Evening Star Newspaper, November 5, 1935, Page 18

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A—18 SPORTS. THE , EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, DN, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1935. SPORTS. Devitt and Bullis Both Handicapped in Priming for “Grudge” Game Friday MATERIAL SCANTY, [ Ratings of Foot Ball Teams Based on Williamson System These ratings represent respectively esch team’s efficiency of consistent CRAMPED IN TOI performance to date. The ratings do not always indicate a direct gauge of }the possble strength of each team. The percentage figures below in the ! right-hand column are the most important. The listing figures in’the left- Practice Fields About Half hnnd column are merely for convenience in giving the fractional differences Size of Grid—Contest Due to Be Hot. BY BILL DISMER, JR. | F ANY two teams ever prepared for a “grudge” battle under more I similar circumstances than Devitt | and Bullis are preparing for their mportant game on Friday, they must Dave been different teams of a single ! Anstitution getting ready for an inter- tlass struggle. No less than four striking similari- ties crop out when a study of each of Friday’s opponent is made, all of which portend a more interesting bat- tle than at first was believed likely. For the first time, it is revealed that Devitt's outfit has been reduced to a | fiumber almost the equivalent of Bul- ‘iis' 15-man squad, only a few more than that working out with the Black and Gray yesterday. Toil on Smail Plots. IN THE second place, neither team has been enabled to praciice on a field even half the size of an ordinary gridiron, both schools working out on a plot of ground near th class rooms but little larger than a base ball diamond. Again, it looms as a battle distinct- | 1y of the Irish. For confirmation, take | a squint at the names of the respect- ive coaches—Pat Mahoney of Bullis, Jim McNamara of Devitt. What hap- pens when a Mahoney and a Mc- Namara start a scrap? The answer will be given when their foot ball teams start fighting for them. Lastly, both schools just recently have gained the services of stellar backs, who have been out of the regu- lar line-up since the first games of the season. Devitt's Frank Granier, the punting and passing fullback from Montana, is ready to go for the first | time since the Central clash of Sep- tember 27. ED Tllinois. is back in uniform for Builis, after being laid up for four weeks by injuries received in the Rooseve game. Hohnfeldt still favors his weak | leg a trifle, but probably will be in there most of the game against Devitt. Incidentally, the game has been shifted to the Roosevelt High Sta- dium, instead of at Western, as first announced. The starting time, 3:30 p.m., remains the same. FIRETHORN HEAVILY WEIGHTED IN STAKE ill HOHNFELDT, the - l Will Carry 122 Pounds, Probably, Top, in Riggs Handicap at Pimlico Saturday. By the Associated Press. P!MLICO RACE TRACK, Md, No- vember 5.—Firethorn, Walter M. Jeffords’ colt, probably will carry top weight in the $7,500 Riggs Handicap | here Saturday. The colt, surprise winner of the Washington Handicap at Laurel, has been assigned 122 pounds. ‘Weights were announced by Frank J. Bryan, handicapper. Firethorn's 122 pounds is not the highest, but those named to carry greater weights are not likely starters. Discovery, A. G. Vanderbilt's star, 1s listed to carry 136 pounds, Belair Stud’s Omaha was given 128. Discovery is resting and Omaha is not in training. Brookmeade Stable's Psychic Bid, winner in his last three starts, was given 120 pounds. He won the Fall River Handicap at Narragansett Sat- urday and previously took the Laurel Stakes and the Scarsdale Handicap. Likely starters and their weights are: Chicstraw, 108; 115; Cycle, 107; Dark Hope. 110; Ever- gold, 114; Firethorn, 122; Good Gam- ble, 116; Good Harvest, 108; Kate, 108; Only One, 114; Roustabout, 104; Stand Pat, 115; Soon Over, 109; Silent Shot, 103; Thursday, 108; Vicar, 113. BIKEMEN TIE FOR LEAD CLEVELAND, November 5 (P).— Two teams held the lead today as the six-day bike racers passed the fifty- seventh hour at Public Hall. Jackie Sheehan of New York and Martin Journey of Nutley, N. J. teamed together, and Mickey Rodak of Chicago and Charlie Ritter of New- ark were the duos dominating the contest, in which 12 teams are com- peting. Long Hike Cure For Grid Bettor By the Assoclated Press. ROSAL!.A, Wash., November 5.— Dr. Ray Auro, Gonzaga Uni- versity foot ball trainer, who isn't going to bet on any more games, started the last 30-mile hike of his 77-mile trudge from Pullman to Spokane, today. He's walking because he said he would if Gonzaga heat Washington State Saturday. Gonzaga won, 7-0. In the two days he has been on the way, Dr. Mauro has walked 47 miles 1n frigid weather. “Yesterday I had to walk a quar- ter of a mile through a fleld to get around a black cat that crossed the road,” he said wryly. “I've got my share of bad luck without inviting more.” The Gonzaga band and student body will meet him at the Spokane City limits tonight. all-State | javelin and discus thrower from and | Count_Arthur, | | order for each respective team. Under the | foot ball histofy of an institution has tion, others a lower one. team_100.0 Wches'rT. Dme 7.0 | Richmond’ P Pittsourgh Wash 1J.C. 49 Missouri_ 50 Willians - 186 Dickinson 187 De Kalb. I5% Salem 189 Pittsk'® 190 Okla. A&M 191 Gettvsourg i Ohio Nthn. T AR Genevi, A0 West. Md 00 W.Va Univ, 91 Redlands_ 28t L. U 8.canf. Dak. S Va_ Poly. Buckaell Tulsa Unv. W.U 5t W ieaeive ¢ 109 Davidron | Manhattan 108 St. Benav. 109 8t.J. Minn n{'unfl\ 1 1 1) 1 1 3 41 . 41 41 41 41 41 41 41 11 41 41 40 a0 40, a0 40 T 408 1.5uDemu U ONTINUING its program of changing two putting greens each year. the Columbia Country Club is getting ahead with its schedule for 1935 by recon- structing the twelfth and fifteenth greens. The twelfth green is com- pleted and the new fifteenth will be finished within a few days. Mean- while, a temporary green is in use at the fifteenth, short of the ditch, making the hole & drive and short- pitch affair. The twelfth, now a long par 5, will be shortened a few yards when the ‘new green is put into use next Spring, but will be by no means an easier | hole than the old par 5 affair on | which so many birdie 4s were bagged. Accentuate Dog Leg. HE new green sits on a hilltop between the old green and the eleventh tee, but the Greens Commit- tee plans to force the play far to the right, making the hole even more of a dog-leg affair than it now is by en- larging the trap at the left side and by putting in a row of small trees on the left in the rough. The rough at the right toward the third green will be cut away and the tee shot will be forced well out to the right to open up the new green from the right side. It will remain as a par 5 hole, but the long hitters will be able to get home in two shots just the same. The fifteenth green is being rebuilt on the site of the old green, but the bumps and hummocks will be smoothed out and the green will be | fairly level, with a slight slope from rear to front, Heretofore, a ball which slid over the back edge left a very tricky pitch shot to a green sloping away, but the new green will be smoothed out and leveled off. Several years ago the Columbia club embarked on a program of.changing two greens each year. Last year the seventh and seventeenth were rebuilt and now are among the best greens on the course. Paid Gridironer Is Defended All Right if He Works, Earns Money, Declares President Allen of Marshall College. By the Associated Press. UNTINGTON, W. Va, No- vember 5. —President James A. Allen of Marshall College holds the opinion subsidization of “athletes never originated on the campus and that, therefore, criticism should be di- rected where it belongs. He told a group of young business men yesterday that persons and forces outside the institutions usually are responsible for payment of athletes. He added they are the ones that should be held to anster the protests of those who want non-subsidized collegiate sports. The Marshall president then re- ferred to the “situation at Ohio State where the papers.have been filled with charges that some of the foot ball players are on the State pay roll.” “If they work and earn their money there is nothing funda- mentally wrong with that if they are deserving,” he sald. “But if they are not there is something badly wrong.” Each rating in the table below is the current average of the game ratings ‘Williamson method the teams of the Nation are divided into eight classes at the start of each season. The past nothing to do with this classification. As the season progresses, naturally some teams will earn a higher classifica- Col'mbia Wes. Con: Dubugue Mor. Har Grove Cy__ Gl'nville T, 2 Sox 200 Ot Bai. 401 Cal, Pa. T. 7 Susa’hana IR Roanoke 0 Hamp Svd 10 BanClaire Lock Hav.- 410 Niagara U. 441 Lafavette 11 345 Millville 7 Bethel. Kn. 446 Guilford R Colby o Cheney S Capital U’ : ) 9 ] 3 5 4 1 ;) e 2 3 A 2 abzzaa q-.n‘n::=~zn i1 Arknsas. 8. 20.8 > Chricty, T i1 €. Cloud T. Wentworth lamette 406 Mt Pls. T ° 7 Rochstr. U S Mry Mn Abnm' Sch. 5 Arnold M 480 MsAlester 451 Marquet. T. 452 Las Vi B o Jamestown Ceardia C. Futatorn “0& TAahy & B, ° avenite. . 40% Kperd 4 Yankion 00 Otterbein _ 507 Hndrson. T. 508 Tenn. Poly 500 Chi. State 510 Arksas. Col. §11 Hendrix Ric SR8 Datuth T 387 S. Dieeo 8, | A%K Evansville agn cul St'ton | | a0 eingsra 407 | 380 Oglethorpe 1Cnn'fllh! 1035.) 'Columbia Revises Two Holes; New Ones Planned for Manor The sixth, tenth, thirteenth, four- teenth and sixteenth have been re- built in previous years. | . New Holes for Manor. | OLF course changes under way at Manor will find the Greens Com= mittee ready next year to slip in sev- | eral new holes on the first nine, where much reconstruction work now is in progress to lengthen the holes and produce two entirely new holes. The present fifth will be considerably lengthened, while a new short hole will be cut through the woods to & site near the present sixth tee. | Meanwhile, plans for changing the fifteenth green at Congressional have | | been temporarily abandoned, after QChnh'msn F. M. Davison of the| | Greens Committee had talked over the proposed change with many of the golfers. By the Associated Press. INNEAPOLIS.—Clarence *“Tuffy” Thompson, star Minnesota half- back, can sympathize with Babe Ruth and his stomach ache that made base ball history several years ago. When he finally stopped blushing, Tuffy admitted it wasn't an injury that forced him out of Saturdayis | game with Purdue in the third quarter —ijust the effect of too many oranges | {and sugar lumps consumed between | the halves. The rest of the Gephers partook sparingly, but Tuffy was hungry. UNIVERSITY, Va—The records show that Virginia and Washington and Lee have been playing each other at foot ball since 1890, but their rivalry goes back farther than that, They had a soccer game in 1871 and began play- ing rugby a few years later. PRINCETON, N. J—The Princeton and Harvard coaching staffs show that their famous break is a thing of the past. Art Lane, 1933 Tiger captain, helps coach the Harvard junior var- sity as a sideline to his law studies while John Crocker, who scored the tying Crimson touchdown against Princeton in 1920, assists in the coach- Ing of the Princeton 150-pounders. ANN ARBOR, Mich—A victory over a strong Penn team and the com- paratively poor record of the next opponent, Illinois, doesn’t mean much to Harry Kipke, Michigan coach. “Ye know Zuppke's type of offense is much harder for our kind of team to stop than the Pennsylvania power was,” he said as he sent his team out for & stiff Monday drill in the rain, ON NATIONAL LIST ATHOLIC UNIVERSITY'S cording to the Williamson figures. current list stand thirty-eighth among close calls in tussles with Virginia are eightieth. Hoyas, Maryland Are Well Up in Williamson Table team continues to command a high rating among the foot Although defeated for the first time in the campaign by De Paul at Chi- 519 teams mentioned. Their rating is 77.1. opponents nevertheless bettered their standings. The Hoyas at 66.0 stand Colonials Lose Ground. - | AFTER its drubbing by Rice, tie C. U. RATED 36TH of 519 Teams. C ball teams of the Nation ac- cago last week, the Cardinals in the Georgetown and Maryland that had seventh-third and the Terps at 64.9 George Washington outfit fell 5 |to the 122d berth with a rating of 55.1. American University rates 364th | with 20.7. Galludet is given no rat- ing this week. nor is Wilson College. Excepting Maryland and American University all members of the Capital | area group are rather higher than their opponents for the coming week | end. Indiana is given a shade over- the | Terps and Randolph-Macon is reck- oned much better than the Eagles. Notre Dame by virtue of its stunning victory over Ohio State increased its rating in top position by a point. New Teams in First Ten. MINNESOTA Rice, Louisiana State and Alabama remain in the Na- tion's first 10, but Southern Methodist, Texas Christian, California, North Carolina and Mississippi State ousted Ohlo State, Auburn, U. C. L. A, Iowa and Temple from the select lot. Williamson forecasts with winners named on the system's ratings were nearly 90 per cent correct lav. w-e.( is 87 | The season’s “batting average” per cent—1,258 “hits” games. MLITARY TACTICS SCORE FORDIXIANS | Mississippi State, Tulane, Like Forest, Get There First With Most Men. BY DAN McGUGAN. Director of Athletics, Vanderbilt Univers ASHVILLE, Tenn., November 5 —Dixie's teams were &s an- | noying to Eastern foot ball Saturday as Forest used to be to Sherman's army. They used For- est's methods. They got there first ‘\mh the most men. They did not ! wait for the enemy to attack. ‘When the Army rushed against the |front line of Mississippi State, it found this line already in motion. lt was advancing, it was in the enemy's camp before the Army's attacking forces had a chance to organize. When the Army extended its line to protect its flanks, Stedman drove hard | through the center. When the A"my “comractpd its line to reinforce the center, Pickle's corps executed suc- cessful flanking movements, JFOREST was most brilliant in rapid | surprise marches on enemy com- munications, and this is what Missis- sippi State’s forces did in the closing mmutes of the battle. Armstrong, a | passer of poise and accuracy, threw | the ball to Walters, who had made a | rapid, uncbserved march to . the | Army's rear, well behind the reserve corps, and in this manner Maj. Sasse's forces, getting on the enemy’s com- munications, destroyed its base and source of supply. The Army, being unable to live upon the country, was driven from the field, but don’t forget that the men in charge of the sectors of the invading forces carried out their assignments. Tulane turned back Colgate by similar methods. Tulane's fine backs, Johnson, Mintz, Thames and Loftin, | executed sharp thrusts similar to those of Marshal Foch when he took command of the allied army. These were varied by air attacks, Odom and | Watson co-operating. Colgate got to Tulane’s rear once and Tulane to Col- | touchdowns, Colgate one. (Copyright. 1935. by the North American Newspaper Alliance. Inc.) Oranges, Sugar Lumps Force Gopher Grid Star From Game magic, there may be another upset Saturday when "the Wildcats meet Alabama. The Tidesmen hold almost as big a jinx over Kentucky as Yale did over Dartmouth, winning 12 straight victories since the one Wild- | cat triumph of the series back in 1917. NEW YORK.—The St. Mary's Gaels | should be able to add something to | | the famous Florida-California weather argument when they get back home | after Saturday’s clash with Fordham. Their route from the west coast here included a jaunt to Florida, and they were due to leave Miami yesterday a few hours before the big storm struck. PHILADELPHIA.—The Penn reg- ulars who want to hold their jobs are having some bad moments this week. Coach Harvey Harman already has made tackles out of Johnny Neil, an end, and Dick MacWhorter, a full- back, and his threat of further shake- ups has the regulars shaking in their cleated shoes. — e SMART "HUSKER SQUAD All Nebraska Gridmen Get Good Marks in Classes. LINCOLN, Nebr., November 5 (#). —This. year's University of Nebraska Cornhuckers were credited today as | being the smartest squad of foot ball players the campus has boasted singe the advent of Coach Dana X. Bible's regime. The conclusion was based on the quarterly scholastic reports which showed every player eligible by a safe UNIVERSITY, Ala—If Kentucky can borrow some of Dartmouth’s margin—not “just getting by.” The scholastic record also held good for the freshman squsd. 3 out of 1,440 | \ gate's rear twice; hence, Tulane two | Newest Gridmen to Twinkle for Colonials Halfbacks both, George Jenkins demonstrated their potentialities in for BY ROBERT B. PHILLIPS, JR. APT. JOHN REYBOLD was somewhat worried about the future of his day's hunting. On his person reposed the; mask and brush of a fox freshly killed by the Riding and Hunt Club hounds. The pack, keen after a taste of blood, seemed now and then to cast a vague and hungry look back at the gentleman who had a whiff of Reynard about him. Capt. Reybold | | began to wonder whether he soon would have to make a point across country and let the hounds chase him. Fortunately he was saved that | doubtful excitement by the appear- | |ance of a second live fox on the/ scene. This one, perhaps aware of the fate that befell his cousin when | | the Hunt Club's hounds put on their | best opening hunt speed, made a quick frun of it. He headed straight for | home and was comfortably in his den 10 minutes after the first hound gave tongue. It was, nevertheless, a whale of a day for the Washington hunters, one | that indicated their season is to be tops in the history of the town's oldest fox-hunting organization. The lucky owners of the mask and brush are’Mrs. J. E. Behney and Mrs. For- rest Sherman. Capt. Reybold was acting as their trophy bearér. Uncon- vential as it may be to give the mask to other than a man, when a lady gets there and the gentlemen are laggard, what else should you do? RUMOR drifts in from the hunting precincts to the effect that on Saturday: Warrenton drew covert after covert for about four hours. but could not stir up a run for the field of 100 that turned out for the opening meet. Middleburg had two fine runs and | killed on one of them. Fairfax enjoyed a pair of protracted chases in the beautiful Potomac River country, the second one in pursuit of a game and handsome red fox that made such a long point he succeeded in doing under every horse that at- tempted to follow in his wake. Redland had two short bursts of about 20 minutes each, one of them, prefaced by some good slow hound work on a cold trail. Since his field included & rather unusual number of children accompanying their parents on the chase, M. F. H. Tom Mott stayed chiefly in the open country. 'HE National Horse Show this year has more local strings tied to it than any Madison Square Garden | meeting in years, The judges include | william _Bell Watkins of Berryville, J‘Vorth Fletcher of Warrenton and | Frank Bonsal, jr., of Green Spring | Valley, all notable names in the horsc news of this district, and for the first time the military competitions mean something to Washington. With the United States and Chilean Army teams only 10 days.out of our namlet, all the thousands who saw the inter-American show in Rock Creek Park will feel more than desultory interest in the international champlonships. Furthermore Fort Myer's Troop E of the 3d Cavalry is journeying North to put on its great exhibition ride for the city slickers, about half the hunt- ing population of Virginia will ac- company Mrs. John Hay Whitney’s and Mrs. Nina Carter Tabb's covered wagon next Sunday hight when a| gala evening brings out all man- | ner of costumes, and Maj. Hiram E. | ‘Tuttle’s dressage - demonstrations at | the inter-American won him such a following that innumerable fans | would be willing to make the trip to | | DAYTON FAN BELTS For All Cars m .NW. 'NORTH Ilfi (above) and Joe Kaufman (right), the recently developed attack dis- played against Rice last week and are expected to prove potent factors G. W. when Davis-Elkins is encountered Friday Stadium with further exploitation of the new spread formation. night at Griffith New York just to watch Vast and Si Murray skip through their paces un- der pressure of a pair of silken reins. Then the exhibitors’ list contains | many a name popular in these parts. For example, the Llangollen Stables, Danny Shea, Mr. and Mrs. M. Roben Guggenheim, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wet- tash, Miss Helen Bedford, Miss Frances Dodge, Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Untermeyer | and half a dozen others who mean ox office to Virginia, Maryland and Washington horse show associations. Get there if you can, good people. And if no other way is open, maybe “Liz" Whitney will give you a ride up on the ox cart. Been intending to tell both readers of this column that we've discontinued carrying the hunt dates each week. Since our esteemed colleagues, Nina Carter Tabb, is writing a hunting loe thrice weekly, that information need | not be repeated here. After all, the place for the hunting log is “The‘ Hunting Log.” Look for it there. T THE risk of spoiling a very good | thing, we want to let out the word that Annefield’s race meeting truly is charming. one of those small, informal affairs reminiscept, as some- | one said, of hunt races in Ireland. Everrbody knows everybody else in the tiny crowd, some of the horses are sent up by farmers and others come | from the very best stables, a lot of green material is shipped in for trials over courses that are both mcderate and fair, and the day affords one an opportunity to see those delightful | pcople who live “over the mountain” down Berryville way. That alone would be worth the trip, as the Blue Ridge crowd is not in evi- dence half enough up this way. They have their country and their horses and they like both too well to leave either. In the native bailiwick, how- ever, they have a way of doing things handsomely. The best wisecrack of the season, | probably made unconsciously, comes in ! some advance publicity for the Tappa- | | hannock Fair to be held down at Tappahannock. of all places, on No- | | vember 7,8 and 9. Folk in that section | | think a lot of trotting and pacing race | horses, but they will tolerate a runner every now and then. Their program this vear boasts each day “two horses races and two running races,” as our correspondent puts it. Let the thoroughbred boosters think that one over for a whilel —_— JOCKEY IS SUSPENDED. Jockey Harry Richards, who rode Grand Slam to second place back of Hollyrood in the Pimlico Futurity, has been suspended for the remainder of the meeting, which has nearly two weeks to run. He was charged with carrying Hollyrood wide stretch turn, Color Chanues In Cue Tourne) By the Associated Press, (CHICAGO. November 5—The field will be about the same as in recent years when Johnny Lay- ton of Sedalia, Mo., opens defense of his world three-cushion billiards championship tomorrow night—but the surroundings will be oh, so different. Gone will be the traditional green cloth; in its stead a purple covering for the table. Instead of the familiar red object ball, the 10 coatestants will work with a yellow one. PIMLICO RACES Baltimore Oct. 31 to Nev. 14 = # Romal Sia.) - 12:19P. M. both stations. EIGHT RACES DAILY, STARTING 1:30 P. M. ! will be held July 2-4 | A LAST TO FIT EVERY FOOT AL SESCHMCE " OFLOPTTETE Win Over Randolph-Macon Would Keep Eagles in | i | Chesapeake Race. American University in end- O ing its 1935 foot ball came paign next Saturday at Central Sta- | dium, but to the Eagles there Will be \mnre at stake than just the oppor- | tunity to inflict the season’s first de- feat upon little Randolph-Macon. For both A. U. and Randolph-Macon still are aiming for a conference championship, the Chesapeake Con- | ference, in which they are embrofled | with Hampden-Sydney in a fight for | supremacy. It's just possible that the |race will finish in a three-cornered | tie between this trio, and Saturday’'s game would play no little part in such i eventuality. At present, leading the c ov Am: NE of the country’s undefeated minor elevens will assist H mpden-Sydney s iih defeats d Bridgewater, in second place, only start, agzinst A. U. is third, having trcunced Bricgewater befcre losing a 14-12 game to the confcrence leaders. Scores Against Eagles. RA‘\DOLPH Macon and Hampdene Sydney meet on November 23, in a game which may prove of vital im portance to Walter Young's Eagles. If they can lick Randolph-Macon on ’Saturday, they will finish with a .666 | conference percentage, and in a posie {uon to share top honors. should Rane | dolph-Macon trim the present leaders | two weeks later. In such an event, all | would wind up the conference compee tition with two victories in three games. | So far this year, Randolph-Macon has defeated St. John's. Bridgewater, Delaware, Guilford and Haverford. A tie with Richmond in the opening game is the cnly blot on an othere record. It has rolled up e opposition. versity's chances for victory diminis when it is remembered that i's rivals hung a 14-0 shiner cn St John's, & team which defeated the Eagles, 19-7. ‘Coupwd with this gloomy reveiation ‘cI the figures is the realization that A, U. did not look so “hot” against Gale laudet last Saturday. Shoot Works.” | merican ' SOCCER TILT BEARS ON COUNTY HDNORS THE \“I odists’ brightest hopes for victory lie in the fact that this iill be their jast game and they can Blair and Rockville Battling to safm “shoot the works.” Randolph= Remain in Race With | Macon has two remaining foes to face A {after the Eagles. Gaithersburg Team. A victory for A. U. would give it & OCCER teams of Montgomery Blalr Winning percentage for a season for and Rockville h Schools were he first time in vears. So far, it has to fight for a shot at the Montgemery | Droken even in six Eame County high school championship this PrasIpes afternoon in a game at Rockville. | LEASES ROSS FARM. Gaithersburg, leader of the league. was r to idle before making its last appear- ‘Grl:n: Si\;;:kif;s U‘:k?;!:);?:::?:ag: ance of the season on Friday. |on the old J. K. L. Ross farm near Should the Montgomery Blair boot- | Laurel, Md., where he will train some ers defeat Rockville they could win the | 30 vearlings purchased last Summer champlcn<hlp from Gaithersburg three | from J. O. Keene. Markley races days hence by winning the last game. |unuer the name of the Bomar Stable. A victory for Rockville today, however, would leave that team in a position to assume the league leadership in the event of a Montgomery Blair victory over the present leaders. Damascus and Sherwood will con-} test fourth place in the standings with a game at Sandy Spring tomorrow | while on Thursday the cellar-occupying Poclesville team will seek its first vic- tory in the tussle with Safdy Spring. | Mount Rainier's junior soccer team was in a position to clinch the title of the Prince Georges County Junior Soccer League tod: when it met Bladensburg, second-place occipar at Bladensburg. A victory for th runners-up, however, will bring mem‘ to within one game of the leaders. Maryland Park was to travel tol Hyattsville for the other game in the younger loop. Bears Conceded Rose Bowl Date BY JAMES PHELAN, Head Foor Ball Coach. University of nston EATTLE, :\o\ember 5.—Foot ball fans, expert critics, dope=- sters and coaches are pretty well resigned to the fact that the Golden Bears of California will continue the march to the Rose Bowl untied and undefeated, after the easy manner of fact way they handled U. C. L. A. before 80,000 paid customers in the coliseum at Los Angeles Saturday. U. C. L. A. was a fighting, driving ball club and gained more ground through the strong California line than any team has made this year, but California does not give any ground past midfield and when the break appears California is quick in true old Michigan style to un- cork the scoring play. | (Copsright, North American Newse paper Alliance PICKS ROWING TEST SITE NEW YORK, November 3 (#).—The American Olympic Rowing Committee has awarded the rowing tryouts for | the 1936 Olympic games to Lake Car- negie at Princeton, N. J. The trials Rugged Round-Toe *‘Rocker-Bottom," English Walking Shoe. In Black “King Calf” and Imported Brown Holland Veal 5555 LAST LEATHER This British type, heavy-weight, staunch, “meaty” King Calf Upper, with a stout, solid, oak-tanned, extra- weight Sole, built over a comfortable English “Rocker- Bottom” Last, is one of the most popular styles in every Regal Store from Coast to Coast. It's a lot of Warmth, Weight and Wear for $5.55. Compare Custom Bootmaker’s Expensive Originals with Regal Reproductions, in our Windows Today. A STYLE FOR EVERY OCCASION SHOES

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