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Evening star from Washington, District of Columbia • 50

Publication:
Evening stari
Location:
Washington, District of Columbia
Issue Date:
Page:
50
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

G. U. in Grid Opener Tonight: Three Other D. C. Teams in Big Tests Tomorrow A A ALBRIGHT'S HUSKY Hilltoppers Well Equipped, but Lack Experience of Invading Eleven.

"WHETHER Georgetown's sophA omores can carry the Hoyas up the gridiron ladder this year will be determined tonight. Facing a seasoned team in Albright at Griffith Stadium at 8 o'clock. Jack Hagerty's untried eleven will give the answer as to whether Georgetown will reach the heights or wait another year. Lions, presenting a heavy veteran aggregation of juniors and seniors, will pit their experience and precision against the most promising Hilltop team in years. Fast and aggressive, Georgetown probably will be forced to take to the air.

Heavily outweighed, the Hoyas will depend greatly on the broken field running of Bill Duff, who has been prancing through practice sessions for sizable gains. Bank on Meglen, Ferrara. JOE MEGLEN. one of three veterans in the starting lineup, is expected to supply the power for Georgetown, along with Bob Ferrara. stocky sophomore halfback, who will take over right halfback.

Tommy Keating, former Georgetown prep star, will call signals, with Bii Duff filling the other half. Paul Sheeran will see plenty of action, no doubt, on the receiving end of laterals. Cummings, tackle, will be the only seasoned man in the Hoya line, the remaining six positions being taken over by sophs. ''Turk" Teehan. former Western High School fullback, will start at guard, while Larry Hardy will be at the center post.

Coached by Wayne Munn. former all-American at Minnesota. Albright banks mainly on power plays, in which Dick Riffle, halfback, carries the brunt of the attack. ALABAMA VICTORY SEEN BY M'GUGIN Thinks George Washington Will Suffer as Result of Tie With Howard. BY DAN McGLGIN.

Director of Athletics. Vanderbilt. October step right Into several hard games in this section on the first Saturday in October. Alabama and George Washington should have an interesting game. Inasmuch as Alabama was tied by Howard most people would pick George Washington, always a hard nut to crack, but I believe Alabama has a great team.

While no credit should be taken from Howard, Alabama suffered from Injuries to Quarterback Smith and others, and perhaps she needed just this kind of shock to make her men realize that nothing can be taken for granted in foot ball. Although Tulane lost many veterans she appears to have another great team in the making and should have a little too much for Auburn. I pick Tennessee against North Carolina, partly because Tennessee has been winning from North Carolina quite consistently. However, North Carolina, under Coach Snavely, mads remarkable progress last year. Tennessee gets ofi with the ball as fast as any team in the country and always has some highly perfected special plays which carry touchdown possibilities at any stage of the game.

(Copyright lft35. by The North American Newspaper Alliance. Inc.) Lee-Auker (Continued From First Page.) throws underhand because he hurt his shoulder playing foot ball. Auker, though, had this pitched and won the fourth game of the 1934 world series against the St. Louis Cardinals, and while he also lost the last one, he has that all-important experience.

The Cubs love that home park of theirs, but today the gamblers like the Tigers, and the boys who have to freeze in the press box would like a hot-water bottle, a couple of extra blankets and a set of woolen ear muffs, please. Navin Field Little Antarctica. TT MAY have been colder some of those days when Army and Notre Dame played foot ball in the Yankee Stadium, but for downright nasty, treacherous, piercing freeze the heights and depths of Navin Field won some kind of prize yesterday as the Tigers, smothered 3 to 0, by long Lonnie Wameke in the opening game, finally came into ther own. Under these circumstances, with the pitchers blowing on their fingers between heaves, it was quite remarkable that the 155-pound Bridges, instead of pitching beautiful six-hit ball, blown clear off the premises. Nor wras it strange that Root failed to get a man out before he left in the first inning after Jo Jo White singled.

Cochrane doubled. Charley Gehringer singled and Greenberg, coming out of his long slump, blasted a home run Into the left-field runs and the ball game. Greenberg Misses Afield. 'T'HE Tigers certainly would miss big Hank revived hitting power if his injury proved more serious than is now supposed, but they certainly could get along without his present ideas on fielding. In full accord with the setting Hank played first as though he was using a lacrosse stick.

He made two errors that helped the Cubs to their first run in the fifth, tying a world series record for first-base mistakes in one game. The Cubs scored two in the seventh on a walk. scratch hit, an infield out and Bill Herman's solid single, but that was after Bridges had plenty of runs to work on. Henshaw gave up three to the Tigers with two out in the fourth before he was replaced by Kowalik. who was better, but not good enough.

Pete Fox batted in the last run in the seventh after Kowalik indulged himself In a walk and another nicked batsman. This Grid Picked by Scientific System Representative foot ball games throughout the United States this week end are listed below, with each rating according to the Williamson National Rating System. Where no rating is given the schedule so far is insufficient for calculating a clear rating. Note tht a number of games this week are between teams with ratings very close together. Other games watched, but not listed below.

Some of the teams not rated (due to incomplete returns) may deserve a recofnizable rating. Every college and normal team is invited to send in its record to date to Williamson National Rating System, 608 Common Street, Suite 204, New Orleans, La. Explanation (Figures give rating on teams in their relative class, 100 being perfect): Friday afternoon; Friday night; Saturday night. In column: 1, means win for No. 1 team; 2, means win for No.

2 team; means possible tie game; means reversed prediction against Williamson ratings. No. 1 team plays Prediction Schedule for Week Ending October 5. LOCAL TEAMS. Team No.

1. Team No. 2. Predict. Plaoe.

Score. yOeorgetown Albright Washington Gro. Washington (58.4)— Alabama (H5.4)_- 2 Catholic University Salle (69.4)_2 Washington I Maryland (82.21 Virginia Tech. 139.5)— Balto. 6tadtum-- 14-9 i Washington Ohestertown.

Unsala (27.3) Wilson East Orange. N. U'Tl KnolSL i lUnALt. yXavier (31.2) Va. Wesley Cincinnati o-o Boston University (17.0) Boston Carnegie Tech (65.7)_Notre Dam? (93.3)_2 Pittsburgh 0-13 Centenary (08.01 (57.31 Shreveport--- Columbia M.

I. (47.8)_1 New York -29-6 Cornell West. Reserve (64.0)_IR Ithaca Indiana Centre (47.4) 1 Bloomington zLa State U. (86.5>_Texas (82.2)_IT Baton Ohio State (64.6)_1 Columbus Rice (95.7) Duouesne (56.3) Houston Rutgers (17.6) (3.9) New Brunswick1 Texas A. and M.

(60.8)_Temple i72.Si Dallas 6-40 Army Wm. and Mary (32.6)__ 1 West Navy (86.3)_ Mercer 125.51 VUlanova 171.5) Maryland IT Villanove 0-0 Cberlln Obarltn 6-7 Westchester T. (60.5)_Elon (41.4)_ Westchester West Liberty itfo.fn. Rio Grande 1 Wen Greelv. 8.

(88.8>_Chadron T. Greely SOUTH. Loyola of South (36.0)— Birmingham 8. 2 New Orleans yMiss. State (26.7) I State College Hgttiesburg I (31.2) Morris Harvey (7.0)_1 Huntington 29-0 yNaval App Sch.

(7.9> Campbell 1 Newport News-- ySouthwestern La Southeast. La. (48.6)__ 2T Lafayette 10-0 Appalachian (43.0)_Southern 1 Boone Chattanooga Georgia U. Chattanooga Davis Elkins (17.1) Va. Elkins 7-12 Furman Presbyterian Orecnvillt Georgia Tech.

-1 Atlanta Maryland P. I (39.5) 1 Baltimore-14-9 Mississippi west Mem (47.8). 1 Oxford 19-0 Mississippi Col. College 2 Meridian Carolina U. Carolina S.

2 Columbia 0-6 Tennessee (71.8)-N Carolina U. (73 Knoxville Tulane (85.3) IT New 13-0 Vanderbilt (66.9) -Cumberland Nashville Virginia -2 Charlottesville Wake Forest Clemson -2 Charlotte Wash-Lee (71.0) (75.7) -T Richmond Catawba Newberry 44 5 Salisbury -24-0 Citadel (18.7) Charleston. Cullowhee Lenoir Rhyne (43.0)_7 Cullowhee H-18 Em Henry 3)-King Emory -14-7 Louisville i Transylvania Louisville 0-13 zMurray Teachers i37.ll. Sprmghill -2 Murray. Kv.Roanoke i5h.ll (48.2)_- IT Salem 0-27 Wofford (42 (4.5)_,_1 St John's Md.

(9.2)_Rand-Macon 153.9)_2 Annapolis Langley Field Hamp -Sydney 2 Langley Field-- 0-2 EAST. yBucknell loll O) Urslnus (13.2) Lewnourg Brown Rhode Island Providence -13-0 Wash, and Pittsburgh U. (73.6)_2 Washington. d-26 C. C.

Y. (4d.t)i_ St. New YorkColgate 169.71 Lawrence i63.0l_1 Hamilton -32-0 Dartmouth i75.2> (28.6) 1 Hanover Fordhatr. i70.li'-Boston College (67.01 IT New York 6-0 Holy Cross iT1 (56.2i Worcester Manhattan i64.0) il5.5)_1 Brooklyn N. Y.

U. Bates (31.2) 1 New York Penn Valley 164.01. 1 State College-13-0 Princeton Pennsylvania Princeton Syracuse Clarkson Syracuse -28-0 Yale Hampshire (30.2)-1 New Haven Baltimore Shenandoah (39.Oi_2 Baltimore 6-13 Colbv 2 Waterville 0-7 Dickinson (63.81 1 Carlisle 0-7 Frank Marshall (44.1»_Pa Mil. Col (28 7)--- 1 Lancaster-- Hamilton 8) 1 Clinton 0-0 Harvard Springfield. Mags.

(58.3) 1 Cambridge Haverford i57.6i -2 Haverford- Lafayette Easton 19-0 Lowell Text. (5 4) Inst (37.0). 2 Lowell Mansfield Cortland Tchr. (50.0).. 2 Mansfield 6-18 Mass.

State Bcwdoin Amherst 0-n Middleburv i43.0) Williams (70.3) -2 Middlebury -19-27 Millersville Bloomsberg T. 2 Millersville 0-8 Montclair Wagner 1 Montclair Northed stern io9.8)_Alfred Boston ---13-13 Norwich i28.41 Arnold (1.91_1 Northfield I. Trinity. Conn. 2 Troy 0-27 St.

Anselm (21.2)_ Providence (63.6) Manchester Slipperv Rock (72.0)_ Geneva Slippery Rock-14-14 Union. New York i43.0>— Hobart (35.4) IT Schenectady 6-19 Waynesburg (63.2) Vincent Waynesburg Wesleyan (30.4) Conn. State (50.01-2 Middleton -14-0 MIDDIES WEST AND MISSOURI VALLEY. yAkron Otterbein Akron------ yAshland, Ohio Northern Ashland yAugustana Carthage yBal! State T. 143.9)_Danville Teachers 1 Muncle -20-0 xBethany (27.9)_Sterling_ 1 LindsborgxButler (54 Evansville 1 Cape Gtraudeau 2 Carbondale- 6-14 yDayton Ohio Wesleyan 3)-- 2 Dayton 0-21 yDenison (29.2)_ Muskingum (28.8)_2T Grandvllle yDetroit (56 1 Detroit yDrake Simpson 1 Des Moines- 6-6 i yEmporia Teachers (35.5).

MacPherson Emporiai xGnnnell (34.1)__Washburn (65.2)_2 Grlnnell1 yGus Adolphus Mary's. Mtnn. (36.61 St. Peter- 0-6 yJohn Carroll Bald-Wallace (77.2)_2 Cleveland 7-10 yMankato Teachers 1 O). Bemidji Teachers (30.7) 2 Mankato- 13-0 vNebraska Wesleyan 10.6) Kearney Teachers 2 Lincoln- J4-0 xN.

Dakota State Fargo -12-12 ySt. Louis D. Kirksville Tchers. i57.4i 2 8t. Louis- O-lo ySouthwest Kansas Coll Emporia (31.0)— 1 Winfield 7-0 ySupenor Teachers St Olaf (59.7)_2 Superior xUpper Iowa (25.2)_ Buena Vista (40.8)_2 Fayette 16-7 Chicago (55.R>_ Carroll (37.7)_1 Chicago 19-0 Cincinnati (71.n)_ South Dakota St (88.3) 1 Cincinnati Illinois U.

(4.3.9)_ Wash. St (66 2 Urbana 12-7 Iowa U. South Dakota 11. (43.2). 1 Iowa Cliy-3'-0 Iowa State (49.2(_- Nebraska (78.2)_2 Ames--- fi-7 Kansas (55.8)_ St.

Benedict Lawrence -34-12 Michigan Michigan State 2 Ann Arbor- o-16 Missouri Columbia Northwestern (75.6)_Purdue_2 Evanston Wisconsin- 3-0 Adrian (4.3.4)--Albion 1 11-7 Augustana. S. D. (50.9)_Aberdeen Teachers (7.7) 1 Sioux Palls- 3-30 Beloit Lake Forest (27.9)_2T Beloit 6-15 Green. (56.2) Bowling Green.

Ohio. 13-0 Bradley (26.9)_Elmhurst 1R PeoriaCase (46 1) Miami. Ohio (52 Cleveland Coe Dubuque Cedar De Pauw (2R.4)__ Franklin Green Earlham (41.9)_ Wabash Richmond. Mt. Pleasant (14.2)_2 Big 8-6 Haute Tis.

(12.0) 1 Hiram (27.9)_2 Illinois Lowa Wesleyan (7.5)_Columbia. Iowa (7.2)_T Mt. Kent State (3.1)_2T Knox (29.11_ 2 0-10 Lawrence (55.5) (31.1)_1 0-6 Marquette Teachers (49.0) Oshkosh (33.6)__ 1 Milwaukee Teachers Wheaton (19.9)_1 Missouri (28.8)_2 Rolla 6-20 Illinois De Kalb (53.9)___2 Normak. 0-0 Ripon (63.8)__ Carleton (50.0)_1 Rlpon o-22 St. Cloud Teachers (9.0)_Duluth (29.0)_2 8t.

0-14 St. John. Minn. (54.0)_Hamline (21.5)_1 26-8 Spearfish Teachers (28.0). Minot Teachers (31.0).

Valparaiso Valparaiso o-21 Wayne (31.6)... Ypsilanti Tchers. (37.5) 2T DetroitWooster (71.2)_ Wittenberg (27.7)_1 Wooster Michigan M. A- St. Norbert (31.0)_2 Houghton 0-0 Cedar Falls- Cornell College (61.0) 2 Cedar SOUTHWEST.

yousun t-ouege 6-6 yCameron Abbics Oklahoma 0-7 yDan Baker (35.8)_ John 6-6 yDenton Teachers (32.8i Southwestern. Denton 6-0 yHardin Simmons (28.7)_St. Edwards (28.1)_T 7-0 xMurray yOklahoma City (47.2)_Edmond Teachers (76.2) 2 Oklahoma 0-7 xPanhandle A. A Teachers 7-25 ySam Houston T. (33.3)_Ada Teachers (42.3)_2 Huntsville- 6-6 xSchreiner (35.4)_San Marcos (21.2)_1 ySprlngfield Tchrs.

Tahlequah Tchrs. (27.9) Springfield Mo- 6-33 vS Austin (18.0)_CommerceTchers. (48.6) 2 0-32 xTexas Teachers (60.8)_Wichita 1 Lubbock xTrinity. Tex. (28.1)_Howard Payne (35.9)_2 0-28 Arkansas (73.8)__ T.

C. D. (86.2)_2R Baylor (60.5)_ Texas A A L. (28.2)— 1 WacozCreighton (75 Okla A. ft M.

(68.4)— IT Omaha Texas Mines (15.0)_St. Mary. Tex. (31.9)— 2 El Flagstaff Teachers (54.0). New Mexico St.

(31.8)_1 6-6 Sul Ross Teachers (59.0)_Abilene Christian (22.5) 1 Tulsa (29.9) M. U. (69.1)_2 Tulsa MOUNTAIN TIME AND FAR WE8T. vPuget sound 128.0)_ Albany. Oreg.

(7.2)- yDenver (54.2) Colorado State 8). Der ver 0-3 Loyola. Calif Los Montana (51.5). Berkley (62.2)_St. Mary s.

0-7 Goniaga (24.2)_Idaho (40.8)_ SDokane Oregon Utah Eugene 8-7 Oregon State U. C. L. A. (79.51_ 7-26 San Francisco (68.0)_ Stanford (81.4)_ 8an 0-3 Southern California (70.1).

Pacific Los 6-0 Utah State Washington (74.6) Santa Clara (85.3)_ Seattle Washington State (75.21— Willtnmette 0.9)_ Wyoming 0 8.8).-Colorado Mines (38.4). Laramie Ca Ifornia Tech. (7.2)-R-dlands (78.8)_ 'Pesadena 0-2 Colors-cI College (26.3)... Western Colorado -California 6-1 tt 4-- La Verne- Claremont- 6-0 U. (43.4)_ Portland, Salinas J.

-California Salinas San Diego Teachers-Santa Barbara (29.0). San Teachers-Chico State- San 0-3 San Jose (28.2)-California San Jose 0-0 C. U. vs. La Salle (Saturday, 2 P.M., Brookland.) No.

C. U. Pos. La Salle No. 69 Schmarr L.E.

Comey 2 77 Karpowich L.T. Botto 26 72 Anthon'vage L.G. Bonder 32 58 Yanchulis C. Cappillo 18 67 Lajousky R.G. Loomis 27 76 Clements R.T.

Land 6 50 Mulligan R.E. Kadlubosky 22 52 Dranginis Q.B. Sciaretta 33 62 Adamaitis L.H. Stanziale 20 41 Carroll R.H. Kutzin 29 47 Makofske F.B.

37 Catholic U. Arnold; 82, Brinkman; 57, Brown; 87, Chludenski; 60, Connors; 79, Dunne; 44, Foley; 70, Gemlo; 56, Glodeck; 69, Greco; 74, Katalinas; 65, McGann; 53, Munhall; 80, Orth; 61, Patano; 42, Perron; 88, Rydaewskl; 68, 8eelno; 78, Shaughnessy; 73, Sochon; 68, Stanley; 46, Walker; 48, White. La Brennan; 5, Parris; 7, Etsel; 8, Cook: 9, Oregorski; 10, Newberg; 11, Marshall; 12. Murphy; 13, Allison; 14, Powers; 15, Givins; 17, Phelan; 19, Wartman; 21, White; 23, Clement; 24, Somers; 25, Ritter; 30, Spann; 35, Mlnifri: 36, Manno; 38, Cutcavage; 39, Palmer; 41, Reichard; 42, Donahue. Referee, Dr.

E. J. Cummings (Boston College); umpire, Orrell Mitchell (Loyola); head linesman, Van Surdan (New York ADDS TO SERIES LEAD. OKLAHOMA CITY, October 4 OP). City Indians took a 3-1 lead over the Atlanta Crackers here yesterday in the Dixie base ball championship by winning out in the tenth Inning, 11-10.

BAD TIME FOR D. i G.W. and C.U. Among Those Figured to Lose Grid Games This Week. COLLEGE foot ball teams of the Nation's Capital are in for a rough time this week, if the P.

B. Williamson National Rating System, which picked grid results throughout the country for an average of 90.2 last week, is that nearly right again. Washington teams take part in seven tilts this week. Williamson falls to step out on the limb as to the Georgetown-Albright game here tonight, nor does he mention the Gallaudet-Bridgewater clash at Kendall Oreen tomorrow, due to lack of data, but he picks Capital entries to lose in four out of the other five tilts. He gives Alabama the edge over George Washington and La Salle over Catholic U.

in the big battles here tomorrow, and sees defeat for American U. and Wilson Teachers in their visits to Washington College and Upsala, respectively. Maryland Picked to Win. ARYLAND, meeting Virginia Tech in the Baltimore Stadium tomorrow, is rated well above the Gobblers, much too great in the opinion of the Terp coaches, who see it as an even battle. Alabama's mathematical edge over Goerge Washington is not great enough to dampen the hopes of the supporters, the cold calculations giving the Tide only a 7-point advantage.

No figures are furnished to contrast Catholic U. and La Salle, but the latter definitely is picked. In the outstanding game of the East, Princeton, with no contrasting figures, is named to conquer Penn, and in leading tilts in other sections, Michigan State is chosen to Michigan, North Carolina (73.2) and Tennessee (71.8) are seen as locking. Louisiana State is rated to subdue Texas U. (82.2) but a tie is held probable, while St.

Mary's is favored over California. The table in the accompanying columns covers the foot ball map, with few exceptions, these being where data sufficient to make comparisons was lacking. Sportliglit (Continued From First the route. Later on Charlie Grimm sent in Kowalik. who held the Tigers to a run as the game finished.

8 to 3. But anything that happened after the first Tiger blast was nothing but a wasted gesture. There were the four nms and there was Tommy Bridges and there was the ball game. Weather Complicates Matters. pROM that point on it was largely a matter of how much punishment the 47.000 customers could take.

Cars arrived at the ball park from 50 or 60 miles away covered with snow. The lofty press box at times swayed in the face of the semi-hurricane, laden with ice. On one occasion, Owen, the Tiger third baseman, started chasing a high foul along the left field line and Rogell, the shortstop, finally snagged it within a few steps of second base. It had all the elements of a slice, one of those drives that starts for the left side of the fairway and winds up in the rough on the right side of the course. There were numerous occasions when both infielders and outfielders had to surround a high fly.

as no one could tell where the wind-biown ball might drop. Weather conditions made good bare ball Impossible for any one but a flock of Eskimos, who yet taken up our national game. After his clinching home run. Hank Greenberg made a pair of errors at first, which may leave him another world series record if he blows another chance. But Hank had turned in the main job of the day when he rapped his home run into the left field stands shortly after the ball game opened.

After that blow, nothing much mattered for those who had heavy overcoats and warming furs. The show was over. (Copyright IMS. by the North American Newspaper Alliance. Inc.) I Locomotive BOB MAKOFSKE, C.

V. fullback, one of the hardest hitting backs In District collegiate foot ball, from whom much is expected when the Brooklanders tackle La Salle tomorrow in the Redblrd horseshoe. Makofske led the Capital gridironers In scoring last year and was one of the top touchdown getters in the East. Photo kg Harris-Bwing. Watch Fight Against Albright 11 mmmmmmrn mm i 111 III Fred Tehaan, on the left, guard, who played a lot of foot ball at Western High, figures to do the same for Georgetown tonight in its opener at Griffith Stadium, and the Hoyas are banking on Don Gibeau to catch some passes, even as he snagged the one you see in the picture.

FROM THE PRESS BOX Balance Is Seen Big Asset of Tigers, Again Established Series Favorites. JOHN MBnvM CHICAGO. October 4 with one thing and another, Mr. Gordon Stanley Cochrane is in a reasonably pleasant position as his Tigers move on to Chicago for the third game of the world series. The series is tied, one game to one, and Mr.

Cochrane is satisfied that the issue will be decided in favor of his mob within four days. Here are some of the reasons why Mr. Cochrane feels that way: 1. He has produced two fine pitchers to and the Cub6 have shown only one who is sure of 2. The first four hitters in Mr.

Cochrane's line-up, together with Pete Fox. have demonstrated that they can and will pulverize any sort of right-handed pitching except Warneke's. Fox. as a matter of fact, plays no favorites. He can hit even Warneke.

3. Rowe can work more often than the aforesaid Warneke can. 4. Two of the batsmen who spurred the Cubs on in their pennant-winning and seem to be cooling off in the Autumn wind. 5.

The Tigers have a better balanced ball club. Contends Team Plays as Unit. last contention needs to be A enlarged upon a little, and Mr. Cochrane Is the man to do the enlarging. But Mr.

Cochrane Is busy. After sitting in with two licensed physicians yesterday in a conference on the subject of Hank Greenberg's wrist, he dashed off to Chicago. He had time for only a few words about balance. seen the he said. have a lot of good ball players.

Man for man. I wouldn't rate them much below us. At the end of the National League season the Cubs all worked together and were unbeatable. But they're not a unit like our club. They have to be hot to click.

what will make the difference between winning and losing in this I assume that Mickey considers the Cardinals of 1934 to have been a balanced club, or a unit. They were. He's probably right in feeling that the Cubs are not. The Cubs have a dozen regular players, some young, some old, whom Charlie Grimm succeeded In fusing at the end of the season. But Lindstrom was not a regular all yeaf.

I Neither was Hack and neither was Demaree. For balance, unison and experience as a group, the Cubs do no. compare with the Tigers. Their success, if they score one. will have to be achieved by individual teats.

Cubs Produce Individual Feats. CO FAR there have been individual feats of importance on the part of several Cubs, chiefly Warneke. Hartnett, Hack, Galan. and Kowalik. You know about Hartnett made three hits in two games and has been brilliant defensively, especially when he shut Greenberg ofl from the plate in the second game.

Hack is fielding splendidly at third. Galan Is doing the same in the outfield, and Kowalik pitched extremely well in limiting the Tigers to three hits in four and one-third innings. If Grimm manages to fuse these fellows once more in the next three games in Chicago, he has a chance to win. He can look for another victory from Warneke. But the rest of his pitchers are unknown quantities in series competition, and his hitters are not likely to produce an assault like the one launched on Root by White, Cochrane.

Gehringer. and Greenberg in the first inning of the second game. The betting commissioners, as the classic moves to Chicago, have reestablished Detroit in her position as a 10-7 favorite. And those odds are just about correct. (Copyright, ips.V by the North American Newspaper Alliance.

Inc.) PLAYER WEDS ON BIKE. YAKIMA. October 4 Mounted on a tandem bicycle. Don Rader. 41.

former big league base ball player, widely known In recent years as a developer of base ball talent in Walla Walla, and Miss Gladys Scheffel. 36. of Walla Walla, were married here yesterday. Hunky Shaw, business manager of the Yakima Indians, was best man. G.

U. vs. Albright (Griff Stadium, tonight, 8:15.) Pos. Georgetown. No.

Albright. No. (16) (22) LG--Shuker (16)-C. Knox (38) Hardy (45) Garnet (18) RT. Cummings (11 (15) (47) (23) FB--Meglen (14) Reserves.

O'Brien: 2. Fuardo; 4, Scalzi; 5, Barabas; 8, Herron (cocaptain); 9. Lynch; 10, Gibeau; 11, Petroskey; 12, Cavadine; 14, Frank; 17, Curley; 18, Brown; 21. Noonan; 22, Stadler; 24, Sullivan; Conway; 27, Fleck; 29, Bodine; 31, Nolan: 34, Vaccaro: 35, Dooley; 40, Martin: 41. Urbanski; 43, Shields; 46, Dealy; 45.

Leslie; 48, W. Hardy. Jowitt; 4. Zuke; 5. Zelonls: 6.

McClintock; 7, Endes; 8 Scholl: 11, Troisi; 12, Alexinok; 17, W. Riffle; 19. Bodnarik; 21. Fittipaldi; 24, L. Knox; 25, Muller; 26.

Buechle: 32. Reed: 35. Slingerland: 40, Oslislo; 46. Brandenburg; 48, Cammaroto: 49, McCormack; Barnard. Compton, Plotta, Patee, Carpousis, Treida, Moore.

Officials. o. Dayhoff. Paul Menton. Head M.

Guyon. Field G. Crowley, I WINNER OVER TIDE; A. P. Expert Also Selects Penn Edge on Princeton.

BT HERBERT W. BARKER, Associated Press Sports Writer. NEW YORK, October 4 few foot ball shots in the dark 1 (or at least In a deep twilight) George out on the well-known limb, Tufty Leemans and George Washington looms 1 as the best game of the day. An extremely uncertain ballot for Penn. Maryland-Virginia might as i well play blind man's buff as pick this one.

The Wildcats seem to rate an edge. Tennessee-North ob- I server has a hunch the Tarheels will get revenge for last defeat. Washington and ballot goes to Duke. Califomia-St. for the bomb-proof shelters, California.

Texas A. and a iong trip for Pop Wamer's Owls, but the Easterners look like winners just the same. get oeyona Rice on this one. Columbia-Virginia mose Lou Little of Columbia should have need for a handkerchief. Fordham-Boston this is one of the East's closest games.

It probably will be again, but Fordham gets the nod. Army-William and Vir1 ginians had no luck with the Navy last week, and tangling with the Army immediately afterward comes under the general heading of a big mistake. Carnegie Tech-Notre narrow squeak with Case last week indicates they're in for a trouncing. Tars look much too good. Villanova-Western Maryland One vote for Villanova.

Washington and Jefferson-Pittsburgh Pitt's poor showing against Waynesburg the Panthers should win handily. Michigan-Michigan dope i points to Michigan State. Ohio this corner it seems Ohio can win this one by sheer force of numbers, if by no other method. stab in the dark, Wisconsin. Iowa will be a terrible shock If Lloyd Cardwell and the other Cornhuskers lose this one.

Louisiana extremely timid ballot for Texas. Illinots-Washington Despite beating by Ohio University here's a vote of confidence in the Illini. Arkansas-Texas nod in direction. South Carolina North Carolina looks like a good year for State. Georgia Engineers of Tech.

Oregon State-U. C. L. C. L.

but the Bruins probably will be hard pressed. San Prancisco-Stanford Stanford will have to fight for this one. G. W. COCKY OVER ALABAMABATTLE C.

U. and Maryland in Just as Tough Games With La Salle, V. P. I. THREE of Washington's in collegiate foot ball will have their mettle tested tomorrow in games that should give a true line on what may be expected for the rest of the campaign.

George Washington, in meeting the Alabama Rose Bowl champions at Griffith Stadium, heads the list of the trio of attractive battles, but the Catholic Salle clash at Brookland and the Maryland-Virginia Tech struggle in the Baltimore Stadium doubtless will be just as hard fought. Ail of the game start and the followers of each team, plus oodles of just plain fans, will be on hand with a "critical Colonials Are Confident. QEORGE WASHINGTON is optimistic over its outlook in the Alabama battle. The Colonials, from Jim Pixlee down to the East Indian water boy, Kadiak Sampath, have confidence of the sort that implies a team is keyed to its greatest fighting pitch, carry the fight to them all the way if said Pixlee. Yes, Alabama is plenty big, fast and strong, but not so much that they can't be he said following a glimpse of the Red Elephants who arrived this morning.

Alabama, impressive and eager, too. was given a rousing welcome at noon shortly after arrival at Union Station. The District Commissioners presented the Tidesmen a key to the city in a public ceremony on the street steps of the District Building. The invaders appeared in excellent physical condition with the lone exception of big Riley Smith. 195pound quarterback and blocking star, who limped somewhat as a result of a knee injury sustained three weeks ago.

Alter establishing headquarters at the Willard, the visitors hopped out to the stadium for a limbering-up sion before the Colonials took the field. Tonight they will attend Loews Fox Theater, along with the Colonials, as guests of the management. G. W. Eleven Heavier.

Tidesmen tomorrow will average about 191 pounds as a team. 198 in the line and 178 in the backfield. George Washington, though, will hold a slight weight advantage, as the Colonials average 193 pounds as a team, 198 on the line and 184 in the backfleld. G. prospects were brightened the announcement that Frank Kavalier, regular 1934 fullback, is fit for action.

He injured his shoulder early in September and rejoined the squad only a week ago. He will not start. The fullback hole will be filled either by Herb Reeves, 188-pound junior, or Lou Carroll, 170-pound sophomore. Fears for Tuffy Leemans. G.

all-around star and the most colorful figure on either team, are groundless, it seems, for Trainer Roland Logan pronounced the quarterbacks arm sufficiently healed to permit his mg. Appearing for the first time this season in the line-up, Sid Kolker and Hollis Harrison, veteran guards. Will add strength to George defense, which has undergone some changes since the Emory and Henry victory. Both Kolker and Harrison are rugged defensive performers Andy Horne and Ted Cottingham, a pair of sophs who held the jobs last week, will be held in reserve. La Salle Has Many Stars.

A team, undefeated since 1933, arrived in town this afternoon and went to a hotel to rest until the tilt. piayers.including Fritz Brennan, the injured' captain of the team, made the journey from Philadelphia in charge of Coach M-rty Brill and Athletic Director Jim Henry. Aside from the highly publicized La Salle freshman duo. George Reichard and Joe Cutcavage. who punched over touchdowns to rout Davis-Elkins last Saturday, the C.

U. team is faced with the problem of holding in check. Quarterback Joe Seiaretta. According to Fod Cotton who scouted La Salle, the Explorer quarterback is one of the best signal callers he has seen in years. Besides barking the plays, Seiaretta also handles the booting and the passing.

It was his heave to Kadlubosky that tied the score against C. U. last season. A large delegation of La Salle fans is expected to descend upen the city tomorrow morning. A telegram re(See G.

W. COCKY, Page Albright Recalls 1916 Roul bvG.U. ITEM from Albright, which Georgetown meets in foot ball here tonight, cites the fact that the Hoyas played the Pennsylvanians back in 1916 and handed them an 80-to-0 pasting. Albright evidently will be spurred by the memory of that debacle in an effort to revenge. That year Georgetown compiled 412 points to be the second high scoring team of the country.

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