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THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, OCIObiR 12, 1930—PART FIVE. Roesch Ranked First Among D. C. Golfers: Tilden Could “Throw” Doubtful Points SHOREY 15 RATED | CLOSE RUNNER-UP Capital Has Not Had .Really‘ OQutstanding Performer Since Voigt Left. BY WALTER R. McCALLUM. | NY ranking of the local am- A ateur golfers on their com- | petitive records during 1930 assumes a difficult com- | plexion, for this year, even mm‘ei than in the past three years, no| individual stands out by the con-| sistenc of his winning streak.| Ever since George Voigt left| ‘Washington, with possession of a | record no amateur about the| Capital has equaled, there has, been no single figure so com- | pletely dominating the field. | Last year Miller B. Stevinson of Co- lumbia stood out as the top ranking | player, but Stevinson had his defeats, | like the others. This year Stevinson has not played in anywhere near the | number of tournaments he played in | last year, for business reasons, and for the fact that two of the towrnaments which he won last year were not held this year. ©On the face of their records during the season of 1930, I would rank the amateur golfers about Washington in this order: No. 1—Frank K. Roesch of Washing- ton, the District amateur champion. No, 2—John C. Shorey of Bannoek- burn. . No. 3—Miller B. Stevinson of Colum-~ ia. No. 4—Harry G. Pitt of Manor. No. 5—J. Monro Hunter, jr., of Indian Bpring. No. 6—Everett Eynon of Columbia. No. 7—Page Hufty of Congressional. The rankings this year are doubly difficult, because of the fact that three big tournaments were cancelled and be- cause all the topnotchers did not play in all the tourneys. Steveinson, for example, did not play at wmmom. urn. Shorey did not play at Columbia and Hunter, Eynon and Hufty did not play in them all. Shorey Close Second. the face of the record it seems ible to place Roesch at the of list. If we agree that a 72-hole medal play competition is the best test of consistency in the game of golf, we must place Roesch at the crest. An for the same reason Shorey must be placed at No. 2, for he finished but a single stroke behind Roesch in the Dis- trict title tiit at Burning Tree. Shorey has a valid claim to No. 1 place for he won the tournaments at Woodmont and Bannockburn. But he did not play in at least two of the big-time events, and second in the District event to Roesch. The champion should have top place, if his.game on the whole has measured up to his championship vic- tory. And I believe Roesch's game been up to that standard, Stevinson and Pitt should be bracket- distinetion in place th of them won one vietory this year. Stevinson beat Pitt in an overtime match in the Wash- ington tourney, and Pitt turned around a few weeks later and beat Stevinson in the final of the Chevy Chase tourney. In so far as victories over each other are concerned, they are even. But Pitt went along to the end in the District championship, while Stevinson with- drew at the end of the second round. Btevinson also relinquished his Colum- championship. He did not enter in the other side of the picture Stevinson was accepted for a place in national amateur champlonship. are as nearly even in ability as and either or both it beat the top pair at any is really very little to I abllity between the first the ranking list. None went to the final in the tourney—the largest event year around Washington. This was won by Billy Howell of ond, with Paul J, Prizzell of as runner-up, Hunter & Comer. ext three places are just as the first four, J. Munro Indian Spring, won & off i i Eg R9] : £ HEEL at pammud his ability by ll‘ th . mfi h"l ifer e year. He Wmnm: along fast, and f? he Temains in wuhtnc{m will undoubt- edly become an outstanding figure in the amateur ranks. Next to Hunter I place Everett Eynon Columbia, who succeeded Stevinson es the Columbia champlon, played con- sistently to win fourth place in the District amateur champlonship and has played at a consistently high standard all through the year. Little has been heard of Page Hufty, the Congressional star, this year Hufty was ranked well up last yeas but this year he played only two local tourneys and in one of these he was disqualified because he inad- vertently played the wrong ball. His standard of play, however, has been as as ever and on this alone he deserves a ranking at seventh. There were several young players who performed well in the various Washington. ~ Among | men who work so hard to make the | tournament a success, and labor 50 long | these were Robert Bowen of Argyle, who won the District junior tith RATED BEST AMONG D. C. LINKSMEN Columbia Plays HE big time competitive season for birdies and pars may be over as far as majur tournaments are concerned, but don't think that golf has been packed away in the moth balls until next Spring. Not by & jugful. Your golfer plays whether Winter winds blow or rain falls, or whether the calendar tells us it is De- cember or June, Last week there were two big golf tournaments in Baltimore, d | inyolying many local entries, while one club championship was decided. And this week there are just as many big events scheduled in these fine golfing days of Midoctober, when the best of the golfing season is with us. Today the teams of the Indian Spring Golf Club and the Columbia Country Club are to match shots over the In- dian Spring course with the stake the team championship of the Maryland has | State Golf Association. It seems rather strange that two local teams should be playing in a match for the team championship of the State of Mary- land. But the two local teams were better in competition than the teams representing clubs in Baltimore and ot?xer sections of the State, and so the match for the title is on today be- tween two local clubs. It is scheduled for 1:30 o'clock, and both clubs will have their strongest aggregations in alone the glory of winning the cham- plonship, b:t. n};su a flock of little silver cups. To the runners-up go only glory, for the association has not provided prizes for the second-place team mem- bers. For a time there was some in decision as to where the match should be played, but Capts, J. V. Brownell | of Indian Spring and M. B. Stevinson | of Columbia te. % a coin and Brownell | won. And so (i match will be played at Indian Spring ther captain has | made public his 1 ur‘ but here is the way the two teams lined up in the semi-final matches last Sunday: Co- lumbia—M. B. Stevinson, Everett Eynon, Clyde B. Asher, Norman J. Prost, W. Carlton Evans, Albert R. MacKenzie, Thomas P. Bones, George P. James, Paul J. Prizzell and L. W. Laudick. Indian Spring—Dr. L. 8. Otell, Leroy Sasscer, J. M. Hunter, ; Elliott Spicer, J. V. Brownell, J. W m Harvey, Charles R. Morrow, Herbert L. Lacey, Sam Rice and Tom M. Belshe. Both teams are strong and the match should be close, with the advantage ning toward indisn Spring because of the familiarity of the team members while members of the Middle Atlantic Association of Greenkeepers are playing in a tourney at the Suburban Country Club of Bal- timore, & small fleld of women players will be competing at Chevy Chase in the first round of play for the club title. This event is & 36-hole medal play affair for the club title, at scratch, | with the final round to be concluded | Tuesday. Priday s players drawn from all the clubs afili- ated with the Women's District Golf Assoclation will gather at Chevy Chase | to contest in & match play tourney. A | prize has been presented by Bob Bar- nett, the club pro, for the low medlli score, This prize is one of the coveted | “sand wedges” which caused such a | | commotion at the amateur champion- | | ship at Merion. HY is it that the professional | golfers of the Middle Atlantic sec- tion make their tournament an open event? It seems strange that the to raise the money to make & sizeable | the fleld, for to the winners go mot | large feld of | Indian S pring For Links Title of Maryland | Morrow, who is the Maryland woman’s champion, was favored to win the Mid- dle Atlantic title for the third time, b | putt between her and victory on the | eightesnth hole, she blew the putt. And one of 4 feet to halve the hole and carry the match to the twentleth. Mrs. | B2l 'won because she hung on when the | going was toughest. She won the to keep-the match going, and she put | together two fine wooden club shots going to the nineteenth, where Mrs, Morrow took three putts to lose the | hole and the match. This pu busi- | ness may be overrated, but still it is | part of the game of golf. } RANK K. ROESCH, the District | amateur champion, now holds two titles, and may perly call 1930 | a complete year for If in a golf- | ing way. Last year Henry D. Nie went to the thirty-seventh hole to divest Roesch of his Washington Golf and Country Club title, but this year Roesch was just too good for the title holder | and beat him on the thirty-first green of the final round by 6 and 5. Roesch Hkable youngsters playing golf arolnd ‘Washington. So is Nicholson, but this seems to be a Roesch year. The dinner scheduled to have been held last Friday night as a testimonial to Roesch in honor of his victory in the District title chase will be held next Friday night at the Washington Club. The affair was postponed because of the death of E. F. Locker, a member of the board of governors of the club, Stewart Whaley, the greenkeeper at Washington, has done & quick job of repairing the ninth green, which has been resodded during the past month. Within 10 days after the green was stripped of its old sod it was ready for play with sod taken from the club's | turf garden. It will need rolling, but | is playable and in good condition. ut on each occasion when she had the chance to put over the finishing punch | on the putting green she was unable | to hole the decisive putt. She missed | & 3-footer on the fourteenth, one of similar length on the fifteenth and then, with the title in her grasp and a 3-foot ‘llflm on the nineteenth she missed eighteenth when she needed to win it | is one of the finest stylists in the game | about the Capital and one of the most | THINKS OFFICIALS ARE TO0 PAMPERED Says Game Would Be Better Off if They Thought | Less of Dignity. BY WILLIAM T. TILDEN, IL. HILADELPHIA, October 11 | Every year the discussion | rages about the “throwing” of points in tennis matches | to make up for errors by umpires | and linesmen. I have heard all the arguments | of those who are against the prac- tice. I have heard how it is an insult to the linesman or umpiré how the breaks of the game even | up in the end, and this and that.i but I have yet to discover any| argument that changes my opin- ion that throwing a point under | certain circumstances is the only | sporting thing to do. I believe in throwing a point when | you are convinced your opponent has suffered an injustice, or when he clearly | shows he believes it even though you are not in a position to see definitely yourself. In other words, throw & point whenever your own sporting standard is outraged or violated. There is no intent to humiliate or insult & linesman by this act of re- turning & point. In most cases and I know in my own, the linesman does | not_center out the matter and in most cases is not thought of. If linesmen and umpires would think less of their dignity and more of the fact that they are on the line to help the play- ers there would be far fewer unpleasant incidents in tennis matches. However, it is not the throwing of a point that influences the match result 50 much as it is the incidents that us- ually accompany such an action. Ordi- narily there is just a glaring error by s linesman, o bad that not only the players but the gallery see it. If the error is persisted in by the official the gallery usually halts play by its dis- approval, voiced in no uncertain terms by catcalls and whistles. Then the innocent victim feels aggrieved _and. the one who received the benefit is usually in wrong with the gallery. The latter player throws | the next point. Instantly he is a hero. The whole gallery bursts into applause. The matter, stops play and completes the wreck of the concentration of one or_both players. Such an incident is clearly shown in the critical moments of the match be- tween Henri Cochet and myself in the finals of the French champion- ship at Auteuil this year. I had won the first set and the score stood at 6-all in the second. Cochet, by a miraculous burst of super-tennis, had pulled even from 5—3 down. A close shot of mine to the base line caught Cochet going backward and was allowed * b the linesman. Cochet evidently thought the ball was out, and as for the gallery, its protest could have been heard miles. I could not see the ball myself. I }ngbd at Cochet and asked “How was et she umpire in the chair said the ball was 3 " I attempted three times to serve, only to be whistled and booed out of action. Finally, after about three minutes’ pandemontum, I deliberately served s double fault. Instantly the crowd went crazy the other way. They cheered me five minutes before play started again, The result was my active toncentration collapsed and I offered fo resistance until I was down 4-1 in the third set and a set-all. Cochet might just as well have been the victim. Now, if the gallery and officials had allowed Cochet to signal his ylews to me and allow my deliberate double ‘fault to pass unnoticed, neither of us would have been affected by the incident, although the result of the match in Cochet’s favor would not have been changed. This matter of throw- ing points should be purely & matter of the personal desire of the player. He deserves neither praise nor blame, for all he does is to be true to himself and uphold his own sporting standards. Let us attempt to recognize that all tennis players are sportsmen and their actions, which may not please the on- looker, ‘are still governed and directed | by their own sporting spirit, which in most cases is at least as good as tle | spectator who only sits and criticizes. Shires Keeps BY WALTER gathered after the world volved Art Shires. It app | fan with a fine pair of lungs to get the goat of the the great But Shires didn’t always ha “Mister Shires, you certain I ever saw.” Art Furnishes Material for Yarns of Players and Writers at World Series. HERE were a lot of stories told when writers and players Washington club a series was played in Boston and one remarks at him until finally Art turned and held up his hand. “Don’t worry about your nerves,” said Shires. “I was nervous myself the first time I saw Babe Ruth.” On another occasion, Shires dropped one of those little looping flies for which he is noted back of third base. “Well,” he said on arriving safely at first, “there are two of us. They tell me Keeler could place hits, too.” { that Washington had bought a young first baseman, he con- cluded that the club was getting an oversupply of first-sackers and asked the boys if they realized that he was a great out- | flelder. Taking an outfielder’s glove, he went out to chase flies in right field. The bleachers were filled at the time and one colored fan yelled in a carrying voice: ’Em Talking TRUMBULL. series games. Many of them in- ears that after Shires joined the amused himself by attempting Shires. He bellowed disparaging ve the last word. When he found ly do play the deepest first base | meets J. E. McClure. Semi-F in-als In Congressional Club Golf LARENCE B. MURPHY, holder of the Congressional Country Murphy Enters Club title, yesterday moved two steps nearer a repetition of his victory of last year in the current edi- tion of the club title event, which start- ed Friday, and is playing in the semi- final of the tourney today, where he In the other semi-final match carded for this morn= ing, Page Hufty, who won the title in 1926, 1927 and 1928, will meet William ‘W. Jones, The first Tound of the championship | yesterday morning was marked by an upset, in which M. Parker Nolan, the long hitter of the club, who was picked as & semi-finalist, was beaten on the twenty-first hole by James A. Maloney. Maloney was dormie 2, but lost the seventeenth to a par 4 and the eight- eanth to @ birdie 3. Real fireworks came on the nineteenth hole. where Nolan reached the green at this 520- yard affair with a mighty drive and & big wallop with a spoon. But Maloney holed a 20-foot putt for & half in birdie 4s. The next hole was halved in par 4s, and the match came to an end on the twenty-first green, where Nolan took three putts, while Maloney chipped out of a bunker and sank an 8-foot putt for | the victory. Maloney lost in the after- noon, however, to McClure, Today's Pairings. ‘Today's pairings follow: First flgh 9:30, C. B. Murphy vs. J. E. MeClure; 9:35, Willlam W. Jones vs. Page Hufty. Consolation—Thomas Bradley vs. S. T. Ansell. Second flight—9:20 am,, Dr. J. L. Barnhard vs. F. T. Mitchell; 9:25, C. A. | | Bennett vs. W. F. Smith. Consolation, final—1:05 pm., A. L. Plant, jr., vs. W. H, Grimes. Third flight—9:10 am. P. G. Ewalt vs. Dr. O. U. Singer; 9:15, Emmett Dougherty vs. A. J. Walker. Consolation, final—8:55 am., L. G. Goode vs. W. E. She Here are yesterday's results: Pirst flight, first round—C. B. Mur- phy_defeated Franklin Parks, jr., 5 and 4; J. I Tierney defeated J. R. McCarl, 1'up in 19 holes; J. E. McClure defeated Bruce L. Taylor, jr, 1 up in 19 holes; James A. Maloney defeated M. Parker Chu | Nolan, 1 up in 21 holes; William W. | Jones defeated Dr. Bruce L. Taylor, 7 and 5; Joseph E. Murphy defeated S. T. | Ansell, 4 and 2; A. C. Williams defeated | Thomas Bradley, 1 up; Page Hufty de- feated J. L. Richards, 4 and 3. {ney, 2 and 1; McClure defeated Ma- honey, 5 and 3; Jones defeated Murphy, 3 and 1; Hufty defeated Willlams, 5 lng 4. ‘onsolation—Parks won by default, Taylor won by default, Ansell won by default, Bradley won by default. Parks defeated Taylor in the semi-final and Ansell match at 1 o'clock this after- noon, Second Flight. Second flight—Dr. J. L. Barnhard defeated A. L. Plant, jr, 4 and 3; F. E. Johnston defeated Willlam Ullman, 4 | and 3; F. T. Mitchell defeated J. H. Sheppard, 6 and 5; A. W. Henderson | defeated C. E. Stewart by default; C. A. Bennett defeated V. A. Sissler, 4 and 3: J. A. Meegan won from Victor Cahill by default; S. T. Eddingsfield defeated W. H. Grimes, 6 and 5; W. F. Smith | defeated Dr. R. A. Kelly by default. | _ Second round — Barnhard defeated | Johnston, 3 and 2 Mitchell defeated | Henderson, 6 and 6; Bennett defeated | Meega, 7 and 5; Smith defeated Ed- dingsfield, 2 and 1. Consolation—Plant won by default, Sheppard drew a bye, Grimes drew a bye. Plant defeated Sheppard and will play Grimes at 1:05 this afternoon in the final. Third flight—Col. drew a bye, F. G, E R. B. Sleeper drew a b | | A. Buchanan t drew a bye, Dougherty defeated E. L. Baldwin, by | default; T. S. Emmitt defeated T. R. Capote, 5 and 4; A. G. Shibley defeated W. D. Osgood by default; Allan J. Walker defeated W. E. Shea, 5 and 4. Second round—Ewalt defeated Bu- chanan, 6 and 4; Singer won from Sleeper by default: Dougherty defeated Emmitt, 4 and 3; Walker defeated Shib- ley, 2 u?. Consolation—Goode defeated Capote, | 7 and 6; Shea drew a bye, Sportsmen in Hawail have taken to | gater polo, | field of water. Second round—-Murphy defeated Tier- | will play the winner of the Bradley- | MS with D. C. GIRLS WIN MATCH Blick's Bowling Team Scores Match in Richmond. RICHMOND, Va., October 11.—By a margin of two pins John Blick's Girls of Washington, D. C., conquered Billy Haskins' Stars in_the first three games of a home-and-home bowling match here tonight. Blick's Girls totaled 1,484 to_1482 for the Haskins' rollers. Blick's won the first game, 519 to 502, lost the second, 486 to 527, and cap- tured the third, 479 to 453. 1930 NET RANKINGS in Year's Prizes to Be Awarded at | Fourth Annual District Ban- quet on October 21. Man and woman 1930 tennis rankings | for the District of Columbia will be | announced and prizes for the past cam- | patgn will be awarded at the fourth |annual banquet of the Washington | Tennis Association Tuesday, October 21, at the Columbia Country Club at 7:30 pm. Plates will be $2.50 apiece. All tennis players of the District are in- | vited. Reservations must be made with | John' Ladd, 4422 Lowell street, by rext | Friday. A limited number of tickets |are avallable at Spalding’s, 1338 G | street. | It is planned to have a speaker of | national_ promience representing _the United States Lawn Tennis Assoctation address the gathering. Following the banquet there will be an_informal dance. Shepart is chairman of the ar- rangerhents committee. LAST BALL GAME TODAY Virginia White Sox Will Play Cen- terville at Cross Roads. They're still playing base ball over in_nearby Virginia. Virginia White Sox will play host to the Centerville, Va., A. C. nine on |the Balleys Cross Roads diamond this fternoon at 2:30 o'clock. It will be Sox, whose pitcher will be Bobby Dove. WILL BE ANNOUNCED JONES AND TOLLEY LIKE LIGHTER BALL Champion Says Drive Will Be Only 5 Yards Shorter When Air Is Calm, By the Assoclated Press. TLANTA, Ga, October 11— Bobby Jones believes & prop- erly hit drive in calm air with the new golf ball will be, on | average, not more than five yards | shorter than the same drive with the | old baL “I like it,” the golf champion sald of the ball that will become official after January 1. | Jones gave it as his opinion that with the wind against the drive the distance with the new bl will be pro- portionately less, and with the wind behind the drive it will be longer, but not_proportionately so “For the Teason,” he said, “that as it nears the end of its course on the | fly its speed will be less than that of the wind.” | _ Cyril James Hastings Tolley, former | British amateur champion, who is & house guest of Jones, also likes the new ball. | _ Tolley should, for in a match with | Jones he hit the new ball 350 yards |from one tee and on several other drives went above 300. | ' The big Britisher was paired with ! “Big Bob” Jones, father of Bobby, and the quadruple champlon was teamed | with Charlle Freeman, a fellow club member. The four played & lackadaisical | mateh, which was won by Bobby and | Freeman, 2 up, in spite of Tolley's long | shots and “Blg Bob's” phenomenal put- g. [ %G e frst nine noles the elder Jones had seven one-putt greens and |3hot s 35 to match his famous son's | score stroke for stroke. | Bobby turned in a 72, Tolley a 77 |and “Big Bob” turned in a 78 | slipping on the homeward nine. after riding wooden horses in a | the final game of the season for the |man was off his game and uls h; | score was “something around 98." Mdn Tommy Bones of Columbia, Tommy | purse, throw the tournament open to Webb of Washington, J. G. Drain of | the world, only to see the major part of Washington and Congressional, Jack | the prize money go to men who have Powell of Columbia, John 1. Tierney of | no interest in golf about this sector of Congressional, Beverly Mason of Chevy | the land, and only pley in the tourney Chase, and Harold N. Graves of Indian | " the hope of gathering in part of Spring. Among the veterans .Martin | the spofls. Of course, Gene Sarazen is F. McCarthy of Beaver Dam won his | i1, Middle Atlantic open champion be- way to the final at Bannockburn, and | cayge he played better golf than any one William P. Di Este of Argyle played | jce in the field, but to an outsider it exceptionally well in the District | soomg strange that the local boys should championship. not have had a cut at more than the But the year, as a whole, has mot | ;..o siice of the prize money re- roducod an outstanding golfer around | sorveq for them. It amounted to $175 | Elizabeth Daingerfield Quitsfi As Man o War Farm Manager By the Associated Press. EXINGTON, Ky, October 11.— To a woman's keen knowledge of Samuel J. Riddle, was selecting a sult- able site for his own farm and ing it ready to receive the champion. Far- ‘ashington, and there is not today & where Man O’ War has single player who can be termed the best amateur player about the Capital. Rossch deserves first place by his vic- tory in the hardest test of all, but the | maigin between the champion, Shorey, Stevinson and Pitt s almost non- existent. HOWARD FIGHTS TO TIE Capital Team Reaches Smith U.’s| Yard Line, but Is Scoreless. {of a $1,500 pyrse, if our information is correct, and the balance went to the visiting pros from the New York area. Bob Barnett had a great chance to win the tournament and played grand golf for three rounds, until he ran into trouble on the last round to take an | 84 and finish far outside the big money positions. layout toug any goifer, but Bob deserved far bet- ter than he got. Any man who is good enough to play level with Sarazen and | lead such men as Mehlhorn, Lacey, | The Woodholme course is a | Where Man O' | thousands of visitors. Saying e Geserved o et | was leaving Farawsy on “the best of terms,” Miss Daingerfield has announced that she will devote her entire time to | » as a sire. And now, after having charge of the famous horse for the last 10 years, Elizabeth Daingerfield has re- thoroughbred horses is attributed the great Man O’ War's success ' | signed as manager of Faraway Farm, | War annually receives that she complete | |away Farm, | been living, is the property of Mr. Rid- dle and Walter M. Jeffords. Miss Daingerfield has been considered especially astute in allowing Man O’ War to mate only with suitable mares. Like her father, the late Maj. Foxhall A. Daingerfield, she is a keen student of blood lines. Man O’ War boasts & pedigree that goes back two and a half centuries. Man O' War's sons and daughters | lands, which she owns, have won every important stake on the her own thoroughbred activities at Hay- ns e American turf in the seven years they and at the MacFarlane and Runyan for three rounds deserves better than the paltry share of the prize money that Barnett [got. The take at the gate was insig- iversity fought to & 0—0 te here | nificant. Probably a field made up only o S, toas Howard's open- | of the pros from the mid-Atlantic area ing game. | would have done as well at the gate. In the third quarter Howard drove to — the home eleven's 1-foot line, but there EVER has the value of putting been was held. The Bisons outplayed the Emith eleven for the most part. Marshall, crack 1028 hibited a sterli e Drew, Mack an ite were outstand- | won the title in what the Baltimore ing, for Howard, made 12 first | golfers termed an upset victory over dovms to 4 for Smith. | 3Mrs. E. Boyd CHARLOTTE, N. O, October 11.— Howard University’s foot ball team of ‘Washi m_and Johnson C. Smith match of the woman's Middle At. lantic championship last Friday af Morrow of Mrs. Gorham Farm, which she has taken under a long-term lease. | Holds Man O’ War Greatest. | Miss Daingerfield leave of Man O' War. regretfully | “I consider Man O’ War | horse of all time,” she sald. in a match race and became American e ko wies | champion thoroughbred. The following {2 the backfield: | Elkridge, where Mrs. M. Louise Bell| January he was retired to the stud and it | of the Coachin gClub Oaks, and remained there | ican winner of the while his owner, laced “in Miss ata Stock Farm. for several years rfleld’s care " takes | | the greatest | Derby; Crusader, winner of the Subur- Tomorrow it will be exactly 10 years | $203,261 better proven than in the final |since Man O' War defeated Sir Barton | Bateau, winner of the Pimlico and have been racing, with the lone excep- tion of the Preakness. Two years he was_the leading money-winning sire. Included among his get are Clyde Van Dusen, winner of the Kentucky ban twice and the Belmont, a total of during his racing career; | Coaching Club Oaks: Scapafiow, winner |of the Belmont Puturity; Florence Nightingale and Edith Cavell, winners Amer- Belmont and For YOUNG © 1930, General Cigar Co., fac. ...and MEN with YOUNG IDEAS