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SPORTS. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, .D. C., SATURDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1936. SPORTS. K % A—13 Minnesota Grid “Expert’s” Best : Columbia Plans Watering System Backs Trojans, Army, Yale; Picks Virginia; Gambles BY HERBERT W. BARKER, Associatea Press Sports Writer. acout time for a flock of up- sets to floor the foot ball time to rotreat: Navy-Yale: The Tars are one of Jooked a bit vulnerable to & good pass- ing attack. Yale will have that as fense that stopped Penn's bone- crushers, Navy has bowled over Yale's opposition has been tougher. We'll take the Elis and hope for the Northwestern - Ohio State: There has been a remarkable swing away were treed by Pitt's Panthers. It strikes this corner, though, that if the plenty. Northwestern's defense hasn't been particularly air-tight thus far, State to win a high-scoring duel. Harvard-Army: Harvard is defi- "Army expresses doubt in the Crim- son’s ability to halt Monk Meyer's - WITHTULANE TEAM on Georgia Tech. .NEVJ YORK, October 17.—It's guessers flat, but this is no the East’s major powers, but they have well as the same' stout-hearted de- three Southern Conference rivals, but best., from Ohio State since the Buckeyes Bucks can score at all theyll score 80 this wavering ballot goes to Ohio nitely on the way up. This vote for passes. Trojans Favored. SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA-WASH- INGTON STATE: A crucial con- ference test for both, but the clever Trojan offense looks good enough to put this in the Southern California victory bag. Duke-Georgia Tech: No real basis for comparing these two high- powered arrays, first-class represent- atives of Southern and Southeastern Conference foot ball at its best. Out of the hat, Georgia Tech. Colgate-Tulane: It must be some- thing beside luck that keeps Tulane in the undefeated class, and this cor- ner is hopping on the Green Wave band-wagon, perhaps at the wiong ricment. Tulane, for better or werse. Penn-Princeton: Despite its unreal- ized potentalities, there's no way to pick Penn against a Tiger that has lost only a few of the bigger teeth that' gnawed through all opposition last , year. Columbia People’s Choice. CQLUMBIA-WRGINIA MILITARY: | The people’s choice, Columbia. | New York University-North Caro- | lina: The visiting Tarheels. Cornell-Syracuse: Cornell, but here's hoping the Ithacans have learned a lot more foot ball than they knew in the Yale Bow! two weeks ago. | Dartmouth-Brown: The Indians on X the warpath, with Brown as the victim. Holy Cross - Manhattan: Probably close, but Holy Cross just the same. Pitt-Duquesne: All the elements for a first-class upset in this one, but Pitt, of course, gets the call. Villanova-Western Maryland: Andy | Stopper hasn't been stopped yet. Villa- nova, Chicago-Purdue: Shaughnessy fears Purdue, justifiably. Iowa-Illinois: One of the Big Ten's tightest struggles. The coin says Iowa. | Nebraska-Indiana: Nebraska looks too strung. No. 20 for Minnesota. MINNESOTA - MICHIGAN: Some- | body’s trimmed the Wolverines' | claws too sharply. No. 20 in a row for Minnesota. Notre Dame-Wisconsin: Wisconsin's | due to spring at least one upset this ! season, but this doesn’t look the spot | Jor it. Michigan State-Missouri: State. Marquette - Kansas State: enough, Marquette. Detroit-Auburn: We'd infinitely pre- fer to skip this one, but Detroit gets the call for its greater apparent punch. Alabama-Tennessee: The Volun- teers engulfed by the Crimson tide. Georgia-Rice: Comparative scores (the little rascals) say Rice, but only faintly. Louisiana State-Mississippi: U. after a struggle. Southern Methodist-Vanderbilt: | Ray Morrison takes his new pupils to his old haunts, probably for a beat- ing. Southern Methodist. Washington & Lee-Kentucky: Ken- tucky despite the Georgia Tech rout. L 8| One for N. C. State. ORTH CAROLINA STATE-FUR-| MAN: Strictly on the theory| that the Wolfpack is overdue, North | Carolina State. Virginia-Maryland: One guess is good as another, Virginia. South Carolina - Virginia South Carolina, with a prayer. Kansas-Oklahoma: Oklahoma. Texas A. and M.-Texas Christian: Christian, but Sammy Baugh's passes have got to click. Texas-Baylor: Tech: Texas looks the §oods. ~~ California-U. C. L. A.: California hasn’t looked nearly as good as was expected, but we'll string along with the Golden Bears once more. ‘Washington - Oregon State: choice, but Washington, possibly. Denver-Utah: Denver manages to squeak through and gets the nod. Brigham Young-Utah State: Not much to choose, but the coin says Brigham Young. Montana State-Greeley: Btate. Colorado University-Colorado Mines: The university. Wyoming-Colorado State: No Montana State. Late Relly Trims Cardoza. Special Dispatch to The Star. BALTIMORE, Md., October 17.—A touchdown in the last quarter enabled Douglass High to nose out Cardoza of Washington, 7 to 0, here yesterday afternoon, » Dusek-Olson Rematched. A rematch of last Thursday's wres- tling headliners, Cliff Olsen and Ernie Dusek, has been announced by Pro- moter Joe Turner. Olsen demanded the return bout after leing whipped by Dusek. BIERMAN GOOD SCOUT. Bernie Bierman has never lost a game to a grid team he himself has scouted, either at Tulane or Minne- . *xurymuinl'hflehem Close | Playful Pups Belie Their Looks Fighting off their natural camera-shyness, Jiggs and Maggie posed at the home of their owner, Mrs. Arthur R. Forbush, today. 2023 O street, They are appearing in the Alexandria dog show The gentleman on the left is Gen. Grant, R-K-O, and the other is Irish Marguerite, descendant of Irish Alaunt, They are favorites with the children of the neighborhood. BARKS #%om 5 DOGDOM BY R. R. TAYNTON. NCE in a long, long while a dog is born that is a real per- sonality, a dog that achieves | Nation-wide fame, a dog whose * name is synonymous with greatness. Such a one was Blue Dan of Happy Valley, the outstanding English setter which so long headed the Happy Valley Kennels of Dr. E. E. Mitten of Philadelphia. His was a record unequaled by any other English setter of recent or re- mote times. Three years in a row— 1931, 1932 and 1933—he was judged the best English setter at W nster, as well as being named the best American-bred dog at the show in | Westminster in 1931 and 1933. He made a Canadian as well as an Amer- ican championship and probably was named best in show more times than any other dog of his breed. In addition to his bench-show qual- ities, Blue Dan was an accomplished nd tireless hunter, whose style and stanchness are immortalized in the | Grantland Rice Sportlight motlon pic- ture, “Canine Champions.” Blue Dan’s career is of special interest to Washingtonians, for his sire was a locally owned dog, Judge Henry Hunt's Gore's Blue Pal. And the culmination of Dan's ca- reer took place at the 1933 Washing- ton show where he was judged best in the show and then retired from active competition although he was shown for exhibition only by popular request several times after that, His body is being sent to the Pea- body Museum of Yale University for preparation as a permanent exhibit of what the ideal setter should be. Blue Dan is dead but his influence will long be felt in the English setter | breed. INSPIRED by a picture of R. M. | Whitlock and his wire-haired ter- rier recently published in this column, W. J. Moore of the Northumberland Apartments sent in this original poem: With hope and health and money gone, And human friends unkind, What do I find crouched at my t? Jaithful dog of mine, Jee That Though steeped in sin and lost in shame, Through dissipation, crime; What ne'er desserts me in such plight? That faithful dog of mine. With kindly eye and waggin tail, ¢ Bespeaking love sublime, He’s ever at my beck and call, That faithful dog of mine, Though weak and hungry he may be, With vigor on decline, He loves his master just the same, That faithful dog of mine. When angered and the lash is used (Even though it be a crime), He yields without resentment, oh, That faithful dog of mine. Then from this lesson we should learn That loyalty’s divine; So emulate my dumb brute Jriend, That faithful dog of mine. 'AESAR is home again! Or, at least the last time I talked to his owner, Caesar was home again. He may be somewhere else by now. Cae- sar, who is registered as Coulon’s Little Caesar, standing only 33 inches at the shoulder and weighing a mere 183 pounds, is a Great Dane, black as the ace of spades, and with & pen- chant for travel. I” urge and is off to do a little exploring. He may stay away from home only a few hours, he may stay away three weeks, but he always comes back, looking none the worse for his adven- tures. Caesar can take care of him- self. When it rains he scratches at the first door of sufficient beauty to appeal to his artistic nature, and when the door is opened Caesar walks in and makes himself at home on the most luxurious davenport. It would take more strength and courage than most women have to disposses him. When he gets tired on one of these strolls he parks himself by an im- —Star Staff Photo. GONZAGA, DEVITT, HOYA PREPS WIN St. Albans, St. John’s, Lan- don and Bullis Beaten in Full Foot Ball Day. \/ V foot ball teams today had | less than a .500 average to | show for a full day of activity yester- | day, the first afternoon of the season on which every prep eleven in the city | was playing at the same time. While Gonzaga was scoring the only victory of the preps over a local high ITH only three victories in seven games, prep school | posing parked car, and when its|g.poo) Roosevelt, the two other win- | chaufleur appears Caesar shoves him | nino elevens were Devitt and George- aside and gets in first. When he getS | toun prep the latter scoring in the hungry he visits a market and goes | respect and protection accorded other from stall to stall, barking at each! attendant and demanding tribute, | which he invariably gets. | He has a special predilection for | drug stores in hot weather, and has | been found three times asleep on the | tile floor in the artificial breeze of a! big electric fan. NOBODY loves the dog catcher!| What a sad, sad tale that tells.| When he is busy tending to his own business, engaged in ridding the city of strays and unwanted dogs, he is jeered at and mocked. He is the butt | of rude jokes and ruder remarks. He | is made to feel an outcast and a pariah. | And the ignorant, sneering hood-; lums who torment him become public | heroes and get their pictures in the | paper. A dog catcher’s job is a mec- essary one in most urban com- munities. The efficient dog catcher helps to keep down rabies epidemics, helps to | keep down dog fights, helps to keep the city streets clean, saves many un- wanted dogs from years of abuse and suffering and acts as a clearing house in restoring lost dogs to their owners. The dog catcher is a Government employe and should be accorded the public officials. N THE comparatively short time in which Procarmin, Inc.,, has been operating as a cook shop for canine meals it has made astounding prog- ress. A whole new building has been added to the rear of 411 Eleventh street southwest, and the big loaves of dog food are mow cooked by live steam in huge brass-jacketed kettles. All the cooking is now done at night, and the food is delivered fresh daily. This is a local product which has found great favor among dog owners in and near the city. JUNIOR ELEVENS CLASH Fpecial Dispatch to The Star. ALEXANDRIA, Va., October 17.— Willie Hammond’s Pirate Juniors will open their foot ball campaign Sunday, when they meet the newly organized | Fort Belvoir Juniors.! The Belvoir Juniors are coached by Sergt. Waldo and composed of officers’ sons. The Pirates are the junior champions of Alexandria and vicinity. The game will N. T. be played at Bejvoir at 3 o'clock. TARHEELS PACK POUNDS. CHAPEL HILL, N. C. (#).—Foot ball is a weighty subject at North Carolina. Eight members of the squad tip the beam at 200 pounds or better, with Ed Juliber scaling a mere 220. Wolf Busy Man At Waynesburg 'AYNESBURG, Pa. (P —For & busy man, we give you Frank ‘Wolf, Waynesburg College coach. When he’s not foot ball coaching, he can be found directing the basket ball or track teams, acting in his usual capacity as college athletic director or running his first inter-prep game of the year, with | Friends. St. Albans, St. John's, Landon and | Bullis all lost—the first two to a couple | of local public high elevens, Woodrow Wilson and Central, and the latter two to a pair of out-of-town foes; St. Paul's of Baltimore and Massanutten | Military Academy. Playing their first game under Ed Hargaden, Georgetown University's | former athlete, the Georgetown Prep | youngsters pushed over two touch- | downs at Garrett Park to trim Priends, 13-0. Adison Hagan, the whom Hargaden has been touting in | all pre-season drills, accounted for | more than half the ground gained by the winners. It was the second game in which the losers failed to store, having been blanked last week by ‘Woodrow Wilson. Line-up, summaries: Priends. () OO T Georgetown Friends - Touchdowns—Hagan (2). _Substitu- tions: Priends—F. Newmyer for Cliff Wan- nan A Newmyer for Gordon, Georgetown —Graham_for Heimbaugh, McGowan for Graham. W. Hagan for Cullar, Clay for Dogett for 2, Murray. Nurre. Sexton for Coakiey’ for Cummings, for McGo W. Dumas for, Referee—T. Brew. ley. Fleld judge—Mr. Hallet. Devitt, apparently the only “power house” among prep schools, romped through its game with National Train- ing School, as expected, to the tune of 26-0. All of the winner’s scores came in the first half, Coach Jim McNamara allowing his regulars to ease up in the last 20 minutes. A galaxy of former high school stars were in Devitt’s line- up, Lee Fones, last year's all-Virginia back, from George Washington High of Alexandria, scoring two of the touch- downs and providing excellent blocking for another made by Lyman, erstwhile Roosevelt star. Line-up, summarfes: Devitt. Rush [ H HIEPBIRATEY 0—"0 Touchdowns—Fones (2), Cattell, Lyman. Points after touchdowns —Fones’ (place). and_rush. _ Substitutions: Devitt—Clark, Hargaden, Parquar. Heider, Davis. Referee —_Mr, Carlen (G_W.), Umpire—Mr. Unger 4!"1")!&10“). Head linesman—Mr. Meush (Roosevelt). Two long runs cost Landon’s prom- ising gridders their first defeat of the season when they traveled to Balti- more and took & 12-0 licking from St. Paul's. The losers had some con- solation, however, in the fact that they cut last year’s margin of defeat by the same team almost in half, St. Paul’s running up a 25-0 count in 1935. An interception of a pass, fol- lowed by a 70-yard sprint, brought the winner's first score, while a 50- yard return of a punt accounted for the other. St. Paul's., Beck halfback ' fy classes in the department of edu- cation, arranging schedules and trips for the various teams, a:: :l.x: side of college, playing on one of the town's city base ball league clubs, > Roosevelt Discounts Loss, While Wilson Acquires Prestige in Win. ACH hboasting three victories in four games, Central and East- ern foot ball teams today re- viewed their respective triumphs yesterday and confidently await their battle, the second of the interhigh series, next Friday at Cen- tral Stadium. Roosevelt, trounced 14-6 by Gon- zaga, focused its attention on the out- come of the Western-Petersburg High fray today at Petersburg, Va. hoping that the Red Raiders will reveal weak- nesses that may aid the Rough Riders when they clash in the serles inaugural Tuesday at Western Stadium. ‘Woodrow Wilson, which will partici- pate in the scholastic gridiron series next year, made an impressive debut by trimming a somewhat crippled St. Albans outfit, 12-0. Central's pass defense, heretofore ragged, was responsible for three of the Columbia Heights eleven's touch- downs in swamping St. Johns, 34-13. Charley Jones intercepted two alien heaves and raced 25 and 49 yards, re- spectively, to score, while Billy Ve_r- million plucked another Cadet aerial from the sky ngd pranced 70 yards to score. Coach Hardy Pearce, with a 26-0 lead at half-time, rushed in his third stringers, and the Johnnies, aroused by the insult, struck for two touch- downs in the final quarter. The Central regulars finished the game, scoring & touchdown on the final play when Bill Ickes sliced off left tackle and scooted 35 yards to score standing ups,‘ 3] H BDCODVIOCE] TweH0 QX! 20 7 0 0 0 13 =17 ones (7). Wooten. Ickes Points after touchdown i Gn:d.\-! Rebkopf | (pass) worthy, Feuz. lain. Pittleman. John's— O'Meara (Gonzaga) (Catholic (George Washi Siiverstein. Endes. Referee—Hoby Ray ngton). Although the first high school to bow before Gonzaga, Roosevelt never- theless gained a moral victory in the defeat. The Rough Riders, with an over abundance of raw material, have made rapid strides in the past two weeks and may create trouble for their series rivals, although at this stage Roosevelt looms as the outstanding contender for the cellar. Jim Ellis sent Orrel Mitchell's crew into the lead in the first period when he crashed over the goal from the four- yard line and Sonny Hartman in- creased the margin when he sprinted ILY HARPER, the slim Ports- mouth, Va., miss, who has been the uncrowned queen of Middle Atlantic feminine golfers since the day she first pasted a booming tee shot in Richmond back in 1933, may the hand of a vanquished final-round opponent, she probably will pinch her- self to find out if it's true. The young Harper woman, one of the better stylists of the game, con- queror of Maureen Orcutt, Mrs. Betty Meckley and Mrs. E. Boyd Morrow in other days, has played in four Middle Atlantic tournaments. In three of them she has been runner-up and in the fourth she was medalist. Twice she has won the Virginia State crown and yet the one title she wants badly has so far eluded her. So far as Lily's dreams are concerned the Mid- dle Atlantic championship must seem like a bad nightmare. She's gained weight, too. She now weighs 102 pounds, teeside. 'OU'D think that a girl 19 years of age, in fast competitive golf only four years, would still have plenty of keenness left. And yet the Lily Harper who was runner-up for the 1936 championship to Mrs. Morrow at Elkridge yesterday looked and acted like a golfer who didn’t care whether she made a putt or missed it. Her mother bore out this idea. “Lily has been playing a constant round | of tournaments. She is tired of com- | petition, and her game shows it. She has lost her keenness.” Whatever the | cause she would have had to be | right on her stick to have whipped Mrs. Morrow, for the steady Elkridge | woman, a veteran competitor playing over her home course, wound up the match on the sixteenth green, win- ning by 3 and 2, with a brace of pars left for an 80. That sort of scoring isn't often seen in a woman’s cham- pionship final in this sector. Particularly on a layout like ALEXANDRIA SHOW : HAS UNUSUAL DOGS Griffon, Norwegian Elk Hound, Among 383 That Seek Prizes. By a Staff Correspondent of The 3tar LEXANDRIA, October 17.—The A frst annual dog show of the Old Dominion Kennel Club opened here this morning amid a fanfare of barks and howls, Canine aristocracy from California to New with the championship some day. But | when the youngster finally does shake | @ Elkridge, where the greens are tightly trapped. T WAS Mrs. Morrow's third mid- Atlantic championship. Five times she has been in the final and thrice she has won. That's a record that will stand for a while. She won the first two title tourneys played in 1926 and 1927 and has missed playing in only one such affair—the 1934 cham- | pionship at Washington. Mrs. Bishop Hill of Chevy Chase won the second flight easily, beating | Mrs. C. C. Barr, one of Baltimore's | better golfers, by 6 and 5. A REAL championship final round was being staged today at Colum- bia, where Harvey Johnson, the Georgetown student and surprise win- defending his championship against Miller B. Stevinson, six times holder | of the crown. Stevinson won his way | to the final by licking Paul J. Prizzell, 4 and 3, with a one over par round yesterday, while Johnson beat Lou Laudick, 3 and 2. In the second flight | the finalists were Dr. R. B. Holt and Barge L. Hartz, while the third flight | finalists were W. B. Putnam and | Howard G. Nichols. The fourth flight | was between G. H. Mattingly and W. | G. Hoyt, while the fifth-flight finalists were R. J. Lindquist and C. 8. Abell. and Dr. W. D. Goodman met, while the seventh-flight final found H. C. Frick meeting Elmer Flather. It will all wind up with a dinner at | the club house tonight, JOHN BURKE, the Georgetown boy | who holds the Rhode Island State open and amateur championships, put | on one of his most spectacular scoring pieces at Kenwood yesterday, when | he played the last nine in 31 whacks to hammer out a 70, after getting over the first nine in 39. That boy, they tell us, is going to be a rough hombre to lick in the tournaments next year, John W. Martyn, well-known War Department official, is being congra | lated on an ace he made on the eighth | hole at Columbia. \IRS W.S.MASTEN is the woman's i champion of the Washington Golf and Country Club for the sec- ond straight year. She beat Mrs. Richard N. Sutton in the final round to retain the title she won in 1935. | Other results: First flight consolation —Mrs. Charles Molster defeated Mrs. T. W. De Lashmutt, 5 and 4. Second flight—Mrs. Norman Freer defeated Mrs. Byron Price, 3 and 2. Consola- tion—Mrs. William Molster beat Mrs. 0. Thacker by defauit, | Mat Matches By the Associated Press. | BOSTON.—Yvon Robert, 221; Mon- | | ner of the club title last year, was| In the sixth flight Willlam W. Curtiss | TWO DAMS FIGURE IN CLUB'S SCHENE Pond Would Be Created at Sixteenth Green—Pool Drainage Included. BY W. R. McCULLUM. ‘WO dams to be constructed near the sixteenth green and the seventeenth fairway of the Co- lumbia Country Club course will provide the water for irrigating the fairways of the golf course next Summer if the club membership votes favorably on a proposal to provice & fairway watering system %r the | course. The sixteenth green will be sure rounded by water on two sides and the hole will become a true water | hole, under the set-up outlined by the committee in charge of investigat- ing the irrigation system. The entire | scheme will be put to a vote of the | club membership on October 28. It | has already been O. K'd by the Board of Governors and if approved by the membership will make Columbia the second course around Washington with watered fairways. The commite tee report is signed by Daniel C. Wale ser, Greens Committee chairman; Martin R. West, Golf Committes | chairman, and William W. Dean. Use Chevy Chase System. A SYSTEM similar to that in use at Chevy Chase, by which pipe is to be laid down the center of each fairway with sprinkler heads attached | at intervals, is planned at Columbia. | This system generally is regarded as the best for fairway watering, per= mitting an adequate flow of water across the entire width of the faire ways from nozzles located in the center. Annual costs of the Greens Committee will be increased by about $2,500 if an irrigation system is ine | stalled, and the total cost of installa= | tion is figured at $24,000, to be paid ‘ofl by a small assessment levied | against the membership each month for a little more than a year. One of the two dams will be con- | structed, under the plan, across the creek on the seventeenth fairway, to impound the waters of the creek which | crosses the first, fifteenth and sevene | teenth fairways. This dam will supply the maximum daily requirements of the golf courses, for fairway watering purposes, amounting to about 250,000 gallons of water. Will Form Water Hazard. | A NOTHER dam will be constructed ! on the creek adjacent to the six= teenth green, at the headwaters of the other dam, forming a water hazard in front of the sixteenth green and cone | verting the hole into a true water hole. About 90,000 gallons of water are emptied from the swimming pool three times each week. This water also will flow into the dams and be used on the fairways. The committee estimates that the normal stream flow of the creeks 21 yards for a touchdown in the final | York and back again is displayed on | treal, defeated Ko Koverly, 224, Cali- draining the course will be increased quarter. The Rough Riders scored in the last minute of play against the Gonzaga second-stringers when Ray | the long vacant four-story building Piers, Frederick snagged a short heave from Richards and ran 18 yards to tally. Pos. QUIEOPHHOrE T Roosevelt ______ """ 0 0 0 6— 6/ Touchdowns—Eilis. Hartman. Frederick. | Points after touchdown—Penwick iplace kick). Wiles _(rushing). Substitutions: | Roosevelt—Frederick for’ Mammett. Dun- | bar for Beck. Bateman for Green, Webster | for Rich. Brennan for Kolker. Ladbush, Miller for Vasvary. Preund for Bartenstein. | Kollmyer. McDonaid for Moore: | —McGuire ‘for De Filipo. Butler | for yne. Wiles for Ellis. Fennell for Herbeck, Seridan for Windham.' Gardner | for Heiberger. Fiynn for McDonald eree—Bryan Morse (Clarkson). Umpire— W. 8. Shereitz (V. P. 1), Linesman—Jack Gass (Lehigh). Eastern's high-stepping backfleld, held at bay for three quarters by & scrappy Calvert Hall team in Balti- more, unleashed a deadly running and passing attack in the final period to win, 14-0, Al Kidwell and Paul O'Brien, who promise to sparkle in the interhigh series if a green forward wall can manage to shake them loose, scored the touchdowns. 3 alvert Hall. Gottschalk Gautreaux Calvert Hall _ Touchdowns—Kidweil 0 0 0 O'Brien. ‘Woodrow Wilson handed a plucky but outclassed St. Albans team its third loss of the season and at the same time established itself firmly in the local scholastic pigskin picture. Dave Tate climaxed a 42-yard drive in the first quarter when he skirted end for a touchdown. Bill Garland accounted for the final score when he plunged over from the 2- yard line after the scrappy Saints held for three downs. The line- backing prowess of Cary Grayson, jr., held the score down. St Albans. 'er.l:nu; Whtt . Oty 8 =M. Farrell (Holy Cross). tations: St. Paul' z Bullis was another loser to show improvement over a team which had conquered it asyear ago, holding Mas- sanutten Military Academy’s powerful eleven to a 6-0 score, in contrast to the three-touchdown margin of. the Woodstock cadets last year. Out- weighed, the lighter Bullis team yield- ed only in the second quarter, when 8 fleld-long march culminated in Bi- Zarro crossing the goal. Massanutten. Murra Bullis School. Armsteac Honan B O] = ggpa — Bi - o5, irper for To! ;unnm Mont el Tor the elegant gold and purple benching which sprang up mushroom like in at 520 South Washington boulevard, and spilled over into huge tents on the adjoining lot. Three hundred and eighty three m d| dogs of 43 breeds, which ranged in size from the lordly St. Bernard to for honors. The show already has proved itself unique among Southern shows. Its German shepherds, which is the larg- est number of dogs of that breed ever benched at any show south of the Morris and Essex show, which is the largest in this country, and the larg- est outdoor showing in the world. Among the unusual dogs present are the Brussels griffon, Scottish deer- hound and Norwegian elk hound. Most of the popular breeds are be- ing judged after 1 pm.,, and group judging does not begin until 7 p.m. The children’s handling class will be judged by Mrs. C. L. Scaggs of Upper Marlboro, ai 12:30 and that other popular innovation, the obedience test class, will be judged at 6 p.m. by Mrs, Violet Baird of Dover Plains, N. Y, -— EPISCOPAL IS HOST Entertains Pottstown Team—G. ‘W. High Faces Masonic Eleven. Special Dispatch to The Star. ALEXANDRIA, Va. October 17.— Two of the best scholastic foot ball games of the year were to be played here this afternoon, with a pair of Alexandria high school elevens con- fident of emerging victorious against out-of-town opponents, Episcopal is meeting the Hill High eleven of Pottstown, Pa. one of the strongest prep elevens in Pennsyl- vania, while George Washington faces the Masonic Home of Virginia grid- men. GRID “SELLOUT” SEEN Texas Tech Homecoming Game Has Lubbock Aroused. LUBBOCK, Tex. (#).—They're talk- ing “sellout” for the Texas Tech-Cen- tenary game October 24. The home- coming day tilt is expected to pack Tech’s new stadium to its 15,000 ca- pacity, and still not take care of all those who want to get in. Pick Your Sports HAND BALL SQUASH VOLLEY BALL BASKET BALL SWIMMING GYM CLASSES BOXING WRESTLING and Many Others at the “Y" JOIN NOW— Y. M. C. A 18th & G Sts. N.W. NA.. 8250 fornia, two out of three falls. NORTH BERGEN, N. J—Henry 222, Holland, threw Stan | when the fairways are irrigated, as a portion of the water use dwill find its | way back into the two ponds to be cre< Sokolis, 218, Philadelphia, 30:27. ated. This has been the case at Chevy OTTAWA —Dean Detton, 204, Salt| Chase, where the ordinary stream | Lake City, defeated Lou Plummer, | flow was doubled after an irrigation the petite Brussels griffon are vying| | 228, South Bend, Ind, two straight falls. NOW HIS NAME IS KEOWN. NEW YORK (#).—The publicity | bovs at Fordham aren't overlooking largest entry consists of thirty seven |8DY bets to make things easier for| their publicity channels. Their latest release tells you that Center Joe Woj- ciechowicz pronounces his name “Woe-Gee-Hoi-Wits.” BY PAUL J. MILLER, JR. standing European chess mas- ters Norway recently staged B at Oslo an invitation tourna- ment to which came Reuben Fine, | champion of the American Chess Federation in 1935, to win first prize, 613-1;, without the loss of a single match, the draw being with another invited master, Salo Flohr, premier Czechoslovakian star. Fresh from his triumph in Notting- ham, England, where he placed 2 point behind the co-winners, M. Botvinnik and Jose Capablanca, the youthful American carried Uncle Sam's colors to victory, and added to his fast-growing reputation as either first-place star or one of the world’s “in-the-money” master class. Looking back over the records of the great European tournaments of the past five years, it is observed that Fine lost no games in the interna- many other genu 1934 Y2-Ton tires. Dodge Chev. Chev. Chev. Chev. G.M.C. G.M.C. @ S Rear 30 M St. N.E. - 1936 1%-Ton dition. 1934 1%-Ton tires. 1932 1%-Ton first-class 1932 1-Ton paint. OASTING some of the out- | Canopy Top; - system was installed. All the flat land between the sixe teenth tee and the ditch now in front of the green will be covered with wa= | ter when the south dam is built. G | MOUNT RAINIER READY. | Mount Rainier, 135-pound foot ball team, would like to book & game for Sunday with a fast club in its class. | Call Greenwood 1501. | tional masters’ tournaments of Haste | ings, Zandvoort and Nottingham. Although Samuel Reshevsky won the so-called United States chess | championship title early in 1936, the | National Chess Federation of the United States of America, making a | deal with the retiring and beloved | champion, Frank J. Marshall, for all | rights to the crown he had held nobly ;(or a quarter of a century, the boy wonder, Reshevsky, has not ear- marked a place among the three great chess prize takers in the world. Only Fine seems to be in this class. At Oslo, the Norwegian Myhre ob= tained a draw with Flohr also. The | Danish schoolmaster, Pedersen of | Vejen, carried off minor honors. Final summary: Totats L) Players. ne (U 8. A)____ Flohr (Czechoslovakia) Pedersen (Denmark) _ Enevoldsen _(Denm'k) Myhre (Norway)._ Johnsen (Norway) Enutsen (Norway) e rrorsened PRSI Unusual Values Now on Display at Our USED TRUCK PARK All these trucks are in first-class condition and can be inspected with ine truck bargaing Panel; new paint job, good 1933 Y2-Ton Panel; new paint, new tires. Cab and Chossis; excellent con- Cab and Chassis; good paint, n\v Coal Dump Body; mew paint, good tires. 1929 2-Ton Coal Dump Body; new tires and paint; condition. new tires, good MAINTENANCE MEt. 0505 WEEK ONLY