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S)Y-TEAM BATILE STARTS IN APRIL Martin West, Red Banagan Work Out Details for Unique Competition. BY WALTER R. McCALLUM. T COULD only come about in & big club like Columbia—the new series of intra-club team matches which Golf Chairman Martin R. | West and “Red” Banagan, his genial | and hard-working aide—are planning for next year. Not every club has enough golfers | or enough players interested in team | competitions to form a seven or eight | team league for play throughout the season. But Columbia has enough | players, and so West and Banagan | today are working out the details of | a schedule that promises to keep Co- | lumbia golfers on their toes through- | out most of the next year, what with tournaments nside the club and those | outside the organization. Columbia has six handicap classes, | ranging from scratch up to 24, with | the players in those classes competing in their own divisions in the club | championship tourn wherein only | men with handicaps to and in- play for the It is proposed that a team of 12 men be organized within each of these handicap divisions, one from the better women golfers of the club and another from the junior players, the teams to meet at least once each month on a handicap basis. It is proposed that the matches be played on Sunday afternoons. Women May Give Handicaps. UT the queer pa; it all is this With the women having their handicaps rated against a par of 77, and the men ed against a par of 70, it is entirely possible that when the women's team clashes with a men’s team from the fifth or sixth division the femi e golfers will be in the unique position of giving hand- icaps to their male oppon You don't often find that being done, but it may come about when these matches are or d next year “We think these matches will serve the double purpose of getting our members acquainted with each r | and with their and of providing | West said today “We plan to start opening probably f: to give eve So far t r there isn't any doubt worked out, together w of election of team capta of eligible players and play and application of ha If the tourname of next Summer, and doubt it will, your Columbi are going to be busy folks, wh: their own regular foursome play and competition in these intra-club affairs em off with our h will to play.” tentative, but Women Will Elect Officers. ELEGATES from the member D clubs of the Women's District of Columbia Golf Association will gather at Columbia on December | 6 to go through the form of balloting | on the candidates for officers of the | association next year. Nomination | is_tantamount to election and the following women have been nominated for the association offices for 1 | For president, M) Hacker, Chevy Chase Club: ses ice president, Mrs. N. J. Waldron, Beaver Dam; treasurer, Mrs. Donald Scott, | Congressional: secretary, Mrs. D. M. McPherson, Manor. Committees to | serve next year will be chosen after the annual meeting, at which Miss Elizabeth C. Harris, who has served as president for the past two years, will turn over that office to Mrs. Wing. If you are struck by a golf ball hit | from a public course you cannot col- lect damages from the municipality, according to a ruling by a Baltimore judge. Miss Adelaide J. Ticer, walk- ing along & street hard by one of the municipal courses in Baltimore was struck in the eye and injured by a golf ball driven from the cours She filed suit for $10.000 against t municipality. Chief Judge Samuel K. | Dennis sustained the city's demurrer | to the suit and court officials inter- preted the decision to mean that the city 18 not liable for damages in such cases. Wonder what the application would be in Washington, where most of the public courses are operated by & privately owned company? HAGEN WOULD SHUN PLAYING-LEADER 10B| Willing to_Either Pilot Yanks Against British or to Be Golfer in Ranks. By the Assoclated Press. ACKSONVILLE, Fla., November 29.—Since the Ryder Cup first was placed in competition nearly 10 years ago, Walter Hagen has been closely related to that gold golf trophy but now the old maestro of the mashie and the midiron wants to step aside as play- ing captain of America’s team. Hagen hitched his gray flannel knickers over his not so slender frame, slid forward in his chair at a hotel here, lit a cigarette and reminisced about the four Ryder Cup competitions by teams representing the greatest of American and British professionals. Now with the British coming over here this Summer for a defense of the mug, Hagen would rather not be the playing captain of the American forces. “I've been the American captain | since it all started and I believe it is time to step aside and give scme of the other boys a chance at the honor for the good of golf,” he said. “But,” Hagen said, “if the boys should insist on me continuing as captain I would not play. On the other hand, if they name me as one of the players, I wouldn't be captain. I soon will submit my resignation with these conditions.” The Haig leaves here soon for the Miami Biltmore open and then will motor to the West Coast to meet the boys returning from Australia. GONZAGA AT ALEXANDRIA. ALEXANDRIA, Va., November 29.— Gonzaga gridders of Washington and the Alexandria High eleven were to square off this afternoon at 2 o'clock in Baggett's Stadium. It was the last scheculed game of the campaign for both teams. ' SPORTS. & They wrestled through the ropes last night in the Turner show feature. (out of ring). Left to right: Gino Garibaldi, —Star Staff Photo. Referee Burns and George Zaharias BOUT OF MEANEST RASSLERS LOOMS Zaharias” Rough Conquest of Garibaldi Puts Him in Dusek’s Class. ASHINGTON'S rassle stage was set today for a “meanest man” showdown, | with Rudy Dusek and George Zaharias, winners in Prof. Joe Turner's first pair of two-falls-out- cipals. With a kick-in-the-stomach hold fully as effective as Dusek’s repetoire of unpopular tricks, Zaharias joined the Omaha growler as a sort of public enemy No. 1 last night at the Wash- ington Auditorium with a pair of falls over Gino Garibaldi of St. Louis. A week before Dusek destroyed young Vic Christy in a tussle which nearly started a riot. While the couple of spectators voiced their disapproval, Zaharias won the first fall in 17 minutes with a boot to the midsection, dropped the second in 7 minutes and then came back with another barrage of knee kicks to win the deciding fall in 5'z minutes. Zaharias Still Rough. HE Colorado Greek, making his first local appearance in nearly & year, proved early in the rough-and-tumble comedy that he had lost none of his quaint tactics. Four successive knee punts to Garibaldi's stomach had the Italian squirming and gasping on the modified mattress of a mat like a goldfish out of his bowl. A succession of headlocks finished Gino. The second fall was short, and, to the fans, sweet. Swarming all over the Greek, whose ear dives still remain the acme of rasling hipprodome, Gari- baldi banged Zaharias on the loose plank a couple of times and then squashed him with a body press. The deciding fall was scored much in the manner of the first, with Zaharias getting off long punts to Gino's torso and drawing nothing more than ap- parent warnings from Umpire Cyclone Burns and a sprinkling of popcorn boxes, cigar butts and rolled up news- papers from the fans. Put on “Wrestling” Match. HE incurables who like their T rassling spelled wrestling had their innings when Sandor Szabo and Vic Christy tangled in the 45-minute preliminary. It was, of course, a draw, with both boys mar- ring proceedings by acting the part of | gentlemanly growlers. Abe Kashey, hairy Syrian, featured the preliminary card. He rassled twice against different stooges for a batting average of .500, losing to Charley Allen in 16 minutes when he failed to climb back into the ring in- side of a 10 count, and then rallying to throw Steve Znoski in seven min- utes while subbing for Tor Johansen. Tor's arches, or something, broke down en route to the auditorium, but the management threatened to pro- duce the 315-pound Swede next week in an extra bout. BIG RACING SEASON IN CUBA FORECAST Day, Who Visits Bowie After Trip to Havana, Thinks Out- look Exceptionally Bright. By the Associated Press. OHN 1. DAY, presiding steward at Oriental Park, in Havana, re- turned to Bowie yesterday after a fiying visit to the Cuban city, and re- ported everything in readiness there for the opening of the season. A number of stables have already been established at Oriental Park and others are slowly moving in, Day said. A feature of the season there will be | the presentation of a cup to the win- | ner of the weekly Sunday handicap. Steward Marshall Cassidy will leave Bowie immediately after the close to- day for Miami. Fla., where he will pre- side in a similar capacity at Hialeah Park, Don Meade was within one victory today of tying Silvio Coucci for the lead among riders at the current Bowie meet. Coucci left the track with 13 victories and Meade enters the Thanksgiving day finale with 12, 63 IN DISTANCE RACE. Sixty-three were to compete in the first annual D. C. A. A. U. 10,000-me- | ter cross-country championship, which | thousand | by ARL JAMISON and his brethren of the unorthodox method of smiting a golf ball are going to have a tournament all their own at Rock Creek Park on Monday, December 10. Jamison, you will re- member, was runner-up in the some- what synthetic “national” southpaw ! championship at Miami last Winter. | Now comes along that energetic worker in the golfing vineyard—Harry | Graham. manager at Rock Creek—with | announcement of a southpaw tourney on December 10, open to any left- handed golfer in Washington. They | should have better luck than the south- | order | of-three-falls exhibitions, as the prin- | | paws had at Indian Spring last Sun-| | day, for the Namandjl Ninj ‘Trophy | affair, held annually at that club, was | postponed. Jamison is a good southpaw golfer, | as southpaws go. There are better, | such as Sam Rice, Tommy Bones and | Earl McAleer, but considering the way | | these left-nanders swing at the ball | | and the way the base ball boys speak | | of southpaws, they play good golf. In| | base ball a southpaw is supposed to be | | a little balmy, but the same cannot be | true of southpaw golfers. They hit the ball too well, and it takes a sane guy ! to do that. HAT causes a golfer who nor- mally shoots at an 85 gait to suddenly, for no reason at all, drop down to 73? Jerry Blazek is try- | Ing to puzzle it all out today, as he contemplates the immaculate round of golf he shot yesterday at Washington, | where he eclipsed his best previous | mark by five strokes on a day when | the ball got next to no run at all, | putting greens were covered with mist | and everything was against good scor- |ing. "I don't know why it happened I'm still in a daze. But I wish Calvert Dickey could have seen it.” Blazek, who is a moderately short hitter, played the first nine heles in 36, with a birdie on the fifth, and then came home in 37 for a 73, with only one | lengthy putt, on the eighteenth hole, where a 25-footer found the cup for a par 4. “Wouldn't it be great if you could play that way all the time.” he said, as he collected from Pete Bran- son, the gent who made him eat crow a couple of days ago. Firestone { (FORD) COMPLETE Firestone CAR WASH $120 13th & K N.W. NA.3323 was to get under way early today -N‘ the Rock Creek goll\club house. | months at Miami. 7 i Firestone MOTOR OVERHAULING Firestone WINTER SR TIes | 25¢ QUART Firestone Service Stoves W. R.MsCALLUM OST of the local pros who travel to Miami next week to play in the Biltmore tourney will come back to go through a Washington Winter, but two of them will remain in Florida to play golf in the balmy atmosphere of the South for the rest of the Winter. Bob Barnett already | is at the Indian Creek Club of Miami Beach and when Leo Walper pulls up stakes here next Monday he,will be prepared to spend the rest of the cold Al Houghton, Mel Shorey and Roland MacKenzie will come back to Washington after play- ing in the Biltmore tourney and an affair at Nassau. The Florida sched- ule of other big-time affairs does not start until February, while the inter- pational four-ball tourney is not due to start until early in March. More than $90,000 has been put in prize money for the’tourneys in California, the Southwest and in Florida, Georgia and the Carolinas. quite made up his mind whether he will make the Western swing or not, but in any event he does not plan to remain in Washington during the coming Winter. LIST EXTRA-MURAL “TOUCH.” ‘The championship extramural touch foot ball team of the University of Maryland will meet Georgetown and Catholic University combinations early next month to open a home-and-home series among the teams. The winner will be determined on games won rather than by the elimination system. Mat Matches SAN FRANCISCO.—Hugh Nichols, 189, Cincinnati, tossed Red Lyon, 178, Seattle, two out of three falls; Ward Flemmington, 153, Barrington, Eng- land, defeated Jack Domer, 150, Co- lumbus, Ohio, on a foul. LOS ANGELES.—Hans Steinke, 240, Germany, beat “Man Mountain” Dean, 317, Norcross, Ga., two out of three falls; Joe Savoldi, 205, Three Oaks, Mi and Howard Canton- wine, 211, Des Moines, Iowa, drew in one hour. Ry LOW WEEKLY PAYMENTS AS LOwW AS (! AQUAPRUF BRAKE RELINE Firestone HOT WATER HEATER USE OUR BUDGET PLAN Firestone- SUPER PYRO 3rd &BS.W. NA. 1021 Walper hasn't ! EARNSHAW WILL STICK Abandons Plan to Quit Base Ball and Peddle Insurance. PHILADELPHIA, November 29 (#). —George Earnshaw, the “Big Moose” moundsman of the Chicago White Sox, has changed his mind about becoming & year-around insurance salesman and will desert the dotted line for the dia- mond again next Spring. After a conference with Jimmy Dykes, White Sox manager, Earnshaw announced he would be back in the g ‘Windy City in 1935 under terms of the 1934 contract that gave him a $500 bonus for each game won above 10, —_— IMPELLETTIERE ON AIR. Ray Impellettiere, Peekskill, N. Y., heavyweight boxer, who mixes with Marty Gallagher, Washington husky, tomorrow night at the Washington Auditorfum, will broadcast tonight with his manager, Harry Lenny, over Station WOL from 8 to 8:15 o'clock. They will be interviewed by Joe Hol- man. To Our 17 Million Please accept ou glolronagz which is he stores have been edde hundred and fifty-three. Hot Water Heater For Your Car Complete with Motor & Fittings _ s 32’ Thermostats 1f needed g (f as low as Installation atsmall extra cost “Deluxe” Heater (as shown) You can pay double our price but you cannot buy a better heater. Electric Windshield Defroster 13- Deluxe Mod As shown..32¢ “Good-Penn’’ 1009, Pennylvh a Oil (plus Federal Tax 1¢) container (plus xc tax) . including Special Winter Free Crankcase Service Safety “‘Tot-Bike” 56 Rubber tires. Develops sturdy legs. 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OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 9 1ealest year, we %lk, our biggest SPORTS. RECORD FIELD GALLOPS Henigan Seeks Third Victory in Annual Berwick Marathon. BERWICK, Pa., November 29 (#)— Over a gruelling 26-mile 385-yard stretch of Pennsylvania's Briar Creek hills, a record field of 51 run- ners competed today in the annual Berwick ~ marathon — Thanksgiving day feature of the area for the last quarter century. Jimmy Henigan, the Medford, Mass., distance ace, is seeking his estern AutoStor Use Our Christmas or even later. select Christmas gifts, Tir from our large, complete stocks. third victory in the event. Other entrants include Robert Rankine, from Preston, Ontario, the defending | title holder and one of half a dozen Canadians entered; Will McClusky of Toronto, winner in 1932, and Lou Gregory, the Millrose, A. C. star from New York, the 1931 champion, each of whom is after his second win. EVERETT WHIPS POSTER. ASHEVILLE, N. 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