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e ] @he Catawba Fi MORAN BRINGING HOPPED-UP TEAM! Indians Will Oppose a G. W. Eleven Low Mentally BY ROD THOMAS. ATAWBA COLLEGE of Salis-| bury, N. C., booked by George ‘Washington for a breather, to- | spected opponent as the Coloniais Jooked to their contest tomorrow night | at Grifith Stadium, but one slightly feared. and Physically. C day not only was & highly re- | Slow to recover both mentally and physically from their beating by Ala- | bama, the Colonials will move against | the invaders with a team possibly slowed to a trot by a flock of minor injuries. Half a dozen first-string players are in poor shape and G. W. has scant reserves of high grade. So dire is the need for replacements that Coach Jim Pixlee spent a large part of yesterday teaching Frank | Kavalier, a fullback, how to play cen- | ter in the hope of easing the burden | on Kenneth Rathjen, the red-headed gamester who was knocked stiff three times in’ the Alabama battle but elected to remain because there was no worthy to take his place. Marvin’s Loyalty Helps. TUFFY LEEMANS is in such poor | fettle that Pixlee said today he “hated to use him.” Capt. Harry Dem- ing, who is to the G. W. line what Lee- mans is to the backfield, has a bunged knee. Rathjen hardly is in shape to play. Neither are Wright or Vonder Bruegge, ends. The Colonials are at- tempting to make a flankman of Dale Prather, tackle, being much in need of heft on the wings. The generous praise of Dr. Cloyd Heck Marvin, president of the uni- versity, of the Colonials’ spirited struggle against Alabama and his ex- pression of the firmest confidence in Jim Pixlee and his staff greatly heart- ened the warriors, but it would be re- markable if they reach true fighting pitch for the game with Catawba. On the other hand, the Redskins are coming to Washington bent upon making the most of opportunity. They have pointed for George Washington from the start of Fall practice, and they have a coach who knows close to all knowable about pointing a team, meaning the astute Charley Moran, who used to take little Centre College’s eleven to Cambridge and make old Harvard's face crimson, indeed. Have Their Greatest Team. THE Indians have what they believe to be the strongest team in their | history, and its three straight victo- ries this season, attained with a mass of yardage, seem to justify their esti- mate. They will present a couple of backs in Ole Joe Clarke and Sammy Pritchard who, it is said, could make any man’s foot ball team. Pritchard this season has averaged 137 yards in returning punts and from scrimmage has gained 374 yards, which is an average of 121 a game. That, people, is lugging & foot ball. Seven of Moran's men are playing their fourth season at Catawba, and for them this will be their third ap- pearance against George Washington, which met the Redskins in 1932 and 1933. Inasmuch as the Colonials - haven't changed their style radically, these seven will give the invaders an unusual advantage. Yes, suh, those Colonials have a heap to annoy them besides memories of Alabama. NAVY-VIRGINIA TILT DRAWS A BIG CROWD Many Notables on Hand to Help Celebrate 90th Anniversary of Academy’s Founding. By the Associated Press. NNAPOLIS, Md.. October 10.— Navy and Virginia clashed on the gridiron today in a renewal of foot ball rivalry dating back to 1893. The match was an attraction of the academy’s ninetieth anniversary celebration of its founding, and a large gathering, "including many notables, was on hand. ‘There were many incidental features to the game, before, between the halves and afterward, Navy. - Hulson ftshow | Low's home town, Leominster, !l and Little is a close friend of the WAIT LONG FOR CLASH Columbia, Rutgers, Early Foes, Meet First Time in 33 Years. NEW YORK (P).—Sixty-five years ago, just a year after Rutgers and Princeton had played the first Ameri- can intercollegiate foot ball game on record, Columbia University traveled by boat and train to the banks of the Raritan to play Rutgers. The score was 6 goals to 3 in favor of Rutgers. After a lapse of 33 years the Scarlet and Lions will renew relations on che gridiron at Baker Field Saturday. FINE HARVARD GESTURE Returns Grid Game Guarantee That Cadets, Officers Contribute. WEST POINT, N. Y. (.—In the olden days the support of the Army’s foot ball team came from contributions | by the cadets and officers. Harvard did not know this when they invaded the plains for their first game 40 years ago, but on finding it out re- turned the $250 guarantee, which the WASHINGTON, D. C., Woodrew Wilson Sayre Puts Gridiron Berth Above Recognition as Grandson of President | | Young Sayre all set to receive a pass. BRIDGES IS “HER, MANAGERS VTE Big League Leaders Name Lindstrom Series “Goat.” Philly Wants Bouts. By the Associated Press, EW YORK, October 10.—Rival big-league managers who saw the world series list the heroes and goats as follows: Heroes— Tommy Bridges, No. 1; Lon Warneke, No. 2; Goose Goslin, No. 3 . . . Goats— Freddy Lindstrom, No. 1; Bill Jurges, No. 2; Umpire George Moriarty, No. 3. Managers polled were Bill McKech- nie, Bill Terry, Charlie Dressen, Joe McCarthy and Casey Stengel. Pop Warner is doing a rush job throwing together a defense for Van- derbilt’s aerial circus fomorrow night. If Mike Jacobs will only go down to Philadelphia and put on a couple of shows they’ll give him the big sesqui- centennial arena free of charge . . . Mike thinks of that $78,000 he paid Col. Jake Ruppert for use of the Yan- kee Stadium last Summer and agrees to consider the offer. Prep Star Attracts. WHAT big Eastern school will bag Ronny Cahill, Horace Mann Prep star? ., . Ivory hunters from a dozen scHbols watch his every move . . . Dr. Lou Little of Columbia seems to have the inside track . . Cahill comes from ass., youngster's father. Mrs. Tuck Stainback, wife of the Cub player, is one of the prettiest of the base ball wives . . . She can double for Joan Crawford any day. Southern gazettes report Tennessee fans are blaming Maj. Bill Britton for that North Carolina rout .. It was Tennessee’s worst defeat since 1925 .+ . North Carolina presents Clarence Parker, Duke backfield ace, as its all- America candidate this year, SEEKS SUNDAY GRID FOE. A game with some 150-pound or unlimited team is wanted by the Arlington A. C. for Sunday, Call Clarendon 1490. Army Is Stalked . . o By Vicious Jinx RMY has suffered some severe disappointments concerning personnel. A grievous loss was Joe MacWilliams, the quarterback, whose death last month shocked and saddened coaches and fellow cadets. ‘Wynn Graham, who played half- back a few years ago and was cap- tain of the track team, lost his life when his plane dropped into the ocean off Panama. John Finn, counted on for end, received a fractured skull in & motor accident during furlough and, while in the academy as a student, may never play foot ball again. John Hartline, probably the best lineman on last year's eleven, fell afoul of the tactical department and will be confined to barracks over the season. FRIENDS, ST. ALBANS ON GRID TOMORROW Tackle Stuyvesant, Boys' Latin, Respectively—Both Teams Well Trained. PREP school elevens are headed for another busy day tomorrow, with four seeing action, one of them for the first time this season. In addition to the two games in which public high school teams will be met, Friends makes its debut against Stuyvesant Prep at Manassas, Va, and St. Albans tackles an old rival in the Boys’ Latin School of Baltimore. The latter game will be played on the field at Thirty-fourth and Garfield streets. Friends is sending a veteran team into action for the inaugural and hopes to start its six-game sched- ule with a victory. All but one of its backfield are experienced triple- threat performers, while the line will average about 150 pounds. Observers at St. Albans’ fleld may be agreeably surprised at the class of foot ball exhibited by the local team. The Saints dropped a 12-8 decision to Gilman at Baltimore last Priday, but made all of their points in the last quarter while holding their conquerors scoreless after the second period. BY BILL DISMER, JR. | LAYING foot ball within a | stone’s throw of where his famous grandfather, the war- time President, is buried, Wood- row Wilson Sayre would rather be known as a regular on the St. Aloans first-string eleven than as the grand- son of the former Chief Executive. In fact, young Sayre refused to pose for photographers merely as the |'exploiter of an illustrious name, and |it was not until he had cinched the | position as right end before the prep lschool's opening game that he con- | sented to have his picture taken. The son of Mr. and Mrs. Francis B. Sayre, Woodrow’s mother was one of three daughters of the late President, being Jessie Wilson before her mar- riage. But the 16-year-old gridman has won no awards on the fame of his grandfather. As scrappy as they come, he was forced to exhijbit every bit of the fight characteristic of his namesake in order to gain a regular | berth at St. Albans, and it was his aggressiveness that gave him the final call over other candidates. A hard tackler, Sayre is one of the best linemen on the team, according to his coach, Bob Middleton, who started him for the first time as a regular last Friday. ,(This is Sayre's second year at the school, where he was on the third team in 1934. Mid- dleton found him most impressive in the season’s first game against Gilman Country School in Baltimore and in- | tends Eeep him at the right flank. Dashing and spirited on the grid- iron, Sayre is the very antithesis in the class room and other walks of life. Quiet-mannered and extremely popular with his schoolmates, the youth is considered one of the leaders of his class, which graduates from St. Albans next June. In fact, he first attracted attention as a particularly keen student. Look like Wilson? Some say he doesn’t, but close observers have noticed the same facial features as dominated the countenance of his fllustrious grandsire. Sayre weighs 145 pounds and is § feet 9% inches tall. Leaves Sandlot Fans Dazed After It Twice Defeats Strong Heurichs. BRILLIANT aggregation of former local collegiate base ball heroes was being hailed today by the skeleton rem- nants of the N. R. A. as having brought that once powerful organiza- tion into the spotlight again as sponsor of the city's championship sandlot team for 1935. They said it couldn’t be done, that no team could lick the mighty Heurich Brewers in a three-game series, much less by winning two straight, but this morning such pessimists were forced to eat their words as they learned of the Blue Eagles’ convincing 6-1 vic- tory over the hitherto invincible Brewers, Yesterday's rout capped the two- day drive of the erstwhile collegial satellites, who, on Tuesday, had given signs they were not to be taken lightly by winning the first game. Stevens Gets Plaudits. I'I"s John (Lefty) Stevens who is taking most of the bows for yes- terday’s victory, the young southpaw not only holding the ever dangerous Heurich sluggers to three hits, two of which produced their only run in the seventh, but striking out six Brewers at opportune moments with a sharp- breaking curye. 3 All of the winners except the battery, Stevens and Keyser, got one or more hits, Johnny Bozek and Pepco Barry collecting two. The latter provided a real thrill in the eighth when he scored from second on an infield oat. Some of the 5,000 observers at the game compared the new champions Dominican Lyceum clubs of another era. ORGANIZES PIN LEAGUE. MARTINSBURG, W. Va., October 10—A Commercial Bowling League, with eight teams, has been organized, with Earl Johnson as president and J. Nelson Hicks as secretary-treasurer. Grid Dance Floor to Colorado Star Lam, High-Scoring Quarter, Finds Fast Tap Makes Him Shifty Runner. By the Associated Press. OULDER, Colo., October 10. B —A gridiron as only a dance floor and a broken field dash as a variation of a fast tap—that’s foot ball to Bill (Kayo) Lam, 154-pound quar- terback at Colorado U. In fact, foot ball was described squad had received for traveling ex- penses. e ONE LONG DRIVE TELLS. 8T. LOUIS, October 10 (#).—A 69- yard touchdown march in the first quarter last night gave the Kentucky Bourbofis & 7-to-0 victory over the St Louis Blues, professional eleven, -« L3 by Lam today as mostly a hobby and a diversion, for all his record of last season as one of the best backs in the Nation from “a standpoint of yardage gained. Lam carried the ball 110 in eight games in 1934 for a of 906 yards, an average of 8.2 yards and was second high Conference with 55 points. But rhythm is Lam’s true love— and business., By leading an orchestra at school dances he earns his way through college. He plays the drums and a cou- ple other instruments, croons a bit through a small megaphone and tap dances when the crowd asks !orl% He's been tapping since he was 7. “Whereupon the diminutive quar- WITH SUNDAY MORNING EDITION BARmNAI_S I_.[AV[ Becomes Grid Handy Andy of Gaining Revenge for powerful foot ball squad left over Duquesne University tomorrow ago. to the arcs, under which they haven't is his defense against passes. Should win decisively, but this promises to be 10 OPPOSE DUKES Beating Last Year. this morning for Pittsburgh night and revenge for the 14-0 licking T‘he Redbirds will practice tonight played for two years. the Cards put a damper on the Dukes’ no easy assignment inasmuch as Ed Strong Squad Is Confident CATHOLIU UNIVERSITY'S firmly confident of a victory the Dukes handed the Cards a year at Forbes Field to accustom themselves Coach Dutch Bergman’s only worry aerial attack, it is believed they will Zanieski of Duquesne is rated as one Foening Star THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1935. : eared by Crippled Colonials : Greenberg’s Cracked Wrist of the topnotch pass throwers in the [ E East. May Use Goal Kicker. HOULD the Cards be surprised by with the famous Knickerbocker and | N the stoutness of the enemy line, George Mulligan, expert field goal kicker, will be called into service, if C. U. comes within striking distance of the goal. The Cardinals are expected to start the same line-up that answered the opening whistle against La Salle last ‘week, as follows: Hermie Schmarr and Mulligan, ends; Capt. Ed Karpowich and Ed Clements, tackles; Joe Antha- navage and Bill Lajousky, guards; Joe Yanchulis, cenVer; Pete Dranginis, quarterback; Irish Carroll and Bill Adamaitis, halfbacks, and Bob Ma- kofske, fullback. CAVALRYMEN GET 10 FINAL IN POLO {Play Fauquier-Loudoun for Title After Defeating War for Upset. T WILL be up to the 3d Cavalry team from Fort Myer, Va, to maintain the polo reputation of the Army on Sunday when it meets Fauquier-Loundoun, a civillan group of riders, for the championship of the War Department’s handicap tournament at Potomac Park. How fit the Fort Myer contingent is for the task, however, is realized by a reflection of yesterday's semi-final affalr when it provided the first upset of "the six-day-old tournament by nosing out the favared War Depart- ment four, 9 to 8, when Capt. Willard Wyman drove through the decisive point late in the last chukker. | War Starts Briskly. ‘FORCED to overcome a five-goal handicap, the War Department gave early indications that such would not stand in their way, Col. W. W. Torr’s three goals in the sec- ond and third frames leading in the | erasure of the deficit in the first 20 minutes of play. But midway in the game 3d Cav- alry acquired the knack of defending its goal rather effectively, and while holding the War Department to two points in the last three chukkers started a little scoring on its own ac- count. Capt. Harry Stadler, opened the winners' goal-making in the fourth chukker by taking theball the length of the field through the entire opposing team and duplicated in the next period. Fort,Myer Scores. LIEUT. GRUNERT'S shot then tied the score at 8-all, as the last frame started. It was all over when an took a pass from Capt. Gene Harrison and split the Department’s goal with the game-winning shot. In the Consolation Cup tournament the 16th Field Artillery began activi- ties by taking an 8-6 decision from the Freebooters. Hagerstown plays Fort Belvoir in another consolation game at Fort Myer this afternoon. Today’s winner will meet the 16th Field Artillery in the final game Sat- urday. Third Cavalry, Pos. No.1 Capt. Wyman_. 0 No. 2 Capt. Stadler No. 3 Capt. Harriso No.4 Lieut. Gruner ‘Totals .. Handicap Total Pos. No.'1 Col. W. Torr___ No. 2 Col.’ Lil Lyman_ . 3 Maj. H, McBride . Smil Handical Total _. Umpires—Maj. Adna Chaflee. Referee—Capt. TOO ROUGH FOR ZELMA Denver Girl, 17, Tries Foot Ball, Winds Up in Hospital. DENVER (#).—Perhaps a woman’s place, after all, is in the cheering section. Zelma Shumate, 17, stopped to watch a sand-lot foot ball game. She volunteered to join one of the terms and was dubiously accepted. A few minutes later Zelma was Alec McNabb and_Col. C. H. Reed. SPEARS NOT TO RESIGN. MADISON, Wis., October 10 (F).— consin has been denied by him. PALACE TRAINS GUNS. Preparing for the Coast Artillery at Benning Stadium Sunday, the A. C. gridders will practice at tonight on the Water and M fleld, » —0 MARTY began his clean-up cam- DALE P] Normally a tackle, who was shifted to the backfield by G. W. for several games last season and now has been switched from tackle o end for the battle tomorrow night with Catawba at Griffith Stadium. SPORTS copE BY FRANCIS E. STAN T IS high time that the American | public took note of our Martin | William Gallagher, the successful fistic faflure. True, a few years ago folks did note Martin William. They watched him fight and often walked out, re- solved never again to patronize the box fight. That is not the kind of notice the Foggy Bottom's pride-afid- joy should receive now. Times have changed in the last few years. As a youngster ambitious to gain ranking as a heavyweight con- tender, Mr. Gallagher was a pretty colorless person and not &n especially necessary gent to the boxing business. In fact, fistlana could have struggled along without him. Now, however, I move that Marty be named Public: Boxing Benefactor No. 1 and some sort of medal be presented to him in appreciation of his efforts. ~ Marty Tries Another Game. MARTY was smart enough to real- ize, in time, that he would miss the top flight of boxing and so he hung up his gloves for regular and lengthy periods and turned his efforts | body has heard of the nice, but futile toward building up another business. In this display of regard .for his owa future and the feelings of some of the boxing fans, Marty stood alone. The other contenders kept right on contending to the continual annoyance of the customers Who finally drew up a rough program of reform. ® The most likely of the sug- gestions for relief was to deport all heavyweight contenders, but this was reported to have met with the firm disapproval of other lands and so the plan was dropped. Here Marty Gallagher stepped in. At periodic intervals he takes his gloves from the nail, dons them, and currently is busy eliminating the contenders. Mops Up With Big Boys. paign modestly enough. He licked Red Barry and then took on Tony Galento, a roly-poly, colorless contender whose only redeeming trait was an unholy ability to punch. Tony’s big trouble was that nobody of any note would fight him so he picked on the stumble-bums of the land and the result was that customers walked out holding their noses. Classified Ads | | i | | | | Gallagher Helps Boxing as He Knocks Aside Ring Nuisances. [ This had been going on for quite a while until Gallagher met up with Tony, who had just been taken under the wing of Jack Dempsey and was being built-up as a contender. Mr. Gallagher promptly put a stop to that. Next, and perhaps his greatest achievement, came last Winter when Marty took on Ray Impellittiere, who was being foisted upcn the public as the next champion of the world. QGallagher immediately cut down the glant to Singer midget size and no- Imp since. Now to Erase Baer. 'HEN last night, after idling for nearly a year, Marty took it upon himself to eliminate Kingfish Levin- | sky from the foreground of the heavy- weight picture. For a while the| Kingfish was welcomed by the fans ! because he was colorful, good “copyy” and even promised to become a pretty good_ fighter. In fact, he busted up Jack Sharkey’s comeback campaign so completely that the entire Nation was hailing Levinsky as a sort of benefactor himself. ‘Then, overnight, the Kingfish's bubble broke. Max Baer knocked him ‘head over heels in a couple of rounds and the defeat so rankled the ng-l fish that he got into a couple of legal jams and bothered people as he dodged to and fro while fleeing from process servers. Eventually, Levinsky settled down ! for a while, trained hard, and an- nounced that he was going to stop the march of Joe Louis. The gullible | believed him and thronged to see the big show. What happened is too har- | rowing to go into detail. Briefly, the King paled at the sight of Joe and | swooned dead away in the first round | without swinging a punch for the spectators. Se you can see the work that is being done by our Mr, Gal- lagher. Those who saw Max Baer against Joe Louis are hop- ing that when Max stages his comeback they will match him with Marty. Sports Mirror By the Associated Press. TODAY & year ago: Seven games world serfes grossed $1,128,995.27, including $100,000 broadcasting rights. Three years ago: Giants traded Bill Walker, Jim Mooney, Bob O'Farrell and Ethan Allen to Cardinals for Ray Starr, recruit pitcher, and Gus Man- cuso, catcher. Five years ago: Jackie Kid Berg outpointed Billy Petrolle in 10 rounds in Madison Square Garden. Stagg Uses Old Grid Tricks May Try Ancient Plays as He Has Team in San Francisco First By the Associated Press. AN FRANCISCO, October 10. —Amos Alonzo Stagg’s first invasion of San Francisco with & foot ball team in 41 next Saturday— brought recollections and compari- sons today from the 73-year-old patriarch of the gridiron. Stagg’s University of Chicago eleven beat tSanford, 24 to 6, back in 1894. Saturday his squad from the tiny College of the Pacific, at Stockton, Calif, takes on the St. 's “Foot ball hasn’t changed much in some ways,” commented the veteran coach. “One of the plays that helped us beat Stanford so long ago was an ‘end around end’ that we may use again against St. Mary's.” Another play Pacific likely will use i & wide flanker maneuver, i 1 Time Since 1894. with the principal rambling over near the sidelines. In the past two years it has annoyed such foot ball powers as California and Southern California. Stagg orig- inated it some 35 years ago. “That’s the advantage some of us who are referred to as ‘old- timers have” he said. “We can dust off an old trick and find it works pretty well.” Stagg doesn’t live in the past very much, though. He said he thought present-day players, as in- dividuals, were superior to early- day pigskin warriors, and attributed it to the vastly broader interest | he said, Tiger scouts have roun D—1 tobe O. K. RECOVERY IS SEEN WITHIN SIX WEEKS ‘Surgeons Say Tiger Star Won’t Be Handicapped in Next Campaign. By the Associated Press. ETROIT, October 10.—Hank Greenberg, the big first base- man of the world champion Detroit Tigers, fretted today | at the delay to his vacation caused by | & plaster cast encasing his left wrist, | fractured a week ago in the second |game of the series with the Chicago | Cubs. The third set of X-rays of the wrist disclosed the fracture last night. Pre- vious photographs, made after Green- berg’s collision with Catcher Gabby Hartnett of the Cubs in the seventh inning, had not disclosed the minute cracks, Dr. William E. Keane, Tiger physician, said. Dr. Keane said the injury was not serious, and that the wrist would be “as good as new” after six weeks of treatment. He paid tribute to the courage of the Detroit first sacker, who played two innings of base ball after incurring the painful injury. Won’t Be Handicapped. GREENBERG received the six weeks’ verdict with a show of He had planned a visit with relati in New York, and later a Winter of vachting in Florida. “I'll have this concrete off in a couple of weeks if I have to use a sledge hammer and chisel,” he { threatened. He derived a measure of consola- tion, however, from the informa that he would not be handicapped by the injury when another base ball season rolls around. Manager Mickey Cochrane, depart {ing for Wyoming on a grizzly bea hunt, announced that every Tiger rej ular would have his work cut out for him to hold down his job next year. To keep his men on their toe. d up the biggest squad of rookies in years. Ten Youngsters on Roster. TEN youngsters have been named make the trip to the Lak Fla, training camp. They inclu Don Ross, Beaumont third sacke Chester. Laabs, a Milwaukee slugger Albert English and Chester Wilburn of Portland; Salty Parker, Toledoan who received a tryout last year; Dixie Howell, the former Alabama foot ball player; Rudy York, another Texas League product who aspires to Greenberg's berth; Jack Wade of Portland, Chad Kimsey of Montrea! and Pat McLaughlin of Beaumont, all pitching prospects. In addition, Herman (Flea) Clif- ton, who got into the world series because, of Greenberg's injury, has made a bid for Marvin Owen’s job at the hot corner and Roxie Lawscn, formerly with Toledo, will be a candi- date for starting mound assignments. HIGH GRID TEANS IN TEST BATTLES Only Tech Idle Tomorrow. Results Should Offer Comparisons. OMPARATIVELY speaking, the high school grid card tomor- row offers scholastic fans a direct line on the hopes of three title contenders. Tech will not play, while Central will journey to Norfolk to engage Maury High. Eastern, with one of the best elevens to represent that school in recent years, will meet a scrappy St. John's outfit at Eastern Stadium: Roosevelt will play Gonzaga at Nineteenth and Benning road northeast, and Western will travel to Alexandria to face George Washington High. All games will get under way at 3:30 p.m. Eastern Is Favorite. Y'El‘ to be scored upon, the power- ful Eastern team will reign favorite over the Cadets, who were held to a 0-0 tie by Western. Coach Artie Boyd is expected to give his reserve strength a thorough testing should his first team role up the score. The probable starting line-up for Eastern will be: 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, quarterback; Chick di Guilian and Al Kidwell, halves, and Russ Kendrick, fullback. That Boyd is developing a title threat easily is seen in Eastern's vic- tories over Episcopal, 6-0, and Gon- Zzaga, 19-0. Real Job for Western. IP DAN AHERN'S Westerners can defeat GeOrge Washington, which scored & 12-7 win over Tech, the Red Raiders’ stock will take a decided boom. Ahern has brought his green squad along fast, but even the most rabid Western fan is pot expecting too much this season, with Roosevelt, Tech, Central and Eastern putting experi- enced and hefty teams on the field. Gonzaga, a much better team than it appeared against Eastern, will furnish the opposition for Lynn Wood- worth’s Rough Riders, who should vacate the cellar spot, which has been their home for eight years. Coach Hardy Pearce and 23 of Cen- tral’s hopefuls were to board ship this evening at 6:30 o'clock for tomorrow's fray. Unless another game is booked, the Maury tilt will be the last for Central until the interhigh series. . JOCKEY IS SET DOWN. BOSTON, October 10 (#).—Jockey K. Korvath, who Decorate, dis- qualified winner of the seventh race at Suffolk Downs last Saturday, has been ruled off all tracks in Massa= chusetts for ghe remainder of the year by the State commission.