Evening Star Newspaper, November 25, 1935, Page 15

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v SPORTS. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, . D. C, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 25 1935 SPORTS. A—15 Demands for Coaching Scalps Are Few : Grid Season to End With Grand Blast PUBLIC NO LONGER Is Paramount—New Head Mentors Do Well. Associated Press Sports Editor. EW YORK, November 25.—The N scalps appears less conspicuous this season than for any year Perhaps it’s a bit too early to make this situation stick. The outraged yelp of the “anvil chorus” may be more pronounced after all the traditional Ppaid off. Some of the most prominent of under fire this season, including How- ard Jones of California, Gil Dobie of Maj. Bill Britton of Tennessee and Harvey Harman of Pennsylvania, but ticularly well-timed or effective. ‘The records of coaches of the caliber of years and at outstanding institutions | of the East and West, is such as to re- | to produce, if and when they have ma- terial, THE evidence this year indicates that +* the foot ball-following public final- that the material, not the coach, is the main factor in foot ball success— get more out of good material than mediocre mentors. It's also axiomatic make no real headway without ade- quate talent. the coach of a losing team, most old grads this season are adopting more seat at the shows. According to A. K. C. records, America now is breeding as fine dogs as any foreign country. Whereas 10 years ago imported dogs won best in group and best in show honors 65 per cent of the time, this year American bred dogs have taken these honors about 75 per cent of the time. ‘These figures are based on show results of 50 A. K. C. member clubs throughout the country. The show- ing of good American bred dogs this year was stimulated by the distri- bution of approximately $10,000 in extra cash awards by the American Kennel Club to winning American bred dogs. S’Z‘RANOELY enough, the depres- sion is considered a factor in the improvement and heightened interest in the purebred dog. It is claimed that devotees of dog breeding have 0 LONGER does the Ameri- N can bred dog take a back “daddy of five veterinary hospitals in the District,” has recently been ap- pointed veterinary surgeon for the District on & part-time basis. Dr. Buckingham's appointment followed a personal indorsement of his applica- tion by Mrs. Roosevelt. WHILE the flea is a well-known pest to all those who own dogs, many | owners do not recognize dog lice. If | your dog keeps scratching, even | though you do not see any fleas, and | even though his diet is all that it should be, if his skin shows small welts or sores or flakes off like dan- druff, look for lice. These insects are smaller than fleas, are white with a darker core, look very much like eggs about ready to hatch. Lice burrow under the skin of the dog and cause him acute discomfort. Most good flea powders will rid the dog of lice, too, but the powder has to be applied at frequent “intervals in order to get the lice as they hatch Miller's Wee Bill, black cocker spaniel, owned by Dr. W. D. Small at the Naval Hospital, which recently completed his championship at the Columbia, S. C., show. Takes View That Material BY ALAN GOULD. demand for foot ball coaching in the past decade. of the old grad or the strident notes returns have been posted and the bets America’s coaching figures have been Cornell, Tuss McLaughry of Brown, the sharpshooting has not been par- of Jones and Dobie, over a long stretch move any question about their ability Public Knows Material Tells. ly has soaked up the well known fact or failure. Good coaches will, of course, that the best coach in the country will Thus, instead of popping off about practical manners and methods. ‘They're going out and doing something | had more time to devote to their | out. about sending bigger and better mate- rial to the old alma mater’s halis of learning. Or they are taking the strings and the restrictions off the sit- | of the purebred dog since he has | hobby since the depression, and the average public has learned to appre- ciate the virtues and the fine points The sores or welts on the dog's skin are nests for adult lice and eggs. F L. SHERRY'S kennel of Irish ® terriers has' been moved from uation that kept good athletic Pros-|peen unable to spend so much time | the Lee Highway below Fairfax to pects from matriculating and, having | and money in appreciating other | 4907 Wilson boulevard, Baliston, Va. matriculated, from getting along rea- sonably well. | If you haven't been studying the relatively insignificant portion of newspaper space devoted to “fresh- | man foot ball results” you have been | missing one of the most interesting sidelights of the current campaign. Old Grads Study Freshman. TKB old grads have been studying these returns. Old Blues didn't miss the significance of the fact that Yale’s freshmen trounced Princeton’s yearlings. Cornell, aided by its new scholarship plan, has come up with a highly promising freshman squad to offset the effects of a dismal varsity season and dissipate some of Gil Dobie’s gloom. Lafayette has another outstanding| freshman ° squad. Pittsburgh and| Southern ‘California, each in the| process of rebuilding, look for a re- turn to better things with new ma- terial in the process of development. Bo it goes the length and the breadth of the foot ball land, among colleges large and small. First-year coaches have helped quiet the clamor of the non-combatants this season by producing some ex- ceptional results. This list includes Stub Allison of California, Madison Bell of Southern Methodist, Bernie Moore of Louisiana State and Lynn Waldorf of Northwestern. Perhaps all four should give a vote of thanks to their predecessors, as well &s the alumni, for furnishing or leav- ing over the material needed to obtain winning results. They have made a Temarkable showing, nevertheless. New Coaches Do Well. LLISON and Moore had relatively little head coaching experience be- ‘foré succeeding Bill Ingram and Biff Jones, respectively. Bell succeeded Ray Morrison, who has done pretty well in his first year at Vanderbilt. “Waldorf took Dick Hanley's place at mwmm after piloting Kansas to s Big Six championship. “Waldorf's successor, Wes Fry, has turned in a good job, even though yielding the conference title to Ne- braska. Elmer Layden's second year at the helm of Notre Dame foot ball has satisfled all concerned that the one- time fullback of the “Four Horse- men” was a happy choice for the job. He has restored the spirit as well as the prestige of the fighting Irish, under handicaps and under particular- -1y severe pressure. - Francis Schmidt at Ohio State has axperienced major disappointments for two years in a row with exceptional “material at his disposal, but there's o move on foot to blame him for _that or question his ability to get con- ‘sistently good results. . Dick Harlow stepped into & tough gpot at Harvard this year, but the ‘Crimson isn't looking for coachnig Shiracles, overnight. Carl Snavely, the former Bucknell coach, has demon- strated his ability to get extraordi- parily good results in a short time at North Carolina. Lou Little of Colum- ia- and Andy Kerr of Colgate, two of the Nation's top-ranking coaches, have not enjoyed their best seasons, but you don't hear any of the old grads yelling for their scalps. - ALCOVAS WANT ACTION Wictors Over Warwicks Are After Fraters, Marions, Palace. . ‘Three teams—the Fraters, Marion A. C. and Palace A. C.—are being “ghallenged by the Alcova eleven, which rang up another victory yester- _day with & 12-0 defeat of the War- wick team. Doggle Hutter’s 60-yard run to touchdown produced the first 6 points in the third quarter, while Ed Gold- blatt's pass to Padgett accounted for the other. Prospective opponents of the victors should call Manager Henson at Clar- endon 1490. .NORTHEAST BOYS AHEAD. “Touchdowns by Colie, Wilson and ‘Wines gave the Northeast Boys’ Club sn 18-7 victory over the Kenilworth Boys' Club yesterday. Wilhelm scored for the losers. .. .OLYMPIC PASS DECIDES. A 85-yard pass from Kemper to . @arter carried the Olympic A: C. to & Monument gridiron r ~ things. ‘HIS community is full of so-called kennels of hole in the wall breed- ers who, with no love for dogs, no | knowledge of the science of breeding, | no interest in the betterment of any breed, acquire one or more females, feed them inadequately, breed them | at every opportunity and promiscu- | ously, sell seventh-rate puppies with of keeping the mother or rearing the pups, and then, when their business dies, allow their puppy machines to starve to death or to become a menace. ‘The animal rescue league wiuld per- form an even greater service than it now contemplates if it would ferret out these puppy factories and put them permanently out of business. THE Old Dominion Kennel Club is planning another puppy match, to be held at the Town Hall in Falls Church on December 7. This will be an afternoon match. The exact| hour and the list of judges will be announced: later. This show should to look over the various breeds before deciding on their Christmas puppies. to display their wares here. DRA DAVID E. BUCKINGHAM, one ians in the District, and, as he says, JANBARK b TURE. fockalt, 7 BY ROBERT B. PHILLIPS, JR. entering sports arenas through the pass gate also suffers from handwriting somewhere on the wall. ‘While other people are enjoying them- presence of two box fighters or six race horses, the boys in the press box peer descry something significant. It makes them very unhappy to admit that they evening looking at & mere horse race or 10 rounds of modified murder. contenders,’ blood lines, trends and other mystic miscellanea. you that we also have been gripped by a bad case of the “whatdoesitmean” week before at Middleburg, where only six horses went to the post in two seemed a lamentably small repre- sentation, but it was apparent that prove a magnet for people who want Breeders, of course, will have a chance of the oldest practising veterinar- ¥ and NY ONE who has the habit of A an irresistible desire to find selves placidly or hysterically in the anxiously into the vold, seeking to are spending a whole afternoon or They prefer to dream of championship All this priming is intended to warn this week. The first symptom set in rather famous timber races. That several owners might be holding off the timber portion of Middleburg’s card, we could not help reflecting that racing over post and rail fences must be in rapid decline in this section. Checking over the charts of past sea- son, we find as many as 14 different horses starting in timber events at Middleburg in one day. This year six was the peak. The brush tests, on the other hand, filled ‘very well, much bette~ than in previous years. | He now has some 80 dogs, which |probably puts him in the ranks of owning one of the largest kennels in the vicinity. ‘ Although he is a comparative new- | comer to the ranks of breeders, Sherry's Irish are acquiring a reputa- | tion for quality. | HOSMER BULLDOG KENNELS have ordered a granddaughter of | Irish Alaunt from the famous English no stamina at any price the traffic | gennels of Mrs. Walz. Irish Alaunt | will bear, with no regard for the costs | js known as the progenitor of some of the best known dogs of his breed. | Local dogs took many honors dur- ing the month of October. Some of | the most outstanding ones are win- ner's dog taken by Dr. L. Cornet’s | dachshund, Hans von Ardolin, and | winner’s bitch and best of breed by Luis von Borls (same owner) at the | Raleigh show. Mrs. Katherine Koehne's collie, Flormay’s Blue Boy, took winner’s dog at this show, too. Mr. Kimes' cocker ,spaniel, Wire- haven's Happy Man, was best of winners and best of breed at the same show. Aspin Hill's High Time | IT, Boston terrier, was best male Bos- | ton at the same show, while Mollie |of Wollaton, miniature Schnauzer | from the same kennel, went to best | of breed. High Time, 1I, also took best of winners in a very large class at the Greensboro show. At Columbia Dr. W. D. Small's cocker, Miller's Wee Bill, handled by Mr. Kimes, went to best of breed and completed his championship. ing its plans for a new plaat. The idea has caught on like wildfire. Wise trainers have been insisting for some time that it was suicidal to run horses over relentless wooden ob- stacles at the speed that was becoming inevitable in timber races. The minute |they were given an opportunity to | shoot at good brush courses, they | switched. Running at a 2-minute clip (and as | early as 1931 that was considered | moderate for timber toppers) a horse | is bound to give his legs a terrific beating if he raps solid fences. Fur- rattling fall. Neither is exactly a help | to his future usefulness. to its proper status—as & test of real hunters. People have been buying race horses, getting them qualified by rather doubtful hunting exploits (with grooms or jockeys in the saddle) and then running them over posts and rails. It was a silly business to begin with, and one induced only by mis- guided competitive spirit. When the stake horses started running at hunt meets, the real serviceable hunters withdrew. In recent years they have been diverting themselves in point to point meets and elsewhere. We pre- dict that within the next year or two they will be seen at hunt races rigidly limited to horses that have been hunted by their ownars and are ridden i across country by real hunting people. FEDS CHALLENGE MARYLAND CLUB Defi Follows M. A. C. 9-0 Win Over Washington Pro Gridders. LAIMANTS to the District in- dependent foot ball title by virtue of its 9-0 triumph over the Washington Pros yester- day at Grifith Stadium, the Mary- land A. C. already has received a challenge. Ray Smythe, manager of the Wash- ington Federals, who told the Mary- landers to go out and earn a reputa- tion when Ralph Boyer endeavored to schedule the Feds early in the season, claims his club can spot the District’s only undefeated semi-pro eleven to a brace of touchdowns and still come out on top. That’s saying quite a lot, for Boyer's boys have swept by eight teams, being tied by the Richmond Arrows, whom they later defeated, in their first game of the season. But one touchdown has been recorded age;jst the Mary- landers, and despite tne presence of & pair of all-Americas, the Washing- ton Pros never advanced inside the Maryland A. C. 20-yard line. Dunlap Is Troublesome. EARL DUNLAP, one of the mythical eleven choices and a former Ross Bowl hero while playing for Georgia Tech, gave the Marylanders a few anxious moments in the scoreless first half, however, with his bone-crushing smashes at the line. Willis Benner, former University of Maryland star, sent his team into the lead in the third quarter when he tore through the pro forward wall to block Don Bomba's attempted punt from the 4-yard line following Dick Nelson’s 55-yard boot. The ball bounded over the end zone for an automatic safety. Inspired by the narrow margin, the Marylanders swept down the fleld im- mediately after the kick-off, with Nel- son passing 30 yards to Benner to initiate the drive. Gene Augusterfer, former Catholic University quarter- back, pounded left tackle for 7 yards, placing the ball on the 14-yard line. Nelson then flipped a pass to Jim Forney, who scampered 6 yards with Dunlap and Bomba hanging on to his rugged frame. Benner, who has not fatled to convert this season, added the extra point from placement. Advancing to the 20-yard line late in the third quarter, the pros were repulsed by the strong Maryland line and a 50-yard kick out of danger by | Nelson ended their only scoring threat. Line-Ups and Summary. Pros. (0). ucl . Point_after touch- down—Benner (placement). Safety—Ben- . Bubstitutions—Hearn, Hallett, Haw- kins. Roberts. Sothoron, _Farrell,~ Brew, Holland. Schwarts. Acri.' Bozek. 'Referee | —8weeney "(D. Umpire—Par- | rell @.C. Head linesman—O. Mitehell (D. ). Time of quarters —15 minut HEURICH TOSSERS BUSY. Three second-round games in the Heurich Basket Ball League will be played at Heurich's gym tonight, starting at 7:30 o'clock. Resettlement Administration will meet Olmsted Grill in the opener, which will be followed by the Agriculture-Bolling Field and the Renrocks-St. Mary's Celtics scraps. wark, and they are doomed, not neces- sarily to oblivion, but to return to their proper usage. SPEAKING of the timber horses, Indigo will go to the Maryland this year as we had hoped. Charlie Hicks, his trainer, said he wanted to send the old boy to win the Virginia Gold Cup sgain, but Owner Johnnie Schiff has also been lured by the siren Spring, Hicks thought they would the season, because of his legs. We asked about the underpinnings this week an dthe little trainer rapped sharply on some nearby stone steps. “His legs are just like that,” he said. ‘Trust he’s right, for we’ve gone com- pletely overboard on this son of Stefan the Great. He is an amusing cuss, too. In the two-horse race Wednesday he was pulling Charlie White like a steam engine going over the first four fences. As they turned to cross the far hill of Glenwood, Indigo was about 15 lengths ahead of Sun Faun. Seeing and hearing no opposition near at hand, the grey horse dropped down almost to & walk. White was kicking him, but he wouldn't run. Andy Fowler on Sun Faun thought some- thing must have happened to Indigo (And a lot of people in the stands who had taken the 1-to-10 price offered by the bookies were thinking the same thing) He rushed Sum Faun forward. The moment Indigo within striking distance after that, but there never was any doubt who was going to go home with the R. Penn Smith Challenge Plate. if purchased before song of Worthington Valley. Last| have to retire Indigo at the close of | Type of Work Friday’s Game Will Aid Capital. Harb (left) and Sam Pertino in the When Central High takes on the Mexico City eleven at Griffith Stadium Priday afternoon the proceeds will go to Metropolitan Police Boys' Club, which is doing a great service in building up the youth of the Boxing is part of its program, and here Sid Silas (center), the instructor, is engaged in teaching Fred fine arts of the pastime, HE fifth annual Dixie Sweep- stakes towered over the local bowling world like a ten-pin over a “duck” Saturday, but the Intercity struggle, interrupted only momentarily the concentration of hundreds who are tied up in cham- pionship fights in the countless leagues in the /Capital. Once again, we make a four-way ¢ | division among the classes of leagues, starting off, for a change, with the k| | Commercial boys who play for the firms for which they work. While a 12-team league seems to be about the average size, the Commer- eclipsed by the Sanitary Grocery Co., which sponsors twice that many—32 ... but while the latter has en undis- puted leader, Jumbo Bread, the Com- mercial peak is occupied by three teams—Dijamond Service, Continental Baking and Peoples Drug Store with the first-named holding team recards of 602 and 1,698 . . . The Eve- ning Star dropped to second place this week . . . tsk, tsk . . . Wendall Moyer rolled the week's high game in the Electrical loop last week . . . but Western Electric still is two' games behind the leading Pepco. ONLY two games separate the first four teams in the Georgetown Commercial . . . Chappell's Billiards is first by one game, Jefferson Spring | Service and Martin's Tavern are tied with Clarendon Cleaners & Dyers for third . . . and Burrow’s flat game of 97 is the best of its kind . . . Con- | tinuing its upwerd sweep, the Cold | Streamers left Encore in the cold last week by taking an undisputed lead in the A & P. League for the first time lseoe Darnes’ 108 average is having a | lot to"do with the Streamer’s stream of victories . . . York Auto Supply and Brotman’s Market share honors all around in the Petworth loop . . . tied for the loop, York boasts the high game | of 613, but Brotman's boys chalked up a set of 1,693 which hasn't been equaled . . . American Security's third team crept up to a third-place tie in the Bankers' League and yet may catch its first team’s pace which has it in first place . . . yes, Hamilton's still the same game behind in second .« » four more teams are separated by four games in the Judd & Detweiler League, with Bindery No. 2 leading Commercial Press by one . . . but Judd & Detweiler's team in the Graphic Arts League is second only to Progressive Printing and the J-D's have high game and set, 609 and 1,680. Out in Takoma, Seal Construction leads the Duckpin Association, but Fritz Billiards, Stewart Brothers and Brooks' Shade Shop share the sub- urban spotlight . . . The A, B. C.’s are T-O-P’s in the C. & P. League, and their Bechtold has the best average and highest set . . . De Molay’s Alumni are setting the pace in the Saturday Night League and average 531 sticks a game . . .while Stanley Hotner’s em- ployes motor out in front of the Gen- eral Motors League ., . Hessick Coal still continues as the king pin in Co- lumbia Heights . . . Neither Judd & Detweiler nor Edward Motors is any- where near the leading Valspar No. 2 team in Mount Rainier, but both boast game and set records for the season. $1.10 GENERAL ADMISSION 5 p.m., November 26 GOOD FOR RESERVED SEATS G. W. U.-North Dakota U. FOOTBALL GAME THANKSGIVING DAY, 2 P.M. (Central Stadium) On Sale: G. W. U. Ticket Office, 2016 H St. N.w.' cial Duckpin League has 16, only to be | Chips From the Mapleways | AND how are the deacons, elders | and other brethren doin’ in the | church leagues? . . . Not s0 many, but | Miss Crow's game of 147 while rolling | for Grace hasn't been matched in the Lutheran Ladies’ League, which Georgetown is leading, however . . . but neither has any one equaled Miss | Broeker's set of 351, compiled as a member of the Zion five . . . Brookland leads the B. Y. P. U. Men's League, but West Washington girls are first | in the ladies’ loop . . . Douglas No. 1 dropped out of first place for the first | | time this year in the East Washington League, which now is topped jointly by First Brethren and Grace Reformed . . Baptist-Christian is two games ahead of Presbyterian’s second team mn Takoma ., . and that roar you heard up at Central Presbyterian Church came from Jim Millspaugh | when his Deacons fell out of first place | for the first time this year. | | BEAVER DAM holds on to that lead in the Country Club League like | & hungry dog to his only bone . . | its high game of 646 is 36 pin& bet- | ter than Kenwood's first team’s best |+« .. but Indian Spring and Manor’s second team are yapping at Beaver Dam’s heels—one game behind. As to the military and fraternal | groupings . . . Internal Revenue con- tinues to hang on to first place in | the Veterans of Foreign Wars' com- petition, but Advance and Potomac can't settle the second-place argu- ment . Joseph H. Milans Chapter | pulled away from the Washington Cen- | tennials by one game . . . but Miss Kohler still is supreme, individually, with a 149 and 380 . . . Sight No. 1 came from nowhere in the Columbia Lodge, No. 174, I. A. M., to grab first place away from B. M, No. 1, but still must contest that position with Dr. Rm. No. 1 ... the L. P.’s and Crescents share the Almas Temple lead, but Bunker Hill leads the Amer- ican Legion, Mount Pleasant the Odd Fellows, Hiram the Masons, and Equity the Hebrews. SEE THE GAME OF THE YEAR! FRANKLIN FIELD, Philadelphia Saturday, November 30 $ 90 In Fast, Comfort- able Electrically ROUND QOperated Trains ™IP If you want to get there safely— @and on time to see the middies and cadets marsh inat 12:15 P. M. =GO BY TRAINI Special Trains Direct to FRANKLIN FIELD Coaches—Parlor Cars—Dining Cars. Lv. Washington 8:40, 8:45, 8.50, 8:55, 9:05, 9:20, 9:30 A. M.~ Ar. Franklin Field 11:05, 1110, 1:15, 11:25, 11:25, 11:55, 11:57A. M. PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD —Star Staff Photo. | MIDDY GRIDDERS | DRILL IN*SECRET | Tackling Dummy Named for| Monk of Army Is Given ! Stiff Beating. By the Associated Press. TRADITION MARKS Army-Navy Clash Saturday Is Tops in East, With 80,000 to Attend. By the Associated Press. EW YORK, November 25.—Foot ball this week begins on N Thursday and runs continue ously through Saturday. As usual, most of the good things are saved for the last. Traditional Thanksgiving day games between ancient foes will be reeled off on Thursday to clear the decks for such spectacles as the Army-Navy, Yale-Princeton and Southern Methe odist-Texas Christian classics two days later. It looks to be one of the biggest foot ball weeks of the season, both in quality and quantity. Featuring the turkey day program in the East will be the New York Unie versity-Fordham game at New York, in which Dr. Mal Stevens’ undefeated and untied surprise eleven will make its Rose Bowl bid against a Fordham team which has been looking better every time out. Fur to Fly in South. KEEN rivalries will be renewed at Providence, where Colgate meets Brown; at Pittsburgh, where Pitt plays Carnegie Tech, and at Philadele phia, where Cornell tackles Penn. In the South the fur is sure to fly when Vanderbilt plays Alabama and when Kentucky-Tennessee, Virginiae North Carolina and Virginia Military and Virginia Poly clash. These teams have been battling each other on ‘Thanksgiving day for years. Other holiday headliners are St Mary's vs. Washington State, at San Francisco; Texas-Texas A. & M., at | College Station, and Missouri-Kansas, at Lawrence. Saturday’s main bouts will be topped by the colorful renewal of the Army-Navy feud at Philadelphia.” A capacity crowd of 80,000 will be at Franklin Field. Neither team has & chance for national honors, but an Army-Navy game is just that—the most colorful foot ball attraction of any season. Another sell-out crowd is possible at New Haven, where Yale's tricky Bulle dogs go against the Princeton power house. Princeton will be favored strongly to avenge last year's licking, when 11 Yale iron men invaded the New Jersey jungle and turned back the best Tiger team in years, 7 to 0. Southwest Is Agog. DAR.‘IMOUTH, loser to Princeton Saturday, comes to New York to meet Columbia in the metropolitan area’s big game of the day. Holy Cross and Boston College will resume their rivalry at Boston. The Southwest country hardly can wait to see what Southern Methodist's NNAPOLIS, November 25— | +| ing thump as the Middies went taci- Strict secrecy cloaked Thomp- | son Stadium today as Navy's ! gridiron warriors began finish- ing off their preparations for their classic foe—Army. | While the team was engrossed in the perfection of its strategy, no occa- | sion was lost to drum high the spirit | of the Midshipmen for the colorful fray Saturday at Philadelphia. 1 On the practice fleld was a tackling | | dummy labeled “Monk.” This repre- sented Monk Meyers, West Point back- | | field ace. It received many a resound- | turnly on with their pre-game grind. Hamilton Non-Committal. Ovm the main doorway of Ban-| i eroft Hall was an electric sign flashing out the injunction “Beat| Army.” Pacing the hall, old Tecum- | seh, Navy’s Indian household god, long | since has been daubed with war paint. None was grimmer with the ap- | proach of the climatic battle than aviator-head coach. After a mini ture Army game on the practice field, “B” squad players taking the part of the Army, he was asked if his squad was shaping up well. “Yes and no,” was his cryptic reply. The sailor squad will leave for | Philadelphia Thursday, to arrive there | Texas Christian. “pony express” will be able to do with Both these elevens will go into the tussle undefeated and with a chance that the winner may receive an invitation to the Rose Bowl. This game is scheduled for Fort Worth. Baylor and Rice will play at Houston. Except for the Georgia-Georgia | Tech engagement at Atlanta, and the Louisiana State-Tulane meeting at New Orleans, there is little going on in the South. Idaho goes to Los Angeles to battle U. C. L. A, in the only game on the Pacific Coast. FIVE-POINT TEAM ON TOP. A Afirst-quarter touchdown by B. Fitzgerald was the only score of the game in which the Five-Point Terrors defeated the Massachusetts Avenue eleven, 7-0. Moore accounted for the extra point on a pass. DEFENDS GRID LAURELS. Alexandria’s 1935 senior foot ball tchunpionsrup was won yesterday by the Virgina A. C., which successfully defended its title of last year by swamping the Pirates, 20-2, at Bage gett’s Stadium. BATTISTA BIG SCORER. Two touchdowns by Battista in the last quarter clinched a 20-0 victory for Shepherd Park over the Clarendon well in advance of the contest. Lions on the gridiron yesterd: @ Always known as the finest high priced pipe, Milano now sells for one dollar! Volume production makes this amazing reduction pos- sible. Quality remains as before . . . only the world’s finest briar goes into Milano. Plus an exclusive new feature you won't find in any other pipe no matter how much you pay! NEW, IMPROVED GUARD GIVES YOU ""SMOKE CONDITIONING."” What air conditioning does to air, smoke conditioning does to smoke . . . makes it cooler; drier; purer. Milano does just that. Also . . “breaking in” unnecessary. Milano mee this new pipe at any good . DeResine Processed briar makes is sweet from the first pufl. Ask to tobacco counter. You'll like it. Made by WM. DEMUTH & €O, Ine. Mokers of Fine Pipes Since 1862

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