Evening Star Newspaper, October 30, 1931, Page 52

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) o B 4 SPORTS. THE EVENING STAR D. C.. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1931 SPORTS. No Class to Dreadnaught Boxing Class as Proposed by Muldoon of Commission HS"G SKH.I_ RARE High Cost of Golf Seen Due Fistic Battles | |New Golf Course for Women , ! and ALEXANDRIA FIREMEN, . wa DEL DAY IN GRID TILT By the Associated Press. NEWARK, N. J—Tony Canszoneri, world lightweight champion. outpointed (10); Harry | To Club Parties and Dances, Promises to Be Big Success ! IN GIANTS OF RING! Excelled by Much Lighter,' s, e asociated press . HICAGO, October 30 — The Shorter Heavies, Would “high cost of golf” is not really Not Mean Much. due to golf itself, but to the addition of social affairs, in | which only & small percentage of mem- AT A SR bers participate. These few play and BY WILBUR WOOD. | dance in elaborate club houses while EW YORK, October 30 — |the golfers pay the fiddler. Boxing Commissioner Wil- _ A% Jeast that is the situation as liam Muldoon's idea of a painted by John W. Fulton, broker of new dreadnaught division, vey for the purpose of determining g0lf memberships, after a national sur- | With Golfer Paying Fiddler |open all Winter, This showed that there were 65 days In a year when the average business man could piay through the regular season. A few played all Winter week ends, but the average rounds were under 100 & year Price Runs Up. For this dues, interest on cost of membership and other club expenses | run around $300 s year, or an average of $3 or more a round, besides trans- portation, * caddies, refreshments and equipment. Fulton contends that this cost could be cut in hail if social mem- bers paid for all except upkeep of the courses and s reasonable portion of | Phillie Grifin, Newark | Blitman, Philadeiphia, and Bud Man- | ), Bound Brook, N. J, drew (10) | Rattner, Newark, outpointed Steve Smith, Bridgeport, Conn. (10) PHILADELPHIA — Leonard Dixon Leiperville, Pa., outpointed Pat Hay- wood, Kansas City (8). | MUNCIE, Ind—Billy Brent, Pitts- Tmrlh..;bnd Hi lish, Toledo, drew | (10); " John Conley, Toledo, outpointed Johnny Griffiths, Pittsburgh (10). VINCENNES, Ind.—Frank Hollings- worth, Vincennes, knocked out Chick Branch, Indianapolis (2). TERRE HAUTE, Ind.—Joe Cooper, | Terre Haute, outpointed Donald Fagg. | Clinton (10); Jackie Purvis, Kokomo, |Ind, outpointed Frankie Stevens, | Boston (). | Congressional Country Club, has re- ‘The first green—295 yards from the | given » piece of ground suitable for | golt course construction, can bulld an | are well balanced, of good length and He did so, and what a job he did. The course is a natural. in every sense of the word, a fine plece of work over very fine' golf country, with some of the finest holes we have seen on any golf course about the Capital, and not a weak hole anywhere on the layout. for the fair sex now have something T, be sure, male golfers of the first of which they can be justly proud. The | class would make par look silly on formal opening of the new golf course |Such par 4 holes as the first, second of the National Women's Country Club | 1d ainth. but on the whole the course on the Bradley Boulevard, out near the | the onslaughts of the best male players. OMEN golfers of the Capital) who are dissatisfied with the length of the golf courses bullt for men and who hold that a woman's course should be built | tee—can be driven, and I have a hunch | that the second green might be driven | by a long hitter. But the other holes vealed that & good course architect, amazingly fine golf course of just the | are framed in those Tolling contours distance suited for women's play md; that moid the rolls of the greens info the landscape in such a Way as to f i with 45—8—37. the the medal play tourney, Meckley and Mrs. M. L. Bell, forme: dle Atlantic champion, defeated Mrs. J. - | Elevens Coached by Former Ce Teammates Are Scheduled to Clash Sunday. exhibition match which fol- | ALEXANDRIA, Va., October 30.—N: Mrs. T Mid- | 5 Engine Company and Del Ray A. C. | will struggle at Baggett's Park Sunday w. |in an intracity battle that will havc in | 80 important bearing upon the 150 {pound champlonship of Alexandria | Play will start at 3 o'clock. 1| . Two former teammates are coachins | the rival clubs. Dick Allen, forme St. Mary’s Celtics quarterback, is tu toring the Del Ray eleven, while Mik« Goldman. who played guard for thc Celts, is handling the Pirefighters. Alpha Delta Omega Fraternity team can put into that golf course enough | fine shots and good golf to make it an interesting proposition for the finest of male players. ‘The opening day of the club, for which practically every woman player of the Capital turned out to the num- ber of nearly 120, not only broke all records for the number of entries in & women's tournt about the Capital but also sh the male golfers of the city that a feminine counterpart of the Burning Tree Club is getting along and going somewhere fast. For the sponsors of the National Women's Country Club, with covert smiles, point to the fact that mere man is just an will go to Richmond Sunday to clas) :.‘lth Arrow A. C. in the Municipal Sta. um. Plans are under way to organize boys' bowling team to- represent Ajex andria in the State championships. Virginia Midgets want a game fo: Te|?}!‘|:no Manager Pull Alexan 901-W between 9 and 9:30 p.m, Episcopal High will entertain the grid warriors of Gilman Country School, Baltimore, in & trio of battles on Hox- ton Field tomorrow. Junior and junior varsity elevens of the schools will elash in the morning, followed by the varsity Birate A, 0, wil agains rate A. C. stack it Robinson A. C. of wnhlr“w’fi here Sundl( t 2 o'clock on Hunton Meld. “Bubbles” Yarter, Alexandria High back, who is ineligible to play the re- mainder of the season with the institu- :En.. eleven, will appear in the Pirate e up. Hammond has booked for No- vemberuwnhl.yonmnm-‘t.d.on Ballston Fleld, November 15 with Vir- ginia Juniors for 135-; d Alexandria _:!glc‘h and November 20 with Takoma jers. limited to boxers weighing more than 220 pounds and standing six-feet-three or higher, sounds good enough on paper. In theory it is all right, but in practice it threatens to be all wrong. whether the situation could be solved by the addition of affiliated social mem- bers. The canvass followed the evolution of golf from the original, simple golf club, | where a professional alone looked after | [ Foom in & modest club nouse. Inio. the | | room - it clul ouse, e Just look what the first result of this | 90 1n & modest club house, tnto the Bew edict is likely to be. Jimmy John- | The primitive club cost & member from | stan, probably with the laudable inten- | §20 o 50 & year for golf, while the Hion 'of killing off practically the entire | pretentious affair today costs him from adnaught division in one show, has |§150 to $500, owing to elaborate club Broked the following matches tenta- | houses, large dining halls, dance pa- tively for the November 13 program in |vilions, uniformed flunkeys, French Madison Square Garden: Primo Car- |chefs, greens keepers, caddy masters hera vs. Jose Santa, Charlle Reizlaff vs. |and other supernumeraries. Giacomo Bergomas, Walter Cobb vs. Still Could Be Reasonable. any other dreadnaught available. John- | .m’; also hopes to have a match be- | While the cost of golfing parapher- tween Mateo Osa and Steve Hamas on | nalia had gone up from 100 to 300 per that card, though they are not dread- | Cent since the game had taken hold on naughts. | Americans four decades ago, and the | raing with Leon | cast of keeping up the better courses has | se:m;a:nm-l::r of "‘é.,"“"l’,’: foremost | doubled, Ze survey showed that golf | fixed charges. The canvass showed that large clubs which have adopted social memberships, such as Merion Cricket Club, Philadel- phia; Chevy Chase, Washington; East | Lake, Atlanta; Olympic Golf and Coun- 2, o S By i G New York, timore ub, had an average of 1,350 social members | NEWARK, N. J, October 30.—Tony and 400 golf members, with an average | Canzoneri’s title ‘“defense” against e e U7 Igfmlvlf expenses 10 | Phillie Griffin of Newark proved just a ‘“;o':";;.:?m The evolution of petmi- A e D e Ry T S tive golf clubs to dual organizations had < . Peen”was shown by the. fact that the Mo B R B survey uncovered only a dozen of such | GEPPIRARER TISTEL ThC ), ESE O simple organizations, aside from the fee % et - n 1 45 paid for as it is |1ast Dight, but had no trouble ai ali apea e T o s o s | : o cision by a wide margin after 10 | en's Country Club is & women's organ-| No. 5, 465 yards, 5: No. 8, bl u‘; ‘mere golf. Wwhen Griffin appeared disturbed by the | lowed there as a guest of his fair| 400 yards, par 4; No. 9, 210 yards, par A sample was Bob O Link Club, Chi- | POHEEE 0% Beng o, The Swene Sng WL | Sriends and on that Basls alone. 4. Total yardage, 3015 yards, Par 36, cago. It found that the club was spend- | y01¢ o¢ all, ‘Then when the Newark boy O years ago Fred Finlay, a Scots- e ing more than $100,000 » year, only & began to fight, Canzoneri fought back, man who learned course architec- | features of the opening day were aspirant for ht honors, Santa | cGuld be had for about & third of the (third of which was for golf, while the |y,q Phillie up against the ropes &) ture among the rugged hills of his| X a medal-play handicap event, which was the only opponent available who annual dues and_incidentals, |Tést went for partles, Autumn festivals: | couple of times and put on one flurry | native Caledonia, was commissioned to| _ Was hortened from 18 to 9 holes was acceptable both to See and to the elaborate club facilities are | MUsic an cing, T ers thok | in Which it sppeared he might knock | construct over the country which sur-| because of the size of the entry, and a Johnston. |small percentage of the members out his rival before he eased up again | rounds the old Montgomery Country | nine-hole exhibition match. Mrs. Betty i part. for the finish. Club a golf course fitted for women.' P. Meckley, the District woman's golf Doesn't Deserve Ranking. tion by taking in social members who | That match, if made, may turn out |played golf, if at all, only on days o be & satisfactory fight. Yet Santa | when golfing members were not at the certainly does not deserve ranking |club. The dues and golf fees of such among the first 20 boxers in the heavy- | non-voting members paid for all the weight class. About the only qualifl- | expenses added to the old-fashioned cation the Portuguese has is size. He |golf club by socialization is as big as Carnera, Yet his size did | The evolution of the expensive organi- not enable him to escape knockouts at |zation from the simple golf club was the hands of Max Baer and Salvatore |largely due to an attempt by persons Ruggirello. If it were not that his bulk | in rate circumstances to ape the makes him an eligible opponent for |exclusive clubs of wealthy persons, al- Camera the only way Jose could get |though even that class was shown to into a Garden main event would be by |have gone back in many instances, as the liberal use of dynamite. at Old Elm in_ Chicago, to golf only while holding their social activities to other clubs. As to the “high cost of socalized golr,” Fulton kept & tabulation on play at a large Chicago club with four 18-hole courses, one of which is kept break the ragged contours some of our course architects affect. The eighth hole is & gem. Here Finlay has utilized the natural curve 'CANZONERI'S CROWN DEFENSE A WORKOUT | By the Associated Press. . P Mrs. Henry F. Dimock, vice president; Mrs. Hugh D. Auchincloss, vice presi- dent; Mrs. Edward T. Stotesbury, vice president; Mrs. Virginia White Speel, vice president; Mrs. E. L. Townsend, secretary; Miss F. E. Ward, treasurer; Mrs. J. E. Hughes, executive secretary. The Board of Governors is composed |of many women prominent in Wash- |ington social circles. ‘Three contestants have reached ths The Blanatos Toophy at the Ghers Shass ese a vy Chase Club, while in the lower bracket the first-round match between E. O. Wag- enhorst and H. P. Wright still is to be played. Results in the second roun are: W. J. Waller defeated L. B. Platt, 1 up; R. P. Whiteley defeated C. G. Treat, 3 and 2; P. P. Blackburn de- feated H. L. Merring, 1 w ‘The win- ner of the Wagenhorst-' tht match will ;nlet John Britton in the second round. itting man it is a par 4, a drive and spade shot. For the best of the women it will take two wooden-club shots to get home. ‘The short holes, three in number, are finished off with fine golf taste. Not an easy one on the course, and all are | well trapped. Here is the card of the course: | No. 1, 205 yards, par 4; No. 2, 390 yards, par 4: No. 4, 160 yards, par 3; average | eyen it retained. Many clubs had overcome this situa- |BLUES HOPE TO END SCORELESS STREAK Gallaudet has yet to score a point | this season, but hopes to ring up & few when it meets Penn Military at Chester, | Pa,, “tomorrow. The Blues held the | Cadets to a scoreless tie lest year, but ‘There are not more than half a this time would do well to prevent a big dozen of the so-called dreadnaughts who have any standing in the Carnera, Dekuh, as, Cobb, Rets- Jaff—that just about comprises membership in this new division. Ray Impeliteri -;m Justin s}l‘rutu .:;: twg beginners who possess the wel an( height to qualify, but who have had |8 boxing lesson by Joe Sekyra. And almost no experience. ;hm sre uml!tkemgéhm‘e.l?nw" S:m Overlordship Empty Honor. s s : Paulino, Walker Griffiths and the rest ‘The overlordship of this gang would be indeed an empty honor. Carnera must have protection! ‘There is another bad feature to the has been beaten very badly by Sharkey, an in-and-outer amcng the ittle"” idea of limiting the dreadnaughts to matches among themselves. What heavyweights. Campolo has been | about youngsters like Impeliteri and knocked out by Schaaf. Dekuh has been belted around so often that space irutis?” Where are they going to ire experience? The only possi- is lacking to tell the sad story. - | bility would seem to be to hook up the mas was fortunate to get a draw few dreadnaughts into sort of troupe old Tom Heeney. Cobb was stopped |and let them traverse the country . by Stanley Poreda. Retgzlaff was given | together. o score. The Kendall Greeners have lost three games, but improved with each. By way of expressing something or other, some of the team’s members are letting .their whiskers grow. In a recent scrimmage that was little short ¢f an actual contest, udet emerged about even with American University. 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