Evening Star Newspaper, October 29, 1937, Page 53

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SPORTS. STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1937. SPORTS, THE Hard Work in Order if Montague Is to Realize on Links Assets SUCCESSDEPENDS 5, STRAIGHT OF FOTBALL EFORM ONPHYSEALTRM HELDBOONTOPIT N — = = 9 e Profitable Game Bookings NCLE BILL ULLMAN is back in town, somewhat disconsolate and g Fares in Tournament downcast about his experience at Pine Valley. Uncle Bill, as you Threatened by Old Plan, probably have read, is the originator of the “animal game,” which It Is Declared. P]ay Intrigues. | they play at Congressional and a few isolated spots throughout the {land, where the story of Ullman’s putting wizardry hasn't yet spread. But By GRANTLAND RICE. jeven though Uncle Bill has come back a sadder and wiser man from his By FRANCIS J. POWERS, EW YORK. Oct. 20.—What|Pine Valley junket, he learned something. Even a gent so bright can learn HICAGO, Oct. 29— place will John Montague, the of Pittsburgh's cl de-emphasis something from golf mystery golfer, t now that EVENING Sports Mirror By the Associated Press. Today a yeer ago—Dan Bulger, favorite, won ninety-seventh running of Cambridgeshire by 2 lengths over Daytona. Three years ago—Gene Mako, University of Southern California, ranked No. 1 on 1934 intercollegiate tennis list. Five years ago—Pittsburgh de- feated Notre Dame, 12-0; Brown | downed Harvard, 14-0, and Mich- igan topped Princeton, 14-7, in football. |BERGMAN FOCUSES Duke, California,’Bama, Pitt, Auburn aqul Colorado Safest Bets in Big-Time Grid Games ITTSBURGH-CARNEGIE TECH, ler Wednesday. . . . Miller’s EW YORK, Oct. 29—Toughest|* at Pittsburgh—Pitt has started outlook hardly is rosy, since games to pick: Yale-Dart-|rolling again with one of the nmnx}}ammy Alperstein, lightweight, is the | {“0"lh~DF:"fU(m\l,‘1l-lN°"“' C“I;’l,' | teams of the country. Pittsburgh. only member of last year's undefeated | ina, etroit-Villanova, i- | — 3 re; p a onsk nois-Michigan, Holy Cross-Temple,| California-U. C. L. A., at Los An-|gouert Confereiice champlonship Baylor-T. C. U. geles—Once again we get word from | "o " onn ol football banquet Feature battle—Yale and Dart-|the West Coast that California is two | itk b N'“m Naoverber 18 ;“ thes mouth, both unbeaten and untied touchdowns better than any team in | .o /" oo oo The Lincoln Uncertainties due to injuries—Co- | the country. No one is that good. But | oo oo foooy s s e S Jumibia;Cornell; ColgatesN, V. U | California " is good enough. Plenty. |, V" I celmae o St big-time shots—Duke, Ala- | California. S b Sl 5 By BURTON HAWKINS ARYLAND'S boxing squad will report to Coach Heinie Mil- . | By GRANTLAND RICE. How Former Links Mystery | ley series Bill went up to Pine Valley full of determination to lick the golf course. he is in a position to prove his | He'd played it before and had taker thought, with all the experience of place am rs of battling Jack McCarron and The seve! moved by n v » can afford to ght and n;nwi Coopers, | ens, Hagens, | 1l be an in-| | athletic fame his golf ability t Hollywood to Elizabethtown be by g the future that he any financial way, guarantee. him from N.Y It will il rises or after the opening to get back in t and rebuild th take ove undoubted 2 becomes much met game’s will lose tige as a pi John day tion to was on a ra Los Ar es, one of t golf v Armour | r one Y& courses ved with M en and Ba anaemic comed I had h ieved about heard. But t 33 out and 3. hole—460 yar 6 iron. He | yards—uphill niblick. I what I a 6 rse of t { ved v Up until la had seen him o played only cz golf game suffered- never chipping his putting—quite ual in ete who is &s strong as anyone I ever have know! But his long game had lost 30 or 40 | s long iron play k ck of tim w his am still is a r his game held u at that time he was far from being i top physical form, being 26 pounds | overweight. Some Golf Stars’ Opinions. Here are some opinions concerning Montague's golfing ability George Von EIm—"The greates golfer I ever saw. I've played with him four years. I played a montk with him over different courses and never beat him a game. As I recall it, his highest score was 69. And he | was down around 65 or 66 more than once. At his best he could win championship.” Walter Hagen—"I never saw him | play—but he can make it any amount for 36 or 72 holes and it will be all right with me.” Paul Runyan—“I would be very glad to meet Montague and let him name his own terms—anywhere or any time.” Charley of golf w his best ! Lacey—"“I've played a lot th Montague. I'd say at he could beat any pro or amateur I ever saw six times out of 10 starts. Whether he can get back to his best depends on Montague. He can't loaf and do it. Not against this bunch.” Leo Diegel—"I don't know Montague would do in an open the first pro to play with him, four or five years I've played with him since. last time I played I shot a 68 and broke even. I still class Hagen, Armour and Mon- tague as the best money players I ever saw. In an open—I don't know. I doubt that he could win one. Mac Smith hasn't in 27 years ere’s | as-great a golfer as I ever (Copsright. 1937, by the N Newspaper what I was about 80 HOWARD AND MINER BATTLE FOR TITLE City Honors for Colored Grid Teams at Stake Tomorrow in Bison Stadium. OWARD UNIVERSITY'S Bisons and the Miner Teachers will meet tomorrow in Howard Stadium in a football game that will decide the col- ored collegiate championship of the city. Only once have the two schools met in a scheduled season encounter. That was in 1935 when the Bisons won, 6-0, after defeating the Cheyney Teachers, 12-6, the same afternoon. Howard will have a decided weight advantage in its forward wall. Both teams have light and fast backfields. Each has scored a hard-earned victory of the Cheyney Teacher: BILL WERBER Philadelphia Athletics Insurance Counselor Phone National 0978 Most people count their Life In- surance by thousands. It should be analyzed in terms of monthly income. The true need of insurance is not to rst | e and a provide large sums of money, but to establish a Life Income. Bill Hughes behind him that he could | So he landed in Philadel- all to conquer Pine Valley, a welcoming committee met him quantities of currency that 110. Bill took them > mean) and he got of the evening an One woman by the ley to o five by U dn't make 115. You've seen a grab a plug—sometimes. Tl Bill grabbed one, ust 110, set and wav I n't bus bets, way ady, wife s man and better take it u libility if e said and you can have it Which caused Uncle Bill some pain, if he is capable of pain after playing “animals.” VYELL, to make a long longer, U Willie st on the 18th hind him 4 affair, Ita friend as he So Bil ly shanked o shanked an reached the e 5, still in pot where & pitch and a good putt he migh his snappy 110 and liked it But he | 110. But Bill always was obliging. He ut his next shot in the water and his and on his 9th stroke he over- ed the green. He chipped back | and got down in 2 putts for an even 12, which gave him exactly 116 strokes for the round. You could, if you'd been in the neighborhood of Pine Val- ley, have heard him s about In fact, he is talkin But mayt ud better not up. forgiving soul |P ne bring it il is under some cix bt tlantic Association of will gather Monday at the Belle Haven Country Club of Alex- andria for ir monthly golf tourna- ment and dinner The Greenkeeper YONGRESSIONALCOUNTRY CLUB i 1 hon team, winners land State team matches. 1d at the club the er 7. Team mem- land MacKen: S h, Gene Pi Dettweiler, r Peacock® Claude A R Parker Dr. H. L ttman, Shea dwin, Rog Frank Go Rip- Walter McCallum, | course manager s in the market to win a turkey raski tart- to wind up two weeks 1, Rock Creek P a similar tourney the Rock played aft CARNERA IS BANKRUPT. v 29 (/P)—Primo C: heavyweight boxir liabilities it has b receiv vlaced his w no nced by a b a meeting of his ¢ pt reditors — it. ON FOUR RESERVES ‘Guyon. Bunsa, Pirro and Osinski | Get Opportunity to Start Against Wildcats. JROM now until time to meet the | Bobcats of West Virginia Wes-| cyan on November 6, Coach Dutch | eman of Catholic University will be focusing a large part of his atten- | | tion on four reserves, Joe Guyon, | back; Joe Bunsa, end: Carmon Pirro, | tackle, and Pete Osinski, a center. | The fleet Bunsa, having acquitted himself well against St. Louis last | week, is scheduled to alternate with Al | Calabrese on the left flank | Guyon, a fast-improving back, is making the first-stringers hustle to| keep their jobs and Pirro, who was in- active against St. Louis because of an injured leg, will figure prominen L OF GRIDMEN | | PENN FUL Throng of 250 Divided Into Four Squads at University. PHILADELPHIA (#) sity of Pennsylvania hasn football team in the East, | probably has more football on hand. 250 divided i In addition there are freshman, teams. Best squad | -pound and ‘B’ to | HAPES CAN CARRY MAIL | ‘ UNIVERSITY, Miss Hapes, Mississippi bac 90 yards or more five times in his ca As good an ex ability on these the fact that he was ca the 100-yard dash la | team | than Auburn, California, Pittsburgh, Colorado. Detroit has brilliant Farkas, one of the unbeaten teams, Yale Given Slight Edge. | back in Andy Yale-Dartmouth at New Haven— pest. Villanova has more all-around Two fine offensive backfields equipped | strength. Just a faint nod to Villa- with running, blocking, passing and |nova. Little choice kicking. Hutchinson may be ano Villanova-Detroit, at Detroit—Two | S necessar: | thers hoped for furtner gr lations with the Western Conference and Notre Dame. Off-record opinion in the Big Ten | was that its teams could not meet Pittsburgh on even terms. The Pan- | thers’ permanent training camp, ea | Reports that the 26,000 spectators | who viewed the George Washington- | Alabama game comprised the Iz | crowd ever to witness a here were 140,000 persons saw rines trim the football tilt erroneous. . . . More than the Quantico Ma- 3d Corps Army champs Ithaca—An Peck is if George a toss-up. Columbia-Cornell edge for Cornell ready. Otherwise Grange—Clint Frank half a foot team. Yale has slightly better lin more exper. A delicate shade the blue, where either team can win | Holy Cross-Temple, at Worcester— | Both better aten. the ceton— a better unby chance, Harvard-Princeton Holy Cross Harvard is about du: than last fall's, which tied a better Princeton team, 14-14. Harvard much better than results have shown. A nod to Harvard. | -Pennsylvania, at Phila a | also better than it has shown. tic. Navy has it. | ro at the fullback at 50 Minnesota-Notre D: olis—Minnesota, altho Nebrask m one of try. Not shows, but and mater the vote, Michigan, Champaign— | too hot far. Zuppke likes to beat Michigan. Zupp is at his | best on such d Tllinois » at Minneap- beaten mi of the cot S, han scorir Gor Minnesota gets Tennessee Is Favored. ()HIO STATE is cago, Mi homa ¢ afe over Jower picked over C ouri over Towa State Kansas State, Michi- | Kansas. Colorado and look safe, especiall er Close Win for Vandy. JANDERBILT-GEORGIA TECH at Atlanta—On form Vand il all, but the game is much harder recent ¢ Tech was " |U Colora as Tennessee-Georgia, at Knox A hard ga with Tennessee favor nj off form s fine play tuff.” Vanderbil call day but is capa- | | S. M. U. is named over Texas, Ala- and Colgate over o re- Waco—A ha Baylor has been star team a fine team. rd to take, bt 1 seori toward P 1 n State, at State Col- cuse in a hard game ansas, at Fay- in one of the and M.-A e—Texas Aggies ames of the d: 117, by spaper Alli Griffith | start and selected personnel were lieved to give them | conference team coul Stadium in 1923 local papers quoted the more than 40,000, th said 45,000, Ci Unive | troit there and s | vear at eq | fo associations have been cor Minne: home-and-home Ter State, team. olic a a onsir serie th Nort start next Wildcats’ rdinal sopt ready for ac- | . His injured knee has ace Rocco Pi The Gon- zaga-St. John's football game Novem ber 20, most feud in this sector, probably played in Brookland Stadium the lesota were ex- tractions : cared to re- recent series prep school will be Grantland scribe, once e, the ed sho an ex- xlee of George led to appe heons of the Washil GREENLEAF’'S CUE KEEN PHILADELPHIA, h Greer Oct New “PUNCH BOWL"” TO GO. world poc | well as round-robi The Ne ate Lenwood e pri made a Mosconi Joe Die Greatest Product Ever Offered the Motoring Public under the Name of TYDOL! 4 STAR PERFORMANCE AT NO EXTRA COST Y HIGHER ANTI-KNOCK . .. Ontheroad where itis needed most. Highest performance ever made in Tydol Gasoline, FASTER STARTING... Tydol dealers everywhere proclaim it the fastest starting-Tydol they’ve ever sold. Instan where Easier waste. A PRODUCT OF TIDE WATER ASSOCIATED OIL AFFORD T0 MISS... GREATER POWER o . 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