Evening Star Newspaper, June 22, 1926, Page 26

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v o8 SP BRTS. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C.. TUESDAY, JUNE 22, 1926. SPORTS. Record Field to Compete in Annual Tournament at Congressional Country Club 326 GOLFERS ARE LISTED FOR QUALIFICATION TEST Probable That Number May Go 350 Before Event Starts Tomorrow Morr en te Competil tered in the second annual i [ Country Club. which begins t conrse of the hig club in Montgomer. The field of 326 plavers. entered irom every club about Ws=hington and many ont-oi-town organizations, X 1 about the city this year. with the exception of tonrnaments ) J Stevinson of Columbia, winner of t Club events. Stevinson will be out o Addition of several plavers from the Manor Club and more entries from Baltimore clubs is expected o bhring the total enury list up to 350. The Manor and Baltimore entries had not been completed early today. Because of the huge size of the fleld. starting will be continuous from % n'clock tomorrow morning until late in ‘the afternoon. with the same schedule to be followed on Thursday. A dinner will be given by the club o tournament competitors Friday nizht. Pairings with starting times follow: oog.. and Whit- H ney Leary. nK . 1o—#alton Brilawssi. Con. aad Raloh ., nat St ison_ 20—Ray H. Phillips. Catocpan. and Carl Spook. Catocpan ‘!s'g. Rk emiargon, Cong.. and Charies ole. 30—H attachad 14 Rov. Coug.. and L. C. Craw- son, 5 . as— At e, f\'(".'{;u Coe.. 0. Astirew radley. unaitac 10— C. Brinton, Cong.. and L. C. Craw- 45— Walter £ Kells. unattached. and O. *H fheer. Gonk 80—Ford Sevdel. Cong.. and 0. A. East- “wold. Conk. 35—Mishe! George Daoud. I. (omas M dden Foley. Chy 00X Robb. Bann.. and 05—Rotert Mellen. Sawickles V. Feank Thyson. ir. Cong. 1o—Frank Haover, Cone. and ® 5—F°°W Weed. Cong.. and Donald C. pne,. and Na- 2itached. Timan"dong . #0d R. S Antrobus. Cong o—Waier §: Tcksrman. Buming Tree i Withiams T €. and 3. M. Cutts, H “.\_i(>a~\"‘;¥nnr‘5 and Albert Waicer. Con 15—E. ¢ Fihs, Cons - ‘and W. X. Vaile, an 30—George, F. Buskie. unattached. and T Brnwer. Cone. v. and F. Tabaterro. Cone. B e N ] 35—Bill Williams, 1. S.. nnattarhed. 10— Cong.. mer and Raymond . Argyle B." Hardwick Clark. 1. S 10—Jamex Dulin. unattached. and J. B Woodside, Con. Landvoight. Manor. and E. M unattached. and J. Lea: Cong.. and partner. 30— E. Richardson. Cong.. and E. J. Gray. Manor. 35—Hyeh WeKensie. Col. and Claude at 45-—Charler Aznew. ir. unattached. and L. B McCar. Con Wash. and S. B ss—. B B niba. Cong, > uiin: Bana. and A. T. Stew- " nattached. “55—jokin T Tiernes. ir. Cons.. and P. H. Colman, unattache 001 e O and Fward B Watson: Cone Fr2" G Coniell. Col.. and ¥. B. Le. o 10— Phillips, Wash.. and R. E. Ball. 00—C. 2% Gillette Cong.. and Harrison ohnson. Cong Eiison: 3i. Cons.. and William Shreeve: unattached 10—shn D. Wade. Ur 8. & 1 a : thur T. Wannan. unattached. *:15—A. C. M and F. E. Holmes. on, and Ar- Moses. Cong. 3 J. Gore. Cong.. and A. P. Portner. nhaitached —F. W. Brainard. Cong.. and R. A Whité_Cong —J. C. Petty. Cong.. and G. B, Cun- minzham. Cong 5—A. Knox. Cong.. and M. B. Willett. ! Cong.. and H. C. i. and E. H. Bateon. Col.. Brawner. and and 1. B Cong.. and Mon- 10— G- Petera. Bann.. and M. S. Van Tussen. Bani 151 M. Beed®, Bann.. and L. 8. Pfautz. nr ':(‘—R:r'\‘ M_ Roeser. Bann.. and George €. Billard Bann . Robert L. Rll:rd Col.. and H. F. Harmon. unaitac — e Brice T Tavior. Cone. and M. A" Shiniex. tinattache 350 B, Reelér. B Do and €. W. Grif- fin, Argvle. 40— Wirren T, Heav. 1. S. and F. 1. fit7 Cheve Chase. and Frank Chevs Chase. and 1. H. Stro- . 55—;\? 3. H:l"h Col.. and C. A. Dunn. 05—Gardon Stone. Wash. Wash. am haries D. Couneil valter R. McLister. and George and L. B. Chap- and G. D o "Cong.. and J. E Co Argyle. and €. A. Rice, ched e own. Cong.. and H. F. H —Walter W, Marr Bann. and Paul Steintorf. Bann B. Haynes * Cox unattached. and_ nartner. W A Slonic! inattached. and E. B ler iinattache 20— A Felford. Col.. and 4. R. Lelghty 2:95—K5 Hampton. €ol.. and Leo Pass. = Calfee. D:'nl!hv 5—J. H. e, 35 —Lnpiton. Ed 2:40—B. Sullivan. 3:45—A D. V. Burr. Col.. o—Willvam L. Peters. Cons. 3 80— phingston. unattached. THURSDAY K. Turner. Cong.. and P. . and J. C. Hop- nd E. B. Con- Cong.. C. Hillser. 1. S.. and Harvey L. unattached, and S. B. Wash. and C. R. Cherrs. and G. B. s oily. Wash. .15—Eillow Spicer. Graver. unat. Rend- 20—C. K. Rang. Cong.. and 25— tarben: Doggett. Weatchester Hills, B nd J. M. Downas, unat. s 30— . White. Kirl and L . Warrick, unt ete 35— ('.h fi k.\ Pie . ane . én. Marav s0—& B ‘sorngion. and Paut ors; Bann a5t W insnen, Cong.. and G, C. Han- on. o—Harris o . Ashburn s5—Arthur Ma: hy, Cong. ¥ oo—Waiier "Hagen. Cone. St "h'K.:YJ:H' “V;I“M‘t unat., and Harry Day. unat. \rov. 1. and T. J. nal unat.. ‘ong.. and R. 1. Mur- and Royal C. .. Col., and E. Eynon, . Rellerman, jr.. Col.. and L. A. B. Kegser. €A Wat! Shead, Cong., 05—John Zabel. Col. 10—A. B. Bennett, Bai #on. Col. i 15—C. A_ Dougherts. Wilmington €. €. and Robert Dougan, una i nk Roesch, and Robhert ¢ d and Paul . and 20— o R Flaidar u:u_{."" Sioore. Baltimere C. Hough. ir.. Cong. HE largest field ever to compete in a local golf tournament is en- .. and Edwin Burr, | Cong. Osgnod. Cong.. and Howard A. | Jack | _|and Mel Shorey, 91. 0 veerneff. Wash. and P. W.| and G. P. Wil- | | . and R. A. and T Q.| and William | | g—Dinner to Be tors Friday Night. nvitation affair of the Congressional omorrow morning over the splendid v County. includes every player who has won | i Miller B. he Columbia and Baltimore Country i the city during the tourney. " Itimore 112 H. Greenfleld. Raltimore C. W, B Jeftrier, Cong. e i Roling Road 0. Rolling Roat. and B. A, Gil . and partner. Cong.. and W Manor, h R.T. | Cong. i | . F. Donpemilter, Cong.. and T. G. nd C. Dar- 10—C. "? Hatfield, Cong., and P. §. San- | faard, B. D. and Evan ¢.. and P. G, Clark- 55—Walter_McCallum, Wash.. and Perry dover. I 8. ark Griffith. Col.. and partner, . K s.an r. chnlu and Nr. Jones, and G, C. Letia and T. C. Bragley, Oong. Walllng. ‘oris..-and . ¥. Bar: & | 120 F 3 n' 7. Cong.. and J. A. Cox, i .zs—.i'."i:.A Ultt, Wash.. and Jobn Dud- | , o 30—Lyther Florine, B. D. and C. A. Cong. B. D. and N. L. Bann. and W. P. 05— 1 ol Frawier . and D Vere e re G 2:00,-Goorgs’ Voight. Bann. snd Tom Moore. 1. 8. k4 0-'&7-(}“';“,’ K Orme, Col., and N. V. —§, B Coiladay, Cong.. and Mr. Smith, arvland €. C "R .‘Rlitz. Baltimors C. C.. and D. "Eghn-, I 8. and A. 8. ackall. Chevy Chase. and Cor Cong 3:00—0. ©. Murras. Wash.. and E. D. Col- Tos,” W, 3:06—G. D. Efi.—mnfi'«mnu and B H. : i . amd RS owler. "Wash 3:15—john Bolph. Cons.. and H. L. Cobb. fi. Rittenhouse. and H. C. Pea- ony 3:20—M S ok Arg L. Baity. ‘Cong.. and partner. 338 Ben 1. "Fuiler.Wash~ and Forrest § well. Waeh.. and David G. 3:45—Roper Poscock. Arevle, and M. . Riftenhouss. Ir.. Oone. MRS.TILLEY-BEACH ANNEX GOLF EVENT Mrs. E. R. Tilley of Indian Spring, a former woman's District champion, and Ralph Beach, professional at the | Burning Tree Club, won the ama- | teur-professional foursome match at the Town and Country Club vester- | day with a card of 79. | The match was played in two-ball foursome style, with the rgen and | women alternating in tee shots. One shot behind Eddle Towns of | Indian "Spring and Mrs. Alma Von | Steiner of the same club at the end | of the seventeenth hole, Mrs. Tilley l-and Beach won when the former | woman's titleholder laid a spoon shot | within easy putting distance of the | cup at the eighteenth, enabling Beach (o hole a birdie 3. Mrs. Von Steiner {and Towns secured a 5 on the hols. ! Mrs. H. A. Knox of Indian Spring and R. Cliff McKimmie of Beaver | Pam had a card of 82. | . Other scores were Miss Dorothy | White and Dave Thomson, Washing- | ton, 84; Miss Linda Pattison and Leo | Diegel. 84; Mr: O. Glavis and| { Dan Horgan, Mre. J. F. Dryden | |and R. T. Barnett, Chevy Chase, 88 Mrs. J. M. Haynes and P. J. D'Arcy | Bannigan, 90; Mrs. R. L. Rose and | A. B. Thorn, 90; Mrs. Eva Surguy | | | | | | TENNIS STARS SURVIVE. INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., June 22 (#). The way was still easy for seeded | players in the Western clay-court ten- nis champlonship tournament when | | sacond-round matches got under way at the Woodstock club here today. Several first-round matches, among them those of George Lott of Chicago. Alfred Chapin, jr., of Springfield. Mass., and Luclan Williams of Chi cago, are to be played off, after hav ing been postponed vesterday. NEAL LEADS IN MEET. Jimmy Neal headed the individual scoring list vesterday in_the annual track and field meet at Logan Play- ground. He took first place in four events in the 85-pound class and ran on the relay quartet winning the 360- | yard event. 'y Chester Horton. Many players ask me not only hew to grip but where to grip the club. Grip the wooden clubs about the micddle of the leather: the cleek, mid- iron, jigger and mashie at the top. My mashie nib- lick is gripepd in all three places according to the distance 1o be made—at the top for full shots, at the middle for half shots, and at the lower end of the leather for quarter shots. Years of instruc- tion have shown me that the first step in teaching was to unteach, 50 to say, the habit of grabbing hold of the golf club as if it were a base ball bat, and making plain that golf is not a game of brute fol The player must manage to loosen his muscles in making his | grip. The grip. whatever the clulf must_be preliminary to a relaxation »f the muscles of the body, so that |the shot may be made with a rhytkmic flow of muscular force. It and W |8 | ment, | Hassett - of the Aloysius | Club are among the officials named | (°F i« eavential in all shots that the ‘hands and wrists work together. (Copyrisht. 1926.) / P CHEVY CHASE FINAL |LENGLEN BEATS REACHED BY IRWIN QTHER AMERICANS SCORE Chevy Chase Club's annual tennis champlonships moved forward slowly | By the Associated Press vesterday, the opening round of dou bles being postponed until today and only one singles match being run’ ofl'.! At least four of the six doubles | tiits are scheduled for today, how- | ever, and the singles ahould advance | to the final of the upper bracket. | Harry W. Trwin, club champion in singles, took the final clash in the lower bracket yesterday, defeating | Bill Hitz, youthful star,” who went | through the first three rounds in|6—4. championship style. Hitz dropped the | . firat game, 6 to 0, wnd, after a brief | 1" paies, BY spurt in the second, was forced 10| gatented .. A Ry ated today by Henri Cochet pionship tournament at Paris. WL\INI.F.I)()\'. England, June 2. today decisively defeated J.B. G 61 The admit defeat. ‘The count for the sec- | ond game stood at 6 to 3. Arthur Hellen is favored to go to the semi-finals today. He is matched | “/) Mi% | B. Rowan. Maj. Georges | 08 (F wnd Bishop Hill meet in the | (M €htr 3 [ can el Joan Iry 6 0, <. Fisher [ | Mrs. Kity o ! . Von El 0, 60, i walkover when the Ameri tched. Mrs, ner, of Helen \ on, was ser defexted i Marshall, | were | Kiity defented D. Wat- | latter 7 The George green ler, club pr ports 18 entries for the boys’ which opens on Saturday a 10 o'clock. Women's singles start on the same day. D. C. MEN TO OFFICIATE. BALTIMORE, Md., June e | e—1 tourna- | - irna- | &1 1. J. G. Ritchie, 4 N | Ryan M. Watson defeated Miss R. o 6086 « and e g % 5 | M. Van Lennep of 1 Earle Weeks of Washington Canoe | o ie, """ FEOEER 6 land de | ve last night for the South Atlantic junior and senfor track and fleld | championships to be held here Sat.| urday. Both will serve as timers. Yankees Win Easily. Vesterday Richards defeated Yenc ken, 6--0. 0. 6 -0 while Kinsey Dixon Jean ¥ 6 WIMBLEDON, England, June 22.—Vincent Richards, the out- standing American star in the Wimbledon lawn teanis tournament, chards also lost to Cochet in the recent hard court cham- “Howard Kinsey of California | bert, left-handed British player in the Wimbledon tennis tournament, 61, ! Suzanne Lenglen climinated Mary K. Browne, 6- Elizabeth Ryan, American, defeated Mrs. Colegate of England, 60, rench holder of | eliminated ' veteran Gudiree defeat- | terday was a one-set exhibition match | in whic experienc the opposing | her energy into her endeavor to stave off the determined atta her Tittle help, and they Vivcent Howard [ 1as " " == Mishu. Rumania, $—o, BROWNE; France, defea #—1. 7—5. 6- Bar Paul Fere A H. G Eugiand. R Garkies harfes H. K Willie Robsoti, Arsent o, ngland, defeated L 6—1. 6—0. of France, 4—6, 6—3, 6—4, g, defeated ' - e ngland, o Peters Englan —4, 66— o P. Dixon, internationalst, 62, 6—1, . 'INDIAN SPRING CLUB Mlle. Lenglen and her part. | beth Ityan, had the unusual of defea at the hands of | . who in this case Godfree (formerly I Mis« Rouman, the | | the British ' most interesting feature ves- Mre. L, MeKane) a of Holland. French star, sweater, unt ever: A1 must o provide mof e. the lake is beir the tee. MeCormack hopes [take “over “which - | at the seventh hol water for the cou widened toward John F. | committee heddin ouncy her of all . but Miss game, gave lost, 6 -8, the who was off he will not ba nullified by Yesterday's Results. Richards. 1. . England. 6-—0, 60 Kinsey. Engtand, #— Boroira. France. de A—q. B—3 France. defeated Nicho deteated A ). 6—0) defeated P.| « i1 . feated V.. A. God- | of vears ago, is gl ncinnati Reds. now A N w.| “deteated ed T. M.| Smith, 8 and 7. IS WIDENING LAKE | Indian Spring i« entarging the | earry Chairman of the greens encomiums which have been heaped on him for the excellent condition of the course protests | against extension of the water hazard At @ y Bohbie Wallace, the great shortston the | think 1 ' LONE AMERICAN ENTR\{ fHEI;D SHOOTS A 67 ' OUT OF BRITISHEVANT| "™\ xo o n e TRIALS HARLECH, Wales, June 22 (). The only American representative in the British woman's golf champion- ship tournament withdrew today, | By the when Rosamond Sherwood of Boston | ST, defaulted to Mrs. G. 2. Long. The third-round matches today cluded imone will, a Associated Prass LOUIS, June 22 Facing tha alternative of shooting a score of 160 lower, or abandoning hope of en e champlonship flight, more than 200 golfers of the Middle West today played off the second 15 holex of the 36-hoie qualifying round of the annual transmiseissippl goif tourna ment over the Algonquin course here | ©“rom the entire field, which went | through te first 18-hole qualifying 'BOROTRA HAS TO FLY | st "3 . heh S5 'TO ROYAL CEREMONIES ™asm e 5% ven ey (57 or teri time in Lewis an easy « | this round. defeating Mrs. Standing out well in the iead was | Eddie Held, Algonquin, St. Louis. | former Missouri_amatenr champion, who turned in a 67 for his first round He is a former transmississippi ch pion, and 15 favored to emerge torious in the present tournament Close behind Held were J. W. Daw E len Oak, Chicago, and Elliot Whitebread, Sunset Hill. St. Louis who_ negotiated the first round in par 71 James Manion, River View Louis, and also a former title h anked fourth, while Clarence Wolff Sunset Hill, St. Louis, present cham pion, and Joe Pappin, Joplin, Mo were tied with 73 each. Today's play will decide which of the 32 lowest scorers will enter the | first round of match play, which is to { start tomorrow. By the Associated Pross WIMBLEDON, England, June An incident of some pigquancy oec curred at the ceremonies opening the tennis championships vesterday, in | which Jean Borotra, th played a Borotrs monies, royal cere- breathless, racquet in in the central court | where Queen Mary was hestowing the medals. The Queen looked some- what nenplussed. hut the King wore | broad smile nd ehided zood naturedly as they shook hands. Borotra explained in At 12 o'clock T appointment in past 1 am, in an airplane. From the airdrome of Croydon we come hy car full speed— 0 miles an hour. When T get here T m ton Iate. ay, ‘Go And I zo in.” Athletes in Japan wear shoes which separate the large toes from the others to increase the runner's grip ''n! go in Lon the ground. ~ Jomething big 1s happening among fine cars Everyone in the industry recognized many months ago that the beautiful Hupmo- bile Eight had evolved from the straight- eight principle a new kind of perform- ance and a new and almost incredibly higher value. The word spread about very quickly that probably only one car in the world was comparable to the Hupmobile Eight. And that car was the product of the fine European engineering genius—a hand- built eight-cylinder car costing several times the Hupmobile Eight price. What is happening in the automobile in- dustry, however, goes deeper than this startling of automobile éngineers and manufacturers. The new development has to do with the way the American people now think of fine cars and fine performance. It is, in the first place, an uprooting from the public mind of the old-fashioned idea that mere price or name must necessarily mean prestige. Motor car buyers are now sensing the prestige of super-fine performance, the prestige of the newest and the best when that newest and best is the super-efficient development of a super-efficient principle, as with the Hupmobile Eight. So the Hupmobile Eight is, in a way, erecting a new aristocracy of motordom, attracting to its banner the people who rate highlv beauty and performance and value, and who buy with unerring, shrewd judgment. In the second place, it is a new and better conception of what fine performance really is—and of the utter superiority of the eight-cylinder principle, as perfected by Hupmobile, in providing such per- formance. Now, at last, the public is discovering that no other kind of car, however well built, can ever give the kind of performance you find in this beautiful Hupmobile. It is for these reasons that that part of the public which instinctively turns to the finest in everything, discovered and advertised the Hupmobile Eight —and quickly made it the largest-selling straight eight in the world. It is these causes which underlie the fact that the public is advertising the Hup- mobile Eight even more enthusiastically today, and discovering it in increasing numbers everywhere. Beauty—Color Options—Luxury Sedan, five-passenger, $2345. Berline $2445. Coupe, two-passenger, with rumble seat, ¥2345. Roadster, with rumble seat, #2045. Touring, five-passenger, 1945. Tour- ing, seven-passenger, %2045. All prices f. 0. b. Detroit, plus revenue tax. STERRETT & FLEMING, Inc. Champlain St. at Kalorama Road | Home of the Certified Gold Seal Used Cars Note: New Showroom, Connecticut Ave. at S St. Q@ Columbia 5050

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