Evening Star Newspaper, October 23, 1930, Page 47

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PORTS.- THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1930. SPORTS. D3 Major League Clubs Are Forced to Dig Deep in Search of Promising Talent ‘ Hole-in-One Is Nothing Rare | On Course at Congressional PLAYERS OF NOTE REHARD TO FIND Illustrations Given in Men ‘Who Are “Discovered” for Chisox and Giants. BY JOHN B. FOSTER. NEW YORK, October 23.—In looking over the young generation in the minor leagues some sharp- eyed chap who was “digging them up” for the Chicago White Sox told Charlie Comiskey to draft Goff of Henderson. So he did. “Who is this Goff of Henderson and is_Henderson?” the fans are . Henderson is down in North and not in Louisiana or Ne- braska, as most of the boys guessed, and it was in the thick of a corking base ball race last Summer in the 'man who played le the bosse: and it untll an order from head- told them they must do so. gave battle to the Pled- in August and finally came winner of the t on nine were enough to s championship in league. Another. of the Joneses. a result the Giants bought foj a young outfielder by o 58 i YOULL SIMPLY HAVE TO KEEP THEM CLEAN YOURSELE™ = ( 91930 The A. P.. All Rights Reserved L — et NSS GLERNA +COLLETT: ~HAS JUST Won AERS FIETH NATIONAL- GOLF~ GLENNA Has | WON THE. "NATIONAL- TREE YEARS ™ eucclilsmod 0 |Oe” CHAMPDIONSHIO Y PRO GOLF BODY NOT DEMANDING ANY FEE Asks 10 Per Cent of Tournament. Gates Only for Ryder Cup Trip Expenses. on | 37 the Associated Press. CHICA( GO, October 23.—The agita- tion over the request by the Profes- slonal Golfers’ Association for 10 per cent. otwm‘:dmtpflumwuu- to Albert R. Gates, an of the association. “The money does mnot -treasury of the P. G. A..” he said last night. ~“It is used to defray the ex- A man is only as good as his feet. Youth crumbles at the foundation, not at the top.Why, then, should you, craving and utilizing all the silken amenities of life, endure periodicago- nies of “breaking in” new shoes and a slow-up in your pace when it's all so unnecessary? You can b step into a Stetson Shoe of the Ryder Cup matches ed every two years be- and American profes- Tournament Boarl, which is AVENUE in imported lack or brown colf Shop today and into a PRE-WALKED shoe. You can cover the next ten miles without raising a blister, pain or pang. All because Stetson has wrought a comfort revolution . . . softened, flexed and limbered the fine imported leathers in its marvelous system of progres- sive shoe assembly. Machines, and not man, do the “breaking in.” A master idea in shoe craftsmanship, yes . .. but what a blessing on your feet, so vital to your success! What size, S ir# ~ STETSON SHOES . THE STETSON SHOE SHOP of Washington Owned and operated by The Stetson Shoe Co, Inc. 1311 F Street Washington, D. C. directed by Robert Harlow, offers to help these associations organize their events. In return we ask them to con- tribute 10 per cent of the. prize money to the P. G. A. This contribution is entirely optional and there is no gound for 'nhgu; that pressure p;auld brough eep leading players from gfl.lelplm in its which not make the payment.” in those . old, smooth, worn treads that you do not wapt to ride on this Winter, now, today. ON NEW WINTER SPORTS LISTED PINEHURST, October 23 {(#).—Pine- hurst’s Winter mfl‘ season will October 27 with seventh annual - south tennis tournament. Bryan Grant, jr., of Atlanta, national courts champion and four times md-gr of the Southern title, will top the list of entries. Buy Goodyear Tires or Exide Batteries On Our Convenient | CLUB PLAN Establish a charge ac- count—or, if you prefer, use our Weekly Payment Plan. No délay or red tape. BE WISE! BE SAFER! BE SAVING! Road-Holding GOODSTEAR 'ALL-WEATHER BATTERIES Power—Light 13 Plate 'PROTECT YOUR. CAR! Drive in today and let us protect your car from freezing with PRESTONE or AL- COHOL. MID-WASHINGTON TIRE COMPANY, Inc. Conn. at Nebraska (One Stop Service) Pl hone Cleveland 0301 7 AM~11 PM. 1602 14th St. N.W. Phones: Joris ¢ 8 AM—6 PM. OMETHING approaching & world record for holes in one made on | 8Teen other than a public golf course has been set at Congressional Country Club this year, where no fewer than eight holes in one have been made on the scattered short holes that dbt the long and arduous layout. ‘The ringer tourney of the club, which is fast drawing to a close, shows most of these aces, but a few have been made which are not recorded in the ringer event. M. Parker Nolan, the gent who started , although one of them gmedl a 2 on the short eleventh to tie with Nolan for first place. Those who are tied for second are J. R. McCarl, Clarence B. Murphy, the club title holder; John E. McClure and Page Hufty. The scores of McCarl, Murphy and McClure all have been alded by the holes in one they have ring the season. Last Sunday Guy Mason was playing in. s four-ball match with Sandy Armour, the club_professional, as his partner, J O'Hare. Mason, who is chair- man of the club tournament, commiitee an 18-handicap man—one of - to get his and Mason celebrated. That 1 was the margin by which and Armour licked the other , for they finished 1 up on O'Hare juette, with Sandy blowing a short putt on the seventeenth, which would have gi him orth The short putt was one and the break his tee shot got on the eighteenth was Po e e propér Bbot ot the right to T a e'gr'nzro&‘m uee::b.hutlnhll:mofml- on the ive a putt for cfi}ue{' kicked at right ft and ended up far onal cannot be counted in the ringer score, for ‘the reason that it was not made in a full round of 18 holes. He had played four extra holes in a match g on the fourth extra hole, he decided to cut across and play the eighteenth back to the clubhouse. He Introductory Offer PROBAK RAZOR and 8 BLADES for $1 To introduce the new rasor we offer a matched shaving set consisting against J. J. Marquette and | gree: ©O. M. Hester has scored an ace on ninth hole. Olarence M scored one on the sixteenth hole, where Mason X All the others who are tied for sec-" ond place have identical scores of 327 for the first nine and 25 for the second . The tourney ends on October 31, but meanwhile another big event looms on-the golf horizon at Congressional. This is the competition for the Tatum Cup, donatedsto the club several years ago by S. M. Tatum. This tourney is to be played next Sunday at 18 holes handicap medal play. Workmen today are finishing the job of laying the top soil on the new tenth n at Congressional and the green will be seeded to bent grass within a few days. Little work is necessary on the fairway, which will start near the club house and work its way across the hills to the new tenth green, located out near where the present eleventh green now stands. The present tenth green will be the new eleventh under the re- construction scheme. Franklin L. Pisher and Harry A. Gil- lis are the finalists in the Liberty cup tournament at the Chevy Chase Club, Pisher yesterday defeated George E. Hamilton, jr., by 6 and 5 in one-half while Gillls defeated . Stanford 1 up. The tourney is a handicap event and the final round is scheduled to be pla; either today or tomorrow, Mrs. J, Marvin Haynes, women's champion of the Columbia Country Club, defended her club title today against the meticulous game of the Rhode Island State cI , Mrs. Everett Eynon, & mrluuve newcomer to local golf, but a player who is likely to win in any eomy, Mrs. Eynon yesterday downed 8. F. Colladay, a former champion, by 2 and 1, w! Mrs. Haynes was winning 7 «nd 6 from Mrs. H. R. Quinter. in the first flight consolation were Miss Elizabeth Brawner and Mrs. N. B. Frost. In the second flight, Mrs. Frank Tomlinson and Mrs. C. A. Slater won their way to the final, while the con- solation winners were Mrs. A. 8. Gar- diner and Mrs. H. C. Flynn. The third flight finalists were Mrs. T. W. Brahany and Mrs. Charles R. ‘White. In the consolation Mrs. Her- va. Alice Marston. MIXED DOUBLES TILT FOR MONEY BOWLERS Arcadia Offers Novel Event for Skilled Duckpinners Next “Saturday. Variety is the Monk Fraser, hi Arcadia of life, believes manager of the bowling alleys, hence some- thing new will be offered local pin spillers of both sexes. Praser inaugurate s mixed doubles sweepstakes Saturday, supplant- ing the Lorraine Gulli stakes for this Saturday night, at least. ‘The innovation, according to Monk, should please Planly of pin fans, and quite & field of men and women is ex- pected to take the Arcadia drives Saturday night. prize mmfi will be split two ways, but if a fleld exceeding expecta- tions is lined up, first, second and third places will earn a plece of dough. Entries should be made at the Ar- cadia, either by calling at the office or phoning Fraser. The fee is one buck aplece and games. HOLLYWOOD IS LEADING Has Game Edge in Play-off . With Los Angeles Club. contest with pair of doubles in five chances. '| Mechanical NEW REGULATIONS FOR RACING YACHT Devices Done Away With—Must Work - Above Deck. .| BY the Associated Press. ONDON, October 23.—British and American yacht racing suthori- ties have agreed to do away with the “mechanical” yacht, which came into fame in the recent races for the America’s Cup, in future interma- tional contests. After a series of conferences in-which Norman Clark Neill and B. Heckstall- Smith, British representatives, met first with New York Yacht Club rep- resentatives then with the councll of the British Yacht Racing Association. The council yesterday voted to adopt with modifications the New York Yacht Club's rule rating yachts of above 141 meters in The modification provides tiat class J yachts, which inciudes all America's cup contenders, must weighing at least 5,500 that standing g up nor worked below the u%pcx deck, and that the yachts shall be fitted with “reasomnable” accommodations. ~* ingenious but expensive devices used by £ ive devices the 0:3 defender Ente: in its ve- cent triumph over Sir Shamrock V. 60 cents for the three |Ing the he AGAINST SACRIFICE FLY ' - AL S d | Hickey Backs Barnard in Effort to Alter Base Ball Raule. ani shave you gently.. OU can’t torture or distort a Probak blade, no matter how tight you clamp it in your double-edge razor. Most of the bending shock and strain escapes scientifically sha; what little as it was in the blade the butterfly channeling—Probak’s tions. Duo-tempered steel absorbs and. strain are left—before they reach the finely- honed shaving edges. Your Probak blade is as keen in the razor Your face will tell you there’s something new and different in shaving with a shock-absorbin: Probak blade. Buy a package now. Use two blades in your double-edge razor. (old or new model). See how Probak wipes off wiry hairs without pull, drag or burn—leaving the skin smooth, cool, refreshed. If you don’t find Probaks far the best double-edge blades you ever used—return the package and your dealer refund every cent—$1 for 10, 50c for 5. ‘ Probak Blades Are Made by the Gaisman Process Guaranteed by PROBAK CORPORATION Division of AUTOSTROP SAFETY RAZOR CO., INC., 656 First Avenue, New York City, N. Y. Also, Toropto, London, Paris, Milan, Rio de Janeiro Protectsd by Patents Nos. 1,633,739; 1,639,335, Reissue No. 17,567. Other patents pending.

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