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14 - WILD TRIBE ON WARPATH WOULD SCALP CHAMPIONS Uhle, Smith, Karr, Spurgeon and McNulty Are Mak- ing Cleveland Club Dangerous Title Contender. Nationals Again Beat Browns. BY DENMAN THOMPSON, Sports Editor, The Star. LEVELAND, Ohio, May 16.—The pathway of a world championship club is no rose-strewn lane. Every titleholder is made an espe- cial target by all contenders, who feel the natural human urge to unhorse the man in the saddle and strive their mightiest to that end. In the Indians, met here in the next four engagements, Nationals. will be encountering an aggregation which has proved more formidable than any they have played te date, with the single exception of the Athletics. Although given a modest rating in pre-campaign calcu- lations, the Tribe, like the A's and White Sox, have done a bit of dope upsetting, and over the first month of the season have proved coasistent ek i S S S e A s B climb back to the pitching heigths he slumped from after 1923, when he won 26 games; Sherrod Smith, veteran left-hander, and Benny Karr, res- cued from mir gue obscurity at Atlanta in the Southern Association, the kins have been cutting quite a_swath in Ban Johnson’s circuit, bagging about two-thirds of the games they have played, PRETTY SOFT WASHINGTON. S. Rice, rf. ... C to be e Redski One of in their unlooked-for the work at third base « geon, the 2l-vear-old came up last Fall from New Orleans, | where he batted only indifferently | §. Kice, but fielded well. Spurgeon never was | 3° garnor considered as a regular until Walter Lutzke was injured, then he step- | Judge. ved into the breach and set such a| BIUgEe. dizzy pace that Lutzke has had dif § culty getting back into the line-up. McNulty Helping Tribe. Another prominent contributor to Tribal triumphs has been Patrick Me ¥ from Cleveland’s - own West de. who has startled both fans and opposing players with his perform ances on the field. This athlete is ac- used of having ivory where the gray matter is supposed to be, alien play ers as that he does things that savor of pure boneheadedness, but he possesses speed g arm and a good battir ey 1 although he does unexpected and sometimes wrong things he gets away with them and, as he seems to be an inspired as well as a lucky performer, the fans are content that he be dumb as long as_he delivers MeNulty is likely on his broad and y for the next few the most minent factors | has been | Fred § pr Ruether, =l oscoss00- Totals. - Gerber, Bush. p. Vangilder, . Danforth, p. Grant, p. Staufrer, Falk, p. Tobin® ... H. Ricet. Dixon3 2| s0350e093-00--0 Totals. “Batted for Danforth in f #Batted for Grant in #Batted for Stauffer in eighth inning. Washington. 14050100 St. Lot 10211000 Two-base hits—S. Rice, Evans, McManus ). Ruether, Jucobson, Bluege. Three-base Ruether. “Home rin—>eManus. Stolen bases—s. Rice ( Harris, Goslin. Sae- to have a burden uthful shoulders days, at least, for Tristram Speaker, the aged but agile pilot of the Indians, has been com pelled to absent himself at Rochester, Y., to seek treatment for a twisted | knee that compeiled him to knock off. following last Wednesday's game, after maintaining an average around 375 against the hest opposing hurlers could offer M ulty has moved over to cover the middle garden in the | absence of his boss, bequeathing the right-field post he had been filling to mer Summa and Riggs Stephenson. | "he Tndians have been missing hits | he of Glenn Myatt, thei: sturdy backstop, who has slumped | below the .300 mark, and Charlie Jamieson, the former, Griff, who. usually is one of their most consistent swatters, has made slower start han at any time since he earned his berth in th left field, latest averag showing him down in the .240 class Rut Jamey does not belong in such a lowly positio: d it would be ju: \ Bingles by Goslin and Bluege in the the luck of the Nationals to have |third were nullified, as Judge hit into him start to make up for lost time |2 double play and Oss died stealing, while they are sojourning. here |but the Griffs got that brace of runs e e back with three to boot, in the fourth A . when’ Vangilder followed Bush to the| it three out of |Showers, and Ruether again was a by taking the final of the set|factor in the attack. the Browns in St. Louis yes-| Peck was forced by Ruel, after terday, 12 to 7. The Capitalians fat- |drawing a walk. Ruether then poled tened ‘their averages at the expense |2 double to the limits in left, scoring of a whole handful of Brownie hurlers | Muddy and took third when Rice after chasing Joe Bush off the hill, scratched a safety to McManus. With while Ruether pitched only well | the squeeze sign displayed, Bucky as he had to and batted in his usual | Harris beat out a bunt toward first, | effective manner. | scoring Ruether and putting Rice on A\ rather flukey cond. With Sam, Bucky then engi- ved the way for a_ Washington |neered a double steal and the pair of ly the opener. Sam looped = |them tallied when Joe Harris shunted xas leaguer close to the foul line |a single to center. in right t netted two bases and | This ended Van Gilder and brought completed circuit on Bucky | Danforth to the mound. Goslin greet- Harris e and Joe Harris' long led the southpaw with a safety over fiy to Evans second that sent Joe Harris to third, The Browns came right back in|and, after Judge fanned, Bluege dou- their half to knot the count. Evans’|bled to left, cashing Moon. Peck left double, with one gone, was almost a |his mates on third and second when duplicate of Rice's blow and he count- | he popped to Gerber. ed when Sisler pro; v evolved his | Ganly hit—a sngle to gne o o & MecManus Smacks Homer. The expected duel of hitting he-| Singles by Gerber and Evans pro- tween Bush and Ruether ended sud-(duced a run for the Browns in the denly in the second when the swatting | fourth, and McManus’ homer over the southpaw of the Nationals chased his | jeft-field fence netted another in the pitching opponent to the showers |fifth, while the Griffs also tallied once with a productive three-base hit. in_the sixth on Goslin's single and a walk to Bluege and Peck's ( h Washington, 9 Buses on balls—Off Ruether, 4: off Vangilder, 1; off Grant, 1 . 2 off Falk, 1.’ Struck out— : by Danforth, 1: by Stauf- Hits—Of Bush, 1 in 14 innings: " Vangilder, innings: off Danforth, in % o n 1 inning; off Stauffer, 5 in off Falk none in 1 | inning. ” Lesing pitcher. Umpires— S Naltin and Co Time of game 1t markers. Evans walked at the out- set, and, after Sisler and Williams |had been stowed away, scored when McManus lined a double against the left-field fence. Jacobsen then lashed a single to left that scored McManus, and Severeid duplicated this blow, but | Joe Harris’ throw to Bluege flagged | | Jacobson sliding into third. Champs The champs made bingle by Rice | the sacri luege walked with one gone, moved | steal, up on Peck’s slashing single to left | death. and scored when Rue! looped a sz The Griffs increased their total of to center. Ruether then sent Bush|runs to an even dozen in the ninth, in to wash up by poling a triple to|when Rice got two bases on Gerbe; the limits in right-center, which|wild throw, moved up on Stan Har- cashed Peck and Ruel. Dutch then|ris’ infield death and scored, after counted on a safety to left by Rice. Joe Harris walked, by cleanly steal- ing home while Chester Falk, sixth of the, St. Louis pitchers, held the ball A walk to Evans, Sisler's single and McManus' double gave the Brow. their sixth and seventh runs in tne final frame. Browns Rally in Third. at the far double in the also walked Browns pped for a pair of Johnson After Fifth Straight Mound Win at Indians’ Expense C stranded emittiz Jacobsen w corner, after second, when Vangi but in the third the Ruether right mer EVELAND, his fiith May ght 16.—Walter Perry Johnson will be angling for victory of the campaign when he faces tie In- combat of the set here today. Since receiving his opening effort of the campaign at Philadelphia, when Bryan Harris inflicted the only whitewashing thus far experienced by the Nationals, Barney has successiy trimmed the Yankees, Red Sox (twice) and White Sox, blanking Collins” men in his most recent appearance, at Chicago, with five scattered hits for the 108th shutout victory of his career extending over 19 seasor In these last four contests th tionals have scored 3 str; dians in the initial 3-0 reverse | ninth, B Goslin leaped to spear Wil- runs for John- | liam: with one fin in a spectacular som. an average of 9% to a game, and | manner, and the Goose then chased §f they approximate such attacking fover to the barrier in left-center for support for him today Walter m.u:dhumr.sons long drive. fairly breeze through to victory. The | advance dope was that Southpaw Sherry Smith would be Barney's mound opponent this afternoon. GOVERNMENT LEAGUE LED BY G. P. 0. TEAM Government Printing Office tossers are leading the five teams of the Gov- ernment Base Ball League at the end of three weeks of play with a record of three straight victories. The Printers got off to a good start by nosing out the champion General Accounting Office nine in the opening game, and since thenr have scored at the expense of the Commissioners and the Patent Office forces. The Interstate team moved into a second-place tie with the Commission- | ers yesterday by defeating the Patent Office nine, 10 to 8. The league standing: ivans had to back up against the righi-field barrier and leap to get Joe Harr drive with one hand in the opening round at St. Louis yesterda 1t brought Rice home from third. ler didn't wait lons to get the e that boosted his string of con- secutive hitting games to 30, rapping A cafety to right on his first appear- ance. Bluege's double in the fourth w viciously hit ball, carrying on a line to the leftfield fence. McManus’” two-bagger in tae third was a similar blow. but his homer in the fifth was a high fly that we caught by the wind and carried over the left-field barrie Jacobson has a bad throwing arm and the Griffs were running wild on every occasion at the expense of the Browns’ big gardener. Rice made a brilliant forward run """"m" I —By RIPLEY. A MANIPURL OF ASSAM, TNpIA CAN LAY FOR HOURS ON THE POINTS OF 7 BAYONETS As long as he remains ne\d heis sate. AN EGG WAS SENT THROUGH THE MA(L \n Gogland — AND SAFELY DELIVERED. 196 EASTERN HIGH TEAM WINS FIFTH IN ROW Eastern High moved nearer to the scholastic base ball title when it scored its fifth straight victory of the season defeating Central, 10 to 6, in a loosely played game at Wilson Stadium. Eastern’s three-run lead was wasted in the third inning, when the Central batters got to Burdine for a quartet of tallies, but the Lincoln Parkers came back strong in the fourth to sew the game up. Burdine, Eastern's hurl er, blanked his opponents in the last three frames and led his team at bat with three safeties in four trips. Moser of Central also connected three times. St. Albans turned back the St. Christopher’s team of Richmond, § to 2, at the Wisconsin avenue field. To- day the St. Alban’s junior nine en- counters Gilman Country School at Baltimore. Emerson Institute trounced Devitt Prep, 6 to 1, in a game featured by the pitching duel between Biggins and Corson. Woodward School increased its lead in the Interprep base ball loop by de- feating the Friends nine, 3 to 1. Taking two out of three singles events and breaking even in doubles, Devitt Prep defeated the Georgetown Prep tennis team, .t to 5. CARDINALS V WILL INVADE EASTERN A. A. GROUNDS Eastern Athletic Association plays its first home game of the season to- morrow at 3 o'clock, when the Alex- andria Cardinals are encountered at the Eastern Field, Fifteenth and C streets northeast. Rheems or Neidfeldt will hold the mound for the home team, with Tread- way in the hackslopmnx position. GOOD BALL PLAYED IN SANDLOT LOOPS Chestnut Farngs and Lansburgh & Bro. nines came through in yester- day's games in the Commercial base ball loop, the former defeating Thomp- son’s Dairy, 9 to 4, and the storemen nosing out the C. & P. Telephone tos sers, 7 to 6. I the Treasury Interbureau League Annex No. 1 triumphed at the ex- pense of Annex No. 2, the score being 7 to 6, and in the Departmental cir- cuit the Printers shut out Agriculture, to 0. Public_Buildings and Parks nosed out the War Department nine in the Potomac Park League, 5 to 4. General Accounts outclassed Regis- tered Mails, 20 to 8, in the Post Office SOUTH ATL. Augusta, 5: Knoxville, 4. Macon. : ‘Asheville, 4. 13: * Chariotie, 7, 4: Spartanburg. 3 Raleigh, 5-4: Greensboro, 4-5. SOUTHERN Memphis. 6: Birmingham, ASSOCIATION Mobile. 4. 6: Chattanooga, 3. Atlanta, 5. 5: New Orleans, 1. Hargrave . Gregg Johnson Goslin . Rice .. Bluege ... 4. Harriy | Judge .. Teihold Peckinpaugh S. Harris. . . Ruel ... MeNeely Rhirley MeNaily ano0000 o EETTE =5 Coveleskie. . Kelley Adams (1. Marberry Ogden Y SNCEP e ning catch of Robertson's fly in the Pasent ONés L | St. Louls AMERICAN LEAGUE. Philadelphia Washington Cleveland Chicago .. St. Louis New York Boston .. ... Detroit ... GAMES TODAY. Wash'n at_Cleveland. Phila. at Chicago. Boston at St. Louis. New York at Detroit. YESTERDAY'S Washington, New York, Cleveland, Philadelphia, 8; Det NATIONAL LEAGUE. Won. Loat. Pet. 3l Phila. Bost New York at Detroit. RESULTS. New York Cincinnati Brookivn Philadelphia Boston . .... Pittsburgh Chieago 3 1 0 1 e GAMES TODAY. Pittsburgh at Boston. Chicago at Phila. St. Louis at Bkiyn. Cincinnati at N. Y. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS. Philadelphia, 8; Chicago, 4. New York. in th Brooklyn, ‘8: 'St. Pittsburgh-Boston (ral PIERCE A. C. LOOKS FOR A REAL BATTLE Pierce Athletic Club of Hyattsville is expecting its hardest game of the season tomorrow, when the Benning nine is encountered on_the Riverdale field at 2:30. Manager Wolfe requests his players to be at the diamond at 1 o'clock. The Pierce club wishes to arrange a double-header for Memorial day. and would like to hear from fast unlimited teams of the District. For bookings call the manager at Hyattsville 311-W. GAMES TOMORROW. Pittsburgh at Bklyn. Chicago at New Yori Calvary M. E. tossers trounced the West Washington Baptist team, 7 to 3, in_a Sunday School League tilt Broadbent, pitching for Calvary, al- lowed but one hit, struck out 12 men and led his team at bat with a quartet of safeties. War Department and Tremont Ath- fetic Club teams will mingle today at 5 o'clock at the north diamond of the Ellipse. Warwicks handed an 11-to-5 setback to the Warrenton nine. Harp Midgets are to meet the Kalo- rama Midgets at the Virginia avenue | playgrounds tomorrow at 2 o'clock. Hilltops journey to Alexandria to- morrow to encounter Motor Car Co. No. 5. Jenkins and Long will form the battery for the locals. Hilltop players are to leave Twelfth and H streets northeast at 1:30 o'clock. BLOOMINGDALE JUNIORS BOLSTER UP THEIR NINE With Fales, Tech High first base- man, and Ryan and Cohen, Business High players, added to their line-up, the Bloomingdale Juniors are expect- ing to make a great showing in their division of the Washington Base Ball and Athletic Association. Before éntering the junior class the Bloomingdales played as a midget combination and defeated the Cardi- nals, the Celtics, Seat Pleasant, the Diamonds and St. Martins. Two vie- tories were scored over each of the last two. Since moving up a notch the Bloom- ingdales have defeated the Bucky Juniors and the Takoma Athletic Club and hope to make their wins three straight today, when the Mount Pleasant Athletic Club'is met at Holy Cross Field. e e st VIRGINIA LEAGUE, Rocky Mount. 7-1. th, 10-11: Kinston, 8-10. Richmond, REE PIEDMONT LEAGUE. High Point, 12 Winston-Salem, innings) . AMERICAN ASKOCIATION. St. Paul, 8: Minneapolis, 6. 6: Milwaukee, 1 INTERNATIONJL LEAGUR. 11: Newark, 3, al lJ Syracus#, 10 (13 | got “Frosty ™ PETERS Montana State. College. — KICKED \7 ‘GOALS FROM THE FIELD IN ONE GAME tov. 14 1224 CENTRAL HIGH GIRLS SHOOT A 498 SCORE High School markswomen match this week with Waller 1 h School of Chicago. The local girls have ne ceived t results of their opponents’ scoring, but | the Chicagoans w have to do well, for Central got a total of 498, 7 u\ll of the 10 competitors making 99 or better. The high 5 counted. Ruth Wright, shooting for- her first time in a match, ored Helen Taylor, Helen Prentiss anc Robinson each scored 100. Ani Peters, Helen Huhn and Ethel Theis 99’ each. The Centralites now are looking for ward to the interscholast rifle meet to be held May 27 on the Eastern High ange. Centra! shot a postal Grace Moody, gymnasiu mstructor at Central, is running off an indoor track event for all girls in her classes. The event consists of a 50-yard dash. imination heats are now being run off to determine the best runner each class. be run against each other in a final. At the meeting of the Capitol Ath- letic Club last night it was decided to elect the officers for the coming year by mail ballot, as there were but 11 member present. The nominating committee has prepared a ticket, copies of which are being sent to each member. May 21. The following names appear on the ballot: For president, Mrs. Cecilia Beubig; vice president, Mary son and Florence Skadding; treasurer, Mary Richardson and Tillie cording secretary, Marie O’'Da ma Winkjer and Mary I corresponding secretary. Frankie Riff, Valentina Tottefeu and Hazel Davis. MISS GULLI BREAKS MARKS AT DUCKPINS While the Washington City Duck- pin Association officials were dis- tributing the prizes won in the recent tourney at the Coliseum last night, Lorraine Gulli, the acknowledged “queen of woman bowlers,” indulged in a three-game practice set with the result that she astonished the spectato She broke all records for women for three games, with a total of 410 and high game of 179. Miss Gulli started the record game with eight pins, followed with two spares, then two strikes, another spare, on top of which she sprang another double-header and wound up with a spare, a mark in 9 out of 10 boxes. IrreSpective of sex, this score of 179 and 410 are ones that any bowler would be proud of. Not content with this exhibition, Miss Gulli_also bowled an extra game totalling 122, or 532 for four sames, making another record. BALTIMORE PYTHIANS WILL BOWL HERE TONIGHT The picked team from the Balti- more Knights of Pythias Bowling League, which defeated the cham. pions of the Washington loop by a margin of one pin on the Baltimore alleys last Saturday, will attempt to repeat tonight in a return match at the Coliseum. Having won the matches for the last two years, the District pinspill- ers are expected. to put up a stff fight to- retain their championship honors. COLLEGE BASE BALL. At _ College _Park—Maryland, Washington and Lee, 1. At_Chapel Hill—Virginia, 4; Carolina, 1. * At Providence—William and Mary, 6; Providence College, 5. At_Pittsburgh—Carnegie Tech, 14; Bucknell, 3 At Quantico—Marines, 11; West Virginia Wesleyan 3 orth More people are engaged in sperts in Australia and New Zealand than in any other country in the world. lizabeth | in | hese winners will then | The returns must be in by | Richard- | “G” CLUB MEET TOPS 'ATHLETIC CARD HERE A well filled athletic program was to be offered this city today, with the annual “C" Club track and fleld games at Central Stadium heading the ¢ tainment. Starting at 2 o'clock, meet sponsored by the organization of Central High School letter winners, alumni and undergraduates was ex- pected to be the best ever held here primarily holastic athletes. Tt had a record-breaking entry list, and was filled with the cream of high and prep school talent of this section of the country. Varsities of the local group were to compete lacrosse, base ball and track and field games, several of the contests being scheduled for local fields. At College Park the twi | 1and and Pennsylvania we lacrosse match at 2:3 { ball games beginning at o be played at the Hilltop betw orgetown and West Virginia Wes. an, and at Brookland between Cath. | olie University and the Marines. At | Kendall Green track teams of George Washington and iudet were 10 open a meet at 3 o'clock CGeorgetown and Maryland have rep- resentatives on foreign fields this aft ernoon. The dashing Hilltop track and field squad is at West Point for a dual meet with Army, while the Old | Line nine is at Baltimore | with Maryland's arch-enemy letics, Johns Hopkins. The Maryland nine vesterday took | the measure of the Washington and am in a 3-to-l game at College The Old Liners made but three and earned only one of their tal held the Generals to five attered safeties. Ge Washington racketers were defeated yesterday in a tennis match with Lehigh at Bethle- hem, 6 to 1. DIXIE TITLE GAMES INCLUDE 19 EVENTS the Associated Press. SEWANEE, Tenn., May 16.—The cream of track athletes of the South ern Conference today went into the| finals of the annual track and field meet being held at Hardee Field Nineteen events comprised the day's program. One recc the broken five times in | inaries yesterday and | indicate ‘more records | the day is over. bettered the record by jumping 21 feet 10% inches. Dutton of L. U. was only 4% inches behind the discus throw record {and bids fair to equal or better the record today | Those who qualified in the shotput W. R. White, V. M. L; McCall, | Sewanee; Helvy, Sewanee; Cober, Uni versity of Mississippi, and Bryan of Vanderbilt The jave es of Mary 0 o'cloc Base in ath- d, broad jump, was the prelim- other ‘marks will fall before of Kentucky 7% inches, srady ) throwers will be: Round- Mis- Vander Stevens, | sissippi bilt Yates, L. U. The half-mile runners will be: inson and Smith of Mississippi A. M.: Newman, Cle n; Brown, tucky skett, Vanderbilt; Reeves Auburn: Jonas,” North Carclina, and Rushton, Wa gton and Lee. The best time was Nine men 1 the 440-yard sh, including Roy of Clemson, Worthington of Mississippi A. and M and Cailletear who won yester {three heats. The best time was | Good time was made in the A and many close d for today Rob: nd Ken- n | other races preliminaries |are predict 'SCORE OF 79 MADE | BY MISS COLLETT| | By the Associated Press TROON, Scotland, 6.—The English woman gol. »day won the annual international team contest by defeating the Welsh team, ni matches to none. They had previ ously defeated Ireland and Scotland. Those entrants in the women's open | championship tournament who did not participate in today’s te: improved the opportunity of getting in a iittle practice. Joyce Wethered, the champion, played fines golf, except for some lapses on the putting greens. ince the beginning of the week she Glenna Colett, the former Amer- an champion, separately have played everal rounds over the course. Al- most daily the British girl has covered the 18 holes in three or four fewer strokes than the American aspirant for her title. Yesterday, however, Miss Collett was at_the peak of her game and_ took She did the N | the Sabbath and s being” Scotland. there will be no t all. The open championship tournament begins on Monday One of the entrants is Enid Wilson of Chesterfield, old girl, who wears her hair in a long pigtail. Al though a strongly built miss and cap- able of driving a golf ball more than 200 yards, she is the youngest golfer ho_ ever entered mpionship pla. in this countr: he has drawn a most difficult _assignment for her championship debut, being drawn to meet Mrs. W. A. Gavin, experienced American tournament player, in the first round. ROTARY TEAM BEST IN CIVIC GOLF EVENT Golfers of the Rotary, Kiwanis and | Civitan clubs took down the part of the prizes offered in the first tournament of the Washington Civic Club Golf Association, played yester- day over the course of the Washing- ton Golf and Country Club. Teams of four men from six clubs competed in the tournament, which was the first of five similar events scheduled over the season. The next event will be played at the Indian Spring Golf Club, May 2 Tn addition to the three clubs named, teams were entered from the American Business Club and the Cosmopolitan | and Newcomers clubs. Rotary’s team. composed of Clyde B. Asher, L. W. Laudick, Paul B. Lum and O. R. Evans, won the gross prize with a total score of 374. Low net went to the Kiwanis team, composed of J. M. Cunningham, Frank Howard, Z. D. Blackistone and C. H. Pardoe, with a net of 286. Civitan Club_golf- ers won both second gross and net prizes.) R. Lester Rose of the American Business Club won the gross prize with a card of 83, while low net went to C. H. Pardoe with 89—22—67. Scores turned in in the gross com- petition “were Rotary, 374; Civitan, 381: Kiwanis, 385: American Business Club, 402] Newcomers, 437, and Cos- mopolitan, 449. Net scores follow: Kiwanis, 286; Civitan, 298; Rotar; American Business Club, 308: comers, 321, and Cosmopolitan, 351. PLAY ONE-SIDED GAME. ’:"reasu';\l Qlomls of the Colored De partmental loop outclassed the Reg- Isters nine, 14 to 4, e to start a | lock were | for a battle | play | ‘major | SPORTS. TAKES MEASURE OF VOIGT IN FINAL AT CHEVY CHASE Young Columbia Star Beats Bannockburn Links- man, 5 and 4, After Defeating Parson, 6 and 5, in Forenoon Semi-Final Engagement. BY W. R. McCALLUM. OLF tournaments to Roland R. MacKenzie, Columbia Country ‘ Club’s prospective national champion, are becoming just a series of personally conducted triumphs. Roland is playing in a one day tournament at the Princess Anne Club, near Norfolk, today, with a | memory of his play of yesterday, when he won the Chevy Chase Cl ing cvent with the finest display of golf ever shown i linksman about the city. Roland beat George J. Voigt of Bannockburn, former public champion, by 5 and 4. in a final round, in which the 18-year-old Colur star was in front all the way from the third hole. The impressive anne in which he nullified the generally accurate game of Voigt with his ow far-reaching and much more accurate shots amply testified to the wort of the finest game of golf ever developed about the Capital. Figures tell the story of Roland's jwon the sixth with a superiority much better than words. | Voigt failed to get ho The lad played holes' yesterd: Roland was hole high beating Donald Parson on the thir- |and spoon teenth green in the semi-final and Voigt came to life on beating Voist on- the fourteenth in [hole, sinking a 30-foot dc the final. For the 27 holes he plaved, |for a par 4, after hooking hi he tinished 3 under even 4s, a rec- |and overplaying his ti ord that has never been equaled by |half and got away with a an amateur about this city in tourna- |at the long eighth 1 pla ment pla over such course as |midiron shot out of the ro Chevy Chase. And the course was green. The ninth was I 1 played from the back tees. although Roland's try for a on the very lip of the cup, Voigt u half stymie, which he tiated. Roland got another deuce at the short tenth, his second of the round, laying his mashie shot 8 feet fror the cup. and became 4 up. 1 halved the eleventh in 4s, with Ve {playing a great brassie to the of the green from bac} twelfth v halved in foot putt for a hort thirteent shot from amate fine 4 in with wher dr the seventh put she He got a other half srea to the in 4s, hung laying nego. MacKenzie's Game Strong. Against such golf even the ma- chine-like game of Voigt was help- less and it was not at all surprisir.s that the former municipal champion cracked. When the final round ended Roland had par for a 70. Against | Donald Parson in the semifinal, he {had par for a 63. Not so bad for a youngster who has been playing 1f s ihan six years and who now is only 18 years of age. esterday’s victory was for Roland cKenzie in as tournament starts this Spring. The only ,thing he didn’t do at Chevy | Chase was win the qualifying round. |He won both the medal round and he tournament at Indian Spring and { Washington. And strange to say, all three of his final rounds have ended on the fourteenth green, with vic-| tory his by 5 and 4. He beat Tuck- erman at Indian Spring, Kane at Washingt and Voigt at Chevy Chase in the same way. There could be mno better proof of his superiority than the impry e mar- gains the voungster accumulated over all_his adver: Roland for He morning more tc 1 the third man The match h, Roland holing an §. the hole and win the i of the finalists follow 414 H n end on haived putt tch Scores MacKenzie Voist —~Bye holes not played out n Tournament Summary. Summaries of yesterday's se and final rounds ®c First flight 14 low Semi-finals—George J. Vo Bannockburn, defeated W. 'R. McCaliur hington. 2 and 1: Roland R. MacKenz defeated Donald Parse and 5. Final nd 4 Conisolation—Charles M defeated A. McCook Dunl 1 up (19 holes): Fraser Ha Brawner. Col cated shington last night Anne tournament. | in the city Monday and will play in the Balti- ument which begins next Wednesday, with the finest field ever | i entered in an amateur tournament near Washingtom. | left | L and » Hale Semi_finale—R. T. defeated W. A, Ksle Stead, jr.. Chievy Chase . T Torme —Stead defeated Harrell, 5 an Consolation—F. H. Wilme. efeated J. B. Murphy, Bannockh . M. Leavell, T it 11 . nalk—J. ¥ ! | morn able, Lasy Forenoon Victory. t Donald Parson yesterda 1z Roland was simply unbeat while Parsons was far off his The result was inevitable— 1d 5 victory for the youngster. | Roland was out in 34, one under par, and had par for a 64 when he com- pleted the match. In the meantime, | Walter R. McCallum of Washington Golf and Country Club and George | Voizt of Bannockburn were locked in 1 semi-final which might have gone either way, but which Voight won on | the seventeenth { Voigt holed ninth for a_birdie |putt for a birdie |each shot winning establishing his argin of victory | MeCallum missed a 5-foot putt at ¢ Sl ] "h(- twelfth to halve the hole in 3.| & ¢ Glimin, Cotumbia. & and 5" Voigt won the fifteenth to become 2 | Ciark defested Eliott. ¥ and"1 n.,. when McCallum missed a 6-foot | tt around a half-stymie. and Voigt, | {Gormie 2 up. laid McCallum a dead | | stymie at the seventeenth, with both men on the green in two shots. McCallum's ball struck that of Voigt on the lip of the cup, prevent- |ing a possibility of the match going |to the eighteenth hole. Voigt had a |4 on the eizhteenth for . while MeCallum had a 4 for a 76. Voigt started in the afternoon with a rush, and MacKenzie, remembering | his defeat by the same opponent in the semifinal of the Columbia tournament last Spring, was not so sure of yesterday's match at the outset. Roland missed a 4-foot putt for a half in 4 at the first hole, and missed another short putt to the second hole. He won the however, with a magnificent | shot to the green after missing his | tee shot, when Voist failed to hole a 6-footer. Runs Down Long Putt. Roland ran down a 20-footer for a 2 at the short fourth and the Ma Kenzie march to vittory was on. annexed the fifth with a 4 when t_hooked into the woods. and Speedster ['BRODT'S, Inc. ‘ Looks and runs like new. | Every possible extra Are Different $2.50 to $5.00 Reduced Prices on every car in 419 11th St. stock STUDEBAKER 503 9th St. White Front Lot 721 14‘!]\ 'st 14th Street at R N.W. 3218 M Street N.W. BELOW N. Y. AVE. Potomac 1633 4 ar defeated E Al—W) L 6 a Fi A. McTthenn Pt Ban : likenny de 1 up Consolation—C. G S._H_ Kauffmann, MeMenamin v Childress, Chevy defeated McMenamin Chevy Chase hevy Chase. 4 sk, defeated 1 up. Fin 1 up W. B. Duncan ven Thompsos A F. P Walter Chappel Final—Prescott de Chevy Chase Chevy Chase hot at the a 20-foot at the twelfth, the hole and Cievy Chase cott.” Columbia, Chety Chase. feated Duncan. 1 up Consolation—6. F. Elliott. 1 up c F HAGEN IS NOT GOING. PHILADELPHIA, May Walter Hagen, British champion has announced here that he would not go to Great Britai this Summer to play in the open at Preswick, Scotland. He stated that would return to Great Britain in 2] open ¢ RADIATOR, FENDERS BODIES MADE AND REPAIRED NEW RADIATORS FOR AUTOS WITTSTATT’S R & F. WKS. 319 13th N.W. 1423 P. REAR Amazing values in good used cars. Be sure to see this one. Big 6 Studebaker BRODT’S, Inc. I{l Selling Good Hats for Over 40 Years | $3 DOWN! Balance Mun:h’y I 30x3% Tire, $11.00 | Equip your car with new tires Six Months to Pay! PROBEY TIRE STORES 2104 Pa. Ave. NW. Oth & P Sts. 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