Evening Star Newspaper, August 17, 1927, Page 27

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TS S ffp EYENING STAR. WASHINGTON, D. €. WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 17. 1927 % SPORTS. 7 Two Grid Classics, Yale-Harvard and Nebraska-Notre Dame, Missing This I'all VON X TENNIS TEST WON WOMEN IN SPOR'T | COLLINS WiLL AGAN | BY I?OEG ,AND LOTT e BY CURINNE PRAZIER FOOT BALL FANS REGRET LOSS OF THESE BATTLES had | Petomac Archers’ Club, were the men behind the bows, and were opposed by I. .. Graf of Washington and Willian Waod stant professional at the a 41 incl cup, the the best and Wood ON has fust | versus ball is one of th many which occupy the att S0 campers at B o camp . turn ; i ited the ¢ « Anna Mae Simms inners. Nell Griffl alternate Hoosiers and Cornhuskers Are Likely to Get the Girl Junter, i Tilden was select i T to o of Santa Crimson Break May Last Long Time. S : s 2 . ! ! 150 W Douglas for | <ara Sh of | fielding of | put up a sstelle R pitehed for the « Rennett was th The Scout team he | Brown, Peggy Garrett nly | Retty Tillinghast, Miss Miss Dougl Simms, fith and Miss I Counselors Miss 1 faile T ol Bennett, named liant e t | Stanton, Dorothy merou: Hobbs, Hester b ney, Lydia Hunt, gether Within Short Time, But Tigers and Williams Hennessey N. White vi ood game at fir ; : ) wrds and Margaret Jo ntwir N the in v will 1 ounselors. i ~ - t having BY LAWREN PERRY ion much ind the Orange 1t prohably will he Harvard and foot ball again, hut 1} that the South Bend T titutions had buried St In telling of the sue . LA Dame elevens, which 18 conched, the writer cited Nel being the particular t of fichting Iris forved to w vhuskers which the ) their s fact is that to Notre Dame in 1918, teams coached by him have beaten Nehraska four imes. have lost three times and have playeg one tie engazement | n the 1 Black tion Cr and Lewis Lty turn e ve 1 na will defe: 11 day 13 veste ate v heavy hitter R« included Ruth | Shallenbet Miss Grif Harvard me ret plaved nd the OF FREE TRACK PRACTICE " i front, you know it.” hefore wrha v spe ik hat ch sey fon BIRDIE IN FIN'AL HOLE DECIDES STATE HONORS , Mo., @id not Princeton break xeason, hori: And the narke Jor wer ene Mi hove liaom, orn Gre o golt tear swir red the Cor vds as wrett by an merely rivalry < accumulated relation classic patina More rar 1y mode one curi Notre Dame-) o 10 wirls o swimmers plavground po Kathe Iy and municipal rding Indiana - ner. since Rockn two week, ffer Tadd | The majority of the tests were pass ed in the Georgetown pool The names of those who m: were reported as follo Georgetown pool inne Sions Hitoreen tno' two ','{J,i”?-f."'ffliLOTT’ TENNIS STAR’ ven, five games havinz been won by | ich and ¢ N < ka won in 1915 ir 1918 they play ceron, Ruth Brown, Evelyn MeDowe won in 19 Ry 1 at 3 | Marjorie Moon, lLee Lyddane, Kath won in 1 ner, Elizabeth Schaefer, Ann Center department ¢ Friday ntral | no ck with i . ze J. Vaigt of Bannockhurn 0 Is There i connection ed a ompirative: lassic for | The |} was a gan o play it hec 1o the A with 143, * ZONETENNIS FINAL |/ STARTS TOMORROW ' n (Tack) Coll coach last Commur the hoys pe runnin v ns s tie. th He i sprintir and hurdli ith the | fun ne u Nebraska in 191 Notre D Nebra P Miller B. St ter probahl the annua an Golfer tro rs from the the District s from different clubs, Co. alone having more than one. distance one of thos 1t rtienlar de e 1o bo that Miss the Communit , A Ken et ur Myrtle man MeCoy won i the duri direc is th time the depart Hei 3 ¥ ered tro instruction s mbia He started last month, and while 4 t m caf many hoyvs took Competit the unlimited and ntage of it the start, more and | scnior el closed to pupils of are joi the group as it he public championship of the Virginia Miki. Hiki and | hecoming known throughout the cit Fou nization for the Alexandria Ga to be the best | just how much real enjoyment and |t} t . have an- |zette will be plaved August 2¢ henefit can be had. Miss Baker is oth 9. Junior players of i by e i it ot compete for the Ma Yacht Club Iyst | heen selectec erce. He is presi-| the undertaking and hopes next vear, | | i 2 Saturday, of them finished, | de ) Y i Lawn Té if interest cont s to inc | victory there over Tilden enconraged | i Rde NS T “arst ‘and. second s chosen at the re- | ary for « ) in the I him, but the “old has beaten | W1 tgper lzu when 1t found | ern High S oo i | "Fdith Fehr of Detroit made the 24- neutral official was not Letice 1 He entered Chicago with some repu- | L iefid o ie % TG0 20 minutes ation as a base ball pitcher and bas- ket ball forward, in addition to the | title of junjgr tennis champion of the country, but lack of concentration on his studics kept him off the varsity teams | “Lott stands today id one of his | University of Chicago professors “where Vincent Richards stood at 2 the flaming youth of his day on the courts. And, unlike Vinnie, he is not | and the classic Where break | the N¢ me - j’ 1lmos ( ‘ Lott won national rank at the hot | tom of the first ten last Summe {and in January left the University of | Chicago, whera he had never hecome | ((HERICTH B9, scholastically eligible for athletics, to | S O 0 G play Winter tennis in Florida. One | i nd A Willi Thomp Mulha Violet Chic nniversi Rupli, ielitz, ¥ May Margaret roline { Mary Hunter Angell. Swimmers' cided to switeh his from Chic 20 years old, T " nd o t ball 1 rancors n and he firir friends imd all lovers of fo o the time when ill have heen ms n 1t th Thi wn today and v 1 in o W hope ne Francis 1 vacaney Junior golfers, of whom there ar in the Washington Golf and Country Club, are to have a busy time the next three weeks. The s ta test—Sadie Kintta Weightman, Winifred Thompson Marietta Booth, May McCoy, Blanche |~ Hughes, Jessie Nimmon, Mary ¢ S aEloty | Rosemary Mulhall and Jliz P f Nchaefer. Glita o Harada appeared today rted on a ir. Ylub, on Lake St. | Garnet 11 um of heating I for the fourth on the Davis Cup in the last set of trial matches will =hts s caplain tried mong apan ont Sl doubles cor i Harada, ' vuki orida. He izo Toba » [ mor e Despite Collapse of First Venture in F WALTER HAGEN TALKS IT OVER Predicts Golf League. Believes It Will Have ne Standing Ball, and Will Pay Well. Fighteen girls st it s ‘ Kenzie trophy. in Base BLACK SOX TO CLASH. 2 n and Baltim Pays Tribute to Bobby Jones, and Says He Will Remain an Amateur. meet | more than 1500 hig-game nder United States protec dium will continue at Centrs the two remaining Fridays this month 1:45 o'c tion ¢ +é l I ] o o 1 pressed by economic necessity."” o ( : Al s{{":‘i‘}nd"rg'r.;l\‘;:;e R [in my mind that in years to come| WOMAN GOLF STARS * or in M Walker | (perhaps the players of t | Bl Moo I e champlon) and | Will be great grandfathers by then) | REMAIN IN TOURNEY Fiaem F0a n Winter Haven: Gene |@ big league golf match hetween lead ‘ bt e iz Holly: ing teams in the center of a large| y Earazen and Leo Diegel in H 89:,;";’_};;”1(!:\: community wil draw plenty | e Johnny Farrell and | . : R hank in Tampa; Jim Barnes and Fred | of_beople. s Skt Sahine Stie) m]n‘:.rr - ‘\uuvx - McLeod in Temple Terrace; Tommy it = - LAKE GENEVA, Wis,, B T s b onanio | greatest. golfer, is a thought-| pive women who I - Lirkwoo hyself in Pasa- | Tu] young man, and I had the pleas-|ern golf championship, including the | end Joe Kirkwood and myself in Pasa- | |, “¢ sitting at his table in the din- | [0S0 Gl holder, | Dorothy Page, | ing salon of the ‘{\'““" ja last Sum- | were among the 16 contestants in lhw‘ oh team in the league | mer, returning from pe. ~ We | zecond round of the championship e L hedule was | talked of many things, and Bobby told | tourney today at Lake Geneva Coun. | ¥ Aomnisted before the players, or |me that while 1 might have been the | try Club. gte L.“r"(n‘{(. Y1 the | biggest money-maker the game had| In only one was There ar nimals vall riffith there he a big)New York, Boston, Chicago, Detroit a. nd a few others repr Al firs gue of the sort will certainly result o as the game increases in popularity. Real Profits in Idea. ars ago T was told exhibition were about finished. yet last ommy Armour and mysell drew $648 in Schenectady, N. Y., and | | more than $600 for each city in Utic: and Erie, Pa. There is no question | OME day enough of the ef: three Winters in | da to convince me that a| e of leading professionals can be | The golf league here in the Winter of 14 e developed into a big thing had not run into that 1 forts would 3t Florida temporary slump. seven August 17.— ve held the West Alton Hamilton remarks to his friend Carl de Mel as he offers him a Lucky Strike at the Manor Country Club. for a home-and- se were they arrayed | went on strike and the | ing blew up. Some of the boys could | t it was necessary to do | pioneering to get the league ing is certain. There nevel nuch rivalry among pro- playing four-ball best- | e lall matches as was displ teams in this league in the ga wid 1 remember one le: in Lakeland, with Walker | playing Cruickshank and Farrell, and | the leadership of the league at stake. | It looked for a time as if it would be | necessary to call out the police to cool | off the ardor of the contestants. Played for Gate Money. ! Every Monday morning the news- | papers carried the standing of the feams in the league, just as the big lea e base ball standings are pub- Jished, and’ the boys certainly fought hard to get their names at the top of the column. There were many funny | mes they | gue game | and_Loos | arranged that the teams pla for the gate money, the winning team | 60 per cent and lo: 40 per | With so0 many mes, it wa 1 that at times the crowds were mea he minuteness of some of the returns annoyed the more tem- peramental of the players, and I re member one golfer calling me one | night, after a league game, and asking | e what he should do with the $8.90 | e had collected that day for his share This me was played in 'l end the Tampa golfers never di the league jdea as strongly & supported elsewhere. We did well at | | league games played in St. Peters cent natur the the ed b players failed valuable publici being included in prof nal - golfers. 1| the time will come when be falling all « one 3 \ organization orth with cities like | "rantee the boys v another to er Jeague Abe’s Long Drives Don’t Worry Hagen BY SOL. METZGER. nand Abe Mitchell golf match, as ain to do some Bri pro- tease Hagen most ce the long-hitting nal will never to pressing, no matter how much ther he drives from the vs his limitation sh One onal THE CLQSER A MARKSMAN TO A TARGET THE EASIER HIS SHOT—~ 450 WITH THE GOLF SWING Aba had tee while ots from a - csman v nee at a target mar preater dis 4Copsright. 193 r |at High Point, asked me more often than any other d by the |i%: ! make about as good a lawyer as he| Gregg Lifur of Los Angeles, b produced up to that time, leaders in | against professional golf in the future would | make me look as if I had been doin business at the corner grocery store | N. C. Bobby ne other, and in that match » had as opponent Mrs. Elaine Rosenthal Reinhart of Dallas. Mrs. | eran of the former champion coterie, one question | was opposed by Mrs. J. W. Taylor of Chicago, who showed turn | form in eliminating Mr: Speaking of s: “When is Bobby going to professional, and why doesn’t he?” | of Columbus yeste I tell everybody Jones never will| 1In the lower bracket matches came become a professional golfer, and that | M m Burns Horn of Kansas is true. Bobby knows as well as| City ng Mrs. Harley Higbie of anybody he could make a fortune out | Detroit, who was runner-up to Mrs of the game, but this does not inter- | Reinhart two years ago. There was est him. He has selected another | also Mrs, Dave Gaut of Memphis, for line of effort as his great interest in | merly Southern champion, facing Jo life, and golf will always be a game | sep of Chicago. and a favorite sport with Bobby. C contender, When people ask me why he doesn't | Harry Pressler, having won 2 and turn professional, I inquire if they|1 over Mrs. R. Holloway of happened to read a newspaper story | Chicago in near par golf, had a test last Spring from Atlanta which s.'nrl‘ in meeting Virginia Vanwie of Chi that Jones led his class in the Emory | cago, who shared medal honors at 80 Law College for the first half of the | with’ Frances Hadfield of Milwaukee ar, and finished ond, about a|Miss Hadfleld, however, slumped in point behind the leader, for the sec-| her game yesterday and lost a 20-hole ond half. People who wonder about|match to Elizabeth Dunn of Indian Jones turning professional should con- | apolis sider his law school record s 1 have an idea Bobby is going to| vivor Curtis Sohl Mrs. n Turpie of New Orleans, sur of a 19-hole match with Mrs d a Stewart hot par yes is a golfer. Bobby will be a profes- | dangerous opponent in sional, right enough, but he will be| Hanley of Detroit, who s a professional lawyer, and always will | terday. remain an amateur golfer. | Mr | Lee Mida of Chicago, d par 81 in_the first round, worthy foe in Virginia Wilson reached the semi-finals in the | tourney several weeks ago. who had whe itish Greyhound racing 1s going big in Toledo this Summer. The Golph in Iis Native Haunts BY A, D. DUFFER. HE Golph, an exceedipgly interesting little creature rapidly is becoming the object of study by a large and increasing number of lists. It appears in great in the Spring when it may be seen flving from bunker to bunker or lying in depressions or holes in the fairway. It loves to le down to rest in such piace: he Golph is a very shy bird and at every opportunity takes refuge in the tall grass where, once hid den, you may hunt in vain to locate it. This seems to disprove the theory of protective coloration for while the grass the players are g but the Golphs are deaf, wh most fortunate thing for th At other times the Golph make big nicks or even culs ri through the skin of the Golph then the poor creature is done for for as It can no 1 to any distance and it s up the ghost Golph bugs are so vicious that they have heen known to kill sev- eral Golphs in a afternoon and great numbers have vscaped from them during the same time ht be mentioned in this connection that these bugs gather in gr s to more relentlessly pursue phs and it is the ng for olph bug to swear nself is the custom. Golphs are classified into species according to the markings on the epidermis. The common Golph, iolphum vulgaris, has circular de- pressions on the skin, the other, Golphum squarrosus, as the name indicates, is distinguished by square mark It may be interesting to note that the Goiph, like the FEng- lish sparrow, was introduced this country from Great I and likewise spread with great rapidity to all parts of the country and now that the pest has gained h a foothold, there is little hope of its exterm . In fact, the greater number of Golph hugs there are to attack the Golph the . common the Golphs become, S Bhe AT simply an example of thriving until t ey 5 it 1t sped that the ahove ohser vations will prompt o more Iy the teresting hird, HAWKINS > - TROUSERS To Match Your Odd Coats ]EISEMAN'S, 7th & F R A natur number e ger fl on- giv wild unde always ch t} however owner owners under control Golph is on the the asily s its pe Of course hanges shade. Often, like 1 landing they ¢ m of hops eac in the Jast re wl ev are depenads ¢ sad This simpi their color to or eve o study this in- r Golphs 1 pes «l habits of This creature i nd colors may be pur and all scasons of the year the Golphs relentiessly ng vicious swings at them with wood or iron clubs. It is at such times that the Golphs in self pro- tection into the neare: 2 if that is more com Sometimes the bugs mis: Golph entirely and then the rent with the most dreadful n on Fourteenth St 333-37 14th St. 1 Melvin Jones of Chicago, vet- | championship | You, too, will find that Lucky Strikes are mild and mellow—the finest cigarettes you ever smoked, made of the finest Turkish and domestic tobaccos, properly aged and blended with great skill, and there is an extra process—*It’s toasted”—no harshness, of bite. No Throat Irritation -No not a bit It’s toasted™ Cough. Herbert Brenon, noted Film Director, writes: “During the pandemonium of motion picture production—as in my direction of ‘Beau Geste’—1I find Lucky Strikes are not only soothing to tired vocal chords, but they have the best flavor. The con- stant use of my voice in my work demands that I keep it in condition. Lucky Strikes are the only cigarettes which protect me from an irritated throat, and which I enjoy to the utmost.”

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