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PO "SPORTS. GRIT OF VETERAN - CONQUERS BRTON ; Heowever, Former Champion | ' 1s *“Doomed” to Fall Before | g Helen Wills Today. BY WALTER TRUMBULL. OREST HILLS, N. Y., August 23. —Talk of your Terry McGoverns and your Dempseys, tell the charge of the Light B and the Spartans at Thermo; . 2. but when it comes to sheer fighting heart Tl take Molla Mallory. For savage atlack in the face of odds. for flaming spirit which will not admit cefeat, this litile tigress of the tennis courts has no superfor in anv game that's known. She is the epilome of | . the ninth-inning rallv. the last minute touchdown, the knockout punch, that turns the scales of war. When she 100k the court against Nuthall here yesterday, the masch conzidered almost a formality. | lla Mallory had won her first ma- | ! tional champisnship when Betty Nut- hall was 4 years old. Now, she has a twisted knce, with a bandage on it. She was playing the brilliant youngster who 13 davs ago had forced Helen Wilis, anueen of the courts, to seis of 8—86, 3—6 fo beat her. Miss Nuthall had vouth, £ki]l. zpeed in her f{avor. The crowd settled lanzuidly back, but it didn't stay | there long. The spectators were looking for some- thing in the nature of a practice mateh. RBetty Nuthall wonld, naturally, save | herself all she conld. She must play | b s in her next encountes v had different. ideas. She | potting Miss Nuthall 18 vears. but | what of it? Molla Mallory never stepped on a tennis court without iniending to She intended to win now. 1 Mizc Nuthall was confident. Why ahouldn't she be? Here was a veteran ready for the slaughter. Yes. but whose | slaughter? That became a question that was answered with startling rapia- ity. When Mrs. Mallory took the firsl, game. thers was no excitement, even | though she took it on Miss Nuthall's The crowd was glad to see her cll. _She lost the next game and That. was to be expected. | hen Mrs, Mailory took two more | in her turn, the throng grew in- | terested. The old spirit was there, | She was going to make a fight of it. Af:=z Nuthall. roused to her best, brough! the 2ame to 3 all. Then her best wasn't | good enough. Molla Maliory, hitting | with all her old power. wen the nexi BY O. B. KEELER. For the Associated Press. When they go saying, as a lot of superficial followers of golf ‘and not a few critics) are saying these days that Bobby Jones virtually is cer- tain to make Pebble Beach his fifth amateur championship triumph, the week of September 2, why, I just re- member Flossmoor. And before that Brookline, and before that St. Lonis, and before that a few other national amateur championships. And 1 have nothing to say, for the nonce. I prefer tc let the forecasting critics do the explaining—in case. E ‘There was Flossmoor. now, in 1923, Bobby went to the huge Chicagn course with the prestige of his first open championship at Inwood. And the eritics elected him amatenr champion, before ever a ball was struck, at. Flossmoor. And after a terrific 35-hole batile with T. B. Cochran. an unheralded golfer from Wichita Falls, Tex, who got into the tournament in a play- off, Bobby breaking the course rec- ord with his morning round e=ainst Mex Marstop in the second match, was ejected from the competition in round 2. his earliest exit——to date. Max put him out, at the thirty- THE EVENING STAR. WAGHINGTON, D. C. FRIDAY, AUGI'ST 23 1929 fifth green, and went on fo defeat Jess Sweetser. 1932 champion, on the thirty-eighth green of one of the grimmest struggles in history, And speaking of Sweefser . . . Bobby was the hot favorite the vear before at Brookline. And he went through steadily to the semi-final round. and there he met Jess Sweet- ser, another 20-year-old youngster. Apd, speaking of hot rounds, Jess boled a 90-yard pitch for an eagie 2 at the second hole and busted a course record of 13 years' standing to give Bobby the worst thrashing he ever got in an amateur champion- ship, 8—17. Hum-ho! T looked up the old cards the other day just to reassure myself that Bobby Jones once stood 6 down at the end of the first nine holes of s championship match, end then came back in 34 to gein only one hole. It was true. Here is the morning card of Sep- tember 8, 1922, at Brookline: 4 2 3 5 4 . . 4 H 3 3 H s And Sweetser i Bearh affair. too. three games and the sef. This stirred the crowd. The old ehampion had shown a flash of the old stuff. Tt couldn't last. but. it was great. © Miss Nuthall hadn't played her game. Tt didn't occur fo many that the reason | was that Molla Mallory wouldn’t let, | her play her game. They had forgotten | the dav when Suzanne Lenglen didn't piav her game against, this opponent. Fritish Girl Surprised. i erious English girl who | second set. - This was mot | ctory which sha had antici- M3 5 the player in such nhmsm;e; \‘hnlt i 1 e, | Shola 2 length from those of long irons 2,5 platform, grimly de- | Gown to the short. pitehes may be con Foreing shot fol fidently plaved at the pin with assur: Mo, Mallory took the firet | ance that the green will hold the ball | . These questions have been raised b desperate, | Fred J. D. Mackav, well knew, | golfer of Richmond, and George T. Switt | Cunningham, former amateur of Ban- ‘slose to | MOCkburn and now greenkeeper at the of two decades ago. when th player his his shots to the green H was b ' drivez and drop she known amateur Greens Are Made “Too Certain” - For Golfers, Two Players Aver AS golf changed from the game | surface were loud. Buf now most putt- ing greens are wide open in front, and t frequently happens that a badly hit with & speed which depended ball gets better results than the well on the speed of the green? Or | hit. ball. does the green now play the ball for| How many times have vou, Mr. Golfer, half iopped your second | #hot and had it roll to the green within | easy putting distance of the hole, while vour partner or opponent. hit a good hot which bounced over the gre into a ntic trap? It happens every day. and it is all wrong, of course. In -our judgment the advent of th new bell will tend to force approach {shots to be struck a little hetter, for | the ball responds poorlv to a badly hit the net and forehands to the baseline— nene of them was good enough. The Pritish star tried the supposedly vul- nerable Mallory backhand, but Mrs. Msllory either returned the bail in the orthodox manner or danced around it and slammed it back Jike a whistling shell. Fighting like the game girl she is. Betty Nuthall managed to bring the score to 3 all, but that was the best she could do. Mrs. Mallory took the next three games and the match. Marvelous Molla Mallory! They may well eall her tha she won her fi #hip in 1915. She won again in 1916 1817 and 1918. Then in 1920 she came back as Mrs. F. 1. Mallory and won ree straight vears. The next vear the rise of Helen Wills, Mrs. Mal- just a veteran until she came back in 1926 and won the championship for the cighth time in 12 years, Now she faces Helen Wills. Prob- ably she will be beaten. Miracles rarely i happen- twice in succession. But if she | €ors lose she will go down fighting. ! (Copsright, 1920. by the North American Newspaper | Country Clubh of Vir‘lm‘n in Richmond. | shot and acts favorably from a well Both men are golfers of the old school | hit. one. The present standard bail acts | and remember the days when putting, fairly well from a badly hit shot, and | greens were just putting greens and|if a badly hit shot is struck to a well when the velvety carpets of those days | watered green the ball acts almost as | were not treated Ilike. pampered pc!.s.;we%’u & well hit shot. - a | e contention of Mackay and Cun- | JolisiBaR Weo) Enully; { ningham 1= 2 good one, and one fhat | The theory of Mackay and Cunning- | ham is that putting greens of today are | eration of greenkeepers. But the same | kept. too well watered and given too{old wail would arise if the putting | much attention, and that instead of the { greens were not kept well watered, par- | player playing the putting green and | ticularly during a golf tournament, and | gauging its speed and roll, the putting | then the situation would not differ, un- | greens now play the plaver to the extent, | less the new ball forces a change. And that he may play shots of any length | along the same line, is it not entirely confidently to the pin, knowing that the | posible that with the new ball, which i ball, even if not struck correctly, will | can be controlled better from the iron | stick. | clubs than the present ball, traps will | Mackay learned the game in Scofland ; be placed closer to putiing greens and | some 40 years ago. Cunningham has, thé greens themselves be made smaller? | been playing for more than a score of | | years, as amateur and professional, and | both ‘men know thoroughly the condi- } | tions -of which they speak. Not that | either of them intends to be archaic in his thoughts on the modern game, fo | both believe that the tendency toward ;mmuing skill hes been progressively | upward. However, both feel that the | | days when the player had to play his | | approuch shots to ‘the green with dus | consideration of the speed of the put- Good Players Hook But Average Slice — | ting surfece, without reliance on the | when Mrs. Molia Bjurstedt Mallory med fading from the picture sz a coniender for major tennis hbnore the veicran Norsewoman has come back spotlight. with a smashing vie- well watered surface fo hold the bsil, | | might well be returned. | | One step in this direction bas been taken with the production of the new | | standard ball. But about 10 years 280, might well deserve the serious consid- | ARMOUR'S 65 TOPS Tommy Is Five Under Par in Setting Pace in Field of 170 Golfers. RY PAUL R. MICKELSON, Assoctated Press Eports Writer. topped the field with a spark- ling 65, five under par, as 170 golfers from the East and Middlewest moved into the second st: of battle for the Western open champion- ship loday. O troke behind the Scot was Ho ton Smith, the blonde Jopfin, Mo., sen- ation; two strokes to the rear of Smith were Gene Sarazen. dapper Italian from | Plushing, Long Island, and Dick Nel- | son, Indianapolis professional, who had 's, while Frank Walsh of Appleton, open champion: Henry Culci, Stratford, Conn.: Willard Hutchizon, | Glencoe, T11.; Bob MacDonald, Chicago, {and Leonard Schmutte of Lima, Ohi | were traiiing closely with par breaking | 69's. i | So closely bunched were the favorites that the only probability was that a |new champion was to be crowned at {the end of the 72 holes of medal plav. | Abe Espinosa @f Chicago, who won the crown last year, was exactly 10 strokes behind Armour and nothing but a | miracle of golf could bring him back | into the running. | { Great With Trans, Wizardy with the { Armour to turn in hi ng score | yesterdav. His aproaches were 50 dead- |1y that he was within one putt distan {on two-thirds of the greens. Six tim: | he one-putted for birdics, Mnd only once did he take one over par for a hole. | That was on the third. A par four hole, | where he misjudged the distance and | slipped his aproach over the green. Ho | required 33 strokes going ouf, and. @ | spite a thunder shower that halted hi | drives, came home with a 32. Smith, gunning for his first golfing | crown since the Prench open, went out {in 33 and cams home with the same {total on_his glittering round. His far- | flung drives. streaking down the center of the fairways, placed him within casy position for his pitches, and he #p- peared to be back on his game. The | Joplin professional attracted the largest { gallery of the opening 18-Lole qualif; g round. | “Scores of 80 or better were gond enough to land in today's flight. While | tournament, rules provide that the low {150 and ties can enter the second round. { there were 149 under 78 and 21 tied for | last place with 80’s so they all crept in. After today’s fiight. the Jow 64 and ties will remain. They will battle over 36 more holes tomorrow for the title. frons enabled it INWESTERN OPEN JLWAUKEE, Wis,, August 2: Tommy Armour, erstwhile | holder of the national open tile Straight Off Tee ‘The Ozaukee Country Club course at | Milwaukee, where Tommy Armour took the lead in the Wesiern open cham- | plonship yesterday, is one that lends | | itself readily to low scoring if the fal | ways are fast, according to J. Munro | | Hunter, go at Indian Spring, who has | piayed the course frequently. | Ozaukee is within a short distance of the club where Hunter held down | the professional berth for several years, | and he is familiar with all the tricks of the layout over which the cham. i plonship is being' playes | | Nevertheless, Hunter said, Armour" |65 was a great round of golf. He pre- | dicts a low score will win the title. ‘The Western Maryland champion. ship, under way today, found a few { Washington golfers playing in the tour- | | nament over the course at Deer Park.| |Among them are Charles H. Ruth, | Frank T. Fuller, C. E. Maybury, Charles | W. Hauser and Gene Clayburg. o Some of the pros are beginning to | wax a bit cagy about the partners they | will select in the amateur-professicnal tournament at Manor next Monday. | Viewing the narrow fairways of the first | nine, and knowing that they ere not | alws trajght. enough to keep out of | the woods which guard the edges of the | fairways, they are going about the | | task of choosing partners with a weather | eye open for the amateurs who usuaily are straight. With the course in its present fast. condition, the long hitters | (are apt to get In a peck of trouble if | their lengthy wallope slide off the fair- | way. | For example: J. Munro Hynter and | George Diffenbangh plaved the eourse SPORTS. the other day. For 17 holes Hunter was 3 under 4z, but he did not hole out on the first hole, where his tee shot went, across the fairway into a ditch beyond. Little George had a card of 71, even though he took a 6 on the first hole, where a fast fairway and a down slope combine to make the tee shot excep- tionally hard. The golfing gent who keeps them straight will win the tour- nament next Monday. And he does not have to be so long either. The fair- ways are fast enough to make a moder- ately well hit ball look like one of bet- ter than average length, STADIA TELL GROWTH " OF DIXIE FOOT BALL| Dr. Wilbur C. Smith, athletic direc- tor of Tulane University, believes the growth of foot ball in the South can best, be gauged by the ever-increasing | oWn speedy drive stood him in good | Manuel del Rosario from Carne amount of stadia building. Of the 23 institutions in the South- e Conference, 12 of ready have constructed fine foot ball plants or have granted building con- | tracts for such structures. Before the war not a college in the South was prepared to seat more than 10,000 or 12,000 fans and only three or four could handle crowds of that size. ‘Today 8 or 10 can seat crowds of 30.000 while several others can handle crowds of 20,000 and upward. Others are prepared to seat from 5.0'00 up to 12,000, Dr. Smith pginted out. BLUES NEAR PENNANT. Dutch Zwilling i piloting the Kansas City Blues to a pennant unless all dope miseos . |CONSIDINE OPPOSING | | CHAMPION RACKETER | | BUFFALO, N. Y., August 23.—Robert | Considine, Washington’s lone hope for | | taking the national public parks single | title to the Capital, was to face the ‘crucial test of the tournament today when he met George Jennings of Chi-, cego; defending champion, in the semi- | final round. | Considine downed Harold Bartel, | Cleveland champlon, in a grueling fight, 2—6, 6—3, 7—5, 6--3, on the Delaware | Park courts here yesterday. The lanky Washington star could not cope with Martel's swift pacing in the opening set, | | but found his stride in the second, and | by dint of careful playing and the em- | | ployment of all the court strategy at, | his’ command, turned the tabies to win | {that and the next two. Considine’s} | stead once he had learned to control | the Ohioan’s fast ball, but his winning | | ponent hiking. i Jennings was picked to win today's | encounter in the upper bracket. while | Jack Delara, Los Angeles southpaw, | slated to battle with Jack G. Castle of | Buffalo, was the favorite in his half. | The survivors of today's matches will meet tomorrow afternoon in the title match. | |~ Doubles play gave way to the singles yesterday, only one match being sched- | | uled. Maurice O'Neil and George Shoe- | maker, Washington's _representatives, | | staged a gallant but losing battle in | this, bowing to the former title team. | Leo Lejeck and 1. Charles of Chicago, 6-4, 8—1. 11—13, 7—5. ‘The locals. after dropping the first two sets, came from behind & 3—-1 handicap in the third to capture it and stood within ‘:;me at 5—4 of having the fourth al ut were checked here by the winners successful rally. The victors took tl place in the semi-finals. Considine and Jennings, doubles pair, did not get into a yesterday. FILIPINO TENNIS LIST WILL CLOSE TONIGHT Entries to the seventh annial Filipinn tennis championship of the District, which staris tomorrow at 3 o'clock en the Monument courts, must be in the hands of the committee, composed of F. M. Silva, C. Carballo and M. G. ora, at 1915 Eve street befors 7 o'ciock tonight. Entrics for the doubles will cloge Sat- urday night. Among _the EMolla Mallory Shows Her Great F ighting Qualities in Beating Betty Nuthall famed entran are Tni- versity, Mariano Erana from Philadel- phia, A. Tomelden, runner-up in 1 the number al- | shot was a chop drop that kept his op- | Joe Orozco, M. G. Zamora and F. M. Silva. Auto Bodie Radiators, Fenders Repaired: alsa New Radiatars Harrison Radiators and Cores in Efnck Wittstatts, 1809 14t North 7177 Al 3 1 TROUSERS To Match Your Odd Coats EISEMAN'S, 7th & F S S T S IS And now there are over 60 TAUBMAN STORES! TRAV-LER Portable i RADIO 33 7.50 N Pittsburgh, the other day, TAUBMAN’S achieved the great- est accomplishment of any retail organizaticn in the country, the opening of TEN STORES at ONE TIME. That makes over uccessful, because human nature is the same everywhere. We all like to save money—and people everywhere will patronize those stores where there’s “more power to your dollar!” Time Payments Other low scores in the first qualify- | ing flight were Jim Carberry, Har { Hampton. Jock Hutchison, aii of Chi- eago, who had 70's: George Sargent of Columbus, Ohio: Johnny Fisher, Cin- cinnaty; “Wild Bill’ Mehihorn, New | York: Bobby Cruickshank, New York Alter Murray, Gary, Ind. and Harlev Denny of Green Bar, Wiz, who had 71's. Pisher led the more than 100 | amateurs wha sought the erown, 'MICHIGAN IS AIMING | " T0 DEFEAT HARVARD Br the Assontated Press. H | Fifteen years is a long time to wait, | | rspecially #0 when it's a little mat- | ter of avenging a foot ball defeat But University of Michigan fans | have been waiting patiently over that span of seasons for a Maize and Blue | | gridiron team to get another crack at | a Johnny Harvard eleven. It'll come | to pass this Pall when the once chesty | | Crimson invades picturesque old Ann | Arbor to do battle with Harry Kipke's | Wolverines. The date ix November 9. | 'Back in the Fall of 1914 Michigan clashed with & sirong Harvard outfit | |at Cambridge. The Crimson boasted | such twinklers as_ Eddie Mahan, | | “Tacks” Hardwick. Pennnck, Bradiee | and others. Michigan had Manibetsch, | Hughitt, Raynsford and Splawn as outstanding_stars. { | The Wolverines weren't conceded | | much of a chance, but rather startled | | the Easterners by holding Harvard to |8 7 to 0 victory. The star of that fra- cas was not Mahan, Bradlee or Hard- wick. On the contrary. it was stocky | Johnny Maulbetsch, Michigan's sopho- | more halfb Twic Michigan marched almost the length of the fie'd | with Mau carting the leather on | threey out.of every four” downs. WEYERS, A fi batteries. aerial, ube set, complete with Joud speaker. and:loop It. ean be rarried any- 1ggage ivpe. L Yol xtend re and ix the ideal radio for . ete. case included with ev: Tubes priced evtra, Carrving sixty in all—and every one BATTERY 6-8 volt; ber. unbreakable. leakable case. your old battery. 13-Plate 11.Plate Guaranteed TRESH STOCK. Fach battery tesied for full strength. Electric Toaster Makes crisp, brown toast quick. Fully nickel plated, with long lasting heat unit. in hard rub- . non- Guaran- teed for one vear. 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N T N N N N Cords v N N\ o imore Inner Tubes N L torr over Betty Nuthall, 6-3, in|__perhaps a little more—greens com- | the quarfer finals of the national wom- | mittees began fo tighten up golf courses | en’s championship. -5 | by bringing the bunkers in a little | It mey be thst the familiar surround- | closer around the greens. On the heels | $ served as an inspiration to call |of this development came the practice orth some of the super tennis that|of keeping the greens well watered, for NidE PR — WARE marked her hevday. However, Mrs. ' Mallory was given something less than | ene chance in a hundred to stop Hz!eni Wills, whom she meets in the semi- | finals loday. The champion has lost | only two games in‘ four matches, hav- | ing smothered Mrs. Peggy Michell of England yvesterday, 6—0, 6—1. In view of the wonder tennis which the champion has been producing, in fact. the odds were something like 50 to 1 against Mrs. Mallory's chances of taking a set from the young Cailfornia marvel, | ! _Tn the other semi-final tpday Helen | Jacobs, America’s second ranking star, fared one of the hardest tests of her career, as her npponent was to be M ! Phoebe Watson, the slender, darl haired Englishwomap who defeated her in the Wightman Cup play last week. « Although easily able to defeat Mary Greef, the Kansaz City youngster, yes- terday, Miss Jacobs has been somewhat below par all through the present tour- .2 strained ligament in her back set tq, Fdith Cross of San Fran. isco, and was forced to work like & Trojan to pull out the .match, but, in general, ner play has been sound and her driving as crizp and accurate as any Miss Jacobs has uncovered this season. In the doubles only one Amg combination remains, that of Mrs.’Anna Harper and Miss Cross, Tunners-up last vear. Mrs. Watson and Mrs., Peggy Saunders Michell form one of the strong British .combinations which are threatening to bring about an all-Eng- lish final, and Mrs, Phyllig Covell and Mrs. Dorothy Shepherd-Batron e other. The Anglo-American team of Helen Jacobs and Betty Nuthall holds the foyrth-semi-final berth, and faced Mrs. Waison and Mrs. Michell, the Eng- lish ehampions, today, while Mrs. o per and Miss Cross opposed the second British pair. e L LAl HEAD OF A. A. F. TO VIEW, SITE FOR 1932 QLYMPICS NEW VORK August 23 (P)--J. Sig- fvid Bdctrom cof Swi , president cf Internetional ~Amal Athletic ration has arrived in New York en business Seute to Jhpan on & . tuE Dup ¥ | THE EXPERT TOGHIENS Wis| HIS ARMS 2 80DY - HENCE. | HENCE THE! THE SLICE. |« the yelps that arose when a well hit| ball bounded merrily over the putfing Net Title Threats BY SOL METZGER. Al an open championship you'll see more hooks than slices. At your club champlonships and tournaments you'll see more slices than hooks. Average ‘golfers usually slice. Good pro golfers, when off, usually hook. it is an odd game. The average player taking it up struggles for some years with a slice. When he ins to improve he begins to hook. en he's in bad shape for a season or ti A week of practice now and then w] in this stage, instead of a dajly round, wo\'u:o eliminate the trouble in"a month or two. the best players. . Which is rather good that they are best players be. cause they practice. The reason for the development from WISCONSIN TO ENGAGE COLGATE ON GRIDIRON MADISON, Wis., August 23 (P).— Wisconsin will engage in Easten col- lege foot ball for the second time in. its history October 5, when it en- tertains - Colgate at Camp Randall WILLIAM T. TILDEN. BY TED VOSBURGH, 7 “Associated Press Sports Writer. 'OW that the French have “soft- | ‘ened up,” Bill Tilden, the 36- year-old ex-champion will be called “upon to meet a determined chal-: 1550 "mationa] sinples ouroa: na Forest. mm'.mfug Island, ‘With ‘The last battle against an 3 -mmwhxmm&‘lflu, Coste not in the and resulteld in a 6-to-0 Eli victory." certain to be close to an even choice | nst the field in the classic | :n':’mmmt he times in l | il stecs Fodin-e MAKES HOLE IN ONE. MONTREAL, August 28.—Leg Den- durand, managing divector. of the Cana- i oessts But none will practice except | i A R control ensbborn heis snd keep bed all day; also hel; hair. \\ SORLAY sives appearance whick Loty Clearance SALKE While They Lese? Here’s mileage you can buy for the freight voud pay on “orphan” mail order tires. New-car change- overs, slightly used and old tires traded in on Gen- erale. All well knownhrandsand backed by our FREE PROTEC- “TION. . Select early? 13th & I Sts. 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