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THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, DECEMBER 21, 1930—PART FIVE. Bowlers Lined Up for Star’s Annual Yuletide Tournament Opening Friday - OPENPLAY FRIDAY AT THE COLISEUM '!Schedule Makers Get Busy This Morning — Krauss Conditions Drives. “ her entry for the third an- nual bowling tournament spon- _sored by The Evening Star, and competition for $500 in cash prizes will get under way next “'Friday at the Coliseum. It is highly problematical, how- “ever, that any one of several -score outstanding bowlers will "“finish at the top of a sizable field. Bowlers with modest aver- ~ ages have triumphed heretofore «in both men's and women's classes. Entries were flowing in at a late hour last night and no attempt was made to check the total, but it appeared “certain that the number would not fall <-ghort of last year's. This has been a :-skimpy bowling season. Arville Ebersole, secretary of the Washington City Duckpin Association <3and chairman of the Tournament Com- mittee, has called a meeting of veteran schedule makers for this morning at 11 o'clock and before the day is done the program for the big pin party will be complete. ‘The schedule will be pub- lished next Wednesday. No notifica tions of bowling times will be given other than through mewspapers. The g-uy schedule will be published in The tar. BY. R. D. THOMAS. VERY bowling star in Wash- ington and vicinity last Will Prepare Drives. ‘The Coliseum will be slicked up for the tournament by Lonnie Krduss, al- though this famous conditioner of mapleways yesterday left the staff of the Coliseum and Recreation, operated i Judge. by Harry I. Carroll, to assume the man- agership of the Mount Pleasant King Pin, or, rather, the Columbia, as the new proprietor, John named it. Harry B. Halley, the “grand old man” of duckpins. will have chargs of the alley end of the tournament, with Ebersole in general charge. It should | be a smoothly conducted affair. CENTRAL FIVE LISTED | BY HYATTSVILLE HIGH ‘Will Be Final Tilt Before Holidays for Suburbanites—League Quints to Play. H HYATTSVILLE, Md., December 20.— | Hyattsville High School's basket ball | team, which so for has won one game and lost one, will end. its pre-holiday | schedule next week with a game against Central High on the Armory floor here Tuesday at 3:30 o'clock. Play of Warren center, and Curley Byrd, jr, gu: veterans, has stiod out for Hyattsville so feor. A game has bcen arranzed between the high school team’and an alumni combination for Jenuary 7 in the | Armory at 8 p.m. Prenchy Cohan is | organizing the graduate team. | Four besket ball games are sched- uled for the Armory. floor Lere next | week. Two exhibition matches will bq played tomorrow and two Prince Georges County League games Monday night. | ‘There will be no more games until next 6unday. In the main attraction tomorrow | Company F, Hyattsville National Guards, | will entertain Anacostia Eagles of | ‘Washington. ‘This will follow a game in which Company P Reserves tees, another District quint, at 2:30 o'clock. Comvany F and Dor-A and Brent- wood Hawks and Hyattsville Southern + Methodists are to meet in the league games Monday night. It had been thought that the Hawks, who won'the league title last season, would not com- pete this campaign, but they decided to do so. Wilson Avenue Baptist Church quint of Colmar Manor is after games with 115-130-pound teams having courts. Aztecs, Shipleys, Fort Myer, Mount | Rainier Junior High School and the Riverdale Boy Scouts are especially challenged. Ed Hudgins is booking at Hyattsville 652, Blick, has | TOSSERS BUSY IN LOOP Five Games Booked This Week for Community Center Quint. Pive games are scheduled this week in the 14-team Community Center Bas- ket Ball League. Nine matches were staged last week when pi ‘The card is lighter th's of Christmas. De Molay will make its debut tomor- row night when it engages Drakes in the Central High gymnasium at 9 o'clock. An hour earlier on the same floor Mount Vernons will meet Tre- monts. Mercurys and Pontiacs will face at Eastern High Tuesday night at 8 o'clock and an hour later on the same floor Eastern Whirlwinds and Monroes will clash. Company E, District National Guard, and Potomac Boat Club are to try con- clusions Saturday night at 9 o'clock at Eastern. A limited schedule also is listed for nexi week, but, starting January 2, there will be at least one league game every week night untfl March 1. WALKER COUNTY CHAMP Defeats Hiser in Pin Battle Metropolitan Area Laurels. ‘Tommy Walker, originator of the plan to check Henry Hser's reign of bowling supremacy in nearby Maryland and Vir- ginia counties, last night defeated Hiser in the final block of the roll-off of the decisive sweepstakes and was crowned metropolitan area county champ. ‘Walker, who gained a 33-pin lead over his rival at Bethesda last week, in- creased it College Park last night by 16 pins. ‘The scores o!’!’:ue final block follow: Walker 97 107 109 135583 130 112 97 110567 QUINTS PLAY AT LAUREL for De Molay of Washington and El-| licott City in Game Today. LAUREL, Md, December 20.—De Molay of Washington and Ellicott City Hoplites will clash in an Intercity Basket Ball League game on the armory court here tomorrow afternoon at 2:30 o'clock. In s preliminary, Laurel National CGuards will entertain Griffith-Con- sumers Co. quint of Washington in an exhibition match expected to provide hard battling. Play will start at 2:30 o'clock. . night had turned in his or| Kline, Michelet Now Grid Rivals ’l‘HB traditional gridiron rivalry between Cornell and Dart- mouth should prove of more than usual interest locally when they meet on the fleld of battle next season, due to the likelihood it will find two Washington lads opposing one another after several years spent as team mates. * "Phil Kline and Bob Michelet were members of the Central High squad in 1927 and the following two years performed valiantly in the backfield and ate end, respectively, for Mercersburg. This Fall, Kline matriculated at Cornell, where he was made captain of the freshman team, while Michelet attained simi- lar honors with the Dartmouth Frosh. They are now spending the holidays together here, chums as ever, but friendship between these potential sophomore stars will cease when the foot ball forces of Ithaca and Hanover clash on a ;’fli]um November afternoon next all, PIN YEAR NOTABLE FOR HIGH SCORING Sam Del Vecchio, Joe Overton, Howard Campbell and Marjorie Smith Figure Prominently. | This has been a red letter year in | bowling from the viewpoint of high |scores. Several records were made which 10 years or so ago were un- | dreamed of. | "For instance, there was the 240- | game rolled by young Sam Del Vecchio. Sam put on his hot hand in an inde- pendent game at the Queen Pin. He tarted with seven consecutive strikes, | this in itself constituting a remarkable | record. To Joe Overton of the Rex team in | the Recreation League fell the distinc- tion of shooting the first league game in the 200 class. On October 2 Over- ton hung up a mark of 203, but it hasn't _been accepted as an official | score because there was no foul line Only recently was achieved the out- standing nine-game score in the his tory of the sport for girls when Mar- jorie Bradt Smith won the Bill Wood Sweepstakes with a count of 1.074, giv- ing her an average of slightly better | LeIE% | It, than 119 Howard Campbell of the Lucky Strike established an all-time record for a full season’s league average when he held a pace of approximately 121, On the strength of this he was placed No. 1 in the Washihgton City Associa- tion's Big_Ten. Campbell captained the King Pin team to a pennant vic- tory in the District League. was given a great fight by the North- east Temple bowlers, led by Max Rosenberg. | Clem Weidman, a King Pinner, had | | an " excellent opportunity to establish | an all-time record for average made on a circuit of drives, but slumped late in the campaign and finished with about 118, Rosenberg, a leading stake shooter almost from the time he learned to bowl, achieved a burning ambition by winning the Howard Campbell Sweep- stakes, the blue ribbon “money” tournament of the year. His pal, Georgie Friend, ran second. The win- ning score was 1,834 for 15 games. In the big intercity match of the year the Grand Palace Valet bowlers of the National Capital League de- feated the Hartford, Conn., all-stars in the five-man and doubles events, but Howard Campbell lost in singles to Jack White. The Evening Star's annual singles tournament, which ushered in the year, was participated in by 1,400 men and women. Tony de Fino scored a sur- prise victory in the men’s division with & five-game score of 632. Bess Ack- | man topped the girls’ field. Both hailed from Petworth. De Fino carried on to | victory in a roll-off with champlons of | H similar tournaments in Baltimore and | Boston. \ Washington bowlers as usual won a | generous slice of the prize money in |the National Duckpin Bow!ing Con- gress championships, which were held at Waterbury, Conn. Lorralne Gulli established an all-time all-events rec- ord for girls with a total of 1,051. It stood as a national nine-game mark until Marforie Smith stepped out in the Bill Wood Sweepstakes. Paul Harrison and Joe Mulroe shot | 780 to win the national doubles title, and the Bethesda team, captained by Henry Hiser, rolled 1,805 to take first place at Waterbury. A rare feat was pulled by Arlie Webb, Post Office southpaw, when he rolled a perfect flat game. It was in an in- dependent match on the Silver Spring alleys. A perfect three-ball score (30) was made by Carl Betts, of the Knights of Columbus League. in winning a tourna- | ment at Convention Hall. The Washington City Duckpin Asso- | ciation tournament winners were: Teams. Class A-—Olive Cafe, 1.796. Class B—Olympians, 1.741. Class C—Northerns, 1,704. Class D—Carry Ice Cream, 1,632 Class E—Stella Maris, 1,561 Doubles. Class A—Wolstenholme tenholme. 755 Class B—Deputy and Pratt, 701. Class C—Day and Wagner, 702, Class D—Dodge and Heine, 631 Class E—Van Horn and Curtin, 693. Singles, A—Billhimer, 385, B—Ballard, 377 C—Fulmer, 367 D—Calaway, 352 E—Hendricks, 345. All-Events. A—Heffelfinger, 1,135. B—Aylor, 1,053. C—Fulmer, 1071, D—Dorton, 977. E—Helne, 965. CENTRAL QUINT VICTOR Class Class Class Class Class Class Class Class Class Class Turke Set Pace as Alexandria High Is Beaten, 32 to 27. ALEXANDRIA, Va. December 20.— With Burke, sharpshooting ferward, finding the cords often, Central High's basket ball team of Washington van- | quished Alexandria High. 32 to 27, in | the armory court | scored 12 points. Central came from behind to win. | An alumni team defeated the Alex- | andria High girls’ undergraduate se: . 17 0 14, In a preliminary. Line-ups: Centra tonight. Burke Alexandria Boran. f.... Luckett. 1.0 Schreier, ‘T Evans. c. R ol 0ommrornoomy anacaacn® ®. Cross. «.. | De_Lisio, Fox, .. Totals. ....13 Alumni (17). ¥, Dreifus, 1. Travers, & oommmmonoi Total Alexandria (14), ts. ¥ g ol sossounud w»l s00s000w %l oscocaua® Totals...... 6 His team | and Wols- Baer Regarded BY EDWARD J. NEIL. Associated Press Sports Writer. EW YORK, December 20.—Max Baer, the curly-headed wolf from the Coast, looked out through one good eye upon the | roxing world today and saw plenty there to widen his normal grin of satls- faction. A youngster just up from the ranks—and a beaten fighter at that— he stood for a day at least with the fistic world at his feet. Metropolitan fight writers to a_man | welcomed him as one of the finest | young heavyweight prospects of a dec- ade, despite the walloping he took in Madison Square Garden last night from the more experienced, better conditioned Ernie Schaaf of Boston. They agreed he was overmatched, perhaps poorly trained, and not quite ready yet to | tackle strong, cagey, plodding warriors of the Schaaf type. But they sang his praises as a puncher, a colorful, courageous young- ster, and a figure to be carefully watched by the topnotchers who will have to ward off the logical contenders of the next year or two. Wants Another Chance. ‘ Baer kept to his quarters today, nurs- left eye as tightly closed as a padlocked speakeasy. bulb where his left eyebrow used to be and the swaggering good looks he brought East from California were more | or less scrambled. He was perfectly | content, however, with the situation in | general. “I'll knock that Schaaf out if I ever get another chance at- him,” he sald. “I had him going last night a couple By East, Despite His Defeat ing split lips, a bruised nose and a| There was a sunset-colored | Likely Heavy of times, but he certainly takes & mean belt well. I couldnt seem to get my second wind after the sixth round. I didn't feel right. The change in climate from the Coast didn't do me any good.’ Promoters in the meantime formed to the right for a chance to send the big San Francisco puncher into action, de- spite his faflure to win his first match in the East. His rollicking style, 200 pounds of loose-limbed, free-punching athlete, have provided them a new gate | attraction, whether he wins or loses. To Remain in East. Baer has decided to stay East for the | holidays, heal his hurts, and tackle the | best man the Garden can find for & 10-round bout in January. Schaaf, the | big blonde addition to the select heavy- | weight circle, probably will appear on the same card along with other young- sters beginning to attract attention. The Garden may name Johnny Risko, the Toly poly Cleveland veteran, as Baer's next | opponent if Johnny's injured hands are in shape by that time. The manner in which Baer and Schaaf, by their clouting tactics, en- thused 'a crowd of 10,000 in the Garden has eliminated for the time being all thought of the disappointing veterans who have been cluttering up the heavy- | weight, picture for several seasons with- | out producing a thrill. Max Schmeling and his arguments | with the New York State Athletic Com- | mission were forgotten and no_one | | seemed to care whether Jack Sharkey | ever got another shot at the heavy-| Seight ehampionship. fight, and the signs are beginning to appear on the walls for the veterans who have forgotten that the faithful must be entertained. | UPSETS AT BASKET BALL | Atonement, Wallace Surprise With Sunday School Loop Wins. Atonement defeated Eldbrooke, 37 to 123, and Wallace Memorial downed Trin- ity, 33 to 25, in upsets last night in ti Sunday School Basket Ball League. Petworth scored over Calvary Method- ists, 37 to 25, in another match. The :;més Awere played at the Central Y. The Line-ups. Atonement (37). Eidbrooke (2 ! -l soasoseil . Dury Tucker, Hun| Washburn, E. Duryee, | Sheele, & Totals " Petworth omwormnl, » 8 Totals ... [Er | caary y Woodward, f. Brady. | Gleason, 1. [ethueuet) %l convacar? Totals .... Trinity Staubly, Totals ... Wallace ;% 1 « « o = ororory woossLny ~Bouomnun’ Hancock, Livermore, [eSew-1 aZnuaa Sargeant, .. ol csoronanl ol al 8 Totals VIRGINIA TOS.SERS AHEAD Totals CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va., December 20.—Virginia’s basket ball team tonight defeated the Staunton All-Stars, 38 to 26, in a pre-season practice game. Young, forward, and Hudson, center, both new men on the Cavalier varsity, | led Virginia in scoring with 8 points each. The Line-up. Virginia (38). Staunton (26) G.F ¥ —onancond) [y corrommoiy Doran, ‘s Stouder, Stephens, Steinber; wl soscssmesy 2luonanonah? Totals Totals ....11 428 BLICK MIDGETS LEAD John Blick Midgets, working on a 23-pin_lead, increased it 50 more last ] NETMEN IN INDOOR TILT Washington Plays Hopkins Today. Dumbarton Bows to Racquet Club. ‘Washington's indoor tennis team will meet Johns Hopkins racketers in a Baltimore Winter Indoor League match | this afternoon at the Fifth Regiment Armory, Baltimore, at 2:30 o'clock. Making up the Washington team will be Dooly Mitchell, Frank Shore, Eddie Yeomans, who is home from the Uni- versity of North Carolina for the holi- days; Clyde Yeomans, Colin Stam and Bill Buchanan. Dumbarton Club netmen of this ¢ity, playing in the Baltimore League for the first time this season, suffered & 6—1 defeat at the hands of the Racquet Club team yesterday. It was a much closer match than the score indicates. Summaries: les—Carter (R.) defeated Rutley. 3—8, Brockman (R defe 0. —32, and Dawson (D) de- “Doubles—Walker €2, 46, 6—1. feated Barber snd Deitz, HARRISON, FISCHER LEAD Roll 681 to Lead Array of Mixed | Doubles Teams. Paul Harrison and Elsie Fischer, the | mixed doubles duo that crashed into | the bowling limelight last year, last night at the Arcadia triumphed over a field of 13 tedms from Baltimore and | Washington. i ‘The Harrison-Fischer duo shot a combined total of ‘681, Paul shooting | 351, his partner, 330. George Isemann and Helen Whitbeck ran second with a neat total of 657, while the Red Morgan-Catherine Quig- ley combine took place money with 629. The scores follow: Paul Harrison. Elsie Fischer George Isemann. Helen Whitbeck.. Reds Morgan. . Caiherine Quigiey. Margaret Miltner M Glndys Lowd. Bill Garirell night in the final block of their match | Bo) with | Arcadia The scores: | JOHN BLICKS. | simmons 2 | Chalfon | Burke | Sister Harriso | | | Woods .. R. Harrisol Ingram Du Glasgow TOMORROW. Convention Hall. Income Tax Unit League—Rec. vs, | c6. A1 vs. Min., T1 vs. CL1, C5 vs. E2, | A3 vs. HO1, T2 va. B, A2 vs. R3, DC vs. SA, Sec.~vs. R2, HO2 vs. D2, El vs. B2, CL2 vs. APC, OG vs. M, R1 vs. C8, Tim. vs. DI. Sanico League—Mercer vs. Gartrell, | Smith vs. Bradford, Roberts vs. Leffler, | Bremerman vs. Mortimer, Diehl vs, King, | Fagan vs. W.llis. | | Lucky Strike. Typothetae League—Big Print Shop vs. Fellowship Forum, Ransdell vs. Ty- | pothetae, On Time All Time vs. Max- | well Jones, National Publishing vs. Geo. A. Simonds, H-K Advertising Service vs, National Engraving Co., National Capi- tal Press vs. American Electrotype, Judd | & Detweiler vs. Craftsmen, Washington | Typographers vs. Central Printing, Po- | tomac Electrotype vs. Gibson, Columbian Printing vs. Chas. H. Potter, Lew | Thayer vs. Standard Engraving. Western Union Men's League—Ac- | counting vs. T. and R., Repeaters vs. | Aytomatic, Equipment vs. Delivery. estern Union Ladies’ League—Golds vs. Greens, Lucky Reds vs. Orchids, Sil- ver Six vs. Orange. | Rendezvous. Fraternity League—Sigma Delta vs | Pt Phi, Chi Sigma vs. Sigma Lambda |Nu, Kappa Phi vs. Sigma Phi, Alpha | Tota Kappa vs. Kappa Sigma. Packard League—Service Sales vs. Used Cars. Accounting Office vs. New | Cars, Quick Service vs. Parts, Body vs. Electric | Terminal Y. M. C. A. | _Terminal League—Station vs. Shops, C. T. Co. vs. King Fish. | Siiver Spring. | North of Washington League—Avig- none Freres vs, American Legion, Com- missioners vs. White Pig, Frank L. Hewitt' vs. John H. De Muth Construc- tion, Manhattan vs. L. E. Breuninger & Sons, Faulconer & Proctor vs. Potter- Nash, Geary-Johnson vs. Kensington. Northeast Temple. . Hebrew Interclub League—Iris Club vs. Jr. Mardeile Club, Rialto Club vs. Mosean Club, Regents Club vys. Club, Vista Club vs. Pals Club, Club vs. Les Amis Club. . - the Hyattsville Midgets at th!i, | the leaders by trimming Parkway PFilling | was high. (& 351-set as Lucky Strike swept a set Catherine Resnolds KIN PINNERS RETAIN NATCAP LEAGUE LEAD Swamp Coliseum Specials, With Frye Hitting High, and Hold Hams at Bay. The Pountain Hams saw their last chance of overhauling Howard Camp- bell's King Pin team before the holidays fade a when the King Pinners crashed a team total of 1,818 in swamp- ing the Coliseum Specials and clung to the National Capital League lead. Bernie Frye, with 396, was the big gun. His set was the best of the week. Fountain Hams, however, kept -pace by trampling over Judd & Detweiler. Lucky Strike bowlers drew up among two games. After dropping the first skirmish to Rinaldi Tallors, King's Palace put over the last two. Capt. Morty King's 349 TEAM STANDING. King Pin Fountain Ham! Parkwa, Lucky Meyer Davis lors. Packwood Prig. 1’ 18 1f Judd & Detw'ler BUTLER, LEAMAN SHINE Get Fat Scores Their Teams Put Over Clean Sweeps. Billle Butler and Margaret Leaman led the fair pinettes of the Ladies’ Dis- trict League to a fitting end to bowling | activities over the Christmas holidays | with some fancy pin sniping. Billie featured the week’s action with from Convention Hail. Margaret Leaman and Irene Scott held the spotlight as Rendezvous won three from Billie Williams' Recreation quintet. Margaret rolled 342, while Miss -Scott shot 335. Elsie Fischer's 323 set the pace for John Blicks in its hectic two-game win over Meyer Davis. Bess Ackman's 334 was best in Boulevard's odd-game win over Bill Woods. Queen Pin won two from King Pin, while the King Pinners came back Ly taking two from Meyer Davis. Team Standing. n Blick Joh Rendezvon - . = BOYS' FIVES TO PLAY. Play in the Boys’ Club Basket Ball League will get under night when Optimist ] meet at 7:30 o'clock and Spengler Post and Blue Streaks at 8:30 on the club court. % : X The stage seems to be set for the S youngsters, gambling kids who like to | EDERLE ON PROGRAM | MARCEY WINS AGAIN AT SHOREHAM POOL‘Hend. Washington Gun Club shoo«l at Benning Traps. Shattering 93 clays out of 99, Julius Channel Conqueror, Other WAater | yarcey, who has been showmng strongly Stars in Exhibitions on | in the Washington Gun Club trapshoots Opening Night. for several months, yesterday led the l: iz field in the annual pre-Christmas tur- key competition at Benning. Marcey Gertrude Ederle, conqueror of the | also gained a leg on the Lane Trophy. English Channel; Stubby Kruger, widely | Results follow: known diver, who specializes in_comiC| Event 1—Marcey, firs efforts; Walter Spence, _breaststroke | Shciton. third. * = rat: crack; Dave Russell, steliar high board |y Bvent Morgan, ‘Williams, diver,'and Herman Ringler, a scholastic | * Event i topnotcher, will participate. n an ex- | Cook. thira i D e hibition at’ the opening of the Venetian | Event 4 -Morgan, first; Strowger, swimming pool at the Shoreham Hotel |~ AWatds on total program—Marcey, Tuesday night, starting at 8 o'clcck. | Wynkoop, second: Wilson, third, While Miss Ederle doubtless will be | ,,Tolal scores were—Marcey, 35, the chief drawing card, Kruger's comic | 3355 ook 32, 24, a3, 1787 diving is expected to add a real kick to | 1685/ Shelton, 23, 24, 21, 17--85; \ the program. Russell will team wlth‘fi 24 0. 17 Kruger in his funny stuff. 26,723, 23, T80, Spence now is at Rutgers. Ringler | comes from the Penn Athletic Club, as | does Russell. | In the Venetian pool something new | 1s brought to Washington, it is believed I is o designed that dining and | Quint in Midget Class Year Enters ancing may be enjoyed near the water. | Saneiion s esn slver the exhibi-| , 130-Pound Ranks. 20:;\!:{’ the District Association of nwi COLLEGE PARK, Md., December 20. TR e g R i % | —Shipley basket ball team, which made CENSUS DEFEATS GRAYS |® fine record in the midget class last | season, will hold forth in the s The strong Census Enumerators won a old forth in the 130 second; second; second; second; first; 24, . 21, 17—88; 83: , Stroweer.” 13, : Wilson, 31, 32, 21, 13 by defeating the United Typewriter Grays at Immaculate Conception Hall, | 30 to 21, | Census. GFPts Grays Macdonald, £.3° 0 10 Shio Nee. 1. $ 018 EN Birthright, & ) 0 Field, &. o0 030 vicinity having gyms. York Hollings- worth is booking at Hyattsville 196. | Members of the Shipley's squad in- clude, in addition to Hollingsworth, who plays a forward, Alvin McChesney and Warren Kidwell, other forwards; Don- ald Hollingsworth, center; Coleman __ __|Headley, center or guard, and Curley .9 321 'Byrd, jr, and Jimmy Rimmer, guards. ts, | 3 8 4 8 0 Totals .. ound group this year, and are after | | their second consecutive game last night | bames with teams ‘of Washingten and i 'D. C. PRO LINKSMEN AT FLORIDA COURSE |Barnett and Diffenbaugh Go to New Club—Beach to Jein Them in Dixie. Bob Barnett and George Diffenbaugh, | together with Barnett's wife and young- | ster, have gone to Miami Beach, Fla., | where Barnett and Diffenbaugh will | preside in the professional’s shop at the | Indian Creek Golf Club until April 1. | Ralph Beach, formerly pro at Burning | Tree, was to join them in the South. The course of the Indian Creek Club will be opened for the first time on January 1. Meanwhile Gene Larkin, Elwood Poore and Bill Hardy will hold down the fort in_the golf shop at Chevy Chase. Members of the Bannockburn Golf Club are to gather tomorrow night at the club house to hear the report of a special committee authorized to com- municate with Arthur McGeorge of Wilmington, owner of the club property, in regard to a proposed loan to re- habilitate the course and carry on the activities of the club. | Members of the club are most opti- mistic concerning the future. The Columbia Country Club has joined the growing list of local golf organizations which have relaxed their customary _restrictions on local golfing guests. The board of governors has authorized a regulation permitting local guests to use the course any week days except Saturdays and holidays until the opening of the regular playing season. It also has designated Wednesday as an additional guest day during the regu- lar season. Heretofore the guest days at Columbia have been Monday and Friday only. e GRID BATTLES CARDED |One at Alexandria and Another at | Arlington on Tap Today. ALEXANDRIA, Va, December 20.— Two foot ball games will be offered the fans of Northern Virginia tomorrow. Pirate A. C. will entertain the Dis- trict Grocery Stores eleven of Washing- ton at 2:30 o'clock tomorrow on Guck- ert’s Field, and Alcova Motor Co. will | play the National Press Club Cardinals |on Arlington Field at the same hour. Frank Summers, athletic director at | Staunton Military Academy, will bring his coaches' quint here next Saturday |night for a game with the Richmond, | Fredericksburg & Potomac Railroad Co. at Armory Hall. Alpha Delta Omega Fraternity basket | ball team will entertain Saks Clothiers | Tuesday at 8:30 o'clock in Armory Hall. Del Ray A. C. five will go to Wash- ington Monday night for a game with the Aces at Central High School. STAGE ANNUAL "STAKES | Hyattsville Bowlers to Battle in Yuletide Tournament. Hyattsville's fourth annual Yuletide sweepstakes for class A, B and boy | bowlers will get under way tomorrow a‘, | the Hyattsville Arcade and run through Saturday. The sweepstakes is open to all sub- urban bowlers. Class A is open to ail crack pinmen, class B to all whose aver- age is not over 105 and the boys' tour- ney to youngsters under 16 years. Duckpinners in the men’s ‘class will roll five games and the boys three games. Jfrom Old Havana Twenty-five, rich brown, luscious Robt. Burns cigars= Perfecto Grandes, Panatelas, or Staples, nestled in their comely holiday package, dramatize the season’s sentiment for the MAN smoker., Here’is_afmodest item in the holiday budget,-butia quality gift amidst any array of presents—a good-cheer cargo of romantic charm from old Havana that can’t go wrong with him. Every puff of each cigar—mild, fra. grant, flavory with clear Havana filler—warms the heart of the smoker »ho enjoys taste without_the_ kick-back of strong tobacco. A firstthought" gift for men- friends—this attractive holiday box of fine cigars. Easy—quick to get at_the corner cigar stand —or nearer, LISTEN IN any Monday night—10 o’clock— WMAL ° 'Eom the Ace Orchestra e of Air—Guy bardo’ yal Canadians on the Robt. Burns Panatela Emm. i [z L .. World’s Lavgest Manu{acturer of Clgara.