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allagher Scores CIGANTIC FIGHTER MARK FOR MARTY “'ew Yorker, Towerixg Over D. C. Heavy, Is Sluggish, Lacking in Fire. BY FRANCIS E. STAN. IVE years too late, perhaps, but Martin William Gallagher of Foggy Bottom. most glorified of all Washington fistic prod- | uects, finally basked in the long-sought national boxing spotlight today. The pale, perfectly formed Irish- man. who for eight lean years com- manded an almost fanatical idolatry irom his fellow-townsmen and re- turned only failure upon failure, be- latedly had rewarded even ifis most | rabid champion today as a stunned 1ing world surveyed the possible wreckage Marty's heretofore phleg- | matic fists had wrought on fistiana’s mest expensive investment, Ray Im- | pellitiere. Gallagher. the 27-year-old Adonis - ho quite probably was looked upon as 2 human punching bag for the gar- ~antuan “Imp" by every fighi follower cutside of the District lines, soundly | whipped Impellittiere last night at the vashington Auditorium. He whipped ~im far more easily than did the clev- est of all heavyweight fistslingers. smmy Loughran, and that wild- vinging. durable Teuton. Walter suzel. Marty whipped him more undly than the “Imp" ever was iten before, Imp Not Natural Fighter. ARTY conceded Impellittiere nearly 6 incnes in height and 48 pounds in weight. He gave vay youth—three precious years of uth—to that gigantic 24-year-old alian-American boy from Cold oring. N. Y. He gave away punching wer to the $100.000 Frankenstein of 'xing. But brains and courage he nceded not at all. Gallagher, resembling a welterweight tted against a heavyweight, a pursuit 1ane eircling the Graf Zeppelin, yoked good last night, fighting the ind of fight his followers so long have | reamed was in his system. But. for 11 of his impressiveness, Marty did not n the flames of hope that he might rove & heavyweight title contender. 1l he did was to prove that a certain ergrown gentleman named Im-| “llitiere was not. Ray—christened Rosario—made the | catest concession. true. when he en- | red the ring without a fight und'r} s belt for 11 months. Impellittiere | as rusty to the squeaking point. He | at fat around the midsection. His| ming was off | But bundle up all these items and “btract ‘sm from the points he scored | st night and still there iz a deficit ch must be attributed to something. ->x Baer was rusty and not the finely- ~nditioned Baer who beat Schmeling 2en he fought and kavoed Carnera st June. But Baer was a natural | fighter and a hitter. loaded with “killer” instinct. The Imp is “ither, _Rocks Foe With Rights. MPELLITTIERES chortcomings were evidenced before four minutes of the scrap had ticked away. 1anks to a couple of inaffective jabs, 2y won the first round, but early in the ~cond Marty threw a looping. over- and right to the jaw. Too late went » the Imp's hand to catch the blow, hich caught him on the side of the aw, spun him around, and all but nocked him to the floor. That blow | on the round for Gallagher. Ever grinning good-naturedly, even nile Marty’s punches, or throwing his *n wicked. but too slow right upper- it, Impellittiere dropped the next ree before rallying in the sixth to in a slight edge. The fourth was lost ' the Imp early when he struck a ion of illezal rabbit punches. in the fifth visions of a technical | ockout arose when Ray emerged m a body-punching skirmish with « Jeft eve cut and blood streaming wn his face. It was not a bad cut, wever | impellittiere had only an outside ince of winning after gaining that ith heat. but this was promptly re- ced to enly a knockout chance after rty had clinched the verdict in the venth and eighth by rocking Im- “llittiere with looping rights to the ‘. Apd the Imp, for all of his wver, had not the kayo wallop. On this observer’s card, the last two unds were even. Six rounds were “llagher’s, two were for the Imp| 4 two were even. Final points scored | re 431, for Gallagher to 38'; for | ipellittiere. Eller Votes Draw. T THAT, Gallagher narrowly es- caped becoming the victim of a reverse of our so-called “home- =n" decisions. Judge Bob Eller could ot see Marty as the winner. and voted draw, Carroll Dunn, the other judge varded the fight to Gallagher, and ~feree Howard Livingston. who, in- dentally. turned in a bang-up job, 2at. the deciding ballot for Gallagher. h* weights were 258 for the Imp and °0 for Gallagher. Both seemed over- ~'ght. A cplit decision for Bob Lowry of echington over Mickey Landis of ancaster. Pa. in the eight-round mi-windup, and the auspicious pro ebut of Gus Mirman, former D. C A. A. U. light-heavy champ, featured ‘he preliminary card. Lowry won two, otes as against a draw ballot, while “firman took a unanimous five-round | srdict from Deacon Owens. | Joe Green, local featherweight. won close duke over Sammy Seaman of *lexandria in a six-rounder, while Lou erry of St. Louis outpointed Stumpy | “acobs of Hopewell, Va. in & six-! sund lightweight battle. A crowd of only 1.705 cash customers. * 2,022 in all. witnessed the card. e gate was $2.170. and the principals ere paid off at 25 per cent each on 1.855.35, after 10 per cent, or $217 ad been deducted for a Christmas narity, along with the usual 5 per -=nt for the Boxing Commission. ‘ “RAWFORD BEATS PERRY | “>wns World's Ranking Racketer l in New South Wales Final. SYDNEY, December 1 (Saturday) | ™.—Jack Crawford, Australia’s ack tennis star, today defeated | ‘ed Perry ofe England. the world’s ¢+ ~nking player, 7—5, 2—6, 6—3, 1—6, ,—5, to win the New South Wales ‘“ampionship. | College Basket Ball ‘Wisconsin, 34; Franklin, 11. ’cmmn. 39; Concordis (Minn), 0. - 20 Years Ago IN THE STAR. OHNNY KILBANE, feather- weight boxing champion, may soon meet, George Chaney, crack Baltimore battler, in a bout at Cincinnati. Mike Doalin has been dropped by the New York Giants base ball team. Jimmy Archer. crack catcher of the Chicago Cubs, has suffered many injuries. The Brooklyn base ball team led the National League in batting last season and Jake Daubert, first baseman of the Dodgers, showed the way in individual batting, but the team finished in the second division. The salary of Roger Bresnehan, manager of the Chicago Cubs, is said to be $18.000 a year. Alexander Dickson Wilson has been elected captain of the 1815 Yale foot ball team. Pepco won all three sets from the Judd & Detweiler team In the Commercial Duckpin League. Roll- ing for the winners were Doerner, Ferrell, Gardner, Brooks and Thomas. The losers used Mc- Ceney, Hoover, Fellinger, Morrison and Hayte. Charley Weeghman, owner of the Chicago Cubs, has offered Walter Johnson, crack Washing- ton pitcher, a salary of $48,000 for three years. AR DUCKPNNERS BEGIN TOURNEY T Great Field Is in Line for Davis Stakes—Orioles Visit Occidentals. NE of the strongest fields of girl bowlers ever to shoot in a Washington tournament is expected tonight when the opening block of the seventh annual Meyer Davis Sweepstakes is rolled at the Lucky Strike. Entries will be ac- cepted up to post time, which is 7:30 o'clock. The s~cond skirmish will take place at the King Pin next Saturday and | the final the following Saturday at the Lucky Strike. Lorraine Gulli, who has won the tournament four times, will be the de- fending champion this time, Marjorie Bradt Smith, with a record score of 1,079 in 1931, and Margaret Leaman | Lynn, champion in 1931, are the others who have triumphed in Bill Wood's prized event. The girls will put up $3 apiece, all of it to go into the prize fund. will donate the alleys. Two Other Events Slated. EVERAL new stars are out to make it anything but easy sledding for the great Gulli While the girls are holding forth at the Lucky Strike the crack Occidental Restaurant team and Ray Von Dreele's Stars of Baltimore will be having it out at Convention Hall in he final half of a home-and-home series, with the Occidentals having a 51-pin edge. Still another attraction tonight is a doubles battle with Ollie Pacini and Frank Mischou meeting Hap Franz and Ray Barnes of Baltimore at the Northeast Temple in a return engage- ment. In Baltimore, Franz and Barnes won by seven pins and Pacini lost to Barnes in singles by 10 sticks. The Heurich Brewers regained first place in the National Capital League over Washington Times. “Trojan Gridders On Mettle Today 0S ANGELES, December 1 (#) The question of whether Southern California’s foot ball team is really on the come-back trail will be answered bv Wash- ington at the Memorial Coliseum todar. If the Trojans can subdue the fast-moving pack of huskies, then they may have a chance against their intersectional foe, Notre Dame, here one week hence. For six years Washington has tried vainly to stop Coach Howard Jones' eleven. Wood | "BAMA EVER FIERY ROSE BOWL TEAM Followed Narrow 1926 Wir. With Tie Next Year, Easy Victory in 1930. (This is the first of three stories on the Alabama foot ball team and its record in the Rose Bouwl for a period of 10 years.) BY T. M. DAVENPORT. NIVERSITY, Ala., December 1 (#)—A lyricist recently wrote “Stars Fell on Alabama,” but in foot ball in the last decade stars have risen in Alabama. On New Year day in Pasadena’s Rose Bowl the fourth Alabama team in 10 years will defend the gridiron | prestige of that vast section east of will glitter. Gone are Hubert, Gillis and Brown of 1925, Caldwell, Winslett and Enis of 1926, Cain, Sington, Campbell and others of 1930, but omnipresent are the stars in Howell, Hutson, Lee, Smith and others. who have made Alabama's 1934 campaign one of victory. Great Rally in 1926. HE first Crimson invasion of the Rose Bowl on New Year day. 1926, raised the stock of Al hml:- foot ball and the South in gen- eral Trailing by two touchdowns at the half, Alabama, led by the wildly driving Pooley Hubert, rose in the zecond half and won as spectacular a victory as any ever did to nose out Washington’s Huskies, 20 to 19. A year later, although Hubert and Grant Gillis, who fired the 50-yard | pass to Johnny Mack Brown that won the game, were gone, new stars had |risen. Again Alabama traveled west | this time to meet Stanford's Indians | The Indians went to work and ran | over a first-period touchdown. Kept Up Fight. chell Caldwell, Red Barnes, Wu gotten the 1926 rally. After fighting Stanford to a stand- still for two periods, Alabama’s offense | clicked and Jimmy Johnston, fullback, | finally plunged over for a touchdown Caldwell converted from placement for a tie. Alabama's fortunes waned. For three years old enemies in Dixie won. In 1930 the last Wallace Wade coached eleven came through unde- feated. Easy Win Last Time, s were there—John “Hur- Cain, a sophomore fullback who called signals: Ralph Mc- Knight, a blocking back whose name | appeared only in the line-ups, never in | the detail; John Henry Suther, Monk Campbell, ace of the spinner play: Pred Sington, an all-America tackle | and Captain Foots Clement, his run- | ning mate This starting team was backed by |8 second string eleven, almost as | strong defensively as the varsity. In- ismd of staging a spectacular rally to electrify the bowl crowd, this eleven | went to work and defeated Washing- ton State, 24 to 0, going away. | In 1930 the 'Bama team was a power unit that went through, today it is speed, deception and split second timing. But the stars shine as brightly in | Alabama. HE | last night with a_three-game victory | D. C. GIRL HOCKEiY STAR Jenny Turnbull Helps Southeast Reserves to Win, 1-0. 1 NEWTONVILLE. Mass., December 1.—With Jenny Turnbull of Wash- ington playing strongly at center half in the second half, Southeast Reserves lost a hard-fought match by 1-0 to the Northeast team vesterday in the Na- tional Field Hockey tourney. In other matches Southeast downed the Northeast Reserves, 11-0, North- east won over Southeast Reserves, 2-1, and Great Lakes defeated the Mid- west team, 6-2. Only two members of last year's all- America team. Anne Townsend, Phila- delphia. and Anne Pugh, Baitimore. retained their posts, it was announced | at the hockey association’s annual | banquet last night. | 1 the Rocky Mountains, and new stars | HE fighting spirit of Alabama | | had been forgotten, but Hers- | | MARTY “MAULING THE MASTODON --- Winslett and Ben Enis had not for- | "vAL\.AGHiR 11EAD CHEER Don'r CARRY '1M MARTY-.PUT "M ov 2 T NOW i 'FULLER'S WALLOPS ! TRULY CONVINCING Fighter Who Lost Queer Verdict | to Jackson Polishes Off Jadick in Fourth Fuller, sturdy little Boston fight- er who started an upheaval {among New York boxing officials | when he dropped a strange decision to young Peter Jackson a couple of | weeks ago. apparently has no inten- tion of letting such things happen again. | Puller put Jackson on the floor three times. but the judges called the decision against him. Last night he came back and flattened Johnny Jad- ick. rangy Philadelphia welter. three times in one stanza and did it so thoroughly that h~ won on a technical knnckout in the fourth round. He hit Jadick <o hard with a left that the thump of the Philadelphian's head on the canvas might have bren a signal that it was all over. Jadick managed to get up twice, but the referee intervened as Fuller smashed him into the ropes Fuller. just tco big to be a light- weight, weighed 138!,; Jadick, a quar- ter-pound less. —e CENTRAL'S GAME OFF. Central High's scheduled foot ball game with the Columbia High (S. C.) team today at Columbia was can- celed, because a satisfactory financial | agreement could not be reached. Gallagher “Goes Under” for Ring Victory D. C. scrapper socks mastodonic Impellittiers after Jetting lnvader's attempted blow sl his head, ide harmlessly ovep —Star Staf? Photo. LEAGUE BASKETERS . IN ACTION TONIGHT Remblers Meet Internal Revenue. All States Play Warwicks at -Roosevelt High. LL-STATES and Warwicks meet A at 8:15 o'clock and Ramblers | and Internal Revenue at 9:15 o'clock at Roosevelt High in the only | games carded tonight in the Com_ munity Center Basket Ball League. St. Joseph's basketers won their fourth straight, defeating the Boys' Club of Washington quint, 25-10. Fitzpatrick, with 10 points, led the winners' attack. Central High's gym is available for teams vishing to use it Monday night Call Lincoln 2193-W In the Community Center League, Miller's quint defeated the Royals. 42-24; Stewart’s was a 26-18 victor over Levy's and the Rinaldi five drubbed the Atonement quint, 34-11. Fights Last By the Associated Press NEW YORK —Sammy Fuller, 138!, Boston, stopped Johnny Jadick, 1381 Philadelphia (4); Abe Feldman, 1793, outpointed Steve Dudas, 189, Edge- water, N. J. (10): Carlos (Bahy) \Qumtnnn. 117',, outpointed Jo Tei Ken, 118. Korea (8): Werther Arcelli, | 1413,, Boston. outpointed Tommy | Romano, 1483,. Albany. N. Y. (6): | Salvatore (Red) Affinito, 159. New | York, outpointed Christy Lewis, 155, California (6). | CHICAGO.—Joe Louis. 195!z, De- ‘rtroit. knocked out Charlie Massewa, 185, Pittsburgh (3): Billy Miller, 146',. Milwaukee, stopped Laddie Tonielli, 145, Marseilles, Ill. (4); Fred Caserio, 163, Chicago, outpointed Ernie Evans, 169'2, Milwaukee (6). GRAND FORKS. N. Dak.—Ernie | Hetherington. 154, Winnipeg, stopped Red King, 160, Billings, Mont. (1 Bill Strom, 190, Bismarck. N. Dak., drew with Stanley Dorgan, 173, Duluth (6). ST. LOUIS.—AI Stillman, 172, St. Louis, knocked out Frankie Wine, 189, Butte, Mont. (8); Babe Hunt, 197, Ponca City, Okla., knocked out Ray Pelky, 176, San Francisco (1): Joey Parks, 161, St Louis, outpointed Billy Hoon, 155, Rock Island, Il. (10); Babe Davis, 190. St. Louis, outpointed John Ford, 179, Ponca City, Okla. (6). SAN FRANCISCO.—Babe Marino, 150, San Francisco, outpointed Gaston Lacadre, 147, France (10); Fred Apos- toli, 158, San Francisco, stopped Eddie Daniels, 163, Oakland (2). HOLLYWOOD.—Harry Serody, 136, Philacelphia, vante, California (10). PISMO BEACH, Calif—Kid Moro, 134, Manila, outpointed Joe Ghnouly, 135, St. Louis (10). SAN DIEGO.—Johnny Romero, 165, 163, Los Angeles (6). FLORIDA RA.CING IS ON Greyhounds Featured at Three Plants Opening Tonight. MIAMI, Fla, December 1 Florida's racing season opens today. At three tracks greyhounds will start their eternally unsuccessful—if ma- chinery works aright—chase of the stuffed bunny. Thoroughbred horses face the bar- rier at Tropical Park December 15, two weeks ahead of previous Winter racing in Florida. Dog tracks open tonight at Clay County Kennel Club, near Jackson- ville; West Florida Racing Association, at Tampa, and the Biscayne Kennel Club hers. outpointed Gege Gra- | San Diego, stopped Sailor Jack Ward. | (— | SPORTS SWEARS HE WASN'T CRYING OVER THAT HE HAD A™ CODE 1D D'MEAD”,. HERE'S going to be almost a general exodus of local golf £ 4 > STRAIGI professionals from the Capital by W. | early next week if all the lads who are talking about going to Miami for the Biltniore tournament actually make the trip With 812,500 in prize dough flaunted before them, plus a trip that doesn't | cost too much money, at least a half dozen of the local boys are looking | toward Miami and a shet at the big purse. Most of them will leave Mon- day to get in several days of prac- tice before the tourney opens next Baturday. It is now assured that a ! half doven of the leading American pros will not bé around for the divi- sion of the Biltmore purse. They are in Australia and will not be hack in this country until just before Christ- mas. These include Horton Smith | Paul Runyan, Harry Cooper. Dens- more Shute, Craig Wood. Ky Laffoon. ! Gene Sarazen and Joe Kirkwood. most of whom came in for a cut of the Bilt- more purse last December. Those who plan to go from Wash- ington are Al Houghton of Kenwood, Roland R. MacKenzie of Congres- sional, Leo Walper of a driving course at Bethesda, Al Treder of Manor and Mel Shorey of East Potomac Park. Bob Barnett of Chevy Chase already is at Miami and will play in the tour- n Some of the lads have promised IN PAMPAS BATTLE Will Have 35-Pound Advantage Over Campolo Tonight in Second Meeting. | | By the Asociated Pre. UENOS AIRES. December 1— Primo Carn-ra, Italian man- mountain. rules a heavy choice to whip Victorio Campolo of Argen- tina. in their 12-round bout tonight Inaugurating a comeback campaign he hopes eventually will lead him back to the werlds heavyweight champion- ship, Carnera will have a 35-pound pull in the weights and figures to beat Campolo just as decisively as he | did in New York three years ago. Big Primo won by knockout in two rounds on tha* occasion. Tommy Loughran and Paulino Uz- | cudun will be interested spectators. Uz- cudun will fight Primo next month and Loughran expects to face the big | Italian again in January. ' HOOSIER HARRIER WINS Stretch Run Gives Don Lash U. S. Cross-Country Title. TOWA CITY. Towa, December 1 (#). —Don Lash, Indiana star, dashed into the lead in the last 100 vards of th= 6!4-mile cross-country race to win the individual national A. A. U. senior championship in 32:17.2. The National A. A. U. senlor team | champlonship went to Millroce A. C. |of New York. Michizan State was | second, Indiana third, | fourth. and Iowa Races Postponed At Charles Town HARLES TOWN, W. Va, De- cember 1.—Rains, which have been falling since last Tuesday and which washed away part of the vacing strip. resulted in J. B. McLaughlin, racing commissioner for this State announcing at 10 oclock that teday’s opening had been postponed until next Thurs- day. Commissioner McLaughlin care- fully wnspected the track and find- ing :t washed away in many spots, decided not to run the risk of having any jockeys or horses in- jured and informed President Al Boyle of the Charles Town Jockey Club to nostpone the inaugural of the 13-day session. There are more than 500 horses on the grounds. A fine card had been arranged and entries were being taken for Monday when Commissioner McLaughlin ~lssued his order. CARNERA FAVORITE | . | Buckler T OFF THE TEE R.MECALLUM themselves a trip over to Miami Beach to play Bob's famed Indian Creek Jayout. Indian Creek is about 20 miles from Coral Gables. where the Bilt- more tourney will be plaved All the local entries Houghton will fall into the second class. those who will compete for £5.000. Houghton, who is a Class A pro because he qualified for the P. G. A. championship. is eligible to play in the first division, which has a p! purse totaling of & trant done anything much in previous Biltmore tourneys. Willie MacFarlane won the tourney and first prize of $2500 last year. ITH all the courszes around Wazhinzton flooded after three davs of practically con- tinuous rain there wasn't due to be much golf plaved over the week end Several of the courses probably will remain clozed over Sunday until the standing water can drain from flat fairways and bunkers. but some of them will be open tomorrow. although the fairways are sure to be soggy and soft from the heavy rains of last night and early today. Meanwhile the sport scribes on the Washington newspapers are hoping for clearing weather Monday when they play in their annual joust for the Cleland Trophy at the Army War College course. barring Grid Graphs ASHINGTON Nationals and ‘h‘P Mchavks have booked a grid game for December 9 at | Griffith Stadium. It is billed for the | District of Columbia pro champion- | ship. | Wolverine A. C. and Merrick Boys Club elevens meet tomorrow on Fair- lawn Field. No. 1. at 11 am. to decide the recond-half crown in the Colum- bian League. The Wolverines won the first-half crown and will gain honors for the second and the league title should they trim the Merricks. A victory fer the latter will throw the leadership into a_three-way e among Wolverine, Merricks and Northeast Tigers These elevens are after games for tomorrow: Notre Dame Preps 150 pound eleven Atlantic 2310, pm Brockland Boys' pound ecven, Manager Godire 1658. Alexandria Fraters, ¢ with any opponent. Alesandria Anaco'tia A, C. with 13 tecm, cn a Fairlawn Field at 1 o'clock. Atlantic 0823. STATESMAN IS SHIPPED N. D2cember 1 (/) —Stales- wied by the American or Emanuel has been shipped to the United Sta to run in the $160.000 Santa Anita Handicap at Los Angsles February 23 LOS ANGELES, D2cember 1 (/) — | Gallant Sir, twice winner of th> Azua | Caliente Handicap. h2s b22n nomi- nated by Norman Church for the | £100.000 Santa Anita Handicap hers February 23. with a 135 or Call Ev Lucas. between 5:30 and T Club. with 125- Erookland Field. McGinnis, Potomac i-pro tes D. C. HUNTERS OUT. SKYTOP, Pa., December 1.—Several Washington sportsmen were amonz those here today for the openinz of the deer season. They included Seth | Gordon, president of the American 1Gnme Association, and Carl Shoe- | maker and Charles Schmidt. CUBA*INVITES CARDS. HAVANA, December 1 (/). —Mavor | Mizuel Mariann Gamez todsy cent an invitation to Sam Breedon to bring | hi= champicn St. Louis Cardinals here for the 8th. 9th and 10th of | March, with expenses paid by the government. | | | . e BROWNING MAT VICTOR. PHTLADELPHIA. De-ember Jim Browning, 235. Verona. threw George Zaharies, 141, Pu-blo, Cole. in 25 minutes 12 seconds, in a wrestling match here last night. | A - G WS LEEWANS GETS A PRASE Shepherd, Too, Just Short of Big Grade—Borries in Charmed List. (Continuec From Si: ard Don in? fraturing 1 attack Good Backs Plentiful. is convinced he ccezsor to such herole Jim Thorpe and Ernie n Dave Smukler, sophomore of the unbaten Temple e went to such other ctern backs as Bill shepherd of Western Maryland and e (Tufly) Leemans of George ersity. with many rati either of ound equal of (Bull) arty McDonough lternat Col- M: rwin all last year's all-America aces, X Buckler of th> Army and Cotton r n of Southern California, from the top-ranking list although still displaying rare ability. Warburton, his star obscured on & lnsing team. was rated bv some Coast chservers as even better than in 1933, handicapped by a leg 'in- continued to carry attack that it showed jury, nevertheless the brunt of an Army lost eome of the pi last year Other backfield men who earned high recommendati during the ton include Christofferson of Wi ington State, the versatile Hawauan; White of the Coloradn Aggies, Sobrero of Santa Clara, Hamilton of Stanford, Whitehead of Yale, Switzer of Cornell, Cardwell of Nebraska, Clark of the Navy and Shakespeare of Notre Dame. The battle for end positiol was won by Minne ‘s rangy Larson and Alabama’s brilliant Hutson, acclaimed the best of a long line of all-star Scuthern flankmen, only after a close three-cornered race in which James ently th of Pitt (Monk) Moscrip, Stanford junior, supplied the chief opposition. Mos- crip outranked all the ends on the West Coast by a wide margin, includ- ing Brick Morse of Oregon, but he lacks the experience of Hutson and Larson, two of the main reasons for the big seasons enioved by Alabama and Minnesota itson. a speed mer- chant, was a constant threat as ball carrier as well as a sensational pass receiver The East contributed a number of fine ends tn the debate, with Lester Borden of Fordham perhaps the best of the lot. Colgate had two splendid ingmen in Bogdanski and Billings Princeton’s Hugh MacMillan com- bined punting with a good ob on the end of the line. Larry Keller. Yale sophomore, rose to gpectacular heights as a pass-ratcher and defensive block= er. He has been tagged for future alle America deliverv. Chase of Columbia, Erdelatz of St. Marvs. Shuler of Army, Redding of North Carclina State, Goodwin of West Virginia and Vaira of Notre Dame turned in some excellent performances on the flanks. Line Has Lots of Drive. HE all-America line packs plenty T of driving force with Alabama's Bill Lee and Bob Reynolds, Stanford star. at the tackle positions. Each scales around 220, looming above a field that is otherwise below the best tackle standards. Until the Orange crumpled in its last two big games Jim Steen of Syracuse was a towering figure in the tackie list and not even defeat can deprive him of high rating. Maddox of Kansas State and “Cash” Gentry of Oklahoma stood out in Big Six compan From a wealth of great guards the top places gn tn the Pitt<burgh cap< tain. Doc Hartwi nd North Caro- lina's versa Genrge Bar- clay. only 2 he hottest of all - America t Hartwig, completing three great s at his position as a fine leader, matched by his teammate, th Ormiston, are spectacts Tegether they form the pair of euards in the country and are rated by neus tral crities as just about on a par. Playing without a headguard. Minnee sota’s fiery Bevan has had some perlative days. but lacks some= thing in consistency For the v iole at cent alle America spot goes to Darrell Lester, 2 pound powerhouse of the Texas ristian line which upset Rice. er stood out like 5 lichthouse all on. even when the I'regs were los- ing. He carried a terrific charge and outranked a group of fine pivot men in the tihwest, including Coates Arthur of Rice and Newby ancas. Lester's chief rivals, else« included Jack Robinson of re Dame. a consistently fine per- former on an in-and-onut team. and Franklin Meier. latest in a line of capable N 1. A physical freak at « pound George Shotwell burzh played brile lizntly the middle of Pitburgh's Tarrs Slemering of San Franci-ea was all-Pacific Coast cen- ter albanzh of F; T n of Tulane e Patterzon of Chie well up on the list. while b center. Al consistently fine rank o mhia ackling « « C ina raco W.-L. HIGH DEFEATED Outplayz L Then Yiells CHARLOTTY . turnec = for First Half, y 7 to O. ILLE. Va., Deceme Les Hizh School's m of Talston bowed to eleven in a 7-0 game vst half the h of Dan mnary Buetiner Wheeler Rirch Payne Ztit eon= k. Pvan IS Ko -ter (Wert Umpire—Mr. Sipply (Virginia) ' OLDSMOBILE The New “6* and “8* s Lou as §780 Deitvered POHANEKA Clds Sales-Strvice Since 192) 1126 20th St Dist. 9148