Evening Star Newspaper, August 22, 1928, Page 30

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30 VISITING CHAMPION AMONG 32 PLAYING - Perkins Card of 71 Feature dm of Qualification—Medal Honor to Dawson. Br the Associated HICAGO s was match § ago, who ¢ Is Medalist. Dawson the round rned the first allery to talking ly headed John who hobbled es on an ankle that few weeks ago and around the 18 ha was broken only managed to clip t %2 for medal honor: His 141 was three strokes Moe's. Dawson. who was d of the second bracket. was paired with Kenneth Hisert. 1925 Western Con- ference champion. Moe was to meet C. L. Weems. the golfing mayor of Qu . who got in with a 15 Te Cup team started play ment. but only four survived. Three of the Britons got under the wire with- out much difficulty. but the fourth. T. A. Torrance, had to go five extra holes in the play-off before he defeated a field of nine, who tled at 155 Dr. Tweddell Playing. Dr. William Tweddell, captain of the Walker Cup team. came through with a 152 and drew Lawrence Moller, the second Quincy. Il player to qualif: in the opening round. Eustace Storey Engl who plays clad in linen coat, was in that a of the tournament better than awn at the top Chicago. the only American Walker Cup team who entered. was paired with R. E. Bockenkamp of St. Louis. Evans tied SPORTS." ree strokes off par | » members of the British Walker in the tourna- | qualified. | THE EVENING GIRLS’ JUNIOR GOLF | ) STRAIGHT O BY WALTER R. McCALLUM. | ITH its members tired of | ruining expensive golf clubs by striking stones and rocks lying. immediately be- low the grass in the fair- ways, :the Bannockburn Golf Club has embarked upon a campaign to rid the course of loose stones which can vir tually ruin a set of clubs in a season if the owner is unlucky enough to hit | SEMI-FINALS ARE ON the Associated Press HICAGO. August. 22 old Patric kept the ni jor golf chan into its usi Only 16-year- | a Stephenson of Minneapolis | annual women's Western | onship from revert- al all-Chicago event to- | one of six girl invaders to | grade. Miss Stephenson en- | semi-finals_vesterday by de- | The only make the tered the feating Mary 1. and the State's the past will be done golf champion, has a golf. lesson. rving three vears as & caddy, me the possessor of & bag of | of 10 and “just picked He watched the club | Hermitage Club, in the form of his When he tried the the ball sailed straight | How Goss Plays The Stymie Shot BY SOL METZGER. Although the pro is rarely a great The Chicago girls who | priated several thousand dollars to ef- henson’s semi-final oppo- | ffth and sixth fairways probing for s for medalist honors in the | feth hole, where we saw Bill Connellan = & = | ago when Bannockb new course CHAMPlON LINKS MAN picked up and carted off. It means | came to those who attempted to take | Bennockburn has undertaken over the stone-removal drive, ambitious as it is, and true. facilities available. The club has reach- His consistent rounds of 74 to 76 over | Leo F. Pass, the Bannockburn club in the finals Howell defeated, in an | er day at Bannockburn, the first ace he the opinion of the veterans he defeated. | hit a low iron shot, which struck about PRO GOLF BATTLE FREE| | ot 3ot charge ‘n Entry fes'to mem. | atch piayer, imedsl rounch helg Jane Nelson of Peora. | enough of them. The club has appro- | enfered the semi-finals, which were to | factually removi s [be played today, were Mildred Hackl, | e e e e s . | Rena Nelson and June Beebe. 20 workmen is moving today along the q"({f:b{';m“‘r"“:‘m"’ the best| rocks and stones and removing them | Sk "\:‘“;“Fd ith "‘“‘“‘{“’ Sel. | wherever they are found ¢ with the Minne-| * yesterday the workmen were on the und with an 80, whs mateh- | blast out a rock almost as big as a oo i e | church steeple some four or five years | | was in process of construction. All the | | big rocks are being dynamited out of the way, while the small stones are be- B | ing NEVER TOOK LESSON‘”‘M no more will Bannockburn mem- bers strike rocks in the subsoil when i [ they take a divot. And it also means | that an ample area of the grief that | divots in away with. | It's all part of the ambitious program past two vears to give jts members one of the best golf courses around the city Spokesmen for the club declare that the | is but a part of the course-renovation program, designed to give the expanded | strokes hims Banockburn membership the best golf | ""Only six vears after he received his | €d its membership lmit and has & walt- first clubs the slender youngster won | ing list. the amateur championship of his State. | | the difficult and mountainous Cascades | champion, is about to buy a new set | course at Hot Springs brough® the | of fron clul It all comes about be- { downfall of two former champions, and | cause Pass scored a hole in one the oth- overwhelming manner, Dave Ewell, | has made, which came on the 207-yard champion of his own club | sixth hole. Playing with Reid W. Digges, Billy is a typical American boy. in|Norman J. Hall and Fred Byrne, Pass He ic almost as proud of his Eagle | | Scout badge as his golf championship. | CLUB MEMBERS TO SEE Members of the board of governors | of the Congressional Country Club def- | initely decided last night that the club | | bers to witness the first half of the pro- | 5 {essional exhibition match September 8 | B O b e AT v andy Armour wil v & 2 - g Tommy and Sandy Armour Will PIay & | ypy;r Gogs, pro at the Everglade Club | 72-hole contest against J. Monroe Hun- er and George Diffenbaugh of -Indian | ©f Palm Beach. executed the shot Spring, with the first 36-holes scheduled | _ G0ss uses a mashie niblick, for Congressional, September 8 overlapping grip and the The final half will be played at In-| Stance as for putting—eyes over | dian Spring the following day. All| Dall arms near body and spread at non-members of the Congressional Club | €lbows, back of left hand facing | will be charged a gate fee of §1 at| hole Congressional. and probably all non- He takes the club back with his | members of the Indian Spring Club will | right, guiding it with the left. This be charged the same fee the following day at Indian Spring. The match is definitely on, and will be played on those dates. A considerable side bet is involved STAR, WASHINGTON, or rejected Four Britons Start in Western Golf : Farrell Is FF THE TEE 20 yards in front of the green and. curling gracefully over the undulations on the putting surface, ran into the cup. Now Pass is a man of ideas. Three years ago he broke his favorite mashic in a match at Columbia. It broken badly, and he wrapped it with ape and coniinued to use it. Time aad golf went on and his other clubs were nicked and damaged. Still he didn't buy any new irons. And the day he made the ace he broke his mashie shaft Now he insists that because he has had the good fortune to make a hole in one he owes it to himself and his game to buy a new set of iron clubs. So Tony Sylvester, the rotund Bannockburn pro, is about o become a few dollars richer. Speaking of best ball matches, don't believe any pair of professionals in the bunkered land could have beaten the best ball of Reid W. Digges and Albert R. MacKenzie over the last nine at Columbla & few days ago. Digges and MacKenzie scored 30 for_ the last nine in this fashion. 333254244 ~30. They started with two birdies and an eagle, and subsequently rang up two more birdies. Digges drove the sev- enteenth green, but took 3 putts. Three years ago Leo Diegel ncgotiated the same nine holes in 29 strokes fo win a considerable bet laid down by Guy M Standifer. Golf activity in the Annapolis sec- tor is moving along to new heights of ambition. In addition to th> Annapolis yacht and Country Club, launched last Winter by a group of Washington men. several of them members of the Manor Club, another 18-hole golf course is to be built near the Maryland capital shortly. under the supervision of Harr, J. Coliis, nationally known course archi- tect and constructor. Collis has re- cently finished putting in an additional nine holes at the Manor Club, with | which the club is represented as being highly pleased, and will transfer all his course construction equipment soon to historic Greenberry Point, just across the Severn from Annapolis. The con- tract for the course construction work was signed yesterday. According to Charles Dilman, one of Collis’ asso- | clates, the Chicago architect intends to build a golf course of championship caliber, and a course equal to anything he ever has done. The name of the new organization is to be the Green- berry Beach Golf Club. Collis has been prominent in con- struction work on several nationally famous golf courses, among them those of the Skokie Country Club, where the 1922 open was played; the Flossmoor Country Club, where the 1923 amateur was played; the Olympia Fields Coun- try Club, where John Farrell recently won the open, and many other famous layouts, chiefly in the West and Middle West. For y the old Homewood Country Club of Chicago, and still is retained by fits successor, the Flossmoor club, in an advisory capacity. None of the six doubtful entrants from Washington in the amateur cham- pionship has received notification from the United States Golf Association that their applications for entry in the ama- teur championship have been accepted Those whose applications are before the governing golf body for congideration are Reld W. Digges and D¢ wasn't | we s he was professional at | WEDNESDAY, AUGUST LY 1928. OPEN TITLEHOLDE 1S WORKING IN GY |Would Harden Himself for Struggle—Confident He Has Even Chance. BY WALTER TRUMBULL. HE Western amateur golf tour- nament was put forward a week for the purpose of permitting the members of the British Walker Cup team to compete. | It, therefore, is nice that some of them | qualified. Eustace Storey has played twice in | walker Cup matches and T. A. Tor- | rance played in one series, but the | British mashfe wielder who seems to have made the best impression on our | golf experts is T. P. Perkins. Mr. Per- | kins has been doing some handsome | shooting. Dr. William Tweddell also | has demonstrated an ability to wallop | the pill It seems a pity_that Dr. O. F. Will- ing of Portland, Oreg., was not chosen as one of the Walker Cup represent- atives for the United States. Had he been paired with Dr. Tweddell these iwo professional gentlemen might be- tween them have worked out some remedy for the many ills to which | Ple, for a slice or a contracted left arm. | " Johnny Farrell and I were discussing the British team yesterday. He said that ho had played with only one of them—Mr. Torrance, as I remember— and that he was a good golfer. He | must be a good golfer, because Johnny | played with him at the Lido, and any | man who looks like even a fair golfer on that course knows the game | Farrell Training for Hagen. Farrell is taking his coming matches with Walter Hagen very seriously. The | open champion has gone into training |at Artie McGovern's gymnastum. It was McGovern, trainer of Babe Ruth, who put Johnny in such condition last Winter that he won the $15.000 La Gorge open at Miami Evach and more recently beat Bobby Jones in a play- | off for the national open title. Farrell says that he is pretty well tired out from his full schedule of exhibition matches and wants to get in shape again before playing Hagen in their first match at Detroit. When I left him, Me- Govern was putting him through some of the abdominal exercises which he considers of great benefit to golfers. Farrell has played 50 exhibition matches in the last 60 days. In the | next week he Intends to play only three matches, which he considers practically loafing, He says that it is not so much he golf as the necessary traveiing which tires him out. He has been doing most of his sleeping on trains. When he was in Superior, Wis., John- ny was introduced to President Coolidge The President admitted that he had. heard the game of golf well spoken of but said that all the golfing for the Coolidge family was done by his son John. golfers are subject—a cure, for exam- | Training for Hagen Matches be at the top of their game. As a result he frequently is not only beaten by the good men. but somefimes by distinctly second raters. This appears to me to be sound reasoning Farrell figures that he has at least an even chance against Hagen at match pla although this form of golf |is Hagen's leng suit As a matter of truth, Johnny pects to win _or he would not have been so keen for the match. Out to Beat Hagen. Farrell holds that psychology worl | for Hagen in such matches, but feels that it will not be effective in this in- stance. In plain language, he believes that Hagen is likely to get his opponent’s goat and that the opponent is so im- pressed by Hagen's personality and rep- utation that he helps in his own deTeat. But Johnny says that, while a few years ago he might have been affected by an inferiority complex, such a time is past. He will enter these matches fully confident of his ability to win, that the only way Hagen can beat him will be by playing better golf—and- that it will have to be mighty good golf. (Copyright, 1928. by North American News- paper Alliance.) CHAMPIONSHIP SWIM | DRAWS LARGE FIELD i " Entries for the fourth annual Presi- | dent’s Cup swimming race, which car- | ries the natiol team championship, | and which will be held Saturday after- | noon on the Potomac, have been re- | cetved so far from the New York Ath- | letic Club, United States Naval Acad- emy. Quantico Marines, Baltimore Y. M. C. A., Washington Cance Club, under whose auspices the contest will be held; Washington Y. M. C. A, Boys' Depart- ment; Washington Y. M. C. A, and Washington Swimming Club. New York Athlefic Club, who was a member of the 1928 Olympic team, and | who won the race here last year, will | defend his laurels New York Athletic Club will find de- termined opposition in its efforts to re- | tain the team championship, won last year, from the Naval Academy con- tingent and other combinations entered The entry list to date New York Athletic Club—Raymond Ruddy, Edward L. Lee, George Sissier and Leo Diebel. United States Naval Academy—A. R Rule, George B. Cole, Peter A Wycoff, Frank Turner and C. Alien Halle Quantico Marines—James F. Smith | Lacey C. Stafford and Carl J. Rupakus. ¥ C. A. Baltimore, Md —Hugh Parker, Pyral Aulk and George Oreyer. | _Washington Canoe Club—E. Wilson | Stewart, Lawrence Buscher, Jerome | Shear and Carl Ahlenseod |~ Washington Y. M. C. A.—Rolgrt V Corss. Boys' Y. M. C. A.—John A. Hain | Unattached—Donald Halicy Washington Swimming Club Florian Lechman COAST-T0-COAST GRID RIVALRY FOR CHICAGO U. | | CHICAGO. August 22 (. Univer- sity of Chicago foot ball rivalries will | extend from coast to coast in the 1929 Raymond Ruddy, 16-year-old star of | PLAYGROUND TRACK TITLE 'WON BY IOWA‘AVENUE BOYS Sherman (Bowen virtue of victory in the un-, Distance, 15 feet & inches limited and 115-pound class relay races, sturdy Towa Avenue play- | ground athletes achieved 21 points and triumphed in the an- nual boys' interplayground track meet terday on Plaza Field. The winners queezed out victory over Rosedale, run- ner-up, by one point, the latter scoring 1 20. Plaza. last year's champion, finishing | third, was hard on the heels of the | leaders with 19. | “Twelve records were shattered and |one equaled as the more than 2.000 | athletes representing 50 playgrounds | | went through their paces. Richard S Tennyson, director of boys' activities of | the Municipal Playground Pepartment. | believes that the intensive preparation | | indulged in by competitors in the shape of dual. triangular and conference | meets was largely responsible for 5o | many new marks being set. [ 0m o the day's real surprises was the victory of Gorin of Park View in| llash M"‘rfl. 0:0875. . ov Tenls 192° Whalen, Sims, 100-POUND CLASS, ard dash—Won by man: <ceond. Payne (Rosed pital (Rosedaie). “Time. 0-07' ord: old record. 0.08, mads by 0. Lennon (Weishi. third. Ho (New rec- Nathanson, (Weightman) d. Ad old record. 4 feet made by Bail. Plaza. and Casassa Broad jump- Won br Ascro Road). second. Pullen (Plaza) y-Polk). Distance, 15 feet 101, 0 Won by (col POUND CLASS. h—Won by Lucas (Weightm (Rosedale): _third. ime. 0:077 made by Botazzi. Plaza. gh_iemp Won by Meehan (Plaza) ond, Beers (lowa Avenue). third. | (Benning) Distance. 5 feet 4 inches | record old record. 5 feet 3 inches. | 26,/ |the 100-yard dash. unlimited class. “ ‘ Vanquishing such vaunted opponents as | Eisenger of Peabody and Quinn of Towa | Avenue, Gorin swept over the course in | 1045 seconds to eclipse the former rec |ord”of 11 seconds made in 1924 by | Knocky Thomas, who more recently has i"arn‘d for the University of Maryland | Cross of Towa Avenue, also sprung an | | upset when he won the broad fump in the unlimited class with a record-break- | ing leap of 19 feet 10, inches to add 4%, inches to the old mark of 19 fect 6 inches made by Jack Schaffer of Plaza last year. old recor Ben McCullough, who won the half- | Thomas. mile run in the unlimited class-in rec-| Hish iump, ord time last Summer, again was vie- | (RGieduler Distan Miller,” Columbia ski (Haves ird. Distance. 19 feet & old record. 18 feet Plaza.’ in 1927.) Won by Towa Wandester. Tros third. Maury. Time, 0:52 UNLIMITED CLASS. Rybyn: Polk) Qui ew _recor Knocky, on (Tenley): see- (Johnson). third. Thompson 5 feet @ inches. (New 6 inches, made by by Keen Avenue) Jenkins inches. torious yesterday and once more set @ |record: (ld record, 5 feet new mark. He covered the course in | ®inner in 1927, ‘d{wnnq. Sheehan (Rosedale) tecord of 2 minutes 13 seconds by 415 | (Whealey) Distance. 19 feet 10! seconds | mede by Gack Schafler. Piaza. in 1927} | “yard relay_ Won by Towa ints, | finish in the 360-yard relay race, 85- | Pi s ot i : V-:nua e v | cory third, Virginia Avenue. e. | pound class. to overcome Hollis of Plaza. | ihird. Virglnia Avenue. 'Time, 0:31, | of 4645 seconds. which is 35 of a second | third. A Loveless (Iowa Avenue! 1 | better ‘than the old standard of 4643 2084 iNew record: old record. 2:13, made Other new records were made in these | events: pound class 60-yard dash, 100-pound- | Mrs. Kathleen Capper, playing on a Class 60-yard dash, high jump and 360- | course at Brookline. Mass., recently es- dash. high jump and broad jump: un- | Making two holes-in-one in succession. iimited class 100-yard dash. high jump, | = T R R ST T T The Summaries | POINT SCORIN | Fosedale To Match Your Odd Coats 2 minutes 845 seconds to lower his old | sensast Shahan tRosedster: £ (New record: old record. 19 feet 6 inches. | Poole. Columbia Road, staged a great key, Costello. Mitchell): second. T | The victorlous team achieved a record |loneh (GaRelg): second, Shard 7 me | secomias “ inner in 1927. | TWO GOLF ACES IN ROW. Seventy-pound class broad jump. 85- | |Sara eiy: 115:pound class - 70-yard | tablished a new world golf record v broad jump and half-mile run. | fowa Avenue 3 i EISEMAN'S, 7th & F Park View Wheatley Call Potomac 3501 FOR PROMPT ROAD SERVICE HOOD TIRES 0-POUND CLASS. 30-vard dash—Won by Henning (Adams) econd. Holloway (Twin Oaks). third. Pike Wheatley). Time. 0-07 | "Broad jump—Won by Pearson (Blvominz o (Wheatley) - third. e. 15 feet 2 inches ¢ inches. | 1927.) Plaza (Franeis Lassi second. Adams third, Rosedale. Time, 0:32 | John C. Shorey of Bannockburn, Harry | Houghton of Manor | Farrell told me that he did not be- L season, Director A. A, Stagg announc- with Dave Ward of Grand Rapids Mich. in qualifying with 149 strokes. The field was to be cut into half at the conclusion of the morning matches, the afternoon 18-hole round finding the field reduced to eight, who will continue the elimination play with 36-hole matches. MOHAWKS PL.AN EARNEST TRY FOR GRID LAURELS That Mohawks will make a determined effort the coming season to regain the District sandlot foot ball championshin. | which they lost last year to Apaches, is | | indicated by the fact that fine material | already has been lined up by the In- | | dians, including _Tony ~Abboticchio former Western Maryland star, who will coach the eleven and may piay: WILD ANIMALS INCREASE. Among the wild animals said to be on the increase in the United States are the antelope, black and brown bear, | Harold Griffin, erstwhile all-Western deer, elk, mountain goat and mountain | tackle from Iowa. and Otto Saur, tackle sheep, and beaver. The grizzly bear is and Jerome Carroll, end, former reported to be facing extinction. | Georgetown University luminaries. WOMEN IN SPORT y D. B BY CORINNE FRAZIER. N interplayground quoit tourna- ment for girls Wil be in- augurated on the municipal playfields this year as an in- n to the warm-weather | Running second. J. Thre d N s and high jump—Won b O'Neil. 1 P) cged 1 { D. Burgess 100-POUND CLASS. dash——Won b I1da Bei 60-yard Laugnlin ats have been won by various grounds during Collins August, and the winners of these will be entered in the interplayground finals scheduled for the second week in Sep- ance (basket ball) siaged on secand. E jump-—Won by E_Collins ughlin: third. I Beil Won by Mildred Brown ., 1 Bell and W. McLaugh in the tennis tournament, Pre-| ,cking the color of foreign compe- matches of the city-wide QUOL | ytion, which made the woman's na- be run off in four sections, £ | tional tennis champlonships unusually g e Py £y | vivid last season, the title play for 1928 the semi-final and final rounfs | | has reached the quarter-finals with but pmoplons BeNe s ar Toiidhs: | ont title port In view cHelen wills. | Sy o uia Moure: Montrose, Roma | From the standpolot of competition, P, g oice ‘Tease: Hoover, | the result is a foregone conclusion, bar- Cuatlerine Griggs: Takoma, Dorls Grif- | Fing accidents or sudden death, but so #n- Virginia Avenue, Wilda Farran far as ratings are concerned, interest Cook, Mary Vaughn. = vuz» outcome. of certain matches will | 2 een. What will Mrs. Bundy do? Ts one of | the questions uppermost in the minds | of net followers. Will she continue her triumphal march to the front ranks? Track results were reported yesterday and Filimore play i | ATy causes the clubhead to move out be- yond the ball. Then he strokes it forward with the right hand, cutting across the ball from outside the line of putt, taking it clean off the turf with face of club wide open. This one jumped an intervening ball some 9 inches away and curved gracefully into the cup almost 2 yards away. Another odd shot will be described tomorrow Why continue to slice when the fault can be absolutely cured by following a few simple instructions? Write Sol Metzger, care of this paper, and re- quest his illustrated leaflet on “Slicing." In writing inclose stamped, addressed | envelope. (Covvright. 1928) OLYMPIC ATHLETES HAILED AS HEROES By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, August 22.—The Amer- ican steamship President Roosevelt, bearing the majority of the United | States delegation to the recent Olymplc | games at Amsterdam, arrived at quar- | antine this morning to be greeted by blasts of ships' whistles and an official party on board the city tug Macom. The athietes were to have a New York heroes' welcome, a landing at the Bat- | Washington #0-yard dash dis % Zimmer Zimmer Johnson " | been done since the national champion | 8 s 8 Bhe 15 %Q;dof,f!:: 2’0',2;«??53"’ é’a’:;’;’:é tery and a triumphant march through n th the canyons of lower Broadway. They upsets, she will meet Mrs. Charlotte | L8 COBYORR 0 SOVl “om b i e their official welcome Hosmer Chapin, Edith Crose OF Helen | home at City Hall - Jn Inter sounds. ' Alrcady g i | A few of the athlete and liandlers s m":nk‘ :" s P M[””B-r qudurdrlvnd earlier and some have ae- vho o it Hel ; | luyed departure to see more of Europe, Mallory on the national ratiog list. 80.| hut the majority returned on the Presi- ‘m‘"‘mlr:'fl to Q'r op: I '_hf‘ l]n \ica | dent Roosevelt on which they had safled .i:;nx_z;vm,lw; m’“ ?:\'ll'llnk(‘!'fl fh’ draw | more than a month ago and which was B ity #ini . ersalr their home during the Olympics {in the quarter-finals 3 ~ There’s another bit of speculation| Yale's Athletic Assaciation has a around which interest will center dur- | surplus of $215000 in its treasury | ing the national play. That is the pos- | = [ Official A. C. sibility that some one will take a set | from Helen Wills. 8o far this season | no one has done it. In fact, it hasn't SPEEDOMETER SERVICE recovered from her appendicitis opera- | We Repair All Makes | Yion nearly two years ago. 1t s doubtful | Starting, Lighting, Ignition | if there is a feminine racketer in the CREEL BROS. | world today who could do it with Helen w. Pot. 473 at the top of her game But the unexpee around the co most may play It i lupking always | 1811-17 14th St. worked out | [T a part in some | { one of the meetings of the net queen { before she recrowned. ‘The pos- { sibility of even a set going against her however, is admittedly remote fons US.TIRES o CREDIT ed Bring Your Car Registration Card Get Your Tires on the Spot Aute Bodies, Radiators, Repaired; also New Radistors Har 4 cores in stock Witts A 1809 14th 1ath Block e 0 319 Below Ave TODAY BASE BALL [ AMERICAN LEAGUE PARK Washington vs. Chicagc TICKETS ON SALE AT PARL AT 500 AM Fenders North 7177 You want hair that is always in place, but never glossy or gremy. Use Glo-Co. It wars on andruff, too. Keeps the scalp ¢ healthy. If you can't get Glo-Co at your favorite store, write the Glo-Co Company, Los Angeles. Sold in two sizes, S0c and 75¢. LIQUID HATR DRESSING 1y ned yav ! ‘ r Ave 000 14th 8 § G. Pitt and A land Page Huffy of Congressional. Mil- ler B. Stevinson and Roland R. Mac- ! Kenzie of Columbia are the only local entrants sure of a place in the list of starters. MacKenzie will go to Brae- Burn, where the championship will be | played, direct from Chicago, where he is to play next week in the Walker Cup matches. Stevinson will leave the evening of Sep- At Your Service Men’s New Fall “FLORS Jieve that an open champion should | attempt to play in any golf tourna- menis after he won the title. He said that the travel and playing made neces sary by the usual exhibition tour re- sulied in a professional champion be- coming over-golfed, and that it left him in no shape to make a creditable | showing il a tournament where he was | likely to meet the best players in the | gountry, many of whom were sure to HEIMS!” When ready for new shoes, no need of looking around Follow the newest the lead of millions ¢ world who can't be Most Pick a FLORSHEIM ishion trends. Follow »f men throughout the wrong about values! yles, $10 —a few $11 and $12 - i Wo t Last M Man’s Shop 14th at G th & K 3212 14th h Longer! The Sale of Men’s good $6 to $9 Oxfords $4.85 Clearance of regular stoc s—samples—and special purchases. Good shoes for every sort of wear. But not many | eft —and Sale ends soon! ng tonight that the University o. Washington would close the Maroon season on November 23 at Chicago. e renewal of the famous Princeton series was arranged earlier in the year the first game to be played at Princetor, on November 2. 1029, with a return game here in 1930 CIGAR s BACK IN TOWN @F Lastiland Ca.. Boig it A liberal allowance will be made for your doubtful tires. MARTIN J. BARRY 1636 Connecticut Ave. d Time. 00715 {New' racord made by Hos- | pita by Claze (Peabody): sec~ | (Plaza) . third. _Chandler tance. 4 feet 8 \nol Won' by Osbourne (Brook- third. jump. Labana (Garfield) second. hen it'’s got the stuff ...a nickel's enough And it only takes one leisurely smoking of & ROCKY FORD to prove that it's got the stuff. Finest domestic long filler . . . imported Sumatra wrapper . . . workmanship that belongs on a 10¢ cigar . . . and a blend that you'll never forget. When a cigar manufacturer can pack that much quality into a smoke . . . @ nickel’s enough. Try one...it's a match for most 10¢ cigars. 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