Evening Star Newspaper, August 2, 1929, Page 20

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20 SPORTS THE EVEN NG_STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, FRIDAY, A UGUST 2, 1929. Mid-Atlantic P. G. A. Hears Plea for Fund to Aid Stricken Pros and Families BARNETT PRESENTS ENDOWNENT PLAN Exhibition by Horton Smith and Other Stars May Start Coin Flow. BY WALTER R. McCALLUM. UT of the forthcoming exhibi- | tion match on_August 13, in | Horton Smith will show | res in Washington for may come a per- ind for the relief professional 1 eome if Bob Barnett of Che his way, for the little red- | at the Chevy Chase the Middle Atiantic Pro- | * Association should dc Ciub beliey feszional G ishment of a per- endowment, fund, through | professionals and th in {he Midatlantic territo are members of the association and are in need of t-mporary financlal aid, | may be helped. The matier was brought dirertly to a_head by the predicament of Bobby McWatt, formeriy the profes- sional at Columbia. who has been un- able to perform his for more than a vear because of Infuries suffered in &n automobile accident last Summer. Family in Need. During that period McWatt's family has been in need and the benefit mateh | tn be plaved on August 13 will, it is | Thoped, raice sufficient money to put the | McWatt family on Easy street until the husband and father recovers, Details of the proposed endowment fund plan ain to be worked out, but Barnett | that if part of the dues| from members of the association and part of the money contributed at each of the semi-monthly tournaments is placad in such a fund, in a vear or two | there will be the growing nucleus of an | endowment,fund which will be of great | aid to needy members. The business of being & professional golfer is not all beer and skittles, for some of the pros are frequently in need of a job. Many of them have families, and without a certain income they are sometimes hard pushed. Such jobs as that of Fred McLeod at Columbia, Bar- nett at Chevy Chase and Dave Thom- son at Washington are the goals of all | professionals, but they are not so easy to land. Would Branch Out. At present the major activities of 1 ntic Associatis according Barnett, are to guarantee the finan- 1r bilit the members and to put on golf tournaments. But the Chevr Chase pro believes the associa- tion should go further and provide an {nsurance fund for its members. If the project works out, it will be the first of its kind among the many sectional professional associations, and will be thoroughly in line with the wide-awake policy of the local pro body, which al- ways has been a leader in any move to aid the professionals. The pros in the Middle Atlantic section are deeply grateful to Horton Smith and Leo Diegel for furnishing their services for the exhibition match on August 13. “The date 1s on & Tuesday, and is made ¢ by the requirements of Hor- h's exhibition match schedule, ive one. i definitely known e t0 W tickets added inducem: e put on after the to pay $1 a ball vent, which will be open to and professionals alike. m in amateurs SMITH PLACED AMONG | 7-GOAL POLO PLAYERS NEW YORK, August 2 (#).—Handi- cap changes announced by the United States Polo Assoclation have added an- | other seven-goal player to the national Cecil Smitb of the Austin, Tex., Polo Club has played such a fine brand of polo in the East this season that his handicap has been raised from six goals to seven. | Two other prominent players were raised from five goals to six—H. W. williams of Austin, and Aiden Roark, brother of Capt. C. T. I Roark, the British _internationalist. | The rathing of another well known Fastern player. John Hay (Jock) Whitney, was raised from two goals to GERMAN TENNIS STARS NOT LIKELY TO INVADE' BERLIN, August 2 (#).—American | tennis fans who had hoped to see the German stars, Daniel Prenn and Hans Moldenhauer, in action this year seem | doomed to_disappointment. | The Teutons, who carried Germany to the interzone finals of Davis Cup competition, said business probably | would prevent them from accepting the invitation of the United States Lawn Tennis Association to play in the national championships. | Prenn, incidentally, cannot find the ! time to defend his German national champlonship at Hamburg on Sunday. | Use of Right Hand Factor in Iron Play o SHOWN AT RIGHT BY SOL METZGER. Many golfers seem to think that be- cause Lh% Jeft arm controls the long ron shot that the right has no par- ticular mission in it Consequently they are careless in gripping with the yight. The result—poor shot. The right must work with the left, even when the latter controls the entire swing. If it does not one might as well play his or her shots without put- ting the right hand on the club. It's a guide and a support and the grip with it must be firm on long irons. How to put it on the club is a’matter of importance. Scot pros have a simple method to llustrate where it belongs. They let vour right arm hang -naturally down the right side. Then you merely swing it forward to the club and E‘gp it. It does put the right hand in correct position. . The V's in tennis are a select p. small in number. but fine in But if we left cut the " and “Vans,” as they do in Europe (there George von Elm, for instance, is listed under the E's), we would only have two V's of any importance in the tennis world—Didi Vlasto and Howard Voshell. And if memory serves me right, the fair Didi is now married and so has changed her name, At any rate, she is a very graccful and skillful French girl who plaved a great deal of tennis on the Riviera and once reached the semi-finals of the women's singles at Wimbledon, where she was beaten by Mrs. God- free, 6—4, 6-——0. Howard Voshell is an American, a left-handed player who was ranked among the country’s first 10 in 1918 and 1921. He won the indoor singlss crown in 1917 and 1918, was indoor doubles champion in 1921 and 1922 and metropolitan champion in 191 NETFIVALREACHED BY WALV, DOEG Veteran and Youth to Meet! | for Singles Title at ‘ | Seabright. | o By the Associated Press. | SEABRIGHT. N. I, August 2 —Two | fine volleyers are to fight in out for { singles honors in the annual turf court tournament of the Seabright Lawn Ten- nis and Cricket Club. On_the nand 1s the redol ble 2 ‘ ichard N. Wilita) adelphis, playing cl t. hat made him national champion in 1914 and 1916. Pitted against him in fina] round is stalwart young John: Doeg, 17 years his junior and the eigh ranking player in the United States. If Williams were a few vears younger than the 37 he admits, the American Davis Cup committee might be pri ing itself on the possession of a bril- liant prospect for the 1930 campaign One after another Willlams ha: defeated Russell Young, captain of the invading Oxford-Cambridge team from England; Julius Seligson of Lehigh. former intercollegiate champion, and inally Norman G. Farquharson of Cam- bridge University, who hails from South Africa_and plays on that country's| Davis Cup team. | ‘Williams' crowning victory, that over Parquharson, came in the semi-finals vesterday, while Doeg was mowing down Berkeley Bell. intercollegiate title holder from the University of Texas. In another final today Miss Josephine Cruikshank of Santa Ana. Calif, and Miss Marjorie Morrill, Dedham, Mass., | meet the San Franciscans, Miss Edith | Cross and Mrs. Lawrence Harper, for ‘women's doubles honors. The women's singles final between | Miss Helen Jacobs and Miss Cross, both | Californians, and incidently the second and third ranking player of the country, | respectively, will be played tomorrow along with the championship matches in men’s and mixed doubles. ubta- DOUBLES TOURNAMENT NOW IN THIRD ROUND Three first round matches are sched- | uled late this afternoon in the Roose- velt Hotel doubles net tournament in progress on the courts at Fifteenth and W streets. A. O. White and Robert Burwell. well- known local netmen will appear in nnPl of these, opposing Spencer and Gardes at 5 o'clock. At the same hour, Shep- ard and Edgar will play Ritzenberg and | partner. | Becker and Benner are carded to face Zafra and Oronsco in the third match, | scheduled at 4 p.m. Yesterday, three teams advanced to the second round. The team of Dela Rama and Damora scored over Ray and Burke, 6—4, 6—4, in the hardest | fought battle. Pomeroy and Herzog | defeated Lillard and Rosenberg, 6—2, 6—3, while Deck and Crews, public | parks netmen, ousted Vallejo and Eu- | gene, 6—1, 6—2. ‘Tomorrow Hamilton and Brennan will meet Auerbach and Ullman while' Schwab and Lang play Middleton and (.;vlsnlsan, completing the initial brack- et. O N R NET EVENT FOR BOYS | IS CARDED AT EASTON' EASTON, Md., August 2—A tennis | tournament for boys will be held at| Easten, Md., August 7 to 10, on the courts of the Talbot Country Club. Only the singles champlonship” will be | ecided. R. Royce Spring has donated a sil- ver cup to become the permanent pos- session of the winner. Entries are being received now at the club and will close August 7. All matches will be played in the afternoon. Among the entries already recelved are those of Jack Watson, William _ Shannahan, Worth = Holden, James Rouse, Philip Shehan, Draper gmikloe, Jack Eliott and Barney ott. E ARIEL VILAS GOLF VICTOR. CHICAGO, August 2 . (#).—Ariel Vilas, 15-year-old Chicago girl, won the women's Western junior golf champion- ship by defeating Mary Elizabeth Ford TENNIS ALPHABET—V—By FEG MURRAY S i | ron Bela von Kehrling, first rapking Hungarian player, reached the final eight of the men's singles at Wimbledon this ycar. He was de- | feated by “Bunny” Austin, who was | then playing sensational tennis. | Critics noted a great improvement | in Von Kehrling’s playing over for- mer years, his lack of nervousness being one of newly developed characteristics. John van Ryn, conqueror of Til- den and Hunter on successive days in an indoor tournament last Win- ter, has come forward in Furope as | one of the great doubles players of | American tennis history. He and 1 his teammate, Allison, sprung the | biggest surprise of the Wimbledon | tournament by winning the cham- | pionship over such teams as Tilden | and Hunter, Cochet and Brugnon and Lott and Hennessey and then topped 1t off briliantly by their vic~ | tory in the Davis Cup doubles. | WILLIAMS, TENNIS PLEASING TO FANS Great Sportsman and Thrills by Efforts to Win by Own Strokes. BY LAWRE! EABRIGHT, N. J. August Watching Norris Williams in_his play in the thirty-sixth annual | invitation tourney of the Bea- bright Lawn Tennis and Cricket | E why this veteran | court | ain to | led by a populous galle: en in losing the former national| teresting, indeed thrill- | ing, because he plays with that knight errant chivalry he constantly puts all his spots to the test. If he wins, he | wins positively. that is to say by- forc- | ing strokes. The slogan “get the ball | net at any cost,” never found | an adherent in Norris Williams. His | . or they don't go. and in the | difference lie the elements of victory | and defeat. Either way Willlams has | enjoyed the game and that with him | has been the main thing. Bill Tilden has estimated that only about 20 per cent of the points a player makes in a set comes to him through actual winners such as placements, | sizzling, forcing shots and other ex- | pedients. In other words Tilden figures | that errors of an opponent figure 80 per cent in a player’s victory. And with a majority of players, men and | women, such an estimate is closely a curate. But not with Williams or Georg Lott. When they win they have pre- vailed by flash and drive. Undoubtedly George Lott was ordered | to play the percentage game against Cochet, and he never had a chance, whereas with Cochet in the inferior form he displayed in that final match, Lott, by risking all, as he is tempera- mentally disposed to do, might have found himself launched on one of his | good dynamic days and thus possibly a | victory. But, of course, the “get back” gam is the winning gambit as a rule. The | consistency of Cochet and Lacoste in winning and the inconsistency in this respect as regards the fiery and spec- tacular Borotra demonstrates the dif- ference between positive and negative tennis so_far as results are concerned. But it is Borotra whom the crowd loves and who, apparently at least, gets the greatest fun out of tennis. Here is what Senorita de Alverez, the lovely and highly qualified Spanish ten- nis player, said in an interview at Wim- “I am out to win by stroking. ‘Lill’ my friends will say, ‘this policy will lose vyou our chance for the championship. My reply is that championships mater infinitely less than the game one loves best to play. I hate that phrase about the will to win. Of course, I go out to win all the time, but to' win positively, not negatively. ‘That was my object when I first handled a racket and that ¢ is my object today.” As a matter of fact, Tilden could and not infrequently did put everything to ! the touch when he was in the flower of | his game. But normally Tilden relied | upon the good old percentage game, and | it stood him in excellent stead. NEER DEFEATS MANGAN AFTER A HARD TUSSLE: OCEAN CITY, N. J, August 2.— Thomas J. Mangan of Washington was | stopped in the quarter-final round of | the Atlantic coast tennis chnmpmn-{ ships here by Harry Neer, University of | Oregon streak, who battled through two tight sets to win, 7--5, 6—4. Neer meets Bradshaw Harrison, also of Oregon, in the semi-finals toMmorrow. GARBER HURT IN DIVING. Don Garber, former Western High| | School athlete, was injured the other ! day while swimming at the Lantern Hill Boys' Camp at Old Mystic, Conn. Garber, who is a counselor at the camp, | suffered cuts on his arm. and hand when he dived into the water, striking a rock, several stitches were required to close the cuts, but Garber now is im- of Kansas City, one up in the 18-hole final over the Evanston Golf Club course, proving satisfactorily. Herbert Hunter another local boy, also is & counselor at the camp. | and__Josephine | und Murian Weils, 6 WOMEN PLAYING NET SEMIFINALS Advanced Stage Is Reached in Singles, Doubles of D. C. Tournament. HANKS to the generosity of the tennis committee of the Colum- bia Country Club in putting six courts at the disposal of the woman racketers, play in the women's District net championships haz advanced rapidly. matches in both singles and doubles were carded for today. A. Y. Leech, jr, chairman of the tennis commit not only granted the women the and the clubhouse during the tourney, but has himself been on hand to sec the that everything possible was done to expedite the management of the event. Josephine Dunham, who yesterday won from Frances Walker, 6—4, 1—8, 7—6 default, after the latter had suf- fered a leg injury which recessitated her withdrawal, was to meet Prances Krucoff, defending champion. at 3 oclock ~ today. Miss Dunham met Miss Krueof? last year in a tournament |and was defeated by her in straight sets, but her game has improved notjce- ably since that time, and she is looked Semi-final | privileges of the court | STRAIGHT O PEAKING of long driving, it was interesting to note that the two longest hitters in this section -—J. Monro Hunter of Indian Spring and Glenn Spencer of Baltimore—did not scors low at Annap- | olis Roads last Monday, where it was thought their tremendous tee shots would give them the edge over the bal- ance of the competition. The deep traps at Annapolis Roads are just as terrifying to a long hitter as to the man who cannot carry the bunkers from the tees. It now is definitely assured that Washington will not have a single en- trant in the national amateur cham- pionship at Pebble Beach next monti. Roland R. MacKenzie, outstanding golfer of the Nation's Capital, has not | sent in his entry, nor have Harry G. Pitt and Miller B. Stevinson, the other Washington stars who might have been expected to try for Bob Jones’ title. The championship, however, will find Jess Sweetser returning to serious title | golf, with the same game that won him | hi 2, Swaet- | upon to give the title holder an inter- | esting mateh this year. Mrs. Ruth Martinez, who entered the semi-final round at the expense of Corinne Frazier, former Virginia State champ, routing her, 6—3. 6—2, was to play Phoebe Moorhead, District league | at the same hour today. ! champion, Mrs. Martinez outdrove Miss Frazier decisively to gain her position, whicn | marks her first appearance as a semi- finalist in a District title event. Three Teams Advance. Three teams. reached the semi-finals in the doubles vesterday, two of which will play for position in the title round at 5 oclock today. Frances Krucoft Dunham _eliminated Caroline Jansen and Marian Wells, 6—1, 61, while Marywill Wakeford and Corinne Frazier scored over Mrs. Goodwin Graham and Dorothy Kings- bury, 6—2, 13—11. Phoebe Moorhead and Frances Wal- ker, defending their title, also advanced. They downed the youngster pair, Ruth Laudick and Marian Butler, 6—1, 6—1. In this bracket the one quarter-final match remaining is scheduled for 5 o'clock today, with Mrs. Martinez and Dr. Elizabeth Chickering meeting Mrs. H. Clay Thompson and Betty Gochrane. Mattie Pinette and Marian Butler have reached the semi-finals of the con- solations tourney. Miss Pinette scored over Alice Rose, 7—5 6—4, while Miss Butler triumphed over Mrs, Virginia Shepherd, 6—2, 8—7. Dunham defeat- Icer. (Walker Qua . . 18, - Martine: defeated Corinne 2. an o Frances W re DOUBLES. Pirst round-—Ruth Martinez and Dr. Eliza- beth Chickering _defeated Margaret Ryan and Mrs. J. H, Ford, 6—4. 6-2 Second round--Prances Walker and Phoebe Moorhead defeated Marian Butler and Ruth Luudick, 6 1, 6 1; Frances Krucofl and Jo- sephone’ Dunium defeated Caroline Jansen 1. 6 1: Coriune Fra- zier and Marywill Wakeford defeated Doro- thy Kiugsuuiy aud Marearet Gralam, &3, CONSOLATION SINGLES. round—Mrs. Graham & by default; Mrs. J. Flizabeth Bethel, 6—2. 8= Found—-Mattie ' Pinette Ros: 5. 6_4: Marian Bu . Virginia Shepherd, 6 -2, Becond defeated H Ford 7, 84 defeated er defs 1. GUDE TO ROW TODAY IN NATIONAL REGATTA SPRINGFIELD, Mass., August 2.— Granville Gude of the Potomac Boat Club of Washington was entered in the association singles event to be contest- ed today in the national championship rowing regatta here, which was to get under way today. Scullers from the United States and Canada are entered in the various events. to gles, and tomorrow mile will stack up against Joe Wrigh jr, national champion & year ago Johnny Durnan of Toronto and Ma< greal and Fitzpatrick. By the Associated Press. SPRINGFIELD, Mass, August 2— Twenty-four rowing clubs, from points as far as Chicago, St. Paul, Winnipeg and Toronto, today were ready to vie for championship honors in the Na- tional Rowing Association's 57th re- gatta here on the Connecticut River course. The program of 13 senior and two junior competitions has been spread over two days. ‘The opening events included two fea- ture races, the association singles sculls and the senior doubles sculls, the latter test climaxing the first day's rowing late this afternoon. ‘The other events in today's program, were the junior single sculls, the senior 145-pound four-oared shells with cox- | swain, the senior four-oared shells with coxswaln and the intermediate eight- ared shells. . MACKS COUNT ON FLAG. ‘With a view of competing in the world series, a contract has been let for the | construction of 700 additional box seats at Shibe Park, home of the Philadelphia Athletics. This will increase the pres- ent _capacity of reserved seats to 2.500. meet Jack Outst.. % 22777 Collapsible Baby Carriage 5.95 of heavy khakl, Folds awav eas. ed” wheels MAGNETIC 98¢ Clings by magnetic at- traction to metal Pait of the car. Hot and 72 2 7 Seat Covers Easily put on or taken off. ing_materials fn tractive patterns and back cushions wrinkling. “ite without Sedans or Coupes Coaches 1.75 |3.75 16-a; day. Vegetable Bin 79¢ compartments. Just ideal size, too, in colors. Sanitary Refuse 25 Ft. B. F. Good- rich Garden Hose 1.95 Complets with couplings. Double brald, molded hose— heavily corrugated. Wil stand 150-b. pressure. The finest garden hose ‘made. ALL STEEL HOSE REEL..... 1-79 HOU R HOUSEWARES Aluminum Preserving Kettle 1.19 for Friday and Satur- Btrongly built—with three the FF THE TEE | ser bas_ been playing a lot of golf around New York during the Spring and Summer, and, judged from his scores, is back in the scoring groove that made him the leading amateur of seven vears ago. George J. Voigt will be an entrant, but he no longer is a Washington golfer, having transferred his activities to New York, where he has taken it on the chin several times recently in golf tour- naments. Seldom in other years, even in mid- summer, have the golf courses about Washington been more baked out than they are these dave. What is needed — and needed badly—is a rain of about two days' duration. Not a torrential shower of cne hour, but a sosking rain lasting 24 hours or more, which will thoroughly saturate the turf and go down beneath the hard baked clay on which the grass lies. The heat, how- ever, has not had the same bad effrct on many of the putting greens it has had in former years, for greenskeepers are learning to combat the big and lit- tle brown patchy, Pythian and leaf MBI explains | patch more successfully than in other| years. ‘The putting greens, on the | whole, have survived the heat rather | well, and in the judgment of most golf- ers, if the fairways ars kept fairly well | | clipped, and ihe greens are not too rough. golf is just as much a rleasire in the Summer as in the cooler days | of Spring and Fall. | ‘We are reminded of the words of Maj. | R. D. Newman, constructor of the Army, | | Navy and Marine Corps Country Club | course, who sald: “What a Gods>nd crab grass is to golf courses. Without | it, the ground would be laid bare when | the finer grasses on the fairways fade away under the Summer sun. With it, we are always assured a playable ) | and it makes a very passable fairway.' | “We noticed down at Annapolis Koads | that the eourse greenskeeper has sown a great deal of Bermuda grass on the fairways and tees which bas come along remarkably well during the heat- ed spell. 'The mixture of crab grase and Bermuda makes a fairlv good tee and one which is far better than a finer grass which fades out under the sun, leaving a bare spot. | ———e Greyhound racing is the newest sport to capitalize the craze of gam- bling in Mexico City. our sen.lational growth from one store to a chain of over fifty—in five short years! Guaranteed 16,000 It takes but a single purchase to convince the most skeptical that TAUBMAN’S values top them all! 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Trophies will be awarded for high gun and for the high added target handicap shooter. ‘There also will be two contests on the Castleberg trophy and doubles and practice. A preliminary shoot for the Grand American will ‘be held August 10. It will be at 100 targets with the vardages based upon target average and known ability. Featuring the program August 17 will be a 50-target race. A red bird contest, will be the high spot August 24 and a 50-target race will he the feature August 31. T TADER ECAPHONES T 5o R Super By-Pass 54 r the th tane. Es 79¢ Keepes clothing clean and fresh. Very cool when driving in hot weather. SPOTLIGHT A BATTERY 4.95 in hard rubber, non-leakable anteed for one 13 Plate Battery in With old battery, 7 W eds 8-Inch Electric Fan Soldering Iron..... 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