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‘' B-8 8 PORTS. THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., SEPTEMBER 13, 1936—PART ONE. SPORTS Amateur Golf Held Free-for-All : District Players May Go Places - L4 — but Youngsters Are Set * for Brisk Battle. “ Associated Press Sports Writer. ~ ARDEN CITY, N. Y., Septem- G blustery weather without a single dominating figure in national amateur golf championship téday, as the 210 entrants prepared the championship gets under way Monday. trimmed today and, as the wind mounted, the veterans in the field ever before. With Lawson Little, the present | ranks, Albert (Scotty) Campbell, * seattle, and Johnny Goodman are béen light because of the unusually large number of capable players. in the field—George Dunlap, New ‘York, 1933; C. Ross Somerville, Can- Mass., 1914 and 1931; Max Marston, Philadelphia, 1923; Jess Sweetser, Boston, 1921; Chick Evans, Chicago, 1916 and 1920, and Dave Herron, Veterans Regarded Strong, BY SCOTTY RESTON, ber 12—A wild, free fight in the field was the prospect for the for their last practice rounds before The historic course was shaved and were receiving more attention than champion, now in the professional génerally favored, though betting has There are eight former champions ada, 1932; Francis Ouimet, Brookline, New York, 1922; Jesse P. Guilford, Pittsburgh, 1919. Four Vets Given Chance. FOUR of these are definitely con- ceded some chance of coming through. They are Somerville, Oui- met, Dunlap and Sweetser. Somerville, playing the game of his life right now, and Hector Thomson, the shy, stammering Scotch boy who holds the British amateur cham- pionship, are outstanding among the 19 foreign plavers in the field. Two other Scotch boys, Jack’ McLean a¥d Gordon Peters, also are given &a chance to come through, especially McLean, who is in the fourth and apparently the easiest quarter in the draw. Three youngsters, Freddy Haas,| New Orleans, the Canadian amateur champion; Johnny Fischer, Cincin- nati, and Reynolds Smith, Dallas, both | members of the American Walker Cup | Team, are being favored by some critics. Francis Ouimet also has collected quite a following by his play this week. He has been putting the slick Garden City greens especially well ever since arriving here and today he toured the course in 71, two under par, for the best score of the day. Two Big Early Matches. There are two outstanding matches in the first round. Paul Leslie, New Orleans, the Western amateur cham- pion, meets Joe Lynch, Canton, Mass., semi-finalist at Cleveland last year, and Haas faces Charlie Mayo, jr., Long Beach, Long Island, N. Y., the Long Island champion. Two outstanding players withdrew from the championship this week, Ed White, Bonham, Tex. American ‘Walker Cup player, and Maurice Me- Carthy, Cleveland. McCarthy was drawn against Johnny Fischer in the first round and White against Levi| Yoder of Bethesda, Md. A heavy downpour this evening #oaked the championship course and slowed it down considerably. All week the players have been getting unusual roll through the fairways, but have had trouble making the ball stop on the green. This will be the fourth amateur championship held on the Garden Gity course. Walter J. Travis, favor- ite son of the home club, won here in 1900 and Jerry Travers won in 1908 and 1913. Eddie Driggs and Rudy Knepper, both of the Garden City club, are ex- pected to cause a lot of trouble before going out. RIPPY IS 2 OVER PAR IN GARDEN CITY TEST Only Washington Entrant in U. S. Amateur Meet to<Report Practice Score. Bpecial Disratch to The Star. GARDEN CITY, L. I, September 12. —Claude Rippy, runner-up in this year's national public links championship, shot the Garden City course in 75, two over par, today, but no other Washington entrant in the national amateur championship reported a score. Rippy paired with Levi Yoder in 8 match against Morton McCarthy, Norfolk, Va., and Tommy Strafaci, Brooklyn, and the Washington pair won, 3 and 2. Yoder started with six straight pars, but then began missing the fairway and picked up on several holes. The feature of the first round as far as the Washington entrants are concerned is the withdrawal of Ed White, Bonham, Tex., American Walker Cup player. White was paired against Yoder in the first round, but when he dropped out and went back to Texas, Bayard Mitchell Foot Ball Schoql Is in Session at Catholic U. '.' fi & Here Head Coach Dutch Bergman is about to give his charges a few pointers about the game. On the left in the picture are Fred Rogers and Leo Katalians and on the other side of the mentor are Spec Foley and Bill Adamitis. ‘OODMONT Country Club‘ 7 golfers are out for trouble this afternoon over their home course, playing the linksmen from Woodholme Country Club of Baltimore in what Leopold Freudberg, Woodmont golf chairman, describes with doleful main as “a match we probably will lose.” “Why, look here,” says Leo, “most of our strength won't be available for the match. Melvin Kraft, our club champion, has a first-class case of sniffies. He has hay fever and he | has to hit a ball in between sneezes. Howard Nordlinger, another hot golfer, is out. of town, and Milton Harris has something or other. “Yep, it looks like we are in for a shellacking.” Kraft will start in defense of his club championship next week end. Jackrabbit in Canada. JUS’I‘ in case you wondered about the scoring in the Canadian open chamiponship where sub-70 cards were as common as base hits in a soft ball game, you can form a more accurate idea about it when you learn the boys were using the old jackrabbit ball. Then can do tricks with that old, heavy sphere, which particularly favors the long hitters of the Lawson Little type. If they brought it back again in the United States you'd see | 8 the scores drop a stroke a round in the big tourneys. Just before George Diffenbaugh and | 5 ¥ — | the sixteenth green and constructing Bobby Brownell shoved off for Garden City, N. Y., last week George stuck a new driver in Bobby's* golf kit. Bobby already uses the senior Brownell's iron clubs. The new driver may give him a few yards extra distance he’ll need at Garden City. CHIP shots . . . Garden City, ac- cording to Fred McLeod, is the toughest layout over which the cham- plonship has been decided in many a year . .. “You may play a hole in the morning with a drive and a little pitch and play the same hole in the after- noon with a drive and a full wood,” Pred says . . . It's because the wind shifts and comes up strong in the afternoon . . . Long Island is flat with nothing to break the wind. Babe Didrikson has gobs of power behind the distance-eating wallops she smites so far. Any gal who can play the eleventh hole at Columbia with a drive and a No. 6 iron from the back tee won't take odds from any slugger anywhere. She did it Friday . . . Harold Hair played the last nine at Washington in 31 whacks in a recent round of 1...he’s the brother of Club Champ Erwin Hair . . . The amateur-pro match, which is an annual feature at !Wlshingtnn. will be held after the | amateur championship, probably the | 1ast week in September. Pros’ Averages Drop, TO SHOW you how scoring averages among the pros have dropped | listen to this . .. in 1927 Johnny Far- | rell led the pros in the scoring aver- | age column with 73.03 for 68 rounds | of competitive golf . . . This year Harry Cooper is leading with 7171 for 68 rounds of competitive play . . .| | some day they'll get the average down around 70 for a full season. Canadian amateurs, with tongue in | mother country that the Canucks take | the place of Britain in the Walker Cup matches . in view of the nine | straight wins by- America, could they do worse than the British? Claude Rippy sticks to the old bats which he has used for many years . . . ragged, rusty and disreputable looking, they have given him good service and he remains with ’em. ‘The new twelfth green at Columbia |is in use . . . from a good tee shot | the hole is a shade easier than the | old one . . . it might conceivably drop the par to 69, but the Columbia folks | don’t want that . .. and Columbia is !going in for fairway watering next | year all over the course . . . plans are almost ready . . . among the schemes | is one for damming the creek behind | a water reservoir . . . which might | make the sixteenth hole an island green surrounded by water . , . t'would be a good hole, too. Knows His Minors. "POP" STEWARD of Columbia has been chosen again as one of the judges of the national barber shop chord contest . . . it will be held Tues- day night in New York, and Pop will officiate with Al Smith . . . and later will take in the national amateur championship . . . he’ll be one of a large delegation of Washingtonians at the championship. At least a score of boys and girls from the Capital plan to be at Garden City. Howard Foster claims Bill Ullman breaks his heart on the first tee with his sobbing along the “I can't break 100" strain . . . Howard says Bill is a century shooter on the first tee and an 85 shooter on the gqlf course . o . cheek, are thinking of asking the | } sounds familiar to us. am Pagar{o is making an hall to show his mates how it Tennis (Continued From Sixth Page.) champion. He lost the title to Allison in the semi-final round last year when he fell and dislodged a kidney in the seventh game of the opening set but insisted on playing. Miss Marble, who lost to Miss Jacobs in the final of the Man- chester, N. H, invitation tournament last month, started auspiciously, breaking through Helen's service in the first game and going on to take a 3—1 lead. Miss Jacobs rallied and pulled up to 4—3, but she was not stroking the ball overhead as confi- dently or with the finality she dem- onstrated in the two previous rounds. But she lifted her play to champion- ship form as she won the last two games on eight errors by Miss Marble and took the set at 6—4. It was with the start of the second set that Miss Marble produced some of the finest shotmaking the cham- pionship has known. She found a vulnerable spot in Miss Jacobs’ back- hand and kept plugging the ball at the right-hand corner every chance she had. She not only had the better long game, but caught the defend- ing champion flat-footed time and again with brilliantly executed drop shots that fell just over the net and went for winners every time. Greenland is catching geese in large numbers and storing them for food. New Queen Is Crowned in National Tennis of Pine Valley was substituted. ST.JOHN’S GRIDDERS GET OUT TOMORROW Thirteen Vets Form Nucleus of Team Scheduled to Play Eight Games. T. JOHN'S foot ball team, facing & schedule of eight games against local high and prep schools and two Baltimore elevens, will begin training tomorrow. With 13 men available from last year’s squad, the Cadets will prep for thé opening of their season on October 2 against Western, the Red and White being one of four high school teams which will meet St. John’s. Only Tech is missing from the schedule. 8t. John’s two biggest games, with Georgetown Prep and Gonzaga, come in mid-November a week apart. ‘Those returning from last year are Dimsey, Lucas, McLaughlin, Reges, Barrett, Donohue, Byrnes, Cady, Gie- bel, Markward, Goggins, Brennen and Holland. Western. away: 9. Eastern, ntral, away; 31, Calvert Hal vnlu i 13, '8, Mount Walter Merrill Hall, president of the United States association, is presenting the tropy to Alice Marble, the surprise victor, as Helen Jacobs, who reummu:c her title, looks on. ‘l 2 effe lie Mun- should be properly done, —Star Staff Photos. SOPHOMORES FIND C.U. BERTHS HARD Early Workouts None Will Break Into Starting Line-Up. HE Catholic University foot ball squad will resume work- outs tomorrow, adding to its program the blackboard drill. | This drill, which usually lasts for a| half hour, will be carried on every day from now until the close of the season, From now until the campaign gets underway the brain workouts will be devoted to fundamental work, with tests being giveri by Coach Bergman | weekly. After the regular season | starts the scouts will take over these drills, presenting in complete form | | the inside dope on opponents. Sophs Up Against It. WITH tomorrow the fifth day of | practice it now looks as though not a single sophomore candidate will break into the first string. At the end posts Capt. Hermie Schmarr and Fred Rogers are holding forth, with Leo Katalinas and Elwood Clements lin- ing up at tackles and Joe Anthonavags | and Dick Arnold in the guard posi- | | tions. Joe Yanchulis, as usual, is in | the center position. In the backfield Speck Foley is at quarter, Irish Car- roll and Bill Adamaitis at the halfback berths and Bob Makofske in the full- back spot. The second team probably will line up with a sophomore at a halfback position. He is Burke Vidnovic, the | former Kingsley Prep star who hails from McKeesport, Pa. He is a left halfback and probably will draw as his running mate Charley Munhall. Sully Greco is at full and Dixie Walker at quarterback. Get Our Tackling Dummy. JJOLDING sway along the forward wall are Zeke Brown and Eddie Dunne, ends; John Chludenski and Sam Pagano, tackles; Vic Sochon and Pearson Stanley, guards, and Jim Gem- lo the snapper-back. Pads and helmets will be issued to the players tomorrow afternoon and the first sessions with the tackling dummy and other paraphernalia will take place. This is a real test for the candidates and will mean a great deal in deter- mining the final personnel of the first and second elevens which now appear to be on & par, COLORED CLUBS T0 BOX Ten Lined Up for Tournament at Twelfth Street Y. M. C. A. ‘With 10 colored clubs interested, the Twelfth Street Y. M. C. A. is planning a boxing tou ent for junior and senior ringmen. Championships Wwill be established in each weight with prizes going to the respective winners Managers of the following clubs are invited to compete: Trojans, North- east A. C, Stanton Road A. C., South- west Community House, Hill Toppers, Indicate | FOUR FORMIDABLE | N NATIONAL PLAY Stars Not Likely to Find Peacock, Yoder, Brownell or Rippy Easy. BY W. R. McCALLUM. boys may not be going far in the most open amateur golf championship since Francis Ouimet came back from virtual retirement in 1931 to win the title at Chicago in the first Jonesless year, but the eight local qualifiers for the Simon pure title will be in there swinging at Garden City tomorrow and one or two of them may surprise the home folks. They haven't been favored by the draw at all, but an 18- hole golf match is a short contest and some upsets may occur in a tourna- ment where the usual rule is that upsets will come along. Roger Peacock, probably the finest golfer of the eight, is the only one to draw a bye. Roger moved into the second round without firing a shot. He will meet Dr. Willlam Tweddell, methodical captain of the British Walker Cup téam, in the second round. Pairing of the other Washingtonians in the opening match round are as follows: 9:10—Gene Pittman, Kenwood, vs. J. D. Langley, London; 11:00—Claude Rippy, East Potomac Park, vs. M. H. Ward, Tacoma, Wash.; 11:50—Forrest Thompson, Beaver Dam, vs. Scotty Campbell, Seattle: 1:15—Levi Yoder, Kenwood, vs. Ed White, Bonham, Tex.; Bobby Brownell, Indian Spring, vs. Ralph Strafaci, Brooklyn; Tommy Webb, Washington, vs. Charles Boywid, Chicago; Volney G. Burnett, Indian Spring, vs. Brown Cannon, ®enver. Second round (Tuesday), Roger Pea- cock, Congressional, vs. D. William Tweddell, Stourbridge, England. Held Stopped Peacock. JPEACOCK went to the fourth round last year, where Eddie Held dropped him with a streak of ridicu- lously accurate putting. Yoder went to the second round, where Willie Turnesa trounced him. Burnett went out in the opening round of the 1935 joust. The others have had no na- tional championship experience. Here are some thumb-nail sketches | of the Washington entrants: Gene Pittman of Kenwood—Came to Washington last year to help the New Deal over the rough spots. A | short hitter, but deadly accurate with | | the ijrons and around the greens. Probably will lose to Langley, the | English schoolboy champ. | Claude Rippy of East Potomac Park—A golfer whose capabilities barely have been scratched. One of the finest shotmakers ever developed | in this or any other city and one who | can go far if he sticks to his knitting. Expects to hole all putts under 15 feet and usually does. Roger Peacock of Congressional— The best amateur developed around | ‘Washington since the days of George Voigt and Roland MacKenzie. Hasn't been able to practice as much this | | year as he would like, but he is plenty | |rugged and a shotmaker supreme. | His only weakness is from the 3-foot range on the putting green. He will | miss enough of the wee ones to lose a close match, but if he holes 'em all | he can whip any one. Thompson in Tough Spot. FORREST THOMPSON of Beaver Dam—A good golfer, but far from good enough to go anywhere in | fast company. Normally a 77 or 78 | shooter, a pace which will lose by a | big margin in fast company. Due to drop quickly at the hands of Scotty | Campbell, in the first round. Levi Yoder of Kenwood, Middle At- lantic champion—A rugged, tough scrapper who can whip any man when he is knocking the putts in. He may give Ed White a surprise, as he gave Francis Ouimet in the first round of the 1935 championship. Yoder can apply the pressure when needed. Bobby Brownell of Indian Spring— Bobby won the District championship at Manor, but he needs more distance and experience to get along in the bigtime of golf. He may became a real star, but that is yet in the fu- iure. At present Bobby is a good golfer in a field where there are 200- odd men just as good or better. Will do well to win a match in the na- tional, Rippy Imperturbable. TOMMY WEBB of Washington, a first-timer in the national— ‘Tommy is & good hitter of the long shots, but looseness with the short game may prove his undoing. Tommy hardly is ready to go anywhere in the national yet. More or less an in- and-outer. A good shotmaker who plays fine golf at times. His weakness is around the cup. He can win a match or two. On the record. it looks as if the four of the local brigade will be Pea- cock, Yoder, Brownell and Rippy. Peacock already is in the second round, while the other three may get there, with & possibility that Burnett may surprise the home folks and win some matches. Rippy, up in the big- time of golf for the first time, won't be awed by galleries or by the shots of his opponents. The young man had his fill of that in the public links championship last July, where he went to the fin ESPITE the fact that he ex- pects to have a stronger run- ning attack this year, Jack Hagerty, Georgetown's foot ball mentor, intends to continue to emphasize the use of forward and lat- eral passes. Hagerty believes that a team that has a strong overhead at- tack and is adept in laterals is a con- tirdual threat. Last year the Hoyas established quite 8 name for themselves by their frequent use of laterals. Against New York University in Yankee Stadium the locals used five on one play. Forward passes and laterals proved to be the 1935 scoring punch for the Blue and Gray. It was a lateral from Keating to Herron that started the Hoyas on their first win of the sea- son against Roanoke. Against New First and N Street A. C, Oxen Hill Boys' Club, Garfleld Club, Anacostia A, C, Trinidad Community Associa- Northwest York U. & double lateral from Meglen to Herron to Keating enabled George- town to grab a 6-0 lead over the favored Violets. Again, in the land Volney Burnett of Indian Spring— Forward and Lateral Passes "To.Be Big Part of G. U. Attack Dobson Is Lost To Army Eleven ACK DOBSON, son of the Uni- versity of Maryland coach, whom Army's foot ball team had been banking on to be one of its leading backs this year, is out for .the season. Dobson, on the plebe squad last season, suffered an injured knee in Spring practice, but this apparently had healed so that he would be able to take up his duties with the var- sity. However, he again hurt the same knee in a fall from a caisson in artillery drill. This second injury made it inadvisable, in the opinion of the coaches, to use him in the coming campaign, Young Dobson, who also is a track and basket ball star, doubt- less will be able to participate in these sports during 1936-37. TERP LINE HOPES APPEAR BRIGHTER Much Progress Is Made in Two Weeks—Two Teams in Scoreless Test. HE Yellows and Whites battled about a half hour to a scoreless draw at College Park yesterday afternoon to bring the Uni- versity of Maryland’s second week of foot ball practice to a close. Neither team closely approached the goal and not more than five first downs were made. Ellinger did some fine running and pass catching and Weid- inger some clever hurling and kicking for the Whites, while Headley and Daly did most of the Yellows’ advanc- ing. Both groups served to utilize all the fit men on the squad. Star Backs on Shelf. 'HREE ace backs were not in the tussle. Guckeyson, Wheeler and Meade were out most all week with minor hurts, but all are expected to be in action soon, probably tomorrow. However, as has been pointed out before. it is not the backfield that is occupying the thoughts of Coach Frank Dobson and the members of | his staff. It is the line, and a bright ray of sunshine is peeking through the clouds. McCarthy and Bryant, converted from a back, 1935 leftovers. and Bud- koff and Wood, sophs, are showing up | well at the wings, while Page, Egnell, Males, Witzke and John DeArmey have made gratifying progress at the tackle and guard berths. Has Veteran Nucleus. - OWEVER, if Dobson had to pick a line for a game now, most of the choices doubtless would come from the letter men, Willis and Smith, ends; Fletcher and Birkland, tackles: Wolf and Eurgent, guards, and Frank De- Armey, center. Walton, reserve last Fall, i a capable understudy at the snapper-back position, and Forrester, | a green aspirant, has made remarkable | strides at the position. Dobson, though, has stated that he will not pick a tentative first-string line-up until Monday, September 21, the week of the opening game wita St. Johns. There is plenty of pep and spirit at College Park and there is no pes- simism, FETE FOR NASH NINE D. C. Legion Junior Winner Will Be Honored by Sponsor. Members of the base ball team rep- resenting the Kenneth H. Nash Post, | No. 8, will be feted for winning the | pionship for the current season Thurs- day night at the Golden Tavern, 707 Twelfth street. Although the team lost in the re- gional series at Clarksburg, their sup- forced to play three games in two days to win- the District championship and then play their first game in the re- | gional series immediately after. Guests at the dinner will includs Manager James J. Brogan and Coach D. J. Creamer in addition to Horace W. Lineburg, department commander, and Joseph J. Malloy, past depart- ment commander. | District American Legion junior cham- | porters point out that they had been | LITTLE 1S MASTER INCANADIAN OPEN Sets Tourney Mark as He Stages Stirring Finish for Easy Victory. By the Associated Press. \ORONTO, September 12.—Law- son Little, the subject of much | doleful head-shaking because of his performances since he gave up his amateur status last Sbring after two years of sweeping the United States and British amateur championships, came into his own as a professional golfer today. ‘Winning his first tournament as a pro, Little staged a stirring finish to capture the Canadian Open title from & brilliant field with a 72-hole total of 271 strokes. Four times in succession the husky San Franciscan bettered the par of 70 for the St. Andrews public course to smash the scoring record for the tourney and record one of the lowest aggregates ever scored over a full- length course. Despite his remarkable rounds of 67, 66, 69 and 69, Little had a fight on his hands to stay in front of the field through the last 36 holes today as Jimmy Thomson, the Shawnee-on- | Delaware, Pa. clouter, rattled off a 69-69 for the last two rounds. Start- ing 10 strokes behind, Thomson st one time cut his deficit to three strokes. He was five behind as the | last nine began, then saw his hopes vanish as the presidio pounder shot five birdies on the last six holes, Victory Gets Little $1,000, LI'ITL.E'S victory brought him $1,000 in prize money, Wwhile Thomson, finishing with a 279, earned $600. The $400 third money went to Craig Wood, blonde New York shot« maker, who also carded a pair of 69's today for a total of 282. Leo Diegel of Philmont, Pa, who set the old scoring record of 274 for the 1929 tournament at Montreal, had a 283 to tie with Vic Ghezzi of- Deal, N, J, for fourth. Each received $250. Paul Runyan, the White Plains, N. Y., sharpchooter who was not far behind Little after the first two rounds, had the comparatively high scores of 74 and 73 today and took | sixth money, $100. Al Watrous, | Birmingham, Mich., and Ed Dudley, Philadelphia, received $75 each for scoring 285's. The lowest Canadian scorer was Robert T. Gray. jr., of the Sandwich Golf Club, Windsor, Ont. He carded 286. Even a stampeding gallery of 8.000, running through the traps and brush- ing the course stewards aside in their efforts to reach vantage points, cheer« ing like a base ball crowd whenever he made a good shot, failed to pere turb Little when the chips were down. Lawson's Putter Trained. FI\’E strokes ahead of the start of the last nine, Little dropped a stroke to par and to Thompson when | he took four on the short eleventh, Then, with his drives and irons funce tioning as well as ever, he began a putting streak that was too much for his long-hitting rival. He canned a ! nine-footer for a birdie on the eighteenth, dropped a six-foot putt for another on the fourteenth and il’in down still another on the fif- teenth. Thompson sank an explosion shot for a birdie deuce on the short sixe teenth while Little needed the regula« tion three. But the San Franciscan | chipped into the hole for another birdie on the seventeenth and counted |a final sub-par figure on the long | home home hole. ROYAL GOLF STARTS Williams Faces Fight in Defense of Championship. ‘The Royal Golf Club's annual cham- pionship tournament will start this afternoon on the Lincoln Memorial course. James A. Williams, defending champion, will have plenty opposition from a large entry list, which includes a former champ, Reuben Brooks. The tourney will be an 18-hole qual- ifying affair, with this afternoon’s first 1 16 players qualifying for the cham- pionship flight. Special Dispatch to The Star. AMP LETTS, Md:, September 12.—Shades of 1935 began to appear on the training field of George Washington Uni- versity’s current foot ball team late last week when Head Coach Jim Pixlee again instituted the spread offense, which finds the Colonial line- men extended from one sideline to the other when in possession of the ball. Remembering the success with which his team used it against Rice, when it outgained by nearly 100 yards the team which won by a 41-0 score, Pixlee apparently intends to give Washington fans an extended view of the unique formation. Western Maryland in Baltimore, & 30-yard pass, Nolan to Gibeau, tallied. In yesterday's drills Hagerty con- centrated on the overhead attack. All of the Georgetown backs have been drilled in passing and receiving. With a promised stronger running attack, coupled with Hagerty's own hurling, District fans doubtless will see a versatile and colorful George- town eleven. The injury list mounted to five yes- terday, when Joe Keegin and Bill Valiquetta were forced out of the morning scrimmage with leg injuries. Tommy Keating, Tony Barabas and Pete Churinskas complete the crip- pled list. V. F. W. BOWLERS MEET. A meeting of the Veterans of For- George Washington to Stick To Sensational Spread Plays No rest was to be given the squad on the Sabbath, forced as the coaches | are to pick a starting line-up out of | more than 50 candidates for the open= ing game against Emory and Henry, less than two weeks hence. Up in Washington the university was preparing to distribute tickets for the Colonials’ home games on a less expensive scale than last year. Re- served seats for major games will be $1.10, in contrast to the $1.65 scale in 1935, while a general admission price of 80 cents will prevail for minor games. Tickets for the first game on September 25 now are available, as are tickets for each of G. W.'s eight home games. They may be obtained at the office in 2101 G street northe west, with patrons purchasing season reservations getting their preference of locations. SEE THE NEW 1937 PACKARDS AT OUR New Sales Room NOW LOCATED AT 5019 Conn. Ave. PRY MOTOR CAR CO. eign Wars Bowling League wiil be held Tuesday night at 8 o'clock at Duffy’s Grill, 1528 Fourteenth street north- ‘west, President Benedetto requests all team captains to be present. (i USED CARS 1527 14th St. TR T e iy