I IIC FIELD CUT , i AS ACE GOLFERS TURN ON POWER The Haig” Furnishes Humor For Day To Champs B» DILLON GRAHAM pINEHURST, NOV. 18. (JP) The JUtul Golfers' annual hit ^lde marched on today but the ig gUy who ran the show for years ts missing- * -The Haig ' tramped along with t,e gallery it e«. FM and fortytsh, out of practice, t just as debonair and carefree “ f;pr Walter Hagen found the oine too tough. The five-time vic or who has regarded the PGA as ,'pet championship, could do no ,twr than an 80 in his last oand for 178 that left him just a joke outside the group qualifying or the salaried ranks' match play jmpetition today. A single missed putt, such as he short one that rimmed the cup a the sixteenth, would have given /(Iter another chance. Famous for lis raiues. he tried hard down the /retch. Hagen played boldly, but fortune frowned on him. Now Outsider A rear ago he won the medal at jKlsiioma City. Today he was on Ihf outside looking in, crowded out «v a bunch of youngsters and un knowns. Hagen has given more attention to shootine ducks than birdies in recent works. He's been banging sw3V from a duck blind at his ramp In Michigan, eating bounti ful helpings and putting on the iverdupois. He tips the scales at 111, thirty or forty pounds over weieht, and lotks like a burly wres tler; Mv hips wouldn't pivot," he ex plained. with a wry smile. "i switched from one remedy to mother, but none would work, the old man was just terrible." i Wisecracking to the end. Hagen said he was "Trying to shave a ; couple of strokes from my score,”, as he sat hunched cn a bunker ad joining the eighteenth green as the late stragglers came in. Tire big field of 64 players start ed out early today but at sunset only 15 will survive after the two 18-hold elimination rounds. Fay Coleman, the Culver City, Calif., youngster who won the med al round laurels Hagen copped last rar. tackled a southpaw socker, Bon Richter of St. Louis, In his first 18-hold match today. Colemans 68-75—143 placed him two shots ahead .of a trio of cham pions, Johny Revolta, the defend ing PGA titleholder; Gene Sarazen. *ho has won this crown three times sad Tony Manero, the national, open king. Revolta took on Marshall Crich ton of Raleigh. Sarazen faced Jack datroni of Shawnee-On-Delaware, P® and Manero met Jimmy De taam of Houston. Tommy Armour, mnner-up last year, had a tough customer in Mortie Dutra. ' Well, you can tell the folks back home 'that the Australian champion made good among the American s!at5‘' grinned Gene Sarazen aftor ' hiad come in with a sub-par yesterday. Bershak Boosted For All-American .CHAPE1 hill. Nov. 18.—Handy fnav Bershak. the University of "" Carolina's brilliant all-round ^ ’h® Tar Heel s outstanding Ksmr.bition to the ranks of All l(^nra randidates this season. . ”'r North Carolina players de All-America consideration _-c.uoe Captain Dick Buck, senior, | ■•-'e Pa. -—snagging has been an r‘f°r -’ht factor in all Tar Heel1 ****’■ Tom Burnette, halfback.' a,,d place-kicking star and ■•Pi'-threater. rvho has made good! ‘5 tne,s lor lhat extra point; ■ i as averaged 41 yards on punts; 1 £ achills' senior fullback, lead .ccivr. who has tallied five, ““endowns m eight games; and! ,ti Tir.ior fullback, a demon: loin, ' wlvo has also scored four Bu in ei*ht games. i Uni” ,:;l rly Andy Bershak towers •M VIa‘i rf them- An honor stud-; •i™ sical.,y> Bershak ls a ju-i K?„, ;. r°T|es from Clatrton. Pa.! Iffp';1'i ales at 185 and stands! B :'v ■ • the® • Performances speak lor | . Lail season he starred if-,,,,/' on both offense and ir,: , '!'rl r a pass-snagger, be ,nn 'everal all-Southerns, if vC..' nio''t Pvrry minute this has cont'ihhed his all «vvJ, ‘"rmai,fes and has been im, .: ,;,P!or >n all of North Caro M tones. RAMr, ,""''r Poles Rise tut l1?*' Nov-. 18- (*>, -The It a ■ Electrification author - ■ rvual - power poles have the t 111 North Carolina at "■ one every five minutes "o’king day since July 1 ef f *5t * hORSES GALLOP AHEAD IN P.G.A. TOURNEY Unheralded and unsung golfer, forged to the fore In the first day of qualifyino round, for the Profe. weilhin» j.UJt 110 P°und*> *howed what a little man can do by carding a 73 to join a half dozen the cour»e*reeord and Tom/Ii 'k*1, C'ty’ '* ,hown (rlBht) pointing to the green, where he equalled the cour,e record and took flr.t honor, with a 68, four under par. Be.lde him I. John Kinder of New York. (A.aoclated Preee Photo.) Deep Gloom Settles Over Grid Team As Nine Are Injure d And Ineligible ALL-AMERICAN SELECTIONS TO BE HARD TO PICK Semi - Final Reports Drifting In; Many listed ... By ALAN GOULD NEW YORK, Nov. 18.—rs of Kentucky are rated the , ‘tops." Arthur (Tarzan) White of ( Mabama is rated the outstanding , pjard in the Southeastern confer ;nce. Among the backs, Duke’s Ace < Parker. Tennesee’s Phil Dickens, < Maryland's Bill Guckeyson, Ala- 1 jama’s Joe Riley and Louisiana; State's Cotton Milner captured ap- 1 jlause for their efploits. I Southwest—Sam Baugh. Texas ' Christian quarterback, heads the j1 ill star parade in this section. Other j 1 itandout; Routt, Texas A. and M. i fuard; Robbins, Arkansas quarter jack: Benton, end of Arkansas; j ftussell. Baylor quarterback; and' iVolfe. Texas back. Pacific Coast—Those recommend- < :d include: Washington’s Jimmy i rain, Wlatrak. Huskies’ center, and i Jtarcevich. guard: Goddard. Wash- i ngton State quarterback Herwig. t California center: Fnlaschi. quar-|i er, and Dougherty, center, Santa p Gloom as dark as Egypt spread )ver the Shelby high school foot >all team today and with It fear of osing the Lenoir game Thursday ts deathly as the river Styx. Grim grades and injuries told the -ale and alter it was told, nine slayers who have had experience n football will be left out entirely j vhen time for the game rolls around j rhursday afternoon at 3:30 o'clock' it the Cloth Mill park. fluffy Out Another heart-breaking element! s that Captain George Watts, full >ack Fluffy, the charging power of ;he backfield, and quarterback Banks Oashion, have been ruled in eligible because of age. Both arc >ver 21. It was uncertain as to whether he baseball championship cup won ast spring would have to be for feited. When the reports were out yes -erday Weathers, guard and Ervin. >nd, were ruled out, but Ervin was •e-instated. Arnold Vaughn, leading back for he season, left school for a job, ind injuries have taken MeSwain ind Mull, backs, and Walker and Sherrill, linemen. New Team Practically a new team, both In Ine and backfield, inexperienced. >ut with a "We’ll be the doctor till ;he doctor comes” attitude, will be jitted against Lenoir. Fans, and Coach Goodson too. were uncertain how the line-up will ook. but it will likely see a back ield of Joe Blanton, Higley Har non, Robert Hulick. and possibly fohn Mull. Leonhardt mav be start 'd. The line will have a little more •xperiencc. Ervin and Mauney will ikely see action on the ends; Roppc i veteran and Brown who may re place Sherrill will possibly be at ackle; Eaker and Parris, a former >nd, will possibly be at guard and Parker will have his hands full at ■enter. McMurry will be ready to iub for him. 4 Parker will play fullback on de-1 en.se, and call the plays from the :enter of the line.. A few other Jlayers may also see action. In all, it will be practically a new, earn, hardly as heavy as the for ner team, but Just as good, per laps faster. Most of the new fel ows who are getting a chance in he last game of the season will be i it their best and despite their in ■xperience, will play their hearts >ut to seal a chance on next year’s >arsity. 'lara; Coffis, Stanford halfback; 3ray, Oregon State halfback, andj ’eters, Washington end. Rocky Mountain — Ryan. Utah State back; Drobnitch. Denver ;uard; Mulleneaux, Utah State, and :>n?her, Denver, ends; Mathews.! Jtah State, and Fena, Denver, tack es; Moore, Colorado, center, are' ill-star leaders. Kittens Play DAVIDSON, Nov. 17.—Davidson's! Vildkittens and the Blue Ridge j leven will meet here on Richard-) on field Saturday afternoon at' :30 o’clock in what will be the last ;ame of the season for the ’Kit ens. Thus far this season the Dav dson fro.sh have won but one game mile lasing four « HAZING IS GIVEN NEWCOMERS IN SOUTHERN LOOP Win Five Games Out Of 19 Starts In Year By BARTON PATTIE RICHMOND, Va.. Nov. 18.—(VT*)— Old. members of the Southern Con ference Fraternity gave the Neo phytes a thorough public hazing In the football stadiums t)iis season. The records show thft teams of the six newly admtttod members were able to gain bdt' me decisions in i9 games with their elder breth ren. William and Mary’s Indians took the worst thrashing of the initia tion when they were tripped four times in a row. Richmond fared little better, losing thr^e times, wraie trie citadel dropped two con tests. None of the three were able to break into the victory column. Furman Beats S. C. Furman divided two encounters, defeating South Carolina and los ing to N. C. State. The Purple Hur ricane has yet to meet Clemson on Thanksgiving in a game which will decide the South Carolina state championship. Wake Forest and Davidson, toughest of the newcomers, each took two wins but lost to Duke and North Carolina. The Deacons sneaked a surprise triumph over Clemson, while the Wildcats trounded V. M. I’s squadron for the only setback handed the sec ond place Keydets in the confer ence all season. Both of these squads rolled over N. C. State. Although the old members man aged to keep on topside in most cases, the young entries fought back furiously. Except for Furman’s 27-0 defeat when the Hurricane caught an enraged N. C. State Wolfpack on the rebound. the games were closely contested. Davidson gave the champion Duke eleven one of its hardest games of the season before re treating in the September opener. Wake Forest likewise threw a real scare into the favored North Car olina ranks. Louis - Braddock Fight Complicated NEW YORK, Nov. 18.—<;p)_The oext move in the somewhat com plicated business of paving the w#y for a 12-round exhibition bout be tween Jimmy Braddock and Joe Louis in February seems to be up so either Madison Square Garden jr 5oe Gould, manager of the world rhampion. Gould created an unexpected de ay in the proceedings yesterday when he revers d his previous stand ind asked a three-day delay to see vhat he could do about preventing possible legal difficulties. Promoter Herman Taylor produced the S100, XK) guarantee demanded by Gould, md was all ready to get things set led. as Joe had previously said h» vould .inn as .soon as he received he money. DEACON-WILDCAT CONTEST LOOMS AS A “NATURAL” Thnnkiigriving Game To Be Keenest In Years ^ DAVIDSON Nov. lg.-.vPi- Da •wd'nn and Wake Forest will meet\ here Thanksgiving day In what: promises to be the greatest battle between these two schools In their years of gridiron warfare. Davidson has taken the last four games from! the Deacons and have yet to losej to the Wake Forest team under the 1 present Wildcat ooaches. Doc1 Newton and Oene McEver. Tills will be the last game of the ( season for both clubs and with this j game, twelve Davidson seniors will j bring their colorful college football careers to a close. Those Wildcats who will be playing their last game will be John Lee, end; Joe Hunter, tackle: Captain Dick Johnson, Jim Johnston and Lock Vaas, guards; Flank Purdy and Herman Clark, center; Tom Corbin, Ed Armfleld. Charlie Sears, Ken Knorr, and Tom Thurston, backs. Both elevens have open dates this week. Ed Arm rtf Id will have to score against the Deacons to win the Southern Conference scoring title as he is tied with Mac Folger of Clemson at the present time for the conference leadership with 48 points. Both barks have one game to break this tie in Armfleld against the Deacons, Folger against Fur man. Teeny Laflerty has a chance to become the first player lp the his tory of Davidson football to account for 1000 yards during one season's play against Wake Forest. At the present time Laflerty has gained 940 yards, 498 yards from rushing, 444 yards through the air. Laflerty broke Johnny Mackorell's old mark of 770 yards against North Caro lina. Wake Forest has an edge on Davidson in play so far this season, having turned in live wins in eight games while the Cats have only been able to break, even In eight tilts. Wake Forest has scored 104 1 points this season against their op ; ponents’ 54 points while Davidson • has tallied 117 points as compared with their opponents' 87. Browns To Have Real Ball Team NEW YORK. Nov. 18 — (/P)—Louis B. Von Welse, the St. Louis Browns' retiring president, peered into the crystal ball today and came up with ! the forecast for a bright future for I the club under Its new regime, prin icipally because of these- factors: (1) The hew ownership, a syndi cate headed by Donald L. Barnes. puts the Browns In the best of hands. (2) More than $50,000,000 will be back of the club. (3) A highly-increased drawing ; power may triple the attendance. "I think the Browns will really go places now,” Von Welse said of the deal, already approved by the American league. He related that Branch Rickey, general manager of the St. Louis | Cardinals, arranged the sale of the Brownies by the estate of the late Phil Ball, of which Von Welse is (Chief executor. “I went to Rickey over a year ag(T?' he said, “and asked him to 'find a buyer for the club.” J The dale will be consummated I by the end of this week, and the re | tiring magnate is "More than sat J isfied with Barnes and his assoeiat i Alabama Team Is ! Not All Beef Now TUSOALOOBA, Ala., Nov. 18.—f/p> When—and If—Alabama’s 1936 foot ball team trots Into the Rose Bowl, coast fans who saw previous per formance of the Crimson Tide are in for a surprise. Gone are the massive linemen who brought the 1930 outfit the label of "The Red Elephants.” Gone, likewise, are the powerful backs who used sheer power to shred opposing lines. In their places are shiftier, fast er players, who strike with speed and no warning. Coach Frank Thomas Is wearing a sour look about all this Rose Bowl talk. Vanderbilt must be beaten Thanksgiving day, and the invitation Is mainly a matter of conjecture, even If hi* boys win ! that game. But students with s few spare dollars already are thumbing time tables. I Alabama’s Rose Bowl history In i’eludes three victories and a tie In four starts. The Crimsons came from behind to nose out Washington. 20 to 19, in the 1926 thriller, and the following vear tied a great S anford team, 1 (to 7, with another late rally. NEW YORK, Nov. 18 (**) —If that Atlantlr City flulit goes through and Joe Louis .should knock out Braddock and then go on to meet Max Schmellng for the title, Uncle Mike Jacobs, who la about as foolish as the W. K. Pox, will do all right for himself . . . He owns both Louis and Schmellng . . . Not only would he pocket most of the dough, but come up with the next champion. . . Burleigh Grime* showed the Dodger directors they couldn't fool around with him by mak- j ing them take that ten-day release clause out of his con tract . . . Joe Williams Inter viewed Monk Meyer’s mother who said: “If I could have had ten more sons like Monk, Army would have won over Notre Dame Saturday" . . . Bing Cros by, the crooner, will put up the cocoanuts for a $1,000 open golf tournament at San Diego next February . . . Jim Mullen. Chicago promoter. Is here shopping for ring talent . . J whtgi Norman Abdouch graduates from Omalia Technical high school this rnont. he'll take seven letters with him, yet he never scored a touchdown, hit a homer or rung up u basket . . but he’s Just about the best athletic manager the school: has ever had ... those who saw Green Bay drub Brooklyn Sunday say Steve Owen, Giants’ pro foot-, ball coach, hnd better believe ev-j cry thing his scouts tell him about those packers . , . While ‘Old Mail" Mag* has been doing pretty well on the west eoast with his rollege of the Pacific trams, bis son, Paul', has been making a couching name for hiimeir at Moravian College in Pennsylvanian. Mo ravian won six of seven games for the best ret\rd In its his tory , , . Instead of bringing some foreign fistic talent hack from abroad, Jimmy Johnston, the garden pro moter, came home leading two dogs . . . one, an Irish terrier, will be given to Jimmy's old pal, former Mayor James J Walker. The rabbit is the most trouble some animal to Australian farniet At the Bay of Fundy, New Brunswick, Canada. the rise and fall of the ocean tide Is the great est. Charlotte Dog In Lead At Monroe MONROE. Nov 18.—WP)—Tlw open all-age slake provided the competition today in the Monro* field trials and Tarlieella Doc, own ed by Dr. A 8 Bumgardner of Charlotte, was a heavy favorite. The Charlotte dog took the all age membership derby yesterday, waking tiii after a poor start and finding a covey of birds at the tall end of the course. Another Charlotte ctr*. Cook's Flirt Peerless, pretty setter bitch, owned by C. C. Lemmon, took sec ond place in the stake, and Oav Fannie Miller, a pointer, owned and handled by K W Norman of Balls burv. was third. Bowling Tourney Results Announced Results of the county wide bowl ing championship tournament have been announced with Buck Bridges w inning a silver loving cup against the finalists, Dr. K. C. Htcka and I'M Babo ld « play-olf match against .Ju hus Waldrop, winner of Inst year's chniitpionship. Waldrop won two games out of three to retain his championship title. Final Opportunity This Week HAIR BRUSH Sturdy Bristles— Solid-Set 2 for 50c HIRSUTONE Hair Dressing and Tonic 2for 60c GUARANTEED ALARM CLOCK A sturdy, accurate time keeper. 24-hour move ment. During this sale 89 c EACH rsyad not Water Bottle Two-quart seamless. Guaranteed service 2 (or $1-25 Ardsley Linen «0 full sheets and 50 en velopes, highest quality linen, regular correspond ence size 2 for 75c NYAL ANTACID POWDER Quick relief for gas, acid stomach. 50c Size 2 fOT 50c Brilliant Lilac HAIR OIL Keeps hair glossy, al ways in place. 50c Bottle 2 50c Ultra Glycerin & Rote Water Softens skin and hands. 6 oz. bottle 2 50c ‘ Nyal Norwegian COD LIVER OIL U. S. 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Full Pint 2 fo' 50c Nyal Milk Of Magnesia Corrects Sour Stomach Full Pint 2 for 50c NYAL NASAL DROPS Relieve Head Colds — make breathing easier. 35c Size 2 for 35c Ultra Almond Cream Soothes rough, red hands chapping and irritation. 6 Ounce Size 2 for 50c Cleveland Drug Co. _ PHOJME 65