Evening Star Newspaper, April 23, 1924, Page 29

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SPORTS. THE__EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON, D. C., WEDNESDAY, APRIL 23, 1924 SPORTS. *G. U. Should Score in Penn Carnival : Leader Makes a Hit as Yale Rowing Coach BLUE AND GRAY COUNTING ON THREE WINS AT LEAST Confident of Suceess.in Four-Mile and Medley Na- tional Championship Events and in South Atlantic Title Competition. BY H. C. BYRD. | ly looks teward the Penn relay games Friday | ladelph imistically as any other Victory in three races, or at is just what the Blue and Gray expects, capture another event or so, and ¢ cvents for individuals may give a ieant by the old saving, a clean pair of ronent ite Athletic Association one mile better than an even chance for aching basket ball and base , still finds time to tutor cham- st_guarter and will offer the re O'Reilly feels that Georgetown has | wo of Virginia's relay men, Bohannon | ond d a ot toher esult EORGETOW and Saty G university t least an even chance with the that one or two of practical demons heels is a good th In the South A e Tes relay champions victory, Jo I and helping pionship track fe opposition to th but sufficient streng r t and Talbott, do t The Ship rel al P just represented that many feeling that i t may is Says wesides ce twe and of play, tinst the Yeisley with to score the big le period b, was tut could | offerings sufficient « ough r d gaine afayette Lafavette, 5; George- | Marsters, ex | to all fouriot Cutholie University rallied in t three innings in it Mar At Quantico and tw could not prevent th il Dows wtter ng the e trick, so lost by for the Second time this s » that team. De Nault's ho drive wis the most interes of the game from a the | game with rday. whom ng their marks dowi e two-mile race § s a half mi vn mediey the firs cature the next two me ) e i S80. In this 1t Heriil arter and he w!ll der 50 seconds if he continues present fo Dowd Ray Haas th S IS fo travel the b In Other Biz Eveats. ench man, ¢ but in tie sprint anarter the last run_the — Benn: k' another | pocket bil pionship here by defeat 1ulpa nieaf, titleholder, 1 The game ran 26 inning high run s and Gree ' HAVERS-OCKENDEN DEFEAT HUTCH AND McLEOD, 2 UP! BY W. R. McCALLUM. ITH a victory over one of Scotland’s finest golfing combinations icked away in the bag, Arthur Gladstone Havers, British open goli champion, and James Ockenden, French open title-holder, | left Washington early today for New York, headed for more ult. |around the metropolis. | over | Havers and Ockenden, playing the course the Columbia ( munr\i expected to get | . C a fourth or fifth | Club—a course they had never seen before, adec thor- | oughly familiar conditions of weath outgolied Fred the Co- which are th ter-mi - Left to right: the in which they : omp: J. Haas a IN FINAL OLYMPIC TESTS 28— IDISTRICT GIRL SWIMMER BALTIMORE, Md. Mixnew Loretta Canmon y MeLeary, Baltimors, and Miss Flor- ence Scndding of Washington will xent the wouth Atlantle din- A. A. U. in the final Olympic tx for woman swimmers at Cl Lodge, Scarboroughs 7 and S i are announced by 0k committee of the xouth Atlantic district. Mins Canuon will compete in the one and three meter diving fimals; Mixs MeCleary in the 100 meter Mixs MeCleary in the 100-meter Imck wiroke and 100-meter free style awim, and WMixs Skadding will April tment rapidiy athlete thought track and field wc is ent nar but notwi twelve £ anythin place, eve of victories | of Ml James Ockenden, French open champion; Freddy MecLeod, Columbia pro; Arthur G. Havers, British open champion, and Jock Hutchison of | b, Chicago, one of America's leading paid players. contest in the 200-meter breast afternoon, | Mtreke. | Ives dormie gets that ual Races. lumbia pro. and Jock Hutchison of New York yesterday, Three successive birdies on the six- | fourteenth hole of seventeenth and eighteenth in | where them orning round brought the visit- |5 2 the final thrill to duo from 1 down to 2 up at the faithful gallery which followed luncheon interval and they never were | them through rain and wind to watch ter. although Mcleod | the swaying issus of the match. 4 Hutehison. | Five down at the end of the sev-| d style on the final | enth hole—the twenty-fifth of th » match, made a grand bid | match—Hutchison won the eighth and ninth with five-foot putts Ockenden again pulled the spectacu- lar at the twenty-eighth, when hel ran down a sloping thirty-foot putt for a birdie They halved the el R ] Sed | twenty-ninth in 5. none of the quar- 0 drop. Had the putt gone down the | tot g ainst = from Scotland. match probably would have been | wind from the il Totk mad Georgetown 1 squared, for Jock slipped an iron shot | Havers, who consistent uthit the event in whic is entere above the pin on the eighteenth and |other pair, halved the thirtieth hole again it may ac ish e more* Lioled the putt for a birdie 3 and a |in birdie s than it exy mav made under weather con- | do, one thi will £ at rivaled in every degree | Short Thirteenth Produces 3x. have in competit *hiladelphia far-famed gales of the Scottish| .. Yekend | e most brilliant track and | conrses that front on the North Sea. But Havers Ockenden both | field athle Playing with the preoision and |Féached the gree the short thir- town colors. bred by years of Eoif over un- |teenth, the —thirty-first, and were | miliar courses, Havers and Ocken- (down "in par wlitic S ook snall to | ¥ putting them dormie sater Unfamiliar distances bother. | 5 down. Ockenden almost threw the L enom Dot nor Tolls of ground that | 1L missed @ twenty-inch puth for a 1 parlor. They have the game, and | Balf in 4 with Hutchison and both he air knows no rolls | i L to win, with Havers findinz ize the less skillful golfer. | the ditch on his second shot and a Ock 74 and 74 in the | Ing far short of the hole pair of for| Fred Mel turn took t 1mbia like duck: Moleod took 4 match away @t the fourteenth, where »«d Mcleod know he knows his McLeod and Hutchison got 4s on the other natural features | SiXteent n’ paired ‘admi- | Ockenden’s chip shot for his 4 finish- They were iison, and yet were atch on ca: t the sh wi hole card of 149, rs having 154, Ockenden and Mcleod 156 Shower Interrupta Play. and shower forced post- the morning play at the while the high wind ame ‘up wfter luncheon forced scores still higher. The British- ers, however, had Jjust as much trouble in the wind as did McLeod na Hitchison. Where McLeod was n the morning, playing a firm and he was 84 in the aft squi emen: und hth hol, nins They came within_inches of halv- ing the matc for Hutchison's putt for a birdie 3 at the seventeenth, with is side dormie 2 down, just peered | over the edge of the cup and refused sented is which seves @printers have bee pete with Liddel, hile Hav- with 74 and 75, heé morning pastime, ts, he afternoo; ana Scorex for Both Rounds. » scores for both rounds follow: MORNING ROUND. Washington has sred to run in ms to have The ¥ ur than u. v are atic George team e which it s to win faster cmmn wowes oo PRI come Snsn P soon 5 g rabily. merni Leod up. Dayton a and Hutcl o squad Phil L i} professional the | Hutch Lo, Man for Day, | feet to the left of the hole and he ran | m-| Hutchison, notwithstanding a rag- | down the putt for a deuce. equaling | Litiman is to bel ged out nine in the afterncon, was | Havers' feat of the morning. Ha in case a substitute is| the bright star of the exhibition. Me | heeled his tee shot at the seventeenth added a 77 ta his 72.of the morning, |and pushed it out of bounds, but and walked off with a pocketful of | Ockenden was there and ended the gold for low score for the thirty-six (match by holing a four-foot putt for oles, low score for the final eighteen |a 4 after Hutchison's try for a 3 nd the split of a tie between him and | stopped on the lip of the cup. | McLeoa for low morning score. Jock ended with a birdie 3, but it The rugged stand made by McLeod | was too late. He finished five strokes and Hutchison, beginning. at _thelin front of Havers with a thirty-six- adelphia followin mons the fifth m needed. | ...,..m s woos saoco P PO covs coon cose oman pane omon hooe see it i eorgia is here today University of Maryland In two gz one this afternoon, the other tomorrow. Both contests are seheduled to begin i o'clock. The Crackers have one the best—pos- =ibly the best—bz all te in the south. Last year they made a bril- Jiant record and this year they 1” doing. _just about well, if not a Jittle be ;*.7?'3"“";;1;{73"":;"'2‘;?,-“""‘F (’Jhe LORSHEIM SHOE hE e Sl COLU’MBIA NETMEN WIN. BALTIMORE, April 23.—Columbia University tennis team defeated the Baltimore Country Club in a dusi contest here, four matches to one. University of to meet th the last hailf of th that final bagger W over the period, t el two on riottesyille 1d who pro ith the two- who last HE tasty style and summer coolaess of Florsheim Skele- ton Lined Oxfords offer a refresh- ing change to the man who. has not as yet satisfied his feet with a pair of Florsheim Low Shoes. ‘Most Styles™ Georgia's nem wallop, th played bril Crackers to foot ball. give four runs scored against it in the first inning of yves- terday's game with La . enough | runs to give the Bastonians the vie- | tory. After the inning the | Blue and Gray settled down and pro- | Georgetown had STANDARD MAKE TIRES CASH OR CREDIT NT TIRE SHOPS Sizes 4 to 12 AAA t0o E “Casy Club Shop” 1318 G Se. -Cor 7th-& K Sts. comfort-20 414 9th St. | here. | cut off from the descriptive and in- | structive writings of the <| while reading the questien as u very 233 Pa. Ave. S.E. 1914-16 Pa. Ave. Gven.Penbody £.Colnc. HIS PICTURESQUE STYLE IMPRESSES THE OLD ELIS Uses Thunderous Voice in Pointing Out Faults of Oarsmen in Practice-Blue Fast Developing Smooth-Working Combination. BY LAWRENCE PERRY. N, Conn., April 23.—Yale rowing men are undergoing N an experience that is novel. This saying a great deal, for in the course of the past two decades aquatics at New Haven have been rife with novelties. Eli oarsmen have toiled under committees of imported Oxonian instructors, have listened to the cockney mandates of | Putney scullers, have had all the sorrowful experiences that come from inexperienced amateur coaches, and have known as well the faculty coack. es in sli the il sial and picturesque than set_down ping a splendid xception of Shef- re all six footers = Will not fall be- at the inxtant the gether, rowing . but able 1f ever was ic prospect this looks he one. But there no intention of permitting the ) PP tic.paie 10 tae Oiympic trials. wonders why not. Certainly, if the crew in the carly races demonstrates | that its nt wspect was not mis- ding. it eriainly should be a ndidite for the houor of representing But never until now have they been roared at by a large-lunged Y west as adequately as the departed Guy Nickal's represented England and Bill Mallory. the 1923 Yale foot ball captain, represents the south. | When Jupiter Tonans holds thun- . Sl e 0 | through which the Housatonic River | winds its picturesquely tortuous way Edward Leader knows his only rival. What ix this “fiick of the wrista” | Leader. . that golfers are told xo much about | And Yale should. For here is a | and which is, I agree, exsential to the | TOWing coach, indeed. Had this man | For the most|impossible they would sce more than part the wrint| Leader sees with his two keen and action in the golf | comprehensive —orbs. Al _in one that the player not only of the d < of one man houta' he DIA7S5 | But of every man in hte boat, so it must be — uncon- | scems fn. however, m|INE Vour : \u are feath- ok ot e n under P t your blade wrints” Juxt o | . not getting which the golfer vhould under- stand. Thix - ix Futting of the rough the ball than it 1.! matter of npplying wrist power | That Ix, if vou properly guide | 10 150 poun | the clubhend ihe application of powe od dixcussions I shall (ry to make this || “flick of the wrints” understandable | o[ | to the avernge golfer. ms picturesque son of the uttermost west ward Leader represents the | derous sway over the hills of Derby By Chester Horto }Anrl Yale likes it. Yale swears by | ki g St e licattve ahatd from the west a dozen eyes, it seems Khot ix o rapld | stroke will cateh an impression wclons of it. There | “Han, ou are rusb- the ball ix hit a proper head mects he | T M relghic o will he instinctive. In subsequen ; Jol NET LEADERS ASK TILDEN TO “TALK THINGS OVER” PHILADELPHIA, April 23—William T. Tilden, national tennis champion, today declined the invitation of Julian S. Myrick, chairman of v the American Davis cup committee, to discuss his recent resignation from the Davis cup and Olympic teams at a conference in New York on Friday. Tilden stated that he had a previous engagement to play in exhibition games in the south. EW YORK, April 2.—William T. Tilden, I tennis champion. who resigned from the Davis cup and Olympic teams wing the publication of a report by the amateur rules committee oi the ten association which, he alleged, referred to him as “a because of his w mittee Friday to iting, has been invited to m talk things over In the letter of invitation Julian Myrick, chairman of the Davis cup committee, expressed surprise at the | possibility that an American tennis champion would refuse to represent his country in international competi- tion when called upon “You have been invited to pln\ (Gopre TESTS FOR S. A. BOXERS. BALTIMORE. Md. April proximately seventy amateur boxers are entered mpio f the A AU : i) YALE wms AT POLO. it tonight. Eight s 3 : C. April 3 from t to heavywelght, :A)t[txh' defeated Charlotte carded 3 5. after the locals had ans, 5 to 2, at the end | of the first half ZUNA NOT REGULAR | &% TEAN oETs coumts. ON OLYMPIC TEAM 2 of the Chesapeake and . pany team NEW YORK 1, regarded o e natior the Friends rom May 1 to nnmlw ed by Chair- n evil influenc with the Davis cup c s, considerable nd implies its ation's decision is generally conce and in Eng- pproval of the POCtAOT thon until he ded that the Davis cup weakened ton mara start Bostor 1| versa Zuna ve April William , 2d, of n _has tele- | Eraphea that = national clay on in the of July pla Weir in the ts in and De r were winning th doubles Philadelphia, wlex with recent ) Davis cup committee.” ft read, “it i difficult to concelve your having any doubt whatsoever With regard to your eligibility or to the committee's view in this regard.” Action Stirs London. LONDON, April 23 —William T. Til- den’s withdrawal from the Davis cup and Olympic competition is attracting much notice in lawn tennis circles s said to have entered the ainst the advice of election commi‘tee CREDIT “Pay as You Ride” W.. April \n"(rmmh Malch Your Odd Coats With Our Special TROUSERS $4.65 ur Save the price of entire new suit. All eolors, sizew, pat- terns. EISEMAN’S Seventh at F Small Payment Down, Balance Monthly T. 0. PROBEY CO. 2100 Pa. Ave. N.W. the cup were m: ced by the developm tors and Fenders D MADE OR REPAIRED, stailed in ary make ‘T MAKES RADIATORS S R.oznd . WORKS 803 Your Old Hat dadeNew Again Cleaning, Blocking and Remodeling by Experts. Vienna Hat Company 400 11th Street The Westminster Gazette, ing on the decree of the States wn Tennis Ass which ht about Tilden® drawal, “The purists in gone much too far. the pl versal comment- United tion, with- | this ' instance If such a rule, as er-writer decision, were uni-| applied, the public would be best expo- nents of many games, a deprivation which would be seriously resented.” | Sporting Life, on the other hand, big one, says the practice of ama-| teurs writing for newspapers has!| Get this flavor (0] generatio;ls of Eisenlohr worked to get the Henrietta flavor. Then the Elsenlohrs set a watch over that distinétive taste quality. Not one man or two, but twelve —a jury of judges—each keen in his taste and expert in judgment. All this effort is worthwhile only if you find in Henrietta the flavor you’ve always wanted. Test it tonight, by smoking the after-dinner Henrietta (the fifteen-cent size). W. H. WARNER J. S. BLACKWELL & SON 504 Eleventh St. N.W. Alexandria, Va. 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