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SPORTS. THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, OCTOBER 4, 1936—PART ONE. SPORTS. ' 'Brilliant Yale Trims Cornell : D. C. Will See a Free Golf Show ELIS ARE CRAFTY | INWINNING, 230 Experienced Team Entirely Too Strong for Sophs From Ithaca. By the Associated Press. L EW HAVEN, October 3.—An experienced Yale foot ball team turned its craftily con- ceived offense against Cor- nell's sophomores today and recorded & brilliant 23-to-0 opening-game vic- tory. A crowd of 17,000 saw Carl Snave- 1y's green but big eleven, with nine second-year men in the starting line- up, “flunk” its first major test of the season, but it took an exceptionally alert Yale team to do the trick. Leading the Blue's guileful at- tack, rich in deceptive short-side plays and passes sprung fron spread formation, were Al Wilson, sopho- more, of Sharpless, W. Va.; Clint Frank of Evanston, Ill, and Buddy Miles, local boy, each of whom tal- lied a touchdown. Dave Co.well of Loveland, Colo,, accounted for the other points with a field goal and two conversions, all from placement. Yale Slow in Starting. A PTER a scoreless first period, dur- ing which Cornell's sophomores, led by Dick Baker of Tonawanda, N. Y, and Jack Sheffer of Glen Ridge, N. J, which was featured by s long drive to Yale’s 20-yard line, the Elis’ attack began to click. Slowly at first, but gathering mo- mentum gradually, the Blue tricky and foxy plays began to baffie Cor- nell. A series of line plays and two passes, Prank to Bob Carey of Cleve- land, Ohlo, placed the ball on the 2-yard stripe, midway in the second period. Then, while Cornell's backs were chasing decoys, Wilson scampered around his left end on the hidden ball play. Shortly after, with the ses- sion drawing to a close, Colwell step- ped back to the 13-yard line, and kicking from a slight angle, sent the ball between the uprights for a field goal. Yale was placed in a scoring position after Wilson unveiled the ancient “Statue of Liberty” play. Losers Make Threats. NDAUNTED, Cornell's gallant sophomores rushed the ball twice to within scoring distance in the third period, only to be stopped once on the 1-yard line and shortly after on the 15-yard mark. Prank tallied for Yale toward the end of this period, two long passes, Frank to Carey, plus an interference penalty paving the way for the red- haired Evanston flash to dash around end from the 5-yard line. Yale's final taily came in the last period. A 30-yard run by Wilson placed the oval on. the 6-yard line from where Frank threw a short pass over the line to Miles, the latter scampering the remaining 2 yards un- Yale (23). ' 8cor Cornell Yale by peri Touchdowns — Wilson, ank. Miles (substitute for Hessberg). eld goal—Colwell (placement). Try for mims‘amr touchdown—Colwell, 2 (place- ments). Yale' gubstitutes: Ends—Dyess. Rafferty. Tackles — Peterson, Rumley. Hemingway, acciolo, Tyler. Center—Watson. cks— ‘Mott, Ewart, Humphrey, Albinger, substitutes: Ends—Boochever, . Roth. Hilmer. Tackles—Kennedy, ledge Gunsch. Po- Center—Pfeffer. Backs— Moulton, Ziegler, Gilder- Yale scorini Siem iti, Grossman. aiten, Peck, sleeve, Nelson. o MARCEY TRAP CHAMPION 8cores 43x50 to Win Washington Gun Club Doubles. For the fourth time in the history of the trap-shooting event, Julius Marcey won the doubles championship of ‘Washington Gun Club yesterday when he scored 43 out of 50 to repeat former triumphs of 1924, 1930 and 1931. ‘Trophy distribution was under the Lewis Class system, with H. M. Bing- ham and R. D. Morgan tying in the second class, the former winning the shoot-off. Marcey also won & leg on the Hunter-Wilson three-month trophies with 24 out of 25. Col. J. C. Smith duplicated this score to get a leg on the cups. Gibbons Young of Washington College shown scoring ajter 76-yard run, following interception of an Eagle pass in the It Was Things Like This That Marred American U.’s Start fourth period of the game yesterday at Central Stadium, which the visitors won by a 25-7 count. JOWALICKED, 18-, BY NORTHWESTERN Simmons Proves Flash, but Hawkeyes Are No Match for Wildcats. By the Associated Press. VANSTON, I, October Eleven hard-charging, sure- tackling Northwestern foot ball players demonstrated to- | day they could drop a super star any time—the slippery Negro, Oze Sim- mons, when they defeated Iowa, 18 to 7, in the opening conflict of the West- ern Conference championship season before 30,000 spectators. The Hawkeyes, figured to make somewhat of a splurge in the Big Ten race with their big veteran team, were completely off stride and threat- ened seriously only in the fourth pe- riod, when their forward passes be- gan to click. Northwestern took the lead with a touchdown at the start of the second period, added another and a field goal = other two points in the fourth as the result of an Iowa safety. Iowa's score came in the final pe- riod when Simmons, catching a lateral in the closing minutes, stepped around most of the Northwestern team and broke away on a 20-yard gallop for a touchdown. He received no blocking support sational returns of punts that thrilled the crowd. Hawkeye Attack Smothered. which completely smothered the Hawkeye attack with two first downs h 4 and 20 yards . gained by rushing, & half dozen Northwestern backs made their plays click with consistency. Ollie Adelman, a 155-pounder from Milwaukeé, demonstrated some re- markable ground-gaining ability, once breaking away on a touchdown run of 56 yards. Bernard Jefferson, & 180-pound Negro from Grand Rapids, Mich., also gave promise of future greatness in punting and carrying the ball, while Don Heap, the Wildcats’ triple-threat star, played a sensational game, al- though allowing others to take the spotlight. ‘There was no question about the re- sult after the first few plays as the game progressed. Northwestern con- tinued to become more challenging while the Hawkeyes faded more and more, except for their splurge near the finish, when Simmons scored =and forward passes began falling in the right hands. Line-Ups and Summary: Towa (7). Northwesterp (18). Lannon y Bovateh Voists Diebl Banzo _ Hinton Toth ild Simmons ™ - Eicherly Ball 0 01 ‘Touchdo Point from try Pleld 7— 7 2—18 wns— after scoring: uchdo on! Foint from try after touchdown—Nelson. Bafety—Balass. 00 8 0 Notre Dame Unfolds a Driving Attack to Beat By the Associated Press. OUTH BEND, Ind., October 3.— The 1936 “Fighting Irish” of Notre Dame, featuring & sur- |y prisingly robust running attack, went on parade for the first time of the season today and marched through Carnegie Tech to a sparkling 21-to-7 triumph before 35,000 spectators. The Easterners, with a mixture of veterans and brilliant sophomores, were figured to give the Irish a ter- rific battle, .but were unable to cope with the array of power-house ball carriers Elmer Layden turned loose against them. The Notre Dame machine, once under way, hit & high peak of effi- ciency in the second and third periods. Behind 's line that operated beauti- fully on the offense, Notre Dame's backs jammed through for & second- period touchdown and pounded over two more in the third. Notre Dame’s first touchdown drive started early in the second -period when Miller burst through the middle of the line from the 13 for the touch- down. Joe Beinor place-kicked the point. . The Tartans immediately bounced back. Matelan dropped back to the Irish 28 and fired a bullet-like shot to Carnelly, who stood in the corner of the end zone. Capt. Nestor Henrion place-kicked for the tying point. Danbom, & 190-pounder. from Cal- umet, scored the second. touchdown on the prize play of the dsy. Taking the ball on Tech's 38-yard line, he sliced through left teckle, reversed and out-galloped two defenders over the goal line, & dash of-62 yards. Andy Puplis place-kicked. - ‘The parading Irish wound up the scoring by staging an uninterrupted march of 55 yards, Miller sailing L] Carnegie, 21-7 around his own left end to score. Puplis again kicked for the point. Line-ups and Summary, Carnegie (7). Notre Dame 421} Patt — O'Nefli Bteinkemper in the same period, and tossed in an- | sither on this run or any of the sen- | PERATING behind a forward wall | 20 YEARS AGO IN THE STAR Slel.'lN years of seeking the National League championship has ended in success for the Brook- lyn Robins this season as they clinched the flag by beating New York, 9-6. A bombshell was thrown into the ante-game discussions as Manager John McGraw accused his players of not doing their best. He declared that indifference of sev- eral of his players made the task of the Robins much lighter. New York and Washington played to an 1l-inning tie when Bert Gallia weakened after holding & two-run advantage going into the ninth inning. Previously Gallia had been handed "a five-run lead when the Nats scored four runs in the first and one in the second. Georgetown and Maryland State, who are preparing for their opening foot ball games, will stage an intra- squad scrimmage this week. The Hoyas are meeting Navy, and Maryland goes against Dickinson. Kentucky Gives Scrappy V.M.I. Beating in Rough Game, 3810 0 HARVARD SMOOTH ROUTING AMHERST Cashes Six of Nine Chances to Register Markers in 38-to-6 Contest. By thc Associated Press. AMBRIDGE, Mass, October | 3.—Harvard's well-drilled foot | < ball team, miles ahead of the | one that launched Dick Har- low’s coaching career here last year, opened its season with a 38-6 victory over the hard-fighting Lord Jeffs from Ambherst today before & 15,000 crowd. ‘The Crimson, although unable to do much with the simple passing at- tack it attempted, cashed in six of the nine scoring chances that came its way while battling the sturdy (Little Three) collegians in intelligent fashion. P Fullback Vernon Struck was the outstanding ground-gainer for Har- vard and his long gains, the rewards for his backfield mates’ splendid block- ing, enabled George Roberts to plunge over for three of the six touchdowns, the first of which required nine minutes. Blocked Punt Helps. ARVARD scored but once in the opening period, added another in the second when Bobby Jones, its center, blocked an Amherst punt that was recovered in the Lord Jefls' end 2zone, 20 yards back, by Left End Gib Winter, and twice in each of the last two quarters. Early in the final session Harvard's ber second string backs marched 53 yards before Bob Stuart drove over from the 1-foot line on his second try from that distance. About midway in the period Ken Booth, a tackle replace- ment, recovered an Amherst fumble on the latter's 40, and George Ford supplied most of the gains that en- abled him to jaunt 10 yards off his left tackle for Harvard’s final touch- down. Amherst, which gained but 52 yards running and passing during the first half, clicked beautifully while taking full advantage of its only scoring chance of the game. Long Pass Productive. ’I‘HAT opening was forced in the third period, the result of an overhead from Al Snowball to John Coey, left end, that gained 65 yards. After Dick McClellen, a backfield re- placement, fumbled and recovered, Hartley Joys, another spare ball car- rier, darted over from Harvard’s 8- yard line. Harvard’s forward passing failures “¥fke | rulned two scoring chances in the e Tebh o— 'gie Noire Dame o=~ o 711 0—ai Carnegie touchdown—Carnelly. Point after touchdown—N. Henrion. (plsce-Kiek): otre - Dame . tochdowns—iller (sub for Danbom)._ 2:Danbom. _Point_after BN Clase Rl ™ for Steinkember), INDIANA GIVES LATE DISPLAY OF POWER Makes Long Marches for Three Markers in Last Quarter, Beating Centre, 38-0. By the Associated Press. Bwomnomu, Ind, October 3.— After three quarters of erratic foot ball, Indiana’s eleven went into high gear in the final period of the game against Centre College of Dan- ville, Ky., today to pound out a 38- to-0 victory. ‘The Hoosiers scored in every period, but for the first three quarters the attack stalled repeatedly within the 20-yard line. Three times, however, in the last period, the Crimson eleven marched down the fleld for touch- opening period, and the first half ended with the Crimson having & 7 | third down 2 yards from the Amherst goal line. The “Big Three” team made 21 first downs against 5 for the “Little Three” and outrushed it 443 yards to 83. Each team completed 3 out of 10 passes, but Amherst netted 105 yards via air against 48 for the Crim- son. Amberst (8). Ambherst L\ ywn—Joys (sub- AR ERE oo wns — Boston (substitute for —— FISHBURNE IS UPSET FRONT ROYAL, Va., October 3.— By the Associated Press. Kentacky's Wildcats overpow= ered Virginia Military Insti- 38 to 0. in a rough game on the blue grass of Stoll Field here today. The before & crowd of approximately 12,500. ball fleld like & scared rabbit, was in- jured three times when stopped by game. He contributed two of Ken- tucky's six touchdowns, one of them Wildcat's other ace halfback, scored one touchdown in the first period and Dameron Davis, Bob's younger brother, and Tommy Coleman, Hunt- Foe’s Line, Score in All But Third Period. HICAGO, October 3.—A black | and gold wave from the| versity of Chicago at Stagg Field today, as the powerful Vander- whelmed the Maroons, 37 to 0, before 15,000 spectators. offense cold, and scored in every pe- riod but the third. Coach Ray Mor- peatedly smashed through to halt Ma- roon plays almost before they had Chicago made only one scoring bid. A 26-yard aerial by Omar Fareed to toss to Lawson put the ball on the Vandy 20 in the third stanza, but Commodores, crushed the Maroon hopes to avert a shutout. Just before the Maroons on the Vanderbilt 27, but the game ended before another play EXINGTON, Ky, October 3— L tute's scrappy foot ball team, game was played in perfect weather Bob Davis, who runs over a foot tackles, and played less than half the on a 68-yard run. Bert Johnson, the another on the first play of the second. ington, W. Va. broke tyfoum, the Heavy Commodores Smash B3 the Associated Press. South rolled over the Uni- | bilt University Commodores over- The visitors stopped the Chicago rison’s heavy, hard-charging line re- started. Bill Gillerlain and another 9-yard Lawson's fumble, recovered by the the final gun another long pass put could be run. x, Huggins Starts Vandy Charge. SPEEDY Jimmy Huggins, used only through the first period and & minute in the second, started the Southerners on their way. His run- ning and passing sparked Vanderbilt on a 70-yard march which ended with Sam Agee going over from 5 yards out. A few minutes later Huggins slashed through for another score, after Hall recovered a Maroon fumble. Lunsford Hollins took a lateral from Alex Truitt and sprinted 17 yards for a touchdown in the second, while an- other score in the period came when < —Star Staff Photo. Cadets for gains of more tba:: 0 yards each for Kentucky., Both are second stringers. The Cadets played the major part of the last period in Kentucky terri= tory but lacked a scoring punch. Andy Trzeciak carried more than his share of the backfleld burden for V.M. I and Al Fiedler was a pillar of strength in the Cadet line. Earl Sands, Sophomore fullback, cut through the left, side of his line for 26 yards and the first Kentucky touch- down came before the game was two minutes’ old. Bob Davis made a 68-yard touch- down run on the seeond play after the second kick-off. Dameron Davis tore off runs of 8 and 42 yards, which paved the way for Johnson’s touch- down off right tackle. Johnson skirted right end for Ken- tucky's fourth touchdown on the first play of the second period. In the third period, Bob Davis g0t back in the game and made a useless 20-yard gain on a fake through center | which was called back for off side, but on the next play Coleman ran 43 yards on the same fake, and a pass, Coleman to Hagan, scored again from the 20-yard stripe. | Bob Davis contributed the last | touchdown a few minutes later after | Johnson and Sands had helped him | carry the pigskin down the field on straight foot ball. Line-ups and Summary. V.M. 1 (0). Kentucky_(38). b Hagan NIrORERArTTY a. B. (@i | Franklin, Vanderbilt's rangy, alert end, intercepted Lehnhardt's pass and galloped 18 yards to score. Marcon Line Is Nipped. Amn, halting Chicago’s bid in the third, Hollins, S8am Agee, Keene and Ford teamed up to rip through the Maroon line on a fourth-period march climaxed by Ford's score on a 1-foot plunge. An intercepted pass gave Vanderbilt another chance in the final minutes. Aerials to Brown and Noel—merely two of Vanderbilt's large and classy backfield department —put the ball on the 1-yard marker, from where Worley smashed across. Only on the opening touchdown did Vanderbilt convert the .extra point, Plasman making that from placement. Chicago's offense, slowed when speedy Ned Bartlett went out with an injury early in the game, accounted for only seven first downs to 21 for the invaders. Vanderbilt gained 131 7" Beard v Sf‘nr; by periods Touchdowns—Kentucky. Sands. B. vis (2), Johnson (2). Hagan (sub for placements) —Hagan. Simpson. Gets Touchdown With Its 64-Yard Drive Made in By tae Associated Press. ORFOLK, Va., October 3.—The N feated a game but outclassed William and Mary foot ball assembled to witness dedication of the new $300,000 stadium of the Norfolk Harry Martin, 190-pound Charlottes- ville boy, rammed the Indian line for drive in the first quarter for the touchdown, He kicked the goal from Virginia threatened several times | thereafter, but penaities and fumbles | liers. During the closing moments they were content to protect their smothering the Indians’ attack through the air. made & net gain of 190 yards from scrimmage to 5 first downs and a net Mary. The Indians made but a single first down, and that on a penalty, Indian Kicks Matched. Indians resorted to a kicking game that saw Otis Bunch sending his long on many occasions. Martin, however, matched his efforts in this depart- Virginia intercepted five Indian heaves, and completed three ocut of yards by rushing to 60 for Chicago. Line-ups HErpRIpIar ey BAaD, Doans Vnndarlul scoring: uesins, Hollin: int’ from try an (placement) — SHOWS FINE OFFENSE Mississippi State Easily Wins From Howard, 35 to 0. STATE COLLEGE, Miss., October 8 ty | President John Lioyd Newcomb of the Kentueky "~ Davis).' ~ Points afier touchdown W.ANDM, 7700 Opening Quarter. University of Virginia de- team today, 7 to 0, before 15,000 fans division of William and Mary. the final yard at the end of a 64-yard placement. nullified the best efforts of the Cava- slender margin by breaking up and Virginia piled up 11 first downs and gain of 24 yards for William and during the first three quarters of play. Tfllm running attack stopped, the spirals down the field on first down ment. nine attempted passes for a gain of William and Mary and Gov. George C. Peery sttended the game and ad- dressed the crowd in the dedicatory exercises just before the kick-off. University of Virginia was unable to attend and was represented by Capt. Norton Pritchett, athletic director, Line-ups and Summary. Virginia (7). W. &M (0. -Davenport Zable Weeks s NRFPRRROFET hdown. Martin: placement), Martin. ANACOSTIA VS. CYPRIAN. ‘Two foot ball teams will be playing their first game of the season this afternoon at Gongaga Stadium where the Anacostis A. C. tackles the Seint COyprian eleven. The kick-off is at 3 o'clock. . | sibility. FOUR AGES BILLED ON KENWOOD CARD Shots by Smith, Little, Cox, Thomson Will Be Aired Over Loud Speaker. BY W. R. McCALLUM. NE week from today four of the better professionals in the United States will put on & free show at Kenwood before some 5,000 golf bugs. The gal- lery probably will be the largest of the year. Headed by Horton Smith, the like- able Missouri chap who now has been in the thick of international compe- tition for nine years, the Spalding caravan will come to Washington Oc- tober 11 to appear in an 18-hole shot- making exhibition, starting about 2 p.m. Other members of the caravan are Lawson Little, 1934 and 1935 ama- teur king, and Jimmy Thomson, the guy who poles a golf ball further than any other man. Wiffy Cox, Kenwood pro, will be the fourth man in the golf match, and probably Wiffy and Horton Smith will pair against Thom- son and Little, Sound Truck Helps Show. ANY way you figure it this match will be well worth watching. Of course it's all commercial, but the commercial angle has been played down even to the extent where, ac- cording to Smith, the name of the outfit sponsoring the exhibition isn't to be mentioned, which is just about the last word in repression in these days when blatant commercialism hardly overlooks a chance to sell its wares. But fak: it any way you want the match should be s pippin. You don’t often get the chance to see four such exponents of the art of mauling & golf ball playing in a single match. The only way they could improve it would be to stick in Bobby Jones, and his presence isn't even beyond pos- Bob himself may be around, but not to play. Horton Smith told me in New York 8 few days ago that the caravan has been going great guns in the provinces, drawing crowds of 5,000 and 6,000 per- sons in almost every city in which they appeared. A sound truck ac- companies the players and the shots are explained through a loud-speaker system. “Doesn’t this radio business bother you fellows?” I asked Horton. “No, it doesn’t,” Horton said. “We get used to it, the shots until after they are hit. It really makes quite an impressive show.” Use Public Courses. So FAR the exhibitions have been conducted largely on public golf courses. The caravan spent a month around Chicago during the Summer, performing on the many public layouts around the Windy City. The Ken- wood appearance is the first showing at a private club in the East, and it will be & wow, provided the weather man turns on & good sample of weather. ‘That long-hitting battle between Thomson and Little alone would be worth traveling a parasang or so to see. And with Wiffy Cox's wise-crack- ing and Horton Smith's putting it really will be a match worth gazing at. The only bad part of it is that with the expected crowd a lot of peo- ple aren’t going to see much of the golf. Barton (Continued From Sixth Page.) edge in the medal score—83 to 84 for Maureen. B It also furnished her with the im- petus virtually to put the match on ice at the twentieth hole. She started the afternoon round with a pair of birdies 4s, sinking a 20-foot putt at the nineteenth and reaching the 384- yard twentieth with a drive and & spoon and almost holing a 14-footer for an eagle three. Maureen won the twenty-first where Pam missed a 6-foot putt for a half in 4s and that was the last hole she won until she staged a rally latter on. Miss Barton also won the twenty- third with & par 4, the 561-yard twenty-sixth with a fine birdie 5 fash- ioned from three hard-hit woods, and the twenty-seventh as Maureen took three putts from 30 feet. That put the British champion out in 38, one under par and five up. Wins With 30-Feot Putt. THI twenty-eighth and twenty- ninth were halved in par and then Miss Barton sank a 6-focter for a birdie three after a brilliant spoon shot to the green to go dormie six. Perhaps trying a bit too hard to put on the crusher, Pam bumped into all kinds of trouble at the thirty-first. After & fine 220-yard drive, her brassie second struck a tree and al- most bounced all the way back. Thea an iron third hit a movie camera- man’s truck and she finally took a six to Maureen’s five, At the 190-yard thirty-second, Pam's drive landed in the rough and she missed an 8-foot putt for a half in par, becoming dor- mie four. Miss Barton' closed, out in glory. She canned & 30-foot putt for a birdie four and conceded a birdie to Mau- reen, whose ball was 10 feet away, giving her & medal of one under par for the afternoon against four over par for Maureen. COLGATE RUNS WILD, WHIPS URSINUS, 54-0 Jaeger, Spectacular Back, Heads Scoring Parade With His Brilliant Dashes. Bv the Associated Press. AMILTON, N. Y., October 3.—Led by Whit Jaeger, spectacular back, Coigate's Red Raiders scored almost at will here this afternoon as they k | ran up a 54-0 count on a scrappy Ursinus team. After Lalor, Colgate fullback, car- ried the kick-off to midfield, Jaeger ‘broke loose for & twisting, leaping run for 50 yards and a touchdown. Jaeger scored twice more in the first half on spectacular dashes to prove thai he is one of the great run- ning backs of the country. With Jaeger, P. Marshall running off the flanks, Lalor bucking and Albie Burke blocking, the Raider backs high powered their way up and down the field. The second Colgate team played most of the second half. 6 nd they don't explain | | Bill Luckett rushed in to Pam Will Return To Defend Title By the Associated Press. quuun‘. N. J,, October 3.—Pam 7 Barton, the British and new American champion, is coming back mext year to try to make it two in @ row. “I'm thrilled beyond words to win the American championship,” she said accepting the championship medal and trophy from John G. Jackson, president of the United States Golf Association. “Naturally I'm very happy to take the champlonship to England, but I'll be back next year to defend it,” said Pam as she was suspi- ciously near tears during the pres- entation. Passes -in Third Quarter Give Washington State Edge in 14-13 Fray. By the Assoctated Press. ULLMAN, Wash.,, October 3.— A spectacular aerial attack, unloosed midway in the third period, carried Washington State to a 14-to-13 foot ball victory over tanford here today and knocked the Indians from their three-year position atop the Pacific Coast Con- ference. Ed Goddard, all-around Washington State star, gave the Cougars an early advantage with his 40-yard punting, then cut loose for the first touchdown with & 35-yard run in the second period after receiving an 8-yard pass from Rodger Dougherty, who place- kicked the extra point. Washington State took a 14-0 lead in the third period when God4ard whipped & 24-yard pass to Jehn Klumb, sophomore end., and tossed 8 to Floyd Terry, end, in the end zone. Hal Jones converted. Stanford Strikes Back. STAN’FORD promptly struck back through the air, with Glen Hamil- ton hurling passes in deadly fashion in a goal-line drive from Stanford's own 28-yard mark after the kick-off. He was injured and taken out after | plunging almést to the line and John Brigham, his substitute, plunged over. kick the extra point. Stanford paraded down the field. | ‘The Cougars grounded a punt on the 8-yard mark, but Pete Zager, big Heavier Shoremen Slowed by Plucky Eagles After Early-Game Drive. UTWEIGHED 13 pounds to O the man, American Univer- sity's foot ball team went down to defeat before a strong Washington College eleven at Roosevelt High Stadium yesterday, 25-7, although two of the visitors’ four touchdowns wire the resuit of intere cepted passes. While a crowd of 3,000 looked on, the Methodists, riddled by injuries and failures of 1935 regulars to return to | school, put up a fight that limited the | impressive victors to two touchdowns | produced by their own offense. | Furthermore, A. U. held the visitors t0 12 points in the last three periods | after a two-touchdown rush in the initial quarter threatened to turn the game into a rout in the first 15 minutes of pla; Visitors Score Quickly. THERE was no stopping Washings ton in the first quarter, when & powerful running attack culminated | in Young circling 11t end for 18 yards |and the first score of the game. A moment later the first interception of an A. U. pass produced the second visiting touchdown, Evans snagging | one of Hal Toner's heaves and racing | 60 yards. American constantly threatened the enemy’s goal in the second half, during | which it possessed the ball the ma= | jority of the time, and its efforts were | rewarded when Emerson Bartlett cut 15 yards off tackle for the lone A. U, | touchdown after Toner had sent two | long heaves into the arms of Dud Rogers and Ralph Winslow. Jack | Rhodes, former all-high tackle at Tech, kicked the extra point, 1 The winners' attack was led by Gibbons Young, ace quarterback, who | was given a tremendous ovation when he left the game. Sitnik, Brown and Rogers were the stand-cut linemen {for A. U, while Hansborough and | Bartlett aided Toner in the backfield. Line-ups and Summary. American U. (7). Wash. C. (35), Pos. L. LT Worl 777 collins Skipp American U. __ ______ Washington College .13 6 0 6—°5 Touchdowns. Huffman. Evans. Young (2). Bartiett; point after touchdown, Huffe sophomore tackle, recovered a Cougar man fumble for a touchdown. Luckett's place-kick was a trifle wide. Stanford drove down the field again | ,, on four completed passes by Brigham, | linesman. L but the Cougar line held on the 1-foot line. CHARLES TOWN HIGH TOPS. CHARLES TOWN, W. Va, October 3.—Charles Town High beat Berkeley Springs High at foot ball here, 30 to 0. 'OU NEVER GET any more re- spect from the world than you give yourself. And good- looking, well-groomed hair is clean-cut evidence of ‘a proper masculine pride and self-respect. That's why every man should know Vitalis—Vitalis and the fa- mous *“60-Second Werkout” — and what it can do to keep his hair healthy. Brisk massage with Vitalis loosens tight, dry scalp—quick- ASK YOUR BARBER—He'sane. Substitutions—American. Sturble. Tree harne. Cook. Sitnik. Howard: Washington, Meador. Collins. Benham. Referee. Orrell Mitchell (Georgetown): mpire. Dr. J Simpson_(Loyola). head W_Thomas (Maryland): fleld judge, Joe Mitchell. HEGESVILLE RALLIES. MARTINSBURG, W. Va, October | 3.—Hedgeville High staged a rally to- | day to beat the Leesburg (Va.) High eleven, 19 to 14. The visitors led, 14 Ito €, at the half. ens circulation—restores the flow of nourishing oils. Loose dandruff disappears and with it one threat of falling hair. Your hair is left alive and lustrous and easy to comb. And ther颒s never a hint of that social taboo ~the “patent-leather” look. Get a bottle of Viulis from your druggist today. Let the 60« Second Workout” keep -your hair what it should be—a sogial and even a business plus, ~ert oni the care of scalp and hair. He is recommencs..,, Vitalis in the new single application Sealtube. It is the most samitary package ever made. Be sure to get a Sealtube. Seconds torub— .:?u-lnhlfl“l&‘ —needed oils ace AR and the 160-second workout”