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SFORTS. Line on District High School Teams - INEPISCOPAL TILT | Encounter W.-L. foot ball front opens with a into action in games which should Victims of their own aerial attack light but scrappy Episcopal eleven at Literally throwing their previous touchdowns, Tech probably will at- weighed 15 pounds to the man in the | Hardell again has predicted dire things Central, Seen as Favorite in Title Series, Will BY BURTON S. HAWKINS. IRING along the local scholastic . steady bombardment tomorrow as the five high schoods swing give a definite line on the title aspira- tions of each team. in the first two frays, Hap Hardell's Maroon machine will clash with the Hoxton Field, Alexandria, in an effort to get into winning ways. games away by allowing forward passes to be intercepted for winning tempt to polish its passing against the Virginians. Episcopal will be out- line. In keeping with his annual custom, for his team. Hap's tear ducts always were a bit weak, however, and Tech followers have not given up champion- | &hip hopes as yet. John Cramer, regular end, will be unable to play, due to nead and body injuries received recently in an auto- mobile accident. He is expected to be < back in uniform shortly, however. Tech will take the field as follows: Theodore King and John Whiteman, ends; Ernest “Whitey” Rawlings and Gerald Davis, tackles; Americo Natella and Gilbert Schroth, guards; Moe Schulman, center; Will Hart, quarter- back: Nick Leisert and Lewie Nowlin, halves, and Francis Crimmins, full- back. Central Team Strong. ENTRAL, victorious over Devitt, 7-6, in its initial siart, runs into Washington and Lee High of Ballston at Central Stadium. Presenting a potent passing attack and the heaviest line in local scholastic circles to clear the way for experienced lbacks, Hardy Pearce's pigskin proteges fprobably will reign a slight favorite to 'cop high school championship laurels. Pearce, no doubt, will make his men brush up on their running attack to- morrow, however, for Central was forced to hurl leather against Devitt when its backs failed to function. The probable starting line-up for Centrad will be: Paul Whedon and “Schnoz” Kline, ends; Hugh Cramer and John Swank, tackles; Charley Jones and Al Groome, guards; Vincent Meenehan, center; Johnny Jones, quarterback; Billy Richardson and Norman Sabatini, halves, and Bill Wooton, fullback. Eastern’s “dark horse” eleven will face the promising Gonzaga gridders on the Eastern field. Artie Boyd, former Tech basket ball coach, has taken over the destiny of the light blue brigade and reports from the Northeast have it that he has fashioned a winner, despite the loss of &ix regulars. ‘Whether or not Eastern will be a title threat may be determined tomor- row. The Purple team, coached by Orrel Mitchell, always has given East- | ern bruising battles. Ahern Has Little Hope. JiASTERN'S starting line-up will consist of Bob Brand and Allan Miller, ends: Earl Fox and John Dono- van, tackles; Bernie Herman and Milt . Heider, guards; Len Cappasella, cen- ter; Capt. Glenn “Hawk” Shaw, quar- terback; Chick Di Guilian and Al Kid- well, halves, and Russ Kendrick, full- back. Over at Western Dan Ahern holds little hope for his young and inex- perienced crew. Paul Borden, Bill Edmonston, Mason Morse, Ed Lloyd, Frank Donohue, Bill Shelton, Charlie Wells, Morris Snead, John Hatch and Rob Saum seem to have clinched regu- | * lar berths. Shelton has been shifted from end | to quarterback in an effort to put| power into the backfield, while Dono- | hue will be the only veteran in the line which will start against St. John's. | Roosevelt’s Rough Riders may live up to their name this year. Lynn Woodworth has a veteran aggregsunn‘ which includes eight letter men, and | Roosevelt rooters look for their club to climb out of the cellar this season. Such stalwarts as Francis Beamer | . and Spero Kollus, ends; Frank Witt | and Irving Hayman, tackles; Julius| Lewis and Gus Papanicolas, guards, | and Joe Bovello and Abe Lyman will give Bullis Prep all they can handle. } Just so we'll be able to come to work | Wwith rosy cheeks Saturday morning, | we pick Tech to win over Episcopal, | Bullis and Roosevelt to tie, St. John's to triumph over Western, Centra} to take Washington and Lee and Eastern to trim Gonzaga. All games will get under way at| 8:30 o'clock. !In Field of More Than 300 Competing for Laurels in $5,000 Open. By the Associated Press NDIANAPOLIS, October 3.—A field mcluding most of the world's | greatest professionals began play here today in the 72-hole, $5.000 | Indianapolis open golf tournament. The huge entry list—more than 300—made it necessary to divide the ! field, one-half playing the first 18 | holes today and the other players | taking their tum tomorrow. The 150 players with the lowest scores will enter the second round, | | and the 60 leaders at the half-way | mark will play 36 holes to complete | the tournament Sunday. | | The entire British and American | | Ryder Cup teams are among the con- | | testants, along with the open cham- | plons of Britain, the United States and Canada. Only a few amateurs are entered. | The better known money players— | Henry Picard, leading collector for | | the Winter series of 1934-35; Sam | | Parks, jr, Uaited States open cham- | pion; Alfred Perry, British open title | holder, and Gene Kunes, Canadian | | open champion—do not start unul| | tomorrow. | | Twenty-four States and the District | of Columbia are represented in the | touraament. ISSUES DIAMOND DEFL Maryland County League's base ball champions, the Senate Giants, have | | challenged the Blue Flame Valet for | the District title. The manager of | the local team has been asked to | | call Silver Spring 117-M. | THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, They Clash at Brookland Stadium Saturday b Hak ¢ 4 Upper left: Jim Bonder, 21-year-old 180-pound senior left guard of the La Salle outfit that tackles Catholic University this week end, and Charles (Bud) Munhall, one of Coach Dutch Bergman's sophomore back- field aces, who is expected to prove a mainstay for the Cardinals in their initial tilt of the season. 20 YEARS AGO IN THE STAR Georgetown achieved yesterday what it has striven for many years when it defeated Navy, 9-0, in a bitterly fought game at Annapolis. Gilroy went over for the only touchdown to culminate a drive which started from Navy's 35-yard line, while late in the fourth quar- ter Dempsey was rushed in the game for half a minute to kick a field goal Maryland Agricultural College lost to Haverford, 7-0, & long forward pass placing the ball on the Aggies’ 4-yard line, from where the lone score was made Virginia trounced Yale, 10-0, and Holy Cross tied the Army, 14-14, in two outstanding surprises of the day. A reduction in the size of the bowling ball has produced lower scores in early season matches this year, it has been observed by pin officials here. VALUABLE HORSE DIES. KNOXVILLE, Tenn., October 3 (/) —Black Gold, a valuable five- gaited horse owned by J. V. Robinson of Greenville, S. C,, is dead following several days’ illness of pneumonia. By the Associated Press EW YORK.—The Boston Col- lege Eagles may think the whole of Massachusetts has landed on them when they encounter Fordham Saturday. The two backflields who alternated in yesterday's Fordham scrimmage included five Bay State boys: Bill McDermott of Charlestown, Steve Sorota and Joe Dulkie of Lowell, War- ren Mulrey of Malden and Joe Woi- | toski of Pittsfield. The Ram squad has nine other players who are almost neighbors of B.C. BLOOMINGTON, Ind—Alvin (Bo) McMillin, Indiana‘coach, may have a tough afternoon Saturday when the | Hoosiers play Centre. It was McMil- lin who played a leading part in put- ting the “Praying Colonels” on the foot ball map, and from all indica- tions he’ll have to root for both sides. AUBURN, Ala—If Billy Hitchcock, sophomore halfback at Alabama Poly, Southern Conference Coaches Have Plans Upset by Injuries ICHMOND, Va. October 3.— Injuries claimed a heavy toll ball teams today as coaches tapered off on training schedules in Hunk Anderson’s North Carolina State aggregation, which meets South workout featured by some punting on the part of Cowboy Robinson, sopho- for a “charley horse” a few minutes before the session. hurts than other teams in the confer- ence, turned to the air as they lanche of touchdowns. Mel Henry .was doing the passing most of the Duke was another team perfecting the aerial game. It evidently expects Lee Saturday and are getting ready for it. Joe Brunansky, tackle, was on time for the game. ‘Washington and Lee welcomed back hurt his knee in practice at Nimrod Hall. Yesterday physicians told him line. » South Carolina’s Gamecocks are | striving to improve their running plays as run by the freshmen, V. M. 1. emphasized running plays. At Chapel Hill the Tar Heels had every man in uniform, although sev- eral still were on the injured list, as they worked toward their inter-confer- ence clash with Tennessee at Knox- ville. Virginia players have been giving a lot of attention to developing & driv- ing, slashing attack to greet Davidson and to eradicate fumbling. BEARS WILL PLAY GRAYS Chevy Chase Bears, one of the lead- i—g sandlot base ball teams here a decade ago, will meet the Chevy Chase Grays Sunday on the Chevy Chase Playground diamond at 2:30. Some of the Bears who will parti- cipate include Bert Adelman, Henry Gichner, Mike, Bobby and Ray Stevens. Gilbert Tribby, Huck Hilleary, Duke Oldfield, Bud Fisher, Hank Duryee, Doug Frisbie, Larry Schneider and Jack Batson. LAURELRACES Trains leaving Union Station 12:10 and 12:35 P.M. T RA T 1 ! By the Associated Press. of Southern Conference foot preparation for Saturday’s games. Carolina at Columbia, ran through a more halfback. Robinson was treated Virginia Tech, less hampered by swamped the freshmen under an ava- time. plenty of passing by Washington and the sidelines and may not be fit in| Duane Berry, 200-pound guard. Berry hecouldgob-ckmtheu':rtmnuge game. They worked against N. C. Btatg 'Boston College Battles Own State Boysin Fordham Game; Centre Tilt Stymies M’Millin doesn't develop into a star, it won't be for lack of coaching. Billy is a brother of Jimmie Hitchcock, 1932 Auburn captain and all-America halfback, who now is backfield coach of the Plainsmen. WEST POINT, N. Y—Bill Wood, who coaches the Army kickers, has worked out a new system of teaching | the boys to aim their punts at the “coffin corner.” He marks out the territory with flags on the goal line and five-yard stripe and tells the booters to put the ball outside be- tween them. NEW YORK.—Lou Little of Colum- bia has solved his problem of not having enough “scrubs” to give the varsity an argument by arranging practice scrimmages with other local teams, but it’s a trifie tough on the boys. No matter how well they do | against City College, Manhattan and the rest, they can't have the satisfac- tion of winning a game from them. The whistle toots every time a run- ner gets into the open and no score | is kept. OAKLAND, Calif—One thing Prof. James L. Hagerty, head of the St. Mary's College Philosophy Depart- ment, can't call dilatory students is “clock watcher.” For the last 14 years he's been watching a clock nearly every Saturday afternoon dur- ing the Fall—as official timekeeper at all the Gaels’ home games. MILWAUKEE.—#f plenty of prac- tice 1s helpful—and the coaches claim it is—Marquette should be ready to give Wisconsin a real struggle Satur- day. Marquette followed the Western Conference schedule this season and advanced the date for starting prac. ;i:e lr;om September 15 to Septem: T OLYMPIC SQUADS Chevy Chase. \/ V and exhibition to be held | Chevy Chase. Md., was completed to- Thirty-three events, including mili- hibitions and exhibitions by the Rid- Six courses offering a wide variety courses discloses the classes to be Proceeds of the show, which has fray expenses of the American eques- The feature this year, of course, will which will compete in the three-day Canada and Europe. |Room 1027, Munitions Building, Hazen is president of the show; Ad- Leonard, vice presidents; Col. Scott, —Star Staff Photo. | | U. 8., Chilean Teams Are to Compete in Events at ORK on the program for the Inter-American horse show | October 26, 27 and 28 at Rock Creek Park show grounds in day by Col. Charles L. Scott, secretary for the meet, and his committee aides. tary and civilian jumping, hunter classes, fencing matches, dressage ex- ing and Hunt Club and Redland Hunt | hounds are listed. | of fences have been settled upon by | the committee and the cut of the most difficult and similar in every re- spect to Olympic jumping classes. been licensed with the American Horse Show Association, will help de- trian and pentathlon team in the 1936 Olympic games. be the appearance of the United States Army and Chilean jumping teams, | military team event. Next year it is | hoped to bring military teams from Entries are to close on October 15 Ennd must be filed with Col. Scott, | Washington, D. C. District Commissioner Melvin C. miral Cary T. Grayson, Maj. Gen. leon B. Kromer and Maj. Henry secretary, and Capt. H. B. Smith, treasurer. COUNTY CHAMPS CLASH. The base ball championship of the Fairfax-Prince Willism Counties will start on Sunday, when Manassas and Fairfax Station play the first of a three-game series at Manassas, BRAKES RELINED 4 Wheels Complete Plymouth Essex Chrysler « De Soto Dodge D.D.-D.H. Other Cars Proportionately Low $ <75 . ERFECTION IN GILLETTE STEEL is assured by a special testing device that actually den flaws “sees” through the metal. Hid- are instantly revealed. This is one reason why the Gillette “‘Blue Blade” takes and holds edges so incredibly keen. Prove this. Try the. Gillette “Blue Blade.” Reputable merchants give you what you ask for. In stores where substitution is practised—insist on Gillette “‘Blue Blodes.” GILLETTE BLue BLADES D. C, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, «Courses—T70 Is Her Low Score, 85 Worst. EW YORK, October 3 —Joyce Wethered, the British golfer, courses played during her American tour . . . her best round was | better on 25 rounds . .. her average for the tour was 76.9 . .. that's nice ‘The Cards will be made over, with starting pitchers the main require- Sugar Bowl game . . . Joe Gould, Jimmy Braddock’s manager, is a vic- Add Bernie Bierman's worries: Lloyd Cardwell, the Nebraska threat, lugged |last week and gained 161 yards. | BILL TERRY is seeing his first world | | Keefe, New Orleans foot ball expert, has placed his official o. k. on Bernie Street has signed to manage the San Francisco Missions again next year. the Boston Redskins will be double what he was paid for any year he has another flying circus in the mak-. ing at Vanderbilt . . . If you don't be- his Mississippi State team . . . They | report the air was filled with passes | Joe Louis’ trainer, Jack Blackburn, has been offered $2,500 to coach Bud- « « . Columbia alumni are whispering sweet things to Lou Little to make PAUL DAMSKI Walter Neusel's manager, thinks Joe Louis would Arnold Greene, 205-pound junior, is the biggest and fastest quarter Pitt | Both managers in the zoological world’s serles are musicians . . . Mickey Cochrane toots a saxophone . . . Jim Bottomley collected three bird ing last week. Roberto Estrallella, who went to little English, but can talk plenty with his bat . . . Leo Dandurand and Joe Canadiens, may buy into the St.| Louise hockey team and move it to| Has a 76.9 Average for 53 By the Associated Press. broke 80 on 43 of the 53 70 and her worst 85 . . . she was 76 or going. ment . . . Rice wants a bid to the 1936 tim of the golf bug. | the ball six times in the first half series as a spectator . . . Bill | Moore's Louisiana ‘Staters . . . Gabby Eddie Casey’s income as coach of coached at Harvard . . . Ray Morrison | lieve that, ask Maj. Ralph Sasse and | last Saturday. dy Baer while Joe is honeymooning him forget that coast offer. stop Max Schmeling in one round . . .! has had in years. | | Charlie Grimm strums a banjo and dogs when the Reds went barnstorm- | Washington from Harrisburg, speaks Cattarinich, who recently sold Les Cleveland in 1936. that counts. ciate the fresh mildness flavor that grows on you you smoke. different blend, different all-day satisfaction.”? JUST SAY “LA-ZO-RA” DISTRIBUTOR 1935. SPORTS. STRAIGHT OIF THE VEE by W.R.MECALLUM OLF teams from four local| clubs will swing into action Sunday in the second edition of the Maryland State Golf Association team matches. Two of the contests will be played at Washington clubs. Here is the schedule: Chevy Chase vs. Baltimore Country‘ Club at Chevy Chase, Beaver Dam Vs. | Hillendale at Hillendale, Indian Spring | vs. Rolling Road at Indian Spring, | Woodholme vs. Kenwood at Wood- | holme. Manor will meet the winner of the Woodholme-Kenwood match. As usual, the teams will consist of 12 men, with the club pro playing st No. 1. Three points will count in each foursome, one point for best ball and the other two points for individual matches. THEY call 'em the “love birds” at Washington where they are in- separable golfing companions. Dr. Thomas D. Webb and Dorle C. Gruver are the “love birds,” so named by Jimmy Corcoran, but when it comes | to golf in the club championship | friendship is forgotten. Gruver licked | Webb in the first round yesterday by 2 and 1. Webb won the club title three years ago. VER at Columbia Miller B. Stev- inson, the perennial winner of | the club title, is plowing along in search of his seventh championship. He met a tartar today in Clyde B. Asher in the second round, but | “Steve” usually has been able to whip ! Asher. | Other second-round matches found | Martin R. West, golf chairman, clash- ing with Louis W. Laudick; while| Martin F. McCarthy, runner-up last | year, met Luther C. Steward, jr., and Charles B. Hatch, who also has been a runner-up to Stevinson, met big- foot Harvey ‘Johnson, the kid with the prize pair of hands and feet. Stevinson licked Kenneth Gillette in the first round by 3 and 2, while both Laudick and Hatch went extra holes to win. R | GHORN of one championship only | last Friday tall Johnny Bass, pro at the Clifton Park public course in Baltimore, waited only five days be- fore picking up another and still big- ger title. Bass dropped his assistant professional’s crown last Friday to Gilbert Cunningham, but it is replaced today by a bright and shiny diadem which means much more, for the black-haired Baltimore lad whipped George Diffenbaugh yesterday to grab the Middle Atlantic P. G. A. cham- pionship. Bass won by 2 and 1 from Diffen- | baugh, who had relaxed considerably from the hot pace of his earlier rounds, rolling in a lengthy putt on the seventeenth for a bird 2 to close out the last-minute rush of the In- | dian Spring midget. During the tourney which started Monday, Diffenbaugh had reeled off a 68 and a 69, but he couldn't gather his ailing game in the final yesterday and Bass was in the lead all the way, enjoying a 5-hole lead at one time. George got the lead down to 1 hole at | the seventeenth, or thirty-fifth of the match, but Bass stopped his rally with the putt for the winning deuce. VICTORS over a strong Baltimore team in the final team affray of the season, most of the Capital team members were playing today at Chevy Chase in the tourney for the Keefer Trophy. The handicap tournament was being run off today. Washington's women links stars won an 11},-to-9'; victory yes- terday over the Baltimore women at | the Roland Park course of the Balti- more Country Club. Mrs. Jerome Sloman led the scoring with 83. Mrs. Roland MacKenzie had 82 for 17 holes. QUIGLEY IS LEADER IN RINGER TOURNEY Playground Champion Gets 172 Points in Sears, Roebuck 100-Shoe Contest. VILL!AM QUIGLEY, who won the senior championship in the Mu- nicipal Playground Department horse- shoe tournament, is in a fair way to capture more honors. Quigley is far in the van in the Sears, Roebuck | tournament, a 100-shoe test, which ! will be concluded next Saturday on courts at the Bladensburg road mer- chandise plant. Quigley rang up 172 points with | his 100 pitches to land 30 points ahead of his closest rival, F. Baptiste. Ray- | first round in the 36-hole | | mend Shegogue is third with 140. | Other scores follow: | Jack Smith. 132: Willlam Lewis 127; Vener Fois, 101: L. Boyle 100: Mar- Bill Lewis, KK A er Bardroff. %6’ Bill arles_Hall, R0; H E George ;e P. - E a9 H M jr. 63:'P. 8. Schn hn J. Bello, Murray. 58; Jo r “"Colored pitchers will hold their sec- tion of the tournament Saturday, starting at noon. urra urra GALLAGHER ON AIR. Marty Gallagher, Washington heavy- weight who Fattles King Levinsky at Griffith Stadium next Wednesday night, will be interviewed by Joe Hol- man over Station WOL between 8 and 8:15 o'clock tonight. Gallagher will discuss his impending test and review his colorful career |is out C3 Due as Five See Action Tomorrow kg BULLIS HAS GREAT 11BUT THAT'S ALL Toiling on Improvised Field, Any Injury Would Be Telling Blow. BY BILL DISMER, JR. ACKED out of weeds and grass standing two feet high, a diamond-shaped plot of ground no larger than the infleld at Griffith Stadium daily bears the thud of 30 young gridironers po- tentially the strongest prep school foot | ball team in the city, It's back of the Silver Spring Armory that Bullis Prep, conditioning school for West Point and Annapolis, has been preparing for its first game of the season tomorrow against Roose= velt High, and the sight of 11 big, fast and powerful prep athletes who have made their mark in cities 2u v e « country creates the speculation of a “gridiron great.” Laments Lack of Foes. T APPEARS it was no idle sooth- saying of the founder of the school, William Bullis, a Naval Acad- emy graduate of the middle 20s, when he said, “I wish we had more of the public high scheols on our schedule. We could beat any of 'em—if no one gets hurt.” And that is the only drawback. There are 11 sturdy players daily learning more and more under Pat Mahoney, former wing-back of West- ern Maryland’s undefeated 1931 elev- en, but Mahoney shudders when he thinks of the first injury. After that first 11, there “ain’t no more good ‘uns.” Three days ago it wouldn't have been so bad, as three stand-out linemen were with the team. But “Reds” Daly, Tech’s all-high tackle last year, was put out for the season with a broken collarbone; Jack Antonelli, husky guard, must rest for a week with three stitches over his eye, and Bill Sampson, another tackle, temporarily from the grip. Some say it was the knowledge of Daly bolstering an already powerful team that caused local scholastic coaches earlier in the year to refuse Bullis a place on their schedules. Has “Sweet” Backfield. COACH MAHONEY has a fine back- field in Doug Clark, fast I55- | pound quarterback, Schoonover and Pearce at the halves and Ed Hohn- feldt at full. Hohnfeldt is an all- State favelin and discus thrower from Illinois and the tossing of & foot ball seems childs' play to him. An all-State tackle from Mas- sachusetts is in one of the guard posts, 160-pound Tom Chiara. But one local boy, Von Drehler, former star end with St. Martin's A. C, 18 in the first-string line-up. Smoke THREE... THE first puff never tells the entire tale. For it is not the first puff that gives lasting sat- isfaction — it’s the way your taste reacts to steady smoking Smoke La Azora for one whole day—at least three; more if you're a steady smoker. Then check yourself for satisfaction. You’ll appre- and delicacy of with every cigar The reason? La Azora is different from other 5c cigars. Different (and far costlier) tobacco, character. It is made for steady smoking—the sort of cigar that makes you say, “Here is the cigar for DANIEL LOUGHRAN CO, INC. 1311 H STREET N.W.,, WASHINGTON, D. C. 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