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*’ SPORTS; THE EVEN]NG STAR, WASEINGTON D. C 'WEDNESDAY APRIL 22, 1995. SPORTS. 31 D. C. School Teams Out of Penn Relays, But All in Maryland Interscholastics GREAT TECH FOUR RIDDLED BY FRATERNITY RULINGS| \ Eastern Also Abandons Plan to Send Quartet on Ac- count of Loss of Stars—Manual Trainers Have Lone Member of Quartet Left. BY JOHN I. WHITE. ASHINGTON will not be represented in the scholastic events at the Penn relays this year. Tech and Eastern, the two schools that had intended entering the annual event, that takes place on I"nv!ay and Saturday, have been so badly hit by the Board of Educa- « tion's ruling against fraternities that the trip to Philadelphia would be a mere wild goose chase, and the other three public high schools have not yet sLown .mmgh class in this branchf sport to warrant any strenuous Inside Golf Tech's case is somewhat pathetic. By Chester Horton. the ps few ears Hap track mentor, has been build- a team of athietes that began real strength during the in- the 7 Winter. In fact, iL was generally conceded that the Manual Trainers had the District ck championship “sewed up,” and was little doubt that the one- e-relay team would take fi onors in the big scholastic Pennsylvania’s annual carnivi Three members of Harde ay quartet now are ; ‘ech’s prospects on the cinder in 1925 are an unknown quantity ¢ though the Eastern squad was not as sar along as the Maroon and ( yunners, the fraternit barred enough men: t Jarnest Rick to abandon all plans for saking part in the Penn games However, all five high schools will have entries in the University of Maryland scholastics at College Park on Saturday, May 2. Western, Tech rnd Eastern alréady have appeared in outdoor meets, and the Western coach is giving his green squad another try- . out tomorrow against Episcopal High et Alexandria, Eastern's runners get their next opposition on Tuesday of next week, when Alexandria and Hyattsville are encountered in’a tri- mngular meet at Eastern's Stadium * Central trackmen are taking things ing up to show door meets of Rolling the right wrist over at the instant of impact, which is likely to develop as a habit from trying to un- ical point in the ROLLING THE swing, will de- velop such a hook that no rough on ‘the course long remain unex- plored b player who this fauit. h.\e only to place a clubhead back of 'the ball with the wrists cin their natural - position, then Toll the right over to ob- serve what hap- pens to the club face. 1t turns in- ward directly, and it will be at once apparent why the ‘clubhead, thus striking the ball, would give it the hook spin. ¥ you make this demon- { stration, at the same time roll the right wrist under aud see the chub- p«.(h | " FRED W. KNIGHT TELLS: Crucial Stymie in a North and South Event HE psychology of stymies is a peculiar thing. In 1924, when I topped T off the winning of five tournaments in the South by capturing the North and South amateur championship, at Pinehurst, a stymie proved to be the turning point of my fina!l match with B. P. (“Buck”) Merriman of Waterbury, Conn. At the end of 29 holes “Bucl MANGAN ADVANcEs IN TENNIS TOURNEY me 3 down and 7 to go. It looked like I was in for & ligking. I had been trailing pretty regularly, having WHITE SULPHUR SPRIN Va., April 22—Seven men and eight s “veisatied 8 ¢hair respective divisions when the early rounds in the annual open tennis tournament | of the Greenbrier Country Club were | concluded. William T. Tilden, 24, national champion, reached the ~semi-final rownd ome bracket ahead of the rest of the field. Vincent Richards, New York, who was drawn in the upper been four down at the end of the morning round. Playing the long twelfth hole (the thirtieth) we were both on the green in three, but Merriman was nearer the pin. 1 putted and placed my ball 4 Inches from the cup, leaving him with a partial stymie. “Buck” had a chance to sink his putt, but he also could easily have halved the hole by merely running up his ball and not trying to get past that fractional stymie. But, good sports- man that he is, he elected“to try to hole out. The res 38 W 1t was an mportant break in the game. He hit my Mall and | half, defaulted, due to his inability knocked it into the cup. This gave |to be present. Thomas J. Mangan me a birdie 4 and the hole. of Washington, D. C., semi-finalist Incidentally it left me but 2 down and with my courage renewed. Merri- man_ followed by topping his drive on the thirty-first hole and won it, 4 cutting his lead to 1. econd an eight-foot putt went down for me, giving me a birdie 3 and squaring the match, and on the thirty-third T took the lead. This ‘one-hole margin proved suf- ficient, as we halved the last three holes. at Pinehurst last week, advanced to Richard's place and later in the day reached the round before the semi- final by defeating R. W. New York, 6—3, 7—5. In the second round Tilden won two love sets from Dr. Thomas B. Webster and in the next defeated Cedric Major, 6—2, 6—2. Tilden meets the winner of the S. Howard Voshell-G. Carlton Shafer match In his next appearance. In the women's singles Martha Bay- ard, title holder, defeated Gertrude Dwyer, ; Mildred Willard, Philadelphia, won from Mrs. Theodore Shost, New York, 6—1, 4—6, 6—4; Anma’ Fuller, Boston, defeated Mrs. Vandy Cape Hall, New York, 6—1, Gilmore, WOMAN'S TEAM T0 INVADE. By the Associated Press. LONDON, April 22.—The British Lawn Tennis Association has decided 6—2, 6— to send a woman's team to America [6—2, and Mrs. Edward Raymond, for the international Wightman| New York, defeated Mrs. Harrison matches to be played in August, and | Smith, 6—1, 6 | OVER 100 LINKSMEN | SEEK BRITISH TITLE| for the national championship. The British team probably will visit Cana da on the way to the United States. B | TYGERS LET MOORE GO. DETROIT, Mich., April Wil easy at présent, but Coach Bill Fol has a good sized squad out and will be heard from in the Ma »C” Club meet: Business, like West- ern, is handicapped by not having a practice fleld, but the Stenographers have not abandoned hopes of getting into action in the Spring meets. Overrnming a 9-to-3 lead that Busi- ed in the first inning, base ball team handed the | enographers a 15-to-13- beating at | Central Stadium in the first game of | :he title series s Taster holidays. Central and Emstern | were scheduled to pla i head take such an angle against the | ball as to cause the slice spin. (Copyright, 14 BY WILL Heavy hitting carried Eastern to a | Thestoiont e nton 12-to-4 victory over Devitt Prep at the | ending tale of tragedy. Nobody ever Eastern Stadium. Burdine and Frager | wolves will eat. And even th neld the mound assignment for the | ranchers in the West, who believe tha Lincoln Parke: | legendary and that the good they do . ; | The other day I was talking with a e D‘;’"fi;p"“}§i§‘r;;§,";’.n“gg“g‘r;:;j.smm who lives up in the nartheast freshmen; the final count standing 5 N ~!h;“":“:}’]“‘;‘éefi:€1" to 1 in favor of the yvearlings. The | had been ed th Manual Trainers play at Alekandrlg | £ion in which he lives in an effort to s kill off the wolve 5 gains g .m}:lg;lr.ow against Alexandria High| “H U3 he was going ito destroy every poisoned balt he could find, and that the poisoner was going to leave the country the point of a re- votver is ary “He every living thing in ay e and_if : he ]‘1 eeps it up the woods will be bare of witd ver Emerson Institute, 4 John’s College chalked up its. straight victory on the -dia- John Morris’ triple with three s the feature of the contest. fourth mond. smaller life. There enough wolves to do any damage. a basket ball letters have| “d!lnié o pvarded the following members| noispns very few of them, but I have| of the pt.O'Donoghue, | 70 SO0 200 158 Quinn, Gaghan, Costello, En- right, Fitzgerald, Farrell and Manager | O’Donnell nright has been chosen to pilot the team next Winter. ' THREE GRE/ GREAT SHOTS ON GOLF LINKS HERE Three remarkable golf shots have been made on courses about Wash- ington during the t week. And . strange to te, only one.of them | was a hole in one | The ace fell to S. B. Hardy Sunday on the second hole at the Washington Golf and Country Club, when the cup was in one of the most difficult positions to reach on the ‘green. The ather pair of shots are even more remarkable in that they con- stitute the only twos ever recorded on the fifteenth hole' at the Chevy Chase Club, a hole well over 400 yards in length, particularly hard on ac- count of its character. Gen. H. P. McCain, a retired Army officer, who does mot glay a long game, hit a fine tee shot %at the fifteenth | c last Thursday, and playing another wooden shot holed out. Two days later Wadsworth of the State Depart- ment holed his second shot on the other smaller animals. I" in the woods all my life and never have seen or known of any band of wolves doing the tenth the damage that this poisoner is doing. The feeling that poisoning i not warranted is growing, I think, all over the West. animals are not so predatory nted. The | good they do is overlooked. The-bad | they do is grossly exaggerated. I'll be glad when we come down to earth. last —Stock- Racing of ‘the Business Men Association, which conducts the an- nual Winter running races at the Fair Grounds track here; voted to change the name of the organization to the Louisiana Jockey Club,-Inc. SARMIENTO VS. TREMAINE. CLEVELAND, Ohio, April 22.—Pete Sarmiento, Milwaukee bantamweight, has been matched to box Carl Tre- aine, Cleveland, 12 rounds to a de- sion here” May 8. in stakes during h THE CALL OF THE OUTDOORS President kzaak Walton League of America. nce the start of the | ECENTLY I told of the tragic énd of a fine sled dog that ate some v this afternoon. | woli poison in narthern Xinn. poisoning of wolves is decricd by many | liam Moore, recruit pitcher, has left Detroit to join the Rochester team of the International League. He joined the Tygers from that team. HOYLAKE, More than 100 England, April 22— ali-English golfers of all ranks and classes contested the first round of the newly instituted amateur golf championship of Eng- land at Hoylake. The most notable absentee was Sir Ernest W. Holderness, the amateur champion of 1924, who, though chair- man of the committee which framed the rules, found himself unable to com- pete because of the fact that he and both his parents were born outside of England. | Roger K. Wethered, who was ama- | H. DILG, esota the other day. if it could be told, would be an un- has designed a poison bait that only pete, though eligible. Cyril J. H. Tolley, 1920 champion, who started favorite, played brilllantly | both first and second round matches, and defeated C. Farrar of | the Royal Club, Liverpool, 6 and 4, and —|J. Hassall of Bromborough, 2 and 1. Perhaps the most popular and pic- turesque figure in the competition was Hoylake's own hero, the 64-year-old John Ball, amateur champion far. many years and open golf champlon in 1894. After getting a bye in the first round, the veteran defeated H. Walker of Ormskirk, 6 up and & to play. t.the crimes of the/coyote are largely is not fully appreciated. SANDE RIDES SARAZEN VICTORY AND A RECORD HAVRE DE GRACE, Md., April 22. —Far] Sande made a triumphant re. turn to the saddle: yesterdgy, and to the acelaim of thousands of emthu- spectators brought the gatme little Sarazen, star of the stable of Mrs. W. K, Vanderbilt, .24, home an sy victor in the Newark handicap. Not only did Sarazén score a decisive victory, but they shed past the winning post to.a new track record of 1:11 flat for the six- furlong course, elipping a fifth of a Socond off the old mark established by Billy. Kelly on Episcopal High School annésed the base ball title of the city of Alexandria by defeating Alexandria High School, 5 to 4 Sure Way to Get There is one sure way that never fails to remove dandruff completely and that is to dissolve it. Then you destroy it entirely. To do this, just get about four ounces of plain, ordi- nary liquid arvon; apply it at night when retiring ; use enough to moisten the scalp and rub it in gently with the finger tips. By morning, most, if not all, of your dandruff will be gone, and two or three more appli- cations will completely dissolve and entirely destroy every single sign and trace of it; no matter how much dandruff you may have. You will find, too, that all jtching and digging of the scalp will stop instantly, and your hait will be arazen shouldered top weight of 129 pounds and ran a remarkable race, finishing a length and a half in front ot the Glen Riddle Farm's Big Blaze, vhich he was conceding 14 pounds. AT o Havre de Grace teur champion in 1923, did not com- | = (00000000000000000 lustrous, glossy, silky and soft, and SEVEN RACES DAILY B. & O. train leaves Unlon . Park Special lor and Station 12 o’clock noon. Dining Car_attached. Course—Eastern Standard Time: Admission—Grandstand _and _Pad- dock, tax. $1.65, including Government FIRST RACE AT 2:30 P. same hol SRNN BASSAS The above cut illustrates a 3-ton International Truck Dixon, manufacturer of corgcrete blocks. equipment, ing bulky material. O N S S e N N S R N O S g—:. lz;fifl_o»—nght Service b PASSSRRE 228232 First Street NW. FOR THE CEMENT MAN This body, you will note, has removable, 'sides which makes it a ver By taking the sides out you can ‘make a flat. h)'ody that is g - LET Us DEMONSTRATE ONE "‘D You. % % Call at our shgwrooms and see the wonderful display of Motor Trucks. Interriational Motor Truck Agency, Inc. plosions. © ‘Regular only with clean, in.the service of M F practncal for haul- DEREL A EEEEEEELEE K EEERERREHERS LXEEELY. EEEEERRRERNK Combustion Your ‘motor’s Mer depends on ngnlu- ex-’ standard brands of gas gain the intensified combustibility created through cleaning by this exclusive Minute Bervice Station treatment— GASOLINE Flitering three times ~ twice NATION’S GOLFERS WATCH CAREER OF MISS ORCUTT By the Associated Press. OR women's national golf champion i presents a 17-year-old high school girl, who, for lack of compe tion in her own sex, often plays with men and defeats them The first, thing the gallery at a tournament notices when Maureen | Orcutt is on the first tee is her bobbed bonde locks, tied with a ribbon | - Then the distance that ball goes overshadows Her hitting is amazing, and has been so since | of flaming red or other hue. all other considerations. she starud to play-the game as.a little girl. At the woman's national tournament | When the the near future New Jersey snow covers the fair-| Quatrain, WAR POLOISTS TO PLAY IN RICHMOND SATURDAY war Depariment piuce, who seccac | WIN FROM BUSINESS ed the Artillery poloists, £ to 1, will | open play in an elimination tourn: ment at Richmond Saturday in which| Western High netmen sc seven other fours will take | second win'of the season WESTERN RACKETERS d mexr Teams. that will compete are 16th | out the Busin Fleld Artillery, Fauquier County to. 0, at the Henry Country Club, Charlotte Riding and |courts. At no stage of the match was Hunt Club, 11ith Field Artillery, Fort | Western extended to get the decisto Brag; hmond; V. M. 1. Club 2 the War Department Blues. V). det 6—0; McDiarmid chellin (B), ¢ (W) defeated Morton ( ive (W) defeated H PR RPN Sebasti: n | (W) defeated zebrook ®) QUATRAIN GOES LAME. | CHICAGO, April 22—Trainin one of the outstar for the Kentu >ky Derby, | favorit at- the, Hollywood Gélf, Club,” Deal, | ways at White Beeches, Miss Oreutt | gyoraq® o0 neq SE0iL o s N. J., four years ago, a mite of an | helps develop her wrists by throwing|due to recent bruise on MeDiarmid ar L Gl entrant, who wore half-hose and |a basket ball as a member of the high | forefoot. The horse will be i Schellin and skirts the shortness of which was |&chool girl's team at Englewood. resume training within a_week 2 determined by her size and age and not by fashion, stepped up to the first tee in the quali{ying round and caused a chorus of surprised “ahs” when she smashed the ball 225 vards, a good drive for any golfer without regard to sex or age. That was Maureen. A storm came up shortly after that drive and helped to run her score up to 119, which failed to qualify. Miss Orcutt has had much experi- ence and her share of victories since then, having won the woman's State champlonship last year. When there is no woman's tournament for her to enter, however, usually the only worthy opponents she can find are male members of the White Beeches Club at Haworth, N. The men welcome her as a competitor in all the club ‘fixtures, and in the club championship last Fall she was runner- up, forcing the male victor to do a 74, while she took 79 on the difficult course, which measures 6496 yards. Many good woman golfers have dif ficulty with their irons, not having the firmness of wrist essential for a crisp | and successful shot. Not so Maureen The length she gdts with irons would not be at all bad for a professional The mashie iron is her favorite. Often she has reached a green more than 400 yards from the tee with 2 drive and an iron. When her short game becomes s good as her lor e should be unl Mother Orcatt is a golfer. or vather was before she helped teach the art to Maureen. Mrs. Orcutt just had | been runner-up in the club woman's | championship of her sex when she and Maureen played an homest-to goodness match. Maureen won. Then mother gave up the game, except for chaperoning Maureen to tourna ments, supervising her. practice and reminding her. if she is beaten, that she is young and another year is —iformer coming. Miss Orcutt, ‘in her. short tourna- ment career, has won the junior title. of the New York Metropolitan district twice and she bas qualified twice in the women’s national tournament. of a series of articles editorial section of— issues of the hour. YOU’LL LOOK | Dressed-Up —as you should be dressed if you have your clothes tailored at JACK BERNSTEIN 814 F St. N.W. 0034000000000 0009¢ ing and educativ David 1. Walsh Governor of recently a member of the chusetts, answers these questions in the second The Sunday Star Senate reform is one of the great national Mr. Walsh’s articles on the Senate are inter- He has undertaken to discuss, frankly, from a non-partisan point of view, his obser tion of the Senate’s effectiveness in our of government, its achievements and failures. its strength and weaknesses. Be sure and get the next issue of— The Sunday Star Is Dawes Right? hould the United States Senate revise its rules governing debate? Are the Senate’s methods of transacting the Nation's business antiquated and out of - [ tune with modern-day legislative progress: | Should a Senate minority be permitted i to obstruct leg filibusters and similar tactics? islative action by Is there medium ground between the v Senate rules and Vice President Dawes demands -which would facilitate business and avoid bitter conflict promised for the next session of Congress? and but Massa- Massachusetts Senate from which will appear in the but stem Rid of Dandruff; lookamlfetllhndmdhmflm You can get liquid arvon at any drug store and four ounces is all you. will need. This simple remedy has never been kmown to fail. explosions are possible volatile - gasoline. Only Ne. 1—17th & L Sts. N. W. Ne 4—Poana. Ave. & 21st SLN. W. ' 13 No. 2—Gopryia Ave.& Upshar St. Ne. S—Linworth & C Sts. S. W, _ No.3—10 & ESt. N.W. '~ Ne. 6=Florida Ave. & 3rd St. N. E. mmil’}g' No. 7—1706 L Stroet N. 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