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IRELAND FORESEES some traps and getting a 5 to.Cooper’s par 4. At this seventh hole, as ! Cooper was surveying the line to the H :pir, he suddenly reached down in the Precautions Taken Due to|had a oo Possible Demands of Repub- |t licans at Dail Opening. | By the Associated Press. BELFAST, Ireland, June 18.—Dub. Yn dispatches say that, in view of the possibility of trouble at the opening of the new Dail Eireann next Thurs- day through republicans attempting to force entrance, the speaker, Prof. Michael Hayes, has decided not to issue tickets to visitors. Refuse Allegiance to Kin, Dublin dispatches on Wednesday #aid the republican deputies of Ea de Valera’s Fianna Fail party were expected to go for the time to parliament house and in the Dail when it assembled. would, howevel refu: to take the oath of allegiance to the King. The ith is t |} ate of- selves the cifically ref to clerk of the hou s tl have been bound by the ¢ deputies cannot under ¥ stitution legally take their Mr. De Valera, however, ared the belief that the r the recent elections, in which the Fianna Fail party made a large gain, would aid the movement for aboliti of the oath. He was quoted *The people will not toles (the republican deputies) being barred by the imposition of this penal oath.” - Text of Oath Required. The oath reads: “I do solemnly @wear true faith and allegiance to the constitution of the Irish Free State, as by law established, and that I will be faithful to His Majesty, King George V, his heirs and successors by w in ue of the common citizen- ip of Ireland with Great Britain and her adherence to and membership of the group of nations forming the British Commonwealth of Nations.” One of the republicans elected to the dail, Samuel E, Holt, representing the Leitrim division of Sligo, was quoted as saying in a speech yester- da: A“If we are admitted with the oath rémoved, we are prepared to help the Hree State government function in every way possible and work for the sinking the putt for a 3 when Cooper missed his bid for the like. Then Toemmy promptly gave Cooper back his stcoke advantage, pushing his tee shot to one of Oakmont's fear- cup and pulled out a field mouse. Thinking it a good omen, he tried to pick it up, but the mouse apparently set of teeth, for he drepped it quickly and went about his business of squaring the match. So they went to the eighth level again. And again Armour played a great bunker shot, nearly holding his shot from the same right-hand trap into which he played in the last three rounds of the champlonship. Cooper was on the green from the tee, but took 3 putts and Tom was again in the lead—a lead which he dropped at the 477-yard ninth, where he pulled his second shot into the crowd and failed to get close enough to hole the putt for a half with Cooper's birdie 4. And there they were—level at the turn, with no advantage for eith.r over nine holes of great shot making and grim courage. Cooper, with the honor, pulled far to the left into the eleventh fairway, and Tommy hooked inte deep rough. Cooper played one of the great shots of the day, a spoon shot that pushed its way across rough and fairway and brought up on the edge of the green. And Tommy got one of the breaks to which he so modéstly alluded today. Iron Shot Badly Pulled. His iron shot was badl struck the down slope of a bunker nd careened quickly oss the reen, headed for a jungle of weeds :d bushes. Providentially, some un- named spectator stopped it and Tom- my stopped just on the green. Of course, the spectator wouldn't have pulled, was coming his way. He just couldn't move fast enough to get out of the way of the fast-moving ball. Tommy chipped up 8 feet short, missed the putt and lost a stroke to Cooper’s par 4. But he was lucky, for he might have gone down into a wild tangle of underbrush and taken a 7. A booming tee shot went too far at the eleventh, finding a ditch that winds its. way across the course, and Tommy dropped another shot to a par 4 for Cooper. Here it was that the timid chapg began tc murmur dolefully and hope against hope for Armour to win. And he vlayed a great niblick shot to halve the long twelfth with the racing Calhfornian in_par 5. But at the short thirteenth ¢ heav- ily bunkered 164-yard affair, Ccoper got a fine break. His strongly hit: he finished in the grass, instead of rolling déwn into the sand. He chip- ped too far past, and Tommy, who had a putt for a 2, holed his 3 and picked up a shot. Tommy missed a great chance to square at the four- people of this old nation.” He expressed hope that an arrange- ment would be made for some sort of government when the Dail met next Thursday and that the Fianna Fail would be part of that government. There was one defection from the républican boycott of the Dail at the t session, Dan' Breen, who did uch active fighting in the Irish ggle. . CITY GOLFERS HAIL ARMOUR—BREAKS WON, CHAMPION DECLARES (Continued from First Page.) 1 lying inches away for a sure die 3. “They halved that hole in 3, retain- fiig for Tommy the 2.shot margin he picked up at the short sixteenth through Cooper’s error, and Tom was Nothing but an earthquake could post him the championship. For Tom Scotch and while he is not close In any sense of the word, he has the ttish trait of holding on to some- g he has won, whether it be okes or honor. And yesterday he on both, the last a hold-over from he previous day, and the strokes the sult of hard-fought, dogged cour- over Oakmont's fearsome terrain. “Plain, downright dogged courage on the championship for Armour in tried in the fierce fire of compe- fition might have wilted, but not nour, who learned his game on wind-swept Braid Hills course, ar Edinburgh, and tempered it in e heat of struggle with the finest players of the world. Cooper Fights Hard. “And that does not mean that Harry Poover quit in the heat of the cham- nship blast, for this London-born d never gave an inch all the way ound the course, although he ed out with a one-stroke deficit the very first hole. He squared jwice before the turn, was still one oke back playing the ninth, and at he tenth he forged into a lead, add- another stroke at the eleventh and sing doleful heads in the gallery shake and strained voices to sa ‘m afraid Tom is los It did look as if Cooper was the Joming champion, particularly when Pom missed a four-footer at the four- enth to square, and, with the green de open, pulled to a trap at the eenth. But Tom stuck doggedly to job. Holing a putt that was noth- g short of a stroke of genius at the fteenth and going into a two-shot d at the sb h, whi orse Harry pl woefully and eby lost the championship. JBix thousand persons banked them- ves around the tee and down the o i airway as these two | yers started out day afternoon for the greatest ze in the game; to watch a veteran n with only one jpd a cocky , who @e me in the sunshine of ttle each other through 18 hole h Light |, teenth, where a Tifle-llke tee shot. thundered 300 yards down the fair. way, while Cooper was far to the! right in the rough and his second shot trickled into a bunker at the green edge. Disconcerted by Wind. Just as Tommy was playing his pitch shot a vagrant wind rose and flopped his straw hat, plainly discon- certing him. He underplayed the pitch and then took 3 putts, giving Cooper a half in 5, for again Cooper’s ball stayed up in the grass on the ide of the bunker and again the bronze Californian chipped too far past. But the big break came at the fif- teenth, where it looked as if Tommy had thrown away the championship, and fate, goddess of the game, tossed it back in his lap. Here Tommy, as he had done over the last nine holes, drove far past Cooper, in & far better spot—a spot that opened up the hole to a midiron shot. Cooper pulled to trap, leaving the green wide open to the Scot from Congressional. Tommy proceeded to pull his fron shot into the same trap, and there was some question as to who was away. Both got out fairly well, with Coopej away, and there fate poured the gold2' contents into Tommy's lap. He sank a 40-footer clear across the green for a four, while little Cooper, not to be outdone, hit the cup with his bid for a half from a slightly lesser distance. Again they were all even, little thinking of the Cooper debacle to come, the break that raised Tommy from a contender to a champion. Armour played a brainy shot, a great spoon shot to the left side of the green, keeping far away from the yawning trap up against the green at the right stopped the ball had he known it|sl mashie shot went over the green and |, pushed, milled about and raved to watch the crowning of the new title holder, and they saw it done right. Cooper took a five and Tommy took a four, and then they gave Tommy the champion’s ride. Literally hundreds of people, led by the Congressional crowd that went without sleep and food to see him win, pulled him up on their shoulders, and Tommy rode in triumph to the foot of the clubhouse stairs. “I won because I got the breaks.” Maybe so, but the milling thousands who watched his gallant struggle to go in front, be tied, forge in front and finally drop behind, only to come to the front again won’t believe breaks alone decided the thirfy-first national champlonship. Champions make their own breaks, and Tommy made his yesterday. True enough, he got his share, but so did the other fellow, and the best golfer won. There can be no doubt of that. Tommy made one of his character- L.tic modest little speeches when they gave him the historic cup, and a purse of gold, thanking the United States Golf Association, the Oakmont Coun- try Club and the gallery which had pulled for him to win. Both he and Cooper got nice little presents from the association and club, mething never done before in the history of this classic. Each chipped in $100, a total of $200, making the championship, with first money of worth $700 to Armour right and potentially worth many ands, in addition to the diamond 1 and possession of the cup. “oover also got $200 from the associ- ation and tke club, in addition to his $300 second place mone; Judgment Decides Issue. It tkare was any one thing that cost Cooper the championship and won it for Armour, it was judgment on the side of the wirner and lack of it on ol the loser in -laying the Lole. Here Tommy consist- ougl »'l his championship e - leit to open up the Cooper, gain alv cost Cooper two shots and Tommy got down in par, and that was that. Here are the cold statistics on the match that brought Washington its first major golf championship: Out—Par— 544 543 435—37 Armour 445 535—39 Cooper 544 444—39 In—Par— 445 344—35 Armour 555 334—37—76 Cooper 445 535—40—79 Armour has a contract with the Congressional Country Club running through 1928, so that no matter what he does he will be with the Washing- ton club for another year. He is 31 years old, is married and lives at the club. He went through the war, win- ning his major's leaf in the Tank Corps and taking n shower of shrap- nel during an engagement that left a splinter of steel in his left shoulder and took away the sight of his left eye. SCHOOL GROWS TO 600. Economics Class, Started with 12, Has Steady Growth. MANHATTAN, Kans., June 18 (). —The first class in home economics in America has advanced in the half century since its organization here on the plains of Kansas, until instead of its original 12 girl stu- dents there are 600. The meager equipment has expanded so that the class is housed in a building with complete and modern conveniences. Dr. Margaret Justin is director. Mrs. . C. Cheseldine originated the first class 52 years ago as a trial, offering practical work In sewing and cooking for the young housekeepers of the time. The work was started at Bluemont Col- lege, on the sice of the present Kan- sas State Agricultural College. Ked- ic Hall was the first bullding in the TUrited Sta.eg erected for the exclu- sive uwa of domestic sclence students. The number of stars is now esti- wmated at 30 biltion. 23 ARE GRADUATED AT GONZAGA HIGH Rev. Eugene J. Connelly Warns Rosy-Hued Futures Painted Fail to Arrive. Warning that the rosy-hued futures generally painted for graduates at the time they receive their diplomas very often develop into opposite con- ditions of reality, Reyv. Eugene J. Connelly, rector of St. Peter’s Church, addressing the graduating class in the seventy-eighth commencement exercises of Gonzaga High School last night, declared the best advic he could give the class lay in Christ’s admonition, “Seek first the Kingdom of Heaven and all things else will be added unto you.” The execution of that advice today, Father Connelly sald, could be effected merely in being as good as one can, and, he contended, moral “succe: invariably brings material success well. 53 Are Graduated. The commencement exercises were held in the Gonzaga College Audi- torium and were attended by 1,000 persons. A concert of orchestral music augmented the student orations and addresses by the priests, which, ith the presentation of diplomas to 53 graduates and the award of medals of especial merit to deserving students of the entire high school, completed the program. Lawrence B. McHugh won the high est awards in the school, and, with the medal for general excellence in the fourth year B class, he was awarded also a four-year scholarship to George- muscles firm. side. His ball rolled over into the grass, but Cooper pushed his shot into the trap at the right, a spot feared by all the tournament players, particular- ly where the pin was yesterday. Cooper Again Trapped. Cooper was away, and he failed t> get out of the trap with his second shot, his ball banging on the bank in the grass. Tommy was then away and he played a great shot to within three feet of the cup. Cooper chipped up 10 feet short and missed the put taking a five. The big break had come. Armour knew it, so did Cooper, an: Tommy closed the door to any chance by holding the putt for a three. And right there the championship was in for the Scotsman from Congressional, though Cooper, brave little fighting :irfl.lsher that he is, never gave in an n Tommy's tee shot at the seventeenth left him a pitch over another awesome trap, and it looked far worse whan Cooper played one of the really great shots of the day, a niblick pitch that brought up not more than a foot past S0 there was Tommy, with ne pitch, a two-shot lead that nish if he quit on his shot mpionship in his hands if he made it right. Did he make it? His pi was So Br that it looked as if it might hole, and it finished inside of Cooper. The putts for birdies were little more than a formality, and Tommy bad a two- s he looked down the 45 ard stretch that leads to Oakmont's ! nth green, and the thousands around the green for the new | down the fairw € the first md on the n, whi ded to the lef. Tom holed a si poter for a birdie 4, while Cooper | hissed onc of five feet for a half. fooper stuck his second shot up | #thin =ix feet at the second hole, | it missed the putt, enabling Armour | ¥ halve in 4 | Squared at Third. The Californian square fhere he chipped up dead from the k edge, and Tommy missed a four- | boter for a 4. - Cooper changed steel-bladed affair third | putt of the day 1 his tee shot to a bun rth hole 8 eatisticd slashed ou 280-yard dis hter and pulled his brassie secon the Jeft of the green fthin 40 bip shot ran Fmour played t the cup. pitch over a | and when | i footer Armour + 4, Armour picking | . 6t08 only big error of the at the 346.yard fifth ere, with the pin stuck on a closely f| pped corner of the green, he played he of the finest shots of the d ping boldly for the hole and bring- up 7 feet past. Cooper was th the like, but 25 feet aw tted up short Tommy we rong for his 3 and missed coming ck, taking three puts from seven et.” Cooper holed for a 4, 8o they went to the short sixth, ? in. 1 rmour played the B were to keep him in the ¢ til the break on the sixteenth. He lled to a trap, while Cooper went rap. The Californian jd out 15 feet past the pin and exploded out to within 3 feet, ll“ the green 30 feet short of the hole. e mounds to | | cen and his | n to he crowned. v crashed out a 300-yard drive, s an arrow down the fair nd Cooper, apparently pressing for distance, pushed his tee 8h -t far 10| the right over toward the practice ground. Cooper played a fine second 1t, but found a bunker at the green , and Tommy, knowing all was over and that he was champion, played ands of people struggled and BELLE HAVEN Virginia’s Restricted_ W;;dr:fdo Subgyvision | 4 High Above River Forest Trees Beautiful View Facing Golf Course ‘ Snyder-Kane-Boothe | Va. Realtors Washington Office Vermo:t Bldg.—Main 9252 i Alexandria Office 614 King St.—Phone Alex. 322 N 72 consult 727 always. 7 TR L L e L e 2 L R 2P 22777 7, 3 East 52nd St. The Smart Beauty Solam of New York City Y N A Buying Guide BEFORE you order dinner at a restaurant you the bill-of-fare. The advertising columns are a buying guide to you in the purchase of everything you need— including amusements! your time and conserves your energy; that saves useless steps and guards against false ones; that puts the s-t-r-e-t-c-h in family budgets. The advertisements in The Star are so inter- esting it is difficult to see how any one could over- look them . .. fail to profit by them. Just check with yourself and be sure that you are read- ing the advertisements regularly—the big ones and the little ones. Tt is time well KD K2 R X < g Avoid time-wasting, money-wasting detours on the road to merchandise value. Read the advertising “road maps” Before you take a long trip by motor car you pore over road maps. Before you start on a shopping trip you should consult the advertisements in The Star. For the same reasons! A guide that saves e Announcement Miss <MARY HAYES, R. N. Specially Trained Registered Nurse Sfrom PRIMROSE HOUSE Arrives Tuesday, June 21 at our special invitation for consultation with our patrons Miss Hayes comes ditect from New York to give, advice to our patrons about the care of the skin. She.will be here for one week and will give full particulars and sirections for carrying out in your own home The famous Primrose House Method of Face Molding the wonderful treatment originated and used exclusively by Prim- rose House to control the contour of the face and make sagging Make a special appointment with Miss Mary Hayes to consult her about your individual needs At Our Toilet Goods “Department Woodmard & Lothrop 10th, 11th, F and G Streets 2 777 spent . . . LI L/ LA L L L LA LS L L L LM L S L L R LA L LA A R LA L L A LA LA LA L2 A L LA L L L LA L L L LA L L AL AL LA LA LA r f Z N N town University. Andrew Scheele won the general excellence medal in the fourth year A class as well as the Bishop Shahan scholarship to the en- K’Itneerlng course at Catholic Univer- sity. Following two musical selections, Mr. McHugh delivered an oration on ‘Religious ~ Intolerance—Its Cause,” after which Clarence T. Springmann z}mke on “Religious Intolerance—Its ure.” Students Awarded Medals. Rev. John C. Geale, S. J., rector of St. Aloysius Church, prescnted the diplomas and awards and spoke briefly to the graduates. He urged the young men to continue their educationgl pur- suits and to strive for the highest ac- complishments. The awards, which Father Geale made, included medals to the follow- ing: Joseph I. Cavanaugh, senior apologetics; J. Kenneth Collins, junior apologetics; Edmund R. Gloyd, ele- mentary apologetics; James Far- rell, senior elocution; Arthur F. Car- roll, junior elocution; Clarence Spring- mann, prize debate; Thomas W. Brew, general _ excellence, third year-A; George R. Clauge, general excellence, third year-B; Ignatius J. Bradecamp, general excellence, second year-A; James B. Horigan, general excellence, second year-B; William H. Sardo, gen- eral excellence, first year-A; Samuel R. Pitt, general excellence, first year-B, and Joseph E. Kennedy, gen- eral excellence, first year-C, and also a special medal for his Lincoln prize essay. Diplomas of Graduation. Those who received diplomas of graduation from the classical course were Paul James Allen, Francis Charles* Allman, Adelard Lionel Brault, Joseph Ira Cavanaugh, Jo- seph Aloysius Davis, Francis De Sales VIONNET’S Dean, James John Donohue, David Francis Doody, John Jerome Dugan, Thomas Leo Farrell, Thomas James Fitzgerald, George Raymond Flaherty, James Thomas Graghan, John Hall Genau, Francis Raymond Hillyard and Theodore Joseph Himmelberg. Robert Henry Hunter, George Francis Kane, Joseph -Aloysius Kear- ney, Paul Joseph Kelley, Francis Joseph Kenny, Edwin Grattan Kerans, Joseph Anthony Madden, Michael Daniel Madden, John Thomas McGivern, John Francis McGuire. Lawrence Charles McHugh, Edward Patrick McLarney, Owen Joseph Me- Namara, John Berchmans Mealy, Charles Berkeley Murto, Francis George Neubeck, John Henry Neu- beck, Joseph Patrick O'Reilly. Thomas Heni Quill, Frederick Paul Renner, Edward . Lancaster Roach, John Carlisle Ruddy, Andrew Frederick Scheele, Clarence Thomas Springmann, Joseph Warren Sweeney, Charles Samuel Walter and Willlam Curtis Waters. Those who were graduated from the non-classical course were Raymond Joseph _ Augusterfer, John _ Peter Bozek, Patrick John Byrne, Francis John Burke, Francis Bernard Dove, mes John Farrell, Lawrence Tracy Higgins, James Joseph McCarron, William ¥lugene Scheele, ~George Clark Smith and John Joseph Tracy. Bible School to Open. Special Dispatch to Tho Star. FREDERICK, Md., June 18—The fifth annual vacation Bible school will open here Monday, under auspices of the Frederick County Ministerial Association, with more than 500 chil- dren enrolled. Classes are held each week day, except Saturday, from 9 to 11:30 o'clock. Teachers and super- visors contribute their services. GERMAN FIRM PLANS AIR FLIVVER SERVICE Will Be Given Tryout Soon Be- tween Berlin and Copenhagen at Small Rate. By the Associated Press. BERLIN, June 18.Aerial flivvers are to be given a tryout sooin between Berlin and Copenhagen, according to plans announced by the Daimler works of Stuttgart. The Lilliputian airplanes will have a two-horsepower motor, will cagry one passenger, and will make 75 miles an hour, it is announced. The price per air car is to be about $1,500. The Daimler works plan to run the planes in connection with a system of cheap taxis on land. The taxis are to bring the passenger to the flying field at Berlin and to call for him as he lands in Copenhagen. The whole Jjourney, including taxis on both ends, will take less than 5 hours. The fast- est express trains take 11 hours. The cost of the ticket is estimated at $10 to $12. A second-class ticket on the railway costs $11.80. —e ‘The Euphrates is termed in the East “the Royal River,” from the fact that 672_kin, on_its banks. e ENAMEL, $1.25 Qt.: Craiz & Hook, Inc.. trading as BECKER PAINT & GLASS CO. 1239 Wisconsin Ave. West 67 SQUARE NECK Is First Choice of Chic Women In Blouse, Dress, Sweater and—Even Bathing Suit Because the woman of fashion finds the Vionnet square neck most wearable and becoming . . . par- ticularly in new variations, and when chic details, monograms and bows are added . . . she chooses this smart neckline on all her Summer clothes. Vionnet Dresses may be one or two piece and of plain or printed silk—with their square neckline a n d hemstitched bands. $13.75 to $42.50 Vionnet Blouses choose linen or crepe de chine in plain col- ors and in small-patterned prints—and are with or with- out sleeves. $5.75 to $12.75 Vionnet Sweaters are of white zephyr wool in the new lace weave, with ribbed bands—the newest and smartest of sweat- T . Vionnet Bathing Suits—the latest addition to the Vionnet Square-Neck vogue — are of red or black crepe de chine with hemstitched bands. $10.75 DRESS, BLOUSE AND SPORTSWEAR SectioNs, THIRD FLOOR. Wondmard & Lothrop 10th, 11th, F and G Streets