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SPORTS. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, MONDAY, APRIL 19, 1937. SPORTS. *+ A—15 League Out, Washington Golf Clubs Will Sponsor Team Contests INFORMAL MEETS ONLINKS PLANNED Maryland Association to Support Tourneys That D. C. Body Spurns. BY W. R. McCALLUM. HERE will be no golf team matches staged this vear under | the auspices of the District of Columbia Golf Associa- tion. A committee appointed at the an- nual meeting of the District organi- zation last February has looked the | situation over, gone into the matter of resumption of team contests in a league around Washington and has reported adversely to the District as- sociation, which has accepted the re- port. ‘The committee was composed of Dallas McGrew of Burning Tree, chairman; Robert Stead, jr., Chevy Chase; Albert R. MacKenzie and Dr. Paul M. Stewart, Columbisa, and Albert E. Steinem, Woodmont. But if the District association isn't going to start something along the team match line, there’ll be lots of | informal and formal team matches | played this year. The Maryland State Golf Associa- tion is going ahead with its Spring | team schedule of handicap matches, | with Chevy Chase, Manor and Beaver Dam slated to be among the com- peting local clubs. Informal matches | are being listed by several of the clubs around Washington, among them | Army-Navy, Argyle, Beaver Dam and ' Manor. To top off the team match busi- | pess, it looks as if the Middle At-| lantic Golf Association may re- | sume, in an experimental way, the | contests that were held for many | years by that organization and were | abandoned in 1922. Officers of the | mid-Atlantic association are going to | Richmond in a few days to confer | with officials of two Richmond clubs which have offered their courses for matches this year. | The Country Club of Virignia and the Hermitage Country Club are anxious to have the initial contests | played on their courses. For t years the team from the Country| ] Club has cleaned up all opposition | in this territory and they're ready | and willing to extend their conquests further to include the entire Middle | Atlantic sector. Bobby Cruickshank and Fred Mc- Leod, two of the veteran pros in this territory, won't be among the en- trants in the P. G. A qualifying | rounds at Indian Spring on April 29. | Cruickshank, pro at the Country Club | of Virginia, and one of the nation's outstanding players (he tied for the open championship in 1923) wires | that he will not be able to play. | McLeod, who is not in the best of health, has decided not to enter. VWOMAN golters of the city, on the | threshold of a big competitive | season, have organized three teams | in as many handicap classes for in- | tercity contests this year. Each team will be composed of 10 regulars and 5 alternates, to play in the following series of matches: | May 13—Winchester at Washington Golf and Country Club. June 2 and 3—Richmond at Con- | gressional; June 22—Baltimore at | Indian Spring. September 5—Washington at Win- ¢hester; September 10—Washington at Baltimore; September 13 and 14— Washington at Richmond. Teams are composed as follows: first team—Helen Dettweiler, Mrs. Betty Meckley, Elizabeth Houghton, Marion Brown, Mrs. Bishop Hill, Mrs. L. B. Platt, Mrs. Roland MacKenzie, Mrs. J. F. Dowdall, Mrs. L. G. Pray and Mrs. K. S. Giles. Alternates— Mrs. B. C. Hartig, Mrs. Norman B. Frost, Mrs. Walter Stokes, Mrs. C. 8. Stern and Mrs. Ora Emge. Second team—Ellen Kincaid, Mrs. Y. E. Booker, Mrs. J. A. Marr, Mrs. H. | M. Brundage, Mrs. G. C. Hussy, Mrs. James W. Beller, Mrs. H. J. Simons, Mrs. T. J. Johnson, Mrs. W. R. Bush and Mrs. J. F. Gross. Alternates—Mrs. C. A. Stewart, Mrs. T. N. Beavers, Mrs. C. E. Purdy, Mrs. R. F. Thompson-and | 135-yard tenth hole at Chevy Chase. % =2, SN e UST to prove to the world that| it can be done, Roland Mac- Kenzie, Congressional pro, parked his second shot on the first green at his home club. - It happens to be some 550 yards from the tee and it was the big shot in a little 9-hole match wherein Roland walloped Billy Shea and Frank Good- win, a couple of youngsters, who thought they could whip the pro. The bird 4 started Roland off on a par busting 36. 'Twas all part of the merry-go- round of golf that started with the first really warm day of the year and the linksmen turned out in droves. There's many an aching muscle and plenty of sore dogs around Washing- ton today as a result. Low scoring was the order of the day, for over at Washington Dave Thomson knocked the ball around in 71 whacks in a match with Dr. J. T. McClenahan, J. G. C. Corcoran and R. T. Harrell, and at Beaver Dam long-hitting Cliff Spencer carved out & level par 72 and with “Irog Man” Martin McCarthy whipped Leo Walper | and Mel Shorey. Clff had a flock of three-putt greens, but bagged a lot | of birdies, too. Dick Lunn, former District cham- pion, announced that he will play in | the British amateur championship at Sandwich the last week in May, along | with C. C. Trautner, an Indian Spring | player. It's the first time in more than | 8 decade that two Washingtonians | will have competed in the British | tourney. Back in 1926 Donald Wood- | ward, Roland MacKenzie and Albert | MacKenzie played in the champion- | ship. Dick won the Mason and Dixon title last week. Six Tie for Top Spot. NDIAN SPRING started the com- petitive season with a blind bogey tourney with six men tying for the top spot. These were H. B. Swarthout, H. M. Comer, Arthur McArdle, Wil- liam Howell, Lloyd Kilken and H. S. Stein. Over at neighboring Argyle Wilton Allen won the blind bogey after a tie with E. T. Cassidy and W. H. Flannery. Jack Olmstead shot the nine in 36 after scoring birdies on the first four holes. The blind bogey tourney at Manor went to George Beyer with a card of 88—15—73. J. T. Maddox was in sec- ond place and Ray Koontz was third, with District Amateur Champ Bobby Brownell and Harry Pitt tying with B. N. Pratt and Max Taylor for fourth. Indian Spring had its first big test of the season today as some 25 ama- teur-pro combinations started in the initial tourney of the Middle Atlantic P. G. A. Clayton Williams turned in a card of 81—7—74 to top the scoring at Beaver Dam in the Maryland State Golf Association handicap tourney. J. J. O'Connor scored an ace on the At Kenwood tomorrow second teams of the Women’s District Golf Associa= tion will open the team match season. First teams will start their matches on May 4. Montague Yarns “Hokum.” CHIP SHOTS: “Who is the best- looking golfer you saw in the South?” we asked Helen Dettweiler (and we didn’t mean pulchritudinous) - . . “Why I guess Katherine Hemphill was the best,” Helen answered . . “She is the finest swinger I ever have seen and one of the finest shot- makers . . . Her record speaks for itself ... She was the only golfer who seemed to be able to lick Patty Berg +..8She’ll go a long way in this game.” . Helen is looking forward to a Vvisit from Maureen Orcutt, but the time and even Maureen's visit at all s indefinite. All this hokum about Superman Montague in the California sector By Walter McCallum <=2 in some tricky way . . . the guy is human, with human limitations, and the man hasn’t been born and never will be born who can play perfect golf gnd golf shots all the time . . . it’s about time this Montague legend was debunked. As for the big wallops, we've seen a golf ball hit 450 yards on a hard fairway and we've seen a& guy get on the eighth green at Chevy Chase in two—590 yards from the tee—but under extraordinary conditions. Montague probably is a fine golfer, a very fine hitter of the ball, but to be certain of what our dear friend “Granny” Rice says about him we'd like to see him play in an open tourna- ment sometime . . . or else let him play his golf in peace without all the hocus-pocus and ballyhoo. Georgetown University’s varsity team will swing into action Priday at Kenwood against Washington and Lee . . . the Hoyas are in the midst of their team qualifications with Charlie Pettijohn out in front with a T4 DUNBAR NINE IS DATED Plays Vocational in Baltimore in Opening Contest. Starting Wednesday, Dunbar High School's base ball team will play an 1ll-game schedule. Coach Perry Jacobs will take his diamonders to Baltimore to play Vocational in the opener, but 8 of the 10 remaining games are scheduled here. James Shepard, Harold Jenifer, Roscoe Brown, Robert Eldridge and Brady Hoffman has shown up best among the newcomers. The schedule: April 21, Vocational at Baltimore; 28, Parker Gray; 30, Douglas at Bal- timore; May 3, Armstrong; 7, Voca- tional; 10, Cardozo; 12, Rockville; 19, Cardozo; 22, National Training COXREAL THREAT INNATIONAL OPEN Kenwood Pro, Fine Golfer Under Pressure, Already Qualified for Meet. BY W. R. McCALLUM. COX is in an easy spot when the national open golf championship sectional rounds come along on June 1 at Chevy Chase. In- stead of suffering through 36 holes of missed putts, Wiff will be at Chevy Chase when the boys start in quest of the open crown in the role of spec- tator and observer. For Wiff is auto- matically eligible for the champion- ship without qualification. He fin- ished well up in the dough in the joust at Baltusrol last year, and he won't have to go through the qualify- ing ordeal at all this time. The first 30 and ties in the national open are automatically eligible for the championship of the following year. It’s a good gesture on the part of tie United States Golf Association, for it usually includes all the guys who have a chance to win, and Wiffy's name is on that eligible list. But he will have ment at Indian Spring He failed at Richmond. Tough Test for Snead. SOME of the lads in the South were booming Sammy Snead for this year's open, among them Gene Sar- azen. But while Sam is good, you couldn’t find many of the pros who'd string along with the idea that Sam might grab the 1937 open champion- ship out of the hat while practically a novice in the tournament game. For Sam has played big-time golf only & year, and the open championship is the big tournament of the year. Sam won't play at Chevy Chase. He will qualify in the West Virginia area. ‘The open championship still is the School; 26, Armstrong; 28, Douglas at | big one of the year, and it has pres- Baltimore. WAR DECLARED ON UNSAFE TIRES! sure that no other tournament carries. News from the Front by EDDIE RICKENBACKER Ace of War Aces Everyone remembers Eddie Rickenbacker and his feats during the World War, for which he was awarded the Congressional Medal —Distinguished Service Cross— 20 YEARS AGO IN THE STAR Nl:w YORK overcame s four- run lead of the Nats to de- feat them for the second straight day, 7-5. Bert Gallia, the starting pitcher was knocked out of the box in the third inning and Doc Ayers was no better. The Nats got to Urban Shocker for four runs on two hits in the first inning, but got only two more hits the remainder of the game. ‘The inter-high base ball season will open at the old Union League Park, Fifteenth and H streets northeast, with Western meeting Eastern. Eastern, defending cham- plon, has lost most of its regular team. Either Fraser or Hunt is expected to pitch for the title- holders while Davidson will start for Western. Joe Judge is the only Washington regular batting over .300, his 5 hits in 15 trips to the plate giving him a mark of .333. Maybe S8ammy can stick in there when the chips are down, but the open championship is quite different from the Oakland open or any other tour- nament. Ask Joe Turnesa or Jimmy Thompson or Ralph Gulhahl or Rol- and Hancock. Can't Overlook Cox. ND don’t overlook Wiffy Cox him- self in this year's open. With a |little putting luck Wiffy can win. He's to qualify for the P. G. A. tourna- | not a& youngster any more, for Wift | is getting close to 40 years of age, but last year in the sectional tournament | pg ap wo > o he can go when the checks are down. He's had the experience 4t takes to stay in there and pitch under pres- sure. He'll go to Detroit fresh and ready and he can win. TREES FOR HUNT COURSE ‘WARRENTON, Va., April 19 (#).— The Virginia Gold Cup Race Associ- ation has contracted for more than 7.000 cedar trees to replenish the brush jumps on the Broadview course, ‘where the Virginia steeplechase classic will be run May 1. A large force is putting the course, which was laid out by William du Pont, jr, in shape for the six-race program. P By GtorGE £ Huser- in the House, having been moved from the Senate, where the Lonergan and Barkley pollution bills still are deadlocked in committee. Moving with surprising speed when compared to other major legislation, the House Committes of Rivers and Harbors held hearings «nd reported out a pollution bill in less than a month. The bill reported, however, happens to be the Vinson bill (H. R. 2711), duplicate of Senator Barkley’s bill, while the Pfeifer bill (H. R. 3914), which contains all the good features of the Lonergan measure, lies buried in committee. The Barkley-Vinson bill pro- vides for a 10-year-study of poilution, and provides for an appropriation of $1,000,000 an- nually for this study ‘The Lonergan bill also provides for s similar study, but in addition it gives the National Resource Board, ’]flHE pollution fight this month is which it makes a permanent establish- ment, power to set up pollution stand- ards and regulations and power to en- force these regulations. Report is Contradictory. ONE of the major contentions made by backers of the Barkley-Vinson measure is that we are not ready for pollution control because we do not know enough about the subject. They want to mark time for another 10 years with useless surveys and studies, all the while having no positive con- trol over pollution matters. It is interesting to note that in the report submitting the Vinson bill to the House, this contradictory state- ment appears: Service * * * has been making studies and investigations of this subject for 30 or more years, the records of which are in its files. Also, there is in each “The Public Health | AMS State a health agency, and the ma- jority of these agencies have a di- vision of sanitation which is more or less familier with pollution problems.” known about. the subject. The 10 per cent tax on sport- ing goods, firearms and am- munition, first imposed in 1932, likely will be renewed. ‘The present nuisance tax bill ex- pires the end of June, and although nothing definite has been decided, there is strong likelihood that the House Ways and Means Committee will introduce a bill continuing these taxes. Included with sporting goods in the long list of items on the nuisance tax rolls are such things as amusements, chewing gum and oleomargarine. Aquatic Study Planned. LSO in the legislative hoppers up on Capitol Hill are one or two other items vitally affecting sports- men. Senator Schwellenbach has in- troduced a resolution (8. Res. 117) calling for the appointment of a committee of five Senators to investi- gate all matters pertaining to the replacement, conservation and proper utilization of aquatic life, including marine and fresh water food and game fishes. Twenty thousand dol- lars is provided for this investigation This is considered more or less perfunctory legislation, and more than likely will pass with- out objection. Bomething which possibly will re- ceive @« bit of objection when it i considered is the Copeland firearms bill (S. 3). It already has passed the Senate, and now is in the House Commerce Committee. It provides for & $100 tax or license fee from manu- facturers of firearms and ammunition and a $1 fee from dealers. The primary purpose of this bill is to control criminal traffic in firearms, and is perhaps the bill which affects sportsmen the least of all those pro- | posed. Bome sort of control has been | demanded, and many sporting organ- | izations are behind this bill and would | rather see it pass. If it doesn’t, there | And yet they claim nothing is| is the possibility that something more drastic will be introduced. Nothing is planned on it in the ime mediate future. The committee which has it now has several other Very im- portant matters to consider ahead of it, and it may be a month or more before hearings are held. SCHOOLBOYS TO GOLF South Atlantic Tournament on Tap at High Point, N. C, HIGH POINT, N. C., April 19 (#)— The annual South Atlantic scholastic BOlf tournament, a one-day, 36-hole medal event, will be played here Sat- urday over the municipal course. The | tourney has been held here the last | three years. The defending champion, John Marshall High School of Richmond, Va., and four-man teams from New- port News, Va.; Chevy Chase, M Columbia, 8. C.; Durham, Winston- Salem, Raleigh, Highpoint and Bur- lington, N. C, and Tech High and Boys’ High of Atlanta are entered Officials said further entries were expected, Golden Ply Silvertowns Are Sold by Meisel Tire Co. 738 14th St. N.W. 1100 H St. N, 611 Pa. Ave. S.E. NORTHWEST | Blair Road Service Station || Blair Road & Underwood St. N.W. Buchanan Service Station 14th & Buchanan Sts. W. E. F. Clark Service S 4901 Wisconsin Ave. | Dome 0il Co. { 6925 Blair Road N.W. Engelberg’'s Battery & Service 1783 Florida Ave. N.W. C. F. Gibson 309 6th St. N.W. | Milton Kolodin Service Station Harvard St. & Georgia Ave. N.W. Parkway Motor Ci Potomac Fill 33rd & M Sts. N.W. Rogan's Service Station 1100 New Hampshire Ave. N.W. Sheridan Service Station 6312 Georgia Ave. N.W. Standard Tire & Battery Co. 935 Pennsylvania Ave. N.W. McKeever Service Station Wisconsin Ave. & River Rd. N.W. NORTHEAST —_— Bokaw Service Station New York Ave. & O St. N.E. Camp Meigs Filling Station 401 Florida Ave. N.E. Paul Honor Service Station 17th & Benning Rd. N.E. Northeast Auto Body 1341 H St. NE. Pearson Service Station 424 Rhode Island Ave. N.E. Saurs Service Station 3008 Rhode Isiand Ave. N.E. The Service Station of Washington 1201 Bladensburg Rd. N.E. Somo Tire Co. 10th & H Sts. N.E. Smith & Stevenson 5th & Eye Sts. N.E. SOUTHEAST Absher Motor Co. 1311 E St. SEE. Mattingly Battery Service 1ith & North Carolina Ave. S.E. Mazzullo Motor Co. 1337 Good Hope Rd. S.E. Harry Sollars Co. 1101 11th St. S.E. Co. MARYLAND Central Service Station Berwyn, Md. Bethesda Sunoco Service Bethesda, Md. Keller Garage Beltsville, Md. Noah Joffee Bowie, Md. Brooksille Garage Brookville, Md. C. R. Willett, jured every year when blow-outs throw cars out of control—thousands upon thousands of car " i i great unseen cause of high-speed blow-outs. Un- . Mrs. H. A. Knox. leaves me cold . . . we've been around Legion of Honor and the Croix de Guerre. Jeas this heat is resisted, rubber and fabric begin Brandywine, Md. Third team—Mrs. W. S. Masten, Mrs. C. P. Medley, Mrs. R. N. Sutton, | Mrs. J. W. Cramer, Mrs. W. B. H. Legg, Mrs William J Flather, jr.; Mrs. . D. Letts, Mrs. Douglas Tschiffely, rtha Israel and Mrs. A. W. Tucker. Alternates—Mrs. R. L. Rose, Mrs. J. J. McCarthy, Mrs. Frank R. Keefer, Kate Scully and Mrs. R. E. Zuber. | Two women's tourneys are listed this | week. Opening matches for second teams will get under way at Kenwood ‘Tuesday with the following schedule: No. 1 tee, 9:15 and 9:40 a.m., Beaver Dam vs. Army-Navy; Chevy Chase vs. Congressional; No. 10 tee, 9:15 am., Manor vs. Woodmont. The Phyllis Keeler Miller memorial tourney, to be staged by women of ‘Washington Golf and Country Club, will be played Thursdaye golf a few years and have yet to see a superman . . . they simply don't exist . . . reading a yarn about the Paul Bunyan of golf in the current Esquire leaves us shuddering and a bit ill, something like the sensation of a guy on a small boat in a Chesa- peake Bay storm, if you get what we mean. What if he does go over a 550- yard hole in two shots? . . . that isn’t anything to get excited about Si4, and all this stur about 350-yard tee shots leaves us clammy . . . bet he didn't sock '‘em that far on a watered fairway and we'll bet Jimmy Thompson and Sam Snead would have him breaking his back. As for the hokum about holing a dozen 20-foot putts in a row, it must have been down a grooved green or | SPORIS = - 4 = uUs PFAU, all-America goalie at Maryland several seasons ago, stands-an ex- cellent chance of being named freshman laciosse coach at George Washington when the sport is inaugurated there. Eddie Johnson, who has done all right this season as an outflelder, will pitch for Maryland University next year. . . . Whether he per- forms on the mound like his famous dad won't mean too much, however, since the angular lad ‘wants to be a farmer anyway. Charley Moutenot, rated the sweetest foot ball prospect ever to enroll at Catholic University, has flunked out. . . . Tommy Whelan, one of the Cards’ greatest backs, enthusiastically indorsed Charley, who starred with the freshman eleven last year, and Dutch Berg- man, Eddie La Fond and Fod Cotton also stamped him A-1 var- sity timber. Bob Boucher, former Maryland track athlete, now is peddling real estate. Unless some team turns the trick this week, when its season closes, the District Duckpin League ‘will be without a game score in the sPAR By BURTON HAWKINS 700s. . . . Which will be the first time in four years. To cure a heavy cold, Rod Thomas, Star sports writer, once swam nearly four miles in chilly water from the Pennsylvania ave- nue bridge to the middle of the Potomac, much of it against the current. . . . He then climbed in the accompanying boat and rowed back. . . . He cured the cold, but we wouldn’t recommend the treat- ment. Bobby Smith, a former Central High lad, will be a regular end at . Yale next season. . . . Bobby, who now is playing lacrosse for the Elis, was the famed Larry Kelly’s sub- stitute last year. . .. Ben McKel- way, The Star’s news editor, is a former Western High foot ball player. The Columbian Athletic League, a local sandlot base ball organiza- tion, is frantic in its appeal for publicity. . . . Following is an in- stance. . “Publication of the following release will be greatly appreciated, as over 1,000 of the league’s juveniles await its appear- ance . . . failure will disappoint hundreds.” . . . Bet they tell that to all the papers. WAR IS no stranger to me. From my “re- served seat” in the sky amid the thunder of anti-aircraft guns, I have seen our boys mowed down on shell-torn battle fields like blades of Yes, I thought that in those hectic years of strife the loss of American life had reached gra an all-time high. But I was wrong. Take a look at these peace- time figures. In 1936 nearly 38,000 American motorists were killed in accidents. Imagine! In the past 15 years nearly 450,000 Americans have lost their lives in traffic accidents —far more than the total casualties in all of America’s wars. And, would you believe it, in- cluded in this appalling total of traffic tragedies are thousands of motorists who are killed or in- owners who do not seem to realize that one great fe motoring is safe tires. To halt this menace to motoring safety, 36,000 Goodrich dealers have been mobilized. Their main objective is to remove tread-worn tires from the roads and replace them with new, safe full-treaded tires—with tires that provide mot« tection they need against today’s high speed factor in blow-outs. American motorists. I salute each and every Goodrich dealer be- cause victory for them means safer driving for EDDIE RICKENBACKER Unfortunately, there’s no sure way to tell in ad- vance when or where you may have a blow-out. But you can be sure of one thing—heat generated inside the tire by today’s higher speeds—is the blow-out! with pro- to separate. A blister forms and grows bigger and BIGGER until, sooner or later, BANG! It's a To protect you and your family, every new Goodrich Silvertown Tire is built with the Life- Saver Golden Ply. This is a layer of special rubber and full-floating cords, scientifically treated to resist internal tire heat. By resisting this heat, the Golden Ply keeps rubber and fabric from separating. It keeps heat blisters from forming. And when you prevent the blister, you prevent the high-speed blow-out! Join the “safety first” army by riding on Good- rich Silvertowns. Remember, you pay no price premium for these life-saving, super-quality tires. For safety tomorrow, put a set of Golden Ply Silvertowns on your car today. BUY NOW WHILE THE WAR DRIVE IS ON AND Ssav¢ / BOMBSHELL TOSSED INTO LOW- PRICED TIRE FIELD BY GOODRICH sting rubber with an ezira layer of spe- cial gold rubber compound to resist chafing and abra- sion. No tube gives you more safely and service for your money. Put in all your tires. 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