most consistent in the light- weight tilt. St. John's first squad will scrimmage with' Vic ‘Sport Shop basketers tonight TWENTY BIG GAMES ON TAP TOMORROW Four Major Unbeaten Teams, Five Conference Champs Listed to Play. BY HUGH S. FULLERTON, JR., Associated Press Sports Writer, EW YORK, December 4.— All four of the Nation's major un- defeated teams, the champions of five major conferences and @ number of teams which rank high within their sections, although having Do titular claims, figure in tomorrow’s foot ball program, which charity games have swelled from five major games to about 20 “big” contests. Tulane, unbeaten winner of the Southern Conference title, faces the tough Washington State outfit, which has lost three games by close scores to the Pacific Coast's leading teams. Tennessee, another undefeated but tled Southern Conference team, ven- tures into the North to face the Violets of New York University. The Southern Methodist Mustangs, also tied once although unbeaten, test the record which gave them the Southwest Con- ference title against the Pacific Coast's “Giant Killers,” the galloping Gaels of 8t. Mary's of Oakland, Calif. A third charity game involving an undefeated team sends triumphant Oklahoma City University against the Oklahoma Uni- versity Sooners. 'OUTHERN CALIFORNIA, which established itself as one of the Na- tion’s strongest teams after losing to St. Mary's in the season’s opener, closes the Pacific Coast Conference sea- son against Washington. Nebraska, champion of the Big Six Conference, ventures into the Rocky Mountain district for a charity game with the Colorado Aggies, while Utah, winner of the Rocky Mountain Con- ference crown, is taken farther West by another charity contest, meeting Ore- gon State at Portland. In the East, the Navy-Pennsylvania game, at Philadelphia, heads a scant list of regularly scheduled games. Another sends Western Maryland against its Southern Conference neighbor, Mary- land. Carnegie Tech and Duquesne meet in a charity clash at Pittsburgh, and a charity “round robin” at New Haven involves four big teams, with Yale meeting Holy Cross and Dart- n-lnoul:h facing Brown in the first-round clashes. ENTUCKY and Florida close the Southern Conference schedule with their meeting at Jacksonville, Chattanooga, champion of the Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association, tac- kles Alabama in a charity contest, and Center, one of its leading rivals, meets South Carolina in another. A benefit dity sends the combined squads of Duke and North Carolina against those of North Carolina State, Davidson and m’l’he Forest. o e Midwest charity program centers around “Big Six” teams, with Missouri facing St. Louls University, Kansas playing Washington at Topeka and Kansas State meeting Wichita at Wichita. The Haskell Indians play Tulsa in a regularly scheduled game on the Southwestern program. —_— FOOT BALL AS TROPHY Kansas, Missouri Play for One Used in 1922 Tie Game. LAWRENCE, Kans., December 4 (£). —The foot ball with which Missouri and Kansas battled to a 3-3 tie in 1911 was the stake of the 1931 game between the two universities. wn will become a permanent trophy, in the Saints’ gym at 7 o’clock. | their Capital City League game Sunday | with Praters. e — be kept from year to year by the winner of each future game. ‘ yr— \ \ Men’s Shop$ 14th at © 7h & K %3212 14th