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THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, SEPTEMBER 16, 1928—PART 1.7 HECKLERS DRAW " ROBINSON'S FIRE Senator Reads Smith’s Edict on Public Schools to Florida Audience. By the Associated Pres A JACKSONVILLE, September 15.— Twice Senator Joe Robinson interrupted his address tonight to reply to some members of his audience which upon) several occasions shouted, “Hurrah for Hoover!” and at another time laughed at » quotation by him of an utterance of Gov. Smith on public schools. The first time the shout of “Hurrah Tor Hoover!" was raised ke either did £ic: hear or decided to pay no atten- tien, for he contniued *ith his speech. A few moments the cry of “Hurrah for Hoover!” had more power behind it and Mr. Robinson paused, raised his right hand and said: “Let me do the talking, now.” | There was sflence for a while until| the Senator began reading a statement | of Gov. Smith, in which the New York executive declared a belief in the sepa- ratiop of church and state and said that he regarded the public schools of the Nation as one of its greatest insti- tutions. Laughter from scme members in the | audience grected the reading of this | declaration. “You can't hoot that doctrine!” the Senator shouted. “It is acceptable to Democrats and should be acccptable to Republicans.” The Senator then took up the re- ligious issue. He said that most mem- bers of the audience in his opinion were members of the churches they belonged to because either their fathers ©or mothers had belonged to those churches. “No one can blame Al Smith for fol- lowing the religion of his mother,” he declared. : Within a few minutes after Mr. Rob- inson had shouted back at the audicmtze that “you can't hoot that doctrine" he concluded, reading Gov. Smith's utter- ance on religion and schools, which the Scnator has referred to in previous ad- dresses, and closed his address. “He left tonight for Miami, where he will speak Monday night before head- ing back northward. JUVENILES TO AID STREET CARNIVAL, Work to Wipe Out $2,000 Deficit | Incprred by Friend- £ ship House. v A juvenile circus, a parade and nu-‘ Mmerous other features will mark third annual street carnival of Friend- ship House, the settlement house at 326 Virginia avenue southeast, Wednesday afternoon and evening. The affair this year will be a benefit to wipe out a deficit of approximately $2,000 incurred by the Friendship Hous> during the past Summer. A total of 2,500 block tickets, at $1 each, have fiknm mailed t_n’dlt, {fl“ Lydia A. H. Burk- , head resident, explaining yesterda: that it was hoped to raise. meyrnnd y Teturns from those to whom she ticke! h:;edbeeéld:ent, ¢ y's i will at 4:30 in the lfummlh themmm- ship House Toy Symphony Orchestra, and a series of folk dances will be pre- |* sented. From 5 to 7-o'clock buffet sup- per will be served, with Mrs. Alfred T. Adams and Mrs. J. Ward Eicher in charge. At 6:30 o'clock a street parade will be held on Virginia avenue in front of the house. The whole block will be roped off and lighted for the occasion. At 7:15 o'clock the circus will be pre- sented under the direction of Theodore Tiller, who has a number of juvenile clowns, acrobats, “wild beasts,” with some of his youngg companions fur- nishing the locomotive power for the “monsters” constructed of wood and will conclude with 8 to cles for sale. These include a “coun- try store,” in charge of Mrs. Albert Stabler; a “parcel post package booth,” in charge of Mrs. Rese Virnstein; a cake booth, in charge of the Friend- ship Nursery Aid Club: soft drinks, in charge of Caleb O'Conner and W K Handy of the Lions’ Club, and an ice cream booth. in charge of members of the Burrall Bible Class. ASKS JURY TRIAL. Mrs. Patricia McCaffrey McCormick of the .Highview Apartments, 2513 ‘Thirteenth street, charged with driv- ing while intoxicated as a result of an alleged collision between her car and two parked machines last Friday, asked for a jury trial when arraigned before Judge Robert E. Mattingly in Police Court .yesterday. She was released under bond of $500. The accident occurred at Second and Fast Capitol streets, and the charge | was preferred on complaint of the owner of one of the cars hit. Police say the machines damaged by Mrs. McCormick belonged to Richard Whitty, 624 East Capitol street, and Frank Kenney, 12 Second street north- THE SWAN BOAT ‘ OFFERS THE COpportunity | TO COMBINE Pleasure and Charity | You will enjoy the delightful ride on the placid waters of the Tidzl Basin aud same time you contribuge the Child Welfare Society for whose bencfit this saie and novel craft is operated. Grown-ups enjoy hoating as much as the children. Our third season is drawing to a close. Winter is not far away. Enjoy the outdoors while you may. Come and ride with us today BOAT LEAVES ON THE HOUR AND HALF HOUR 10:30 AM. ta 9:30 P.M. FROM BOATHOUSE, TIDAL BASIN, FOOT OF SEVEN- TEENTH ST. Adults, 25c¢; Children, 10c W [ for,_the Z'I"hl;lu & Bcbby Remains King of Golf After Beating T. P. Perkins. Victory Gives Atlantén Eighth Major Cham- pionship. (Continued from First Page) heavier, Bobby continued knocking the ball down the middle for the inevitable putt for a birdie and Perkins slipped a shot or two now and then to permit Jones to add another hole to his lead. Perkins Wins Only Two Holes. ‘The British title holder won only two of the 27 holes of the title match, the first in the morning, when Jones moved his ball, and the seventeenth, also in the pre-lunch session, when Jones failed to lay his chip shot dead from a trap. After lunch the son of Britain never won a hole, although Jones gave an opening at the fourth, where he sliced out ot bounds. But here Perkins returned the compliment by doing the same sturt. and Jones won the hole when Perkins put his next tee shot in a bunker. Never at any time was there a chance for a smashing comeback by Perkins, for Jones was steadiness personified. The peculiarly monotonous character- istics of the Jones game were never bet- ter in evidence than in the final of this thirty-second amateur ehamfwnshm When he slipped accidentally from the narrow path he followed the mediocre shot with recoveries the brilliance of which alone must have crushed the heart of the British entry. Bobby outshone Perkins in every de- fnrt.mem of the game, outranging him rom the tee, getting closer to the hole with his long irons and pitch shots and putting far better than the British champion. _Against such a combination only par-shattering golf would avail, and Perkins did not have it in his bag. The cigarette smoking Britisher did not hole a lengthy putt during the final, e B e et oy had 45 putls n oigt. Y put played, six under the par of 54. Perkins did hole out on two holes, but his total could not have been 8s good as that of Jones, for he had two three-putt greens. Perkins” Lead Short-Lived. Although Perkins won the first hole of the match, his lead was short-lived, for after they had halved the next two' Perkins drove out of bounds to drop the hole to Jones' perfect par. Here Jones had only a seven-footer for a birdie 3, but did not have to hole it and Perkins conceded the hole. Jones went into the lead he never relinquished at the 577-yard fifth, where Perkins took three putts, to permit Jones to win with a par. The British champion put his ball in the water hazard at the short sixth, to make Jones 2 up, for Jones was on the green from the tee. They halved the next two holes in par figures, but Jones won the ninth to become 3 up when Perkins’ pitch rolled back down the hill from the edge of the elevated green. That seemed to start Jones off on a wild rampage, for he played the next four holes in three birdies and one par, winning them all. Two smashing wooden club shots put him on the green at the 491-yard tenth for a birdie 4. A long iron shot 10 feet from the pin and a good putt for the birdie 3 earned him the eleventh. He won the short twelfth with a par 3 when Perkins was bunkered, and chipped close enough to the cup to secure an- other birdie at the 470-yard thirteenth. ‘They split the next three holes in reg- ulation figures and Perkins picked up the seventeenth to reduce Jones’ margin from 7 holes to 6 when the Atlanta marvel failed to get a chip shot dead from a bunker. The home hole was putting Music Students Bix Discount on Sheet Music Violin Outfits, $9 Repairing Guaranteed Ratner’s Music Store 731 11tk St. N.W. apartments; porches. Available JONES WINS AMATEUR GOLF TITLE FOR THE FOURTH TIME halved in par 4s, with Perkins sinking a curling 6-footer around Jones' ball for the half, and they went to lunch with the emperor of golf 6 up, sitting more firmly on his throne than ever. Jones Adas to Lead. No man in the game can shoot Bobby Jones anything like six holes in an 18-hole combat and expect to stay in the match. And so it was in the after- noon. Instead of reducing the Jones lead, Perkins added to it by the inac- curacy of his play. . A sample of the crushing way Bobby bore down came at the very first hole, the nineteenth of the match. Here Jones pushed his tee shot to the woods while Perkins poled out a perfect ball 290 yards down the middle. From the wooded sector Jones played through the trees 18 fect past the pin, a shot that must have caused Perkins some dis- comfort, for his pitch was woefully short. He did well in fact. to get a half, for he left himself a three-footer. Another sample of the Jones pres- sure came at the twentieth, for here he played a short pitch from the rough at the right which hit the cup 30 yards away and left him only a three-footer for his winning birdie. That made Jones 7 up and the end was in plain sight. ‘They split the 375-yard third in par 4s. although Bobby missed a six-footer for another strike. With the honor, Bobby lashed out a sliced tee shot at the fourth which rolled out of bounds. Here, if ever, was the chance for Perkins to get back a hole. But the son of Britain, with the peculiar rocking swing that is his, also The Brighton 2123 California St. N.W. Several very desirable house- keeping and non-houdekeeping suites available immediately. Wardman Management LANTERN 733 17th St. Have You Seen Our New " Cafeteria Remodeled and Redecorated Try Lunch You Will Want to Come Back to Dinner. Wardman management. two-room, kitchen and bath unfurnished large The Chastleton Hotel Conveniently Located, 16th St. at R Delightful screened sleeping for immediate occu- pancy. $55 per month and upward. Three rooms, kitchen and bath, unfurnished, $75 , per month and upward. 'puxhed his tee shot out of bounds. Bobby then played straight down the middle, while Perkins hooked to a trap. The upshot was Jones won with a 6, for the penalty for ball out of bounds is stroke and distance. Perkins took |the back of the green. Next Two Holes Halved. They halved the long fifth in par 55 and split the short sixth in regulation 3s, although Bobby had. to play a fine chip shot from the edge of the brook and get down a 7-footer for the half. One of the characteristic Jones breaks' came at the seventh. Tommy Armour-always claimad that Jones has a two-shot lead over the rest of the field in any championship because the gal- lery won't permit his ball to go into serious trouble. «So it happened at the seventh of the abbreviated afternoon session. His pulled tee shot, plainly ticketed for the woods, struck a spectator smack on the back of the head. The man dropped as if shot, and Bobby's ball, instead of jumping deep into the woods, bounced back into the middle of the fairway, giving him a wide open shot to the green instead of the difficult matter it would have been from the woods. The spectator was knocked unconscious by the ball and lay on the ground for 10 minutes, while both Bobby and Perkins sympathized and offered aid. Perkins had his tee shot in the brook at the right of the fairway, and another hole was added to the credit side of the Jones ledger, for Bobby laid his second on the green for a 4, while the best Perkins could sccure was a 6 after lifting from the ditch. Bobby was now 9 up with eleven to go, and there was no hope for the Brit- ish lion. The scion of the Jones family laid his tee shot on the green at the 227-yard eighth, the twenty-sixth of the match, while Perkins sliced wildly to the hillside far below the green, hit a tree with his second shot and con- ceded the hole after his fourth shot, a chip from the back edge failed to go down. footer and holed it for a birdie 2. Finish Comes Quickly. The end came quickly or tie tenth, the twenty-seventh ef tne maich, which Jones started Dormie 10 up. Both men were down the fairway, with their tee shots and both pitched up on the green. Both laid their approach putts dead and Perkins, who had doffed his cap at the fourth, walked over and shook Jones' hand. Bobby placed his arm over “Phil's” shoulder and they walked back to the club house, while a gallery of 10,000 persons roared its approval of the Atlanta wonderworker and the game stand of the Britisher. If they continue holding 36-hole matches in this championship, the only doubt there can be is the margin of the Jones’ victory. Bobby has a pecu- liar mental kink about 18-hole affairs, ni 8 All Doors Pertect Al other Sizes WINDOWS COMPLETE 2 ft. 4 Inx3 ft. 10 in, glazed sash and frame. All perfect— $3.85 Also many other sizes in 12-light and six over one light ‘windows com- plete. Priced proportion- ately low. wood pulp wall 3¢ per sa. ft. N . Ro 8, failing to get & chip shot dead from Bobby stepped up to his 20- but & 36-hole match is cold meat for him. ; - The cards of the findl match follow: Morning Round. i | Afternoon Rou Jones ..434—653—424—35 | Perkins, 444—853—654—43—10 & 9 CITY NEWS IN BRIEF. FUTURE. A card party will be given at St. Joseph’s Hall, tomorrow evening, at 8:30 o'clock, for the benefit of the Sanctuary Soclety of the church. The Gold Star Mothers will meet at the Hamilton Hotel, Tuesday. Col J. Miller Kenyon will ‘speak. The Sons of Jonadab will meet to- morrow night, 8 o'clock, at 623 Louisi- ana avenue. The Washington City Chiropractors’ Association will meet Tuesday night at 2108 Flagier place, 8 o'clock. The Mount Pleasant W. C. T. U. will meet_Tuesday_afternoon at 2 o'clock at Friends' Church, Thirtzenth and Irving streets. Treaty Oak Chapter, O. E. 8., will meet tomorrow night, 8 o'clock at Tem- pe Heights. “Power,” by Leon Feuchtwanger, will be reviewed by Benjamin Tepper, before the Book Review Club of the Jewish Community Center. Daughters of Unjon Veterans of the Civil War, Mrs. Ellen Spencer Mussey, Tent No. 1, will meet in G. A. R. Hall, 1412 Pennsylvanian avepuc, tomorrow evening at 8 o'cloci. ‘Tae -Washington Dietetic Assocla- tiom will meet at the Grace Dodge Ho'el, Wzdnesday night, at 8 o'clock. ‘The Curley Club; athletic committee will give a card party at St. Martin's Hall Wednesday night, at 8:30 o'clock. | CITY CLUB WILL HOLD DINNER SEPTEMBER 24 Affair to Mark Reopening of Re- modeled Rooms—Jose - Heads Committee. The City Club will celebrate the re- opening of its remodeled dining rooms with a_dinner limited to members and their families, Monday evening, Sep- tember 24, at 7 o’clock. Arrangements for the affair are in the nands of Rudolph Jose, president of the club, and a committee consisting of Wayne Kendrick, Joseph Harris, Edward Brashears, Dr. O. U. Singer and Oscar Thorup. = Following the reopening of the dining rooms the club begins its season of Fall and Winter activities October 2. . An _entertainment is being arranged for the dinner. The decorative work included the finishing of the walls to represent colored stone with marble and gold pilasters. The private rooms also have undergone extensive re- modeling. FINED FOR SUIT THEFT. Berwyn, Md., Youth Tells Court He Was Intoxicated. Explaining to the court, thovgh he earned from $6 to $9 a day by J)rking for a railroad company, he haa stolen a suit of clothes while intoxicated, Arthur Aleshire, 22 years old, Berwyn, Md., was fined $25 by Judgd Gus A. Schuldt. The suit was taken from Francis McCann ‘of 1811 Third street northeast. Pleading gui'ty to having stolen a $30 watch from Henry Muse on July 7, Joszph Jones, colored, 1615 Half street, southwest, was scntenced to 60 days straight. g PR The .League of American Civil Serv- ice will meet at the Willard Hotel at 8 o'clock tomorrow night. Harlan Wood, commander of the American Legion here, will be among the speakers. Church, will hold a card party Tuesday Legion, will meet in the board room of the District Building Tuesday night at sociation will meet Wednesday night at give a luncheon in the gold room of the Lafayette Hotel, Tuesday afternoon, Bell Club of St. James' Cathollci | ght at 8 o'clock. Vincent B. Costello Post, American o'clock. The Dahlgren ;‘n—am Citizens' As- o'clock. The Washington Civitan Club will Complete Stock 5921 Ga. Ave. N.W. Now Ready to Serve You with a “Complete” Stack In Brightwood Next to Car Plain Rail - ash Glazed All Sizes 4-Light $4.40 Up. 1-Light $4. Many Other~ Front Doors made of quality ‘White Pine Hundreds of bargains in casement sash, doors and the like. % Certainteed one, ply. roll. EXCHANGE Small Investments Properties Subject to One Trust (Well Rented) For Ground Available for Building Purposzs For Full Information Call J. Dallas Grady 9C4 14th St. N.W. 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