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THE SUNDAY 8§ TAR, WASHINGTO D. C, OCTOBER 26, 1 930—PART FIVE. Fine Card Today for Sandlot Grid Fans : Tommy Armour Leader of Pro Golfers " APACHES, ARROWS w WINS MANY MONEY MEETINMAINTILTO City and Sport Mart Loops Have 14 Contests—Many Other Clashes. H will be a battle between the Apaches, defending District unlimited class champions, and the Arrows of Richmond, Va., starting at Griffith Stadium at 2:30 o'clock. In addition 14 league games are In "the Capitar” Gity 100 and as many ln the Sport Mart circutt in"the Sport Mart league is pendin Not l !ev other independent contests are carde 'ODAY'S game e will be the third for | the Apaches who wlllaped V!.r{lheh A. C, of Alexandria, 38 to 0, fought Tacony Aces of Philadelphia to & scoreless tie. Arrows are expecud to furnish the Little Indians the stubbornest sort of battling. They have won two games in tarts this season, scoring over Mary's Cemu of Alexandria, 16 to 7, lnd lAnlle Field, 7 to 0. A flock of | former college players will dot the b rwin i in also will see action agal this week, being dewn to face Northerns at Griffith SMlum Wednesday night in the first game of the camspaign which will have a bearing on the District title. nfl.huma and Mohawks, two others ed upon as leading contenders for District crown, are not scheduled play today but Knickerbockers, who planning a Md for t.&enm-h, ore EADLINING a full sandlot foot ball card here today flu to -.un to afternoon. Muhlwkl will resume action next d‘, entertaining Tacony Aces at Qrifith Stadium. 8t. Mary's Celtics had been booked for this date but the contest has been postponed until a date | b be announced. Hawks will list either Northerns or Knickerbockers Nov- cnber 5 and have carded es with | the )llrlm yon eleven of Quantico, Va, of Baltimore for’ )vaber 1! and 23, respectively. Hawks will have a scrimmage drill at the Navy Yard field this morning and players are to meet at the club at 10:30 o'clock. the most ballyhooed game in the | Cl tal City League, Nofl.hem Preps worth' Pennants will battle it wc on the Silver s\mu fleld beginning at 2:30 o'clock. the past three these teams hne fought to tles. it season Ihe score was 6-6. Pennant players are gather on the lu'l lmnwmund at 1:15 o'clock to Bilver Spring. is complete Capital City face Here Unlimited Section, hen's vs. Mercury, Gonzags Bt. Sf 2: o‘clock. ants vs. Quentins, Seat feld, 3 o'clock. Alpha De)u Omega vs. Marions, Alex- #ndria, 3 o'clock. 150-Pound Section. - Del Ray vs. Wolverines, Del Ray Fleld, 3 o !lock Northern vs. Petworth Pennants, 8il- Fleld, 1-.:0 o'clock. Rainier o'clock. Centennials vs. Oolnusblll Seat Pleas- snt Fleld, 1 o'clock. Sport Mart u-luc games follow: 135-Pound League. Meridian vs. Wesleys, Reservolr Pield, 11 am. Trinity Boys’ Club vs. Northeast ortheast ‘Trof Mmumk!o.l.!p.n. 125-Pound League. Park No. 2, 1 p.m. Peerless vs, Apaches, West Potomac Park No. 8, 1 p.m. Quentlno foot ballers are to gather t the Virginia Avenue Playground at u n cbek mornln' to make the trip npon st 2 o'clock, when uniforms will issuez. SUTTER WILL QUIT SCHOOL FOR TENNIS Plans to Abandon College to Con- centrate on Hope for Davis Cup Team Place. By the Associated Press. NEW ORLEANS, Octoler 25.—Clif- ford Sutter, who during the past year volleyed and smashed through strong opposition to win four of the Nation's nt tennis titles, has decided to abandon his college career for the time being at least in an effort to achieve membership on America’s next Davis team. His decision carries with it the sur- render of his national intercollegiate and Southern intercollegiate singles titles in 1031, Sutter today said he would give up his academic studies at Tulane Univer- sity on January 1 so that he might devote his time entirely to competition in the annual Bermuda Tournament and tournaments in PFlorida during the nsmninder of the Winter and in the mnl{m in the Davis hun 3 he was asked. “l will if I am invited” he said. “The reason I want to devote all my time to tennis durlnl the first part of next year is that 1 want to IJ the undwork for possible participaticn in g: Davis Cup tryouts.” -~ UT at Oongressional, where aces on the five short holes of the club course are as fre- quent as missed tee shots at & duffers’ tournament, the men behind the golf affairs of the club are talking about buying & bronse plague for in- stallation in the grill room, en which will be inscribed the names of the fortunate gents who knock the ball into the hole from the tee. Guy Mason, chairman of the golf commit- tee, doubted that such an arrangement could be made until he sank his tee shot on the short sixteenth hole last Sunday. When the idea was put up to him Mason pointed to the mrd times, thé state of the golf fund and the general state of the Nation as reasons for not having such & plaque hung up at the club. A few minutes after he had scored his ace he was ap] hed by one. of the club officials with the query, “What do you think of the idea of aving & plaque to commemorate the names of Lhm who make holes in one?” Those members who were around him at the time had been tipped off to_listen, and ithey lm.rd Mason say, “You know, I have been giving that idea 4 deal of thought, belleve i would be & good hunch. seems to me that the idea is worth playing with” And what l kick Mason got out of that hole in one. He is, s you know, & “duffer” himself. (Any man with an 18 handicap falls, by usual consent, into the “duffer’ class) Mason has s handicap of 18 strokes against a par of 73, and in the round on which he scored the ace he also scored a 91—one of his best scores. ‘The ace was no fluke either, as many of them are, for the ball hit straight in line with the pin, took one short hop and bounced into the cup. Oongrmmal ‘members are to play today in an 18-hole handicap medal play tournament for the 8. M. Tatum Cup and will wind up the golf season with a tournament dinner at the club the night of November 3, at which prizes will be presénted to all the suc- this | cessful contestants in the club tourneys is seasop. Pairings round in for the first match g‘lny in the competition for the toric Siamese Cup, one of the Chevy Chase Club’s ma) nll ‘competitions of the year, are to made today. The medal round cloled last, nuhn Next Saturday the golfers of the club will play in an 18-hole handicap tourney for the Japanese Cup, which is mlly a silver tea set, and was pre- sented to the Chevy Chase Club two years ago by Ambassador Matsudaira. ‘The tmphy remains the permanent Eaualon of the club, and the winner have his name inscribed on & plate placed in the club house. Even though the sun does not rise untit quite late on these Fall morn- ings, the Olly Boids, Rock Creek Park's dyd-ln-lhu-wonl |n!1en. still are ting out each morning to_&!lny in ti elr monthly tournaments. DEL RAY T0 PLAY WOLVERINE ELEVEN Only Sandlot Grid Contest i Alexandria Expeoted to Draw Crowd. LEXANDRIA, Va. October 25.— ‘With only one game scheduled to be played within the city's confines, tomorrow will be one of the most inactive Sabbaths, in so far as gridiron play is concerned, in the history of the Fall sport here. o'clock on Edward Dlmeu.nmr‘.w/d.ln the nnly contest booked for presentation in_Alexandria. Both the St. 's Oeltics and the s A. C. will idle, having failed in their efforts to schedule a worthy oppo- nent, while three other elevens will hike to other ports for action. ‘The Del Ray-Wolverine fray should draw one of the largest audiences ever to attend an mdependmz D;rld game here 'n.h no other enntut ering op- tenders for The teams 160 -pound caplu.l clt.y League title. City url on the Al umri'nm s ies tite, sngaging the Ms it Pleasan ;wnlo'aoek. ‘The A. C, which up from the 135-pound class this to battle in 150-pound ranks, is to oppose a rival for the Northern Vir- ginia crown in that weight division to- morrow afternoon when the newly or- ganized Alcova Motor Co. is faced at 2:30 o'clock on Arlington Field. Pontiac A. C. of Washington will en- tertain the Virginia Midgets on Fair- lawn Fieid at 1 o'clock tomorrow after- noon in the Capital City. The local fiyweights will be after their third straight victory, having buried the Alexandria High School Reserves and the Pirate A. C. beneath n'npres- sive scores in their first two starts, . Both the Celtics and Virginia elevens will work out tomorrow morning at 10:30 o'clock on their respective fields with all hopes of booking & game abandoned. The Celtics will drill at Baggett's Park, while the Orange and Blue is to prac- tice at Shipyard Fleld. Washington-Lee High School 'fl.l be host to Alexandris High in third athletic district of Vlrnnh l“uhr it :n‘h?maym-mmm at 3:30 o'clock “Little *» gridiron Generals' " gri at Cleveland Bhnr. muuur of No. § Engine Company, of the Alexandria m’e Dq;‘;tmu:‘ = -'/:nu games with -pound fool ulu thuy be telephioned at Alexandria Julian Whitestone, center for Corbett, manager of the 8f. ltics foot ball team, is ar- schedule for his Seamen Gunners of Wash! n_ will HELEN HICKS IS VICTOR wmuw!ar the course is 81, and the recond was 84 Miss Hicks was out in 42 and home be played here November 2; ederick A. C. of Frederick, Md. Nomm 9; !muwn C., at Baltimore, Novem. ber 16, and probably the Winchester (vll!i) A. C. here November 325. nwnhnmhmwm"" tourney finds the second round in :“'vem -’u under vly. rlth the huew- h de- feated Skinner, 2 and 1' Parke de- feated Cummings, 1 up. They also have bye tournaments for the losers in the first round. In the first of these Edwards won the final from Johnston, and in the second Bearce defeated Emeigh, 9 and 8. Harry Graham, manager at Rock Creek, and Al Price, the professional, took B. H. Burrows, the municipal champion, and Leon Nussbaum out to Beaver Dam a week ago and Price holed a 40-foot putt on the eighteenth green for a birdie 4 to square the match. Of course, that resulted in challenges being flung about, and so the four played again last week at Rock Creek. Graham and Price had a field day at the expense of Burrows and Nussbaum, whom they beat by 5 and 4. Burrows and Nussbaum thought it was an accl- dent and took them on the following day, with the same result. Out at the Washington Golf and Country Club quite & friendly rivalry hn lpnmx ug between Arthur Sinclair loyd, two of the long hmdlclp memben of the club, who play about as evenly as any two men ever have played. First Lloyd scores a one-hole victory and then Sinclair comes in with a last-hole win. But the other day Lloyd got real “hot” on the first nine, and with a 9 and two 7s in. his card got out in 46. He was then 7 up on Sinclair, although the lat- ter thought he was but 6 up. Sinclair though he was 1 down coming to the eighteenth and he put two fine shots together to reach the green in 2 and win the hole and, as he thought, square | the match. He was all chuckles as he came in, telling how he had been 7 down with 9 to play and had squared. But Lloyd thought there might have been a mistake somewhere and he looked over the score card . 8in- clair's face droj a mile or so when he found that he had forgotten Lloyd's birdle 3 on the thirteenth hole, and in- stead of being square he was 1 down, ‘The two have played all Summer to- gether and, according to them, there are not three holes difference over some 40 rounds. Tony Sylvester, the pro at Bannock- burn, is one who has not conceded the Bannockburn club championship to John C. Shorey, who apparently stands out in the contest for the club title, which is drawing to a close. Sylvester claims that John T. McCarthy, if he g!f-l past Norman J. Hall in the lower nckeb will be & wuah man for Shorey W. Fred Byrne, the chairman Dl Lhe Ulub Golf Oommltm also points out that McCarthy is a hard golfer to trim. McCarthy, Byrne says, took up the game only two or three years ago and has developed a very efficient style of his own, which keeps his scores be- tween 75 and 80 most of the time. Shorey won the club invitation tourney last September and is a favorite to win the title. Hé beat Willlam L. Pender- gast, the defending champion, in the second round of the tourney. Acting at the request of the Woman's Golf Committee of the Indian Spring Club, the Woman's District Golf Asso- clation has scheduled a match and medal play tourney for Indian Spring tomorrow morning, which is expected to attract half a hundred entries. The tourney played last Monday at Chevy Chase was the last scheduled event for the association year, but Indian Spring nfiuuud the event tomorrow, and it will be played. Entrants are requested wlze rudy for play at the first tee at the assistant professionals lbmlfl flu Oapital are pllnn.lnq in the assistants’ championship of the lfldnhnuo section, to be held at Rod- mre next Thursday, at 36 holes medal play. Lawrence Wisner of the Baltimore Suburban Club holds the ti- tle. “Brick” Wood, the caddie master and assistant at Washington, who won the tourney two years ago, has an- nounced his “retirement” from compe- tition. Brick, you know, won the event and the money prize that went with it. But instead of spending the money, he bought himself a medal to commemo- rate his vic . A few months ago he lost the medal, medal to show for his win. Outstand- w among the assistant pros around uhlnmn are George Diffenbaugh of dian Spring, Gene Larkin of Chevy Ohua and Billy Malloy of Columbia. Larkin won the Maryland State open last year, and Malloy was tied for sec- ond place over the first round in this year's Maryland State, but faded over | the Jast round. Next Sunday the Woodmont Country Club will stage a tournament to be known as the “champion of champions tournament,” n only to winners of club champie ps and invitation tour- about Washington in 1930. Quite field of golfers will be eligible fc event, but it seems to be rather anti-climax. If this t is made an annual affair, what does the District amateur championship mean? Furthermore, the “champion of cham- plons” tournament is to be played over the 18-hole route, which is an ineon- clusive way to name a “champion of champions.” But if Woodmont wants to get a group of good golfers out next Sunday | to play the course, more power to them. It won't mean anything, one way or an- other, go far as determining the best | golfers around Washington con- | cerned. And next Sunday, also, the “Bright- wood Caddies’ Championship” will be played at the Indian Spring Golf Club, with George J. Voight, one of the rank- ing stars of the country, as the top- liner in the event. At least two of the men who would otherwise play at ‘Woodmont, will play at Indian Spring, for Harry G. Pitt and George P. Miller will play in the “ex-caddies” tourney. Miller is the Manor Club champion, and Pitt won the Chevy Chase tourney, thereby becoming eligible for the Woodmont tourney. The ex- cldmu tournament s an 18-hole handicap tournament, 'hh:h will include many men who the old course of the Columbia Ool( Club 20 years ago, and who now are well known golfers in their own right. Among them are Voigt, Pitt, Miller, Wfl]llm P. Di Este, M. A. Bhlpley, ‘Tom Pitt, George Gist, and many others. It will be recalled that last year Vol registered a 67 in the tourney to m‘ the amateur record for the Indian Spring course. Pitt has received a let- ter from Voigt promising to play in the wum-.menn STORK BRINGS NEW “CUB” |- Rogers Hornsby Potts Has Brother, Hack Wilson Dad Is Fan. HAMMOND, Ind., October 26 (#).— Last year Harry Potts, a Calumet City and now he has neither money nor |- EVENTS THIS YEAR Plays Brilliantly to Take P. G. A. Tourney—Star in St. Louis Meet. BY WALTER R. McCALLUM, WHEN it comes to the on the ranking profes- sional golfer of the year. to us that a tall, lank Scot, who used to uncork his languid golf Club, deserves top ranking among the gents who say it with open their livelihood.: By any count, Tommy Armour, to pump machine gun bullets across trench parapets for the shots and iron shots at distant pins for the right to win at golf, professional of the year, although on two counts his record is below Mac Smith finished second to Bobby Jones in both.the American open and Diegel for second place in the last- named event. But Tommy Armour won match play championship, the Cana- dian open title, the St. Paul open, the the North'and South. No other pro approaches this record for consistency, Armour must be accorded the leading pro of the year on the In Big Money Class. Armour holds down the berth as pro & Summer playground for millionaires, and he does not fare any worse in the is the mentor at the Boca Raton Club, near Palm Beach, where ample money mor has it that if Tommy goes on the way he is going he will be a millionaire mixed up with the L."A. Young Co. of Detroit and hasn't done so wfly in over the past year. ‘Tommy uxmed on the heat in two big the Canadian open and the St. Louis open by such fast golf that none of his the St. Louis open he played 72 holes in 12 strokes better than par. par and finished second. Tommy's scoring in the Canadian open was al- rectly, he had one round over 70. Up 'at the P. G. A. championship at minor matter of settling based on achievement, it seems swing at Congressional Country palms, considering that golf is the “savvy” war veteran who used right to live and now pumps tee must be classed as the leading that of MacDonald Smith. the British open, in a tie with Leo the Professional Golfers' Association St. Louis open and finished second in and on this winning showing of the start of the Winter season. at the Tam O'Shanter Club of Detroit, ‘Winter, for during the cold months he is neceuny to enter the portals. Ru- himself within five years, for he is the matter of picking up cash prizes tournaments this past Summer, wtnnin( competitors could stand the e. In Hagen played the distance in 10 better than most as good. If we remember cor- Fresh Meadow, where some folks re- garded Tommy as an interloper, since he failed to qualify in_the sectional tests around Detroit, he played ten 18- hole match play rounds over a 6,800~ yard course and only once wu ovur 3. He scored a 76 in one round, bul play ' after was 72 ol' better. ‘Wilmington pro, who is to be with 'ranmy at Boca Raton' during the coming Winter, says that Armour’s tting has improved con- siderably this year. His pumnl tl'l!l has been the weakest poin his 'lme but Tommy is like Chlck l.‘vlns used to be. He knocks them so close with the iron clubs that most of his putts are for birdies or eagles. Even 50, his putting_is the weakest part of his game. If Tommy could yutt like Jones no other professional would be close to him in Made Pros Dissy. In the open championship Armour lcd the fleld (or the first raund and then faded away under the blazing heat at Interlachen to finish sixth. He did not play in the British open. But he went into Canada and won the open championship of that prov- ince by so many strokes the rest of the pros were dizzy trying to follow him around. And he did_the same thing at St. Louis and St. Paul. Tommy has thrown his hat in the ring so often a and has come out the winner so often that he must be given top place in t.ha rank! fil t'il hole his tee teent e short of the sand and k\ckad angles, where & kick wol left him a putt a 2, and kick gave him a h‘rd -earned l Tommy came to this country in 1919, as secretary of the wemhzmr- Biltmore Counwdclgbwltygy;,“ "; und Ne He played arol . lnd‘;-’he l:nluur championship, indifferent suc- . But he turned pro in the Wi cl::' of 1924, saw to it that he hlfl plenty of time for practice and has Moved along at such & fast pace eince that few of ys have been keep track of the flying Scot. ‘b}:kw rise pu a first-rate example of a golf game with & nne !oundnlon d practice developed by _practice 19 1" foaay is at the very top of his profession r:“’ he seems tor be zemnx bemr OKLAHOMA VICTOR, 7-0. Kansas Aggies Get Past Midfield but Are Held. October 25 (A).— scoring con= Three Times, NORMAN, Okls. The highly advertised free- e e Seners whm, 7 o e Sooners B iahoma totiched off the only rocket in an munpwad program of fireworks a 49- n‘d sprint 'ml y“ tz::kle for & touchdown ndk ndhunllmmumwlnk times di the afternoon S 3 otked:the bl past midfield, but one thrust fizzled at the Sooner 20-yard line, and the other two lost momentum along about the 36- yard line. Tt00 ———r NEGRO ELEVENS IN TIE contra tor and rabid Cub !ln. christened his boy Rogers Hornsby Potts. Last night the stork came to the: Ponta h:;'nz with ll secopd son and the contract ptly named him Hack e Pt T R SWIMMERS TO PRACTICE Oandidates for the Columbus Univer- team will begin ng Miss | pass from Neither Wilberforee Nor Tuskegee Scores in Grid Tilt. d lfl’flu two Negro teams ‘The game was largely a ting duel between John Johnson of mm and “Bull” Moore of Wilberforce, in which Johnson, averaging 45 yards, had an advantage. ‘Wilberforce thruuned to leore m ',ha second quarter, Mmmth&‘um.m"m play was called WIN MIXED DOUBLES ——ye—— Mrs. Quigley and Mischou Take Sweepstakes by 3 Pins. ‘The doubles team of Mrs, Catherine Quigley and Frank Mischou last night won the novel mixed-doubles sweep- stakes staged at the Arcadia alleys. ‘The Quigley-Mischou combination shot & set of 686, barely nosing out the runners-up, Miss Billie Butier and Al Pischer, who shot a combined set of 663, Mrs. Quigley was outbowled by Miss lut.h but her partner, Mischou, g-rlor to Fischer, rolling a :u Al 's 38’ It was a tough one for the Butler- Pischer team to lose, as the three-pin margin deprived them of the ° prize money, as the event was run of o winner take all. Mrs. Doris Goodall and Haverty fin- ished third, shooting & 630 set. g STANLEY A. C. wm;enm. Stanley A. C. is booking basket ball ames through Manager Crawford et tlantic 2469-R. I*A HEAR COOPER IS LEADER IN SALT LAKE GOLF Has 139 to 36 Holes,, 6 Un- der Al Espinoso in $5,000 Meet. By the Assoclated Press. ALT LAKE CITY, October 25.— Harry Cooper, Los Angeles pro- fessional, fought his way through & driving rain and hail storm today to gain a’six-stroke lead at the end of the first 36 holes of the first an~ nual $5000 Salt Lake City open golf tournament. Cooper added a par-smashing 69 w0 ¥ ©F ¢ ect O\,I/una/(/ E HAYANA FILLER hh of m for & total of 199, under par. Al 'nunlm‘m.t xlholu mm\au no better than a 73 today, and seoond place with 145. One stroke behind his brother, Abe, and Olin Dutra of Delmonte, Oalif, with 146s for the first two rounds. Dutra equaled par to- day, being the only player except Cooper to equal or better perfect res. Dutra had a 74 yesterday. Abe Espinosa carded & 72 and & 74 for the two dl{’l play. Cooper went out in par 35, ul reeled off two birdies and an eagle coming home. He went 1 over on the final hole, getting a 6 when his second shot rested near a post and he was forced nine score was 3 under par. Foley Falls Back. Utah State amateur carded a par 72 yester- ] lig) lay, getting a 75 for & total of 147, three strokes bet- | ter than George Von Elm, former na- | tional amateur champion, who is play- ing his first “money golf.” Von Elm disiiked the sdverse weather and scored snother 18, for a total of 180. ‘ Wood of Bloomfield, N. J., con- Llnued 1s good play, lnhouuh hampered to play the shot left handed. His home | He shot a 76 today, which, Iry nln 3 with his 'fldm.nnlh L] mm Uhl nosa came | D. Dfl”l favorite f‘:‘l’:: vflhd"SWlflm'uOMwm‘ . GAME MAY AID JOBLESS DETROIT, October * 25 ~] Frank Murphy is tryime mm-m"n;": post-season foot game between Michigan and the Unlvmlty of Detroit, receipts to go to the Detroit unemploy- melnt fund. n & conference yesterday, Felding H. Yost, director lhm.ry. at Tni. versity of Michigan, ted out that Western Conference rules prohibit poste season games. University of Mron officials were said to be mmns u’lc n “u A;\:h Arbor ayor Murphy e: m the project with Regent James o Mur- fin of the Unlwm“:flghm mayor e Treceipts at $100,000. Luxury at a thrifty price= the vttermost peak of quality-quantity aemeng cigars —are summed up in two Robt. Burns Perfecto Grandes at 254, Measured in actual minutes of de luxe smoking —they give the most for the money. Two hours of Havana smoking! Yes, 2 hours of imported flavor—imported fragrance—import- ed mildness of clear Havana filler. Snuggle up tonight with a pair of Perfecto Grandes for a whole even- ing of the spell of Cuba’s finest. Time them for an- hour apiece of Havana delight at a quarter for both. Sanaat Cas €2.,... World's Largest Manufacturer of Clgars LISTEN IN any Monday night—10 o'clock —WMAL—to the Ace Orchestra of the Air—Guy Lombardo’s Royal Canadians on the Robt. AR Burns Panatela Program, Rflht Bul'ns Y6 © 1930, General Cigas Co- lney \f*i