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U:S.6.A.IS TIRED OF PICKING FIELD Method Similar to That in Use by Professionals Is Being Contemplated. BY WALTER R. McCALLUM. United States Golf Asso- clation is getting tired of/ taking it on the chin be- cause it has to turn down something like 150 entrants in the nationa! amateur championship each year and is carefully and thoughtfully considering a change in the time-honored system of ac- cepting entrants for the simon- pure title by which those who wish to play in the championship will qualify in sections like the professionals now qualify for the national open championship or the P. G. A. match play tourna- ment. The tip-off from quarters close to the U. 8. G. A. is that next year or the following year may find the parent golf body cast! aside - picking th.:‘mn w;‘: an Nt‘:‘:”m‘n amateur ip and asking all—from the champion down— to qualify in sections before they can . The mu e at A pain in !.h:‘nock. It muut e“e y on-whnwumymln.nt-nmm wanted to come to Merion, and the U. 8. G. A. was swamped with more than 320 entries. Many of them were rejected, for only 168 lol"l:‘l;- faced th:dlumr ‘when the rejected w'o“r'e’ e State chnnpllonl of Ar) and and if you don’t_ think those gents tried to get in, have another guess coming. The Governor of Indiana and a United States Senator wired the U. 8. G. A. asking that the State champion be al- to tion had line somewhere and the Packwood Bowlers Clean Up in League _bowler, games last night to win_the King Friend Billheimer amson Gnrtrell 8. Lawh McDanel P. Lawhor: MeG Hilliard Biviase CENTRAL-WESTERN HEADSCADOL CARD Eastern Figures to Score the annual public high school foot ball cHampionship series. All five teams will have shown their wares in the title set by them with one of the elevens, Business, having twice appeared. day and Business, which last Friday in the series opener, fell easy prey to Tech, defending champion, 0 to 39, will STOTT DUCKPIN WINNER Bweepstakes at King Pin, Stott, National shot three takes at the Pin. ‘The three leaders are members of the ting Co. team. The) SESenZEEE ° FEE a olric Over Business—Gonzaga Plays C. U. Frosh. BY EDWARD A. FULLER, Jr. Y the end of this week con- siderable should be known THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGION, D. C, OCTOB Oapital stzeable | 1, M. indj SEgh Vitale High same Per). ‘138 34; Harvey e ‘et nt. Pis. . " Blect. Nat. Cap. Pri C. E. Potter as to the relative strength |Wash. Typo of the elevens competing in Central and Western will clash Tues- This Central-Western battle may be team rk's. and MERCHANTS' LEAGUE. Southern Dairies nek Electrs High team mi Hjsn teum s (48R individual game— -,}i"" individual set—Vitale (Kapneck), 'Ilndlvldull‘l 'llrllll—'fllllilr (Penn); Vitale (Kapneck), MY TYPOTHETAE LEAGUE. W. L. s . Co.. 11 . 11 . indi vie W, 13 whumaaanee B eSSmmnassunl’ rds. |—rmnrfirg" Y tric N L itale (Kapneck), dust es) { {3 aaeel) (Bacser & usgell (Bar :Prouty (8. D.. No. Stiver (Kapneek), 167 (8 D, kly Reco e (Kapneck). 349: Brue: Sopaitt, . 334, "B5. 85, 197 vieate . Nebel (National Glass), (Penn), ess 10 Sntime - Alltime Typothetae ... ORI [ —— sets—1,631, Georgetown; 1,504, | Navy es—887, St. Marks; 086, dual 8 LADIES' FEDERAL LEAGUE. W. L 3 3 3 3 Com Com. Com: DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE LEAG Bureau of Standards. of Mines IR 2l vl Bu f Li Bureau of Foreign & Coast and Geodetic Surve: Office of the Secretary.. Season Records. team set—Bureau _of Standardy Bureau of Mines, 1,035; Coast an ic_Survey, 1,893. team me—B i i Bureau of Standards, |I‘I"I‘I:Il°“.° l“llla‘ fl..-m eHien Individual sei—Riordan (P i e SR BT da) 360 _each. . Tage—Ahearn (Py lnnl-r?n) i ll‘l.l??. rds), 111-3, BANICO LEAGUE. W, L Strikes, 0. F*Gron, Moo il % Hieh individual set—Enriich, 3, igh team game—Amity N . i eiet FRliagy, Lo o0 verae—P. Eilett, 1165, o rrew o " Ao tion 3. & Tstination 5 FEDERAL LEAGUE. ! -e‘u—i«. Leue: 343, . [TV Aol eamies—196, Maraues: 135, Veter FIGHT WITH RISKD SEEN AS STARTER Figures to Battle Sharkey in December and Then “Get” Schmeling. \ BY SPARROW McGANN. EW YORK, October 18.— Mickey Walker is drawing a bead on the heavyweight target by offering to fight Jack Sharkey during December in order to qualify for a titular % | match with Max Schmeling in May. Mickey’s campaign opens up with a 10-round bout with Johnny Risko at Cleveland on November 7, and if the Betsytown Terror gets by the Cleveland Trial Horse, the fans will have to concede Mickey an even chance to hold his .| own with any heavyweight in the courtry. Juck Kearns has mapped out an in- tensive campaign for his doughty bat- tler and, barring accidents, the should find Walker well on his way to with Schmeling. According to ., is arranged for the championship scrap. It will be held at Soldier Field in Chicago the latter part of May and the hard-headed business man who directed Jack Dempsey into several million dollar battles will guar- antee the warld’s champion $400,000 for his share of the purse. Situation Is Muddled. Kearns' statement is indeed refresh- ing in these days of hemming and hawing on the part of titular candi- dates. At the present time the heavy- , | weight situation is in a muddled condi- tion and unless something is done about it in short order the fans will 19, 1930—PART FIVE. m all about the class and turn attention to the little fellows. Young Stribling’s refusal to accept $50,000 to meet Sharkey in December m&m a chance to challenge the an. Kearns is willing to take even less than that in order to get Sharkey into a ring with Walker. The doctor knows full well he cannot book Walker in this State, owing to Mickey's unwillingness to defend his middleweight title, but that does not prevent Kearns from getting some free wbllc!t{t’n Sharkey's expense. Pa Stribling is coming in for quite a bit of censure for refusing to accept the Sharkey fight. Fifty thousand dol- lars is & Jot of money these days and the chance of reversing the decision that Sharkey has over the Georgia Peach should be sufficient inducement for him to snap up the offer and prove to the world that he is the outstanding challenger for Schmeling’s title. But pa does not care to play second fiddle to Sharkey. He claims his boy is more popular, h{ virtue of his wins over Otto von Porat and Phil Scott, than the garrulous sailor. A Stribling-Sharkey fight would clear up the heavyweight situation con- siderably. The Boston Squire has been taking things rather easy since the dis- mal flop of his proposed fight with Vittorio Campolq, but the Dedl‘fir does not believe in lying around 3 He has started his campaign of over- night jumps and this will keep him in the public eye. Stribling Keeps Busy. ‘There is no doubt that these two fighters stand out from the rest of the crowd and carry the hopes of American fans to return the title to this country. Either one is capable of beating Schmel- ing, yet neither is willing to give the fans the chance to see them in an elimination bout. While it is true that their fight at Miami Beach was a frost, it can safely assumed that a return meeting between them would produce some genuine milling. Inserting Mickey Walker and making the affair a triangular one is not as ridiculous as appears on paper. Walker, | & middleweight, is not too small or over-matched to have a chance with his two big rivals. Mickey crowds more action into a round than the ordinary hea ight does in three. One thing stan out in Mickey’s make-up—he will not go down from a blow below the belt line but will come back fighting, TWINS ON SQUAD. Penn State has twin brothers playing foot ball in Howard J. and Leonard I. Schneyer of Philadelphia. HAT new tenth green at Colum- bia is scheduled to cause a lot of grief to the gents who have been telling the yarn of their second shots with & rolling soif ball. So well banked =3 is the new green and 50 high are the corners facing the line of play that & rolling ball must be ex- tremely accurate to get on the green and even then it may mnot reach the putting surface. The new green is right alongside the old green, and in the view of many members of the club, will make the hole a much harder affair than it has been for many years. In the past almost any kind of shot that had sufficient Jength would be somewhere around the old tenth green, and with the bank at the back of the n to the ball from going over, 'was not overly difficult. pea demands a_pitch ‘make it more intricate the the second But the new shot, which wi for the men who have been rolling ball onto the old green. Golf and deal of considera- e seventeenth hole of the flurry of as it now stands will ent as roofing over of the ditch. E. P. Brooke, a former Middle Atlantic champion and a man who knows his divots, believes that if dif roofed over and in its i |is the man who went to fun | Self{-made music , | Fhythmical order. ‘under present conditions, kicks into the ditch, Wi course these days is in the pink of condition, but that seventeenth hole stands out as the one which causes all sorts of a row. Various suggestions have been made for improving . the hole, but the one made by Brooke appears to be the most feasible. Of course, there is always the possibility of removing the sixteenth ’rcen and placing it in the natural spot for a green where now stands the ap- orchard. But the elub feels trees should net Dick Watson, grount at Chise. has Bubt. hear - the ‘:emh grem & naw groun W used as an alternate green when present green—built last Fall—is W:flly in Edb:m")'#m' mh nate green is about yards right of the regular green. Miller B. Stevinson, former champion, has a knack of turning situations into winning situations himself. What would you think gent who was in two traps at the fifth hole at Columbia and yet 10-foot putt rormz l;l.rdh 4? pushed his drive into the trap at right of the fairway, played from trap into the big bunker which sf across the course and then crashed a high midiron shot which left 10-foot putt for a birdie 4. He g:t it, but he might have made ing in two bunkers. That is hole on which Bob Jones took in the open championship T Y {17 M o .EB HEA § i ‘The final round of the Beaver Dam scheduled for today hitting Volney G. Burnett and Moore, the defending ch-npbnm in the Chevy Chase tournament {hun ago and whistled e a course. He plays of golf, whistle or no whistle. he has a musical ear and m to keep his Sgg Eisded iizga T L ? ———— TURNESA TAKES TITLE Beats Kozak, 2 and 1, in Metro- politan Professional Mateh. WHITE PLAINS, N. Y., October 18 (#)—Joe Turnesa of Elmsford, N. ¥. won the m tan zflm championship ay, Kozak of Douglaston, N. Y. 2 and in the 36-hole final match at the ney Farms Club. ite , but the associal %o draw 8 wiz. There is fiery rivalry between the schools. Last season Central was vlctnmubyvnly.momumy;a’r s - B T = g £l - (3 ! g ] i E;f% SEEE eibt E«E i 5 5gs B -3 8 5 £ E- s I i%%g i: i : 5 L] E» - B2 £ 5 g % i | BEREE = il :§§ L1315 same system would work out in every section of the country, the main being (o?i ts to, demonstrate in the rounds their right to play in the main event. After the qualifying rounds the men who made the grade could all gather 8t the place of the cham) p and tying round and the subsequent match play rounds they have done this year and in years. a perfectly simple plan, and it onus of picking and choosing to qualify, that also is too bad. The have to qualify in other cham- ips before and if they fall again heavens will not open up. It seems to every one who has watched | the championship that this sectional | idea is the right way to, with the increasing list of en- | for the olml‘kur champlonship, TENNIS BANQUET LIST | TO CLOSE TOMORROW Reservations to Be Accepted for Dinner, at Which Rankings Will Be Made Known. Reservations for the fourth annual the Wash| Tenuis before the Blue contrived the prospective en- sectional | Sa PITTSBURGH HOCKEY Chief Referee Smeaton Resigns notice of the transfer of the Pittsburgh | club to Philadelphia and the resigna- is coming to that | gf the National Hockey League here to- de ‘was that he had resigned his post, but Has Won 3 of 3. Central has won two of its Gonszaga will a Sunday game for X" Py history u,)dly ‘when School's eleven. TEAM TRANSFERRED and Is Rumored as Prospective Philadelphia Manager. By the Assoclated Press. ‘TORONTO, October 18.—Official tion of Referee-in-chief Cooper Smea- ton, probably to become manager of the new club, were the principal develop- ments at the meeting of the governors ay. '{'he shift of the Pittsburgh club, re- ported for some time, was made of- ficial. It will play under the name of the “Philadelphia Quakers.” The only efinite fact learned about Smeaton reports from reliable sources had it that he would manage Philadelphia, dupllclnfi Frank Prederickson, former Pittsburg] has two years to run. Smeaton declined to comment when questioned in Montreal, saying, “It is being discussed, but there is nothing definite as yet.” The schedule for the 1930-31 season was adopted and probably will be re- leased next week. The g games Co- opsuiay Wi on November 11 will be Montreal Ma- Americans roons at Ottawa, New York at Boston and Iphis. Only one player London Panthers of the Interna- Leo Queene- , President tions be- High team B ye. 8), 1 lg ndi High indi “Hien o8 . g Marauette Ty Svnder. EAST WASI High indivic h team igh team Hish team b team No. lor 1% W i1 High team Wi American Young Peo) Travelers. Prudential Metropolits manager, whose contract still | 8! New York Rangers at 5y deal was completed, o 1d | B beek, 2 it e T, T *einess :mh‘\. 5. st game—Goodman (Vista), 9. KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS LEAGUE. W. L. W, h indivl Hlen individy High individy h individ Elec. Sto. BL at. Elec. Su Arm. No. m_‘vsaw ames—Brill, 148; Wolsten- indivi Hig! W ime, e fi‘g’mm SaieHaberme o; Lockensey s NORTH OF WASHINGTON LEAGUE. SECTION 2 High team s igh individy jgh individ ndivi 81 set Malicont, 343, (st individual game of wesk—Malicoat, BANKERS' same—Reges_Club, 874 b, 1,831, Tt averses " "Tennebaum Levy (Pals), 160, e eiass. Vista); 988, an (Regents) SEs g? 1 & R0 aeee sl ecavicssald [PUCQRIRE |- [o— dual average—Stephenson, 113-3. fatal et m‘"'\':.."'rf"." pares—] 31. idual ~ strik o set—Douglas No. 3, 1.619. saEzes S gopssE S5ERS SrmErape 5 55 «BEBNEINIZERREESe 3e8zasss a8 & Season Records. same—Creel Brothers. set—Central Armature ‘Works a 138, Gua] sela—Brill, 374; Moyer, 372; 34; Barbai FOPU— | game—Avignone Preres, 635. . 1,803 eres, 1 vonnnaaaanswunl’ 5 13 1 :%El%fi:mm“l Printing ot: ok gl 1545 i sfomes—Kibby, 100; Jol- Higl Al sete—Homer, 303; Miller, vidual ? Moore, 113-9; Priedrichs, 1i3-8. \ ROSSLYN INDEFENDENT LEAGUE. W L w. L oo i -;& 41 verty, 107. P Hign” individusl eames—Haverty, 146; ui’fih ‘indivaiual seta—Spilman, 301; Youns, e’ "eam saimes—Maywood, B85; Divie Bigh'ieam sete—Marwood. 1006; Kirby's Service, 1.871. BUSINES 8], High MEN'S § vusad Savel’ £ Eeat (o -eds %% e ) | T 0"' Diggers. . . . TAKOMA BUSINESS MEN'S LEAGU R R ¢'ngbl'd’s TAKOMA CHURCH LEAGUE. - E | 2 souax: Stifer dacay ¢ Park Pharmacy o—Cleary (West Wash- 1§ Froctor (Peck, Ne. 1), 137 individual i e g High sparesOliver " (Calvars Kinrie A (Peck No. 1), 9. oiftish strikes—colling (Calvary M. E), % innear), 8. ‘Hign srn;"r'n-o—rul No. L 974; Orsce e team set—West Washington Baptist, 1013, Peck No. 1, 1,609 ker (Peck No. 1), ton Baptist), P ricans. »u Standard Oil.... Season Records. LEAGUE. rve Board.. tional Bank . L. & T. Co ibbs & Co. Northesst Savings National Bank o Washington L. Perpetual Building Associstior njon Trust Co.... Pederal-American Nati District Nationsl Bank. American Sec. & Tr. Co. ‘Washin & T. Co. . & Tr. North Capitol Savil INSURANCE LEAGUE. W, Simon. 11 % 10 2 Con! [ ] 1] [ Weekly Records. , I ssme—E. Rice (Acacia al set—Weigle (Young & ~Young & Simon, 561. oung & Simon, 1,586, corunuusassnd conssnnnvanal onls '-'-'-‘-wnumk. 120; Cardin, 119; B2 lmku—o'r;o;v High Fat samen , 16; Mills. 15. same—Youmans, §3. Team Records. oigh team game—National Lithosraphing fllllb-hln set—National Lithographing High individual game—Hel; High individual set—Bell, Hieh average—Louws, 1. Hien G Pouios, 3. DISTRICT GOVERNMENT LEAGUE. L. Bl young features, and years lightly. High team High Leam set—Highwa: High individual game—Bernhardt, '180. sh individusl set—Bernherdt, iS. gh individual average—Bernhardt, 130. COMMERCIAL LEAGUE. L. > TP Cll:l'-h |flllvld|lnl same—Gross (Diamond odllen individual set—Jarman (0. & P. Tl High team game—C. & P. Telophone Co., m-‘}._n team set—C. & P. Telephone Co., MT. RAINIER MEN'S LEAGUE. Section 1. Modern, modish,and manly, the Robt. Burns Panatela puts men in a new and unique position. It gives them a type of smart smoking that is all their own. Long, graceful, unmistakably genteel, it harmonizes with the clear cut faces of men who carry Fellows who have never learned that the cigar is the real tobacco enjoyment get a convincing demonstration of itin the Robt. Burns Panatela. They discover the mildnessof clear Havana Filler —flavor and fragrance without the kick-back of heady tobacco. This is a personal invitation to try the MAN-STYLE cigar. It will put new zest in your smoking, tone down over indulgencein cigarettes and tone up your appearance. LISTEN IN any Monday night—10 o’clock —WMAL—to the Ace Orchestra of the Canadians Air—G1 Lombardo’s Royal on the Robt.'Burns Panatela Program.