Evening Star Newspaper, January 9, 1925, Page 30

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SPORTS. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., FRIDAY, JANUARY 9, 1925. , SPORTS. Harris Was Drilled in Fundamentals of Game by His Brother, a Minor Leaguer POINTERS BY MERLE | G mm (GREBRISKING TITLE vANCOUVER BALL CLUB ' YOQUTH WINS MAT TITLE; POSSIBLE FOR JOHNSON A BIG AID TO BUCKY i B IN BoUT WiTH sage T2t r R PUTS LEWIS IN HOSPITAI s i W Cinmiiesfsiaer - . . Conaht s way theough tho Tntverd| Lengur. o sirown, Vaneouver, | Munn, 260-Pound Former College Grid Player, Who 1 . f sity of Detroit Law School here., wi Nritish Columbin, xportsman, has 5 Practiced Long and Hard to Learn o 4 Thop o lianfices OF Wolths Antatpe. indleated Lt e meneve e Failed as a Boxer, Once Hurls Rival From rience tonight when he meets Harr chaxe the Greb in a bout which the promoters | Vancouver, taking in Johnson ax Place_Hitting, But Never Acquired B e . ) W | |acctare is for the middleweight title. | cither a minor or major stock- Ring—Turbulent Scenes Mark Bout. Sage is down to 160 pounds, while . ramee s down to 160 pounds. while | eles angling for a Const League R B il . g i ? | friends of Greb make the statement| 3% | Knack Tlll Many Years Later. y ‘ ‘ 3 ™ |ne will weigh at least 165 when he | ©1uP A, the Assoclated Pres Lo s the scales. = iz ¥ d AL R : When the final arrangements were DETA“.S OF SCANDAL ANSAS CITY. Mo, January 9—An erstwhile university io . ' = ttempted Greb displayed a c ract | player who tried boxing, but could not nd up against th Harris . A > i calling for Sage to enter Bhing £ e = . = 2 5 “ iter punches, and whose knowledge of the technique of grappling and the : nore than 160 pounds »py In | 3 2 dg el e the hands of the Michigan Roxin PROMISED BY LANDIS | that of a novice, is the new wearer of the world heavyweight wrestling be e. The W g e A Commission called for the local yout R . being “under 160 35 In - Wayne (Big) Munn, a youth who, by his prodigious bulk : course of discussfon, in which the CRETALON T Baas Hal strength, last night threw off the fearful headlocks of the yveteran I bout was all but canceled, the mateh- | . 1008 S S EIETY has an- | “Strangler” Lewis, and crushed him into submissic {Fior, J9e Barno, efumiited allawing | ounced tiat o will'm public to- Lewis today is in a local hospital, suffering i to his back [ the clauss to be written into theGreb | L lorn . the svidbnice sed nim | new experience for the “Strangler,” who, in his long mat career, has ser o e ward for allowing Sage to|0 _banish from Jimmy | ously hurt many opponents with his famous headlock i s o, Db vt PAKe ? | O'Connell and Cozy T f the N, the ring at the middlewelght | G oo Do e +ho- Yakt worla 3 A se Greb received the right to | ooy ™y 00t The will in- clude the complete stenograph Chapter V—Early Infield Lessons. BY STANLEY (BUCKY) HARRIS. Bucky Harrix' early idea of how a big lengue player would poxe In action | | for the camera. The picture was taken in Buffalo, In 1919, just before Hnrrln] I glant in stature and strength,|the ni v prone and a 1 | Munn, despite his meager wrestling |chan heen crowned. It to ] strategy, clear monstrated his | Just 50 minutc received a great gr ¢ trom his | was wold to Washington. It is eaxy to see how, even then, he wus character- b Jeazues were heroes |1ed by slightness of physique. which ix the lutter-day term for the xkinni- : ; ® | mexs that bothered him xo much ax a boy. ree and one judge. Hi ¢ i ¢ : hiT own hasn nged much. It still| cholee was Al Foss, Pittsburgh, for || o't tho comfession of O Connell | POWer over the titleholder, altho ;Mor«; is was i\ exer (e heds : | S o i istns ss 2 ‘foi G lion TaARTila srotest | he young giant three times during in which to play base ball. My | {reteree and Bernard Albacker, Pitts- | loncorying attempted bribery &_foul, which resulted in & yrotest|of R : . ! | burgh, sadge. It is expected the | yraime & by Lewis' manager, marred the \ie-[the match and dashed He took me in hand when he % | Michigan commission will name Eil- ferede tory galned he firs o “ ‘ ' d manne n 21 utes with th hod wanted to be one. He taught me how | [ jeEtiERnnedantet missioner Landls sald that it| 7pe championship clash, witnessed !5 minutes ben in and out of position, how to| I G | . had never been his intention to With- | by 17,000 howling fans, ail of whom » second base to start a double play. 1 & A % TURNER THROWS LINK. hold e report from the public, but | ceemead to be partisans of the chal-| Famed Headlock Fafls. one g SRR 8 5 that considered the best Interests | ozor developed the most tumultuous| The randdera fhmen NeddloE e » Joe Turner scored over Young Shad |of b | to have been served ) . .io”in the turbulent history of|which crus Sponenta Link in a wrestling bout at the!withholding the complete report 5 ! . S Y/ _ppponen u're 8o | N § 2 £ Cai ¢ T 8 | wrestling here. submissio d metimes 0 it ome | NATIONAL LEAGUE MEN : . L Mutuslrnestes Rstu falit Saturds " Tho Glfmax cam atter two minutes| sclousnens, Went for saught ‘s ar expect . | % 4 § . of wrestling for the second fail, when |the tremendous = gth of the yout i TO MEET FEBRUARY 2| |4 003 . . v : 5 Mun, tWisting free from o headlock, | By DIATUINg hie feet Armiy and hes magnates of the N 1 League| [ : ¥ only weapon at his command, and,| Munn asserted after the match y Central| : TR : walking to the ropes, hurled the|did not throw Lewls outside the ring iy iy 3 . L. " Xy g Strangler” outside onto the uncov-| "I held him high and he wriggled )18 One of a Series of Articles by John B. Foster Com- | | erea fioor of whe piatform : jor oy N onia : # M 5 = = Lewls' 228 pounds hit the boirds ; 1o would “co @-fashioned : s oy o p memorating the Fiftieth Anniversary of the with a terrific thud and the title- tended Referes ; 18 L o : N holder rolled to the concrete floor. b ot mmravaingy ie | National Leagus. to Be Celebrated Chaos ensued. “Billy” dow o oo the toul. Batea t will bo lar Spring sched- | ! 3 o : 2 manager of Lewis, sprang into b Ie:o HeniNidos e ile meeting e inal League. | AR i Next Season. ring, crying “Foul.” 1SN = Drotest by SO ibaci s i fict 'step mE SR 2 : The crowd stormed at the platform, | the third fall. e < Yookt observ- | but a large detail of police held back | SPOrt authori bonted ‘o jubilee, which will moment in the world series which showed Bucky Harrls' XXXVIL—GREAT MANAGERS—, N C. ANSON it Leeen dat was none to whom Lewis could * i ar with | agerinl abllity. Here ix Walter Jobuxon coming back in the seventh gmme, R RS=ADRIAN C. ANSON: [l faenmed tane test,” there being no governing be 1 | onies, terminat- | the great pitcher contributing hix bit at bat in the twelfth inning, just afier I T is impossible to review the services of Adrian C. Anson to base ball Returns in Bandages. in wrestling. > place and February, 1926, with a dinuer |the safety by Ruel, who scored with (he decisive tally a moment later, when ) v except in a double capacity. He was one of the National League’s| Referse Walter Bates, a ve Is & Real Giant. o end the year's colehratio McNeely doubled. F ¥ i the National League’s | 3 arbiter, announced the fall Munn, a towering figure of awarded to Lewis on a foul & inches, welghing 260 pounds, pla cessful managers gave Lewis 15 minutes to recurn 10| 1 toa Tine o th 1oibo nds: playe { it ‘ most famous players and he also was one of the league’s most suc- | the ring and announced th» match | hraska foot ball team in 1823 : would be awarded 1o the challenier if | after leaving schocl, essayed a boxir W tional League pennants. Frank Selee and Ned Hanlon stand | Lewis did not appear. Sandow an-|eareer. He met several fehters of o | secor to McGraw in the n ber of championships won by individual | nounced Lewis would continue \n:drf‘zrual ability, and, after being stretc INVALID TO GOLF CHAMP |Inside Golf : . By Chester Horton—. his third in 188 en the Bostons stopped his winning career. | In 20 minutes Lewjs ca to the laway the gloves ‘i ‘alker’s - - is s - = handaged, and was ussist e turned to professional wrestling Cyril Walker’s Own Story of His Rise The true balance of the golf elub| JOhn Merrill was captain of the)and whenever opportunity offercd |TIDE. bandaged. and ca|"Tio urnea 1o | pat wreati & i i» intended by the maker to be found | DOStons in 1883, and Morrill, 4 shrewd | there was much criticism of the or- [ through the rope only last Spring i wise director of ball players, | ganization because it sent its players c S when the grip ix taken about mid- | “"! 3 play CHAPTER “6—THE GREATEST DAY OF MY LIFE. [Way tu Mk leather. Mout plagers|won the pennant of that season mu\llm;mn on its grounds on the first day team. n 1884 Providence stepped in|of the week to play for cash Tt e X : i slace the left hand UNE 6, 1924, was to be the greatest day of my life. And I never| 1t the extreme end |4Nd Won the flag, but the league clubs| As the population changed in the started the second day’s play in a national open tournament with of the whaft, feel- | COUldN't keep Anson out, and in 1885 he | West the City of Chicago grew into| i . i SoniRday : n Tu that they ger | %05 back aguin with andther champlon- | Sunday Lase vail and the torce or one | BERNSTEIN TO TEST ~ FORUM AND BOWEN more mental calm than this one. It was as if something in me | n more powerful|ShiD nine, and one of the best that|National League argument began to Keoler, fathea foresaw B R e o oas Wi | r i sieniagee s | O’BRIEN’S RING SKILL IN BARRACKS BOUT " % way. | Kelly and son, an a | Anson greatly hated, when a batter f 1t Can Be Done. A change in the pairings made Leo Diegel my playing partner for ety Y27 | Preffer and Tom Burns were inflelders. | to be sent (o fitat nese on eolted mor | = o) It A B e | the day. vaanr to take this occasion to publicly express my apprecia- mot yielded wo| In 1885 “Cap,” busy again, landed [ He wanted to hit the ball a mile.| —_— = ‘hild rave:’ wa< all Merle | 1107 0f Leo’s conduct toward me. He's a great boy. I was leading him much through his fifth pennant. It was long ’“"31)"4 f‘“fi not hesitate. however, to let| .. YORK uary 9. —Tommys Al Forum e ca n ol voion < by eight shots, and when he saw the sort of game I was playing he length of shaft as | that before he left the leadership of | his own pitchers send batters to first| NEW NORK. January o s | knocked out Billy Miske in the ¥ S iasti B through balance!the Chicago club, but he never could |On four balls, unless some one bluffed | O/ Brien. Milwaukee lightweight, who 3 ut Billy 3 : T could however, that he was | became very enthusiastic, paid more attention tg my shots than he digd fa the touck, kol eih augen hampionship, although | him about his cowardice, and then, | T6Po:ted concerned about the titie held | Year fight carnival in ths Fort Mye pleascd when 1 remained until dark |to his own and advised with me in all possible ways, while giving me delicate finger and | he was close on the hecls of one|hair bristing, he . would evder. o | by Benny Leonerd, will meet Jack Be riding nother chance ing to drag lLits over firat base,|encouragement at every turn. /4 P SHouLp| Pand muscles be- | twice. In one year he was much ag- | Pitcher to throw the ball “stralght | Steil of New York tonight in the foature | to perform Tany yliog: S :‘H‘: davatier a2y GRIP SHouLD) ing able to apply | =rieved bee: usa he though the East|over’ and show the spectators that Ah_u’ i Jvest. evering at jinseis Andy 2 4 poung socret until Jatey and tpen | he, told me. body was telling me while trying to|| SE TAREN much more power, had switched games to prevent him|the Cubs weren't afraid of any one “3aiSon Square Garde St oF | Wetnboaay | Was muking my living in base balr |, There was a perfect gale blowing. | give me advice as to how this was to | [ABOUT MIDWAY |If the weight of | from getting his just deserts. The|on earth. [ Giasy oo Smiant v Tani | R While plaving a serub game 1|0 View of this, my game going out | be done. | the clubhead re-|trouble hinged upon a game between | (Coprright, 1 Horiorn) CEEbeh: Tith \Tach Shoate ot lothes T0-conns fnally did hit over firet and Grove in | WaS very much the best I had played | What T wanted was not advice, but sponds to thelriNew York and Boston, and the matter Brooklyn, Bushy Graham of Titics.|by promoter ¥ T e et Jrove In | since arriving at Oakland Hills. 1| qulet. I fianally found it in a remote mense of touch.|was explained at the time to the Sel | e R el L e R o ay e ihat B was g1e3®] | came to the ninth hole needing only [ corner of the locker room. Hidden |The player who Erips at the end of | satistaction of Anson externalfy, al B et e ot B g B e e by, Tas EId 1), iehivae foibe ont inidb- there, 1 stretched out flat on biack | the shaft often will find it to be to|though he would boil over now and T oG e Aty At eard, & Dart 3 ned t ck of placing my Cosh Out 1 on & bench. Just before it was the |his advantage o xrip further down|(hen when any one discussed the | RING CHAMPIONS stopped Pete Zivic and has acored vic- wo six-round vk MaEe el e ninth hole measures 240 yards, | POUT to start out again I bathed my |In the leather during the mecond nine |<ubject with % SIGN ories over Johnny Curtin and Tommy . N Y . < | Ryan. i i will referce the pre LG i ML : . face and head in cool water. holex of piay. The small muscles tire,| There neve in the Na- il A ) i 2 5 tr7ing o' do was |Because we were playing dead againat | A% ML MRS IR SoOl maten | SIS PL AT T A ren miac | oy Loeron 1% lived In the X FOR SCRAPS ON COAST | smits. u: 2 heralded as | lim : rickson careSiwhert “‘!“" wind, 1 used a full drive hitting| i 3 national open I was not tired |neldom is as good aw the first. You ward plaver than “Anse.” He couldn t| F o il mage b the third s ESer Ans was the head of the Chicago team in five of the seasons that The match was over within a few| Lewis won the championship th seconds. Munn clamped on a body | vears ago from Stanislaus Zbyszko |and croteh hold and hurled Lewis to! Wichita, Kans 1, if It can be done, [ “I'm going to bring vou in, Cyril, “You've got to beat Jomes,” every- | what I consider the finest shot I made| 41g anyioug at the beginning of the |can ease np on these muscles, offen |bear irickery In any game. and €5 y ik trouble for Eddie (Cannoball) | main & final round. I realized that with |@ctuslly refresh them, seemingly. by | pecially op the part of his own play- | Champi of Meri- | Martin of Brookiyn, who ig present king Jones, Mehlhorn and myself o closely | i&htening the load through gripping ers. When the game began to be|den, Conn., newly crowned "“““"’"L’i\;‘:"-m" of his victory o¥er Abe Gold- | bunched there was going to be a|Well down into the lenther as the played with more of the desperation | . ¥ ; saatel O BOWLERS TO C'.ASH | weight king, nd th e 2ddi (s} ien recently gained reco on in tight struggle. But the improvement | play of the round continues. |of the professional and,less of the | CiRnonnait Martin of Brooklen & prelhminers to’ the omms Saon,in ' <o. in the tournament up to this time. ourself I was beginning [cup and I he a birdie two. I was you had a swelied head. And |out in 34, two under par and three knows what for! But as|under the best score of my competi- ti-|in" my physical condition since my | (Copyright, 1925.) air of the gentleman, “Cap” rioted | o t . el ; ong as don’t take crei or | tors. 1 s | 3 3 E N. Y., who recently won the bantam- | Kid Noj contest at the Garde ong 1 take credit for|tors. Bill Mehlhorn had done a 3 Operation il (the. Sosial Btot s == | vociferously to any who would lis- S on the bantam: | Kid Norfolk contest at the Garden, when IN INTERCITY TILTS e | “You're so dog-| My ball ended up five feat from the | planninig rething that happened | But if this was encouraging, suc- v acel ou're all right | ceeding events were not. 5 - : hat. above the col | At the tenth tee we were held up! o, T SOUS, midiron, 1 stopped my ba 2 ioit 2 H . be able to hold My own | 5 feet from the cup. am S pe A Jater T puiled & bad | by the galleries following the other | (n*tho "groatcst opportunity of my | Cvertrl lrom, the cup. and my putt sone. 1 had shifted to third base. The | matches. At this stage 1 had only a|ira ¥ ¥ | went down for a birdie three weight title, have been signed to ap- [ he outpointed Eddfe (Kid) Wagner of per pear in bouts at the Vernon arena.|Philadelphia. He a steady worker, nounced what he styled “Baltimore |5 ay here «\)dnl((;’ lacking the shiftiness of foot s banl s Zh«l s ';*I‘ e wEil Opponents of the boxers will bel|so common among pugil Tomorrow promises keen sport :_'}“‘i;]:"‘”_‘;f'] ‘)Y;h';_;“fl when Han- | Picked by Jack Doyle, owner of the|and which has been one of the cham- |the followers of duckpins and tenpi inning run was on that bag. 1 took | scattered following. But, breaking I | . Fred Kennedy came up at this| WhIC ‘:'“ bl gL L n;{‘”mfl” stadium, but dates of the bouts have | pion's greatest assets. In his bout with |in this city and Baltimore Pljgiprsen t man, through the other fellows' crowds Nerves Are All Right. | cture and told me Jones had fin»|("2m‘ o ;:“h;‘;‘ had been fastening|DOt been set Wagner, O'B: fought doggedly, sho The King F quint of Baltimo: Merle was slightly difficult. Diegel was| On the very first hole T found my Salwid 2d0)ana Mehtnom itk o Bass Dall Tesmely decanne ———— {ing & good defense and two powerful (with an §7-pin lead, the result of t i | worrled lest T be upset by the delay. |nerves were all right. After a drive | 301 The way lay open to the cham- | 1S€lf UPAR base baly largely because | | itting hands. | five-game duckpin match in the Te | " “Keep cool” he sald. “Don't let|of more than 300 vards, I overplayed | Pionship. 1 finished with a three o o yoaton] FIRPO STILL WILLING. The main bout and semi-final are|rapin City last Saturday night, w stepped,| anything bother you.” my second and had to chip back, ly- |and a five for a total of 297 before a |7, tF" ways was much rivalry be- | Bs the Associated Press | scheduled for 10 rounds. | battle with the Washington Stars, s 11 rolled ac o fisld,i “Cm all right,” T replied. And in|ing 4 foet from the cup. It was one| fl\”‘")'v" “'hr’t:' included every person |,y en the organizations, and the Na-| LONDON, January 9—Luis Angell —_— lected from the Capital City Associz on third home | truth 1_had no premonition of dis-|of the sort of putts I had been miss- | O the cours y s A Pape ays open- | Firpo, Argentine's 4 Bull o | tion, on the King Pin drives her R | aoter. " Neveriielcs, T Lok three | g T The morming, but this tme 1| OUC of the Lpplause and glory which | 1ons] League in lto eurly davs open: | wirpo, Arsentine’s “wila Bull of the| ED) COLLINS GIVES JOB | Vor'ren sinsie wE ohfact. an that | putts on both the tenth and eleventh |didn't fail | the moment brought one circumsta di ed, its & und s m e- Catianel Sarting e andl Harry Krauss and his band of ve led such Tiek on | holes, and after doing the twelfth in| “Well." said Leo, “you had to scrape | stands out more than any othe R L S O N TO HIS ORIGINAL COACH |eran tenpin bowlers will journey so ting | par 5 came to grief again on the|that one, but you got it. Anyway,| Breaking away from the crowd, I|i0ERE PN, 0= SOCTECS MRS, Bt e il o | Baltimore for the second round held my arms and | thirteenth. Only by solving one of | it's the card and the pencil that|ran into Walter Hagen at the ciu o ofter for him to meet Tommy Gb"| GHICAGO, January 9.—Bddle. /Col-|five games with: their Maryiana oppo cooled down the most difficult problems of the|count.” house door. i Some of this was {rus, Some of itibons the Amerl MRt o eAVY - |lins, new mans of the Chicago|nents. The local q gained a | if vou had any |tournament did I escape even worse| The second was played in par. and Well. well, well, Cyril.” he ex-|exaggeration. Th rican Associa- | weizht 1n Seadon, Mave 88060 ok ox igned as coach the|of 431 pins last Saturda he explained. “You | trouble. the third brought additional evidence | claimed as he shook my hand in con- | tion was quite uu(..:-}.j,;f mh‘flv'j D O o oon: With the WinneT |,z who taught him to play base |night ttles Wdiof:roo! ep your head up. You Tete Sn )/ Trap: that I. would-not necessarily break | Sratulation, “we’ve all got to respect|because it plaved Sunday base ball, taking 60 per cent ball at Columbia University. The new |ers will accompan Washingtc It do 't My t = his 140-y i hole under stress. This is a 210-yard hole. | ¥0u now z . | coach of the White Sox is Billie Lau- | bowlers. It vou'we got| My tee shot on this yard I sliced a spoon shot to rough, looked | It Was welcome recognition after | der, of . ht b ; former third baséman the S Vou' leston. | loft me In a trap. 1 was rEht be-|upon my second, and fafled to ket out, | Years of struggle against odds that W, S T . No Tk Gieate s r Ins s all for”your | 2EH 4 e B e thg | 814 dropped my third 9 feat short of | Pad Kept mo out of the first ranka ELLS: 1905, ind tor-peart chercarior” vese | GIBBONS BEATS BURKE, Ry shot, for the pin 3 5 of the stars of the game = = Satombls o keep your mind | ShOL G0 e BE O dulating, so | the hiole. But I sank my puit, and I ball coach at Columbia and other minute from start felt that If I could do that after my . S . Eastern colleges. Besides teaching| REFEREE ST 'd what & coacher | that if you overran the pin the speed | giner ‘mistakes my nerves were ail (THE END.) Sllp That Nearly Cost Me a Title him basa ball, Collins wives. Latider R STOPPING BOUT T cheers or | ©f the ball would be increased to the good. T went out in 38, which, (CopsHight. 1 the credit for his entrance into the| GRAND RAPIDS, Mich, January & Keep Vour |, pacd & niblick, ’“"“,:Eh”;‘f é"‘:gfi considering the high wind, was good il 2 B major leagues after graduation from |y Lomny Gibbons. St Paul light far back, hitting an incl ehin enough. Word came back that Jones ;Tl[)‘IRP no satisfaction like that which comes when your irons are | Columbia. heavyweight, defeated Jack Burk ALt £ ball and putting everything I had S ik 3 : : ; of Pittsburgh in the sixth ro Trick Used in League | progi had. taken s 38 and Menlhorn a 39 MAKEL READY TO FIGHT. working right and you're laying your sccond shots close to the pin. Z thele aoneilsal 10 conah n ! | into the stroke. The ball traveled | ghd ‘SEen & 8 & L TS | d1s e se off than at the| S % 5 E : rle told attr stralght up, came down three feet| S © | Willy Makel, who fought a draw Playing in the Canadian open over the Mount Bruno course at GARCIA K. 0.'S GLICK g e ' { vith Burke hopelessly beaten, un used su fully in|from the cup and held there. Then, with Young Brown, a heavier oppo- | ek Su = 5 i following this escape, I missed my My Best Play. nent, at Fort Myer New Year night,| Montreal in 1922, I got going in fine shape as the third round wore on.| NEW YORK. January 9.—Bobby |able to maintatn s defense, the re putt and had to take a four. Jones had started off the final nine |ls anxious to settle the issue definitely | Finishing the last nine holes, the morning of the second day, I ticked off |Garcia, Baltimore lightweight, knock- | erea stopped tha bout “What's the matter with you?’ de-| holes with 6-5-5, I was told, too,[in another bout. Makel is will- [ A 2 |cd out Joe Glick of Brooklyn in the| Burke weighed 178% pounds and manded Diegel. “You've got to stop|while Melhorn, playing gjust back of |ing to meet Chick Suggs, Jose Lom- |NiNe successive pars 4 i’ fifth round last night. Gibbons 17 signed | this , him, had taken 4-3. T did the tenth |bardo or any other featherweight. When the fourth and final roundjand was down in a birdie two. On ver for- 1 took hold of myself on the 460-|and eleventh in 4-5. So at this point SRR | began T picked up just where T had|the 320-vard eleventh a similar play »n which | yard fourteenth, where, by virtue of | Mehlhorn had overhauled me, while | | Jeft oft before lunch. Five more pars, [ on my second shot gave me a birdie . h € b, | ved by o sixth hole, [ three. This put me back in the iver must | a 300-yard drive and a straight-faced | Bobby had fallen back slightly. It 0 s | followed by a birdie on the P . mashle, 1 was on In two, with &|surely was a tough battle. At this DE F RE T BANNED put me in very good shape. running. ow educe to 1t | chance to get down in four, one un- | point I met Frank Kennedy of New Just then, however, something went| My score at the finish was 303 P der par. I missed a 3-foot putt, how- | York, one of the best authorities on BY N Y BOX'NG BODY wrong—my putter. On the "seventh | Coming down the line behind me, \crensed ambi- | over, and took a five. Still, par was | the game living. O I I needed three putts to get down with | Tommy Kerrigan of Siwanoy peeded 3 | 2 % — : e, one over par. On the short|a 75 to win and a 76 to tie, He fell : ball player. | not so bad. How are you going?” he asked. a five, one over par. | ! 2 1s told me T would have Siel 3 “Fine, I feel. Is there anybody “ighth three putts gave me a four, | just enough short to let me get awas . . o B S k) Estiing s O Color. .| anead of me? | NEW YORK. Januars . — Jimmy | and just off the green in two on the | with the champlonship, his final round — Edndely and get lots of sleep if I wanted | , MY Putting had made me a bit|™un,u vou be thinking if there's|De Forrest. veteran to i Y | S inth T used four more strokes before | of 77 giving him 304, One more hole — b 3 : t. veteran trainer of boxers, | g 5 10 Tvaslt ve | aesperate now, and once more I tried |, sy "ol of Yol he 810 |hes hemn bareed Trom cescondies or | I holed out like the ninth and I would have been | attended to the exercise, playing | {0, Cut the corner on the ffteenth. |uriing your own game.” |handiing any competitor at the ring-| After my good game on the enrl,\; all to the bad. ENTIRE STOCKS asket ball at night. Mother saw | ASain I failed to carry past the traps| "y, “jook ‘here, Fred,” T sald, “I|gide and from aking any part what.|holes I had looked forward to ai hat zot plen ° 5 ca o | in the dogleg, and again I took a five.| & v afl eolns) 5 :d by the Tl least a 34 going out. Instead I t00K | M ————— at 1 got plenty Learty | B O b the thing off, T ran | Want to know exactly what's happen- |cver In boxing sanctioned by the Am | 1 | of my game up to this point had given ten to him. Once he openly de-| | me all soits of confidence. I felt ent for me to say that, e, 0 . petite Mo 5 vouns novae—hut | went | P anothor ive'on the sixteenth by | My SR §0F SINEL x ninc e [SUgn AtRIte Uniont L foe| " On the Lenth, & short one, T Taid 4 s EBONITE "Strings" o a Stck, | uitings vercoatings short on the sleep ration that Win- | WS a d-footputt © - |man that can break 200 will Win" | canamare and Mike McNally, boxers | mashie niblick’ 2 feet from the pin S0 It Winds a Il ‘ ( H the felt sure I could do this. Par five | withdrawn from the New York State | teenth and a birdie four on on the twelfth and thres on the thir- | nmatear. tonrnament be De. Forrset | Around the Gears eighteenth to come In with a 40, r. T was working then as office taen e ; b0 | teenth, followed by a birdie four on |yhen another of his stable, Jimmy | T than the law allowed l“_‘fl‘j"'lc”“.:““‘fl“‘x‘\_‘°w;';°",‘(‘§fl‘l"‘,""“‘,h;“:"x the fourteenth, had brought my !0\“1‘Menduza, was disqualified, was also| 1 x med to thrive on it a Gt Vihe Tour on the 478-yard efght- | to 281 I could take 18 strokes on the | announced | Serv'ce P tO $75.00 and spoon that put me on the green nounced through Secretary Jacob W. Sy Bobby Jones i i e 2 putt and had to : ONE MORE OUTFIELDER found he and T were now tied for the S fant puciisnd HEA o Honrniament: el g e or woolens is steadily ad- with mero; layers in re-| which I had accumulated during the ed in and matched. According to the | that of Tr Ner, ‘atar Hights| Lo cramplonetin. busly 1 had been hooking my drive to ! oy in the Butler colliery t s 2 R e s Formerly Priced From s v o ih s oained by vircae of a driva | laat four holes and still get home in [“"B2"Forrests vanishntent was an- | ' | To Match Your Odd Coats . Momsera A o Ebeta g g teThe troubles I had had on the dog- | Stumpf of the boxing committee of | EISEMAN’S, 7th & F tations i | ent o he scoreboard. | 1¢& fifteenth moved me to play safely | he Metropolitan ociation of the | [T A c N i M d O d e by Tenes aa tanen & Ta, and 1| this trip. But the hole was myJinx. |A'° A, U, which is conducting the | IS s For the convenience of ade to i our rder . : take my Officials explained that De Forrest lead at Mehlhorn was a stroke exp h. owners. { ; 2 there. | S gt , t - IS SOUGHT BY BROWNS | vack of us. Hagen was four strokes | "0 ¢\ e remaining hotes | “PPeaTed with ‘his quartet of ama- EBONITE checker-board Thoug' i and Bobby Cruickshank three strokes| . Par for the three remainiig holes | teurs after the entra b nn | g he price of ST. LOUIS, January 9.—Although| o the rear. 1 went into the clu i:“““ o "n:)":l”“";_ d Y & pound class, in which Mendoza had | pumps are easily available | the St. Louis Americans have parted| house with the appetite for lunch | ‘(fn Ao alstaerieh. ‘Lr lake, hole T|eXpected to compete, had been welgh-! 3 ‘: you whenever vou need | 1 3 ke th 2 hot that clinched the S . them. vancing—we make these S v e Bigies | Yhieh umulated during the | 050" (he s B Lo ks Whba Menied froh ‘Hie A t b l : X i Yy 1 " v ey Yalaeer, Georse Siler | morniag souna completaly, seohed|6e" /S liuce el s con [fles MEsToms Rim Rereit e L] utomobile Insist upon getting EBON: anuar drastic redictions = pre- vill be f extent will be ditions; I ever. have execu . |ately withdrew his entire string, in- s ITE, the master lubricant. sentin tral ¢ li { Vo AMa « s, Can- 2 il - 3 V extra S hande 5 Sent %! the Jew Loses Hix Appetite. the left to get a better play over the :"::::,:Kn‘lnl"‘;:',]“‘l;’"' hamplokag Censy Re alrin * Its all oil. Take no other. Clearance S g a Tuly extraordi Vork Yankees in exchange fof Joe| 1 couldnt eat more than a bite. |lake, and thus-bad found the rough. “"Ilmo fect ie the tnan under whom | Sold by dealers every- | nary saving opportunity! sush The place was full of people, who | This time I purposely aimed to the |y i’ Angel Firpo, South American | ¥ A where, in five-pound The pitching staff as a kept coming up, tapping me on the | right of center, ultimately ending up |yeuv weipht, has stated that he will | an ver g 5. endlEt an el er decla appears nearly shoulder and teiling me how fine it | righit in the middle of the fairway. | (SiuV e RN P00 DER OIS | | eviee Haoan «s formerly, while the c; aff | was that I was tied for the lead. I ~Now it was necessary to play over S | . 5 . \as been considerably strengthened | appreciated their interest, but I felt|the lake, which ran up close to the A. A. A. Service Station th the acquisition of Leo Dixon of | that 1 must get out of there. I|green, and at the same time hold the PART OF CLUB SOLD. St. Paul, who ranked second In field- | ducked for the locker room }l_a‘l_h-r. S t).\'erl"ulx':hf Sl"fT«'h:m::-:i S i T, NEVER Closed Always Available Merchant Tailors for 26 Years ng in the American Association last| Down there I ran into numbers of [wils « good clance that T might get| SPRINGFIELD, Mass. January 9. heridan G I | an d ar: ear. | players excitedly discussing the pros- | into the watericoming back. On the |T. J. Sullivan, jr, of this city, o Sheridan arage, Inc. (7 A good outfielder, batting right | pects of a professional beating out | other hand too short a shot wouldn't |of the Bridgeport Club of th 2516 Q Street N.W. S SHREDDED OIL) 100 Z F Str et W randed, still was being sought by |Bobby Jones Naturally, the men who | got over the hazard. A earry of 175 |ern League, has announced that he eet N.W. FOR TRANSMISS) e . he Browns, it was sald, and the next| make their living by golfing did not yu?j wnf nhs:lule‘:y nec;ssu:’,b. = -:-d -z&"t:re ;';ax(nhto ‘\(\ :)}:f;l::m;fi:g “I(n :hnt:fld:-) SSIONS rade, ¥ would bring| want to see an amateur capturing the This play has been described so part e Roche: = ephone West 2443 A LD, fa “::;noyr cir?:x-b{:‘nm“\’ E open title twice in succession often that 1 will not repeat all the natfonals. AUD. DIFFERENTIALS Dally Closing Mour 6 P.M.

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