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School Foot Ball Games Only Month Off CONTESTS CARDED ON SEPTEMBER 28 Three D. C. Elevens to Play Baltimore Gridmen in Sea- son’s Openers. month from now local boy foot ball teams will get first formal action of the scason. It will be a big season for the District scholastics who 8 schooll contests ‘Washington elevens have en nts September 28, all against in the Maryland i High will Hall, Central will engage Forest nd Tech is listed to face Balti- | : College. Two more local 1 begin _their schedules 9. when Emerson and Busi- will find Eastern and clashing in the opening game 2h school champlonship and Central, together ished in a triple tie for wn Fall. The annual Tech- battle. always a high spot of ~hoolboy card, is to be played Gonzaga will get together in Decem- g to take h won last expected to be ntral and Princeton taged in Central Stadium It will be the annual jer auspices of the AlumniC ral High School. hedule of leading games | schoolboys teams will September 28. Eastern vs. Calvert Hall at Baltimore. Central vs. Forest Park High at Baltie more. Tech vs. Baitimore. Baltimore City College at September 29. Emerson vs. Business. October 5. Central vs. Alexandria High. Emerson vs. Eastern. October 6. Tech vs. Episcopal at Alexandria. | October 12. Deviit va. Eastern. St. John's vs. Tech. October 13. Central vs. York High at York, Pa. Emerson ve. Gettysburg Academy at Gettyshurg, Pa. October 18. Eastern vs. Central. Emerson ve. Charlotte Hall at Char- Totte Hall, Md. i October 20. Business vs. York High at York, Pa. October 23. Tech vs. Business. October 26. Eastern vs. Western. October 27 Emerson vs. Tome Institute at Port Deposit, Md. October 30. Business vs. Central. November 2. Eastern vs. Forest Park High. Tech vs. Western. November 3. Emerson ve. Staunton Military Acad- emy at Staunton. Va. | November 6. ! Eastern vs. Business. November 9. { Gonzaga vs. Eastern at Eastern. | Tech vs. Central. | November 10. { Emerson vs. York High at York, Pa. November 18, Eastern vs. Tech. | Emerson vs. Alexandria High at] Alexandria. ‘ | November 20, | | Central vs. Western. November 23 Emerson vs. Gonzaga. November 28 Central vs. Princeton Prep C Club game). November 20. Eastern vs. York High at York, Pa. THREE GIRLS LEFT IN TENNIS TOURNEY KANDRIA, Va, August 28.- reached semi-final micipal tournament for of age yesterday argaret Chisholm, ¢ Heydon Field ary Crane to- scheduled to play the final other municipal © as follows (annual and abov Horne. deteated e Revision Bureau 1s | a game with the Washington for to- Manager Leslie oned between 4 Alexandria 516, ptomac Yard ) Eay at Dreadnaught A. A. and St. Mary's | Celtics cheduled a series of three ! pures sved in the Dreadnaught Park « ember 16 and 30 and Octo- 8 inis A. C. foot ball team will con- season with the St. Mary's A practice game has been Tuesday on the Shipyard yelock Virg Club has entered the registered wnond Gun_Club | 10 its six original STARTER TROUBLE? WE REPAIR ALL MAKES CREEL BROS, 1811-17 14th St. N.W. Potomsc 473 | Representing 48 Leading Mirs. of Auto Electrical Equipment and Motor Parts g ndris Gun r Demaine f the R additic Alexa e THE EVENING STAR. WASHINGTO D. C. WEDNESDAY i f ! to engage in more than 30 attrac- meet | BOBBY By the Associated Press HICAGO. August golf courses may have a par. but Bobby Jones, ths golfing lawyer from Atlanta, doesn't care. in his fourth score under 70 since a 29.—Chicago 50 set & new course record for the Floss- moor links. Golfers and a gallery went to Floss- moor yesterday in memory of Warren K. Wood, former Western amateur champion. They saw Bobby Jone: go-round in 37—30—67. not only shat- tering the course record. but coming 1 stroke of equaling the world record for nine holes But Bobby made some m There was the 126.yard seventh I where he tc a5 after driving his ba! into the water. And there was the hole before, where he drove to deep wood and took another 5. But that was all Beginning with the eighth he turned in seven consecutive 3s. stopped on the fifteenth for a 4 and then rang up an- other 3 before finishing with two 4s. by Jones, Continuing Great Golf, Sets Floosmor Record of 67 Yesterday Bobby turned | 7 was his ninth consecutive ' JON | round a7l over five different courses, all of them |difficult. H» has played 130 holes of {golf in 32 strokes under par. Fifteen | strokes have been sliced off par for the 72 holes he has played since starting | practice in Chicago for the Walker Cup | riving in Chicago Saturday and in doing | matches, which start Thursday at the Chicago Golf Club. His Flossmoor card gave him a medal score of 270 for 72 holes, played since Sunday. Heading the American Walker Cup team, which appeared in its entirety to participate in the Wood Memorial tour- nent, Jones went out in a foursome included T. Phillip Perkins, the ish champion: Willlam Tweddell, captain of the Britons, and Chick Evans, amateur and open nder of the four- so badly, but their beside that of Jones. 37 5, as did Evans, went around in golf was mediocr Perkins had a 38 whil Tweddell The Americans as a whole fared much better than the Englishmen. Johnny Dawson ranked second to Bobby, with {a briliant 71, while Jimmy Johnston of Minneapolis took a 7 ‘American-Britisrh‘ Golf _Matcil To Be Staged on Hard Course HICAGO, August 29 (@ .—A course that is well trapped, with greens perched high above the fairways and a rough that out at the Chicags Golf Club, where the American and British Walker Cup teams will renew their rivalry tomorrow The out nine is by far the harder of the two. Except for the first hole, which is an easy par 5 at 434 yards, every hole on the outward trip is tough. The second, which is only 11 yards shorter than No. 1 and par 4, must be played with a fade on the tee shot and siight hook on the second to get to the mid- dle of the green. The third is 220-yard hole that takes a good spoon to reach the green that is | | trapped on three sides with a slight dip | in front of the carpet. The rough to either side of the traps is heavy and thick. The fourth of 540 yards may be played in two ways. A longer driver may take the short cut and be within approach |ing distance with two woods, but the | average hitter must take the long way to the green to avold the traps. the wind is from the north. Otherwise | they are fairly easy par 4s The seventh is often cailed a perfect | golf hole. It is an ideal one-shotter | with a carry of 190 yards to reach the | green that is pitched hizh in the air | completely surrounded by large deep | traps. It's an easy 3 if one lands on the green or a hard 5 if the ball fails to | carry to the green. The eighth 1s well | trapped and is a difficult par 4 if the | second shot is short and lands in one of the traps that guard the green. The ninth hole is a replica of the eighth | ly 10 yards shorter and s surrounded | traps that are particularly hard to | a ball from without a full blast | The last nine holes are said by | golfers to be at least two or three shots | | easier than the fitst nine for par | | shooters. | pi Four Yankee, as Pairs Left in By the Associated Press ROOKLINE, Mass, August 29 Four American and four foreign pairs were still in the running today for the third . round matches in the national tennis doubles tournament at the Longwood Cricket Club courts. Each of the American pairs, seeded at the start of the tourney, was due to clash with foreign opponents during the day, and when the volleying ceases at nightfall it should be known whether or not the title, undefended because of the forced withdrawal of “Big Bill" Tilden and Prancis T. Hunter, wili leave the country. Three of the foreign pairs hail from Australia and the other team is com- posed of Henry Cochet and Jean Brug- non, the French Davis Cup players and winners of this year's Wimbledon title Cochet and Brugnon were to meet the veteran American team of R. N Williems, 2d, and Watson Washburn The latter pair have been playing a steady game, and there s & possibility that they may cause an upset ellminate the Frenchmen George M. Lott, jr. and John nes the top-seeded Americans down Lo meet Harry Hopman and Crawford of Australia, and it will an amazing reversal of form if they bow to the foreigners. Johnnie Van Ryn and Wimer Allison, the second Hen- were Jach seeded domestic pair, were also expected | l.ook your bcst! People get a bad impression of ou if your hair's always jum- Lied and tousied. Glo-Co keeps itin place all day—and natural looking, never greasy or glossy. 1f you can’t get Glo-Co at your favorite store, write the Glo-Co Company, Los Angeles, Calif, Sold in two sizes, 50c and 75c. GLO-CO LIQUID HATR DRESSING / s thy and be Many Foreign Tennis Doubles ve their match with R. O. Cum- and E. F. Moon, who came from jerald Patterson and the third Australian pair, were to be opposed by Arnold W. Jones and W W. Ingraham of Providence The fact that seven of the eight teams left in the tourney were seeded indicates how true to form the play | has been during the past two days. The only upset so far came yesterday when Cummings and Moon put out Jean Bo- rotra and Rene de Buzelet, the French \ pair seeded fourth in the forelgn group During the day the national mixed | ! doubles tourney was slated to get under {way at a rapid clip. Helen Wills, who [ came here vesterday to add another { tennis title to her extraordinary collec- tion, gained a p on the rest of the { fleld when she and her partner, Jack | Hawkes, jumped into the third round | by upsetting Marjorie Gladman and | Christian Boussus, 62, 6-—3. Miss | Wills and Hawkes drew a bye in the { first round. All of the other teams were | Jack Hawkes, | The | is heavy and thick is the lay- | fifth and sixth holes are hard jonly if | |PROS GIVEN THREE DAYS | ON TOURNAMENT LINKS Entries in the Professional Golf Association tournament qualifica- tions to be held September 6, and the District junior championship play to be staged the following day at Indian Spring Club, were advised today that the Four Corners course will be open for practice rounds Fri- day and next Tuesday and Wednes- day. it will not be open for this pur- pose mext Saturday, Sunday and Monday. FILIPINO RACKETERS T0 START DOUBLES PFirst round doubles play in the Filipino tennis tournament was sched- | uled to begin this evening on Monument | courts. Play was suspended for today in the singles, the fourth round having been reached. Mixed doubles entries close tonight M. Del major upset yesterday when he defeated A. Tomelden, runner-up to Leopoldo Coronel last year. Del Rosarlo. although I forced to battle for everything, won in | | straight sets. Coronel, defending cham- pion, easily disposed of M. Acantilado, 60, 61 Doubles pairings today L. Coronel and F. M. Silva vs. Velas- | quez and Ramos., Vallejo and J. Silva | ve. Acantilado and Zamora. Guevara |ar. and Del Rosario vs. Carballo and | |E."J. Stiva, Rosal and Suguitan | Tomelden and Orozco Yesterday's singles results F. M. Siiva defeated E. Rivera, 64, 6—4; Abasolo defeated M. Masangkay. 6—0, 6—0; P. Guevara, Jr. defeated E. Vallejo, 10—8, 6—2: L. Coronel de- feated M. Acantilado, 6—0, 6— Rosario defeated A. Tomelden, 6—1 6—2. Vs, 16 ARMY GRID PLAYERS GET CORPS COMMISSIONS WEST POINT, N. Y., August 29 (#).- Sixteen members of the Army varsity foot ball squad. the bulk of Coach Biff | Jones grid warriors, have been promoted to the rank of officers and non-commis- sioned officers in the Corps of Cadets in orders published here by Maj. Gen | Willlam R. Smith, superintendent of the | United States Military Academy | All promotions were based on a merit | percentage system in which every cadet | In the two upper classes considered SCHAAF VS. PETERSON. BOSTON, August 20 (®.—Ernie | signed to clash in the 10-round feature | bout of the Argonne A. A’s all-heavy- | weight show at Braves' Field Septem- ber 4 Sighting for Putt to Gain Accuracy 4 FIR61 PLACER PUTIER IN FRONT OF BALL IHEN BALK OF PUTTING ARL 16 TRUE ARC OF <OIRCLE~ BALL THE QEASON "A"~ OM LINE. 10 (UP ~THEY PLACE FACE Af | |FIR6T 10 GBI THI6 LINE ~ | 1'8716 WHERE PUTTRA. FIRST MEETS BALL .A\Ml-\‘r- BY SOL METZGER. “Why do so many star goifers place their putters on the lin® in front of their ball and then carefully replace it back of the line before they stroke the putt?” The writer is continuaily asked that question following @ big cham- plonship. done to smooth the surface immediately in_front of the ball To understand the reason one must understand the putting arc. It is an arc of a trus circle, its center being the left wrist. Good putters invariably face the back of the left hand and point th: left elbow toward the hole This permits these two joints to auto- matically swing through on this line. The rext point to remember about | putting is that the ball does not leave the face of the club the instant it Is hit. Thus, those using an arc swing must make allowance for this fact. To do so0 they judge the line the ball will take by “rst placing the putter in front of the ball. Then they carefully swing it back and over. the ball, and replace it back of the ball. It is not now on a true lne. But if it is stroked | through -n its correct arc the ball will shown at “A” in the sketch The causes are curable. Send stamped, addressed envelope to Sol Metzger, care | I j I (3} 1} 3 US.TIRES o CREDIT No Red Tape No Embarrassment Bring Your Car Registration Card Get Your Tires On the Spot 1248 1ith 1 N.W. 2230 Kherman Ave MW 8L NE 590 Ga. Ave, 034 Pa. Ave, ¥ 2009 14th 8L N.W. Leong fller Tmported Sumatra Wrapper D. Loughran Co. (Distributors) Washington, D. C. Rosario furnished the Afirst | M. Del | Schaaf, Boston heavyweight, and "Big | Boy” Peterson of New Orleans have been | An fdea prevails that it i | {leave its face on the correct line as| Two Southpaws Prove Best ’ . . ‘ Young Linksmen of District | BY WALTER R. | CALLUM. | that quivering finger of nervousness o v sl o e LR nflxt n]-;\m{hm play an u;dm;\'r]'\' . P T olf, they may make the crop of youngsters spring up on ‘;Z’:{,‘f St they g0 for birdies on every the golf courses about Washing- | hole, they won't qualify, for it takes ton to play a small ,‘,‘m: n; nh: ;nmhmg mur(; than !wu‘;;rdh\m"; rounds big tournaments and make a|of 78 or better to qualify in the ama- mark that is usually borne out by the | teur. promise of future years. Strangely | enough, this year the two lads who have | fiers make is in believing that the bal- | outshone the balance of the strictly |ance of the field is burning up the | new-comers to tournament competition | course and that they must secure a are both southpaws. | flock of birdies to get in. Safe, ordi- | " "Pommy Bones of Columbia and Byrn | nary golf will do it and not the high- | | Curtiss of Indian Spring are the two | pressure game that comes at the first in question and both are unorthodoX |essay in big-time competition golfers in that they obtain unusually | fine results with a left-hand swing in- | In addition to ifying for the stead of the usual right-handed affair. | Professional Golfers Association cham- | They stand out among the vear's crop | pionship, the pros who play in the 36- of young players as the best the season | hole test at Indian Spring next Thurs- has produced, for Frank Roesch, Herry | day will also compete for places in the | Pitt, Page Hufty and a few others are | 32, who will qualify for the Middle At- comparatively seasoned veterans and |lantic Professional Golfers' Association made their mark in other years | match play championship. The Mid- Bones and Curtiss, however, have just | atlantic tourney will be held later in pushed thelr heads up above the ordi- | the year, possibly at Richmond, and hary run of golfers to a modest place |those who qualify will be culled from in the local golfing sun. If they keep |the starters at Indian Spring next on with the pace they have been set- | week. in"a place of Teadership. even though | DISTRICT O.AR SMEN ON LABOR DAY CARD the odds are enormously against them | | because of their unnrthodox method of | swinging, for golf history does not record any outstanding champions who swing | Colors of Potomac Boat Club of this city and Old Dominion Boat Club of Alexandria will be upheld in the an- ‘mml Middle States regatta for oars- m from the Iaft side | Just now. however, they are good enough to give many of the established | | stars an uncomfortable rub and there | isn't_any doubt that they are going | somevhere n golf if they maintain the | pace they have set this year. Curtiss | DUf recently won the junior championship Men fo be held Labor day on the Pa- of the Indian Spring Club, while Bones' | tapsco River. Baitimore. greatest feat this year was his progress | Jonn Bratten and Austin Naylor B e tent (s yenr was his PrORTOSs | will represent. Potomac Club, the for- it mer in the senior singles and the lat- oo ter_in the junior singles e ©Old Dominion Boat Club will be rep- | resented in the four-oared gig, the junior quadruple sculls and the senior doubles. Kenzie will both play in the District champlonship~ for the Mac- ap next week at Indian Spring and bo . are entered in the Namandji Nindj event for the Reeves Cup at Indian Spring September 13. Rodd and James Trout will man the four-cared gig. with Louls Hoy as cox- swain, and the junior quadruple sculls crew will comprise Louis Bell, Edward Gorman, Benjamin Minor and Parke Bell Lionel Beeton and Parke Bell have been picked as the senior 145-pound doubles team. The Alexandrians will carry along Julian Whitestone and Mangus Bales as substitutes. Not long ago Cy Cummings Columbia finished with a brace of at Columbia to win a match t appeared lost. We've just found one that eclipses the record of the tall amore from Montgomery County. r Chick Evans of Columbia is still talking about the finish Clyde B. Asher slipped over on him o few days ago It seems that Evans was 1 up and 3 to 30 on Asher, and appeared to have th match in the bag. Until suddenly | | Asher decided that the match was over | —but in his favor—and finished with of SEEKS LABOR DAY TILTS. i Because of a cancellation University hree birdles in & rov to sink Evans on | &, & 1% UL 11 PRetent (O Lebet 2.3, 3 against & par of 5y aished | o out-of-town unlimited_class nine He 1 Soras’ T lin a double-header. The Fairfax, Va.. ail three of the holes. Evans says none of the birdies was freakish, either. ‘»flmfm,:.“"chx;:fi:,'; b oA P 2792, 3 Asher nearly holed a 1 on the six- teenth, laying his pitch shot 18 inches | 2122 | past the pin. His putt for a 3 on the | seventeenth was only two feet in length and he holed a four-footer for a 3 on | the eighteenth. That is what we would | call consistently good fron play, for all | | the pitch shots are difficult. And they | came under pressure. It's just one of | those habits Asher has. He don't travel | around to the big championships to | miss the lessons they teach i But here's one we claim would be hard to beat erett Eynon of Colum- | bia had two deuces in a row on the | slxteenth and seventeenth at Columbia. | | He holed a good putt for the birdie 2 at the short sixteenth and then drove on the seventeenth green from the lower tee, to sink his putt for a deuce. 1 ™ Considerable conjecture is going the rounds of the local clubs as to how many men among the six Washington entrants in the national amateur cham- plonship will qualify for the match | play rounds. Most of the guesses [place the number of local qualifiers at not more than two. And the fore- | casters think the Capital will be luck; if it places two men in the match play | for the title. MacKenzie and Stevin- son are old campaigners. Both have qualified before and they won't get | thet tightening of the throat before { they start that hurts so many young- sters with games good enough to make the grade. | Hufty and Hovghton have each had | | two bids at the champlonship and have | failed to qualify. Pitt and Diggss. on the other hand. never have plaved in the championship. And the pressure will be heavy on them, for golf history shows it to be unusual for any man no matter how good—to qualify on his | first_attempt. If they can_thrust back TROUSERS To Match Your Odd Coats EISEMAN'S, 7th & F Prepare delicious oods with RED TOP At All Dealers The New TRAFFIC Mg ATRacy The mistake most of the non-quali- | Walter Plerpont, Paul Howard, Taylor | Franklin 158-159 FANS STAY HOME; HEAR” BIG GAMES ] {Pass Up Minor Battles and “Listen In” on Major Struggles. | | BY LAWRENCE PERRY. NEW YORK, August 20.—Tex Rick- ard’s complaint that the broadcasting of the Tunney-Heeney bout hurt the attendance has had the effect of stimu- lating the inquiry which college athletic | authorities have been conducting as to the effect, if any, of radio reports of contests on gate receipts. | "As a result of a personal investigation conducted through the medium of wide- ly distributed questionnaires, Prof. B Wilson of theUniversity of Arkan- sas had come to the conclusion that | foot ball attendance iz not materially | recuced, but that basket ball suffers somewhat. Whether or not Prof. Wilson carried his research as far as the Pacific Coast the writer is unable to say, but in view | of the fact that there is a decided feel- ing against broadeasting of foot ball | games out there it may be regarded a doubtful that the professor included | this region. | | _As a matter of fact. officials of the | | Pacific Coast Conference some time ago recommended the abolition of foot ball radio in the interest of smaller colleges | For it was noted, curiously enough, | | that while the great coast contests | showed no lack of attendance because | | these games were broadcast through the | | air, gate receipts at games among m" | smaller colleges suffered materially. | This because adherents of these smaller | colleges remained at home to follow the {more important games hundreds of | miles away from them. | Indeed. it has been established that | nearly $50.000 was lost at three games | played by Coast colleges on the day of | the Notre Dame-Southern California | | struggle in Chicago last year because so | many foot ball lovers stayed at home | that day to follow the great intersec- | tional game at the Soldiers’ Stadium. | This is the revetse side of a picture | | which otherwise Is alluring. The wide | | publicity given to important games wins for the smort year by year an ever greater following, and has induced tens of thousands of men and women to | study foot ball so that they may follow | | it with intelligence as the various phases | of play come to them through the ether. | So far as the great colleges in the | various sections of the country are con- | cerned, a diminished demand for seats which the radio brings about—if any— | is welcome because it has become im- | Call Cleveland | possible to supply tickets to all Who | Wittsatts, 1809 14th "apply for them. QUGHT ~You WERE GOING TO TRADE IN THE oLD BuY,GEORGE. : Broadcasting Hurts Small Colleges BOZEK, MUCH IMPROVED, READY FOR GRID WORK Johnny Bozek, crack balfback of 1927 Georgetown University Freshm foot ball team and former Gonza athletic star, will be able to play coming season with the Hova despite endicitis last month. e used In the first two or ti according to plans of Head Cc Little, but the Blue and Gray men confident, with the aid specially-butlt abdominal belt able to play thereafter k ated on Varsity eleven il by an ope Boze to play unt The incision NAVY-NOTRE.DAME BOX SEATS ALL ARE SOLD CHICAGO. August 29 (#).—J. Ar- thur Haley, Notre Dame businsss mana- ger. announced todav that all box seats for the Navy-Notre Dame game to be plaved at Soldier Ficld, October 13, have been sold A new foot ball i exnected for the game as t which i3 being enlarged, v 000 when completed The Army-Navy game was vi 115,000 two vears ago HAWLEY IS NbT LIKELY TO COACH DARTMOUTH CHICAGO, August 29 (#) Hawley, foot ball coach of Dartmouth attendance he record ~Jessr |said here that it he would be able t r the big “Green” team this Fall cause of increasing pressure of busi- ness affairs. Hawley said he would be unable to decide definitely until a week or 10 days whether he could go to Hanover to take over the team. The question, he said, rests wiih the board of directors of the radio company with which his concern recently consolidated “It looks véry doubtful” Hawley ex- plained. “because I have to make a living and I have never made any money out of foot ball.” YANKS FIGHT IN LONDON. LONDON, August ) —The ounching pdwer and boxing skill of Mewsboy Brown of New York. billed here as the world flyweight champion, have interested British fans in the American’s match tonight with the bril- liant little Scot. Johnny Hill, at the Clapton Stadium. = Hill is the Britith and Euronean 112-pound _titleholder —_— e e Auto tor: Repaired; also New Radiators Harrison radiators and cores in stoek North 7177 s Block Below Ave. Also 319 13th. WELL, 1 STARTED To BuT I FILLED MER up with TypoL ON THE way GAS DOWN, AND 1 CHANGED MY MIND | Fighting for its HEAD! THEeRE's a breath-taking lift to Typor that seems to pick your car up and throw it at a hill! That scoots it in and out of traffic. a straight-away like an aeroplane with the wind on its tail! Fill up once, and afterward you'll pass up pumps of all colors —till you come to the orange and black Typot. 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