Evening Star Newspaper, March 26, 1923, Page 27

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SrOUOK LS. “UHE EVENING STAK, WASHINGION, D. C., MONDAY, MARCH 26, 1923, 20 Brothers Make a Successful Coaching Pair : U. S. Golfers Face Stymie Abroad WORK OF FETZERS PUTS NORTH CAROLINA ON MAP Sign Five-year Contract to Coach All Sports There, /ith Bill Relinquishing Position of Di- rector of Athletics to Bob. BY H. C. BYRD. OB FETZER and Bill Fetzer, brothers, who have had charge of B athletics at the University of North Carolina for the last two years, have made themselves fixtures at that institution for five years | by signing a contract for that term. Bob and Bill have put North Caro- lina on the athletic map, their work having stood out ahout as promi- nently as that of any other pair of coaches in the south. North Carolina (never accomplished any wonders on the base ball and foot ball fields, on | the basket ball court in track until these men took command. In the | past two years they ha = put out two fine foot ball teams, two as good base ball teams as could ke found anywhere in the colleges. a southern championship basket ball five .m«l a state championship track and field tean, ot much wrong with tha d of a record And, incidentally, Bob and Bill mn.- Larma done a regular Damon and I'yth 1 CUNTEST(]NWEDNES[]AY' vatr, mai for his ability as a rm-l | ball and base ball coach, and durin the two-year regime since he und Hog took charge he has been director of athletics and foot ball and base ball tutor. But now the situation is turn- | ed about, and for the five years to come Bob will be director of athletics and Bill simply will have charge of foot ball and base ball. Bob is to coach track and field and attend o the general details of running ath- letics. Washington's hasket ain will b Spiphany ball prestige *d when the local Juniors clash next Wednes- day night in Baltimore at the Central X AL C A Alert Club of hat city for honors in the 130-pound | of uth Atlantic Assoc- tournament. These teams the titular stage in games last week auestio Gives Credit to Brother. It is Bill Fetzer who has been given eredit for turning out brilliant foot | *F ball teams at Carolina the last two | Class falls, and brilliant_ they have heen but no inconsiderable part of Bill's | Success has been due to the work of Bob. Bill is not the man for details in coaching that Bob and man ket b things that have been done would | ket ball £ have gone undone if it had not been |Of the spe for Bob's watchful eye. And Bill does |When the 1ot try to detract any from the eredit | Marjoric Webster that is Bob's. In fact, he told the Bito e aitog writer last fall that he belleved the |in¢ Holton Arms gym at 8 o'clock success of the North Carolina eleven [ The last time mekithe Blis ang was due more to Bob's attention to |(Gold combination emerged victorious details than any other two factors by six points That these men have signed five- | The Hurrlcana vear contracts at North Carolina will {lows: R. Carruther. be hailed as good news by opponents | wards; Joyce and Southern, centers of the Tarheels, Just as it will by the ! Cooper and Gully, guards. Marjorie most stanch adherents of that uni-)Webster will play Fenn and Moore, versity. All men who handle athletics | forwards ith “and Perkins. cen- in other institutions met yearly by |ters, and Bolen and Blockburger, with the he ation re I ched ved is, n« are promised one of the season rls meet the sextet tonight in diest Hurricana ( game they will line up as fol- and Geiman, for- iecorgetown got baw: ball games, North Carolina find it a pleasure to | Buards. deal. In short, Bill and Bob Fetzer arranged mainly as| %0 back to the beginning and have pra%ice affairs, have their teams in such competition, for at all times they are assured of g00d games, cican play, a high stand- | ard ot sportamansnin and . spuirs | | INSIDE GOLF not only are good coaches, but they | George (ONei and for all that is best in college | BritConreni Ol athletics. | In discussing the detail of swing- by itx twe first| InE the driver perhaps we better Without difficulty, al- ok o ™ SHongh both It and the Maciues mot| ook ot ihe fect. Whe foct M rente of unc nt ot oarines X001 an all-tmportant relation to the Saturday. The Blue and Gray show. ed lots of ability on the field and at | R LooKiAY bat, When Holy Cross and | TW FEET ? Princeton came here later thig wrek | Z to face the Hilltoppers they will find | themselves up against about as good as they will meet this season \?V | University team had an purely practic : Polytechnic will ‘have to put in s today and tomorrow for the opening of resday with Stevens Hobokenites are said to have very strong twelve and are com down to give the Marylanders a w afternon e only lacrosse game | in which the two schools have met | took place at Hoboken several years ago and wound up 1 to 1. < Cla f Marylond's of lacrosse it In 1ts| h Balti- | turday, some good \ prepara- its scedule Institute. | effective golf swing. Everything elxe you do might he letter per- feet, and yet a wrong position of the feet would throw you off. The position of the feet is cnlled the stance, and one of the firat things the golfer who seeks 10 play n tip-top game must realize is that n couple of inches may mean_little in other spheres of life, hut in the zolf mwing that much distance may be of vast im=- feet should not be too far nd at the same time they ¢ he too close together for When we discuss p, and in your prac- d clubs, it ix always nsxumed that you are playing a full xhot, xince under no cireum- stances you every try to play a short shot with a wood club. (Copsright, John F. Dille Co.) MAT BOUT IS CANCELED. NEW YORK. March ~“The Cliff Binkley-“Strangler” Lewis wrestling bout, scheduled for tonight, has been canceled at request of the state ath- letic commission, which held that Ernst Siegfried was a more suitable opponent for the heavyweight cham- plon. Siegfried. it was said, would meet Lewis within the month, BIG RACE TO REBUKE. SAN DIEGO, Calif, Murch 26.—Re- buke, owned by Comimander J. K. toss. Canadian sportsman, won yes- | terday the Coffroth handicap at Tla Adonis, owned by Willlam House of Omaha, was second |and Supercargo, third. The distance Was a mile and a_quarter and the |fime was 2.061-5. Twenty-five thou- and saw the event ley one Moran .ix of his two last vear, to do some the slab. Clarke came to University a vear ago with reputation and did well. He showed steady improvement under Moran's «coaching and this spring should stand many college nines on thelr heads Ively speaking. Clark is a big welghing over 200 pounds, and has an exceptional fast ball. WOMAN GOLFING STARS | MEET AT PINEHURST PINEHURST, N. C. March 26.— 83 Marion Hollins, 1921 national leholder, and Mrs. Ronald H. Bar- low, Philadelphia_star, met today in the second round of ' the woman's north and south golf championship tournament Another feature ma tween Miss Glenna Collett, national amplon, and Miss Frances Steb- bing of Braeburn FRENCH HOLES OUT IN ONE *AND TIES COURSE RECORD PINEHURST, March _26.—Emmet French, Youngstown golf profession- al, holed out in one of the fifth hole of number three cours yesterday and finished h round equallin the course record, 33, 34— He and Bobbie Crufckshank of Shackamaxon defeated Pat Doyie of | Deal, and Cyril Walker of Ingle- wood, by one up in the match. FASCE LEADS SYRACUSE.. >ep” Fasce, one of the stars of Catholic University's basket ball team during 1920-21, has been elected captain of the Syracuse University 1t for next season depending star fine on rk tholic | a big tice with w tch is that be- ¥ INDIAN Frank. 06704 MOTOCYCLE DISTRIBUTOR Used and Rebuilt Motocyolss Sold on' Easy Terms—Repairing RD A. FRENCH & CO. 424 Dth Street N.W. Match Your Odd Coats With Our Special TROUSERS $4.65 Save the price of an entire new suit. All colors, sizes, pat- terns. EISEMAN’S 605-607 7th St. N.W. Drain Your Motor Then Refill With REXOLINE MOTOR OILS The Highly Successful Motor Lubricant Product SHERWOOD BROTHERS, Inc.| Phone Lincoln 7558 EISEMAN’S 605-607 Tth St . s ecsed Bor. ¥ ond G Sts. Stylish All-Wool Suits Buy one of these special suits at $20. You'll have a dressy Easter suit at a small cost. Hundreds of suits to choose from—light and dark snades—sizes 33 to 48. Always Remember you can { buy a good Suit at Eiseman’s ! the 20 for $20. HE TOSSES HIS HAT INTO UNITED STATES PRIZE RING. . Goderwond On right is Eugene Criqui of France, featherweight champion of Europe, who time. weight honors. M. Endiline, Criqu greeting America for the first | He comes to gather sheckels and more pugilistic fame, his real objective being Johnny Kilbane's world feather- | s manager, is the other man in the picture. U. S. GOLF ASSOCIATION FAM[]US PACING SIRE, SCORED BY ALLAN LARD PETER THE GREAT DIES LLAN LARD oi the Chevy former holder of the north A try than, in his opinion, ciation In a statement Lard says “A body which governs the golf in this country is presumed to be repre of Amerfcan zoifers. Ar there a_dozen well informed golfers who helleve our present governing body 1s a representative one? I doubt it sentative Few Recognize Stym “Our governing bodies the stymle through a desire mony with the royal and committee If you were to the golf courses of this country any afternoon and ask the rst five hun- dred pairs you met if they were play- ing stymles you would find at least 499 out of the 500 were not playing them. he American golfers do n belivve in the stymie beca of 8 encroachment upon the precinets « sportsmanship—it unfair and un just. and, therefor un-American We never play them in our friendly matches, yet we are forced to do s in tournaments because the U. G.A desires to act in harmony with th roval and ancient This naturally 1 ds or to ask, ‘Does our assoc tion_represent the American golfers oi the 1o, and ancient abroad?” “Every_golfer in the world—except those of the governing bodies—is anxlous for the termination o great injustice now prevailing he- cuuse of the scarcity of goc hick ory. It is no exaggeration to say that 88 per cent of players are com- pelled to play hickory shafts of poor quality Th United States is only country where hicke and the Department of Agri- culture, after an exhaustive investi- gation, has published the statement that ‘the end of good hickory is in sight”’ n the face of this warning the average man of vision would begin looking around for a substitute, and he would not look far before he dis- covered that the whole engineer! world agrees that there is one, and only one, substitute for hickory. and that is steel.' The U. S. G. A, in its desire for harmony with the royal and anclent, has barred this one and only substitute 1l of us know that our game is longer, stralghter and steadier with fine hickory than with poor. We also know that those who pay the price get the former and that those who reinstated for har neient g0 over with grows cannot afford the price get the latter, | and this leads one to ask if a govern- | ing body truly Amerfcan in_spirit would for a fraction of a second coun- | enance a situation which enables a | golfer to win through his ability to pay rather than through his abllity to I This_sort of administratio Radiators and Fenders ANY KIND MADE OR REPAIRED, QCores installed in any make. 10 DIFFERENT MAKES RADIATORS. WITTSTATT'S R. and F. WORKS CHIPWOOD A better collar with spacing at the top COLLARS ~ SHIRTS Ch the | =l | d0cs not appeal to the American gol |ers onsideration supposed the: H Ori. { ple urday | in | mit e | lca | | WIN FRENCH RING TITLES. ing Lec tro « of Ice of Yo IF AC | oL AB ase Club, nationally and south amateur title of a more American organization to govern the game in this coun- is exemplified in the United have an American golf association. RACING RECORD IS SET IN CUBA FOR 2 1-16 MILES tion Paris nounced with th the lo. | MEN INDIANAPOLIS, March 26-—Peter the Great, famous racing sire of the stable of Stoughton A Fletcher, died here yesterday following a stroke of paralysis. known golfer sees the need States Golf Asso- | {on the track during h the famous pacer, who of 2071, was retired | ago by Fletcher Poter the at | track performers be more by any < racing career. held a mark with their Inherent several years and a square dea f this ‘harmony fr sense of jus- ¥ want hd more who are them, and if should rise gRest that we Great sired 549 standard which 1s said to than twice the number sired other racing stallion He was twenty-eight yvears old and was purchased by Mr. Fletcher in 1916 for $50.000 | i ’ Dow 6—The horse | ntal Park ended | A meeting of the running of the Duckpin Assoclation was held at 2 1-16|terday at the Recreation alieys, with President Earle Stocking in the chair | Committees reported favorable prog- ress on plans for the annuxl tourney At the conclusion of the regular meeting an informal gathering was held by the presidents of the various |leagues. President Stocking explain- ed fo them the intention was to plan for an organization for next vear that would have a new constitution Eugene [and by-laws, into which many ul. Buropean featherweight cham- ' cal improvements would be intro- n. who arrived from France Sat- duced. There were about twenty-five will make his first appearance | leakues represented. A regular meet- in a three-round exhibi- |ing will be held next fall when com- match aboard the steamship |mittees will be selected and work this eveninz. it has been an- | carried on throughout the today by American com- | looking to results tee for devastated France spring. riqui will meet an unnamed ,\mer.] n boxer. to v don’t ge in meetin' sent yme one and n the Alleys AVANA. March ing season at Or terday with the ental Park hand six-year-old Woif is said won red & CRIQUI FIGHTS TONIGHT. W YORK. March 26 America begin in the Carry Ice Cream League has wound | up its season and although it was the first ar of the organization it |proved a great big success. Drivers O onnel | captured the pennant with the Fac- Manch 26 g Wrctonncl| Ly Gt in dicond Muce and e on points from | Heipers third. High set and high middleweleht title | EAMe went to the pennant winners. Charles on points | BIl Brown had the best Individual s ey | kame, Tom Crooke the high set. the | mort strikes were scored by W. e A | Hall and N. Palowall had the larges arry Tee Cream team won {wo out |number of spares. A blind pig tour- three xames from the Marvland |ney will be rolled tonight. Cr. in_ Baltimore. | . 0 and 530. Hali | < won all the honors with | Harry Coveleskl, the former Philly and the high game of |30uthpaw, isa policeman in Shamokin, ARIS, championship m Poutet. Th m Ma GOOD LOOKING UR FRIENDS WILL PAY YAU THAT COM- PLIMENT ABOUT YOUR SPRING SUIT IT IS MADE TO MEASURE BY OMOHUNDRO, OMOHUNDRO SUITS EXPRESS YOUR_CHAR- TER, THEY MAKE YOU STAND OUT FROM WHO WEAR ORDINARY STORE OTHES. AND OMOHUNDRO'S PRICES ARE REASON- LE, TOO. OMOHUNDRO, 514 12th ST. Your Tailor—Just Below F St. ==34I=Z====2 Watch For The Sign Of The Four Esses 39995 The Hecht Co 7th at F One of the greateSt money-earners | Washington City | radi- | winter | 124 TENPIN SET PUTS CINCINNATI N VAN By the Associated Press. MILWAUKEE, Wis, March 26.— Sunday was a day of upset in the standing of the leaders in the team and singles event of the American Bowling Congreéss tournament.. C. Baumgarten of Cincinnati topped W. Elwert of Toledo, who was hold- ing the lead In the singles with 711, when he turned in three big games of 238, 209 and 277 for the remarkable | total of 724. Tournament officials think that score will win the singles event J. Torstick of Louisville rolled into fifth place when he totaled 696 on games of 248, 236, and 212. Buffalo furnished the excitement in the team evant, two quints from the Bison city placing it in the first five. The Schwable Pollak Poster team took second place when it totaled 2,952 on games of 927, 1011 and 1,014. Bad luck overtook them in the iast frame of the final game, keeping them from a bigger total. H Schwable was high man with 649, Jubilee Spring Water was the sec- ond team from Buffalo to place in the first five, taking fifth place when it turned in games of 905, 990 and 1,006 |- for 2,901 | Tne leaders in the doubles remain- ed intact throughout yesterday's fight against the pins. Standing of the Leaders. FIVE-MAN TEAMS, | Petersen Parkways, Chicago. | Behwable Pollak Porter, Buffalo.. Belmont Drugs, Toledo.......... DOUBLES F. Kolacke and J. Jacobs, Milwaukee R. Clayton and J. Ostrander. Toledo. . E. Mueller and S. Summers, Milwaukes SINGLES, C. Baumgarten. Cincinnati....... W. _Elwert, Toledo. F.” Wilson, ‘Toledo ALL EVENTS. ©O. Moses, Toledo. | L. Dunn, hicago. . . | F. Bower, Dubuque, Towa course of his visit to Colum N man, by hard and painstaking effort alon as the mentor is concerned, and by 1f the disciplinary methods of Fred | Dawson and of Buck O'Neill were re- Aented by the foot ball men, and they scemed to have been, one wonders what they will think of Haughton One of Haughton's great assets at Harvard was an unflagging spirit in which every man was willing to give all for the ultimate glory of alma mater. Also to take all. There have been stories that coaches in the my days at Cambridge went farther than hard words on the stadlum ficld when they thought such meaRures were necessary. Columbia is located in the heart of New York and the campus life is not nearly so pronounced as at most fnstitutions of her class. So it would appear that Haughton's duty will be to make clear to the players that they are doing something more than indulging In sport, that they are representing an ideal. fulfilling a stern purposc and that they are lit- tle more t pawns in the great project to which they are committed Perhaps a new verse will have to he written to the college anthem, Sans Soucl,” the refrain of which. as most know, proclaims that the pleas- ures of the day are sufficient without worry as to the morrow. Today will he full of travall under the Haugh- ton scheme, bolshevik tendencies will have no nlace upon the Columbia gridion next fall—E Pluribus Unum will be the watchword. And we hall see what we shall see (Capyright, 1923.) —_— After playing 1,350 games in eleven years with the White Sox, Catcher Ray Schalk is still a headliner. 1,020 COLUMBIA MUST PROVIDE REAL MEN FOR HAUGHTON BY LAWRENCE PERRY. EW YORK. March 26—Percy He pointed out that results on the gr and utter self-sacrifice by the man he is teaching resent his tactics and discipline and take the first town Morningside foot ball will prosper no more under Haughton tha any other coaches that have held the reins at ('u]u mbia in ' rec a bit| YANK INVADERS UNLIKELY TO WIN THE BRITISH OPEN Row Has Aroused Professionals of England and Scotland. OR the past two years the British open ct two greatest prizes from both a -.oneta point that golf can afford, been Amercina golfer—last year by Walter Hagen, and American born and bred, and the year before by Jock Hutchison, a Scottish born golier, but an Amer citizen o 2 This year Great Britain again will be invaded by can professionals in an attempt to liit the British crown for successive time. Press reports indicate that Hagen, Hut Sarazen, Barnes, Mehlhorn, Kerrigan and many other American professional golf will cross the ocean in May silver cup which bears on it so many names that have history. ~Walter Hagen, the long-smiting cx-caddie iro take the cup with him to England. Will any one of the it back? The chances are very much against it |HERE IS ONE ATHLETE WHO IS STAR STUDENT The literary athlete apecien. belng the hent Western Conference cross-country runner and one of the leading two- milers, Eghert Isbell, of Troy, Mich., is a writer of no mean abllity. Whimsies, University of Michigan literary perfodical, car- rles an excellent short story by Inbell in it srecent Ixsue. Inbell hax been a frequent magazine contrihutor. He ix a star student and in his home town Is known as a good debater and speaker. one of the has capturc n an the leading Ameri- the_third , Farrell g again the become g Ame will ns bring | According from the | Scottish turn of e will make wsion restore [to a British subje | fesslonal talent will 1its very best wares | British’ bretd {cleek no I |invasion as not worth {ing. Their complaisant attitude | been rudely shattered by the sple with the odds to profession nts for th superhumarn back the reliable” information the British plaued i a rare Besides deprecate consider. ha did un- wil 54 stror Th Is uniq won Roge amateur, Kerrig Hagen hast play pro. record two years Hutchison off with British Tommy Wether An after a d, the fin fron the v a stroke 5 Arferfcan H Just back of Bar Gene Sarazen, national oper titleholder ibtless will make the trip to land, notwithstanding the that has gone out about R tE i pposi tak The past {and it w him froi as are Ruch a the |event e 1 ranks at the an golf similar world, he internationa British a go: Haughton bia University nade it clear that he is no miracle ers rank with t the exy courses background of d play sthers ron are achieved definite tem, far a spirit of utter reliance upon coach If Columbia players subway train down- an g lines of a so rience an that the sy Hagen Hager Tried Many Times. England British said for gentry t yea ‘SUZANNE AND PARTNERS ANNEX TWO NET TITLES | By the Asenciated Press | CANNES, March 2 | Lenglen yesterday events in which she was entered ime tennis tournament finals In the mixed doubles, the French |girl and Baron Morphurgo w from Miss Ryan paired wi May Miss Ryan toc al fn the w | Mrs. Lambert | en’s doubles Kathleen McKane. rown. TF Mile. w Suzanne the two in de Elizabeth Chambe: d M 3, 6—3 Col. Mays | athlete.” woi ship, defeating Britain, 6—3, 6 again 1 the « A Ph champ, Hunter, Gre 0 g against him he Italian- 'KEARNS CARRIES OFFERS | OF FIGHTS TO DEMPSEY CHICAGO. 11 March Kearns. manager Jack Dem ping here o his way from New York to Los Angeles to confer with the | heavyweight champion ajd tha | three fights had been tentatively ranged for Dempsey i Offers have been for fights with Argentine fighter Harry Wilis. Kearns said that i anxious fight, Through. Geor Dune: . Artk vounge d cha 1, Tay ar 26.—Jack sev, sto champic rhe Ted Ray out of torte ap medal nsh b received, 5 Luis Jess he Firpo. Willard said and Dempsey was bad ho! to You’d Buy a Studebaker WITHOUT a Salesman! Any one who knows cars—and can compare Until one with another—will sell himself a STUDEBAKER after an in= spection of any of the STUDEBAKERS in use or in our showrooms. JOSEPH McREYNOLDS, President Commercial Automobile and Supply Co. Temporarily Located at 1016-1018-1024-1026 Connecticut Ave. ‘We Occupy Our New Home at 14th and R Telephones Jain i Main 2647

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