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L Sports ‘News @he Zoening Star. WITH SUNDAY. MORNING: ED! WASHINGTON, D. C, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 2i, 1932. ’ Features and Classified PAGE C—1 Grid Penalties Likely to Be Heavy : Harvard Is Sticking to Simple Foot Ball SURE TO BE MANY IF CODE ENFORCED Players to Be Punished for Things They Were Taught Were Good Tactics. C result in more frequent in- fliction of penalties, if of- ficials carry out anywhere near the letter of the code. In several types of play the rules forbid certain -actions on the part of players that for years have been drilled into them as good foot ball, and those men who have played the game through two or three years of high school and one or two of college are not go- ing to readily conform to the changes. As a matter of habit, acquired in drills extending over years, it is doubtful if they can if they want to. Take, for instance, the diving on a man, who has dropped on the ground for a fumbled ball. It has in former years been instinctive for players to drop on the man to prevent him getting up to run with the ball, and players still are doing that, notwithstanding the change in the rule which provides | that the player who is on the ground | with the ball in his possession is down. It the player is automatically down and | cannot thereafter advance the ball, it | is only fair for the officials to enforce the rule against piling on. BY H. C. BYRD. HANGES made in the rules for foot ball are going to S a matter of fact, though, on such | plays in the scrimmages that have | been held here, players are so in- stinctively smearing the man who drops | on a fumble that it may result in a suc- cession of penalties. Of course, due al- Jowance will have to be made for the | players who battle in an actual at-| 150-POUNDERS TO MEET ‘Will Hold Final League Reorgani- zation Session Tonight. The last reorganization meeting of the 150-pound independent Foot Ball League will be held tonight in French's Sport Shop at 7:30 o'clock. Several more teams are expected to enter the loop. Palace A. C., winner last season; Centennials, Brookland Boys' Club, Meridians, Stantons, North- westerns and St. Stephen’s are elevens already in line. League play will open October 9. Stanton, 150-pound gridders, who will start their season October 2 against Del Ray at Del Ray, will gather tonight at 7:30 o'clock in Forest Hanback's home, 526 Third street northeast. A drill for the Meridian 150-pound squad is slated tonight at 7 o'clock at Seventeenth and B streets. gl NINES TO BATTLE INBENEFIT GAME Police and Columbia Heights Will Clash Tonight in Griffith Stadium. IDOWS and orphans of Met- ropolitan police killed this year in the line of duty will be the beneficiaries of the | base ball game tonight in Griffith Stadium between the police team and | Columbia Heights, Capital City League | unlimited champion nine. Play will | start at 8:30 o'clock. | It will be the rubber contest of a| series of three. Frank Watt, former major leaguer, will pitch for the Blue- coats and Ben Spigel will hurl for the | Heights team. Evelyn Lynch, Washington's leading feminine diamonder, is slated to start at first base or right field for Columbia | Heights. Music will be furnished by the Vet- erans of Foréign Wars Band. Clark | Griffith has donated the stadium and | the District Umpires’ Association will | tempt to get possession of the ball them- selves, but even with that there should | be frequent penalties, if the officials follow the letter of the rules. | Another type of play that may draw @ good many penalties is the leaving of | feet in interference. Just how the vari- | ous and several officials are going to get | any consistent form of general ruling on this is hard to foresee. One team goes in @ game and its players leave their feet and the officials judge that they dc not leave their feet too soon. The game the next week may find a different set | of officials determined to enforce the| rule and calling almost everything on which a player leaves his fest to take out defensive players. And players un- doubtedly are leaving their feet, and leaving their feet in violation of the regulations.- Pity the team that has one | kind officiating one week and another | kind the next. | S far as the use of hands in the| A line is concerned, it is unlikely that | officials are going to do anything| different from what they did last sea- | son. The rule makers started off last | year with a great hullabaloo about the Testrictions on the use of hands by the defense, but the sum total of their ac-} complishment seems to be nothing. Actually, the intent of the rule makers was good, but such a howl rose on the part of a good many coachesl against what was intended that the | whole campaign against use of hands by the defense has sunk to a zephyr and | probably by the time the games this Week are played it will be a veritable | R | NOTHER thing that the !'ul(=make\'s1 AT that may not be as successtul as | was expected is the placing of five men of the side receiving the kick-off | in such position that they may not d!‘op} back of the 45-yard line. This was done with the intention of making it less‘ easy for the side catching the ball to| yun back kicks, to prevent the forma-| tion of a wedge. As a matter of fact, what ac!ua]éy is | ly to happen is even more dan-| &"fi’\yu to the players of the Kkicking | side, as it seems highly probable that | two wedges will be formed. Any team | that can form an initial wedge around the 25-yard line to carry the back who catches the ball as far as the 45-yard | mark will find there another group of | five men formed into another wedge. In this connection, the writer is almost willing to make a prediction that | more touchdowns will be made this year | by running back the kick-off than in any previous season. Once a player | Teaches the 45-yard line with the bail| it is difficult to see how he can be pre- | Vented going deep into the other team’s territory, even it he is stopped before the goal is reached. | ngevrr. as the writer stated in this | column last Spring, the game from the Stands is going to be just the same. The average spectator hardly will note a single change. It will be foot ball the same slashing, driving, physical| contact sport that has made it so gen- erally attractive. AWAIT COOLER DAYS Gridders Get Under Way With Na- tional Training School Opposed. Eastern Scrimmages. S soon as the weather turns Cooler’ Central's basket ball squad will begin work. Bill Burke, Bill Bryant, Jack Moul- ton and Rex Smith, forwards; Buddy | Nau, guard, and Clff Keyser, center, are some of the boys being depended upon to carry the blue to glory on the -dwood. B hager Bill Gorewltz is arranging a bang-up schedule for the Central quint. Central's foot ball squad was to get its first formal action this afternoon, engaging the National Training §chool boys on the latter’s field at 3:30 o'clock. Scholastic followers were keenly in- terested in the game, feeling it should furnish scmethflng of a definite line on the caliber of the bunch coached by Bert Coggins. Eastern and Emerson gridders will e tomorrow afternoon on the scrimmag Eastern grid at 4 o'clock. ‘Washington and Lee High's eleven took Episcopal preps over the hurdles, 3¢ to 6, yesterday at Ballston. Joe furnish arbfters without charge. —- 'TEUART MOTOR CO. tossers will strive to even the count in their series with the Vienna Firemen Sunday, when the teams meet at Vienna in the second game of their series of three in the Herald's competition for the independent championship of the District area. Vienna won the opener last Sunday, 4 to 2. French diamonders will end their season Sunday against the Front Royal | All-Stars at Front Royal, Va. The| French team will drill tomorry - noon JEast Ellipse at 4:30 o'clock. JOUNDING 15 bingles behind. the five-hit pitching of Hooper, District of Columbia Firemen downed the Fairfax Farms Dairy nize, 11 to 5. Dor-A and Washington Red Sox teams will have it out Saturday nm:4 noon at 3 o'clock on the Riverdale dia- mond. Federal Storage and Mount Rainier | A. C. tossers will battle Sunday after- | noon at 3 o'clock on the District Line | field. Foot Ball Tips BY JOE GLASS." | FTER Yale had gained what | seemed an everlasting lead on Dartmouth last Fall, Morton, Big Green guarterback, put new life in his coi des by velling: “Come on fellows! Three touchdowns and | a field goal and we've got them | licked!” Dartmouth didn’t win, but mirac- ulously it tied the Bulldog. A big | factor in this historic recovery was the following pass, which also beat | Cornell and which will be a favorite | offensive weapon of Dartmouth this ear. ‘The ball is passed to No. 3, who runs back a few steps. He is pro- tected by two backs and both guards. No. 2 blocks the opposing left end. No. 4 blocks the oppos- ing right tackle. No. 7 counters the incoming right end and No. 6 attends. to_left tackle. Meantime, two decoying movements develop. Left end (8) pulls out the deep defensive right back, and right end (5) does the same with the deep defensive left back. These feints pave the way for the receiver (1), who, after running straight out, wheels to the left to take the toss, which comes to him over the center of the line. A tense situation favors this play* | It must evolve with great speed. No. 5 and No. 1 must start simul- taneously and as fast as possible. It is the synchronization of their movements in the early stages which confuses the enemy secondary de- fense. Morton and McCall worked it beautifully last year for Dartmouth. A GOOD MULLIGAN STEW. Grid Gossip ATHOLIC UNIVERSITY and| the University of Maryland scrimmaged for two hours yes- terday at College Park. The Brooklanders showed up wonderfully well and no one need doubt that they will have a fine team this year. Asa matter of fact, the C. U. team of 1932 is stronger than that of 1931. In the workout with the Old Line | School, Catholic U. had all the better | of the play. Its offense and its defense worked more smoothly and the men seemed in better physical condition. Maryland must make some remark- able strides with its green material if it is to ‘come through a creditable year. The C. U. backfield is better than it was last year. With Whalen, Sheary, Jankowski and McVean in good shape nothing need be feared about ability to gain ground. Incidentally, Sheary and Jankowski are exceptional defensive NLY one player will weigh more than 200 pounds among the 11 George Washington gridmen who | start the game with Washington and | team into action. Lee’s Generals at Lexington, Va., Satur- day. Walter Slaird, right tackle, is the heaviest of them, weighing 202. The team average of the Colonials will be 176 7-11. The absence of Frank Blackistone, center, and Ras Nielsen, tackle, who cannot play under Southern Conference rules, renders the starting Colonial line-up a little lighter than it normally would be. 2 Following is the starting George Washington line-up, with the weights: rish, left tackle, 182; Kermit Stewart, | left ‘guard, 166; Tom Dike, center, 185; | Boyd Hickman, right guard, 173; Walter | Slaird, right tackle, 202; Wayne Chambers, right end, 181; Johnny Fen- | | lon, quarterback, 162; Henry Strayer, left half, 170; Finis Parrish, right half, | 169, and Art Kriemelmeyer, fullback, 174. DAY by day in every way Aloysius Thomas Kelly seems to be getting better and better over on the Georgetown University training field. The national 70-yard indoor sprint | king of 1931, a gridiron novice, yester- day ran wild against the second team in a spirited scrimmage, tearing off long runs of nearly half the length of the fleld and pounding through the center of the line for shorter gains. Would-be tacklers discovered Kelly’s hip motion and leg drive tough to overcome. ‘The entire team appeared to advan- tage in the first real scrimmage of the training season at the Hilltop yesterday. CKETS for the Washington and Lee-George Washington game at Lexington, Va., are on sale in the G. W. athletic office, 2010 H _street. Railroad transportation also may be obtained there. A reduced round-trip fare has been offered on a special train departing at 7:30 a.m. Saturday. TILDEN, BARNES VICTORS ‘BERLIN, September 21 (#).—Bill Til- den and Bruce Barnes, representing the United States first matches easily. Tilden defeated Scholz of Czecho- slovakia, 6—0, 6—1, 6—2, and then dis- w of Laube of Germany, 6—0, 6—0, Barnes won from Schultze of Ger- mary, 6—0, 6—2, 6—2, and defeated Richter of Germany, 6—1, 6—3, 6—3. | ASHINGTON and Alex- | andria will have fran- chises in a six-team Intercity Professional Foot Ball League if proposed plans materialize tonight at & meeting in the Emerson Hotel in Baltimore. Present plans call for the forma- tion of a league to de the Mo- and Odie Nunch of the Little Gen- Zrhdl and Don Dwiddle of Episcopal maade long runs. hawks and St. Mary’ ics of Wash- Gridiron Loop Il;vol\ring Four Cities May Be Formed Tonight ington and Alexandria, respectively; Irvington and Western Maryland of Baltimore and Clifton Heights and Pennsgrove of Philadelphia. Buck Grier will represent the Celtics and Patsy Donovan the Mo- hawks at tonight’s meeting. Both are enthusiastic over the prospects of such a loop, which would give pro grid fans of this vicinity a game every Sundsy in Griffith Stadium. Fred Mulvey, left end, 168; Bill Par- | & in the professional tennis championships, here, won their GUARD WINS FIGHT FOR NAVY POSITION {Ruble, After Two Years on B| Aggregation, Is Promoted | to First Team. NNAPOLIS, Md, September 21. | —Harold E. Ruble, 173-pound | guard from Albert Lea, Minn., | is the new varsity left guard | of the Naval Academy foot ball team. | | Ruble spent the last two years on the | ;ycllol’-jerseyed “B" squad. Today he | players, good enough for any team. The | possesses a blue jersey and a first team | line is big and fast and, best of all, the | job. | team is well coached. “He is a plugger and all he has | to_do to hold the job is to play foot | ball,” Coach “Rip” Miller said. | Last year Navy's heaviest eleven | | averaged 172 pounds. This year it | | will be possibie to send a 185-pound | | However, this group will include some “pink cheeked,” in- experienced sophomores and juniors. | Navy has practically selected for the | | has not been announced, but tell the first game with William and Mary on | October 1. It follows along with the second combination: First. Position. Murray : Kane Second. Pulj . Heilman Brownrigg Dawson . Baird ._Clark Dornin Slack [yalal onm berger Walkup Waybright Denny, quarterback, and Clark and Boorhees, _halfbacks, may see much service. = Brooks, a tackle, also may move up. LEEEEE wEEEEH0 | | With the Bowlers ITH seven teams already in line, franchises are avail- able to three more bowling | outfits in the newly formed Independent Handicap League, which will roll at the Lucky Strike on Thurs- days. ’¥‘she maximum team average is 550. Any teams interested are requested to get in touch with Bill Wood at the Lucky Strike. ORMAN A. GRAY of the Indian Office was elected president of the Interior Department League, which will start tomorrow night at the Co- lumbia with eight teams. Tomorrow's schedule follows: Land vs. Engravers, G. H. 1. vs. Disbursing, Survey vs. Secretary, Indlan vs. Pension. ORTY-FOUR teams, an increase of four over last year, will compete this year in the Baptist Young Peo- ples’ Union League this season on the Lucky Strike drives. The loop, the largest in the city, has capable running mates as far as is concerned, Bill Wood points out. The Income Tax Unit has 30 teams, the Eastern Star Women's 18 and the C. & P. Telephone Women's, General Coun- sel and Typothetae 16 each. NEW league team set record was established last night by the Cool's Drinks team in opening matches in the Columbia Heights League. Cool's shot 1,857 in sweeping their match with Ambassador Laundry, rolling team games of 605, 594 and 658. Eddie Espey and Paul Harrison were the standouts, with 413 and 402, re- spectively. Sam Simon shot games of 116, 156 and 130 for a 402 zet. Simon led Swann's to a 2-to-1 victory over Vincent's Barber Shop. . TO PLAN FOR SOCCER. A meeting of the German-American the com| season by two teams, p | delphia, coming back to the White- size | ter Johnson has a pair of pitchers who Another “400” set was turned in when | ord Athletic Club, which will be represented | who signs Sport Stew Season Now Is On District Fans in for Grand Dish of Rasslin’, Foot Ball, Base Ball and Horse Racing. BY TOM DOERER. HIS is the succatash season in sports. I . It would probably be more expressive to call it the| Mulligan stew period of athletics, | figuring that a hobo’s Mulligan' contains everything, including an old shoe and a few hat hands to| add to its sustaining qualities, if not its appearance and taste. In the sports stew the old shoe| is the threatened fusing of the two divided factions of wrestle| into one great happy family in- stead of a two-part great scrappy family of grumblers. ! As a treat for your year of fasting on | punk matches, the happy family will | now put on in Philadelphia a battle be- | tween Jim Londos, the big gate attrac- | tion, and Herr Dokter Richard Shikat, | at the moment the head bone bender | for the faction that’s been suffering from rusty turnstiles. This match between Dick and Jim children tonight that it vgll be soon. And with Dick, and Ray “Ghiani, the fiddling promoter of Camden and Phila- Londos-Turner ensemblage, Washington fans will get to see a few old faces back under Joe's banner. But, between you and me, there never ‘was any real ill feeling between the two factions. There might have been a camouflaged little trade war under way | with the undercover scheme to kick a | few office men out of the clique. But, gentlemen, no war. UT the meat in this sports melange is foot ball, base ball and racing, all coming to & sweet turn at the moment. Within a few days the grid fans will be sitting up nights to figure ers, the world series possibilities will keep-the diamond followers up the rest of the time, and racing fans will run around in circles. -Washington, for instance, meets Philadelphia here Sunday in a game that might mean something more than gate receipts. Much of what it is go- ing to mean will depend on what the Senators do this afternoon to the Sox and what the men of Mack do not do to_their opponents at the same time. Uncle Griff’s club has been annoying me terribly this Summer. It has been going up and coming down for no rea- sons whatever. Just when I'm telling the girl friend that it's the blue-eyed baby of the league it takes a toboggan down among the sweet peas. And when I am about to go out to see Uncle Clark for a good cry on the team’s meandk from the path it| should pursue, up they go to battle some one for a higher place. A month ggo it appeared to be noth- ing better tifin a fourth-place position. Today the boys wart d money, and at the start of the they asked for first or nothing. But there’s this: in the Messrs. Gin'ril | Alvin Crowder and Monte Weaver Wal- would have taken most clubs to the top of the hill, 1 those outfits gave the|TIr boys a little timely hitting, a better fighting spirit and a little more all- around general desire to take advantage of everything on that playing fleld. OTH Griff and Johnson have con- tended that the Senators were the best balanced ball club in the loop. But I'm figuring that if they were the top of the heap would be theirs. Which it isn’t despite the showing of Crowder and Weaver, both over 20-game win- ners, and will not be until there is a long-distance punch in the batting er. Peek at the one-run losses sustained by the Nats this year, take a peak at the men left on the sacks and then you will see what dampened the fine twirling of Crowder and Weaver. But I'm not taking a whack at Uncle's team. No, sir. In fact, I'm likely to get a letter from her name “Rose” or ¥ or on other , “Gertrude.” She 'POLO TOURNEY FINAL will be hel of R. J. Dietle, night in the home 3 Georgia avenue. always tells me that the write & letter in which next time I| Notre I do not say ton in 1 —By TOM DOERER | | | | | | more favorable things about “that grand man, Walter Johnsen, and the nice Mr. Griffith,” that my editor will be asked to fire me. But “Maggie” never signs the samé Christian name. Which has alwa; made me believe that it was probably Goldle Ahearn, Dutch Bergman, Al Schacht or Orrel Mitchell taking me for a spin. And there’s plenty tidbits in the suc- cotash...Those N. B. A. officials gather- ing in Baltimore are concerned about the welfare of a mateurboxing. .. But not half as much as they might be of its gate receipts...Which are increasing, while pro returns are not...Bob Shaw- key is trailing the Cubs and Howard Emhke is telling the Yanks how to lick 'em, to prove that Ruth & Co. are going to take no chances...Gam- bling odds on the series are 2-1 and | 5-3, with the Yanks favorites...Bob | Knight deserves his rating...Three | writers in 50 asked for an opinion on | the series outcome picked the Cubs... | Amateur golf stunted series interest for | | a while...Foot ball interest threatens it more this year than ever before...But | still it is the greatest thrill of the Au- | tumn season...Alex Taylor, Rolling Road (Baltimore) pro, and Freddie Mc- Leod of the Columbia Country Club, both | named “Sandy” Somerville to win after | seeing him in the qualifying round in the national amateur...For records broken and thrills produced the Five Farms event is a standout among the amateur tourneys of all time...Off to watch the horseshoe championship bat- tle, where there is more real sports spirit than in a hundred pro events. IS LISTED TOMORROW 16th Field Artillery and Fauquier Fours Clash for Fort Myer Event Championship. IXTEENTH FIELD ARTILLERY riders of Fort Myer will clash with the Fauquier four tomorrow after- noon at 3 o'clock on the Potomac Park oval in the championship match of the Fort Myer invitation polo tournament. War Department Blues and Quantico Marines are to battle for the consola- tion crcwn at 4:30 o'clock. Performing before a gallery that in- cluded Mrs. Herbert Hoover and other notables, the Artillery quartet yester- day conquered War Department Whites, 10 to 8, to win tourney high goal honors. The Fauquier combination downed the 110th Field Artillery four, 6 to 4, to achieve low-goal laurels. 16th F. A. (10) Lieut. Billings! Lieut. Thompson Lieut. Barden. Capt. Shea Score by periods: 16th Pield Artillery. War Dept. Whites.... 1 *Tw 1 handicap. 0-g¢ Referee—Maj. H. E._Taylor. Timekeeper, Umptre— ‘scorer— Fauquier (6). Rawlings et Score by perio Fauguler .. 110th Field Artilier: *One-goal handicap. Substitutions—(110th Pield Artillery) Col. Evans for Maj. Koontz. Referee—Maj. H. E. Taylor. Umpire—Capt. L. K. Custard. Timekeeper, scorer—Lieut. T. W. Bennett. IRISH, WILDCATS SET Iron Wrinkles to Meet on Grid in 1934 and 1935. EVANSTON, Ill, September 21 (#).— Notre Dame and Northwestern have reached agreement for foot ball games in 1934 and 1935. The series appeared off when both institutions wishes to play host in 1934, but the difficulties were ironed out and Notre Dame will play at Evanston that y:nam ‘The 1935 contest will be played af also will play at Evans- COACH CASEY SOLD ON TIGHT DEFENSE Veteran Squad Will Be Given No Fancy Assignments to Blur Fundamentals. BY BILL KING, Assoclated Press Sports Writer. CAMBRIDGE. MASS,, Sep- Harvard out of the foot ball mire last year are still in vogue at the stadium, where Eddie Casey expounds the doctrine of a simple offense and a tight de- fense. Casey, starting his second year as head coach, has a veteran squad. Such good fortune would tempt the average coach into ex- | perimenting with a most compli-‘ cated attack. But not Casey. He works on the theory that you must stop the other team from carry- ing the ball to win foot ball games. and to do that you need deadly tack- lers. He is also convinced that expert | blocking makes a simple offense just as effective as the most intricate shift formation. O while the rest of the foot ball world is turning to Warner and Rockne ideas, Harvard remains Harvard. It will continue with its basic structures, the short kick forma- tember 21.—The old-fash- | ioned ideals that pulled | shire; Notre Dame Again Wandering Eleven BY LAWRENCE PERRY. OTRE DAME goes on the road again this season. Whether for political or other reasons, the Irish will play only one big out- standing game this season at her own handsome and commodious sta= dium. This will be the Northwestern contest. Carnegie Tech, another home at- traction, will do well to draw 30,000, contrasted to a probable 55020 sell- out when Dick Hanley and his Wild- cats appear. Away from home, the Irish will play Army in New York; Navy in the new Cleveland Municipal Sta- dium, Kansas at Lawrence, South- ern California_at Los Angeles, and Pittsburgh at Pittsburgh. It is esti- mated that in her foreign games Notre Dame will play before more than 300,000 spectato: Conservative estimat ly more than that. It p: when the right eleven does | roaming. the | two soft spots on it. the opening games. | We have probably lost more good men than any other team in the East and | most of our major opponents have been | strengthened.” § far as Harvard is concerned, the improved substitution rule is the | outstanding change in the gridiron regulat] “Thaf jons. t.” Casey predicts, “will develop a new strategy. Coaches will be able to send in entire teams as units or else | substitute five and six men at a time. It mezns more playing time for the substitutes, less for the regulars and fewer injuries, which is. the object of the change. I would t be surprised if a two-team plan is generally adopted. I would like to do it myself.” The Harvard schedule October 1, Buffalo; 8, New Hampe 15, Penn State; 22, Dartmouth; tion and the single wing back with |29, Brown. the unbalanced line and split short side. | November 5. Army; 12, Holy Cross; Many of these plays date back to |19, Yale, at New Haven the early days of Percy Haughton, but | all have been modified by the decep- | tions that Casey used during his three | years as freshman mentor. There is nothing in fhe Harvard attack that overburdens players with extra assign- ments at the expense of the funda- mentals. Although the Crimson has 26 mem. bers of last vear's varsity squad, in- | cluding 13 lettermen and 5 of the Y: " | game ‘starters, i iacks high-grade re. has & hospital list of three with the | addition of Bob Mendelkorn, an end \ganmdate, who has a broken collar | bone. serve material. ASEY regards this need as vitally important to its 1932 success, for, | under the new liberal substitute | ( rule, he plans to use from 30 to 40 |ligament and George NAVY GRIDDER INJURED Mendelkorn, Collarbone Broken, Is Third on Hospital List. ANNAPOLIS, Md, September 21.— The Naval Academy foot ball squad ‘Two fullbacks make up the list, Jim Soupy) Campbell having a bruised (Red) Powell men in each game instead of the 15 |suffering from injuries received in an or 16 as was the case last season. He and his staff are concentrating on the | third and fourth stringers, and hope to have a perfectly balanced squad in time for the major clashes. Last vear Harvard reached its objec- | tive game with Yale undefeated, but | Eddie has no such high hopes this| season. “We would like to Win every one of | ba our games,” he said. “Who wouldn't? But we have the | automobile accident Mendelkorn will be out of the game until midseason. ~Campbell is ex= pected back in a week and Powell in about two weeks. PEASE WITH MOHAWKS. A late addition to the Mohawk foot 1l squad, which opens its season Oc- tober 2 against the Overbrook White Jackets, is Al Pease, former University hardest schedule in many years, only of Maryland end. Help yourself to real enj oyment EL PRODUCTO il i L e il il el i i ‘3"‘\ Tmz highest quality of fine tobaccos blended to distinctive, yet full-flavored mildness is concen- trated in El Producto. And all for just one purpose—to give you the greatest amount of real enjoyment you ever experienced from a cigar. El Producto is mild, so that you can smoke as much as you want. 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