The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 23, 1928, Page 8

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] wee ZUPPKE, WILCE DUELIS STAGED ® FOR LAST TIME Ohio Mentor Is Spending His Last Season as Head of Buckeye Eleven EF it GOPHER CHASES BADGER Burt Ingwersen Will Match Wits With Fielding Yost at Ann Arbor ig Chicago, Nov )—With four teams fighting for a chance to win the championship, the last act of the Big Ten football season promises to be surcharged with plenty of master- minding tomorrow. q The duel of wits between Coach Bob Zuppke of Illinois and Coach Jack Wilce of Ohio State at Cham- paign always has been and probably ir will be the greatest of all. It will ve the last time the crafty Wilce directs an Ohio State eleven, and he is ntends to show his old rival a few football tricks. With defeat of ba Wisconsin by Minnesota and a vic- tory Michigan over Towa, the Ulinois-Ohio State game would de- @ cide the championship. Coack “Gloomy Glen” Thistle- 5 hwaite of Wisconsin will match rick artistry with that of another -apable egist, Dr. Clarence Spears of Minnesota. A victory for 4 Wisconsin would give it undisputed ion of the title, and “Gloomy proposes to get a jump on p Minnesota at the start, if he can. The Minnesota line, too, is a hard barrier to crash, and the Badgers are expected to depend on tricky Passes to gain touchdowns. At Michigan it will be young | Coach Burt Ingwersen of Iowa against Coach ‘Tad Wieman and Fielding (“Hurry Up”) Yost. Two disciples of the forward pass, ‘ Jess Hawley of Dartmouth and Dick Hanley of Northwestern, will be the opposing strategists at Evanston. Neither team has played any of the other's opponents this season, and 1 the result appears a toss-up. At Lafayette, Ind., where Indiana and Purdue meet in their traditional contest, it will be Coach Pat Page of the Hoosiers against Jimmie Phe- lan of the Boilermakers. The heavy training grind was over today, and the last invasion of the season was on. Minnesota was at Madison, confident of taking the measure of the Badgers and scram- bling the title race. MEETS RABBITS Brookings, S. D., Nov. 23—A squad of 26 state college Jackrabbits left here this morning for Le Mars, Ta., where they will meet Western Union college in a non-conference engagement Saturday. In order to protect his regulars against too hard a workout and pos- sible injuries, Coach Kasper took a larger squad than usual. If the game goes right most of the first- stringers will be.telieved early and saved for the big game with Morn- ingside at Sioux City on Thanksgi ing Day. Team Continues Work There has been no letup in the practice sessions this week, because Kasper realized that the Le Mars Telegraphers are no setup. Two phases of the great national pastime have received special attention the past couple of days. One is a for- ward pass defense for the two com- ing games. The cther is in the kic! ing department. The punting this year has been more than satisfac- tory, with Schaefer, Parks and Schultz more than holding their own against every team in the confer- ence. But the tries for points after touchdowns have been miserable, the only exception being the good work of Frandsen in the North Dakota Aggie game, when he kicked three out of four attempts. Frandsen, Schaefer, Schultz and Parks have all been put through the mill. this week, with the freshmen and re- serves trying to block their efforts, Some improvement has resulted, but r is still worried over the pos- sibility of a tie score in the next game that might be turned into a Last Act in Bi | Carnegie THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1928 se g Ten Race Promises Plenty of Master- minding Steamroller Meets Big Test in New York University Team and Halfback MacDonald of Washi The simplicity of getting started on a long run for | off on a 90-yard a touchdown is shown in this glimpse of the recent for six points. Southern California-Washington State game. All it | tants is blocki took was a bit o¥ blocking, a few twists of the another reclines hips, | ington State was feet after taking | A Little Aid, a Little Twist—and a Touchdown! run through the entire Trojan team Note how one of MacDonald’s a: ing a rival out of the play and how | sprawled alongside MacDonald’s care of a Trojan tackler. Lacoste Might Have Given Henri Trouble But He Is in Business Now; California Weman Champ Is Head and Shoulders Above Competi- tors HENRY L. FARRELL iculty of any kind attends the selection of the outstanding ten- nis stars of 1923. The process re- quires no heavf thinking and in- volves no. manipulation of mathe- matics. The ritual of crowning Henri Cochet as the tennis king of the year and Helen Wills as the queen war- rants no more ceremony than the ticket. Because there was no contest and there is something drab about acclaiming someone on an acclama- tion ballot. In the case of M. Cochet there is a mental warning against rash judg- ment in.giving him the honor with- out a struggle and a lingering hunch that he didn’t knock every rival dead. The records show that he wag beaten at Wimbledon in the British championship tournament by Rene Lacoste, who was the 1927 king be- yond a dispute. But the records show that just previous to the Brit- ish show Lacoste was trimmed by Cochet in the French national cham- Pionships, and that in the challenge round for the Davis Cup, Cochet was the hero in repelling the American chaHenge and that Lacoste was beat- en in one of his singles matches. Father Withdraws Rene Lacoste might have made much in a rubber match at Forest Hills, but his father became too serious for the father of a world’s champion and ordered his boy to take his mind off tennis and go to work in his auto- mobile factory. Lacoste, under the circumstances, had to make the most of a compromise. He succeeded in reaching the United States, but his arrival was just a casual event that occurred weeks and weeks after the Forest Hill tournament, and so man weeks after, in fact, that all but the official recorders of the tennis as- sociation had forgotten that Cochet had won the American championship and a lot of other district champion- ships. he critics who take their tennis cept Cochet as the best performer of 1928, even though they might not admit that he was a champion to compare with Tilden and Lacoste when they were enjoying their best years. It is quite probable, however, that from now until they arrive at the ripe old age where the legs go, Co- chet will continue to be the No. 1 ranking player. It was unfortunate for Lacoste, perhaps, that just when the jtime arrived when he had to cease making tennis a business and go to work, Cochet found conditions would permit him to quit hard work and make tennis his chief business. Cochet is his own boss. He is the Proprietor of a string of sports goods stores, and after a life of victory with an accurate toe. Baker Only Casualty Baker was the only casualty who left. with the squad for Le Mars, and unless the going is real tough the big fullback will probably not be used. The return of Arnold to the squad gives Harding a under- study at the plunging job, so Baker will. probably be saved for Morning- side. Eggers will be in shape for Saturday, but with Jensen and Lan- an, two reserve ende, coming good, gers will not be used very much this week. Lemme Herting, who has layed right end most of the season cause of Eggers’ injuries, has de- veloped into one of the best end- in the conference. The big Salem boy an temperament tor an end—and is a deadly blocker and tackler. The _ probable which Kas; ing, gave ends, H fenison, tackles; Adler and » guards; Hiner, center; iy Englemann and Schaefer, halfbac! larding, fullback. HE WASN'T. PAID FOR Arnold starting lineup, F announced this morn and Herti IT Horween, Harvard coach, 1s said to have football withos Esa ot for it. oe aid what he thinks never heard of early hardships he has reached the prune where his business works for im. And Lacoste is in a factory. Picking Wills Easy The crowning of Helen Wills in the years following the retirenient of Suzanne Lenglen is a chore like wading a clock. She is so far ahead of the field against her that the only chance for them to catch up is for her to run down. She won every championship in 1928 that she cared to go after, and she made a-very judicious choice of her appearances. She fits her ten- nis in with her business as an artist, and as long as she can arrange her schedule sq conveniently she will continue to be the champion. The California girl probably will reign long as Mile. Lenglen did, unless she gets tired of the gam and that would be very poor bu: hess, Miss: Wills has itimated that she will retire after one more campaign and devote herself entirely to the pave of art, but it may not be peccrent or unkind to advance the opinion that tennis is the greatest art of the very attractive young lady, and ‘that to retire from thi would convince her quickly that h tennis is too valuable @talent to {i of for a typewriter or a drawing WOULD COST $85,000 Experts value the worth of the Braves by" the "Chicago Cabs’ mt i icago Cubs al $86,000. GETS ANOTHER CHANCE Mike Cvengros, veteran left-hand- er of the Texas ot ener Leagues, was drafted cago for a trial next spring. CHOOSING COCHET AND HELEN WILLS AS WORLD LEADING TENNIS SHARKS SIMPLE mere writing of their names on the | | loose on an end run and sprinted 60 Y | ably unique in the annals of football. If i seriously, however, are willing to ac- | UARRANGES 65 "RIFLE MATCHES Grand For university its first match of the season Janua: 19, according to Captain Davis, o | ficer in charge, when a telegraphic | meet against six schools will be! ive matches have been ar- mong them national com- | petitors “cr the Hearst tifle trophy, and over 100 new men have enrolled | for the try-outs to be held soon. | Practice iiring has already started. | Fifty-fi 1 60 Yards and Fails to Make Touchdown)! Cleveland, Nov. 23.—One of foot- | | ball’s oddest plays was pulled in a game between Oberlin College and Western Reserve University here | | recently. | Butzberger, Oberlin half-back; got | | | yards for a touchdown—oi | almost for a tauchdown. . Far ahead ! of his pursuers, Butzberger got con- fused as he crossed the Western Re- | serve five-yard mark and mistook it for the goal line. He slowed to a stop, wheeled about, and downed the ! ball—just ‘about ‘six inches in front | of the real goal line. The groan of dismay from the stands aroused him after a few sec- | onds, and he picked up the ball to/ dive over the line. But the Western Reserve backs had caught up with him, and they fell on him, five or six strong, before he could get the| ball across. i Oberlin managed to ram the ball} over on the next play, saving Butz- | berger from being the goat of the | game. But, even so, his stunt of | | shaking off all tacklers and making | an uninterrupted run of 60 yards,| only to deprive himself of a touch- | down by downing the ball on the wrong side of the goal line, is prob- rather, it n't, it ought ‘to be, anyhow. | Price Says Bettors Are Biggest Kickers Berkeley, Calif., Nov. 23.—The jwise boys were betting four-to-one on California and spotting the Bears’ opponents 20 points in a recent game. And “Nibs” Price, the Cal- ifornia coach, was told about it. “That is one of the things that makes a coach's job so easy and nice,” he’ commented. “The same fellows who are mak- ing those bets are the ones who roast the tar out of a coach when the team fails to win their bets for them. If my team should lose, well, heaven help me, I'll probably be fried in oil.” It might be said that the twenty- point spotters lost some of their dollars as the Bears were hard put to win that game and it wasn’t won by any twenty points. Mirror Flash Gives Race Gamblers Away Bowie, Md. Nov. 23.—(AP)— Puzzled by the flash of a mirror, Prince George’s county officers fol- lowed the gleam to a house about a mile from the Bowie race track and there found a radio out‘it and tele- | graph set. As a result four men are {Under arrest today on charges of bookmaking and giving out racing information unlawfully. The policemen also located a tiny radio sending set: built into a vest. They advanced the theory that this was used by someone at the track to flash winners and odds to some- one at the. house. -In apparent con- tradig@ion to a part of this surmise, was the discovery of two high pow- ered telescopes, placed so that they covered the start and finish at the track, The authorities said they believed that the men arrested were flashing information about the races, but that they would investigate further to- lay. , ae Seen NEVER MISSED A GAME Joe Munson, Tulsa outfielder who led the Western League’ in hitting, never missed a single one of the 165 games played by his club. HE'S LAST. OF. FAMILY Lloyd Thomas, Southern Cali- fornia halfback, is one of four broth- ae who have achieved gridiron fame. WILL BURN LEAGUE UP Connie Mack has hopes that Rube Walberg will be the outstanding pitcher in baseball within the next ARMY WORRIES OVER CONTEST WITH HUSKERS Jones Pessimistic; Nebraska Is Eager to Win National Acclamation West Point, New York, Nov. 23.— Army's football team learned con- erable in the Carleton game Sat- urday and made real progress. to- ward coordinating and smoothing out attack formations. This exper- ience was badly needed as the Ne- braska game next Saturday at West Point is certain to force the Army team to extend itself to the limit. Captain “Biff” Jones, head coach, is extremely pessimistic about the outcome of the contest as the stren- uous games against Southern Metho- dist, Harvard, Yale and Notre Dame have taken much out of the team. All the players are in fair physical condition and Frank Wandle, Army trainer, is devoting his energy to eping them fit. As the Stanford game will be played a week later it is.evident that the condition and de- velopment of the Army reserves will be a most important factor. Reserves Receive Attention All this week the reserves will re- ceive constant attention. As now made up the backfield consists of Gibner at quarterback, Piper at full- back with Allan and Hutchinson halfbacks. Of this group only Gib- ner and Hutchinson have made their letters. Allan has been on the squad for four years and Piper for three years but neither has been in enough games to be awarded a letter, Every effort is being made to de- velop both their line plunging and Passing game. he reserve wing men, Lynch, Marshall and ‘Kenirty, also lack ex- perience. Lynch who replaced Mes- singer, regular end in the Yale game at the start, has been on the squad for four years but has yet to win his letter. .Marshali, who is also contending for a place at right end, is playing his first year of big foot ball, his previous experience being limited to last year's plebe team, Kenny, another end reserve who hi relieved Carlmark’ at left end for breathing spells this year, has prob- ably had more experience than either of the other two. Major Ralph Sasse, end coach, believes that all of these men show signs of, development, but that they will have to work fast to be of real help in the coming im- portant games. All Need Training On the line Wimer at center, Humber and Maxwell, guards, Mac- Lean and Parham tackles, all need considerable training both in offen- sive and defensive work. Captain Jones believes that except when the opponents have had the ball on the five yard line, that his linesmen have not put up as strong a defensive game as they should. Lt. “Babe” Bryan, Army's husky line coach, has been directed to build up these men and Captain Jones will give him considerable personal help. Other reserves who undoubtedly will be needed are to a large extent unknown quantities. This consti- tutes a most decided weakness and is causing Captain Jones grave con- cern. Both Nebraska and Stanford outweigh the Army team and the possibilities of injuries together with the wear and tear of playing against eavier men will probably result in the Army coaches needing every substitute. Did you know that—| ore you knew thet—] The two Techs, Carnegie and Georgia, are battling for the in-: vitation to play in the Tourna- ment of Roses game...... A young ‘undergraduate selling souvenir programs in a South Bend hotel before the Notre Dame-Carnegie Tech game, chanted—“Names, numbers and salaries of all the players”... . The Notre Dame players say that Cagle and Murrell, the Army backs, were fighting all during the Notre Dame game. . . And that Cagle pshed Murrell out of the way of a punt so he could take it... . And Murrell shoved Cagle. the next time... . Mike McTigue has passage booked to South America for a couple of fights ....; But he - says he won't go now until you can get there on-a train. . tly... ... Frank Coltiletti, the jock, has such long legs he won't ride a little hoss. «+++. The Carnegie Tech stu- “dents carried Judge Wally Stef- fen, the coach, off the field cn their shoulders after the Notre Dame game. a MUST STOP KEN STRONG TO WIN Tech Has Fast Line, Brilliant Backs, and a Ball-Carrying End |TIGERS FACE MIDDIES Cornhusker Claim Hangs in Balance as Nebraska Clashes With Army New York, Nov. 23.—(AP)—The | Keystone state of Pennsylvania gets more than her share of gridiron masterpieces tomorrow. i In the western part of the state, National ‘aterest will be focused on the clash betyeen Carnegie Tech's Titantic Tartans and the Violent Violets of New York University. Out of this mixup may come a sprvivor well justified in demanding at least a major part of the mythical crown that awaits so-called National foot- ball champions. Carnegie, boasting of a heavy and fast line, a brilliant set of backs, and a great ball-carry- ing end is favored to turn back Chick Meehan’s Violets, although the latter have been beaten only by Georgetown. Carnegie’s chances of victory seem to lie in stopping Ken Strong, mainspring of New York university’s attack and the highest scoring back in the country. Princeton Plays Navy At Philadelphia, in the extreme eastern part,of the state, another unbeaten array, Princeton’s Tigers, close their season a week later than usual against the Navy. If Bill Roper has succeeded in convincing the Tigers that this battle is a climax and not an_anti-climax, Princeton should win. Those experts inclined to back the Navy are in- fluenced largely by the fact that they believe Princeton, to all intents and purposes, closed its season with the victory over Yale last day. : Pennsylvania has five other bat- Satur- home grounds. Lafayette and Le- high meet at Easton in another set-to of a serixs that began in 1884 but there is little but tradition to keep alive interest in tomorrow’s game. Lafayette °. fvored to win by any- where from three to six or seven touchdowns. At Carlisle, Bucknell meets Dickirson while Drexe: and Temple are battling St. Joseph's and Washington college respectively, at Philadelphia ‘UNBEATEN CLUB If the other states in the eastern sector cannot offer so large a num- ber of games they need not bow to Pennsylvania in the quality of those they do have. The biggest crowd of the day, some 75,000, will travel to New Haven to see the 47th meeting since 1875 between Yale and Har- vard, Season records count for nothing when the blue and crimson tangle and the 75,000 fans who will be there know it. Cornhuskers vs. Cadets If there were accommodations at West Point, perhaps as many would like to see how undefeated Nebraska fares when it tackles the army war- riors. Nebraska’s claim to National honors, somewhat dubious since the scoreless tie with Pittsburgh, will vanish entirely unless the Corn- huskers can conquer the Army. Georgetown, conquered only by the Carnegie Steamroller, is favored to win by at least three touchdowns from Fordham, beaten by West Vir- ginia, New York University, Boston College and Detroit. High School Youth Punts Pigskin for Record in Contest Milwaukee, Wis., Nov. 23.—About eight years ago, a barefooted young- ster amused himself by kicking tin cans around the streets of that sec- tion of town here known as Little Italy. Just!recently, this youngster, now playing shigh school football, let loose a kick that is still being talked about. He is Santo Curro, quarterback of a high school team here, and his kick soared 70 yards and then rolled 30. One hundred yards! “I didn’t realize how far it was going,” he said afterward. “I never had kicked more than 50 yards be- fore in my life, but I suppose I put more in that one because the oppos- ing center was right on me and I had to hustle to get the ball away. We were right“in our end zone.” Athletic and Yank Pinch Hitters Weak .. New York, Nov. 23.—Strange as it aOe seem, batters of the New York Yankees and the Philadelphia Athletics were the worst in the American League when sent up to the plate as pinch batters this sum- mer, The statistics show that the Ath- letics were seventh in pinch batting and the Yankees eighth. a _The A’s obtained only 25 hits by pinch hitters in 120 times at bat, while the Yankees benefited by safe blows only 16 times in 105 efforts. The White Sox were the best pinch batters. Their average shows 29 safe blows in 98 attempts. UNDER SLIGHT HANDICA When La HEAR er, Detroit center, played aeningt pene, Fordham cen- ig! is opponent 69 pounds, Lardner weight aT i eae ema pareenne - - WAS A TELEGRAPH OPERATOR Fred Leach, who will be with the New York Giants next year, was a [es aph operator in Idaho wi he first learned to play baseball, Oliver J. De Victor, one of the best known trainers in the country, re- cently joined the athletic staff at Washington University, St.. Louis. De Victor was the head trainer at the: University of Pittsburgh for eight years and before that he spent nine years at Penn State. He also served as athletic trainer at the Har- risburg Y. M. C. A., in Akron and in the Pennsylvania public schools. 15 BABY BISON CAGERS REPORT Fargo, N. D., Nov. 23.—Fifteen former high school cage celebrities reported to Coach Leonard T. Saal- waechter yesterday for the initial North Dakota Agricultural college freshman basketball workout. This number is expected to! swell con- siderably as the season gets under way. ‘ Two boys from the North, Thom- ason of Mountain and Thor Johnson of Cavalier, stand out as the most rugged of the candidates. Both these youngsters showed evidence of a rigid preparatory training. Jaeg- er of Hankinson and Hanson and Westgaard of Milnor are other North Dakota products making a strong early season bid. Rockford, Ill., contributes two youngsters in the persons of George Fairhead and Eric Nordstrom, while Walsh and Goodwin represent talent! from New Richmond, Wis. Walker and Freeman, two mainstays on the championship Moorhead, Minn., bas- ketball quint also drew suits yester- day. Both are slender, as athletes go, but are endowed with speed and an inherent basketball complex. From the fold of Charley Kimball, Fargo high school net mentor, comes Carl Miller, Clair Peterson and Wal- ter Olson, while “Cy” Lonsbrough, football prodigy, is conceded a strong chance to win his numerals. NO PROFITS HERE Owners of the Bridgeport club in the Eastern league recently filed a voluntary bankruptcy petition, giv- ing their liabilities as $52,187 and their assets as $37.50. {be a whole hor POWER PLAY IS JONES’ THREAT AGAINST ROCKNE | Trojan Mentor Chooses Light Backfield Men for Catapult Formation (By ALFRED F. WESSON) | Coach Howard Jones’ “power | play,” the name given to most of the long series of plays that make up the University of Southern Califor- j nia’s running attack on the gridiron, will get a supreme test when the Trojans meet the Fighting Irish of Notre Dame December 1 at the Los Angeles Coliseum, and critics of the pigskin art who have been saying that the power play is losing its effectiveness will know then whether or not their criticism is correct. Contrary to the implication of its name, the power play does not mean that beefy, powerful men are neces- sary to execute it. On the contrary, preciseness in timing, deception and speed are the chief elements of the play, but the name “power” has been given to it because spectators have noticed what appeared at times to = of interferers pil- ing through a hole ahead of the man | with the ball. Like Knufe Rockne of Notre Dame, Jones selects his backfield men for their speed, alertness and fighting qualities, rather than weight, and generates from these speed merchants the power that has made plays famous. Thomas, right half, is the heaviest man in the Trojan backfield and can barely tip the beam over the 180- mark after the biggest of training table steaks. Harry Edelson, left half, weighs 168; Saunders, fullback, 175; and Williams, quarter, 158. Put this backfield together with Charley Boren, 175-pound running guard who is an important cog in ;the interference machine, and the average is 171, heavy enough for average college men but nothing startingly gigantic for football play- jers. The line averages but a few pounds more, and the discerning {critic of the game will notice that it is therefore not plain bulk but the 4nethod of using fast men that puts the power in the Jones play, for the Jones interference is actually one of regulars, but critics saz that the power. play should have werked an; way, leaving the Hot Stove League members plenty of room to argue either way. That the power play has lost its effectiveness was proved by Stan- ford stopping Williams at the line of scrimmage on numerous occasions, the critics point out, but then Jones’ defenders claim that to stop him the Cards moved up their secondary’ fense and left open a wide area into which the Trojans effectively passed their way to victory. To stop the power play, the op- ponent must center his strength Wd one place, weakening himself some other place and giving the Jones- men a vital spot to attack, is the claim of those who are admittedly fond of the Southern California style of play. Just how correct are such beliefs of fans will be easier to determine after that battle with the Irish Dec. 1, BADGERS MAY LOSE A TITLE Chicago, Nov. acne a sin’s strangle hold on the Big cross-country championship may be broken at the annual conference meet in Madison tomorrow. The Badgers, who have won the title four times in a row, have been bested in the quadrangular and dual meets by Iowa and Indiana, which are among the favorites in the an- nual chase. Illinois also boasts a strong team of harriers. Every school in the conference has entered a team. The race will be held before the Minnesota-Wis- consin football game. HARRY EBBETS MEETS KAPLAN New York, Nov. 23—(AP)— Harry Ebbets, free-swinging Free- port middleweight, who has enjoyed sensational success in his brief fi§- tic career, meets a veteran of close to a hundred fights, K. 0. Phil Kap- lan at Madison Square Garden to- night. The bout is the feature of a card originally attended to wind up with Young Stribling in one vorner and of the strongest battering rams in the game and really does use more men than most coaches put ahead of the ball packer. While critics of the Jones system admit that it was the power play that beat Utah Aggies, Oregon State, St. Mary’s, Occidental and Arizona, by big scores this season, they point out that the Trojans were held scoreless in the 0-0 California game and that it was a forward passing attack that defeated Stan- ford, 10-0. On the other hand, defenders of the power play point out that in the California game the soggy condition of the field at Berkeley made an at- tack that must have accurate timing and speed practically impossible to sustain, because before the offéns- ive was carried along very far some- one was certain to slip and wreck the play with a loss of yardage that could not be made up before the jfourth down. They point out also that two substitutes unaccustomed to their positions, Tony Steponovich at halfback, were running interference and could not have the effectiveness running guard and Marger Apsit at | hay Jack Dorval in the other. Dorval was hurt ard the boxing commission refused to accept Andy Mitchell ag an acceptable substitute. WOMEN GOLFERS TO MEET SEPT. 30 \ New York, Nov. 23.—(#)—Glenna Collett will defend the woman's na- tional golf championship at the Oak- land Hills country club, Birmingham, Mich., the week of September 30 next year. The selection was announced by the executive committee of the United States Golf association yes- terday. The committee decided to hold the national open championship June 27-29. This event already had been awarded to the Winged Foot golf club at Mamaroneck, N. Y. The date was set so that United States stars competing in European events would ve time to get back home. Sec- tional qualifying rounds for the open will be held Monday, June 10. “t your something than mildness, ask yourself this 3 “Where can T'get maildooss ovihenr fer 9088; where can I get mildness with taste?”

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