Evening Star Newspaper, August 9, 1928, Page 33

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rad D. C. THURSDAY. AUGUST 9, 198.° SPORTS." 33 "ENING STAR. WASHINGTON |GIRSON “WISE MAN” CHICAGO, Augus% 9.—The heavy- | ney, passes into the discard of those who ware connectad with the “fight racket” " 3 with the retirement of the champion. il ill cross to- | " Gipson has been connected with the night when O ‘on Porat of Norway | game in the capacity of second, trainer, . 1o o ¢ st Nig, and Plerre Charics of Belgium clash in | promoter, matchmaker and manager of r'ght“ Last g Ibl‘ palookas” and world champions for ths Is of two TR ) e [ i - | % ; ) . . Laarocca, Chicago, 6 and 5, and Rex ENGAGEMENT EAPS | ght-Left Shift Pall‘ Of I '. C. ‘;olfers I hgplay 'CHAMPION DEFEATED | Bigelow, Packson, Mich. 3 and 2. fl!INVAD'NG HEMVIES | e | Gk M moions N JUNIOR TOURNEY it SHEE'GR ! | T0 BATTLE TONIGHT OF PUGILISTIC GAME } | F]nlsh That akes Cha pl()nS [,énsh\m JEsposito, Chicago; _Jaci | { - e | Brewer, Philadelphia, who vanquished A | REAI. I.UVE MATEH‘ bl e o, e atesty. Clioasy [ B7 the Asociated Press ‘ Billy (‘ib::: “::‘l’b‘:(' Gene Tun- | | welGHT k | ®¥ WALTER R. MOALLUM. | match when this quartet meet 1In| CHICAGO, August 9.—The rouns ori[ PHio delemed Lo o oily: foreion Gibson, manag e s i ON RIGHT (\‘ oY J more ways than one, it is the mateh of | junior golf champions gets rougher and | threat, Alex Carrick of Toronto. weight championshin tr: RN ChoeRs Coiren S ol i ae| (e ol RDED g 1eading forelgn cont rnde i < It - y s finish 85 | micison fee will be charged. 15788 aeva i & oberiite I Gene Acquires Wealth, Edu-| | o oLl Across £/ CHBLaDIoEA AbDUl ) The ctners, | aen fe8 WP = TN L i b GALL AND GET %o the saying gocs, faiter and | A small field of youngsters Were com- | championship at Glenview yesterda e anyiNE foSt" fow noles. | peting today In the first annual junior | GETRETC mer champion not a 1 a 10-round bout { 6 a decision. i i WIDE SLICE. | cation and Social Graces 7 | Adages in this game of golf are gen- | championship of the Indian Spring Golf | eryp were in the running as the third past 35 years. . . 29 WaTase | erally truisms, in every sense of the | Club. Carlisie V. Christie and ROger | ound approached today. E | Although the Belgian champlon has | "Gl as he is familiar o N in Long, Hard Climb. : e g |CTall truiems in eery Sense Chould | Beacock started the procession. Others |"UC APRERCICE Predonta, N. Y. the | BY the Asociated Pross Rl Luibe s b WL B L ) like to nominate for the championship | listed were David Utz ""“dm;,“,f,‘,’,‘ tiss. | 1957 title holder; Pat Ennis of Chicago,| MELBOURNE, Australia—Joe Mar- o invasion t¥/an the Norwegian, Von | neuvering a fighter into big money than g class two golfers about the Capital who | Arthur B, Beanctt a0 o L Tomnerae ack vear: Sammy AIpert of | cus, United States, knocked out ‘Young | Torne '5,8 SIEHL favoHlte eration in s huitys Lecard - 2izht_elimination bouts for | Louis “Kid” Kaplan and Gene Tunney. ve nev S spira- | Graves, jr. and John L. Quigler and ert, of TINVe Srver: IR B A | 3¢ | Ghlcago. champion in 1926, and Freday | oo ngiand (7). | | BY WALTER TRUMBULL. | S tions and_probably never will. Roland | John S. Blick, Jr. Lyon of Pontiac, Til., runner-up in 192 I RS. GEORGE LAUDER JR. of | 1‘:‘ h?t"} m;r:a::‘. pent o | Hancock had his great chance at ch- . | il were ‘out In ‘the e —ciminated| BOBTON-—Diok (Honeyboy) Pinne|® SUccEmop o GensrTudery tiLe. . | The setirestent fof { Sheics metd maestis Greenwich, Conn., an- ® Jong-! ng tchell of | cago and failed dismally. Had he been | by better and more consistent golf as | . . % , - , /is a harder puncher ti many thousands of dollars out of the 1 hounced the engagement of | British golf fame says that many of |able to finish a round of golf as the VOIGT CAPTURES TITLE | played by unfamed youngsters. Gl Boston, won over Johnny Jadick, ‘nvlvp‘e;'%gl}:m‘r who in turn, is a better | pocket of Gibson, yet Billy was never her daughter, Mary Josephine | pic punilc have to be broken of a | LAl sycamore of Montgomery County IN NORTH HILLS CLUB|,,0ut o the cist vouths remaining in | Philadelphia (10). boxer. Chafies has a decislon over Na- | heard to utter a complaint. He took Lauder, to Gene Tunney. | coo"hone of keeping the weight Andrew J. (Cy) Cummings—did yester- | | the competition. today, two were big| NEW YORK.—Joe Sekyra, Dayton. | [oEON Jarfk Dorval of New York. who| things as they came and passed up the Miss Lauder’s grandfather was (-rnmtl abit of keeping weight on | 4ay at Columbia, and as T. P. Noyes | o vORK, August 9 (4).—George | favorites.” They were Tom Cooley of |Ohio, won from James J. Braddock, | oW ,]M: ree's decision over Von Porat | good with the bad. That is the sort of Latder. friend and busmess associate of | their right legs when they swing |of Chevy Chase aid, the previous dy | BV YO Nortn-kils Ouub s | Kankake, il and Dick Mullin of Chi- | Jersey City (10). ™ 2oad b R B SRS DR e yoars:é plékiei ity ol t altimore Country Clu ve =RIHE s | cago, Wi st honors with a ? i | g , - s ve e t Foron 5 L s INDIANAPOLIS. — Jack ~ McKenna. | dleweigl /, and Floyd Hybert of Cleve- | as a game, and is so enthused about it the chances are he will spend much e chesing a little white, pellst over links. Andrew Carnegie. Her father Was| ¢hrough with the club. They get it George Lauder, jr great sportsman | 2 Farms course, he would be sporting |the first amateur to win the Long Is- | card of 73. Syracus and well known vachtsman, who. among Montreal. defeated Joe Zink, Syracus e hoate. owned and saled the| but fail to shift it forward with the |romping around the country in a high- | powered car picking up jack merely for back upon this leg when they pivot, | e “national ‘open championship and | jang open golf championship at the | Cooley won his fry match, defcating | 110): Paul Dare, San Francisco, and }f:“;wzm meet in a six-round semi . ] rt Collar of South Bend, Ind., 5 and i - : v Falliiry oty (Gl s scors was,| A6 OOLETiORBOUsE Brty s o M obre | Oty Annesesn s Teries EaLs Ind quer Gibson Dunlap, one of Chicago’s | TS0 o poie wenier Tuledo, DE/MOLAY BOWLERS READY. | Endymion. g Bz downswing. | 1 ot m:“;l:r:l‘u\l\'(rr‘d rrom’ 1 L;";’\;n‘\'\\;ck Naturally this causes them to pivot | Playing golf. 5 "ggnf;’:r ‘“~|Ir‘:~'}l;:i bohind _the former | best junior players. 2 and 1 L TIP FORVFiSHFfi' 'MEN. School, and headed for New Haven,| around the right hip when they Convinces Skeptics. | washington player, Willie Klein, Wheat- | In addition to his medalist score of won_f{rom Jimmy McDermott, Terra | R pbert Le Bruce Chapter, Order of - who inherits his fath fondness for| Swing through at the ball. Such & | Two friends of Cumpnings who were |ley Hills pro, took second place with [73, Mullin tallied 75 to win his frst |Haute (10). D2 / Molay, bowling team is anxious to 9. the water Swing pulls the club-head in Sharply | ceptical that Cy had®not come back |296. Al Ciuci. assistant to Gene Sara- |match and was only 3 above par when DAYTON, Ohio.— Johnny Mason, | -7 Aliate with some league for the com- siight Miss Lauder's paternal grandmother| 8cross the ball and imparts the slice | on is formidable game of last geason. | zon at Fresh Meadow, was third with he ended his struggle in the second & anton, Pa., defeated Joe Delaney, i/ f7 season, preferably a church le: cloudy anv Shenandozh was very mud- was Anne Romayn Varick: her uncles | that all dread. _ ceight |€ven when he shot an 81 at CAlumbia round. His victims were C | (10). ¢ 2101 Earl Kiefer, Mzin 5060, br: dy mornirs. Henry Rowland, the novellst, and The cure is to keep the weight |4 rey weeks ago. got a rude awaken- Lasiiisiins r. Greenws cad of th Ya. je- | back more on the left foot at the top cesterday whi b frol Dt Her siter. Kath | a0 10 pull down and then forward e Bnished the Jast tires. holes e Lauder; 1t Mrs. Edwin Dewing of | With a straight left arm to start the | 373 73 yvon "Cy got two birdies and a Harttord, = | downswing. If that is donme the [.o-'qng it was a right expensive finish Artford, | ey, whose full name is| Weight will shift forward to the left |forp ‘5 Cummings and Arthur S. i James Joseph Tunney, s the son of | le8 and permit you to swing through |40 o0 “oitn"ihom the ex-Georgetown Joseph and Mary Lydon Tunney, both | the ball on the line of flight, the | ro %oy star was playing born in Ireland. ) | weight coming into the sweep. ~An- Indeed, Cy came very close to secur- It was Miss Lauder's mother who | other point about incorrect pivoting, ing an eagle 2 on the eighteenth hole gave 1o the town of Greenwich Isiand | 8 Mitchell sees it, wil be discussed | 08 Gt ton second shot left him a | Beach and endowed it so that those | tomorrow. = oxhe putt of only a few inches. And he are ferried without cost to & pleasant| must Srst learn £3% CORSE, " |this been going on? Who said this | ger's leaflet on “Slicing” takes up in | [0S Dee KOV, [ bathing place | detail the causes. Send stamped, 2 et A Tall Brunette Type. addressed envelope to Sol Metuger, Of course Cy's 3 at the short six-| i & care of this paper, and request this | teenth was expected. He seldom takes Miss Lauder is a tall brunette. a| more than 3 at_this hole. But when | h remarkablc | leaflet. he rang the bell for a birdie at the | fine athlete and a gi ?fi"sffn talent n(slnv s 3 »emd\(xfl;: ;f: —_———— seventeenth, and then nearly sank an e mox School and took post grad- | iron shot for an eagle at the eighteenth, | uate courses at the Finch School flnd‘sERIEs OF AQUATIG his opponents were convinced that there | n France. ras a kick left in the Cummings game | 1 w ney met Miss Lauder through her E s after all. Mrs. Dewing. several years ago EVENTS AR |.| TEDi Privately, of course, Cy didn't want have been formally engaged for | to let “Skeets” Watson in on the secret. a year, but there undoubtedly for he and Watson have a game framed | erstanding between them | A serjes of swimming and diving con- | for next week, and a word about birdies —not to mention two consecutive holes | o T we s boxi before Tunney ever won his BOXINE | yoyg yint be held at the Chevy Chase| ot to mention G SonsCevivy JOUL ) “rhat is the mews, but it isn’t the | Lake swimming pool during the mext|pic horns. But then Watson has al-| tory ; two months, the first one scheduled for | ways claimed he could outtalk the tall | The story is one as beautiful as any | . 14, oak from out Montgomery way. T ever written by a romanticist or a poet. | August 14. = —_— Tt is a story of the princess in the | Events will be run off in two classes, Noyes Makes Noise. | — fvory car and the boy who stood, wide- | junior and senior, for both sexes. Alll Noves was a partner to Tommy | $10d and barc-headed, by the roadside | Snimmers under 15 vears of age will| armour in @ maten at. Baitimore the | I to watch her pass. | be required to enter the junior lists, | oiner - da; ainst B. Warren Corkran, === It is a story which has as its motive | while those older Will swim for the sen- and. lnot’t’le:GWuhlnéwn player. Noyes = the thing which has ever inspired great | jor titles. hadn’t figured very extensively in the = —_— books and great plays and which has | Pinal meets will be held on Saturday. | game up to the sixteenth, but then who urged men to be brave and women 10 | September 22. Prizes will be awarded for | could e:ptct any local amateur to figure be beautiful: a story of that thing, &t | first, second and third place, in each| with such a partner as last year's open which some scoff, but of which all|event. champion. And particularly the way dream, called love. | " In addition to this, at the conclusion | Tommy was putting over the first nine “The distance between Greenwich | o the third meet in each class, points | poles. Armour and Noyes were 1 up Village, New York, and an estate in|of contestants will be totaled and the | with 3 to go, and they came to the Greenwich, Conn., is somewhat wider | syimmer with the highest total in each | dicult - sixteenth. Now Noyes hardly than the sea. From the time Gene |class, boys, girls, men and women, Will | entered seriously into the calculations 1 Sl Tunney first saw the girl to whom he | pe awarded a swimming suit. of the of et = e | = pposing pair. They were watch- N e e | iProstamial Evas ing Tommy. But in came Noyes, shoot- lady in a high tower and he was only | Junier Meets. ing a ball from a terrible lie in the one who stood and looked up at her| Eree style for junior girls, one lap. woods to within 3 feet of the hole to | window. She couldnt come down t0| Bick style for junior boys, one lap. sink the putt and win the hole. And| A 't come n Back stroke for junior girls, one lap. then, just to show that it wasn't an him. He had to climb up to her and, | Back stroke for junior boys, one lap. ident he took a No. 3 1 his | in all humility, he did not dare to teli | Divins. low board, junior glris O 5 By Son trom his) e Diving. low board, junior boys. bag at the 175-yard seventeenth and | himself that he could climb that long. | steep trail He did tell himself—for | Senior Mee eart—t I B tyle for women, two laps. T that he | E7eC Style for men. two laps. nearly holed the doggone thing for an ace. His two was a cinch, and that match was over. But that wasn't all. s o ke o, = °| ISk b wmem e | e Neyes. who padhal This explains many things concern-| Diving for womey. :foot board. eenth e and Noyes, who had half ing Gene Tunmey's actions in_his uiti-| Diving for men. §-test Board. S aatt poxniaen Y mate goal. - That was merely the quick-| The meets will be scheduled as fol- | pons oW -loptecor ‘vt on est road to.his n;.;m-s desire. He need. | lows: 3 And now we're coivinced more than Sraces: eaucatian’ and 56 much money | Ausust 14, Aucust 3k Ausust 3% Sevtem- | have ot b g e that no one could say money had made | ver 4. September 11, Beptember 18. P gl e D tan 4he beghuming| . and that champlons are not y -y " | Senler. the only fellows who finish like the ‘Tunney his pride. | August 16, Au,,u‘.,; :'xn &‘:nx::; ;g. Septem- | wearers of the purple’ | ber 6. Septemibe: Starts Climb From “Scratch.” Preparing for the coming exhibition So, starting from the plane we col- mateh in which he and Diffenbaugh will Toguialty cali “scratch.” Gene began HUDKINS BOUT AWAITS oppose- the two A from Ooneres- | his_climb. He worked and he studied | Slonal, J. Monro Hunter, the Indian | and he developed physically. entally | RECOVERY OF RICKARD | Spring siege gun, has had made up for and spiritually and, a a p e | him a big niblick with a blade like a | Jong trail seemed a little less steep. But, | NEW YORK, August 9 (®).—An at- | steam sh‘o'vel and a shaft like the trunk as in all proper love stories, the way |tempt to bring Ace Hudkins, the Ne-| o' young oak tree. The ball cannot Sas barred by dragons, some real, some | braska wildcat, who failed to lift Mickey | go ina place from which that mighty created by the mind. One of the real- | Walker's middleweight crown, back 10| weapon can’t dig it out, and as for put- est dragons which stood fn the road was | the ranks of the welierweights for a|ging cut on the ball—that club does Toown s Jack Dempsey. Here was a | title shot at the champlon, Joe Dundee. | nothing else but. The dates for the @ragon which breathed fire and flame | today waited the return to health of | match haven't finally been settled yet and had an awe-inspiring reputation. | Tex 3 but it is a certainty that it will be held When he was successful in this trial The master of Madison Square GAr- | the latter part of the week of August by combat, Tunney felt that he was | den is ill at his home here and is be- | 19, with the final 36 holes to be staged beginning to make real headway: for lieved to be suffering from ptomaine | at Indian Spring on August 26. 1 that dragon had guarded the tradi-| poisoning. His condition is not serious.| To say that Congressional and In- :;ontlh mmn a;flfmc?:w:fi —_—— — ahtzn flspl:m‘g nte‘ all "",'f;‘f“ up over e e the affair is putting it mildly, and it is climbed empty handed. Wealth now CANZONERI LISTS ROUTIS. |, %criainty that considerably more than ‘was his for the taking. NEW YORK, August 9 (#).—Tony | golfing honor will be riding on the He had to battle the same dragon | Cangoneri, featherweight champion, has | === #gain later on, but this time under | signed to defend his title against An- different conditions. And by now he|gre Routls, Prench challenger, in a was so much closer to the tower that | 5.round bout in Madison Square Gar- the girl could advise him in his climb- | den, September 20. ing and that was both & great assiSt- | m————— ance and a great comfort. Moreover, | he had picked up many good fr'2ds| waiting and, as in all of Hans Ander- 5o U SU real Ince, ic] N and knowledge that the title was only a | mna];ox‘ne? it @ririment, and he tossed it aside where | So that is the story and it should others might climb for it and went|end by their living happily ever after. on to the tower. b ight, 1928. by North A; - And there be found his princess ‘O Ay ewn | A New Fashion STA® SERYICE STATION o 12th and A‘!.lll how / Frances Alda, - AT Noted Diva, HTE s3aze R 3 adstes SIS Metropolitan Opera Co. 4 RUTTRT gt R Get This Straight r —Men [ The finest tobacco—"It’s Toasted”— !1 broad in cut—no dust—all impur- | ities removed—{flavor improved. e ’I:{OUSANDS NOw >, 1R | | | A 10T of dealers who sell everywhere . . . and_every day new ot s “ta Ve Your | hundreds of young men are turning great selling. But remember | to Admiration Cigars. 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