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Five Golf Tourneys Are Slated Today : Tilden Calls Self Set-Up in Practice: VARETY OFFERE DSTRCT COLFERS Woodmont Men and Women at Richmond for Matches With Lakeside. BY WALTER R. McCALLUM. OLF tournaments are sched- | uled at five local clubs to- day as the season for in- tra-club events pushes on | to its usual Summer lull and in-| vitation tournaments about the Capital fade into oblivion. Out at the Manor Club the semi-final round in the two-man team tournament | 1s scheduled for today. aithough one | match already has been completed in advance of the scheduled date, because two of the contestants were to be out | of the city today. In this match G. F. Wesley and Fred Rade defeated Ray F. Garrity, chairman of the golf commit- tee, and Dave Thomson, chairman of the greens committee, by a 5 and 3 margin. Other scheduled matches will bring together H. K. Bech and W. W. Dean and W. I Green and E. M. Mec- | Clelland | The golf team of the Woodmont Country Club is in Richmond today. | playing the team of the Lakeside Coun- | try Club in two matches, one for wom- en and one for men. The Woodmont team is composed of the strongest play- ers of the club, chosen by the elimina- tien system, and is accompanied by Jo- seph D. Kaufman. president of the club, and Arthur B. Thorn. the club profes- | slonal. These intercity affairs between Woodmont and Lakeside always take on the appearance of gala tournaments, with considerable formality attending | the match between the presidents of the respective clubs. Last year the two presidénts started out with a quartet of caddies and a tall dark man with a water pitcher and ice to cool the brows | of the contestants. History does not | record the finish of $he match, or the | scores, but Kautman said the contest did not end in the cry of “Foul.” T Landover, Md., where the lengthy | fairways of the Beaver Dam Coun- | try Club stretch into seeming in- | finity, the members of the club are to | play today in a flag tournament, while | over at Bannockburn, where the hills slope down to the wiver. the membe are to play in a -tourney billed Chsirman Byrne of the club golf com- mittee as the “Fairway Bandicap.” The | event is divided into three classes, ac- cording to_handicaps, and entries are | to close at 2 o'clock this afternoon. | Over at Argyle, just a stone’s throw | from the classic precincts of Indian Soring. senior members of the Argyle | Club are to compete for the club senior | chempionship at 18 holes medal play. | The event is open only.to members 50 | ars of age and over. ’!snmem‘u'u between 60 and 75 public | links players are expected to play in the | qualification trials over the two big | public courses June 30 and July 1 to choose the four-man teams to repre- sent Washington in the national public links championship at Jacksonville, Fla.. August 5-9. inclusive. James D. Preston, tative of the Unit:d States Golf Association in public links matters in Washington. =:nt 20 entry blanks each to Rock Creek and East Potomac Park and reports that East Potomac Park already has asked for more, while*ths Rock Creek quota has been filled. ‘The entrants are to play 72 holes | over the two days scheduled, at East Potomac and Rock™ Creek parks. The 10 lowest scorers over the 36-hole route | eelch course on June 30 will play 18 holes on the morning of July 1 at East Potomac and in the afternoon will go to Rock Creek for the final 18 holes. The first four players will make the | team r:gardless of where they are from Originally it was intended to play the final of the qualifications rounds on one of the private courses. but the public links entrants protested against this, claiming that inasmuch as the tourney is a public links event, it should be played on the public courses. In Baltimore the sectional tests are to be Tun off over the famous Five Farms layout of the Baltimore Country Club, and in other cities private courses are being' us2d for the qualifying tests. Expenses of the team players are to be aided by raffing off several sets of golf clubs, at a small amount 'per chance, from which it is hoped to raise sufficient money to pay the expenses of the four men to Jacksonville. A total of $460 must be raised, or $115 | per man. | OMAN golfers of the city will| V¥V gather tomorrow morning at the ¥ first tee of the Woodmont Coun- try Club, where the Women's District Golf Association is o stage a miniature tournament,. starting at 9 o'clock. Some of ‘the local professionals will | Journey over to the Rodgers Forge Club of Baltimore, where a junior amateur- | Ri?é'“’”" best ball ‘match will be NUMBER of Washington's lead- | ing woman golfers are expected to compete in the one-day tourney to be staged on Tuesday at the Annapolis Roads Gdlf Club. NTRIES for the Sherwood Forest in- vitation event close with the golf committee, at 411 North Charles street. Baitimore, on July 9. The tour- ney will start on July I1 and will end | on July 13. with six flights to qualify for the match play rounds N exhibition match is listed today at the Manor Club, with Harry G. Pitt, the long-hitting Manor ama- teur, paired with Al Treder. the club pro. -against two Washington profes- | sionals. OMMY BONES and John Owens of Columbia. two of the best of the frowing brigade of good goifers at the Chevy Chase Club, are to re- new their feud todav at Washington with two of the Washington club’s lead- ing_youngsters : They are to play against Henry D.| Nicholson, the Washington club cham- plon, and' Tommy Webb, former West- ern High School foot ball star, in a four-ball match this afternoon. in the a series of matches to carry ruggle they engaged in last | They ended all even in their series last year, and will play several matches at Columbia and Washingion. | MID-ATLANTIC TENNIS TITLE GOES TO HINES CHARLOTTE, N. C, June 21 (#)— ‘Wilmer Hines added another tennis champienship to his string today when he defeated Gus Feuer, Miami, in the singles final of the Midatlan- tic title meet. The scores were 6—2, 6—1, 6—0. Jimmy Halverstadt. Atlanta, defeated & fellow Atlantan, Judge Beaver, in the Junior singles final, 6—2, 6—3. M'CARTHY KEEPS TITLE IN METROPOLITAN GOLF ST! ALBANS, N. Y., June 21 (), — m i e wn_ star, successfuily defen: his m!&ml:hn amateur golf cham- jonshij y. trouncing Pennington iller-Jones, & clubmate at Green Meadow, 9 and 7 in the 36-hole final mateh. MecCarthy led § up at the end of the morning 18. | sure to knock it straight, Perry, | who ever heard of a balt former | | KNnow 1T CAame JuST ABOUT IN HERE — HELLO wHEREe' A BALL ANYWAY - WoNDER wHE'S-? * AN~ HERE ' TIS — No ASN T EITHER. WELL LLL VSE T ANY WAY STRAIGHT OFF THE TEE BY W. R. McCALLUM cannot obtain big distance from the tee when the ground is soft and mushy. Yesterday at Washington V. Calvert Dickey, known as “the man without s slice,” negotiated the tortu- ous Washington layout in 74 strokes, getting enough distance from the tee to HESE days of fast courses are good for the short hitters who Congressional Clarence B. Murphy, & man who claims no great distance from the tee, shot the Céngressional course in 72 strokes, which is by way of being one bettér than par. Fast fairways and slow utting greens spell low scores for the shorter hitters, | and sometimes mean disaster for the big hitters whose lznr.hy tee shots bounce into bad spots if a little off the line. Both Dickey and Murphy are un- usually good putters. 'OURSE SUPERVISOR O. P. FITTS is drawing up for presentation to the Columbia greens committee an estimate on the cost of installing a {airway watéring system, and it may be that sometime this year Columbia will install such a system, using the watering cart method, with water piped from conduits paralleling the fairways. No cours t the Capital today has & fairway whtering system, although | such systems are fairly common in Cali- fornia and in the Middle West. ARNER MATHER, pro at the ‘Woodholme Country Club of Baiti- | more will pair with Glenn 8. Spencer of the Maryland Count Club in an exhibition match at Woodhgime, June 28, against Leo Diegel, professional | match 'play champion and Horton | Smith, golf luminary from Joplin, Mo. i 'HE early bird sometimes misses the | worm, and the best golfer doesn't | always get the hole in one, or so | Burton P. Miller told his brother Perry, | as he laughingly related to Perry just how he lcmmg\hhed the hole in on | he made the other day at East Potomac | Park. Burton is a year or two the | Junior of Perry, and the older lad | usually trounces his brother in their frequent rounds of the golf courses, but Burton slipped it over on Perry when he holed his tee shot on the 183-yard second hole of course F. “You see, Perry, you've got to hold your club this way, and play the ball with an overspin.” Burten said. “Be for jumping out of a bunker into the hole. And sure that it is rolling slowly as it goes into the cup.” And all the while Perry gnashed his teeth as his younger brother gloated over his accomplishment. 'OR many years the extra hole record for 18-hole matches about Wash- ington has stood at eighth extra holes, needed In 1921 te decide a semi- final match in the Columbla tourney between Allan Lard, old-time Chevy | Chase star, and Silas M. Newton of Richmond. Newton won the match on the eighth extra hole. Last week in the Metropolitan ami and Golf Stroke Flat Are BY SOL METZGER. J. Parmley Paret, keen student of tennis and author of several official books on its science, claims that there i+ much in common between the tennis and golf astrokes. He states that the eireular swing that experts in emch use to stroke the ball is s0 made that when contact with ball occurs the racket in ten- nis and the clubhead in golf travel through a flat arc. This flat arc, he argues, is brought 16 THERE. A FLAT ARG TOGOLF SWING 7 B . | ey S ] | about because the player moves for- ward when sf . Many ,uod fl:lf instructors claim this heory that the well played fuxr shot must be so exactly timed hat the face of one's club makes | contect with the ball only at that | moment when it is at right angles to the direction line. Do those sand traps worry P If so, maybe 8ol l(cl:cr'u new m- lst on “The Explosion Shot” will {ml.p you, mfie for it in u&e paper o self-ad- A envelope, Wmu 1930 have a chance at a birdie on most | of the holes, and just the other day at ' | _GUESS You Picked UP MY BALL- WHAT 1S T A covoneEL T YeP THAT'S MInNE - t JUST SLiceD (T OFE Tue (6TW Teem THANKS — S SAY MISTER THAT'S OUR BALL- - weE JusT DROVE 1T OFFEN The Tee = YUP TwmaTS IT CorvoneL 3 S 3 ’ @9 wipnowme i L‘M " teur championship on Long Island two | of the contestants went nine ext les | before they. could break their deadlock | They were Joe McGough of Brookville | and Cornelius Lee of Tuxedo, son of the | former secretary of the United States | Golf Association. McGough won on the | twenty-seventh. | | R. McCALLUM shot a gross 67 to win first prize in class A in the | Saturday tournament played ves- terday at the Washington Golf and Country Club. The tourney was one in which the three worst holes on the card were supplanted with pars. MeCallum played the second, third and eleventh in 8, 6, 5, and when these scores were | nguud Wwith pars, his card read 67.| His 2ctual score for the round was 73. | In second place in class A was Ward | B. McCarthy, who had 78—12—86. A tie resulted for third place between Ralph 8. Fowler. 71—4—867, and P. 8. Black, with 78—11—67. The class B prize, for men with| handicaps of 15 and more, was won by G. C. Roney."who acored 78—18—60, by the aid of the three pars allowed him on his bad holes. L. L. Olivef had | 78—13—65 to win second place, and third place went to L. C. Garnett, vice president of the club, who had 80—14—66. MONRO HUNTER, the big hitter | « of Indian Spring, s in & bad way. He can't seem o score bstter or worse than 70 strokes for the par 17 course of the club. Yesterday in & match with George Diffenbaugh, Dr. E. R. Tilley and J. W. Harvey he scored his third consecutive 70. He made a 70 last Sunday and had an- other 70 during the past week. We wonder how many golfers would be | willing to take 70 and let it go at that. | Hunter is playing fine golf right now, | with his usual lengthy tee shots boom- | {ing down the middle of the fairways, {and his putting going rather well. VET BUREAU LINKS’ I VICTORS REWARDED Gen. Frank T. Hines, director of the | Veterans' Bureau, presented prizes w; the winners in the recent bureau tour- | ney at a dinner held at the Bannock- | | burn Golf Club last week. Leo F. Pass | | of Bannockburn won the tourney and /also won a blind bogey competition | staged at Bannockburn for Veterans’ Bureau golfers. Here are the prize winners and their prizes | . Championship fight (men) | judication service. win C. Deike. adj (welfare prize) Championship flight (wos fon Shiley, fnanee service. winner ‘ng_ prize) ‘Annald Eindor service. runner-up (welfare prize) Men's fight No. 3 | vice. winner (Clark prize) hal | adjudication service, runner-up | ) rl A8t No. 3—cart Brown. American | Legion, winner (Cutter prize): James T | Brady.’ Liigation division, 1unner-up (wel: faxe rize) Men's flight No. ¢—B. D. Durst. legal serv- . winner (Smith prize): Cabt Waison - American Legion, runner-up (welfare 3 Men's fight No. 5—J. O'C. Raberts, »ssist- ant_general counsel, winner (Adams prize): $urS pHydrick. lesal service, runner-up (wel- a1e prize: n's_Mlight No. 6-—J. M. McGraw. Vet- Bureau section. 'general accounting * yinner, (Trigp Drize): Thomas B, Al- , Construction” division. runner-up (wel: 30 | The result of the bogey tournament tollows: G. E McPeely (hizh scare). 7483130, 78 Ne J. Rose. Ne.'1 Dl ford, 1103971 . Leo 140 U R A Women—Mary 8. Maddox, 1516091 REID MEETSijENNINGS IN OHIO TENNIS FINAL | | CLEVELAND. June 21 0P —Kirk |Reid of Cleveland, and George Jen- | nings of Chicago, will meet here to- | morrow in the final round of the Ohio | | State tennis singles tournament. | Reld, secking his sixth State title, | entered the finals today by defeating | 5—1, Ed Burns of New York, 4—8, 16—0, 6—4, 6—1, while Jennings wen( |into the decisive round b'v | default in the fourth set fro | low Chicogoan, Gordon Braudt. had won the first set, 7—S5, nings took the next two, 6—2, 6—32. Braudt conceded the match in the fourth set at 2—2. |KOZELUH BEATS GERMAN FOR WORLD NET HONORS AUTEUIL, France, June 21 (#)— | Karel Kozeluh of Czechoslovakia de- feated Roland Hajueh, German pro- fessional, in straight sets today in a mateh billed here as for the world's professional championship. The scores | were 6—2, 6—3, 3 Hajuch gave Koseluh, who was rec- ognized as the champion after defeat. ing Vincent Richards in a mateh In the United States, a much harder battle than the scores indicate. A majority of the mn’.mt to deucs ’u;;ul times. games lasted urs and 20 minutes ' YOU FIND EVERYBODY ELSE’S BUT YOUR OWN. WELL -WELL HERE'S ANOTHER - BUT T ISN'T M . THERE'S ANOTHER BUT (T PRrRoBABLY ISN'T MINE-. SomeE= BobDY 'LL CLAM T T <R BRIGGS DID You JusT Find Tmat BALL? & LosT IT N HERE LAST WEEK= MY NAME 1S 6N IT- DROVE oFw Tue 15T FAaRWAY. sMyem BLIGED / Rise (;f Voigt in BY. WALTER R. MeCALLUM. MONG the amazing phenomena A over the bunker-infested land where persons who call them- bounce clubs of steel through ylelding grass, is the change In the status of pair man in the Treasury Department and today almost universally ranked as in_the world. Two facts stand out today with re haired chap who might today be the amateur champion of the United States things happened. These are that the United States Golf Assoclation, which | toward Voigt, now has taken him into its arms and established him not alone but one of the most popular club swingers. ‘We learn from newspaper men and | from golfers generally around New York his wares, that the erstwhile public links star of Washington today is re- out squawking. The world loves a win- ner and fighter, and George is both. that Voigt today is one of the most popular and respected golfers on both deared himself to all his mates on the ‘Walker Cup team and is particularly a It and uncomplaining manner won | a host of friends. In Scotland he the crossing of the Atlantic, Voigt was | one of the most popular of the mem- | | that no gathering was complete with | out him, ‘that no group pictures were ing bunch could be arranged without George's crooning temor. And in sing- that arise from time to time selves ‘golfers dig husky divots and George J. Voigt, once a typewriter Te- orte of the first four amateur golfers spect to the smooth-swinging, dark- and Great Britain had not one or two | for four years turned the frigid shoulder | as one of the finest golfers in the world, Has Universal Respect. and other cities where Voigt has shown garded as a man who has suffered with- ‘We have it on the best of lulhorilyi sides of the Atlantic; that he has en-! | favorite in Scotland, where his sound | roomed with Franeis Ouimet, and on | | bers of the team. Our authority says taken without George, and that no sing: eorge is not so far from Rudy | | ng, Despite Handicaps, Is Amazing | within | United States Golf Association failed | Golf World, Vallee, either, for he has a really good tenor k And we have it restated by the same authority that the golf solons of Wash- | ington are regarded with a good deal | of animosity by well-wishers of Voigt for their attitude toward him. ‘What & contrast it must be for Voigt as he views in memory those days around Washington from 1924 to 1928, | Coming Here Soon. | All golfers know how Voigt came e of winning the United States amateur champlanship at @ebble | Beach last Fall when Jimmie Johnston, the present champlon, went o the thirty-ninth hole to beat him in the semi-final and how he had the great | Jones almost put away to later flop and lose out. And when they consider the humple beginnings of this same George Voigl they must recall the hullabaloo | that came up in 1927 when the District Golf Assoclation declared him not eligible to play in the District amateur | champlonship because he had acted | “in a manner detrimental to the best | interests” of the game. They also recall how an_independent inquiry by the to substantiate similar charges by the parent golf body against the Washing- ton lad and how Volgt, after a winning | Winter in the South, shook the dust of | Washington from his shoes to make his home In New York. They remember how Voigt won every major tournament about Washington | over a three-year stretch, how he came from the public links, later joined the Bannockburn Club and how he was the kingpin of the amateurs about the Capital for so long that it looked as if no one could beat him. His rise from a humbie post in the | Government service in 1925 to a good | income in New York and a recognized great golfer is one of the epics of the game. But even more remarkable is his social ' rise and the attitude of golfers outside of Washington toward him. The phenomena is interesting, to' say the least. of Voigt will be in Washington shortly to play in an exhibition match for the benefit of Bobby McWatt. Bobby Jones Will Get Hero Salute in Gotham NEW YORK, June 21 (CP.A).— Bobby Jones, the golfing Alexander the Great, will get an elaborate wel- come home when he arrives on the liner Eurcpa at noon on July 2. He will be landed al the Battery and escorted up Broadway to the City Hall, where Mayor Walker is to re- celve him. e Present plans for the reception in- volve a fireboat saiute in the harbor, an artillery sslute at the Battery and & march up Broadway in step with band music. The citizens of Atlanta have appointed Maj. John 8. Cohen chairman of the committee which is to come here July 1 to take part in the local celebration | SPICER WINS TITLE IN DIXIE AMATEUR By the Associated Pr GREENSBORO, C., June 21— | Emmett Spicer, Memphis sharpshooter, | took the measure of Tully Blair, Sedge- fleld flash, 5 and 4, here today to win t:‘e Southern amateur golf champion- ship. The Blonde Carolinian, who generally shoots in the low 70s, lost five of the first six holes and rounded the turn 5 down. Making the last turn 4 down, Blair| won the twenty-eighth hole with a | birdie 3 and the eleventh with a par 4 to become only 2 down. On the twelfth the Sedgefield con- tender sliced his tee shot and landed in a trap to the side of the green. He made & poor. recovery, landing just on the edge of the carpet, while Spicer | was just a few feet from the cup with | his second shot, and Blair conceded him the hole. Blair's tee shot on the next hole w lost if he was forced to drive another. | He played the second ball perfectly, | but the stroke of penalty proved costly, | as Spicer was down in par 4 to win| and go ¢ up again. Teton/ s g RS | GLENNA COLLETT'S 79 TAKES GOLF TOURNEY PITTSBURGH, June 21 (#).—An 18-hole score of 79 today gave Miss Glenna Collett of Providence, R. I, national woman’s golf champion, the annual invitation tournament of the Allegheny County elub here, Miss Collett scored a 160 for the two days play to defeat Miss Louise Fordyce, Youngstown, Ohio, by three strokes. Mrs. E. Lenthan, Cleveland, who set the pace yesterday with an 80, fell off her game today, taking an 87 for a two-day total of 167 for third place. SHIELDS BEATS MERCER IN DELAWARE TOURNEY WILMINGTON, Del, June 21 () .— Prank Shields, 20-year-ol tennis play- er of Scarsdale, N. Y., stroked his way to a victory over Fritz Mercur, sixth national ranking netman. and won the Delaware State turf court champlon- ship, 6—1, 6—2, 11—9. Mercur and J. Gllbert Hall, South Orange, N. J, won the doubles, defeat- ing Dolf Muehleisen and Robert Muench, University of California, 6—3, , 78, LAKEVIEW NET TEAM ADDS TO LOOP LEAD Lakeview racketers, leadin, the Suburban Tennis League rhlmr lonship race, continued on their winning yesterday, defeating the Argyle netme: 5 to 2, on the Argyle courts. As & re- sult Argyle slipped from second to third place in the pennant parade as Stand- ards, defending champions, came through with a 5-to-1 victory over Wes- ley Heights, on the latter's courts. Yesterday's summaries: Lakeview. 'S Arevie. | Th 2. SINGLES—8tam defeated Thurtell. = omas (L) defeated s (A.) defeated Brown and and M. May (L Satanaatas. 5 Wesley Helghts. 1 N (8. defeated Ladd, §—3. P 8—Judd and Holt (8) defeated e Baminater 61, 6—1: Cra- ‘l nd L. . i, ;" Gedfrey and Stewsrt !’é_f?"&umu Garnett and Lathrop, 6—4, Toam Standing 2 5 1 18 TARIS 18 OLYMPIC BET. By the Associated Press. Jean Taris. 19 years old, who recently swam the 880 yards a fifth of second under the world's record, is coi sidered in s a very serious threat in aquatic events for ‘the 1033 Olympics at Los Angeles, akeview itandards ey . Wesley Heights |D. C. TENNIS TOURNEY ENTRY LIST IS OPEN Entry blanks for the annual men's District of Columbia champ'onship ten- | nis tournament, which will get under | way Priday, July 4, on the Edgemoor Club courts at Bethesda, Md. will be out this week. Entries will close July 2 at 6 pm. with Joe Rutley, chairman of the ten- nis committee, at the Edgemoor Club. !The drawings are scheduled the same evening. Any amateur may enter the tourna- ment, which for years has been the blue ribbon net event from a Washing. ton standpoint. Last year's champions are expected to defend their laurels. They are the vet- and in the doubles. Members of the tournament commit- tee besides Rutley are Colin Stam, Clarence Dawson, Bob Newby, Winfree Johnson, A. O. White, Owen Howen- stein, Comdr. C. C. Gill, the Navy: Maj. R. C. ., vepre- Capt. A. J. referee, re will be the official |MIDGET GOLF TOURNEY ! TO OPEN TOMORROW Starting tomorrow the “pony” minia- ture golf club at Colorado avenue and Longfellow street will hold a tourna- Tent that is expected to prove attrac- ve, The four low scores each day will play the following day in sequ:nce until five winners are determined. These five winners will clash Sunday for a money prize. There will be no additional charge for entering the tournament. Any par- utlrn\ can play as many rounds as he des! MRS. HAYNES IN FINAL OF GOLF TOURNAMENT BALTIMORE, Md., June 21.—The best in Washington and Baltimore golf will compete on the Gibson Island links | tomorrow for the woman's title. Mrs. James M. Haynes of the Colum- | bia Country Club and Mrs. W. Pairfield | Peterson of the Green Spring Valley Cl?h ‘}'fll meet. n the semi-finals today Mrs. Haynes, the medalist in the tournament. slime |inated Mrs. Jerome Slomen, 4 and 2. Mrs. Haynes led all the way, and she was 3 up at the turn. She outplayed the Baltimore golfer in every depart- | ment of the game, but she was not as brilliant as she was early in the week. 'SELIGSON NET WINNER IN A 5-SET MATCH By the Associated Press, NEW YORK, June 21.—Julius Selig~ son of Lehigh added the Eastern inter- collegiate tennis championship to his metropolitan clay court title today by defeating Clifford Sutter of Tulane, the Southern collegiate ch‘m{‘ion. in three out of five hard fought sets. The score was 6—1, 6—3, 3—§, 0—6, 6—1. Seligson started out as if to make short work of the match, forcing his southern opponent into numerous errors to take the first two sets. Sutter ral- | lied, however, and with a sensational | exhibition of velleying and overhead smashes evened up the match by tak- ing the third and fourth sets. During the rally the southern champion scored 20 placements to eight by Seligson and |in the fourth set outscored the cham- | plon 25 points to 11. | . The Lehigh ace came back strong in | the deciding set, however, again forcing his opponent to numerous outs and nets. | The point score of the fifth set showed | that Seligson scored 31 points to Sut- | ter's 22, Sutter and Bayon won the doubles | title late in the afternoon by defeating | the California pair, Elbert Lewis and | Clifford Robbins, in the score of 10—8, 5—7, 6—Love, 6—2. YALE BEATS PRINCETON, 10 70 9, IN 11 INNINGS Jones and Britisher Win Four-Ball Match BIRMINGHAM, land, June 21 (#).—Paired with Dr. Willlam Tweddell, 1927 British amateur champion, Bobby Jones, who yester- day won the British open, defeated irl P"ldd":‘nflt (MGW'm'bfllllt‘: ln‘.ld e o a tfi:-uu match played for charity 'n{;wore was 3 and 2, with Jones and Tweddell having the best ball acore of 69 to their opponents’ 73, eran Clarence M. Charest in the singles | Bob Considine and Tom Mangan | Robe: senting the Army, and Walter Bachrach. | | Kids Study ‘Caddychism’ | To Learn Angles of Job | DALLAS, June 21 (®—Let a caddy sneeze on the greens of the | Texarkana Golf and Country Club | and the victim with the putter | knows immediately that a little more “caddychism" is needed. “Caddychism,” new in golf's lexi- con, describes a session that the club's secretary has once each week with the caddies. ‘There is more to the sessions than appears at first blush. Texarkana Club caddies not only must be is0 | know the little niceties that go to make the perfect club carrier prac- | tically invisible and non-existent. Illustrations go along with the weekly lessons and caddies are per- mitted to ask questions on obscure points. Because the caddies ‘are graded and paid accordingly, they are taking the buainess seriously and | pay close attention to the “caddy- chism.” I IN CHESS T. WHITAKER, captain of the Washington team in the recent London-Washington cable match, has received official notice of the decision of the arbitrators, Euwe and Wee- nick, both modern masters, who had the assistance of Moroczy, the veteran master, in their deliberations. In the communication President A. Rueh of the International Chess Fed- eration, in commenting on the victory awarded Mlotkowski of the Washington team over Winter of the London greup in the mateh in which the other three games were drawn, sa “As 1 am informed, the winning of | the Miotkowski-Winter game has been | constructed on general principles and | conclusions drawn from the position; the arbitrators continued the game, try- | ing innumerable and most various va-| riations, but no instant combinations being found, they refrained from mak- ing up an analytic statement.” 'HE Christian Science Monitor of June 17 says, in part: “It is & singular tribute to Whitaker that he has been able to arrange two cable maiches with London, in each case holding the strong London team, which | defeated Chicago and New York teams with comparative ease, on. even terms. His efforts have saved the Insull tro- phy for future competition.” et | 'HE City Club closed its doors at midnight of June 14, and the chess unit thereof moved to rooms 306-307, in the Edmonds Build- ing, 917 Pifteenth street northwest. The. club starts off with 29 members from the chess unit, with the promise | | that several former members of the old Capital City Chess Club will re- join it. The names of several of the strong_players of the District are m ing. Carl A. Hesse, who won the to | nament champlonship of the City Club | last Winter, is champion of the Capi- tal City Chess ib. The club also includes in its memberahip the District titleholder, F. B. Walker. | SAAC KASHDAN, champion of the Manhattan Chess Club, New York, | is spoken of in some papers as a coming champion. He recently de- feated Lajo Steiner in a set match, and followed it with the defeat of Charles Jaffe. who formerly stood very high. by the score of 3 to 0. Kashdan will play on the United States team at Hamburg in July. In the London-New York cable mateh in 1927 he drew with Winter, the player who lost to Miotkowski in the recent Washington- London match. In a teh on Memorial Manhattan Phila- | deiphia, won by nhattan, 15 to 5, | Kashdan won from Miotkowski, play- ing for Philadelphia, in & two-knights defense, in 29 moves. | REAT BRITAIN will be represented | in the international team tourna- ment July 13 to 27 next by Thomas, Yates, Mir Sultan Khan, Winter and Bwerger, all of whom, except Mir Khan, played in the recent match against Washington. | 'HE British Chess Federation will | hold its national congress at Scar- borough June 23 to July 7. One| hundred players are entered for the| events. Twelve will participate in the master invitation tournament, five of whom — Michell, Sergeant, Thomas, Winter and Yates — played against Washington in the London cable match, | A study of the games played in these | tournaments will enable the Washington | players to get a better insight of the | playing ability of the London players, rn ratory to the next London-Wash- ington cable match. FROM newspaper reports, it appears Dr. Alekhine has eonditionally ac- cepted the challenge of Capablanca for a return match for the world cham- plonship title, No details have been iven, except tha has until finance the match. If he blanca Ber #0, the match is to be played in | completed his round with a 3, | under par, | etrokes under the record for the courae, By FRANK B. WALKER————————— GOLF ACE IS MADE ON 248-YARD HOLE FREDERICKSBURG, Va,, June 21.— Abe Bean, crack golfer of this place, established whai might be a Virginia season's record for a hole-in-one so far as aistance is concerned when he made an ace on the 248-yard sixth at the Mannsfleld Hall Country Club. Nearly all the distance was made with the carry, the falrway and green hav- ing been softened by a hard rain the night before. Bean played with Charles Rollins, Washington, D. C., broker, and Chester B. -Goolrick, Fredericksburg newspaper man, Bean, who was second low amateur in the Virginia State open last year, two laying all the other holes in pars. gfiunt‘ he established a record for the local course by complet- ing it in 32, five under par, and two held jointly by Charles Isgacs, former State open champion. and Horton Smith, nationally known professional. CIRCLES take on Niemzowitsch, the winner of first prize in the celebrated Carlsbad tournament last year, and undoubtedly one of the foremost players of today. This match probably wouid be played in Cuba. Dr. Alekhine recently gave simul- taneous exhibitions in Germ: t Berlin he played against 35 players and won 21, drew 9, and lost 5, in seven hours, At Munich he also played against 35 players, won 26 games, drew 4, lost 3, In five hours. LAYERS fond of end games will find the ition below a profitable study, It is by Sam Loyd, though it is sald to have occurred in actual play, and given up as drawn. K QKt6 Rat QB4 Ktat QKtS5 P at Q Kt 7. Black. Q Kt, R at Q B 6. White to play and win. Solu- tion next week. WEENICK, one of the arbitrators in the London-Washington cable match, recently won first prize in & masters’ tournament at Amsterdam. Euwe came out second. The game below shows Weenick to be a brilliant player. Queen's pawn opening. 1 S ALLISON CAPTURES LONDON NET TITLE By the Associated Press LONDON. June 21.—Wilmer Alli- son, young Texan, defeated Gregory in of Newark, N. J., fellow mem- ber of the American Davis Cup squad, in the final round of the London lawn tennis championships at the Queens Club today. The scores were 6—4, 8—8. An all-American final for the doubles championship gave George Lott and John Doeg, also members of the Davis Cup squad, a four-set victory over thelr teammates, Wilmer Allison and John Van Ryn, by scores of 13—14, 6—3, 6—4. Allison and Van Ryn are the American cup doubles pair. he mixed doubles title went to J. C. | Gregory and Miss Elizabeth Ryan, who defeated George Lott and Miss Mary | Greef of Chicago and Kansas City, re- | spectively, 6—1, 6—1. HAGEN DECLARAES> JbNES INVINCIBLE TO PROS| VICTORIA, British Columbia, June | 21 (#).—Walter Hagen, who arrived here today from the Orlent and Australia said no professional golfer in the world has a chance against Bobby Jones in a four-day medal test, barring freak scores. Hagen acclaimed Jones as “the greatest golfer in the wérld,” and both he and Joe Kirkwood, who arrived on the Empress of Russia with him, ex- ressed pleasure at Jones' recent itish victory. ARMY’S GOLF TOURNEY SET FOR LEAVENWORTH BALTIMORE. Md., June 21 (#)— xuhmn will sot !ls; h. acene of . y's annual golf championship this year; it will be held in Leaven- worth, Kans., Se) ber 22-27, it was anfounced today at headquarters 3d Area, United States Army. A policy has ) sajd, whereby lace of ment will be ted between 21 P-RT 22 B-Kich 23 R-Raen x 38 Bi%een it was ‘| seem able to get en | | mi SAYS HE'S WORLD'S 1, WORST IN WORKOUT Best Players Have Varied | Methods of Preparing for Big Matches. BY WILLIAM T. TILDEN, 2D, IMBLEDON, England, June 21.—The approach | of Wimbledon, which is the climax of the Euro- gem tournament season, followed y the Davis Cup interzone final and challenge and the end of the great tennis events in the Amer- ican championship, finds all the |leading tennis stars working to point their game so it reaches its best at the right moment. Every player has a favorite way of practice, and in almost every case the way is different. You will find the stars working toward the same point by dif~ ferent roads, vet all reaching the be- ginning of ' the greal championship tuned to the second. There are some men who like all the tennis they can get up to the moment of actual start of competition. There are others who want A complete lay-off for several days be- fore a tournament siarts. You will find players who insist en playing actual match play as their ing. There are otliers who want no match play, but hours of stroke prac- tice instead. There are & few who be- lieve they need no practice at all. It s interesting to study the choice of these en. French Stars Contrast. Henri Oochet is a player who appears to want little or no match play, very little hard single corapetition in prepa- ration for a big event, but he prefers to come into the cli after several days Imost _lazy and indifferent stroke R‘cuca In marked contrast to him, ne Lacoste wants hours of intensive tennis up to the actuai moment of play. Lacoste will spend several hours a day during _the preceding period to the Davis Cup matches working on some one or two strokes. He does not want to actually play. He prefers to tune up the mechanics of his game. Jean Borotra usually spends his prac- tice periods of about hour a day for the week before the competition |begins in stroke practice, but on the day immediately preceding he will nlly several hard sets of singles. He . player of impulse more than mechanical perfection. Practice bores him, and is apt to make him stale. He is one of the |few players in the game who is apt to produce his best waen very short of | practice. Hunter a Worker. Frank Hunter is a player who is a bhard worker in practice. He prefers to play rather than fus: work on strokes, but he wants work and plenluf it up to about two days to ene day lore the cham| mmhlg begins. He has one :— culiarity in his practice preference. He likes to go out in the morning and play a set on the day of u_big match. George Lott and John Hennessey do not want as much preliminary work as Hunter. Lott also wants a day of rest it possible before a big match. On the other hand Wilmer Allison and John Van Ryn are gluttons for work up to the moment of actual n'l'ay.h'nuy do not play. Among the women the one who seems to want to practice ali the time is Elisa- beth Ryan. On the Riviera ene found her, even during tournaments, practic- ing as early as 8 in the . And again after play stopped in the tourna- ment for the day. Likes Male Opponents. Helen Wills is a player who practices regularly and seriously, but for short periods. She prefers to actually play and will always choose a man as an opponent rather than a woman. The same is true of Helen Jacobs, except she wants more and lon, workcuts than Helen Wills. She, too, prefers to gain her practice with a man. Cilly Aussem, the little German star, is a very serious player in practice. She spends hours working on her game with a professional. She usually just practices strokes, often in the past to the detriment of her mateh play, Sencrita Alvarez loves to stand on the court and practice her service and overhead. She seldom plays and seldom pays much attention to her driving game. I am ,prob-bly the world’s worst ractice player. Any-one and every ane ts me at will in practice. Last year over our European trip I.did not ence beat Frank Hunter in prattice, yet al- won when we met in matehes, The same was true to a lesser extemt with Junior Coen, who won the major. ity of his practice matches with Needs, Real Competition, | T want to get by tice in actual | tournament play. mehow I never X!learn to make my shots in practice. It is rot until the absolute ny | arises in match play, where it is a ease AR | of make them or lose, that 1 manage to gain a mastery over my game. Practice is a ' personal problem to every star. Until a player has reached the class where he playing the ma- Jority of his tennis in tournaments he can follow certain definite rules for practice and know that by so doing he will progress. But the poor man whe is playing a large amount of tourna- ment tennis has the added burden of preparing his match temperament as well as his strokes, and it is match :la]:nponuunt that needs careful han- ng. I could no more prepare for & tourna- ment or Davis Cup tie as do Cochet, Lacoste and Borotra than fly to the moon. It would drive me erazy and at the same time ruin my game, if any. Equally true is the fact that Cochet, Borotra and Lacoste could mot use my system. Racketers Consistent. The most interesting thing in all this matter of practice is that no mueter how they do it, you will find that every vear these stars reach the big cham- plonship very close to their best form. Only illness or accident seems to cause . . one of them to fail. That is why the game of tennis runs truer to form— . there are fewer upsets and the average standard of play has less variation— than any other game. Certainly skill tells more often and luck far less than in golf. A tennis champion repeats in his title more often than any other athlete in his branch of sport, and it lies in the fact that once condition, mental and physical, is reached, & ph(er will produce the same ame indefinitely until his condition .- alls or he stops playing. (Copyright, 1930, by Nerth American Ni aper Alliance.) ROCKVILLE NET TEAM WANTS MORE MATCHES » Rockville, Md.. tennis team, which' defeated the Washington Grove, Md, combination, 3 to 1, yesterday at Wash- i Grove After more team r., 1§ receiving w arly Several thousand caddies who carry does Cuba. Should he fail to raise the nDecessary money, Dr. Al e is to and & central " Wuu’ location in bags over golf courses in Pennsylvania are proteeted m's compensa