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28 ' _THE F\'EI\'B\'G STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, TUESDAY, MAY 325 Naval Academy Athletes Will Take Part in Many Importan TO ENGAGE ARMY TEAMS IN THREE COMPETITIONS Cadet Trackmen and Base Ball Players Will Visit An- napolis, While Middy Lacrosse Will Go to West Point—Crew in Big Race. NNAPOLIS, May the Spring season for Naval A three branches and the final race of t regatta. -A number of the crucial athletic contests of Academy teams will he massed next Saturday. including meetings with the Military Academy teams in he crew except for the Poughkeepsie The service schonl haseé hall and field and track teams will meet at Annapolis and the lacrosse twelves clash at West Point. The varsity plebe eights will oppose Harvard and Cornell at Cambridge and the and pound Navy crew will enter the American Henley in that class at Phila- delphia Additional sports for the day at napolis are tennix Pennsy! vania and_rifle shoot the | 715t New Yor! ment. both seasgons in those Without reg: other college team presentatives clase the local | por | i te their rating with | service | interes:. | T in each of the three branct: 0 far the records of the team indicate. With in all three of its previous| . the Navy crew hones to defeat d and Cornell and hecome the ed representative of Eastern 3 keeprie brothers, from Lonis, furnish the instance in the his rv of the Naval Academy wher2 three brothers w 11 active in ath letics at Annapolis at the same time. The nearest_approach te this situ ation was offered by the Ingram brothers, Jonas. Homer and William 2 eat athletes, hus students at dif ferent times Albert K Rernet. ir hrathers, 1€ & member af the inz class He was the reznula Bernet ldest of the | adun end on | An- ard Regi | between | |of | asainst the foot hall team and one of the most reliahle memhers of the lacrosse team. John €. Rernet, the second brother, j='a member of the second ciass. He has just broken the Navy record for the high jump, geing over the bar at % feet 1y inch The third hrother is Bernet. who is a plebe. having en ieped the academy last Summer. He playing an the class hasket hall and \ese teams. Howard . lac HAGEN SAILS TONIGHT FOR GOLF IN BRITAIN NEW YORk May P, Walter Hagen. American professional golf champion. sails for Fngland tonight seeking to capture the British open for the third time. Hagen also will meet Ahe Mitehell in 72 holes of mateh play for a purse 1.000 pounds, and will participate with a team of American professionals a comhination of British ex ports. Golf Strategies That Won Some Important Struggles “By Bunker™ CHANGE IN TACTICS WHICH ADED WALKER LENGTH OF HOLE 4|2 YARDS STENSIBLY we ail play golf hand'e cach club as it it should he made. But. if mak in the hope that we will be able to chould he handled and make ecach shot as we confess the truth, the score we| nearer to our hearts than all the form in the world. The middle-aged man who takes up golf should: for his own happi ness, be taught the ahsolutenc s« of this truth. At the start, too. he should be forced to po out an plav shots from the tee and through the fairway for limited distances-<ay 100 vards. and, incidentally. club control ingrained he could procced to acquire In the meantime he wanld be play inz around 100 instead of 125 and 130, or even more, and w contented. Control, is the zreat golf. but\ while M this. he offers it n wild he a 1ot more ential of knows 1 = how often the erack | distanee to dis- | Champic con and lost hecause certain f21l to use their heads in this regard. | Walker Was Conservative. E The 1224 nationa! »pen champion ahip waz won by Cyril Walker simply hecause his tactics were eonservative | almost all the time 1t is noteworthy that when he failed | tn hold to this policy disaster vesulted. | He deserted it but seldom. however. | thus keeping a strons mental control of himself and maintaining his morale. At the start of the fournament Cyril noted that the zreens at Oak- land Hills were very ppery. He de clded. therefore. that in playing to the greens he would place all shots short of the cup. savinz himsel? the risk of | havinz to make downhill putts from | the banked-up rear portions. He held to this manenver throush out, and. of course. in the aggregate. probably saved himself a sufficient | number of strokes fo win the cham nionship. i The first real test of Cyril's wil power came at the tenth hole af the zecond round. On this 400-vard hale he pushed his drive into bad rough at | the rizht of the fairway Played for Safety. | He was about 175 vards from the, flag. and the temptation to try for the | green on his second was strong. but | he resisted, using his mashie and play-! inz to a safe place in the falrway, 150 vards skort of the flag. From his good | nosition he was on the green with his | third. and holed a 5. If he had shot | for the green from the rough the | chances were 10 to 1 he would have Janded in a trap and might have taken | aBor . Cyril’'s next temptation came on the fifteenth hole and. unluckily for him.! he fell. The fifteenth is a doz-leg hole, meas. g 412 vards. In the angle of the Aog-leg a number of traps are placed. 1 vou take the short cut your drive must have a carry of approximately 220 yards to zet over these traps. “T was hitting the ball very well.” says Cyril, “and T thought T could carry over those traps. However, I was mistaken. My ball not only went into one of them, but it dropped right under a steep bank. I couldn’t play toward the green and had to chip out to one side and slightly backward, for a better lie. The result was that I took 5 on a par 4 hole. Fifteenth Was Nemesis. “In the morning round, I hadn't tried to take the short cut and had made par 4. But this fifteenth hole was to be my nemesis during this tournament. When I reached it on the third round I had just made some had putts on previous holes and was anxious to gain a stroke, so T again tried to cut across the dog-leg. Again T fajled and again I had to take’'a 5. “On the final round, when T came to the fifteenth, it was figured that 1 could win it T could do the last four holes in 18, par being 4-—4-—3—5. T then had 281 strokes and 18 more would make my total 299, T was told that the man who could break 300 would win. Bobby Jones had 300 and Bill Mehihorn 301. “1 decided not to play the dog-leg as T had been doing. To go into those traps again might be disastrous. The | nervous tension This would give him mental control. When these qualities had hecome firmly greater distances. nnder which | was tervific. The ffteenth had hecome a mental hazard for me. <1 drove ght down the fairway and followed this up with a shot to the green's edge. 1 had a very nice rhance for a 4, but, this time, the first in which 1 had reached the gyeen i less than three shots, I missed a four-foot putt and used three strokes in the green “1 - didn't laboring was mind the missed putt, e or | though. 1 knew I had used the corveet | morale was | strategy on the hole. My as gond as ever. This told on the next hole. where 1 made a hirdie 3. "This | ~ me all to the good and | finished with a 297 “Ne telling what might have hap. | pened if 1 had found the traps again on the fifteenth. My lie might have been more unfavorable even than on the previons nccasions. If 1 had taken a 6 at that point I might have blown np. That would have heen fatal. com- fng down the home str of a na tional open. “The home stretch @& the point where o many crack. So, even though T took another five on the fifteenth, I | there | figure my change in tactics helped me to the championship.” (Copyright. 19261 HAIR-GROOM | | Keeps Hair Combed, Glossy Well-Groomed all Day “Hair-Groom” is a dignified comb ing cream which costs only cents a jar at any drug store. lions use it because it gives that nat- ural gloss and well-groomed effect to the hair—that final' touch to good dress both in _business and on social occasions. Even stubborn, unrul or shampooed hair stays combed all day in any style you like. Hai Groom” is gr grow thick, heavy, . i al h ustrous hair, i | MACKENZIE PRAISED BY BRITISH CRITICS Ry the Associated Press, LONDON, May of Ronald play ington draws They The with Bobby such stays. is decl chamnionship at perts in today’s newspapers. thing better will be seen during the [are as fallows championship than for the first lnded, the Amecican system of ‘udging yard. | age. an cazie and three hirdles. cagle 3 was the n oart that conc a_highly dapgerous force on the side of the inyaders. assumes that will prove stper Jones or players nevertheless a deep “amazing’ unsparingly showered upon his play. “The critic | the downfall Hezler, an especially sensational surp Kolf of “The seriously £ n | of retaining the championship.” savs| oy the Daily ¢ a0V ¢ lizes a view widely held. | 1251 "Raines. o ! | 3 ierman. H. D FRENCH NETMEN ANNEX | two tennis matches azainst slovakia In the Davis cup elimination | contests vesterday. Rene Lact G SPORTS.’ t Events on Saturday 1026. he remarkabla MacKenzia of Wash- the British amateur goll Muirfield yesterday encomlums from the. golf ex in A will hegin over Club tomorrow. declare that it i< unlikely any Pairings for the qualifying rounds MacKenzie's 33 # 230 B J nine holes. which in NESDAY. & Wash aceording to par figures under Robo Wash., Rann., and and 2. B. Mur- | o B and H. D His | 10 ard sixth hole. | MacKenzie plays 1s avt and i« in Wash writers say : 10 . and Harry A Kiting 10:15-1. F Whash' and Charles B. None of the experts : A - v Indian Spring, and R, H | = v, Indian Spring. and R the \Washingion i 10 Frances her gregt the ¢ i his impression adjectives and 1022, . and Leroy W 0 atson. Col. and G. 1. Sta- Indian Spring Frank Roesch, Wash. and W. €. Wilme, in 10: 0 10 npon them, as “'won “magnificent . and B, H. Col. and B, H 1045 and Claude put_on long e » vril Tolley and Ma Great ain main | ded as| ise. He | N~ | worst W il s Diganne A-—H. . Rrauss, Rann 3l 105 Garrite, Manor, and ¥ T two R Tolley's def " Wash., and 6. T, How o, and R, P red | his Toss diminishes . Wash. aud ¢ 6 of two stalwarts and/ B Bono. chanees Rann Rritish T MeClamahan and Rier. Wain S Picxes Wash and G M Mail's eritic. who erystal and Hugh Saum. Rann . and E. R, Con- | Wash A naile Col, and B, S asional. € R and E. R | nd H ES MATCHES| France won Czecho. | Gman, Cal . Wash . Cash- | Griwar, Wash_ and 1. D, Webn, | and Dr. M. S | Wash.. and 1. M Zokelus, 7 Henri 6 5 s Bann., Bann het | ste defeated 6—%, & ‘THE TREW MOTOR CO.,Inc. JOSEPH B. TREW, President 1509-1511 14th Street N.W. Main 4173, 4174, 4175 Open Evenings and Sundays REO MOTOR CAR COMPANY - MIDDLE ATLANTIC GOLF ATTRACTS LARGE FIELD v FIELD of about 130 golfers, including the leading talent of the sec tion, will compete in the Middle Atlantic championship event that the course of the Washington Go!f and Country w. R Wise, Wash Doyle. Bann., and John Bryan, Waldron m.—1. Ho Raloh 8. Fowler, Wa Walter Hagen, h.. pitt. and F. R. Eng- | . Co E. Richardson. George Shanock. Norfolk ¢ ) 1 Morman, W R N Rer S it Last. Wash Wash Charles George. F. —i. F. Brawner Wash. and R. J N.B. Frost. Indian Spring. and G. J Voigt, Bann T, Harvell. Wash, and W. R Riirning ree llnl‘illn Gurr]nx, and J. ian Shrims minn. Wash.. and 0. L. and J. 'T. Barni Wa De Vere Burr. Col., and R. A. Loftus, € i “hevy Chase v, Bruce 1., nd Dr. W, RMy THURSDAY. raylor, Congressional cLister, Congrexsional It Wright. Wash. and and part Manar, Manor, and Pr Manor. and’ Frank 0. ¢ and A, DV and R and 1..S. Plautz, . Roanake, and 0. €. Murray, D, Garland. Roanoke, “Truett, Wash Col., a F. Kel and ol Nicholson. Wash . and W. E Richardson ) ) Coand A Mackes., Frank M 3 Logan Hopkins, Dr.” Thomas H A. F. Preac Sweeney Wash cales. Richmond, Do Lows With Stake Body 2310 minutes 28 6:10 seconds, | and Tom | Jllnks. in the forest preserve operated by the county. The forest preserve now containe four 15-hole courses. and the commis sfoners arranged the schnol to make these who use the golf zround: move efficient in progressing around the links The tutelage will help them to save v abuse of the turf and 1o keep moving, =o that the zame will lvm' he delayed nnduly FIRST PUBLIC SCHOOL FOR GOLF IS OPENED Ry the Axsaciated Pross CHICAGO, May The first “little red sehool hous where players Clark, Md. C. C., and J. T. Wash: L Md. €. C.. and S. L. Mo y. Wan —Elmer Renling, Md. €. €.. and H. L. West. Col, n’ E. Wise. Wash.. Roland Rolling Rd. B, Stevinson, Col, and ¥. D. Pax- world's | *of zolf, may e instrue tions free froam a dominie emnloved The first lesson will he in funda- by the ecounty hoard, has= installed a | m'\d"'?lc of ‘”’; :’a"y‘e 5‘""' etiquetta & b 7 |and the methad of play. Other conraes » ¢ golf and bezun to ma- | my otenso of gt and tesin o ma | 31} A" S0t et eton 1 4 those who have already plaved goif The primary rlass will he called for 4 i It is planned to open more of the “recitatlon” tedav at 16 o'clock hy “‘deestrick’ schools later. Stewart Cowper, formerly of Detroit. G b The golf schoel, announced some . = time ago by Anton Cermak, president | Rocky Kansas, fhe lightweight of the Cook County rommissioners, | champion, is sald to he one of the rich est hoxers in the game and and G, Wasiy :45--Goidqn Woad, Richmond, and M. R. West. Wash A0 —Frank Joncs. Richmond. and Gordon Erone. Wath 55 Chatrles P’ Schaeffer, Wash.. and Sam Marerm. Ml T:00 - Phil Weyforth, Ma, €. €., and Dr. W, €. Barr. 'Wash 2:0h—L. W_Laudick. Col, and H. €. Doyle, Vid e T:10-—Howard A. French, Md. €. € w. G Thay d. €. €. 215 Walter 1. Md. €. C Louia Mueller. Md. €. € 2:20 0B, "Davie and partner . | FOR 3,000-METER EVENT | win he held at the Edgebraok free BERLIN, May 25 (#).—Paavo Nur T mi. Finnish track star, ran 3,000 TTIRIRRINY 111107111 meters at the Beriin Stadinm yeter- | day in & minutes 254.10 seconds, breaking his own world record of & NEW VYORK. May 25 ().—The new time of : established by Paave Nurml for the 3.000.meter run in Rer- lin hetiers by three seconds the pre. ontdoor mark accepted officielly | Union of | VAN HEUSEN IN THBR METROPOLITAN MANNER Nash-Rinker Motor Co. SALES and SERVICE £ years at the same address speaks for itaelf 1419 Irving St. N.W. Col. 4467 Smartest Collar [o]c——=|a[c———|g] WL N Two-Ton Loads on a Rapid-Transit Basis ALL commerce heeds the winged emblem. speeding up; production is on faster schedules— Industry is And transportation must keep pace! Reo anticipates the needs of industry as they relate to motor transport. And today’s commercial spirit which dictates, “Do it well but do it quicker,” is faithfully interpreted by the performance of the Heavy Duty Speed Wagon. A decade ago Reo pioneered in taking the work-horse off the highways. Put ¥%ton loads on pneumatic tires. Then 1%-ton loads. Provided rapid transit—with safety—with operating.sureness-with economy never before known. Today’s demands include the larger loads, hauled greater dis- tances and at faster speeds. And at still lower cost. That is why—more than a year ago—the Heavy Duty Speed Wagon was created by Reo. Strong-hearted power from a six-cylinder engine—brute en- durance resulting from inherited goodness—road safety with- out parallel —fleetness in keeping with modern travel—riding comfort that shows forethought for drivers. These are definite Heavy Duty features. No other 2-ton commercial car has the combination of 6-cylinder engine, spiral bevel gear axle, double-frame chassis and pneumatic tires. And the average price of all other 2-ton trucks is $811.35 above the Heavy Duty price! Lansing, Michigan