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S THOMSON HOPEFUL FOR CLEAN SLATE Declsive Victory Over Army Craved—Depression Off for Penn Relays. BY H. C. BYRD, OME of the greatest successes it has ever achieved is what Earl Thomson, Navy track coach, predicts for the Navy track team this Spring. To say that his team will go through un- defeated is most unusual for a| coach of any sport, yet that is| Thomson's opinion of his squad now in training for the openlngl meet April 15 with North Carolina. | “We have several good men this| year, and I feel we should go through the season undefeated. To say the least, I have hopes that we shall do that. We have been in training prac- | tcally all Winter on the board track and Monday we get outdoors for our first workouts on the cinders. | | [ “Especially am I looking forward t0 rangement and Georgetown are in- | the meet with Army at West Point.| cluded on the 22-game schedule of the | The first year I came to Navy, West Point gave us & good trimming. We! have whipped the. Army since that time, | but nothing we have done is quite 30| ern Conference rivals. Only nine of the | satisfactory as to be able to go up to| the Point this year and bring back the | bacon by a comfortable margin. We may not do that, but, anyway, I am Bynn Hearne again will coach the | looking forward to it. ’ 'AVY opens its schedule April 15 with North Carolina. The Tar- heels have been strong in track the last several years, but hardly are going to be good enough this Spring to take Navy into camp. Following the North Carolina meet comes the one | PORTS 20 YEARS AGO IN THE STAR. ENT appears to be the most likely recruit pitcher with the Wash- ington ball squad now training at Charlottesville. Packey McFarland received $7,000 and Britton about $5,000 as the re- sult of their recent prize fight. Gross receipts wereflln.m. Billy Evans, American League um- pire, is described as & perfectly built man. Ed O'Neill of the American A. C. of this c“fl won a 5-mile road race held by the Morningside A. C. in New York. Gunboat Smith, slugging Califor- nia heavyweight boxer, has been matched to meet Bombardier Wells. Hans Kolehmainen, Finnish Olym- pic champion runner, who is in this country, has fallen victim to what is known as “shin splints,” and is ex- pected to be out of competition sev- eral months. TARHEEL NiN§ LISTS MARYLAND'AND G. U. Will Play Home-and-Home Series With Terrapins—Twenty-two Contests Scheduled. HAPEL HILL, N, C, March 10— University of Maryland for two games in a home-and-home ar- University of North Carolina base ball team just announced. Fifteen of the games are with South- contests will be played at home, al- though six of the others are w..h nearby teams within the State. ttam and he appears to have ample talent for a successful season. ‘The schedule. March 28, Washington and Lee. April 1, Elon at Elon; 7, V. P. L at Blacksburg; 8, V. M. I. at Lexington; 10, Washington and Lee at Lexington; 11, Virginia at Charlottesville; 14, V.| P I; 15, Davidson at Winston Salem; with Maryland, and most of the interest| 13 “Maryiand: 21, V. M. L; 25, David- in that will attach to the meetings of | son " 28" Wake Forest at Wake Forest. Waybright, Navy's star sprinter, with|yy 2 °N, C. State; 5, Virginia; 6, Vir- ‘Widmyer, Marylander, who generally i3| ginja "at Greensboro; 9, Wake Forest; credited with being among the first siX | 13" Duke at Durham; 15, Georgetown sprinters in the country. On the last Friday and Saturday in April Navy plans to send a sizable squad to the Penn relays. Not only will it have at least two relay teams in competition, but it also will send up several men to take part in the events for individuals. Willlam and Mary is to be met May 6, but on May 13 the squad makes a trip to Charlottesville. Navy was in a dual meet with Virginia at Charlottesville back in 1928 and lost by a small margin. It believes it should reverse that this year. Virginia has not won from Navy since the 1928 vic- | tory. No meet is scheduled May 20, as | that is deliberately listed as an open | date before the meet with Army | May 27. MISTAKE was made in this column yesterday in stating that the Georgetown - Carnegie Tech basket ball game was scheduled for ‘The game 1is to be played to- morrow night at 8:30 in the Tech High gymnasium. The Blue and Gray winds up its season with this contest, and despite a defeat earlier this year at the hands of the Plaid, believes it has a chance to win. In fact, | at’ Washington; 16, Maryland at Col- lege Park; 17, Navy at Annapolis; 20, | N. C. state at Raleigh; 23, Duke, CENTRAL RECEIVES " CAGE TITLE TROPHY | Principal Smith Formally Accepts Award Won in Evening Star Tournament. trophy won by the Central High School basket ball team in the recent tourney for the Metropoli- tan district public high school cham- plonship, conducted by -The Evening Star, formally was awarded the school at an assembly this morning. It was accepted by Dr. Harvey A. Smith, princi- pal, the presentation being made by Bill Burke, crack Torward, on behalf of the team, who in turn received it from Coach Bert Coggins. The trophy was permanently won by Central. Five players and Manager William Gorewitz were awarded letters, Coach Coggins making the presentation. The | players receiving the “C’s” were Capt. foot ball next week. The squad K Buddy Nau, Jack Moulton, Carroll will under the direction of Len|Shore, Bili Burke and Ollie Tipton. Walsh, general essistant to Head Coach | Moulton has graduated and Burke and Pixlee. It is the Intention to put the | Tipton are slated to get their diplomas squad through about five weeks of as | in June. rough practice as it usually gets in| Central is scheduled to end its sea- the mry Fall. Some 40-odd men are |son tomorrow night at 7:15 o'cloek, | expected to report. | engaging the Georgetown freshmen in g | a preliminary to the G. U. Varsity-| Tn list of schools that have sent in | Carnegie Tech game in the Tech High preliminary entries to the Univer- | gymnasium. lay games sity of Pennsylvania relay gal Members of. the Bethesda-Chevy does not indicate there is much in the | way of depression as far as track ath- Chase High basket ball team. runner- Jetics is concerned. So far, 231 colleges | Up to Central in the Metropolitan dis- and schools have signified their inten- | trict tourney, have been presented sil- tion to take part in the annual meet, | ver medals by The Star. which ranks among the greatest of its e kind in the world. Of course, it is prob- | bl that the majoriy of these are trom | LEWIS WILL TAKE REST within a reasonable distance of Phila- | —— delphia, and it is true also that most of | Cancels Several Mat Bouts Because the enirles were sent in before the 4 present banking situation developed. | of Training Injury. ARYLAND'S prospects for a boxing| BOSTON, ~March 10 (®.—Ed team next year are about the best | (Strangler) Lewis, former champlon, it hes ever had. Of the eight booked to wrestle Gus Sonnenberg in men who fought regularly in the va- | Havana Saturday night. has canceled rious classes, only one is to graduate, | that match and several others to return while two or three of the best are only | to_Los Angeles. sophomores. The Old Liners probably | He notified Promoter Paul Bowser he will list & number of more difficult had suffered a severe training injury meets next year than they have had so |and would remain on the West Coast far. Also they may run through a |until he had recovered. o dentaly land depart | ncidentally, Marylan may lepart | Shadows of the Past BY I. C. BRENNER. it feels it will take the measure of the of which both are members. George Washington plans to start somewhat from fts custom of the last | few years in scheduling virtually none | other than Southern universities. It is | understcod that a strong sentiment ex- ‘ ists among the Old Liners to create alliances with two or three good North- | ern and one or two Middle Western schools, but, of course, not to break down in the least the fine relationships | they now enjoy with other Southern | institutions. LOWER FEES URGED FOR OUTDOORS MEN Eight States Already Have Special | Licenses to Attract Rod and Gun Folk. | | | | | | | | OLDING out hunting and fishing as a lure to tourists and visitors, State governments, sportsmen and Chambers of Commerce are making efforts to put non-resident hunting and fishing licenses upon a reasonable basis. according to a bulletin of the Ameri- can Game Association. Non-resident hunting license fees now run all the way from $10 to $50 in some | States. The trend is to reduce the amount for such sporting licenses, and also to issue a short-term license that will accommodate the tourist, fixing the fee at a fraction of the cost of the full season non-resident license, so as to attract more visitors. In order to encourage the tourist| and visitor to come to their States, at| least eight States already have adopted | special short-term or “tourists’ " licenses for fishermen, and one State has pro- | vided a short-term license for hunters. | Maryland now has a bill before its| legislative body to create a non-resi-| dent hunting license good for five days for $5.50, one-third of the regular all- season hunting license. States would collect more money and avoid many violations if their non-resi- dent license fees were kept within rea- son, say approximately $10 for small-| game hunting and $3 for the average fishing; a short-term license good for| about five days should not cost more than half the full season fee, officials of the association point out. | JIMMY O’CONNELL. ERE is one of the human trage- dies of base ball. He devel- oped at San Francisco, and in San Prancisco you will find him, as a longshoreman. 2 ‘This is the Jimmy O'Connell for whom the New York Giants paid $75.000 to the San Prancisco Scals. This is thé O'Connell who was boosted as one of the coming phe- nomena of the game. But now O’Connell is barred from base ball. At the close of the 1924 season Heinie Sand of the Phillies said that O’Connell of the Giants had approached him with an offer to throw a game at the Polo Grounds. Those who knew O'Con- nell thought the idea fantastic. But Judge Landis held a hearing and threw Jimmy out. —_—————— | "He tried playing outlaw ball in MILLER WHIPS FILIPINO. | New Mexico. He was a drayman. SACRAMENTO, Calif, March 10— | He ¥orked o8 & arbet e o E =2 = , N. Mex. He loves base , Freddie Miller of Cincinnati outpointed L i bpasy of the PRilipyinee i | e L 0 R et I =round bout here last night, . (Copyrizht. 1933.) ING STAR, WASHINGTO By the Associated Press. ANSAS UITY, March 10.—The Wichita Henrys, superb collec- tion of basket ball stprs of long tournament experience, will strive to pass the semi-final hurdle in their bid for a fourth consecutive na- tional title against a team which has twice defeated them this season. ‘Tulsa’s Diamond Ollers are opponents of the Kansans tonight as the National A. A. U. tournament draws near an end with three of the four seeded teams still in the running. - Leading the Tulsans is Charles (Chuck) Hyatt, one of the best forwards in the East while with Pittsburgh Uni- versity, and, in the opinion of veteran tournament observers, more dazzling | and proficient this year than ever be- | fore. No less vital to the Oklahomans' success is the play of Carl Larson, elon- gated center, formerly with Bethany College. ERRY DUNHAM, Henrys’ guard and veteran of basket ball tournament play since his first high school days, captains the defending champions, who Have announced plans for a Ha- walian tour after the tournament, | whether they win another title or not. | The champions’ line-up also includes Tom Pickell, formerly of the University of Arkansas, a center. | In winning all its 19 games this Win- ter, 12 of them for the Missouri Valley A. A. U. championship, Tulsa defeated the national champions by 12 points on their home court and by one point at Wichita. ‘This feature game overshadows the | other semi-final contests. The South- ern Kansas Stage Lines team, repre- senting Kansas City, meets Rosenberg- Arvey of Chicagd, a team featuring the former Northwestern star, Joe Reiff. OSENBERG-ARVEY is the only unseeded team among the four survivors. Last night it ousted the last California entrant—Pasadena | Majors—34-28. The Stage Liners, who won fourth place last season when registered from Wichita, had a battle to take their quarter-final game from Hutchinson, Kans,, Renos, 23 to 18. West Texas’ Tall Teachers were no match for the Henry’'s in the quarter fnals, the champions 37-17. Tulsa eased into the next to last round with a 30-17 victory over Phil- lips University. i 'THREE Y TEAMS MIX WITH MARYLANDERS Hand Ball, Wrestling Squads Meet Baltimoreans—Fencers to Face Towson Lot. ENTRAL Y. M. C. A. hand ball, wrestling and fencing teams will engage Maryland opponents here | tonight and tomorrow. Tomorrow the Baltimore Y. M. H. A. hand ball outfit will appear at 3 o'clock and the Balti- more Y. M. C. A. grapplers at 8 pm. ‘Tonight the “Y” fencers will cross | blades with the team of Maryland State Normal School of Towson at 8 o'clock. Maj. Edward L. Dyer, Y. M. C. A. fencing instructor, has been putting his pupils through a stiff course of training in preparation for the clash, when ven- geance will be sought for a defeat of the local team by the Marylanders two weeks ago. It is understood the Normal School fencers will include & feminine expert with the folle, who will pit her skill against the best of the local men. The public is invited. The Y. M. H. A. hand ball team is strong. George Nelson, former A. A. U. national singles champion, captains the combination. Mak| up the Washington team will be Perrie McLean, eaptain; Channing ‘Walker, D. C. A. A. U. singles titlist; | John Payne, Paul Peariman, Joe Cowley, George Newman, Bill Neville, CHff Woodward, Ray Nash, Shorty Vineberg, Tom Charshee and Jack Calhoun. The Baltimore “Y” wrestling team also is formidable, one member being a Natlonal A. A. U. champion and four others South Atlantic title holders, The team is undefeated this season. Washington’s line-up will be as fol- lows: 118 pounds, Dell Shocklfy; 135, Pat Olmsted; 135. Murel McGrath; 145, Sollle Wisooker; 155, Harry Goldman; 165, Evy Leonard; 175, D. Armstrong, and heavyweight, John Ballard, captain, Both the hand ball and wrestling programs will be open to the public. | There will be no admission charge to | the former attraction, but 25 cents will be charged for the wrestling show, which will take place the small gymnssium, s BREAKS SPEED RECORDS. GARDONE, Riviera, Ttaly, March 10 | ().—Count Theo Rossi has sel what was claimed to be a new world record | for three-litre speedboats over a 24- mile course, covering the distance in 34 minutes 20 3-5 seconds. Count Rossi also broke his own record for the mile, averaging 105.918 kilometers an hour. Varied Sports BASKET BALL. American University, 36; Alumni, 21, Georgetown Prep, 30; St. John's, 12. Bethesda-Chevy Chase High, 47; Frederick High, 14. (Maryland cham- plonship tourney game). Valparaiso, 49; American College of | Physical Education, 23. PROFESSIONAL HOCKEY. National League. Boston Bruins, 4; New York Ameri- cans, 2. Montreal Canadians, 3; Montreal Maroons, 1. New York Rangers, 3; Detroit, 2. Ottawa, 3; Chicago, 3. (Overtime tie). TAXI Drivexs ATTENTION Our new cabs are in demand! BLUE LIGHT CAB “The Cab the Public Demands” 2047 L Street N.W. “Washington’s Smartest i-iub" b} BASKET CHAMPIONS FACE STIFF HURDLE Henrys Meet Tulsa Oilers, Twice Their Masters, in Tourney Semi-Finals. BRIDGE. CH 10, 1933. BY FRANK HESS-NUTS defeated Agriculture in the five-man team tourna- ment, sponsored by the District : Chess League, and continues in undisputed possession of first place. The individual scores: Fodtvor Geological Survey found it practically impossible to get out a team and for- feited the remaimder of its matches, which will bs acored against it as fol- lows: Ownz each to Chess-nuts, Kings and &ueens, Agriculture and two to | Model Basin. The standing of the teams to date: Chess-ni Model Basin. . 2 Geological Burvey. | TOURNAMENT for the junior Dis- the games being played at the | Capital City Chess Club. There are six entries, viz, A. Seidenberg and Paulson from Central, Ervin and Mannion from Technical, Magnuson and another play- er from Western. The competition is confined to the high schools. Seiden- | berg has won two games, from Mannion and Ervin. | _Kashdan's new magazine, the Chess | Review, is authority for the statement | that a tournament is proposed to select the team to represent the United States in the competition for the Hamilton- Russell Cup in England this Summer. The idea is for the eight or ten eligibles to compete, the winners to share a fund to be raised for traveling expenses. Marshall and Kashdan will not have to qualify, and the three leaders in the tournament will take the remaining es. ‘This tournament will probably held in late April. Among the con- testants will probably be Dake and Horowitz, who played on the winning United States team two years ago; Reu- man and possibly Herman Steiner and Sam Reshevsky. Harold M. Phillips, who played on the United States team at Hamburg in 1930, has subscribed $200 toward the expenses. The Metropolitan Chess League of New York is having a close contest. After five rounds the Manhattan, Marshall and Empire City Chess Clubs are tied for first place with five vic- torles each, and City College has lost one match. Manhattan, 35; Marshall, 3: City, 30%. In the line-up for Manhat- tan are Denker, Kupchik, Dake and Horowitz, and for Marshall are United States Champion Marshall, Howard, Fine, Reinfeld and Simonson. North City Chess Club won the championship of the Philadelphia Chess e by the score of 37% to 16%.. North City was a newcomer and lost one match, to the Mercantile Library team, out of 10 played. Other CHANGE OF TIMES | SHOWN IN CHILDREN | Again Asking for Penny Instesd | ‘ of Nichel Years ago, & penny was wealth to |a child. Then times changed. Pur- | ehasing-power . Kids began asking for nickels. But there's & | pwing back. Money is picking up! One Indication of the revived Today, st & nickel, Girard gives all you ever got for a dime— that “never is America’s from three countries are teamed-up in the blend. Nome but hree can give’the flavor and jdness that Girard has. Ii's a blend, Men. Worth more » nickel, any day. The best value in any case. Try Girard. | trict championship is under way, | ben Fine, Fred Reinfeld, Robert Will-| IN CHESS CIRCLES B. WALKE] scores were: Mercantile Library, 35 34 to 19, and West Phila- Hermann Mattison of Riga, first Olympic champion, is dead-at the age of 38. In the Olympic team matches at Prague in 1931, he defeated Alekhine. He competed in the Carlsbad tourna- ment in 1929. The standing of the leading in the Boston Metropolitan Chess League is as follows: Cosmopolitan, :Vg-;'z: Harvard, 7-3; Boston City, | 612-1%. M Botwinnik, 25 years old, is cham- pion of Russia. He finished in first place with a score of 10-1 in a tourna- ment held recently at Leningrad. There is no direct contact between Russian and other European players, and com- parisons cannot be made. John F. Barry of Boston, who played Showalter a match for the champion- ship of the United States, and vho played in the cable tches, United States vs. Great Britain, about the close last week for the inauguration. . ND game problem No. 72, from an actual game between Rubinstein and Grunfeld, the Polish and Ger+ man masters: White—K on KR3, Rs on K2 and QR2, B on QKt and Ps on KR4, KKt3, KB2, QKt4, QR3; nine pleces. | Black—K on KR3, Rs on K3 and Q5, | B on KKt2, Ps on KR2, K5, QKt4, QR3 | aight pieces. ,White to play and wh Solution to end game problem No. 71, Yates vs. Rubinstein: 1 B—Kt4, B»‘ "6 R—K4. RxR; 7 PxR, KxP; 8 P—K5, and wins; a very instructive ending. The newspapers the last week con- tained the account of the death by suicide of J. E. During the ‘Wilson for the Interior Department. sAmember of thevold Wi Club and later of the Capital ity Chess Club, and was an excellent player. ship tournament at The Hague in 1928 between L. Steiner of Hungary Strange as this may ing. We had cases teams | of the last century, was in the city MID-ATLANTIC GOLF PARLEY TOMORROW F. A. Peppler Down for Presidency. ! District Association Will Meet on Monday. | first of two major golf meetings | of the ye: which will find the | golfing tournament schedule all | mapped out for 1933 by Monday night, | will be held tomorrow night at the | new Willard Hotel when a group of delegates from member clubs of the | Middle Atlantc Golf Association gather to set tournament dates and discuss the coming season. Edgar A. Peppler | |of the Rolling Road Club of Baltimore | 1s slated to become president of the as- sociation, succeeding Donald Woodward | of Columbia. The men’s tourney of the mid-Atlantic body will go to Rolling | Road, while the women's event will :;’ bably go to the Country Club of Vir- Bids for both events have been put in by the Princess Anne Country Club, which has twice held the men'’s tourney. ‘The District Golf Association annual meeting is to be held Monday night at the Racquet Club, at which time a complete set-up of the 1933 tourna- ments will be announced. 1 and M. Rosselll of Italy. Steiner was not enough on the defensive; he lost time with his bishops. Rosselli’s moves were timely, effective. Opening—Coro-Kann. . LSteiner. M. . White. Rossell1. Black. B—K:i I o 36 Q_Q8ch K—R? 37 Restane: 8 & € | ranging | vey Mills, Stanley Hunt, Charlie Doffle- | Rice, Izra Dickens, John Wilson and TENfY SPORT Gets 1,000 Points For College Five teams, and he never fafled to win a place on an all-star aggre- @ation. FIREMEN, ROCKVILLE HEAD BASKET CARD| Three Other Games Scheduled in District A. A. U—Title Tourney Tonight. 1, never played with any but cham- plon N unlimited class game between the District Firemen and the Rockville A. A. will headline tonight’s pro- gram in the annual District A. A. U. gh?:] ball tournament at Tech High Three other games will serve as pre- liminaries to the feature, which will | get under way at 9 o'clock. An hour earlier St. Martin’s will play Simpson’s Pharmacy in a 145-pound encounter. Two tilts are slated for 7 o'clock. Northeast Boys' Club will meet the Savoy tossers in the 100-pound class on the north court, and Mercury and Crescents, 130-pound rivals, will tangle on the south floor. No games are scheduled for tomorrow. | — | ‘Wilson Flashes and Company L, 12th | Infantry, 145-pound contenders, stole | the show last night in the tourney, the | former quint winning, 42 to 40. The | teams were tied, 18-all, at half. | In other games Fort Washington un- | limiteds defeated Mercurys, 37 to 26; | J. C. C, 130-pounders swamped Dum- bartons, 37 to 7, and Clark Griffiths | whipped Puddin Dawsons, 23 to 10, in the 100-pound class. Crop Production Loan Office and Dis- trict Firemen will oppose tonight in a second-half Government League game | at 8 o'clock on the Bolling Field floor. Other scores yesterday: Delaware & Hudson, 49; Crop Pro- duction, 25. Post Exchange, 41; 1. C. C., 34. Patent Office, ‘Weather Bureau, 19. | Naval Reserves, 43; Boys' Club, 35. | United Typewriters, 32; Rhode Island | Avenue, 29. D. C. Firemen, 31; G. P. O, 14. Miller Purniture, 40; Buckey A. DAIRY NINE IS AMBITIOUS | Fairfax Farms Team All Set for| Industrial League. With roster including several well | known sandlot and semi-pro players | and a franchise in the Industrial| League, the newly formed Fairfax Farms Dairy base ball nine expects to | cut quite a figure on the diamond this season. Through Manager A. E. Dellastatious the Fairfax tossers already are ar- their schedule. They are anxious to schedule games for the lat- ter part of this month and the month of April. The phone numbers are North 3114-J and Potomac 5630. Among those players signed are J. E. Dougherty, Raymond Arenson. Har- meyer, J. W. Murphy, Carlton Rains, Herbert Baldioni. Melvin Milstead, G. W. Mouland, William Taylor, George Jerome Crowder. Coaching the team are L. A. Black and Bailey Everett. Takoma-Silver Spring High basket- ers will close their season tonight in Waynesboro, Pa., engaging the high school team of thdt place. The Taksils have won 14 games and lost as many this season. The contest will mark the final ap- pearance of the entire Takoma first | team. Mpygatt and Leizear, forwards; Clark, center, and Shorb and Pritchard, guards, are all slated to graduate FENCING CLUB PLANNED. A meeting to organize a fencing club will be held Sunday at 2 o'clock at the Jewish Community Center. The fllblic is invited to attend, membership ing open to both men and women. TWIN WATER POLO TILTS. A water polo double-header is sched- uled tonight 1n the Shoreham pool, with the Shoreham team engaging & team from Alexandria at 8 o'clock and the| ‘Washington Canoe Club outfit facing | the Colonials in the nightcap. There will be no admissicn charge. i DO YOU EVER seem, it's the dull razor blade that nicks your face. No one should endure the discomfort or unsightly mars caused by razor cuts and scrapes. Why pay this penalty for cleanliness! Take the route to comfort blazed by thousands and thousands of other men who wanted better, easier shaves. Let the double-edge Probak blade free you from the drudgery of unpleasant shav- like yours in mind when we . S. EARLY VISITT0 PRO PAYS BIG DIVIDENDS Al Treder Warns Against Try- Ing for Distance Too Soon. Other Tips. S nary golfing duffer is more than apt to wander out on the fairways of early Spring lack- ing entirely in remembrance of past failures, and more than likely will fall back into the old ineffec- tual groove unless he undertakes the new golf season with a well- thought-out schedule of self-dis- cipline. Al Treder, the popular pro at the Manor Club, has given a good deal of thought to the problems of these duf- fers, and has outlined a fairly compre- hensive scheme for getting them off on the right foot at a time when not only their golfing aspirations but their swing also, are away up in the air. Treder, the developer of such fine-playing youngsters as Maurice Nee, District junior champion, and Billy Dettweiler, one of the best of the youthful crop of club swingers around Washington, says our middle-aged golfer should put imself through a definite Spring schedule if he is to get the jump on his playmates by swinging into stride ear- lier than they do. Here are a few of the Treder tenets for getting into good golf form as early as possible. BY W. R. McCALLUM TANDING on the threshold of a new golf season, your ordi- IRST, put your golf kit in the hands of your club pro. Ask hinr to see that all club heads and grips are tight; that the windings are not frayed and broken, and that your clubs are in as good condition as they would be if you were entering an important tour- nament. This done, go out and play a few | rounds of golf, interspersed with a few | practice sessions. These rounds and | practice sessions will uncover your most glaring faults, most of which will be holdovers from last Fall. Then you can go to your club pro with some idea of these faults and place yourself in his hands with some idea of what should be done to eradi- cate them. Let him outline for you a course of lessons, Treder says, which may be anywhere from. one lesson to a dozen or more. And abide carefully by what he says. He is a student of the game and of the golf swing and | knows what he is talking about. LWAYS remember, Treder points out, that early Spring golf is played over courses which usually are sof$ end soggy from Winter snows and rains. You will find that your tee shots do not go to the same length of last Fall, and that your iron shots will not have the same sting. Now comes what, in the Treder creed, is the most important part of getting under way properly in the Spring. Above all, the Manor men- tor points out, do not try to regain what you consider your normal ¢ tance by slugging the ball. Attem to gain distance by pressing will more to throw your swing out of ge and ruin your game and your enjoyme« of it than any other e points out. factor, Tr Be satisfled with normal distance the fairway. Swing smoothly a slowly and let the distance take car@ of itself. Ycur distance will increass as the fairways dry out and as your swing becomes smoother and bettey grooved. ONCENTRATE on all shots, bus partcularly on the shorter shots as you appreach the hole. The tes shet is highly important, Treder says, but most people forget that a 2-foot | putt counts just as much on_the score card as a 200-yard drive. Therefore, concentrate on accuracy around the cup Save strokes around the putting green where you have been wasting them by careless chipping or indiffer- ent putting and you will score better than ever before, even if your lon g‘m; 1sn't quite geared up to norm: speed. These hints are easy to follow, Tred- er points out, and as & golf doctor he guarantees that they will get any man away to a better start in the Sp-irg, even when rusty muscles, unused to swinging a club, creak and strain at the unwonted activity, George Cramer is the latest Capital golfer to make a hole in one. He scored his ace on the 157-yard second hold at the Manor Club yesterday, play= ing the shot with a mashie. With him were John F. Brawner, one of the bet= ter golfers at Columbia, and T. C. Mont lery, & member of Washington, Derisive slants at Gene Sarazen's idea of making the golf cup 8 inches in diameter reached a new high to= day, with the observation by one dent golf fan that playing to an 8-inch cup would be like playing poker with the deuces wild. “It wouldn't be golf at all,” an said. NICK YOUR FACE WHEN YOU SHAVE? developed Probek. It is made to serve men who have never found lasting satisfaction. Probak’s edges—unlike those found on any other razor blade —give unmatched ease and comfort to men with heavy beards and tender skin. This blade is sharper, heavier — manufactured to solve difficult shaving.pmblunt. Give Probak a chance. Try it on our money-back guaran- tee of satisfaction. Buyn_pu:hqe tonight. FOR GILLETTE RAZORS PROBAK BLADES