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THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, JULY 14, 1929—PART 5. 3 Considine-Mangan Win D. C. Doubles : Annapolis Roads Has Great Golf Layout CAPTURE HONORS N 4SET HATCH Win Over Howard and Farrin. | Considine and Charest to Battle Today. | match i to be called at 3| RY CORINNE FRAZIER. the caliber of piay In the | District net championships | at Edgemoor Club has reach- past week, and should culminate today | in & duel of wits between two colorful | local racketers who have survived sin- | has already annexed the doubles. title. | paired with Tom Mangan. Clarence Charest, the other singles challenger, | title—having won it three times—twice | on the Dumbarton courts. in 1922 and | 1923, and once at Wardman Park, in | The o'clock. Both players will have a large fol- | side-line comment yesterday while the | fans watched Considine and Mangan nose out the fighting Navy team, En- | in a four-set encounter, 6—3. 4—8, | 10—8, 15—13. The last set was the Jongest plaved during the tournament rising youth who are basing their faith in him upon his versafile service, smashing cross-court drive, strength miraculous speed in court covering which enables_ him to get the shots that have beerl neatly put to bed and final pat by his opponents. When ex- tended the farthest. Considine can be counted upon to show up the strongest. Tnon Charest the hopes of.the rooters for ‘“veteran” talent are pinned. and these are based upon many things— the District. which rests between this X shoulders—and an shown itsel v throughout the past 10-day grind to the title ronnd. Charest has quite a few other assets upon which his sympa- dependable—though not particularly speedy service—and magnificent eourt generalship gained after years of ex- Altogether. nunless one or the other cracks under the terriffic strain, this match should fittingly crown the great- ever known. There is just one thing which threat- ens to mar the scene—and that can be repetition of the faulty judging of ves- terday's final encounter should be’ re- peated. The fault lay, not with the | gether with Col. Wait C. Johnson and other oldtimers have been more than | generous with their services and most | duties. It lay. rather, in the placing | of judges on the lines whose vison was imperfect or -who were unaccustomed Granting that the judges were doing their level best—and it was obvious that they were straining every nerve to close decisions vesterday were not only unfortunate, but costly in the ex- treme at critical junctures. Things of server, often complétely demoralize | tense players, and utterly spoil poten- tially interesting encounters. in the doubles yesterday, for it was in- tensely interesting from the first to the last point, despite the jarring note— of similar judging in a tight singles event like the one anticipated today. | Considine and Farrin Star. Jimmie Farrin were the individual stars of yesierday's title doubles match. Considine’s speed and reach were lievably amazing agility which permit- .ted Farrin to cover almost as much territory as his lanky rival—and the the Middy has developed in an in-| credibly short space of time. | Mangan gave Considine good support | game of hurdling the backstops with his overhead volleys. That is, up to & certain point. Then, at the critical | Wyn'n each advancing round, | ed new heights during the gles play, one of whom, Bob Considine, will be having his fourth try at the | 1925. lowing in the gallery, judging from signs Bill Howard and James Farrin, | In Considine will be the hope of the overhead and last but not least—his tucked in around the corners with a Veterans Look to Charest. chiefly. the canniest head for tennis in Appearance thizers may count. too. among them a perience. est local tennis event the Capital has avoided. It would be too bad if a| referee, Gen. Robert Allen, who, to- faithful in the performance of their | to officiating in championship matches. their difficult task, a number of their this sort, apparently trifies to the ob- | This, fortunately, was not the result | but it might easily follow on the heels Bob Considine and the dynamic matched across the net by an unbe- headwork of a seasoned veteran which in the backcourt but was at his usual | moment in the fourth set, Mangan came through with three magnificent smashes | which gave his team the victory. i Howard played brilliantly in streaks, | acing Considine on a number of occa- | sions—and that is going some—even with Bill's cannonball seryice. But he | had great difficulty in mastering Man- gan's delivery and flubbed almost as many returns as he made good when- ever the Columbia Club player was | holding forth. | The first set went to Mangan and Considine in short order, the younger | pair seming to have gone stale tem- | porarily after their duel with Gwynn King and Dooly Mitchell whom they ‘defeated early in the afternoon in the tponed semi-final match. The scores Rore. il —4. Only the third | —17, 11—, set, was played yesterday, however, the | fina] round, had the necessary reserve, | issued a call to the members of the|ing forward as rapidly as possible, with | other two having been completed before total darkness called a halt Friday. | Catching their stride in the second, the Navy pair forged ahead for & 6—4 | count, seemingly as easily superior as | | the thirtleth annual Western amateur | | seventh hole 1 up. un- | MOE BEATS CARTER INWESTERN FNAL Forced to 37th Hole After Being 7 Up at End of i Opening Round. | Associated Press Sports Writer. ISSION HILLS COUNTRY | CLUB. KANSAS CITY, July 13.—Don _Moe, smiling Uni- | versity of Oregon sophomore | from the Alder Wood Country Club of Portland. Oreg.. today won | golf champiznship. defeating Gilbert | Carter, Nevada. Mo, on the thirty- Carter, golf captain from the Uni- | the singles tit! CHAMPIONSHIPS .| __The winning nation versity of Missouri, lost the match be- | cause of a lost ball after a gallant | | uphil fight which brought him ali| square with Moe at the thirty-sixth | hole after he had been 7 down at the | start of the afternoon’s 18-hole round. On the play-off hole Carter's drive | was in a_clump of bushes near the| boundary line and he did not find it | within the specified 5 minutes. He had | taken a desperate chance and instead | of playing his drive safe for a short appreach had elected to shoot over a nating in their strokes. The clump of tall trees direct for the green. woman members of the club are He took a 5 to get down, while Moe to compete in a sclected score contest, played conservatively and was on in 2 with five holes to be chosen from the and down in 2 pulis. | nine to constitute the sclected score. Carter Whittles Lead. | Club have scireduled today a mixed A gallery of several hundred persons | S o % i started the afternoon round hoping that f"““xh,l";“‘,"}“_“’:n‘,"“; MRESCO PR Carter would recover from bis efraiic | it e iyl morning play und show them some in- | Many Washington golfers are expect- teresting golf, but fully expecting Moe | o4 to [y)lay in cfie Sherwood l-'orest«xln- to win the title by the twenty-seventh | yjtation tourney, which will start Friday green. They watched in amazement &5 | gver the picturesque course high above the 21-year-old Missouri youth slowly | the Severn River. The final round will cut down Moe's advantage, went 1 up| pe played next Sunday. Entries for the on the fourteenth green, slipped again | tourney close Wednesday and should be on the next three holes and then forced | adqressed to the fournament commit- the match into an extra hole by & tee at 411 North Charles street, Bal- birdie 3 on the 267-yard eighteenth. | timiore. Carter was two under par for the | Y I regulation 18 holes of his afternoon | J. Monro Hunter and George Diffen- round with & 68 and one under par for | baugh of Indian Spring, Fred McLeod the 19, a decided contrast from his 80 | of Columbia. Bob Barnett of Chevy of the morning round, which was eight | Chase and A. B. Thorn of the Town and over perfect, figures. | Country Club will be among the com- After shooting a morning round of | petitors in the Butchart-Nicholls tour- 70, two under par, the sweet shot | ney, to be played tomorrow over the maker from the Pacific Coast was | course of the Philadelphia Cricket Club four over par for the afternoon 19 holes. | at Flourtown, Pa. A purse of respect- Moe Often in Trouble. | able size has been put up for the tour- nal 5 Moe was frequently in trouble, but 1Ak —_— when faced with possible elimination| The executive committee of . the by the Missouri dark horse, whom the | Harper - Country Club, composed of tournament, followers refused to take | Fred S. Lincoln, chairman; Ralph P. seriously, even when he entered the Barnard and Raymond S. Norris, has play today in a Scotch foursome event, with the players alter- Members of the Town and Country although the galleries conceded he got organization to take hold of the eom- a lucky “break” when Carter lost his mittee work of the club and proceed| ball on the thirty-seventh. Moe also was medalist with two par | 72 rounds for 144, His victory re- | their opponents had been in the opener. | tained the Western amateur crown for | Hip Pivot Minus STRAIGHT OFF THE TEE ANNOCKBURN golfers are to]| with organization of golf, house and By the Associated Press. | other necessary committees. | “While we are deeply concerned with the executive committee advises the membership, “we are mind- ful that the time is near at hand, Jf not afready here, when the member- ship has a right to expect a club that upplies a golf course and clubho reasonably up to standard. and we ai using every eflort Lo bring this aboui as soon as possible. ‘0 this may we respectfully add that results will be appreciably quickened if | the members will come to our aid, bring- ing their great fund of golf club knowi- edge to the appropriate committee, or, if they will, volunteer to become a part of | or to head up one of the club commit- | tees. Surely within our large mem- | bership we have all that the club could | possibly need of efficlent golfers to take over, plan and bring about results | in” every 'department of our club life | If you are one of those who can and will help, please do not hesitate to volunteer, We not only want you— need you. | “Coming into the situation at this, stage of its building progress, we find | that most phases of this golf plant have been planned out. and that many of them have been brought aimost to | the point of completion. Therefore it | is only needed that the final touches be added to each, and at the iime you | receive this these finishing activities are earnestly in progress. With additional | funds in hand, we assure the members | that the completing of the work is go- the hope that the preliminary work will be soon finished, to the satisfaction of the membershiz.” ‘The greens committee of the Wash- 'BRITISH RACKETERS | LEAD U. . NETHE SOUTH ORANGE, N. J., July 13.—A combined Oxford-Cambridge tennis ! team had gained a lead of six matches to three over the- Princeton-Willlams squad at the end of the first day of play today. Twelve more matches tomorrow will wind up the contest. N. G. Farquharson, Cambridge, came from benind to defeat Kenneth B. | Appel, Princeton captain, 6—8, i 7—5. Farquharson and two of his teammates reached the United States only yesterday, joining four others who ad preceded them. | "E. O. Mather, Oxford, an_American | from Texas, defeated Harry Wolf, Wil- | liams captain, 8—86, 2—6, 6—0. Richard Sewall, Williams, won from | | H. G. N. Cooper, Oxford, another late | arrival, 6—4, 6- 3 | Donald Strachan of Princeton de- ! feated E. R. Avory of Cambrid —3, 2—6, 6—4, and Paul de Ricou, French | player from Oxford, defeated Walter R. R. T. Young of Cambridge. cap- tain of the English forces, defeated 4 Richard Shoaff of Williams, 6—3. 6—3, |in the only one of the singles matches | decided in strajght sets. In the three doubles matches played Mather and Dericou_British pair ~ | feated Appel and Wolf, 6—1, 6—1%, Strachan and Thomas, the Fun. | cracks, defeated Avory |6—4 son of the invading team, downed Sewall and Shoaff, 5—7, 6—2, 6—4. | BROOKE PUTS IN A BRIEF FOR CROSS-HANDED GOLF Why is it, asks E. P. Brooke of Wash- and Young, | , 6—4, and Cooper and Farquhar- ' ington Golf and Country Club is pre-| ington, that golf cannot be plaved as Bos . CONSIDINE - ENGLISH NETMEN RALLY N DOUBLES [Collins and Gregory Easily Beat German Pair in Davis Cup Piay. Br the Associated Press. | ERLIN, July 13.—Rallying after two unexpected setbacks. the British Davis Cup force defeated Germany today in the doubles | match of the European Davis Cup zone final round competition. | "The crack British pair, I. G. Collins and J. C. Gregory, who reached the finals of the Wimbledon champion- ships, easily beat the veteran German ombinetion, Dr. H. Kleinscroth and Dr. Heinz Landmann by scores of |6—4. 6—2. 6—0. The visitors turned | the tables in as decisive fashion as were | the defeats Germany administered to | her rivals in the singles yesterday. | Germany holds a lead of two matches ‘ to one in the series and, to win, needs only one victory in the two remaining | singles matches, scheduled tomorrow. | In these Hans Moldenhauer will play | H. W. (Bunny) Austin, while Dr. H. | Prenn opposes J. C. Gregory. will play the United States next week end for the right to challenge France for the Davis | cup. Palred with Mangan vesterday. Considine attained to doubles honors when they defeated Ensigns William Howard and James Farrin on the courts of the FEdgemoor Club, and this afternoon Considine will engage the veteran Charest for SWEEPSTAKES GOLF - GIVES PAR BEATING | urmsually good or their handicaps are too high if matched, if matched gainst par for the two courses, for | competitors in two golf events around | Washington yesterday succeeded in relegating par far to the rear, At the Chevy Chase Club. which holds a swespstakes event nearly every Saturday afternoon. A. 8. Merrill. who plays with a handicap of 18 strokes, registered a score of 80, to give him & net of 62, against a par of 69. and spread-eagle the field by several strokes. At the Washington Golf and Country Club, in the play-off of a four-cornered tie for a set of matched clubs originally played for on July 4, Erwin P. Hair was 6 up on par at the end of the sixteenth hole, aided by a handicap of 11 strokes, and because none of the other competi- tors in the quadruple tie had & chance to catch him, the match was declared won by Hair at the sixteenth. | Rear Admii Charles B. McVay was in second place at Chevy Chase with | & card of 84-14-70, while another naval officer, Rear Admiral M. M. Taylor, was in third place with 84-12-72, we | Thomas of Princeton, 2—8, 6—3. 6—3. | ‘Those who tied in the July 4 tourney at Washington _were Hair, Thorpe, Drain and Drs. B, 8. Taylor and T. D. Webb. Hair was so far in the lead at the sixteenth yesterday that the match | was declared his. Drain was three up on the part of 71, playing with a handicap of 14 strokes in the play-off. Bannockburn members have a busy day sight today. In addition to the tch foursome event arranged for the men and the selected hole con- test arranged for the women, a team of Bannockburn players will act as hosts to a team of Argyle Country Club members. ‘Tom Moore trophy started yesterday. This is a 72-hole medal play event, with club handicaps to apply, and must be completed in four weeks. First Nine Holes Modeled and Bunker: E of Washin is best in believe wi layouts of the East. ‘The golf course, at olis Roads Golf and heir structed next Fall, there isn’t any | estate development. | ington or Baltimore, which is a be Roads. Designed by Charles H. Banks, who was an associate of the late Seth Ray- nor, six of the present nine holes are modeled after six of the most famous ‘RO" holes of historic fame. The other three have distinctive characteristics which place the on a par with the six which have attained international nition as tests of shot making. We played the course with Bob Barnett of Chevy Chase, Walter F. Hall, resident professional at Annapolis Roads, and Talbot T. Speer. former Virginia and Maryland football star, present chair- man of the golf committee of the Bal- timore Country Club, and a distin- guiched Baltimore sportsman and golfer. We had gone to Annapolis Roads expecting the usual Summer re- sort course. which ordinarily i« a pas- ture turned into what is a poor re- semblance of a golf layout. Instead of that we marveled at its fine condition, at the quality of the first two holes. and continued fto mar- vel as each shot uncovered new tricks and possibilities of great golf, az each hole revealed the masterly architecture of one of America's great golf course designers. The putting greens at An- | napolis Roads are tremendous in size The smallest green on the course is slightly under 10,000 square feet in area, and the largest—the fifth— measures something like 16,000 square feet of putting surface. But the greens are so well trapped and so clev erly designed as to rolls and pitchs that the actual area in which a r sonable putt may be expected is quite small. Thirty and forty yard approach putts are not uncommon at Annapoli: Roads. Try to get one of those dead. To one used to putting on the usual sized putting green, it's a tough propo- sition. ~ First Flanked by Traps. ‘The first hole demands a carry of about 175 yards over a cross bunker which is direetly in the straight line to the hole. But room has been left at the right for the moderate hitter to play around the trap. The first green *is enormous and is flanked by traps on both sides which go down 15 feet deep (by any man's tape line). It is a model of one of the famous holes at Lido, men‘um 400 yards in length and is a par 4. The second is a glorious golf hole with the tee shot forced to the right by a row of trees and a deep trap which surrounds the back of the seventh | green. Then the second shot must be | plaved up to a high green flanked on both sides by traps. The second shot is long. too. demanding a lengthy iron or perhaps & wooden club shot, depending on the direction of the wind. It ‘s a copy of one of the renowned holes at Biarritz. Another par 4 of 380 vards. The third is copied from Prestwick. Either the quality of their goif 1@ one of the famous British courses, and has in it the same fine type of archi- tecture. Play from the tee is over two | traps with a mashie pitch left oto a | green again flanked by deep traps. Par is 4, and the distance is 360 yards. Fourth Great One-Shotter. ‘The fourth is a great one-shotter, where the slope of a hill has been clev- erly used to build thereon a monstrous putting green to make a hole 193 yards in length, flanked on the left by a real- I¥ tremendous trap. The green slopes from the bottom sharply up to a ter- race whereon the cup is placed. The shot is really & spocn or brassie shot, although Bob Barnett used a No. 2 iron and reached the green, 35 yards below the hole. Par is 3. The fifth is a real three-shotter, where the te# shot might conceivably be a little more restricted. After the sec- ond shot a pitch must be plaved to a | green of tremendous size whose center {is a deep trap 15 yards across. The green is flanked at the back by high mounds which hold a ball from going over. This hole is one of the features of the course. For massive architecture u the three-shot holes about Washington Because of the trap in the center of the green the pin may be placed in any of three difficult spots. It is a real par | 5, of 573 yards. | _The sixth gave a breathing spell to: the player who would hope to equal par. For this hole is a simple drive and niblick affair of 327 yards. par 4. But the rub comes in the second shot, |for the pin usually is placed around | behind the fringing corner of another |of those tremendous traps which make |®olf -a nightmare at Anndpolis Roads and is to be reached only by a fine | Seventh Real Test. | The seventh 1s modeled after the | famous seventeenth or road hole at St. Andrews and is a real test of ac- curacy, both from the tee and through and slip-shod architecture to cree arise from the wooded shores of the Chesapeake. day-dreams of a resort developer, but we are not concerned with real Our chief interest lies in good golf and good | golf construction: We cannot recall an alley and Florida. Certainly there is not a nine holes around Wash- | and good golf it has not an equal among | WONDER COURSE GROWING BESIDE CHESAPEAKE BAY -~ in Massive Fashion After Famous Links of World—Greens Enormous s Are Deep. BY WALTER R. McCALLUM. OWN on the shores of ‘historic Chesapeake Bay, just across the water from the dormitories, where Uncle Sam yearly turns out of Annapolis the future admirals of his sea forces, a group on and Baltimore men have marshaled ail that olf course architecture to design a course which we firmi; be recognized half a decade hence as one of t he great gof’f gresent only half built, is that of the Anna- 'ountry Club. resent ideals of golf course construction, and If its sponsors do not relax ermit shoddy into the nine holes to be con- loubt that another Pine Valley will It sounds like the thing better between Pine tter test of the game and demands | finer golf shots, than the nine-hole layout now in play at Annapclis the club, and a former newspaper man, | told us that the club has embarked on | & five-year construction program, and | that already it is well in advance of its schedule. He declared that the promise | of the present great nine will be carried out in the new nine to be started in the Fall, and that the ideals of course construction embodied in the present nine will not be let down in the new nine. If that is true, we feel sure that Annapolis Roads is destined to become one of the feature golf courses of the East, 2 . : Support Is Sought for Them for Cup Matches With British Players. RY TED VOSBURGH, (Associatec Press Sports Writer) LTHOUGH America packs & powerful double-barreled tennis threat in the capable persons of its two Helens—Wills and Jacobs—an earnest search now is under way for worthy material with which to back them up in the Wight- man Cup team matches to be played at Forest Hills in_August. England won last year because of better secondary strength and the sur- passing skill of its team in doubles play. The master minds behind the present cempaign are none too confident that the two Helens, both of whom were on Sthe team last year, will be able to turn back the British invasion unaided. Each Has Three Victories. The current series promises to hold more interest than any other in the last three or four years as each nation has three victories to its credit since the trophy was placed in competition in 1923, and the winner at Forest Hills will forge into the lead. Calling upon its reserves to provide a third singles player, and also to pro- duce thé strongest possible partners for the two Helens in doubles. the United States either can call upon the old guard which includes such veterans as Mrs. Molla Mallory and Eleanor Goss, or turn to its up-and-coming young girls | for assistance. It now looks as though the latter course will be followed. | Although Miss Goss has been playing | sterling tennis in this country of late, the non-playing captain of last year's | team is exceedingly unlikely to be called | upon in an active rolé this season, as is | Mrs. Mallory, who was uniformly un- successful in her two appearances in the 1928 series at Wimbledon. “Midge” Gladman Playing Well. One of the comparative “kids" who may get the call is that dainty and promising miss. “Midge” Gladman, & student at the University of Southern California and a plaver who appears ready for her baptism of international fire. It is not improbable that she will be called upon to play the odd singles match. Marjorie Morrill of Dedham, Mass.— No. 6 in the national ranking, a notch ahead of Miss Gladman—is another likely candidate for this assignment. Edith Cross of San Francisco proved something of & disappointment, in Eu- ropean play, but it is probable that she: will be teamed with Miss Wills in dou- bles, nevertheless. The two Helens, the keenest, of rivals, have never played to- gether as partners, and that feat prob- ably will not be achieved this time. Considerable thought will be used in picking the doubles teams. as it is in | this department that the British held the edge which enabled them to win last year. (EAST MEETING WEST | SRR The competition for _the | pitch igh in the air to hoid the green, | BY the Associated Press. | CHICAGO, July 13.—The East and the Far West will meet tomorrow for | the United States intersectionai team tennis championship. The Eastern team of Julius Seligson and Eugene | McAuliffe, both of New York. reached The third set was anybody's until Man- | Portiand, as Frank Dolp of Portland | gan and Considine established a lead in | was winner last year. }?e did not de- | ihe seventeenth game and succeeded in | fend his title. breaking through Farrin's service to ‘Tonight the champion leaves for make it 10—8, aided by the calling of | home, after being away for more than | footfaults on the server at a critical a month. During that’ time he com- point. | peted in the national. intercollegiates | paring to go through with its previously | well cross-handed, as in the orthodox announced policy of improving the| manner with the right hand below the seventh green at the Virginia course | Jeft on the shaft? Brooke putts cross during the Fall. The green will be raised | handed, and his accuracy on the green | at the back and narrow from the frout.| has become a by-word at Washing- | Other changes, to improve the quality| ton, where many of the regulars have of golf, are planned for the Washington | paid and raid to see Eddie run them the fairway. A well hit shot will| the final round by eliminating the leave a No. 1 iron or spoon shot to Middle West team, while the California another big green with another big | pair, Keith Gledhill, Santa Barbara, and \DEPARTMENTAL NET SCHEDULE RESUMED | rx phms o soner ot puting Sieeerih s, oome e e o | character from day to day, depending | finals. lon the direction and strength of the| The Middle West representative, Em- On Pitch Shot BY SOL METZGER. and reached the third round. He will | ARME TAKE CLOB Question of Stamina. prepare now for the national amateur From one marathon the quartet went in September. ! into another, this even more grueling, | The cards for the finals match: | reducing itself finally to a matter of | who could last out two games in a row. Mangan and Considine finally accom- O plished this feat in the twenty-seventh and twenty-eighth games, winning Con- sidine's service for the advantage and coming through Farrin's for the first time in 19 games to win the match. In ali, the match contained 65 games and side-liners who could remember | back into the nineties were comparing if among themselves with an almost forgotten championship of the long ago which contained the world record mara- thon sst, 29 to 27, totaling 56 games. One of the notable features of the | otherwise topnotch exhibition was the | difficulty experienced by all four play- 1 ers in taking their own services through FROM LAKE Vle, 5 to 2‘ {he st thiee sets. In (he fourth play re orthodox in this respect. oy s o Bureau of Standards defeated Lake View, 5 to 2, in the Suburban, Tennis DE MAR GETS MARATHON |Yiew. s to 2, in the Su TIP FROM INDIAN RIVAL | ‘summaris: Singles: Judd (8. defeated Stam, Olarence De Mar didn't win frst in | 6—4, 6—1; Thomas (S.) - defeated the Los Angeles marathon, but he!Md}lN, 6—4, 6—2. added to his experience and le-rntng.l Doubles: Judd and Holt (S.) de- _returning East with a good impression | feated Callan and Bowen, 6—1, H of the Hopi Indians. He said: Stam and McCabe (L. V.) d:le-m! “A fact that I noticed was that| Cragoe and Doyle, 5—1, , 6—4; Chauca never took a drop of water,| Thomas and Blackburn (S.) defeated even to rinse his mouth, the whole way. | Hall and Brown, 6—3, 6—4. Cross and 1 always drink a lot of water. If Hubbard (S.) defeated P. May and M. eould run without drinking, 1 could | May, 6—1, 6—2: Atwood and Semia finish a lot faster. And that’s what I| (L.V.) defeated ‘Wright and Kranauer, am going to try. 63, 6—1. 3670 336 { 44076146 | 4 H 5 4 4 3-a1 6 34380 CONTROL BODY DOES NoT SwAY BACK LEFT IN / HEAD DowN £ Nl -« Chick Praser takes his club back slow for a pitch, keeping the club- head low to the ground. His own head is anchored. It isn't itted to move= all through th> |tmkl', The arms alone figure in the back swing, the left keeping straight and controlling if. Note how his *left turns or rolls in its shoulder socket. This brings the back of his left hand into full view and, whet's im- portant, opens the face of his club. His weight now begins shifting from his left to right leg. It couldn’t do otherwise unless he made ‘himself . The mere swing back of his arms causes this trarsfer of weight. Don’t wol about it. | course during the Fall. 68 GIVES SWEETSER GOLF CUP TOURNEY | By the Associated Press. | . SCARBOROUGH, N. Y. July 13.— Jess Sweetser, with » sensational clos- ing round of 68, compiled a 54-hole score of 214 to win the Jess Sweetser Victory Cup tournament today. *It was in the annual tournament celebrating his victory in the British amateur golf champlonship in 1926. After an indifferent start yesterday, ‘when he scored 76 in the ing round, the former British champion turned in a good 70. 3 under par today. and followed with the 68 which established a new competitive record for the Sleepy Hollow course. ‘George Voight, New York, was sec- ond with a score of 217 and Howard Pyron, Elmira, N. Y. ished third with a 54-hole totnl of 221. \GIRL NET STAR TO GET, By the Associated Press. _Betty Nuthall, British tennis star, isn't interested enough in cigarettes to walk a block for one. 4500 for me if T reach without having smaked.’ and never ‘And there is age of 21 Sweetser's second. victory in succession | $500 FOR NOT SMOKING | down with his Schenectady putter. He cites Bill di Este of Indian Spring as one of the outstanding examples of a cross-handed player who has gone | somewhere with an unorthodox style. | Brooke claims that greater power can handed method. but that accuracy may be lacking which would begnned by the progtr use of the guiding right hand as in the customary grip. e - =1 STANFORD STAR CALLED SECOND ERNIE NEVERS | By the Associated Press. One of the candidates for Stanford's | foot ball varsity next Fall will be a | youth whose athletic feats as a fresh- | man have earned him the distinction | of being the greatest all-around per- former since the days of Ernie Nevers. He is Rudy Rintala, former S8an Prancisco high school y, and the winning of numerals in four major :Xofi.m This achievement had pre- ously been accomplished only Nevers of All-American fame. starred as a halfback on the gridiron, a basket ball guard, a javelin thrower iand an outfielder. | He stands five feet nine inches and weighs 170 pounds, Girls® Bockey. m ?‘“:m Trinter ey for aanounced. s lacrosse teams are numerous s | be put _into the long shots by the croes- | his T record as a first-year athlete includes |55t Departmental League tennis matches, which were suspendsd during the Dis- trict tournament, will be resumed this week on the regular schedule. according | to Chairman Lou Doyle. ‘Treasury netmen, four times cham- pions, are leading the fleld in the race | for their fifth consecutive title with nine victories and one defeat recorded. Navy comes second with eight wins and seven losses. Patent Office holds third place with five and five. Two postponed contests are still on the books, these to be arranged at the earliest convenience of the teams in- volved. The Veterans' Bureau has five matches with the State Department. in one of these, and the Patent Office- Agticulture team is carded to play the Commerce squad in another five-match encounter. i Standing of the teams to date: 3 FuT—_ | 0’HAVA SAYS GOLF LINKS LIE BETWEEN THE EARS Pat O'Hal pro at Wayeross, Ga. hnAnra‘fil'noe‘:mrvmenllorlld( course, as follows: 'wind. The green is.tight, even though | mett Pare of Chicago and Paul Kunkel {1t is of very large size, and the hole | undoubtedly will become one of the featured holes of the golf courses near the Capital. Par is 4. and the distance is claimed to be 437 yards, although | because the green is built up and the | tee shot cannot be struck far, it plays about 470 yards in length. ‘The eighth is a gem of a one-shotter. A chimed distance of 150 yards really | kidney-shaped green. flanked by the | inevitable deep trap to right and left, | with a_decided hump in the green to make the shot from the tee of extreme difficulty. d%n!nd\nl on which side of | the hump the pin is placed. Par is 3. Ninth Is Fairly Easy. The ninth is a fairly easy finishing hole of the dog-leg variety, where the tee shot must be placed to the right to open up the second shot. A bunker les about 160 yards from the tee and must 'ds. by the way, is playing very mich better golf than he played when he was at Rock Creek Park, told us that the record for the course is 34, made by Glenn Spencer. the long hitter of Baltimore, who holed two chip shots in his record-making round. Hall hl.mndlf holds the 18-hole plays about 170 yards. Play is to a| defending champions, gave the New Yorkers a great battle, but succumbed. two matches to one. Seligson defeated Pare. 6—3, 7—5, in ‘the first singles match. but Kunkel evened it up by trimming McAuliffe, |2—6, 0—6. In fthe doubles encounter, the Easterners were forced to go three :;ts“lnd finally won by 2—6, 6—4, Harris Coggeshall of Des Moines, | Towa, and Wray Brown of St. Louls, | playing for the Missouri Valley, bowed | before the skill of Gledhill and Vines, | 2 matches to 1. The California pair | took both singles matches, Gledhill ;flomifll Brown, 6—4, 6—2, and Vines | defeating Coggeshall, 5—7,” 8—6, 6—4. | The Valley team won the doubles en- e finals w! played tomorrow at Ithe Chicago Town and Country Club. ‘ of Cincinnati, | SAM PERRY CAPTURES ALABAMA GOLF CROWN BIRMINGHAM, Ala., July 13 /#).— Youthful Sam Perry of the Birmingham Country Club today added the Alabama golf championship to the Southern am- Yteur crown which he brought home from Nashville two weeks ago. . 4 down at the end of the first 18, | staged a brilliant rally to triumph, 4 and 3, over J. B. Barfield of Talladega. Both are members of the University of Ala- bama f team. Perry won eight of the first nine holes of the final 18 to the advantace which he never re-