^ptppgraqpamuKw^w?*"^ vaet v • BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE; NEW.YORK, SUNDAY, JANUARY 1, 1933 C 3

<*> • • "• -'••...•_ ...I..I..— Ill .1... -Mil..,! •• II ., • -.•• I •• - ,MjpM.».—N....I——.I.. ,,.•—.• .,.—,—•——^.— — I - • • -.— —•—• ,, I ••,.,„•,-• • , I. Ill •••••.••• I I • . .,-•-„,, -, — -,,,....,, • <—••.— ••.•———• . .-I.." Famous Finn May Give Fresh Stimulus to Running in America • '-?—— . . — —— ± • -<> • • r—• ' ; ; — • : : . ""J— --.;- S- i

• * • Sweetser Gives Palm Will Inaugurate Indoor Track Season in K.; C. Games Nurmi Would Lend Sum «iS Color to the Next To Garden City 18th _^JU. S. Track Season

By RALPH TROST By FRANK REM. ASKED Jess Sweetser which golf hole he preferred. Big With the talk that Paavo.Nurmi may be reinstatedA1,^ an Jess smiled. Then he-answered, "The finishing hole at amateur and be permitted to visit this country with Iso^ollo I the Garden City Golf Club." and Lehtinerr, Finnish Olympic winners, the forthcoming For some reason that sounded a bit strange? Not that Arack and field season may be a bit livelier and more excit­ Garden City's 18th isn't a fine hole. It was because I knew ing than those that usually follow the international garnes. that Jess rarely played it. And also because Jess had smiled. All available Olympic titleholders will be,at a premium "Yes, sir," Jess said, as he grinned some more and pushed it the indoo;; meets, where the mere listing of a Los Angeles his chair away from his desk, "that's a great finishing hole. winner is expected to fill the gallery spots. But it will take, Particularly for the Sweetsers. It has often finished us— more than the mere appearance of an Olympian to keep the that is, dad and me. . * gallery boy's pleased, as they will shout themselves horse only ther is real competition o"n "In the last 17 years father-and I SWEETSER'S FINISH ! s'— — have played in 15 Father and Son i • bugs. This year the boys, who wer« does hold Golf Association championships at ' failures before or at Los Angeles, the track I will try to prove that they had an Old Garden City. And U times that ! off day when their particular event hole had us stumbling. A great hole. ' was held. The .season will also wit­ No doubt about it. ness the accomplishments of thcvs« "It has provided some fine golf lads who arrived Just a year too shots. But' it has given better late, i stories. My father, like lots of other fathers, is particularly eager GENE VEN'/KE ~to stand up on thalTT8ttr~te~e—at FLOP ON CINDERS Garden City and let fly a pin- For Instance, Gene Venzke will splitting iron that will cover the \ . make another effort to convince th# flag from tee to green and bring non-believers that he was not him­ up right-near the hole. He has had self when he was trying to qualify 15 chances in as many champion­ In the 1.500 meters. Had Venzke ships. He has, in 15 different been right, some say, they would years, decided on the club he thinks still be talking about his record- best suited for play on cth.a.t hole breaking running at the Olympics, and gone into retirement, so to But the fact remains that the fel­ speak, so that he might practice | low, who bounded over the Garden . play .with the selected- club in the i boards to smash the 1,500 mark to hope that at last he would execute smithereens, was 'just another fail­ the-shot he has-dreamed about .for, v ure when it came to doing his stuff /years; -• - - ,, f on the cinders. • • fo-j^Awdi^bhcn itfth OP »-la '"Oca Eg with a; 154- YOS competition at an unbelievably low j holder; jra Singer, prominent sprinter, above, left to .right. Joe McCluskey, Olympic ^iic^ift3h4er-- Ifr-6o-happeriecU^thatJ, ,Q^/?—3 ^TTfrniCT^Vhire^^li^^PTrnown, Duncan-; on the day of the championship the 'Gumes—polnt-wlnrrerT-ahd-WtHtanv-N^wlc-irk-,- high^irr>perv4ewer--«left to rightf-wi 1l- be .seen- ^McNaughton™-'of "Canada-won—th wind was at our backs and the shot in "action. championship. AfCer"all"HIFbril- ™ Check With Diagram! llant performances, Squttz certainly on this 150-yard hole hardly more owes a lot to his public. than a mashie But, remember, my , the New York A. O. father had practiced with a mld- hurdler, who flew over trie sticks to Lift Low Golf Cost Level of 1932 last Winter: Emmett Toppinq, the mashle, a No. 3 iron, and that was Casey's _ ___ the club he used. And, as usual, I Loyola sprinter. aTTd a host of local stars have old accounts to settle played our second shot from some­ with the fans. *»• where off the green. Lid on Indoor • Your track fan will have new "For two months prior to each records and distances to learn, as Father and Son ""championship we N future meets will be conducted In talk and dad practices with a se­ Belied Name [Even Lesley Cup Team metric distances. . The Olympics lected iron. Then comes the cham­ Track Season " f^°\ "j™"™' helped toward the ready conversion pionship and for about two months Matches Are to Be De­ of meters into yards, and by ths afterward dad no longer practices Slated for the East Nincompoop. Race Iforse time the Winter season is over, It the shot and I do all the talking. McCluskey Will Meet cided Up in Montreal will be an easy matter for every How I enjoy it! Schedule Saved, His Own Life one. "Some 15 times have we played in Barker' in Feature— By RALPH TROST Ryder Cup play Is set for South- —o— Nincompoop, the . English race this tournapient. Twice we won the Golf, in 1933, stares at an aston­ port, England, and the Lesley Cup B1IX CARK IS »'• title. But only once did we score a 500 Entries Filed horse, is no simpleton! He is a event for Montrea ishingly long series of that word seven - year - old thoroughbred STILE AT PENN par 3 and even then the second shot Those, I should "say, are the sor­ known to all and sundry as "No." steeplechaser, owned by Lord Port- .was not a putt. Our" record is pure rows of '33. But then there are six golf rules means so much. Too few The come-backs of the failures) By George Currie Perhaps there should be an ex­ man, and his intelligence has saved as the driven snow. The green is joys, starting with the well-known know "the complete rules anyway. will not be the only objects of inter- The Columbus Council K. of C. his life. virgin. No Sweetser shot in all 15 clamation point following it but fact that the golf ball legislated However, it ;hould be cheerful est this year. .-lhe stand* He was seriously injured at Hurst championships has hit. that rolling next Saturday night in the IG.6th we'll let that pass. Let's ggt down into being in '32 proved highly sat­ news that the a.verage player's out runner of the Olympics, is an Park races recently while contesting green and stuck. A finishing hole? Regiment Armory will pull aside to the serious biwiness^oTThinking isfactory and is here .to stay. Re­ knowledge of the rules will not be undergraduate. at Penn, and It is the Laleham Steeplechase and or­ highly probable that he still has a. I'll say it is. the curtain to open up the 1933 of aJl the things we'll do without: member the fears of this time last lessened. No major tournament in the ders were given for him to be de­ year when we couldn't make up our No new courses! That remark is few -more records in-his marvelous "But, aside from all this, this 18th indoor track season with a list of stroyed. Is a great hole, a testing, beautiful, East. collective minds about the new ball? for local consumption. Just what legs. Leo Sexton, anothei mighty events which ought to he^p the rail- "Come along. I cannot stay to see Olympian, who can toss the shot marvelously placed one-shotter. It's No new golf bal If you don't, never mind, the ba will happen in other sections of the birds forget the depression. the old fellow shot," said Geoffrey was O. K. • ^ country, no one knows. The like a pea, seem certain to Improve long enough to provide a fair, strong No international competitions on Pease, his trainer, to a friend, and One of the features will bring chances are that the Metropolitan ' upon his world's record. shot. It has the hazard of water. our soil. turned to walk away. In many ways '32 was harsh. But Joe McCluskey. the gangling boy District will see no new layouts If , the pnly double It js ideally and severely bunkered. N6 increase in expenses. It seemed as if the horse under­ at least it did see the paring of ex­ That sand pit behind is cruel. . I've with the smile that won't come off No' greater taxes.. penses. It saw the' frills and fur­ built in '33 mot even by the city of Trojans Test winner'at Las Angeles, and Ralph and Fordham's national cross-coun­ stood, for he hobbled along after New YorkK a circumstance that Metcalfe, the Marquette Express, been in it. So has my father. The No new courses. them as if appealing for aid. When belows Vanquished and golf, as a green demands deft putting. And try champion, aganst George Bark­ No radical changes in golf club game, regain the attention it war­ will make it simpler for the already who finished second both times to Pease saw this he, decided to give Tolan, can be rematched, perhaps its position, almost beneath the er of N. Y. U., the lntercollegate design. rants. Unless I'm sadly mistaken, existing golf courses to survive. -. Nincompoop another chance of life we shall have the annual "race of clubhouse windows, gives it every­ title holder, In the 5,000 meter spe­ No new rules. golf costs hit a new low In '32, and Taken by and large, '33 shapes up Rose Bowl for and the gelding was taken back to the. century.". *- thing that a club should ask foj. cial. Dr. Joseph A. Viverito, chair­ There are probably a few things the chances are they'll stay low in pretty well. The expenses of those his training quarters at Kineton, It does not take much sooth­ From the big, broad windows on­ man of the games committee, has] we are not going to have which '33. Do I hear any cheers? who must nav<> their national com­ Warwickshire.^, saying to announce that in 1933 lookers may see all the play from their entries in his. pocket. And should be added to our New Year's In case you have forgotten. '32 I petition will be increased. But. for the ordinary player casts will be Game With Pitt the record books will be rewritten. tee to green—and if so inclined bet isn't that a bit of a pretty dish list. However, and Timber Point the Lesley Cup was a year o'f bigger taxes. New j lower, and that, gentle reader, is —~J It happens every year, and 1933 will a little for or against the player/' to set before the cash customers? those above will fray. Quite a handful. The West ones were, inflicted on both real estate and playing equipment The ; what we've born looking for. So. be no exception. Among the other entries are Paul suffice. Of the had just two events, the P. G. A l nks~ '"cquipmentr-taxes-a re- to -be- a bsoibed • .come, on.—33... you looki,pixLtx_gfl.Q.cL So. Cal ifornia Favore< 1 FIVE DEUCES De Briiyn, tne Metropolilan"T5-mIte" eighT~IiUTe ne"g~a"- championship and the public by the manufacturers and the to me. champion and Boston Marathon tives, six have" a test. But 1933 will see a reversa 2 to 1 by Coast Fans . IN A ROW winner, to whom 5,000 meters is fine, resonant player will play less for ^oth balls of events. ! ^ Others than the Sweetsers have I sound. Six out oir>\ ancl clubs. More cheers? ,f just a breeze. Paul's trouble will This year Chicago draws the Na­ for Pasadena (.lassie Ought to Know tried and failed on this finishing be to get warmed up before the eight—t hat, in * ^ Hickory Coming Buck 9 Football Games hole at Garden City. There have tional open and women's cham­ gun lap. Bill Steiner, national 20- the jargon of • Not4n_yeaxs.-have fiolf_ciub,nuin-„ been "aces" scored. Johannes. In- pionships. Along wH-h~the big— fah\ -r—For ~Vir-gJnia Po.Ly. .—Pusadcna, CaL.—Dec 31 .^L'Qi-,, MIM.DOON ON THE mile champion, should have"' ""llreTTjRse'lSaTr,' is Bat" ufacturers worried so little about gersoll had the oddest of experi­ you might say. However, the golf *" 'STttTWOTETT" same trouble, and Paul Mundy of ting .750 a sw.eet Blacksburg. "Va„ Doc. 31 i A Southern California's football play­ ences—that of having hit one ball championship and the struggle for "advanced" styles. Last year was Philadelphia, national 10-mile-, average. Nine contests on Virginia Poly-' ers—36 of them—tented tonight Just into the. pond and the next Into first place in growing corn, wheat, a boom year for steel. Also for champion, ifnly a little less. But; mustard, and .making machinery, iechnlc Institute's football schedule THOSE YANKEE BLEACH­ the' hole—thus obtaining a par 3. East Had Blt clubs with the we^hi and center.of above the Rase Bowl battlefielo, • Jack Ryartf Middle Atlantic States, will be held In different parts of for 1933 were announced today by ERS Cheery Will Irwin, the chap behind Events gravity shifted r.round—at the ex­ while their opponents from Pitts­ collegiate cross-country champion, the Windy City. C. P. Miles, gthletic' director. Two the desk, had five successive deuces, should be In his element. The year that pense of the player. The only burgh were approaching by train The National Amateur goes to new foes will be met. Tennessee In SCU.IVAN. JUDGES pretty, pretty birdies. Star* In Sprints has just passed! change impending for '33 is a slight A NO CincinnslL-for.a change. The pub­ An early season game nt Knoxvllle. from their training camp at Tucson. VINES .. The sprint series, at 60, 80 and saw the Eflsternl return in the popularity of hickory From the tee on this 18th hole" it lic links championship doesn't re­ and South Carolina in Miles Sta- Ari7ona. The man i'n the street. 100 meters, will bring out George section of the! shafts. Steel worked wonders for appears that all the hazards are in 1 turn East, "out, goes farther wesU— dium here later. ' probably will regard the winner of Weinstein of N. Y. U.. who upset country draw an some. Not all"?WThe return of hick­ KIRK OUT—KNEES CONE front. From the back all the trou­ extraordln a r11 y to Portland, Ore. Just- where the Monday's game as the national the track world by" taking the in-: P. G. A. championship will be ory will benefit a few, but the ble seems to be behind. From the tercollegiate indoor sprint title last full schedule of. Kalph Trost champion. clubhouse, windows there's nothing events.. Starting with the most played is a question as vet unan­ change baeK will not be revolution­ Mrs. Wads worth William Muldoon. who has seen year; Ed Siegel. who stunned the swered. Rumor says 'Hartford." ary. Golfers, normal beings' and Southern California, with a brief evident but trouble. And those peck­ customers by taking the Casey j northern, the women's champion­ Winner at Golf them come and go nigh onto 60 ship at Salem, Mass., the cham­ But that report is unconfirmed. accustomed to following the styles workout In the fnmou* bowl, out the same as Spring, for instance, there was the Allen of Erasmus Hall H. S.. Metro- sary to buy new clubs'. Do I hear burgh defeated Mrs. Richard Tufts. There may be no connection in tional amateur was held. Brookllnc prevailed a .year ago when the exploit of Cyril James Hastings Tol- polltan junior "century" champion.: golf matches in this country in '33. further cheering? Pinehurst. 4 and -3, in the final the fact, but the New York Yan» drew the Walker Cup matches, Trojans stopped the "Green Backs ley, one-time British amateur cham­ and James Kunitsky. a new speed That's too bad. Even the Ivesley I don't suppose the fact that there round of the Pinehurst season mem­ kees. who continue to make about Fresh Meadow yie National Open from Tulanc, 21 to 12. pion. Cyril, in the annual Invita­ boy developed at N. Y. U. by coach C^up matches are to desert us. The are few" impending changes'in the bers' golf tournament here today. ; 'twice as much money as any major Tlv Western (earn was !n-porfert' tion, was almost comfortably en- Emll Von Elling, arc the dark league club, also have twice as many condition as It sought Its fourth sconsed in a berth In the first horses. bleacher seats as any rival. . . . match play division when he stepped Hose Bowl victory, a record no Pending a better explanation. Ik The Columbus "500" pits Harold up to this 18th tee in the qualifying. Eastern Football Stars Who Play In Charity Gaiii( other team has had n chance to only may be assumed, thinks tIT« Lamb against his N. Y. U. team­ make Pitt. too. with nine days of However, his mashie" shot didn't Associated Press, that the tribunal mate. Harry Hoffman, with Eddie hard work In Tucson's Invigorating ' hit the green. It hit the sand and selecting the 10 candidates for th« Blake of the Boston- A. A., the air. was reported fit. and ready to Jt was a rather blushing Mr. Tolley Sullivan Memorial Award were un­ familiar gold-spcctaclctf>sehool and score Its first victory In throe starts who finally clambered out. of the der the Impression H. Ellswofth St.d Bernstein, former scholastic In (he rose-scented environment. Vinos Jr had moved to Australia. sand and onto the green to hole out star at the distance, the other' Trojans Favored In 11. Rube Williams. th

www.fultonhistory.com

file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/hello.html2/18/2007 11:01:03 AM