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SPORTS. ) 1:).3 TR -} 210 \00\( S+ £ W (S TR SRR S P SR R S LR R — Hoyas, Cards Drive for First Tills : 60,000 Expected to See Walker, Schmeling TAKE NO CHANCES WITH ‘SOFT” TEAMS 6. U. Backfield Has Mills in Quandary—Bergman Has Picked €. U. Line-up. G themselves to begin their foot ball schedules Satur- day. Both universities have what appear to be fairly easy games, with Mount St. Mary's and City College of New York, but neither is taking chances. There is no| intention on the part of Tom | Mills or Dutch Bergman, coaches, | ©f getting caught unawares. | The two elevens are being worked as 1f the opening games gave indications | of being much more difficult than either | 1s expected to be. Up on the Hilltop. Mi still seems undecided as to what his regular line- up may be. Judging by the consistency with which he is playing certain men in their positions, a fairly good idea as to several places can be given, but what Mills has back in his head about the| places for which two, three or four men seem to be getting about equal chances | 15 another matt Nobody has any doubt as to who the ends will be. No other player hi the ability as a flanker k of BY H. C. BYRD. EORGETOWN and Catholic University are girding his job at right tackle, and Callahan ap- rently is n about the same positio relationship to center. Daner does mot have such wide margin on his competitors for the right igh of a of ail opposi berth is concerned. e Downer and Konopka are battling it out without much advantage either way. | the most | fmportant_position in Mills’ system of play, is Viskovitch, who was the best man in that position last season. How- ever, Kelly and Saverine have been coming along so rapidly thet Mills is unable to give any idea of who he may use. | Lione, Costello, Kennedy and Donog- ‘hue are fighting for the quarterback’s job, with neither of them having enough margin on the others to. give anybody an idea who may get the first call | Bradley and Shimmins are the leading fullbacks and the chances are they will divide the play. Inall p y B | ley has a little the shade fo Alenty was the regular righ season, but Stanley is putting up a great fight for the place. A slip on Alenty's part and Stanley will get the call. Mills is not talking much about his team, except to say tha have a better eleven th However, the Blue and knows that his men must go t many hard c < therefore knows thai any prediction about the winning of games would be futile. Georgetown should beat Mount St.| Mary's by a fairly good score. Probably | it will not want to win by any big | margin, but certainly the tie played by Mount St. Mary's last week with La Salle does not indicate any powerful opposition. s il UT at Catholic University Dutch | Bergman has about decided on his | first striug. It will be a powerful | yet fast elcven that the Brooklanders | put cu the field Saturday in New York, And that it will be well coached goes | without saying. Bergman was not especially pleased | with the showing on offense against | 8t. John's in the practice game Satur- | day, but saw in his defense a good deal | to give him satisfaction. St. John's did not make a single first n with | fts running attack, and hardly more could be asked of any defense. In- cidentally, Bergman's offense was under wraps, as scouts of City College of New Xork spent the afternoon in the stands C. U.'s starting line will be Ed White ®t center, Jim Lyons ards; Stafford and Gross, tackles, and aatz and Ball, ends. Three of the backfield positions are certain, with Tom Whalen leading in | the left halfback’s job. Fullback is to be cared for by Bus Sheary, and cared for well. Charley McVean, former Gonzaga player, is at quarterback, with some doubt as to whether Jankowski or Tom Gearty will hold down the ght halfback position. Jankowski arted out brilliantly, but Gearty has been coming slong so_well that Berg- man does mot know which of the two men to use. C. U.'s squad is to leave here Friday end will return from New York Sat-| urday night. It expects to win, but realizes it mey run into a lot of op- position. ITH the arrival of husky Tom Delp, { Gallaudet's foot ball squad will | take the field today at full strength._ | Fis charges in good physical trim, and | ractice well advenced, Ccach Teddy ughes expected to begin scrimmaging in this afternoon’s session. There is not this honor. half last 20 YEARS AGO IN THE STAR. ~ Tm: first game of the Washington- Philadelphia series, expected to decide second place in the American League, was to be played today, rain having prevented a game yesterday. ‘World series play between the New York Giants and the Boston Red Sox will open October 8 in New York. Top-notch horses will race in the Laurel meet, which starts Tuesday. Western High's foot ball squad started work yesterday. Those re- poruing included Capt. Howard, Jones, Brady, Pate, Smith; Brooks, Dovwell, Larkin, Brewer, B. Howard, McIntyre, Bethel, Kelly, Beauregard, Hansen, Adams, Lehman, Collins anc Giblin. Catholic University’s gridiron aspirants held their first practice yesterdey under direction of Coach McDevitt. ALABANA SHAPED FOR CLEAN SWERP Has Excellent Gandidatt_:s for Each Berth—Rockne Style Mastered. BY DILLON GRAHAM, Associated Press Sports Writer. USCALOOSA, Ala., September 26. —Frank Thomas, the rotund ttle University of Alabama foot ball coach, cin afford to smile as he looks over his material— | team, 20-7, but North Carolin a scorelers tie with Wake Fores pion in 1931, | Texas A. and M. of the Southwest Con- THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1932. SCHEDULE BRIGHT IN MIDWEST, DIXIE Intersectional, Conference Contests Due—‘“Practice” Games in East. By the Associated Press. EW YORK, September 26.— All along the line, college foot E.".‘.l levens plunge right $1l0 1#% midst of big- time intersectional and confer- ence struggles this week. The Midwest and the South particularly present an unusual- ly attractive array of games for so_early in the season. Of the Big Ten outfits, Northwestern and Purdue open against members of the “Big S Missouri and Kansas ate, respectively, while Wisconsin tackles the strong Marquette eleven and Michigan may be forced to take a trimming from the powerful Michigan State outfit, which rolled up a 93-0 count against Alma last Saturday. Minnesota, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa and Ohio State open against less severe opposition. The Southern slate ‘is featured by eight Southera Conference games, headed by the struggle at Chapel Hill, N. C., between Vanderbilt and North Carolina, both of which experienced some unexpected trouble last week Vanderbilt overcame a fighting Mercer got only Tulane, Southern Conference cham- makes its_debut against ference, while Louisiana State, which held Texas Christian to a 3-3 tie Sat- urday night, tackles another Southwest perhaps the best in Dixie. Conference eleven, Rice. Still another Out on Denny Fleld here he has some | Souefcim representative, Centenary, will threescore huskies Tomping about, sev- | play Texas. eral good-looking candidates for every | The Eastern program, dominated by = another long serics of “practice” L position and many veterans among | SROURSE 19N€ SEXI2S Of Jpincs B : i | tte, - e Alabama lost on¥ one game in 1931, | Yo ity, Carnegie 7 | plonship but I think this is more from end Conter, | V | the Maryland backs did | and North Carolina. and Thomas, although issuing the usual | , * will be surprised if he | s a single contest this year. | The schedule is admirably arranged | for the Crimsons to point for the big games with Tennessee, Vanderbilt and St. Mary's. There are several rest spots. HOMAS had some difficulty last season in introducing the Notre Dame system to players accustomed Wallace Wade's maneuvers, but | 1 Rockne’s magic faster and shif- Although not es heavy as Ala- bama’s giants under Wade, Who now is coaching at Duke, they are better fitted for Thomas’ formations. picking Alabama o win the Southern Conference cham- force of habit than from any logical | reasoning,” Thomas says. “We have good material and should finish well up | but I doubt if the material is well bal- anced enough to be first-class in all Tespects. Godfree, who as a sophomore gave premise of becoming one.of the best tackles in Dixie, has been bothered by | en injured knee If he is lost, Alabama | really wiil be hurt. But the rest of line shapes up satisfactorily. | HE best backfield finds John Cain. | All-Southern in 1931, at fullback, | at quarterback and Camp- | Jker at halfbacks. Another | ball-carrying quartet lists Hushes at | fullback,” Moseley at quarterback, and | Forvell anc Rhordanz, both sophomores, | at halfback. There are two or three passers and kickers in cach group. The schedule: October 1, Mississippi | State 'at Montgomery: October 8, | George Washington at Washington, D. C.: Octoher 15. Tennesse» at Bir- mingh: : October 2 Mississippi: Octobe 29. Kentuc at_ Lexington. Ky.: November 5, Virginia Polytechnic; November 12, Georgia Tech et Atlanta; November 24, Vanderbilt at Birming- ham. and December 3, St. Mary's at San Francisco. the color they added gave the univer- sity & prestige that the winning of the game zlone could not have given. UI-‘I\'ERSITY OF MARYLAND men‘ a woefully weak Washington Col- lege team and ran away with the | game. The Eastern Shore men put up ry litle opposition to anything the | Old Liners offered. It was not enough | of a test to determine much about ! Maryland's squad, and even a fair idea | strength will not be gained after it meets Virginia this week | at_Charlottesville. Fast backs could run wild agzainst a team that put up as little opposition | as Washington College, and that is what | The real test will come when Maryland's line goes | up against another line in its own class. | One thing the game -demonstrated, | though, and that is that Maryland has two or three backs who, given half & | chance to get in the open, will be dan- gerous to any defense. HE vagaries of modern foot ball were | well _demonstrated Saturday at | Chapel Hill, between wake Forest | The latter gained ! ground consistently, making 12 first downs, while Wake Forest was helpless | on offense, but the result was a score- less tle. It was generally thought that Carolina would win. | Duke University disposed of Davidson | | West to meet | finished sixth with 91. much weight in the Gallaudet squad, | by two touchdowns to nothing, a result but many of its members are speedy | that ran true to form. Virginia Mili- and have revealed considerable foot ball | tary Institute lost to Kentucky, which intelligence. Hughes believes he will also was as expected. Tound out a clever eleven during the 10 | < 1o inrs gissiaved a power on at- days remaining before the first game of | | the Blues' season, that with Washing- | tack and defense against Hampden- | Sidney far above anything any| ton College. OUTsTANDING among the results| other Virginia eleven of the last few | of last Saturday's games in this| years has shown, il section was George Washington's| The Cavaliers have an attack, which | defeat of Washington and Lee by three | they have not previously possessed, and | touchdowns, | it 1 the Kind of attack that is extrémely | The Colonials made good with a| Wearing on a defense. The team has | vengeance, in fact, so good that the score | Switched to a double. wing-back forma- | does not 'really indicate their actual | tion. with power and deception with | superiority. One man who watched the | Power as its hopes for gaining ground. ' game said ibis morning that “Wash- | Without capable ends, a defensive ington and Lee was lucky that George | eleven is likely to find itself lost fn Washington did not beat it by five or the maze of swings, cuts and splits | six touchdowns, as on three occasicns | that Virginia throws inside and out- | Geoige Washington _ passes were| side of tackle and outside of end. knocked down behind Washington and Lee's goal line when it seemed that they Were destined to drop into a George ‘Washington man's arms. W and Lee did not have a chance. That Coach Jim Pixlee was pleased over the result is certain, even if he does not comment very freely about it. ‘The game bore out everything he has| been doing in practice, particularly in| relationship to the rough, hard work- outs with which he crowded his first And incidently, the chap who does | most of the ball carrying is a young | man who, as Dr. Sanford of Georgia once put it, has ideal proportions. He | weighs 200 pounds, stands six feet, one, and is fast. And Virginia's line averages pretty close to 200 pounds | from end to end. ! This year’s Virginia team is the best| Virginia team in years, and it is play- ing the kind of foot ball which in- icates it should be the most con- Ur 3 Georgetown ahd Boston College joining in the fun this week, is marked by an intersectional , clash between Villanova and, South Carolina and the meeting at Pittsburgh between the traditional rivals. Pitt and West Virginia Pacific Coast Conference competition starts with Southern California_match- ed against Washington State, Stanford against Oregon State, Washington against Montana and, on Friday night, the University of California at Los An- geles against Idaho. California, smart- ing under its 12-0 beating by Santa Clara, meets the Olympic Club, while | Santa Clara will play Oregon The University of Kansas travels Denver of the Rocky Mountain Conference at Denver Friday night. Utah, soundly beaten by South- ern California last week, tackles Colo- rado College in the leading Rocky glloumam Conference battle on Satur- ay. — e SHELTON GUN CHAMPION H. H. Shelton is the new 16-yard trapshooting champion of the Wash- ington Gun Club He won the coveted honor by con- quering R. D. Morgan. the club’s pop- ular secretary, by two targets, 96 to 94, in a 100-target test that was put on after Shelton and Morgap had finished | Sideration tonight Dr. | Stadium. the first 100 with 96 hits each. A. V. Parsons won. 25 to 24, from H. A. Bartholemew, after they had tied for third, each with 95. Dennis A. Upson, 1931 champlon, Shadows of the Past BY I C. BRENNER. GEORGE BOTHNER. N the soutly side of West Forty- second strcet, between Seventh and Eighth avenues, in the heart of the Great White Light District of New York City, is the most popular gymnasium in the Metropolitan Dis- trict. It is owned by a former cham- pion wrestler, who still is active in the mat sport, but now only as an instructor and a referce. His name is George Bothner, and looking him over one would scarcely believe that the man standing before him is the same fellow who gained the world's amateur and professional light- weight championship and later the middleweight crown almost 40 years ago. He's past sixty. vet he is as spry as a youngster just out of college. His gymnasium is the training quar- ters of every professional wrestler of note when in New York, vet George finds plenty of time to handle his army of patrons who visit his hand ball courts or engage in medi- cine ball practice to reduce their girth. As a teacher of wrestling, there is no onc in the biz clty who has anything on Bothner and as a referee, he is unsurpassed. George was horn in New York, and has lived there all his life. He started his wrestling career in 1885 as an amatfeur and turned profes- sional in 1896. So adept was he in his specialty that he +was made special physical culture instructor at Princeton University in 1901 and later held the same post at Colum- bia University and New York Ath- letic Club. In his professional career he engaged in more than 200 bouts and lost only four. He is a jiu-jitsu expert as well as a catch-as-catch- can phenom. (Copyright, 1932.) Brown, | Jover Ernle Schaaf of Boston in the |arrived just too late. C THE SPORTS MENAGERIE. Wat coB = Wit REED BIG” BAFT. -.o . AW, THERES NO HURRY 4 EQUIPOISE FNISHED /N N GREAT STAKE, SITTING DOWA. .. GRIFFITH AND BAER G0 FOR TITLE SHOT ;Max Favored Tonight in Bout for Heavyweight Qham- pionship Attention. | By the Associated Press. HICAGO, September 26.—Tuffy Griffith, the young-old heavy- weight from Sioux City, Iowa, and Max Baer of Livermore, Calif,, will meet in another one of those battles for champlonship con- in the Chicago When Baer scored his unofficial knockout in gaining a decision victory same ring less than a month ago, he made himself a place in the heavy- weight championship picture. A vic- tory over Griffith will help him along. For Griffith, who has been fighting a | long time in spite of his youth, the bout, scheduled for 10 rounds, ap- proaches the critical. In his last two major encounters he lost decisions to Young Stribling and Johnny Risko. and | another defeat. especially a knockout. | probably would definitely remove him | from the list of possible contenders. AER'S triumph over Schaaf sets him | up as the favorite, but Griffith, | who never seems to take a bad beating. may be the style of fighter to | upset him. Griffith will depend on his | speed and left hand to score and at | the same time avoid the blasts to the body that softened up Schaaf and rip- ened him for the knockout punch that Baer will have the advantage in height. weight and reach. He will weigh ‘about 200 pounds, while Griffith probably will scale no more than 190. A score-by-rounds board will be used for the first time in the stadium, the scoring of the referee and judges to be flashed at the end of each round. Fcot Ball Tips BY JOE GLASS. FTEN working with light ma- tertal, Coach Tuss McLaughry develops many speedy plays at Brown. These include a bewildering array of double and triple passes be- hind the line, such as those which helped him to beat Princeton and hustle powerful Colgate and Colum- bia last year. Here is a McLaughry triple pass which will be hauled out of the bag more than once this Fall. It is from a double wing-back formation, with the line balanced and tight, save for the right end, who plays 3 yards loose from his tackle. No. 1 receives the ball, goes three steps to the right and, passing to No. 2, dashes around his own right end, not only to feint a run, but to reach E SHEARING SEASON IN FOOTBALL (S ER- T WAS A COMPLETE JOB..... “Ton DozRESpe Max and Mickey Intriguing Ought to Put on Exciting Show, But So Should Have German and Sharkey. BY GRANTLAND RICE. EW YORK, September 26.— In response to a number of queries asking what sort of fight the Schmeling-Walker battle tonight will be, the answer is about this: It ought to be a first class scrap, since both always have been willing to wade in and fight. But I also thought the Schmeling-Sharkey fight would be a good one—whereas it turned out to be the exact opposite. If Schmeling and Walker can't put on an exciting and interesting entertainment, the fight future will be full of shadows. They are both Culling the aggressive and it is usually trouble enough to get one aggressive party into the ring—much less two. Even this pair may find some way to send the clients home with that “never again” war cry of the fight fan, but it doesn’t dope that way in advance. And the “never again” of the fight fan means just about as much as does the threat of the cove who is “through with golf” after one of those sour rounds, which rips into the soul and turns the heart upside down. At least no one has ever accussed Walker and Schmeling of not trying, of not being willing to stand up and ::‘cnh;nge wallops, which is some- paper Alliance, Inc.) Cauliflowers BY FRANCIS E. STAN. Schmeling-Walker affair in Gotham, - Benny Schwartz, Baltimore’s best bantam, and Frankie De Angelo, Washington's leading 120- odd pounder, tonight will square off in the initial fistic card of the Alexandria Day Nursery at Portner’s Arena. Schwartz, the master boxer, will be the favorite, but those who have ‘watched De Angelo closely in his train- ing would not be surprised if the local Italian upset the dope. De Angelo, a better-than-average boxer, cannot box with Schwartz, but neither can Schwartz punch with De Angelo, who today has let it be known he plans to concentrate almost entirely on Benny's midsection. ‘The little Italian disclaims the voiced opinion he has been weakened by the necessity of taking off nearly 9 pounds in less than a month and plans to })rove it by wearing down Schwartz be- ore the bell at the end of the elxhgg round. His sparring has been c to lightweights and junior lightweights. six-round semi-final between e Afth straight Victory. i The card: Frankie De Angelo (122) vs. Benny Schwartz (120), eight rounds. Roddy Davis, Washington (133), vs. Kid Cosden, Cordova, Md. (132), six iy Essinger, Washington (135), va. €T, , V8. Yo“:: Raspi, Baltimore (132), four rounds. Doug Swetnam, Washington (127, vs. Tommy Horn, Baltimore (126), four rounds. Benny Toothman, Baltimore (140), vs. Leroy Zinkham, Baltimore (138), four rounds. Referee—Charley Short, Baltimore, First bout—8:30 o'clock. Women with HILE & ringside radio drones “] the happenings of the HOSE two Jims—McMillan and L Londos—who took the play out of hands and really office record when they clash again Thursday in Griffith Stadium. McMillan, who was opening holes for Red Grange to snake through at Illi- nois five years ago, and Londos, wWho was just another hungry rassler at the same time, have never failed to draw and generally please fans. Attractive- ness to Thursday’s match was added re- cently when Ray Steele, first vice pres- ident of the racket, succeeded in pin- nla!g. Londos in a draw bout, and Mc- Millan was ranked No. 3 by the Na- tional Wrestling Association. The supporting card is brightened by the presence of Rudy Dusek and Abe Coleman, who meet, respectively, George Vassell and Nino Darnaldi. % AKING 8 leaf from Messrs. Jacques Turner is to have his jum. . .It's located right across the street from his ‘Hotel ticket office...Did the N nal Wrestling Association forget there are some rasslers named Hans Steinke, Sarin Plestina. George and Joe Malcewicz when they ranked the t'other day?...Local fight fans can't see Joe Knight being ranked No. § among the t-heavies, behind Bob Godwin and ers beaten by the Geor- gia slugger...Godwin, by the way, meets Reds Barry tonight in a six-round prelim to the Schmeling-Walker bout. Josephus own y KERRY KEEPS LAURELS. DUBLIN, September 26 (#).—Kerry retained the All-Ireland Gaelic foot ball championship at Croke Park, defeating the challenging Mayo team, 2 goals and 7 points to 2 goals and 4 points. A | SHERWOO | (Copyright, 1932, by North American News- | SPORTS. HEAVY ODDS BELIED BY FANS' INTEREST Max 3-to-1 Favorite Over Smaller Foe in Gotham Secrap Tonight. BY HERBERT W. BARKER, Associated Press Sports Writer, EW YORK, September 26.— To the betting fraternity, Max Schmeling is a 3-to- 1 shot to whip little Mickey Walker in their 15-round heavy- weight match in Madison Square Garden Bowl tonight, but Mr, John H. Fan seems to have an- other idea. Otherwise there’s no explaining the heavy advance sale reported by the Garden nor the appar- ently reliable predictions of a “gate” of around $200,000 and a crowd of 60,000 or more. Perhay prosective. customees rereiis g July night last year when Mickey stepped into the ring to face Sharkey, now the heavyweight champion. The Rumson, N. J. gamester conceded Sharkey 30 pounds in weight and every other physi- cal advantage that night, yet gained a draw in 15 rounds and, in the qpinion gl;as%rgceugg‘lcs, was clearly entitled to UT whatever the reason, the Gare den expects to close the outdoor season with considerable profit to itself and the milk fund, always ase suming a favorable “break” from the weather _man. The fight, originally scheduled for last Monday, twice was postponed when Walker developed a case of boils, and the delay has done nothing to hurt the Teceipts. Now it will eatch the ado vance guard of customers arriving for | the first game of the world series here Wednesday. Just as in the Sharkey bout, Walker | will have to concede all the physical ad- vantages to Schmeling. The Teuton is five years younger, nearly 20 pounds | heavier and will have corresponding ad- | vantages in height and reach. But Walker, provided he decides to fight s cagey battle, is conceded some chance of outsmarting the German if he can keep away from Schmeling’s lethal right. PPARENTLY it will be a battle of body punchers, for Walker's best punch is a left to the body, and Schmeling has been working on a right smash to the same sector with the idea of counteracting Mickey’s most effective weapon. Weighing-in _ceremonies were to be staged at the New York State Athletic Commission offices this afternoon. The fight was to go on between 9:30 and 10 o'clock, Eastern standard time. Charley Belanger, Winnipeg heavy- weight, meets Tony Shucco, Baston, in the eight-round semi-final. Sixes will pit Al Fay against Vincent Parille and RCHERY records todsy were being | Bc_}:hGoflw'{rxl against Red Barry. checked to determine whether Mrs. | | There will be no broadcast of the Josephine Taylor of 1460 Irving | ' slgt, l;ln:ke a E:’vml'lgi;!corg‘ Jeslterdny.‘ = 2 when’ she scored 1,052 po rom a double Columbia of 144 shots, in the CENTRAL’ ST. JOHN'S PLAY invitation tourney held by the Potomac | esnersespral | Archers in Potomac Park. Dorothy| One of the brightest early season Duggan of Greenwich, Conn. in the | games of the schoolboy foot ball season national meet at Canandaigua, N. Y. |here is slated tomorrow afternoon be- in 1931 totaled 1,046. | iween Central and St. John's in Cen- Mrs. Taylor counted 534 in the morn- } tral Stadium at 3:30 o'clock. ing and in the afternoon scored 14 out| It will be the third contest of the of 18 bullseyes. | campaign for Central, which showed Mrs. Arthur Blackburn of Baltimore | strongly in holding the Erie (Pa.) | with 640 was second to Mrs. Taylor; | Academy eleven to a 6-0 win Friday at | Mrs. H. Scallowhill, Baltimore, 603, was | Erie. St. John's will be opening its | third, and Elizabeth Elmer, Wayne, Pa., | schedule and will be plaving its first | 424, was fourth. game under direction of its new coach, | Scoring 762. Willlam C. Skinner.|Jack Dunn. The Kaydets have lost Ellicott City, Md.. State champion, won | valuable players by graduation, but have | men’s honors, competing in the Potomac | considerable veteran material and hl‘a and American rounds. high hopes of throwing the well kno mankey wrench into the Central ma~ chine. The teams did not meet last year. In 1930 Central was a 7-6 victor. SEEK SUNDAY GAMES. Anacostia Eagle Prep 125-pound | gridders are after Sunday games. Call | Lincoln 4351-J between 6 and 7 p.m. Pro Foot Ball Yesterday's Results. Brooklyn, 7: Staten Island, 0. Portsmouth, 7; New York, 0. Green Bay, 0; Chicago Bears, (Scoreless ti Chicago, 19; Battle Creek, 0. OIL FILTER REPLACEMENTS RECARTRIDGE EVERY 8,000 MILES L.S.JULLIEN,Inc. RACES TODAY Havre de Grace Records Searched to Determine if Mrs. Taylor’s 1,052 Is High for Double Columbia. = as Wayne, Pa.. seven times national cham- | pion, scored 699, | _W. O. Robinson of Falls Church was chosen president of the Old Dominion | Archery Association formed on the field [SS——— D GOLFER WINS Halsey Scores 152 in Contest for Eastern Shore Title. CHESTERTOWN. Md., September 26.—In a galelike breeze, N. S. Halsey of Sherwood Forest Country Club. Md., put together a pretty pair of 76s to total 152 and take the second annual Eastern Shore golf champlonship_tro- phy in a field of 50 fers from Mary- land, Delaware and Pennsylvania. The medal play was staged over 36 holes at Chester River Yacht and Coun- try Club here with F. S. Carnes of Maryiand Country Club the runner-up with a score of 160. Frank Beck of the local club took the medal offered to the Eastern Shore golfer making the lowest score. He registered 162. IN SECOND TENNIS ROUND Wardman Park Team Advances in D. C. Championship Tourney. Wardman Park racketers, Capital City League title holders, today are in 0 Curley, Ray Fabiani, et al, Prof. |63 the second round of the annual D. C. tennis team championships, the result of a 7—0 win yesterday over Columbia, National Bankers’ League pennant win- ner: Summaries: i iskell, 63, 6—4; Considine (W.) defeated Cairn- cross, 8—1, 6—1; Olhausen (W.) defeated St tatons Snd: snore, (w.). dagtont- Yeatman. an g Ay s - ers defaulted the other two double: SEVEN RACES DAILY Special Penna. R. R, train leaves Union Station 12:05 p.m., direct totrack. Busses leave 1416 F St. N,W. at 10:45 am. Eastern Standard Time. ADMISSION: Grandstand and paddock, §1.65, including tax. FIRST RACE AT 2:15 P.M. HOPE FOR YOU @ If you have trouble shaving, a trial of the Gillette BLUE BLADE will convince you that real comfort can be yours. Unequalled manufacturing methods make this blade the sharpest we have ever produced. Try it and see. escorts will be admitted free. crowd of 40,000 saw the match. SAVE JOHN RUSKIN CIGAR BANDS ohn Ruskin Cigars now are greater value Jl.han ever. You will enjoy either size, Perfecto Extra or Panetela. Useful articles given Free for John Ruskin bands. Ask your dealer for New Premium Washington Tobaceo Co., Distributors « Johnuskin CICARS SATISFY /0< SMOKERS sistent. UT on the Pacific Coast, Bill In- | two weeks at Camp Letls. | From the beginning, Pixlee has re- | elized the importance of the Washing- ton and Lee game and bent every effort | gram’s Celifornia eleven took a to come through it successfully. That| drubbing from Santa Clara by two he met the test so well speaks in bet- | touchdowns in the only big upset in ter language for Pixlee's judgment and that section. Stanford tock the meas- gbility than any words. |ure of the University of San Pran- The outlook for the Westminster con- | cisco, formerly St. Mary's, without test here Friday ]x:iigm Lomu trouble. Washington should win withou - s aly culty, and from today on Pixlee will de-| _In the North, there were no upsets. vote his whole effort toward having the gflrgg&ggu!se:fkacmm;i mm::x:‘t_x | o - 3 5 - feam ready to battle Alabama on Oc-| i PUF Y the South, Vanderbiit and | Incidentally, the game at Washington | Tennessee were victors, but encountered and Lee Saturday was one of which |considerable opposition from Mercer and George Washington may feel proud, in | Chattanooga. Sewanee made a much that it reflected credit on the univer- | better showing against South Carolina sity from a standpoint of the showing | than was thought probable in holding made on the sidelines. About 300 stu- | the Columbia team, 3 to 7. and main- ents and other supporters, with a band, | taining the lead until late in the third made the trip on a special train, and | quarter. Position for blocking the close-up left defensive back. No. 2 sweeps * left, 7 yards behind center, passes to No. 3 and continues on to block the incoming enemy right end. No. 3 carries the ball wide to the right, with left guard and tackle (Nos. 6 and 7) providing interference. Obviously No. 3 must be a very fast man, such as McLaughry had in Buonanno last year. Too, Nos. 6 and 7 must swing back from the scrimmage line with great speed. The blocking assignments of Nos. 1 nndz,nnerm%mbdl.m very important. i left end (8) Pitcher Breaks Arm in Wind- p NOW C By the Associated Press. ‘OS ANGESLES, September 26.— It was a tense moment in the last half of the ninth inning of a semi-pro base ball game, with the score 7 to 3 against the batting side, the bases loaded, two out and the count two and three on the batter. Arthur Rottener, in the pitcher's box, wound up to whiz over the last strike. He unwound, let go and the ball plopped at his feet. He had l whhumlntw.fl:eu tcher retired the |