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k \ { | WASHINGTON IS PREPARING FO 16 Teams Will Clash for Title Walla Walla, 1923 Champ Team, Has Another} Strong Team BY JACK HOHE NDPER the direction of “ Graves, University of Washin fon athletic officials are preparing for the second a: choo! basketball tournament which Will be held in the “W" gymnasium | March 7 and 8. Sixteen of the erack teams of the state will com-| pete for tho title. Walla Walla, 1923 champion, ts early certain to be one of the 16 teams to attend the meet, as the ©) Southern five ts cleaning up all op even beaten the Idaho f Eatonville, 1923 runner-up, ts not fm Buch a favorable situation. The) Batonvitic five has been trounced by | Buckley, the latter quintet being the Tesder in the Pierce county section. Granite Falls, by virtue of a vio | tory over Everett, has assumed the Bnohomish county leadership. Fairhaven is the favorite in the ‘Whatcom county region. Yakima and Prosser are leading tn | " Yakima, with Colfax and Almira hav: | ) ing an advantage in Palouse county Winslow and Port Townsend are Teading their respective sections at the present time. Both teams will re | ‘eelve plenty of opposition, however, for the Winslow five !s scheduled to tangle with Moran school for the Kit- | sap county leadership, Port Angeles, "Is also strong. | Hoquiam seems to be the best team | tm Southwestern Washington. Lewis Clarke, Spokane, may send a/ fo the tourney. Colville and | re are other east-of-the-moun. | B possibilities. | King county, Renton and Fos tre having a merry battle for the Neither has a definite edge. IN NATIONAL ¥ three clubs in the National} Teague failed to put a pitcher ithe “20 victories” circle last sea-| shots of the Seattle Gun club. on, Two of them were the Boston! and the Philliex Oddly! the thicd was New York,| Pennant winner. Scott and Mc-! with 16 wins each, came} Giant hurlers to! the grade. | the Heydler circuit! seven pitchers who hit the! wk and over. Cincinnat! was| th with three—Luque, Donohue! Rixey. Luque turned in 21) ph Donohue 21 and Rtxey) bined, the trio was respon- Sof the Reds’ successes. Other gunners in the 20-game lass were Alexander, of the Cubs,| ; 22 victories; Morrison, Pitts-) 25; Haines, St. Louis, 21, and) Brooklyn, with 22, j king over the records of these, pitchers, it is interesting to! “that they all appeared in al-| St the same number of games| |He’s Tough on Targets | he | | | | C. J. SOLID Altho he started shooting J. Solid is fast gaining a planning for one of its bigg but @ little over a year ago, reputation as one of the crac The club, by the way, is t seasons this year. Price & Ca Siar Blatt Photographers Victorians Smothered by Mets ¥. C. . A. STANDINGS Won Lost Tied Pts Beattie 2 Vancouver . : 2. 438 Victoria o USHING the Victoria Cougars dizzy in the second pertod, when they scored five goals, the Seattle Mets smothered the visitors under an §-1 score at the Arena last night Walker and Fraser led in the early and an assist and Fraser two goals. Fraser Hurt; Out of Game Gordon Fraser, Seattle hockey }] defense man, is out of the game || with a badly strained aide, injured |] Wednesday night when he col- |] lided with Slim Halderson, Vic }] toria player. Halderson hit | Fraser with his knee in the mid riff and it is thought that he in- || fured tho Uguments of Fraser's }] hip. In ease Fraser can't play fn Victoria tomorrow night Al Fish || er will repiace him. ! | | , : jacoring, the former get 1 ; i “Anstance, Morrison, peng 9 Pm ing. the former getting a goal ‘SNOQUALMIE Rixey tolled in 42; Luque in| win 27. / Giants, and Oecschger, took the hilltop on the most 4—but didn’t pitch in ny full games as did various 1 twirlers in the league. BIG HEAVER HURT CUBS of the big disappointments of 4923 to Manager Bill Killefer, | Chicago Cubs was the poor ig of Pitcher Osborne. Banked ‘be a big winner, he had a bad the latter part of the 1922 sn, Osborne appeared to have d with a vengeance. He won Sout of 14 games and his great fn the city series with the Sox enabled the Cubs to win of the few triumphs they have scored over the Chicago Amer- a finish caused Bill Killefer e that in Osborne he had a a running mate for Alexander. fF some reason, Osborne couldn't going last year. He seemed to the stuff, but couldn't win. His for the year was eight vic- against 15 defeats. hasn't lost confidence In He is hoping that a year's filled with a lot of tough ‘will work to the benefit of his - twirler. € BUTLER TO ASSIST AS _ CREW TUTOR DOBERT BUTLER, four-year ZV Washington supervarsity cars- was «ppointed assistant crew on the recommendation of Coach Rusty Callow at a meeting of “the Washington board of control : day night. ~ dratd, sensing that the crew it nat Washington was growing Freer and larger each year, acceded oC. 's demand for an assistant rather than to have the coach f squad. Since the first of ear, the Washington crew men- jas been hampered by insuffi- ‘equipment, but the appoint- it of Butler may help to dispel ¢ of the more grevious wants. Her has heen in the coaching with Callow for the past two (#, but was unable to give much , His appointment signalizes the nt of the Washington crew, launch will be constructed im- fy for the use of the assistant | Holmes TWO GAMES n 39, and Alexander and) Riley and Fisher also scored in the} second period. Both teams made single counters in the first period. Walker made a beautiful goal in the third period when he seored af. ter a solo rush the length of tho ice, circling the net and making a fine backhanded shot. Rowe made it Jeight for Seattle by taking an assist from Arbour from the fence RESULT Seattio $, Victoria 1 AND SUMMARY Victoria Fowler Halderson . Loughlin LINecrs Beattie Harrig . 2.6.2... Fraser . Fisher . Rowe Walker Foyston Arbour Detenae.« Detenne Forward -. Forward . Forward, ++» Forward McFarlane ...,.Forward.. Riley“ «.. Forward Score by periods. Beattie . Victoria Frederickson oiea ee Mast Trihey SOK First period — Fo 11:06; 2, Victoria, son, 749. Second period—t, Seattle, Fraser, 2:58 4, Seattle, Walker, 5:26; 5, Seattle, Miley from Walker, :61; 6, Seattle, Fraser, #146. Third period—7, Settle, Fisher from Rowe, 1:29; §, Seattle, Walker, 11:67; 9 Seattle, Rows trom Arbour, 7:20 ENALTIES Firat pertod—Briden, Second period—Harris, Halderson. Third perlod—Harris, penalty shot missed by Fraser. All penaities, 2 min- utes each. Officials — Reteroe, ‘Yance and Carroll; from Harris, Ton; goal timekeeper, Judges, Wallace. ARE SLATED FOR BABES | VEE fast University of Washington freshman quintet will tangle with St, Martin's college at the campus gym Saturday night at 7:20. The dopsters are figuring the fresh- men to come out ahead, despite the | strong Opposition which is sure to be joffered by the Lacy boys. No ad- mission will be charged for the St. Martin’s game, On Monday Ellensburg normal pulls into town to avenge the defeat handed to them by the frosh a week jago. To defray expenses, Manager | Reeve Talbot is charging g nominal two-bit admission fee, The same five probably will start both games. Everett Clark, brother of Zeke Clark, will be the center, Shreeve is nearly certain to start at ‘one forward, with either Torney or vouls Tesreau at the other. Bob shaw and Jim Charteris are the pects his men to overcome both their opponents, ENDS HIS LIFE MARTINEZ, Cai, Feb, 7.—Arthur lt cost A” pricefighter $4,000 he-|quarrel with his divorced wife, shot | Burnett, e lie kicked his manager down of stairs. He booted one, might say, H, Greenwell, aged 30, following a himself thru the,head in the Moun- tain View district here yesterday, while the woman looked on, Bride | Meeking | Rowe and Riley. | wards, Coach Tubby Graves ex-{ PREP SQUAD GOING GOOD (Saseemier ree high school fs mak ing a fine’showing in the Valley jleague. To date, the mountaincers |have downed 10 straight opponents, amassing a total of 304 points to thelr opponents’ 83. They have scored on the average of 30 points a | game. | Ray Odell, forward, has been the scoring star, He has scored 133 polnts so far. and has a chance of | passing the 200 mark before the sea son is over. The Snoqualmie men defeated the Alpha Tau Omega quin- et in addition to walloping prep school fives, The Falls City and Gitson | North Bend squads are tled for Sec-| peooming ve |ond place in the Valley league. TACOMA RING | SHOW TONIGHT ‘| The weekly Tacoma ring card is lbeing staged tonight, with Young Dudley and Eddie Roberts heading Joe Waterman's card. John Bud- niek and Jack McDonnell, Seattle heavywelghts, meet in the six-round semi-windup. Bud Bercot and |"Shorty” Orr box @ four-round ex- |hibition, under amateur rules, “Cossack” Kasloy and Herb Zim. merman, heavyweights, and Bud {Fitzgerald and Stanley Willis, wel- terwelghts, make up the rest of the | Program. BIG CAGE TIFFS “ARE IN MAKING and the Leavenworth basketball teams are dickering for a home and |home series that will come pretty close to deciding the Independent cage championship of the Northwest for the season. Leaveoworth wants only one game to bo played at Lea. venworth, recording to Stan Riddle, Casey manager, but Riddle is holding |out for a home and home match, RAY FAILS IN DISTANCE RUN NEWARK, N. J., Fob. 7.—Jole Ray, America’s star middle distance runner, failed to overcome a handi- cap of 125 yards imposed upon him aid he finished fifth in the special mile race at the Newark A, C. games |last night. Mack, Knights of St. Anthony club, New York, won the [race in 4:26 4-5. TACOMA AFTER SOLON RIGHTS | Under the direction of Louis H Tacoma sportsmen are planning to make a bid for the Sac ramento Coast league franchise, which has been offered for sale, The Seattle Knights of Columbus | THE SEATTL E R STATE | i THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1924 TOURNEY “SUDS” SUTHERLAND MAY QUIT DIAMOND Gun Club Planning Big Year State Shoot in June Will Climax Local Trap- shooting Season BY EARL A, FRY ERP'S to trap shooting, the sport ‘iE that im played by alluring! Ono of the mort fascinating games the sportsmen of the American or any other continent where shooting is known Seattle we have one of the finest gun clubs, in point of grounds, equipment and good fellowship that ts to be found anywhere in the United States, ‘The Soattio Gun club bears these honors which are given by parts of the country the courtesy of the U in the boundary of the gre Right hero tr clubhe visitors from a Situated, thru &. army, with Lawton one of 6 found ho Ft, offer nights to preserve, | the best shooting T. H. Gowman, popular presiding officer of the Beattie Gun club is al buay man these days laying plans that will unfold Into one of the moat |active seasons the local gunners have experienced A titular tournament, monthly registered tour: | naments, possible Jeague pro and a monster opening season # all come within the program that ts being outlined by the executive off|; | cers of the club. | | STATE EVE IN JUNE | The Seattle Gun club will be |to the shooters of the state on June 113, 14 and 16, when they stage tho lannual Washington state trapshoot ing champions! ‘The local gunners plan to make this one of the largeat events of its kind ever pulled off in the state. Over $1,000 in added money prizes will be offered by the Seattle club, Five hundred and firty targets will constitute the three-day program In the event of the formation of | the Northwest league again this yea club will become a mem one of the regular Besides thin a reg | ever atate hosts nd programs re one-day tournament will b atured by the club each month. Preaident Gowman and Secretary Barnes now working on the opening season 1 be held early tn| anned to make this/ a shoot that will be long talked of} by the local and Northwest clay bird Jartiste, offering a long list of prizes land possibly making samo a regis tered event SHOOTERS / ENCOURAGED 4 | Another specialty this season will] | be an endeavor to interest the fair |sex in the shooting game. Other lclubs of the Northwest have pro- |duced some very fine shots among |the lady gunners and Seattle should |be no exception. New shooters will/ | always find a welcome at the Seattle} jclub and several special programs are | being planned for their special con | lsideration during the season. | Starting with the opening season [shoot in March the members will [start to qualify for a place on the stman intercity trophy event be tween Tacoma and Beattle ltrophy cup is now in the possession of the Tacoma club and the Seattle |boys are out for blood this year, lelaiming they will bring back the cup or throw their guns away, j Members and visitors to the club-| house at the time of the opening sea jon shoot will find a completely ren- | Jovated and repainted plant, special lattention being made in preparing | |the grounds for the big state shoot. | [The weekly practice shoots consist | of 60 targets, which are thrown for the shooters at the price of 2 cents; each. Shells of all makes are of-| | fered for sala on the grounds, } j erest in the shooting game is/ ry keen, according to the | number of inquiries relative to the trapshooting game as received by | Piper & Taft. Sportsmen are finding | that the practive offered by the clay pigeon shooting helps them a great | deal in the field HALL QUINTET | TRIMS FROSH | Defeating the University of Wash-| fington frosh team, 42 to 95, at the Y. M. C. A. last night, the Hall} Business college five climbed into a| tie for second place in Division 1. | of the city cage league. te L the are plan | | | KID WILLIAMS WIN | PROVIDENCE, R. L., Feb. 7.~Kid Williams, former bantam champion, won a 10-round decision from Young Montreal, local bantam. TORONTO, Ont., Feb. Mixed | |bouts were forbidden in Ontario by | a new ruling of the Provincial boxing commission DEMPSEY LIKES STRIBLING Jack Dempsey saw Young Strib. ling, Macon, school boy, in ac | tion in Florida and commented favor- abiy on the Southerner’s style, “A little green yet,"* remarked the cham- | pion, “but he seems to have the stuff and in time may come to the top.” || “No, No!” Says Jack Chesbro (OMES Jack Chesbro, back from antiquity, to deny the |] reaponsibility of wild-pitching the |] Yankees out of a championship back in 1904. That was the year the Yankees lost the flag by one game, and that game was lost by || Chesbro to the Red Sox in the eighth inning, when one of his spitbalis landed against the grand stand, “They sald it wes a wild piteh that day," remarked Chesbro, re- calling the Incident, “but 1 think Kloinow should have caught it.” OUR BOARDING HOUSE BY AHERN | ARNER AND ‘SiR RO! LAND’ MEET WITH A SLIGHT CLA Lincoln I 8 Threat for Roosevelt A bam fague-leading Ftoosevelt bas ketball team faces a tough bat le tomorrow, when Lincoln invades the Teddy gym. The Rallsplitters, strengthened by the addition of E4 die Swartz, a h \, will present a ble thr The Green Lakers gave the 4 tough battle In the opening game of the season, losing out, £3 to 20. Friday's games start the second half of the high school season. The other games of the day follow: Queen Anne, at Garfield. West Seattle, at Broadway. Franklin, at Ballard Diamond Dust RST DIVISION mite manager * 2 {he wouldn't speak to him, has been | oO Bt. te} haps doen not mean so much that} SLUGGER FOR ATHLETICS x Bishop, secured from Halt dn another slugger! to the Athieticn, Bishop, with 22 home runs, tied Webb of Iuffato for circuit «wat honors. LEFT WANDERS LEAD The International league batting aver- agen reveai the fact that the firet four hitters were left handere. The first 10 leaders were evenly divided VANCE STARTS soUTH “Darty”’ Vanos, strikeout king of the National league, is the first ball player to start South. The Brooklyn twirler te @n route to Florida in } Geatination '¢ Clearwat Dodgers will t tles of touring In wetting an earl WALKER REAL STAR Manager Art Fletcher of the Philites roxards Outfielder Curt Walker, secured from the Giants, as a better mah than any New York fielder with the exception of Young. WORRIED ABOUT NIGNEY Manager Cobb of Detroit in worried over reports from Texas that Shortstop Rigney ts having bip trouble that may handicap his play, possibly keep him out of the game for some time, NATIONALS LACK SOUTHPAWS Clarke Griffith bemoans the lack of southpawa on his Washington club, Tho veteran Goorge Mogridge Is the only de pendadle, and he can only stand @ iim- ited amount of work WILL NOT TRY PITCHING George Sinlor ridicules the idea that he it impossible for him to perform at first, he is thru with the playing end of the & GRANSTROM IS SKI WINNER Allen Granstrom, a member of the Rainier Natior +1 Park Ski club who Is now partiolpating in British Columbia ski tournaments, won first honors at Nakusp on February 1 in the class A jumping for stand. ing lung jump. He defeated Hill. strom, the Swedish champion, and Holten, of Revelstoke, another crack jumper, according to a letter ro- ceived by O, A, Kjos, president of the Rainier National Park club. Granstrom entered as the represent+ ative of the Rainier club and is en. gaged in soliciting entries for the club’s annual tournament on Mount Rainier next July 3 and 4. SCHROEDER TO QUIT BASEBALL? “Lofty” Schroeder, a 40-80 south paw with the Portland Benvers last year, is thinking of quitting the game, according to reports from the Rose City, SMOKE A“TURK Y'KiloW NAS! Tyga ) Tacoma May Try Judge System of Rendering Fight Decisions Tacoma comm teaior moters may follow the lead of Portland and Seattle ring in using the judge system of deciding fights, Both Seattle and Portland use two judges and a referee in giving decisions. For years Tacoma han used referee verdicts entire! but some of the recent calls have been very unpopular and the Tacoma promoters figure that the o tingle mao. Jona of three men may satisfy the fang better than that, of a Harold Bird, Paul Shock and Leo Hartnett do most of the referecing in the City of Destiny Collins and Hornsby | Not Likely to Chang BY HENRY L. FARRELL EW YORK, Feb. 7—-With the} Manager and the Yanks, fearing that) time approaching for departure| Deacon Scott might collapse, wanted | lor the ancient soupbones to the boll- | ing places of the South, it seema cer. The Senators wanted him for a |a reliable second baseman so that | Ward might be shifted over to short- j tain Eddie Collins and Rogers Horns. | top. by | next peason. ‘The insistence of the management /an active player, it was thought here | Louls Cardinals that the | that the Yanks might have desired | jot the st, champion batter of the National will not decorate new scenery Figuring that Collins has not |many years more ahead of him as his services in case Miller Huggins EB Cc. QUIGLEY | 44+ Kans, is the Redskins May Lose Pitcher Veteran Heaver Is Man- aging Team in Califor- nia Sticks; May Quit DS" BUTHERL, from Portland in the Harry x trade, may not report to s thinking of quitting game, Hoe is managing team at Ontario, Cal., wherever in, and has @ good Job lined up ar if he wants it, Sutherland t# an effective pitcher when he's right, and ff he decides to quit it will be a bad blow to the pitching department, which at its best right now. Sutherland's action may be « hold- out racket, and chances are that he will be in the fold when the Indian battery men report at Elsinore, Cal, March 2. QUIGLEY IS BUSY DOING OFFICIATING of St. Mary's, only person in ythe world making a profession of | officiating in three major sports. 1 Quig who refereed the 1923 | Harvard-Yale football game, is one lof the few professionals ever called | upon to officiate in college contests. | In addition to serving as referee and umpire of ‘mportant football |games each season during the last Quigley has worked the last |several seasons as an umpire for | the National league and during win- ite r months has officiated in basket- ball games thruout the country. Quigley has signed up to offi in basketball games every night this season, from January 4 to March with the exception of three when he will be on the road between games. Quigley, in addition to officiating in the three sports, finds time te™\/ act as chairman of the faculty ath- letic advisory committee of St. Mary lege in his home town in is. He also is a.golf enthu- iast, recently winning a tournament at a meeting of college coaches in Topeka, Kans. \NET STAR IN GOLF FINALS LOS ANGELES, Feb. 7.—Semt finals in the midwinter invitationa) | golf tournament for women at the | Lon Angeles Country club today will see Miss Mary K. Browne, former national tennis champion, and Mrs. H. D, Hutchins in action. Miss Doreen Kavanagh and Miss | Margaret Cameron will clash in the other contest of the semi-finals play. D, obtained te, ) tribe's iy wobt tecad |HUSKIES PLAY TO TIE SCORE VANCOUVER, B. C., Feb. Teme league would have to play another| should decide that he had enough! washington and British Columbia‘ | season with Branch Rickey, even if | made good | Hornsby's place in the St. Louls |uneup for at least another year per. the Cardinals were not willing to [part with him as that they could not get what they wanted for him; which may amount to the same thing. Eddie Collins was sought by both }the Washington Senators and the |New York Yanks, Six Students Make Up Team Lamont, Wash., high school has 15 students, Six of them aro boys, Lamont has won 11 straight games and expects to be one of the 16 lucky quintets to attend the || Washington Interscholastic bas- ketball tourney to be held at the University of Washington March || 7 and 8. Manager Tubby Graves, |] hearing of the accomplishments boasted by Lamont, exclaimed: || “They take the prize. Six boys || and they have a winning basket- ball team. Some school!” | ae PO RET | |FROSH BEATEN BY HALL FIVE The University of Washington |freshmen went down to a 42 to 35 [defeat at the hands of the Hall's | School of Commerce five in the City league last night. As a result of the story, Hall's goes into a tie with the Lakesides for second place in the Division II. race. Ralph Smith, Leon Nicholson and Jimmy Bryan played great games for the winners, while Shreeve, Clark and Charteria played best for the trosh, DUNDEE AND Mike Dundee and Lakey Morrow, lightweights, are headlining — tho Portland ring show in a 10-round scrap tomorrow night. Dundee comes West with quite a rep. He's from Chicago, LEONARD IN LOS ANGELES Benny Leonard, lightweight cham. pion, is now in Los Angeles, doing the closng weeks of his vaudeville tour in the Angel city. Leonard showed his act for three weeks in San Francisco. Senator Walker js wrong when he says prizefighting needs someone to supervise it. Priaefighting needs someone to sterilize It MORROW BOX! glory and money to retire. The White Sox, of course, | not willing to give Collins a % | when Washington asked for him the Sox wanted Buck Harris in return The Yanks found also that to get | Collins they would have to part with Ward and, like the Senators, they re- fused to deal. Clarke Griffith probably will have to manage the Washington club next season himself. But the smart bugs say he has been doing that right along. (GENE CLINE WILL MEET BOB HARPER IG CLINE, Oakland welter- weight, will be Bobby Harper's rival Tuesday evening at the Crystal Pool. The two classy boxers will meet in the six-round main event of Nate Druxman’s boxing show. Cline scored a victory over Travie Davis, the Everett veteran, last Tues- | day, and impressed the fans as being a clever boxer. Cline will probably resort to other ring tactics in the fight with Harper than he did with Davis. The Oaklander beat Davis in the clinches every time, but he won't find things so easy at close range with “Ruby Robert.” Druxman states that he has Fred- die Mack, the slugging lightweight, signed for the sem!-windup. Mack's rival hasn’t been named yet. KELLY LOSES TO VIC FOLEY OAKLAND, Feb. 7.—Jimmy De- were Jack Reaves, San Francisco, went four rounds to a draw last night. the semi-windup Vie Foley, Canadian bantam, won from Eddie Kelly, of San Francisco, Frankie Monroe, Los Angeles featherweight, won the call over Frankie McCann, MANUSCH HUGS THE PLATE Outfielder Manusch, of the Ty- gers, who, Ty Cobb predicts, will be a star in a couple of years, doesn’t pull an inch at the plate, For that reason he is often hit by pitched balls that other batsmen would avold. The veteron Kid Elberfeld had such a stance and was much hit. In a great many cases the umpire wouldn't permit him to go down, claiming he failed to try to avoid the pitch, “BO” WON'T RETURN SHREVEPORT, La, Feb, 7.—"Bo’ MeMillan, football conch at Centen- ary college, will not return to Centre college as successor to Charley Moran because he could not agree to “certain conditions,” he said, , laney, St. Paul middleweight, and! Inj | varsities played to a two-all tie in* the intercollegiate hockey tilt at the arena last night. An overtime period |failed to change the result, Wash- jington played a brilliant defense | game, LYNX WINNERS | OF CAGE TITLE The Lynx, a new organization, has cinched the ‘city basketball championship of the Tacoma City league. The Scobey Pirates have been leaders for several seasons in this loop: TED THYE TO DEFEND TITLE PORTLAND, -Keb. .7.—Tea Thye, holder of the world’s: light-heavy- | weight wrestling title, will defend it here tonight against Frank Saxon, Canadian title holder. SCOTT ISN’T WORRYING Everett Scott, Yankee shortstop. who holds all endurance records for consecutive play, is confident that he will go thru the coming season without missing a game. Scott doesn't figure that any of the Yankee | reas are going to make trouble for | him, Golf Is Game That Changes Golf is a game of changing thoughts and shifting theories, Once you were supposed to put all the power into a shot with your left hand. Today it is the right which provides the |} main force. They used to tell you the club head preceded the hands by a matter of inches in driv- ing from the tee. . Slow motion pictures show that the hands actually precede the club head, In days gone by the run-up | approach was considered the only practical way to get close to the pin. Then came the bunkers and multitudinous traps. Now if you can't play a high pitch approach to the green you are all put of luck. What next? ONE LOANED ON DIAMONDS American Jewelry Co.