Evening Star Newspaper, July 27, 1924, Page 56

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REIGN OF KID LINKSMEN The ‘Smmese Twins” of Golf Explamed Here by an Expert IN TiITLE PLAY IS BROKEN . Two Crucial Points in COAST STAR OPENS DRIVE INTOURNEY AT SEABRIGHT s Saved Himself This Season for Cam- paign in East—He and Griffin Also Will : Take Part in Doubles. F chief interest, among many interesting po! O nament of the Seabright (N. J.) Lawn Ter which begins tomorrow, will be the Johnston, our second ranking player Little Bill has done no tournament playing buildisng himself up for a six-week campaign, at hopes—and expects'-to find himself at the ve better condition than he has ever been Last year Johnston went abroad in the Spring. playing in France England, and winning all sorts of honors, including the s ship at Wimbledon. Returning to this country his future career was a gression. Anderson, the Australian, defeated cup matches at Forest Hills, and at German hc was |m£ in a condition to \\H"‘un' There m CAPT. SEXTON GETS ACE |wraron Coraiui irs cuvrul e strat o ON WASHINGTON COURSE‘ ng engagements are Cept. W. R. Sexton joined the holesin-one club yeaterday: ncore |UPOD ing an ace on the 11th hole of the |ex Waxhington Golf and Country Clul courxe. With the wind against him Capt. Sexton played a mashic frem the elevated tee and had the satisfaction of watching the ball disappear in the hole. He wa playing with Capt. C. B. Munger. T EEETEAETEET Stroke Are Shifting of Weight at Beginning of Back Swing and Continuation : of Control of Club Head at the Top. [ Seasoned Play Brady Recently Have.Bettered Efforts of 2 7 3 ' Having tried this so successfully. ke £3 | no doubt, and having let your arms cvery golf stroke. and some- | just take the natural course afger the { times there are two of them. shoulder turn, it is a question P { T whether to let you go ong hitting have been hearing that “golf is a young | That implieg that when the player LR IRUCERtter WhALle] Youinow | seid - % i orth, or to tell you how to get over : & cor N s wwing critics who .wrote their stuff about \quers one of these he will do thaf peculiar feeling you develop bunkerediand .com ,g d,m,g and mm.‘m.g the , well to train his cyes [ur a look now \\]h'" your club gets near the top of = Ih‘l\\‘cru these two crucial points < "‘" "”‘“‘]‘ ik < 3 . o BT ) N you have relaxed your wrists certainly appeared that youth was the domi- | in the swing there is little choiee al the beginning of your back swing, and that the lads of 20 or thereabouts were setting | s to which is possessed of the most you have been able to feel the weight ! S : levil ¥ of the clubhead d ctly in your fin- d-timers of 30 or more couldn’t step along with. |[deviltry. About the only satisfac- gers all the way back. (By this wrist effective and driven home by the victory | tory way I know of to stack them relaxation 1 mean you should make 21, in the open at \'LwL:Ir in !‘.4.3.’i _uxachdnu’il\- sure !]\y one against the other would be to howing in the amateur championship at Brookline in the | ¢osc them to th il SS « e ceiling, And then came along 22-vear-old Bobby. Jones the next | i £ andiey with a victory in the open at Inwood over the | the ene.that stuck up there is the worst offender. the” wrists 5o loose that if the club- head weighed two ounces more it +1s ever gathered together. Agiaiod Taking them as twins, we might the’ two crucial points in the would slip out of your fing teran of the old swing, as 1 have observed them in nSl e O nearly every player who has come to my direct attention, are wrapped up near the top of the bac - cver, the clubhead can very easily get away from this distinct sense-of first, the shifting of weight at the beginning of the back swing, and in the continuation of control of'the touch because, at that particular SWING WHERE point where the elubhesd ceases to go clubhead just before the club attains the top of the back swigg. In these CLUBHEAD 1S L Y up and starts to fall down toward USUVALLY "LOST the position of paralle] across the | shoulders, there is an instant when its welght, being directly on top of the shaft as the shaft points up, ceases to cighth tin ks tri N ouly retaste of what | that when I describe a method. I am | your swing is made or ruined o Eome=the Jor “hot in a| dixeussing 1its application to an up-| Discussion of these should begin [ rwmphe for e (hi olier | Tight_or_n_medium upright swing. | WIth the shift of weight beeause, ob- Cablon ot oicorh EEchtn Lunar g ously, it comes first in the swing. Moxt golfers uxe | 1 PN oo preaching my shift of one or the other have any pull against the finger mus- around to the right as start s—and right there is where the un- too. Your left leg falls in, relaxed, cventually would completely snow under the voung and perhaps pre- weight until it would seem that every of these—the me- | Bolfer on carth would by now have dium upright per- toward the right leg. Keep the left [aWay from the ball must learn that :ur."'"‘fix(\ir:}"i';hr s leg free of stiftness. It will pull}lt isn't done any wore ~When you against you If it becomes rigid. ‘The | (huS twisy ¥aur shouiders you risht kneo does not lock, that s, (31 YOUL Mol ONT Srugkic (0 ker| It is this “loss of the clubhead" that What about the hands during this | the club back, causes you to fall for- nitous element in a storm of | G this little advice for the hard-hit, Sicheralbams slane Willer Hagon long, arrowy, flying ball down pat he South, runnini up an mpress hapx ix the com- | and vei—odd as 1t i< —apparently the o aningup (R e e mon swing among | players who can do it correctly are r from their Winter trav- the average run |6V and far between Assuming that perhaps of players. never heard of the There are some | shift of weight 1 might cite here, s Like Walker, Marston, Hagen and > is a crucial i point in | Sarazen, Sweetser and Jones. & ® ars of late we And the kn e haimtalit; Cricket Clu ved by Willia f the form when thev were 1923 it the sure. was made gles champic fie'd of professio: marked retre him at singles A WEIGHT SHIFTS B SHOULDERS TURN (3 EJLPUB STARTS ~----0 THE WEIGHT SHIFT inwhile out at Clevel give Tilden ang school, | of Uu- r championship in 1919 .md ured rather mach in chim i since then, was pointing the | By Chester Horton——' WLy v the veterans by winning the | umateur chamionship for | went to the semi-f directly you Jnship your shoulders lex comes up straight. Let your shoulders and your head go along, twisting essary to the the top of the heap b 1t xhould be assumed by the golfer i ted to stand forth or was “Loxx of the Clubhead.” | Herd the Placid Players. John 1 Howard almost Johnst IN UPRIGHT OR MEDIUM UPRIGHT' WING CLUBHEAD MOVES BACK ON LINE OF ELIGHT BEFORE IT BREAKS BACK LETTS’ GOLF TROPHY TO JUDGE CAMPBELL Judge E. K. Campbell w nual tournament for the John C. Letts trophy, open to members of the have very necessary you saw IN FLAT [SWING LEFT WRIST BREAKS CLUBHEAD BACK FROM BALL MMEDIATELY - giub . causes you 1o promotes that indescribeable S & & thi| ward—toward the hole ahead-—so |2 €0 Bl & TOE HECH :f{’,’; ;'J’L"‘(';,z“‘;";'m,’”,"f",,J,‘:L“f,'(}",,.‘pfis‘nm You are directly above the ball. [ fe€ling of “having to go it blindly A e e i hans ves | The correct shift of weight puts you around the top of the back swing Paxed and free and let the hands and | ™ behind the ball. The left shoulder, | This confusion results because, hav- laxed and froe and let the hands 2nd | then, stuys right where it was in the |ing lost the clubhead without actual- sssmosciayen fogthe 3 address whils you Shift the weight |1y knowing what has happened. you | KVhen: you first try this you wiil|oVer. Keep both shoulders fucing te [ein struggle Jo get hold of it Detroit, where they Oakland possibility of befng -correct in the | Straightening up your right leg|shoulder wmuscles are feeing yor. indeed, wrote the Shift. But 1 say it is far better to|Will causs Your clubhead to move di-|an they are too coarse to wrasp it the abali who use success- | S(ATtel You take your address posi- [and not shift.” Besides, you will vmni-*"rmmu] line, o) 15 to I,m',""’};:f, S el e iz ball over~iz Tully the nat| 425, ?\“w'( epress tne right shoulder | be swaying one-tenth part as et HRuRdD ok Ieei weis e RE Rl SOt I the bt anis s oy would win, ey | #bout = inches and at the same time let | as you think you are X g - R B SO . s N ift Salght s e swing. A gewiloon B 1 3 supported on your right leg only,|one can acquire the shift of weight up on his toes, with the exuber- turally. a few fall | L e ith The| The next thing you must watch out |should be in. Your shoulders, re-|throughout. But it takes training s Club yesterday, defeating and strength of youth, would In with dnxtrae- | O SOt oy forvard T mean | for is the vast difference between |member, are still turned toward the [the sensitive finger and thumb m W Baker on ihe Tact hole up brown tors who teach it |\, 0irq the bole ahead, | This coneti, | really shifting and just shoving the|ball. Now, fmmediately after the|cles to be able to feel the clubh Dr. Baker was one up at the tu Al T like Jock Huteh-| /(70 (o ward press with the body. | FIEht hip out. When this hip is mere- |shift of weight, turn your shoulders|all the way up in the back swing. The Letts' cup competition is a 2 fasom, while ~the | v, ains venly dived Iy poked out to the right the left|{to the right. While turning vour{ An the only way I know of to|pandicap event in which < And what I very fat man findx ght remains evenly divided| 5 “hder dips down, instead of mov- | shoulders do not lift the clubhead|train them IS to train themn I have | he club 57 vears of ag: whe great d Keen | it an abxolute necessity. In the fint O YOUT fe =t \':;l are now set for| oot G This brings about a col- |with your arms. When your should- | known a good many golfers who have | are also member: the “as-4 irned up champion— | AWIng the action of the left wrint | (16 ShITL of welkht with which allly, [0t e efe side. Don’t go dawn ers have turned as far to the right |helped themselves greatl? by taking | sociation, are eligible. the start of the back swing ix |SNOLS Pt the putt must begin | with this . shoulder—go over. Re-|as vou feel they should go (instinct|@ clubhead in their thumbs and fore-| t breaks the club back- To Shift the Welght, | gardless of how much you sway, get|alone will glve you the guide in this) | fingers and “working” it back and = shift this weight Kid { Oakland ances and ppened or seniors' n compietely in the veteran | @t Cyril Walker is more than s old—sufficientiy old to be fortably out of the boy wonder and has been w ng around courses some 20 vears, as long life span of the Youngsters the had picked to win ros went down to at Roslvn Long Is es, Cyril W y, and | o, - make your |over there. By no possible stretch of | just let your arms take the perfectly |forth through this tiny segment of] ontario has more golf links than | right leg straighten up the left forearm aiso rolis seme. turn- ¥ i the back swing until their digits d . i . under you.| your body can you shift too much. natu ourse, and for the first time | = ir digits de-) any other part of Canad ing the clubface mway from the ball | your antire body— shoulders all|~ Now the shoulder. Those of your life, perhaps, you will hit out | Veloped a lot of sense of their own. - | Jity of Toronto leads back. The circle of thix xwing | _wij) move ov Rl e n in the habit ong. straight, true-flying ball 1921.) ber of clubs—twent BIG LEAGUE AVERAGES | Base Ball nd the left arm Ix thrown out xome Including Games of Thursday seplba G Mixs Browne Will Plaf. ss Mary K MUNY TENNIS TOURNEY & IS SLATED NEXT MONTH Mayme 3 SK the veteran clan of tennis players here what serves as the great- | from the body inxtead of being hept in close, ax in the more upright xwings. It is permissible to let the | Here again, left wrist break the clubhend away | was a course from the ball at once, in any swing. | the wallop and strength of 4| but my method urges piayers to use win. And John- | the “late hreak” of the wrixts—that | ar-0ld pro, and a|i% keep the clubhead in line with the s zolter, did ~'to be|shaft until near the {op of the back the winner up to the But | ~wing. It is important that you get agatn ‘@ Veteran o 'the Mike | one method and stick to it. All mmd‘ Haien and Sar spore writers opined, the AMERICAK. | CLUB BATTING. | Club. G. AB. R. H.2B.3B.HR. !cl 1, Clab.. . AB. R H. 2B.3B.HR.Pct Cleveland 52 3180 435 246 180 33 21 997 Now York 7 988 165 48 5707 New York 94 94 940 150 52 €2 Na |8¢. Louis 905 150 53 & Washington ...95 321 9 9 09 888 128 24 52 "5 =5t Louts 90 3. t 524 129 35 39 (282 Anotios| Doty 5. 98 891 140 58'22 281 A €T | Chicago 91 1286 Pmmuxn 840 116 77 16 .281 winning | Boston 93 3. 1275 | Boston i 855 123 &5 17 279 Philadelphia | 92 5,067 349 800 127 29 40 .262 | Philadelphix 378 833 126 40 48 1263 INDIVIDUAL AVERAGES. . INDIVIDUAL AVERAGES. (15 Games or More.) (15 Games or More.) o Flzer,oub. 6. 4B B, o el O B AR B B BRI competition, tennis Hollowers There: | Gombs, N 10 13 412 | Sooper Bt .25 58 o abouts will be attracted by the Muni- 4 o0 | Siophenson. fkvg; g; i s 12 | OBt Bk 8 33 o3 una = g Cipal court tournament, which will e s xmi"“‘“ Bos. ... 22 24 5 375 get under way the first part of Au- Dl ml-;A hsacy 1 ‘s |Savler. Fite._...88 8; -366 gust often again |Archdeacon, Ch. : X H i 88 31 .360 woui royle, who —romp through a field of youngsters [drr)npmx a shot here and there | 5 56 387 i NATIONAL, Lo s Brady of Mamaroneck, where the new | players do that. d Foot Club is located—came | (Copyright. ough. Mike is getting along. He hasn't the dash and fire he used to have and Mike's hair is getting a ttle thin on top. But Mike had the punch in the last round to put it over, kids were wavering and ng to hold their game in the path should go. Last Fall. at sluggers’ course, we ton. the golfing gent phia. who has been f Short est boon for the advancement of the sport in Washington and they | Australian team wi will promptly divulge the information that the District ju ior | Mathey and Behr. championships and the Municipal court titular matches are the muost |, AT2NE the te active factors The junior tournament is-due to close tomorrow on me Dumbarto ourts. Those who have followed the tournament say it has been brin (ul of interest. With the terminatign of the junior 1924) winning the British open veteran of the game in the groove Veterans Are the Steadiest. Sure thing, golf is a young man's | Flossmoor, another |game. But not always in com | saw Max Mars- | tion. How many times hav from Philadel- | youngsters shot a great round performing golf- | two—brilliant, _indeed; far : ‘miracles for many, many years !hnllzant than' the older man's and now boasts a slight paunch— | ding But how re four c considered commit States Lawn Ten six teams are: Wi and R. Norris Willian feated the Austral last year: Vincen Francis T. Hunter, O MANOR AND ARGYLE | v it GOLF TEAMS IN TIE?;&E;'-\."'_*"}:‘E"}\ - while the 1 ] w0 ] ] 2] Richards cham- .—'—".. P P YRR TTSPOR - [P s Gl is one of the the Municipal All but the tered at club | under the the Argyle Country|Sommittee, in a team match|; afternoon at the former's cach team winning BVSSL'LL V#s.h2fl ll o matches, s devised entative an > to a victory in the amateur cham-|through the last 36 holes of a 351 tches, has devised a tentative plar = aoeuae?g—a rénom.a-e-na golfers and » eSwonRaaBeaol | Relly, N ¥ Bressier, Cin. Chi. B TPV P OIS P SN hold on th 385! 8 ro8B0mle Cobb. Det 375 Fingland, where we find Walter Hagen | race, PROS AND AMATEURS FACE ON THE COLUMBIA LINKS | Jamieson, _Clev. 88 Woodall, Det. . 34 Jacobson. St. L.80 Heilmam, Det. 96 | Speaker, Clev. .83 JUDGE, Wash.” 86 Bassler, Det. .79 TAYLOR, Wsh. 15 Harris, Bos. ...73 273 Evans,’ St. L....20 Yilligms, St 176 Collins, Bt. L. RICE, Wash, Burns, Clev. Summa, Clev. immons. ~Phil.. 92 obin, St. L wite, N. Y Sisler, “St. | Grigsby, | G seven tournament ir seri been te first of a have Wrights'e, Phil. Cunning’m = Bos. Grimes, Bkla, Bancroft, Bos. .. Toporcer, 8t. L. 39 91 Fowler, Cin. ...36 91 Do you feel that playing a good deal of golf will interfere with playing good base ball? PPN W 8 ribepar a»weunu-unn—a-uwuac&-‘:—a-nu Manor, defeated Argyle, 2 and 1; J defeated R. P. 1 up. Best ball, Woodward's bunch of amateur golfers today is awaiting the signal that will send them into action against a team of profersiouals from Washington clubs. The match will start at the Columbia Geountry Club this afternoon, and will settle a long-standing-argument as to whether amateurs, selected with care, can beat a team of professionals clubs about the city. a formida- stars, including Bar- won by 3 LL pepped up, hoping for a victory over the paid contingent, Donald early namin am has been ade Bennett, Manor, defeated I.| the stions sssksts Catcher, Chicago White Sox. One of the greatext backstops of all time. {Hax caugcht in 100 or more games per xeaxon for the past 12 years. BEetoBeoBE: 2 group o from the Woodward will captain that Davis cup tean doubles dur eks preced EEREHT R A review of the junior champion- Teveals that no really brilliant | | players were uncovered. but it does | show th several promising youn sters flashed to the limelight. Hicks is a typical example, and if he masters the poise demanded of & finished rack eter he will go far. In the tournament | play, however, Hicks' performance was a mixture of good and bad play Duley {and Jimmy Mitchell, who were elimi- nated, also displayed some cleverness. | Gjjette, Manor, defeated G- & wasg fifty vears ag but they appeared to lack the tenacity | pun s am 1 Boat bt il arantro- | WILERIA: took ot of pressing their opponents. o Ttter e Hicks is apt to acquire the polished T z T T oel e s tactics of an expert if he gets the| CAN PLAY CHESS, THOUGH. |ing the ancient game of te proper kind of coaching, The Holmead | 01 om FO0 TR T s TIRE: TaBEBIT oo b - o - ] s N < 3 years ge, a Moro stk il X rainy or “off” days I think that a|qury o0, of the olest e o e | of Ramain. the new chess champion | o may £o decper than Wingfic! round or 5o of golf will help rather | looxont. for sosas talent. Hicke Mes | Of the PRIlipDines, can neither read | gty DUt his was the first st than harm a player's game of base | Ginty, Callan ang Phillips have been | NOF write the Arabie nor any other | 100, WHTL (he firoe that mere wod | Shaute, “Clev. .30 73 BT T whereby this year's tournament will : pionship. Again the vounger ele- | trying competition, while Manor Club GOSLIN. Wash. 95 357 ‘gsy | Touns. X X who frequent the publie court and his kid days far behind him | ahead in his plodding way to win? MARTINA, Wh. 19 37 351 3 In the near future Doyle will call a | Club spl "he scene should properiy shift to|To the swift goes not always the ub splite even leading players at the Bathing Beach, | Yesterday Sixteenth Street Reservoir, Monument for the purpose of conducting four | POINLS distinct tournaments on these play A return match will be played soon The winners and runners-up « : ; 1t by each tourney will be eligible to com- sults of the match follow to the present cide the doubles and singles Munici- ott. Manor. 3 and_2; John | United pal champions. Doyle believes that | Manor. defeated W. P. Le enge ro rivalry and produce the most talented | by Manor netmen. W. E. Richardson, 2 . on a different basis, as only one se- | Graf, Argyl Answered by ries of matches wis plaved on one | nard. Manor, foll h i a with | Di iz ollowers who are in accord with | pj Este, Argyle. 2 o 2C. Staley, | leading Davis cup } plan. This will mark the fourth S o i e | all_even. Best ball, won by Manor M. Carlson, Manor, defeated | manner defeated C. W. Fisher, | both and 4. Best ball, won by | three w the elder- |Johason N. Y. 44 99 I = be truly representative of the netmen Thent had failed. for Max is over 30, | Iy gents of 30 Summers or more forges | S el mecting of delegates selected by the course, Lot and the Sixth and B Street courts ing_grounds over the mew course of the Argvle 3 that pete in the final matches that will d»~§ V. P. Di Este. Argyle, defeated A. | tentatively nar this plan will inject keen sectional | Duc, Argyle, 5 4nd 4. Best ball, won Last vear the tournament was run | M. Fischer, 2 set of courts. Doyle declares that he | Manor. RAY SCHALK B onferred with a mumber of tens | § year for the Municipal competition. SR e e L Argvle,” 2 up: Frank | With the record is 2 above par for the course. Par has never been equaled by either amateur or professional. McCallum’s card follows Out— Pro, | par Playing golf will not interfere ngles and with playing good base ball if the player uses common sense. When a player has to engage in a base | ball game in the afternoon I con- sider that it would be the height of foolishness for him to indulge in a round of golf in the morning. The reason for not indulging is that golf or any other game, takes the “pep” out of a player and will not allow him to play his best game of base ball. During the winter or Brown, Bkin. . Hoataote, Chi; Gonzales, 'St. L.69 Miller, Chi. 0'Connell, ble aggregation of 4l the tournament winners about washington this vear. while Fred MclLeod. diminutive Columbia lead into action Leo Diegel, re- winner of the Shawnee open; Barnett, former Philadelphia pro- | In— fessional champlon, and others. The [Par o...403 issue appears even, for, while the [McCallum BEE R amateurs probably will lose in the| top bhalf of the pairings against Die- scl. McLeod and Barnett, they ex- pect to pick up many points further down the line, for the amateur con- tingent is well balanced, composed of men who shoot consistently below %0 _over any course MeLeod 1so will have Wilfred Thompson, Dave Thomson, Arthur B. Thorn, Jimmie Crabbe, Peter Jack- =on, Lionel GG. Walker, orge Diegel, Rulph Reach, Danny Horgan, Mel Shorey, _John Monahan, Tom Ryan and possibly one or two more. On Woodward's team will be R. C. MeKimmie, the Middle Atlantic title- holger; George J. Veight, winner of the Columbia tourney; Albert R. Mackenzie, Roland R. MacKenzie, Mil< ler Stevinson, George P. J Karl Kellerman, jr.. A. MeCool Trunlo) Marshall Whitlatch, George Lynde, E. W Freeman, Robert Stead, jr.; W, R McCallum and others. rere isn't much question that the match will be close. Manor, Arg W. H. White, Argvle, defeated Den- man Thompson, Manor, 4 and 3; C.{ Modern Lynham, Argyle. defeated C. M. | jubilec | ; Manor, 5 and . Best ball, won | | Argyle. P 1 ailey Brown. Argyle, defeated J.| | | 29.85588828es as 28825 anRes 3R @500 Gt Fothergill, 4 | Blue, " Det. 8 = L. Sewell, Clev. 30 70 J Uhle, Clev. ...:35 60 Robert'n, §t. celeb accordi editor of Det. 45 159 = 332 tennix is SHREARSIBE NS s BaB3RFBRGANIRES McCallu 3 just draws S PO rOHHeBNaING ioi i3 sEL Patterson, Manor, 5 and 4: Comdr. | Wiy Bt Wi ?;mlch u n{’l. | ¢ Miler, P EEERRREREE R 52 BERaEoREE ! L ) Leo Diegel, the Distriet open cham- pion and recent winner of the Shawnee open tournamentgswill leave Washington tonight for Canada to play in the Canadian championship. Shortly after thc .championship Diegel will start an exhibition tour. He plans to play tournament golf ex- clusively for a few months. Bob Barnett of Chevy Chase an- nounces the acquisition of a few mashie niblicks with concave faces, which will shortly be in the shops of all the professionals about Wash- ington. The new niblick, Barnett says, effectively takes the place of the ribbed face clubs which have been barred from competition by the United States Golf Association, and will stop a ball even on hard put- ting greens. The concave niblick is an adapta- tion of the one invented two decades ago by Dave Foulis, then professional attached to the Chicago Golf Club, and which were gold extensively through the West. At that time the ribbed clubs made famous by Jock Hutchison, with which Hutch was ' a wonderful performer, had not made their ap- pearance, ‘and the shallow markings on the faces of iron clubs did not have holding power to stop the ball on fast putting greens. Hence the concave niblick which has again made its appearance. T Bow woe s Rolp. St. L... McNulty, Clev. . Flagstead. Bos. 89 329 Det. .93 7 PE B 3 K. Picinich, Bos. Seott, N. Hagser, Phil. McMillan. St.L. Jensilder, 8¢, L. Rerr, Det. 3 "'8!583 o e Loftus, Bkin. Doak. St. L.-Bi. 19 Traynor, Pitt. ..76 Hubbell, Phil. . 24 IR I O LLELELH 2BRE RS, e3532ea58e To conclude a busy two days, the pro¢ about the city on their day off will jump over to the Washing ton Ciolf and Country Club tomorrow afternoon to engage in a_handicap competition, at the same time play- ing in an amateur-pro best ball mateh, with the simon-pures being selected f#om the host club. Neither i'red McLeod nor Leo Diegel will compete in this affair, probably in- stalling Dave Thomson, the Washing- ton professional, as the favorite. Dave has been getting around the course consistently in the low 70s. After the mateh the pros will hold a dinner ut the clubhouse. Bt 38 20 a BB S o 8 RENE T SRR S S e u BB BREEREE L bl L i3 B OONENOR OO NHEA 10O OHOO AN DN NS 000D B G M A B T NS D R O 1O N NG 8 Riconda, Phil. B8B2ERSEREBREBIBwatRRERE2I8Y, o} 4 FRFLF TR R FE I L et b St R A A o433 F et 14 8 nooBEEuENnE amaEEEReweeoave-0un kSt rnEEoutH where. She could hold a bad hand, or a |®ood one, and not a flicker of dis- appointment nor a flash of glee would manifest itself. Her courage in Eng- land and France in seeing every play through drew the greatest admira- George T. Howard and C. G. Duganne of the Washington Golf and Country Club are still marveling at he length of the drives made by ‘Goose” ~ Goslin, outfielder of the Washington ball club, who played at poaaSREREE, BESER batl Nt e e alphabet. When playing the game, | fiod in print. declares the wilt menta) Temnis Leagoe expeet to. be | from the' Koran. fts domestic originoit originally d. p T‘u\’sda)' P Office and lnlt‘l’slalx“ many has taken up motor cycle rac- | and its greatest guarant Saturday. Commerce-Interior, which is | BY WALTER CAMP. the series will end August 12 ! | than Miss Helen Wills. “Little Miss | Gommerce-Interior . Treasury . B War | % year for her memorable triumph over e P Veterans' Bureau.. 3 all sportsmen and sportswomen. fectly and satisfy you in ev : poise, the absence of Anything like 7 > > every respect by our clever de have made friends for her every- Marcey led the trapshooters of the ley’s and Benn’s famous guaranteed mohairs and other distance handicap event. He shot 0 Alip smokes cigarettes and sings con- | "% " PTInL, the extraordinarw Thows fans Interested in the Depart- | tinuously, his songs being mOStly | g roein or ThnSepert n o iraordinary and the Veterans' Burau will meet Ex-Crown Prince William of Ger- l was at once its strongest Friday, and Navy an® the War Blues, | leading the race, appears to have the best chance to win the title. Play l.AST WEEK OF " No American victor in the Olympics | Here's how the teams stand SALE. in France created a finer impression v L Poker-face,” a term employed when she appeared at Forest Hills last War Mrs. Mallory has come to mean some- , Post Ofice hing as an exampie 10 st 0 before w8 TAILORED ON TIME WHEN YOU WANT THEM Her inscrutable smile, as ready in MARCEY sETS PAcE Styled the way you want them, tailored to fit per- adversity as in success, her inimitable conceit, as well as the entire avoid lN MEET AT TRAPSS signers and skillful union tailors. ance of assuined modesty—all these | ; Fine quality tropical worsteds; Kool Kloths; Priest- Washington Gun Club yesterday by i oht-wei i f ; D RRIs o As L A E b i m et 1o the light-weight summer fabrics at this reduced price— from 19 yerds, while his closest rival Burrows, curned in a 43 from the 18- | FHE DB RY o on LIS &1 4 Pitcher. Club.’ W.L, Hun-; Club, lv);.n Tailored to Your = LR s Roland MucKenzie found the going hard in a match with a couple of voung pros at Columbia last Friday afternoon. Two of “Red” Bannagan's assistants took on Roland in a best I match and licked him on the last hole, the youns amateur star shoot- ing & 75, Playing from the back tees and from the rear tee on the fifteenth hole, W. R. McCallum. set a new amateur record for the course of the Washington Golf and Country Club vesterday with a.mark of 72, beating ihe previous mark, made by himself a few days ago, by one shot. -Mc- Callum’s 72 ties the professional rec- ord for the course of the WVirginia club, made two months ago by Dave Thomson, the club professional. The brightest part of McCallum's card was the last nine, which he completed im 33 strokes, after an ordinary out nmink of 3. Comini back he had six 4s and three 3 while going out he was over par on the sixth, seventh, eighth and ninth holes. . He Wu nlnln: in a (our-hfll match with F. Paxton, Henry A. Lion and mm«—m the Virginia course a few days ago. “Goose” only got hold of two drives well, and the rest of his game did not ‘come up to his tee shots, but those fwo drives were great ones. At the third he put his tee shot al- most level with the bunker guard- ing the green, and at the seventeenth he carried the trees in line with the hole, his ball coming to rest on the down slope in front of the greem Goslin was one of a party composed of Peckinpaugh, Ruel, Zahniser and Rice, who played over the course. s . WANTS CULLEN AT COACH. The Naval Academy has requested that Ira C. McKee of Butler. Pa.. and Carl E. Cullen of Washington, D. C., two of the leading athletes to be graduated from Annapolis this year, ~assigned as assistant coaches to Bob Folwell in basket ball, foot ball nd base ball. The basket ball- f the West- ern Pennsyivania for Deaf Mutes has-a record of winning seven- toen out. ol S -cuoeho-fiunnnr-—ee—aaeean&nveawv»uuabuho--lvaeee9-eou—u—aau'o'-——ou--uqu~l.noo-9»—aona‘mvna—unuuwnca—u-ezn—a;_unacag 00000000 0000HOHOHAEOHEO00OHONOOHOREHHOOOR ABNEOOOHOOWANORHOHBNOONOOORIH AN EONO RO NHOaEOHNONO ororaarnanraBaoEtalonndBiuneiB1cneBonvontfon Bt ustmod! ey E§ad Bunaswwawasananweanns Waanna Tdo, Pittasi-..oo 8 jehf, 8 T T 350 golf clubs and more m,nog.onu has been invested in land and building.. The amount spenf ‘dll«-!n Donhlhn Hiutme tion from opponents and onlookers. Finally, in defeating Mile. Viasto, the congueror of Miss McKane, the English champion, she proved that she already was America’s greatest woman player and that in the world there.is only one whom she may fear. Mile. Lenglen. It is tp be regretted greatly that the two failed to meet. However the matcli turned out: it would have been the very best experience possible’ for the- American girl and she, even In event of defeat, would have so re- garded it. B e GERMANS LIKE PONIES. Horse racing throughout Germany is enjoying the greatest season since 1913." There are running races three and four days weekly in Berlin, Hamburg, Leipsig and other cities, as well as trotting races in Breslau, Munich, Duesseldorf, Koenigsberg and various centers. eatli yedr. on playing| The veteras Triz Speaker_has just rounded out’ his M(l year as man- of the d Indians, vard line. Marcey also triumphed in the dou-‘ bles, but he shared that honor with Parsons, as each registered 19 out of 24. Scores in the singles, 50 targets be- ing fired at, follow: Marcey, 46; Burrows, 43 41; Orlowski, 41; Brity, 41 4] Porcher, 40: Franklin, 40: Monroe, 40; Wynkoop, Midyette, 39; Ston 38) Flanagan, 38 Sheiton, 38; Hunte 37; Gillett, 29; Robertson, 21; bespin, 18 The doubles results follow: Marcey, 19; Parsons, 19; Robertson, 18; Hunter, 18; Monroe, 18; Morgan, 5! Shelton, 17; Britt, 17; Porcher, 16; Wynkoop, ©13;" Cain,’ 13} Gillett,” 13 TIRES AT BOTTOM PRICES 0om3ss: HOOD, GOODRICH Parsons, Derringer, JESSE B KE 219 Jokn Individual Measure Reduced Down to With Extra Flannel Trousers $20.50 = 5395 JOS. A.-WILNER & CO. v Custom Tailors Corner 8th.and G Streets N.W.

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