Evening Star Newspaper, June 24, 1931, Page 32

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SPORTS. PLAYERS 70 COME FROM BIG THREES Jones Brothers, Howard and . Tad, Will Be Coaches of Rival Squads. !By the Associated Press. OS ANGELES, June 24—For the edification of America’s guests to the Olympic games, foot ball stars of three Eastern institutions will match their prowess against grid grenadiers of three California univer- .sities here the night of August 8, 1932. Players chosen from the graduating igridiron ranks of Harvard, Princeton tand Yale, will line up against selected sseniors from the 1931 teams of Southern ‘California, California and Stanford. The iclash will take place on the Olympic IStadium greensward. In making the announcement today, the Los Angeles Organizing Committee for the Olympic Games sald the con- test would be strictly under the sanction and supervision of these universities. The game brings the Jones brothers against each other again, for Howard Jones of the University of Southern California will be head coach of the Western squad, while Tad Jones, retired coach of Yale, will take command of the Eastern continent, Head foot ball coaches of the pnrucxpltlnn schools will work as assistants. ‘The game was nrrunged for under 8 permit of the International Commit- tee's protocol. When such a contest wu proposed at the last International mic Congress, representatives of all nll ons voiced an enthusiastic approval. grid classic will be played under the llghu the night following comple- tion of the track and fleld events, in order not to interfere with any of the regular international events and o permit all competing athletes to be present. ‘The two coaches and their committees will select their players from graduat- ing ranks next Spring. The teams will be organized several months in ad- vance and will be brought here to pre- pare for the contest. Assisting Howard Jones will be Glenn (Pop) Warner of Stanford and Navy Bill Ingram of California. Tad’s stafl will consist of Mal Stevens of Yale, Eddle Casey of Harvard and Al Wittmer of Princeton. It will be the second time that teams coached by the Jones brothers have met, Howard took his Iowa Univer- sity Hawkeyes east in 1922 as Big Ten champions, to defeat Tad's Yale eleven, 6 to 0. SHERIFF LEADS BATTERS Peffer, 5-Time Slab Victor, Also Hits Hard in State Series. HYATTSVILLE, Md., June 24.—Jack Sheriff, first baseman, led the Hyatts- ville High School in batting during the State series, completed last week, which the team won to annex Maryland scholastic honors. Playing in all five games, Sheriff compliled an average of .524. He hit safely 11 tithes in 21 tries and scored 4 runs. He also led the team in stolen bases with 7 thefts. Curley Byrd, jr., second baseman, was a close second with 12 hits in 24 times at bat for an average of .500. He scored 6 runs and numbered among his bingles 3 doubles and a triple. Francis Peffer, the team's star south- paw hurler, finished third in batting ‘with an average of .400. Hitting safely 8 times in 20 attempts, including 2 doubles and 2 triples, he drove in 7 runs to lead the team in this respect. Pefler rang up an enviable record in pitching all five complete games. He allowed 20 hits, an average of 4 a contest; struck out 61, an average of more than 12 a game, and walked only 5, an average of just 1 a game. Batting and pitching records follow: coconmanonw-l] C] ] JOrSR——Y SoomommBINs cecnuanmamBRT Moxley Pitching. G i =B Pefler ... 5 5 DISMER BIRD FIRST “Twilight” Scores in 550-Mile Race From Chattanooga. ‘W. F. Dismer, veteran pigeon fan- cier, homed the first Washington bird in the eighth annual Chattanooga race. His bird “Twilight” was the long Dis- trict of Columbia entrant to finish the 530-mile flight from the top of Lookout Mountain on the day of liberation. It got in at 8:18 pm. The next pigeon to home, that of J. D. Clagett of North ‘Woodside, arrived the next morning at 4:33 o'clock. Of the 2,000 birds from 30 different cities entered 140 from 31 lofts were from this city. As the results from all the cities have not yet been tabulated by tha national secretary, Earl M. Henderer of ‘Wilmington, Del., Dismer’s place in the event is unknown, but is figured he will be among the first 10, Order of finish of Washington en- trants showing the average speed made in yards per minute by the first return to each loft follows: W. P. Dismer.. 1043 J.°C. Clagett... 1,028 Worch ‘& Schriver ..... 1,80 Flaheriy . : . Kauffman 980 enhaver 981 Ewck & Balmons ..... 866 Thirten lofts failed 80. ye TP w. 4% 8 Robert Bird ... Petworth Loft.. 820 Who’s Who THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, WEDNESDAY JUNE 24, 1931. East- West Grid Tilt Listed for Olympics : Good Will Marks New Army-Navy Deal STRAIGHT OFF THE TEE at Inverness BY GRANTLAND RIC Gene Sarazen. ENE SARAZEN won his last major medal play title nine years ago at Skokiz. He has won any number of. big tournaments since, but not a United States or a British open. e shots and he has the had one putt men and a tendency to get sore after some slip. We talked this defect over before Gene left for the British open. He admitted both charges. Then he let the same lapse cost the cham- pionship. Sarazen has a fine golf swing, a lot of power and his full s of courage. Au"that he needs 15 the temperament to face one or two bad mistakes, steady down, think things over, and forget about it. I recall one big stretch at the National Links where started 4—3—4—3—4—3. He had two fine shots at the seventh hole. His third ran into hard I And then he finished 8—7—6. He let one bad break kill his chance. Sarazen has everything needed to win an open. He has the game, the stamina and the heart. He merely needs & trifle more control over him. self .mr missing & short putt or run- ning into some rasping trouble. He must learn to face misfortune with a greater show of fortitude. 1f he does this he will be one of the hardest men in the fleld to stop. He can hit the ball straight and far, he is a fine iron player and he is willing_to take his chance at any time. You won't find him sieerit.g the ball in a pinch. He will be worth watching at Scioto and Inverness, for he is a slashing, dashing type that carries an appeal to the crowd. Mac Smith. NCE again the Carnoustie veteran marches to the wars. Mac Smith makes a stand at Inverness next week in another desperate- effort to crack the spine of the old hoodoo that has followed him for more than 20 years, It is & tough break to tie for a title wmnal’;: are only 19 years old and then discover at the age of 39 that you are still outside the fold where the wild laurel blossoms. Mac Smith again had a great chance in the recent British open until he faltered over the last four holes. He had the tough luck at Carnoustie in his last stand to open fire with a 70—71 in the two qualifying rounds, which did not count in the championship. ‘That pace burned him out. six rounds. Mac Smith still has the game to give any one a battle. He has one of the simplest and smoothest swings in golf. He is a swinger, not a hitter. He has a sound all-around game and a style that is worth _watching. He is long and straight. But the phantoms of too| many failures in big championships have been chasing him through the years. He is beginning to wonder what will happen next. He has had so many rare chances, and alwnmwmetmnl has suddenly developed that meant one more defeat. Few realize the heavy nerve strain Pointers on Golf BY SOL METZGER. Increase in one's skill in any goif shot from driving to putting is to be obtained only when the stroke, gnted over and over again. practice. Take driving, for-ex- lmple, ‘Those duffers who use the ‘wood from the tee but fourteen times & round are never going to get far. Ome of the CumAn princi- ples of all learning is to Tepeat the act again and again without taking 14 ORIVES PR AOUND ARE Ll ENOUGH = b-29 one’s mind off the task. We violate it in our rounds of golf, as there are intervals of from 10 to 20 minutes between each drive. During these periods our mind is occupled with Mher matters. Smali wonder we ;nhné: little progress with out tee areg g Are you wondering what effect the new ball will have on your game? If so send for Sol Metzger's new leaflet on the “New Ball.” Inclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope in care of this paper. (Copyright, 1931.) big ing | {00 ‘when Few can | gin. keep shooting around that mark through | in golf through the stretch of an orem The bunkers reach out farther and they lock deeper. The greens suddenly turn to ice and the cups look to be the size of a thimble. There is a deep yearning to steer the ball ay from trouble '{fi nur in gl( has suffered tmm is k t final t'um the conulunt Tealizes afford to make no more mistakes. 'nn- sion is the curse of the gnl.t nwlni. and tension crowds in down stretch through the Aecunuhuon m three days' pressure. u-c Smith's best chance will come when he throws aside his ao- ear am- bition to Win and makes up his mind merely to play four rounal o! golf and let fate and nature have their way. But that isn’t as easy to do as it m:;m seem. In fact, it 1s almost an impos- sible vlnn Yefi it vou.ld fl:u him the best ever had—just to turn v.us (m. lmoo'.h swing loose and let it work as it can work under normal conditions. ‘Walter Hagen. TH!R.I is more golf history and golf tradition packed around =Walter Hagen than any other professional goller the United States ever developed. Hagen was a contender at Brookline in 1913 when he was 20 years old. He won his first crown in 1914 at Midlothian, beating Chick Evans in & thrilling dash down the stretch. He won his second open crown at Braeburn in 1919, coming 5 strokes away to tie Mike | Brady and win the play-off. That ended Hagen's march in United States opens. But it was only the be- ginning of a career. r later he won four British opens and, he than won the P. G. A. match play title five years in a row. Walter Hagen has carried along the finest competitive temperament that golf has ever known. Competitive tem- perament in golf means a mixture of daumlnltlnn, concentration and the ability to keep relaxed in rough going. Hagen finished fifty-fifth at Deal the 1921 British open. He posted his last card with a llmle ‘and merely said, “I'll be back.” 1t sounded like a joke. A week later he won the French open from almost the same fleld. And after that he dominated British golf for the better part of five years. Some time ago he faced Archie Comp- ston in a $2,500 challenge match. Comp- ston, playing miracle golf, crushed the Haig by 18 and 17, & murderous mar- It was the beating that would have crushed the spirit of most com- petitors. A week later, as buoyant and as light-hearted as ever, Hagen won | the British open. As determined as he is in competi- tion, few have taken life or golf less seriously. He has been a golf philcs- opher with all of this. Here are a few examples: “Don’t kid yourself into trying a shot you ean't make, especially from ible. “In the rough—that's where I ought to be after that shot.” “I expect to make at least seven mistakes a round. I always do. Why worry when I make them?” “It’s all right to thni the wind, but don’t cheat yoursel “Never mind the mne-. Just save all the strokes you can.” This is Hagen's ninetcenth campaign. He is still a great golfer, one who will be among the big gallery cards at In< verness. They have counted Him. out before. Being keen for the dramatic side, he sees his big chn:lek t‘o make and n fromt ©Of the parade.—In"the recent Western npenhemlmmsln4under even 4's. That 1s no 'ol{ game gone to seed. He is hitting the ball as well as ever. And any one who relishes a hard fight as Hagen does must be given his chance. If his old putting touch comes back he won't be far away. It would be a great comeback after waiting since 1919 to see the home tide turn. (Copyright, 1931, by North American News- T Alliance, Inc.) e EXPECT NET LUMINARIES | College Stars May Play in District Title Tourney. Several of the luminaries now com- peting in the national intercollegiate m-mu championships at Haverford, Pa., &lr in the District of Columbia event, which will start July 4. l'.nmu for the District event now are bein greceived at the Tennis Shop, Spalding’s, the various clubs and the public courts ticket booths. JOCKEY OPERATED UPON. CHICAGO, June 24 (#).—Jockey Eu- gene James, contract rider for Joseph Leiter of Chicago, is out of action in- definitely. He was operated appendicitis and will take no yesterday, mounts before the end of the Arlington Park’s season. Girl Upsets Tennis Tradition Senorita De Alvarez Creates a Sensation at Wimbledon by Playing in Trousers. LEDON, England, June 24.—Senorita Lili de Al- varez set vongues to wag- ging and eyes popping ‘when ghe appeared on the famous center court yesterday to play Bunny Austin’s sister, Mrs. R. Lycett, in & tennis garb of her own creation, featuring short trousers. Old ladies gasped and old gentle- men gurgled as the comely Spanish player pranced about in preliminary practice in her “divided skirt” of cream crepe de chine, topped by a close-fitting bodice. In 50 years of Wimbledon play no ’glrl has ever dared show a stock- ingless leg on the courts. Even the Americans who are accustomed to play bare-legged at home observe Smoke ‘a cigarl HABANELLO IT'S AN OLD ARMY C%STOM the English custom of covered knees. There's no rule against it, but it simply isn’t done. experts, turned nyum for the moment, were of the opinion the innovation in dress of movement it gave, was not very becomin, 2. Former King Alfonso and the In- fanta Beatrice of Spain were inter- ested spectators yesterday, both oc- cupying chairs in the royal box. Alfonso was keenly interested in the match in which Senorita de Al- vares defeated Mrs. Lycett and con- gratulated her after ner decisive triumph. ARMY RACKETER IN'SECOND ROUND -|Strahan, Defending Champ, Wins Easily—Van Vliet Has New Partner. IVE second-round matches and one first-round affair were scheduled this afternoon in the second day's play of the annual Army tennis championship tournament on the Columbia Country Club courts. Competition was to start at 2 o'clock. The two seeded players who saw action yesterday breezed to easy wins. Lieut. John W. Strahan, defending champion, will not make his debut to- morrow. He will have to play three matches to catch up with the fleld. Lieuts. David D. Hedekin .and Stan- ley K. Robinson and Maj. J. H. Hills, seeded second, third and fourth, were the favorites to advance yesterday. Easy for Hedekin. Lieut. Hedekin drubbed Lieut. M. A. Hatch, 6—0, 6—1; Lieut. Robinson polished off Lieut, R. B. Stewart, 6—3, 6—0, and Maj. Hills won by default over Col. K. Easton. In the lone first-round match yester- day that was not completed, Capt. H. Cochran and Lieut. James Heiskell were tied at 5—5 in the first set when rain |3 halted play. be completed In the hndul-(oulht match yester- This engagement was to today. day, Lieut. J. 8. Moran downed Lieut. pla; Fry, 8—6, 4—6, 6—4. mj Leland 8. Hobbs advanced the farthest, gaining the third round. Alur recelving a default from Lieut. M. we default, he defeated Cupt T. J. Jackson, 6—1, 6—1. Van Viiet Out of Singles. It was announced yesterday that Maj. Robert C. Van Vliet, jr., who with Maj. Thomas won the doubles title last season, will pair with Lieut. Robinson this year. Maj. Vliet is not competing in the singles because of not being in prime physical shape. Maj. Finley will not take part in the tourney being unable to get away from his duties at Fort Leavenworth. Today’s schedule and yesterday's summaries: Schedule. First round. 3:30 p.m.—Capt. Cochran vs. Lieut. Helskil cond round. 2 —Lieut. Hedekin vs. Lieut. Broo) i lstenberry, v, Lieut. B n, Hl Hllll vs. Lieut. Gardes. Lieut. i Morrell and Lieut. Robinson vigCapt Dikke. FidMa). Newsarden ve. winher Caph GochPum-Livu. Helow Summaries, First round—Lieut. Hedekin defeated Lie Hllch.b-o &-l.’ t. BCI:Q‘KI delellued ; . fl ted Col. " et Garges meneu Sant ult; Maj. Newgarden Powell by Jefault; Lieut. Gh 3 fison defeated Lieut. . Drake defcated : Hobbs_ defea ‘I"oem.m. Capt. Jackson aJ. Hobbs defe B nd round —Na s defeated Capt. Here’s Lowdown On Shoe Tourney 'HIRD annual metropolitan dis- trict horseshoe championships, P sponsored by The Washington Plly starts July 27. Entries close July 25. ‘Titles at stake: Nelghbcrhood di- visional, sectional lnd city cham- plonships of gton: town, county and State chlmplonlhlpn of Maryland and Virginia. ‘Tournaments in Washington un- der supervision of munuip-\ lay- Eound department; those in )gnry nd and Virginia under direction of local chairmen. !.‘ntfi l‘?;':kt.n ': ?e issued shortly may ed from playground directors and chairmen. be given by The . ‘Town and neigh- champions will bronze medals, suitably engraved. Divisional winners in Washington and county champions in the neigh- boring States will receive silver medals. Gold medals will go to Washington, Maryland and Virginia ions, hies to East and champ tr and silver plate will be awudeswl: the grand flmle for the metropoli~ tan district t ‘Washington a players Ior nmu and land md th two each, the eight to play a round robin. Detailed information m{ be ob- htneu hy gd honing _or iting _the litor, Washington Star dep-runent, phone National 5000 branch 3 For intormlflon on the “colored lectlen of the mu-nnment, com- icate with Arthur Oreem, 'l"le"th Street Branch Y A, 1816 Twelfth street nmhvut phone North 1054, —_— BOOKS TILT; WANTS ONE. BEADENSE - Bladensburg A. C. has arranged & for Sunday with the "g Co. for 3 o'clock on the Bladensburg diamond. A lor noon Sunda; is sought by B! Olfl !hn{ Fierstein at Humvlue 814-W. LYON METAL TIRE COVERS What the Well-Dressed Car Should Wear L.S.JULLIEN,Inc. 1443 P St. N.W. North 8076 FREE PARKING WITH ANY SERVICE ‘%sEEEB“ INCORPORATED Between K and L on 17th FOR A BETTER WASH Free Plrkn. Wltl Any NO EXTRA CHARGE SATUR- DAY, SUNDAY OR HOLIDAYS ‘1 N..ssao 1017-1917thSt.NW Mgsazs Mary Bartlett Gibbs an * | Cottman. Mortensen Sets Decathlon Mark OS ANGELES, June 24 (P)— Jesse Mortensen, former Uni- versity of Southern California athlete, now compe! for the Los Angeles Athletic Club, has .d“cd a world record by scoring 8,190.29 points to win the decathlon meet of the Southern Pacific A. A. U. [The present recognized fofal of 8,053.29 was set for the 1928 Olympic at Amsterdam, by Paavo TUESDAY DEADLINE FOR TAKOMA JAUNT Agee Will Seek Third Victory in Annual Seven-Mile Race’ Independence Day. Entries will be received until next Tuesday for the third annual seven- mile run, a feature of the Takoma Park Independence day celebration, by John C. Post, chairman of the committee in M. | charge, at 7313 Blair road. They also may be mailed to the Municipal Play- ground Office, Room 2, District Bulld- 1 n'A team trophy will bet.nurded zy the co- operating with the Takoma éitizens in 'grun,nwnuumetnc k and fleld events that will follow it l‘;:r{h. Whit- tler playground, 3 w&lt:.m (Bill) , crack Baltimore runner, who will after his third straight win in the event and a third leg on The Evening Star cup to gain permanent possession of the trophy, is & big favorite. MARTINEZ, WALKER SEEK SECOND TITLE Woman Doubles Champs of D. C. Net League Play in Maryland State Tournament. BALTIMORE, June 24—Mrs. Ruth Martinez and Miss Frances Walker, crack Washington women players, who won the doubles title in the recent Women's District Tennis League ' tour- - {nament, will meet Fannie Braunstein and Rebo Kirson tomorrow in the first - |round of doubles play in the Maryland women's State tournament. Mary Ryan of Washington and Mrs. W. V. Winchester will engage Mrs. Charles Boehm and Mrs. Harrison Smith and Mrs. Margaret Graham and Betty Cochran of Washi n will face Mary Clare Miss Cochran was the lone Wuhlnx- tonian to advance in singles title E nswrdly Sh. defeated Mrs. Winc) e second 6—2, 7—5 20 YEARS AGO IN THE STAR. 'ORK of the Washington base ball team's pitchers has im- proved but the club’s hitting has fallen off and its fielding is abom- inably weak. The Nationals stand uventsh 1{:,“ the flag chase, topping ol t. mn’reur, tall Walford catcher, is ‘banging the ball at a .600 pace to lead the Commercial League batters. Al Handiboe, playing the outfield for Commissioners and Cornell, is Prodie, Cologne stood out as Iulc Stars defeated the Im- manuel nine. By WALTER EXT week comes the national open champlonship, the biggest event of the year in golf, and e tournament that this year lacking the presence of the one apd only Bobby Jones, i sure to be packed and charged with a drama 'that has been missing over the past decade. ‘This year the pros-will have 5o Jones complex. They will go out to shoot the works, knowing that off in the dim distance somewhere there will be no Bobby Jones plowing along to catch them at the home hole. championship—one of the great dra- matic moments of American sport— and no Jones in there with a better chance than any other man in the fleld. What a tournament that will be out there over the tree-bordered fairways of Inverness, where Ted Ray land to win our ph].d cnm.med ‘mh stories of fa- “blow-ups.” Of men who should hl'e won the title by several sho?-l. but blew on the third or fourth round. The competitor who goes to Toledo and shoots himself a quartet of ‘135 will be preny close to wlnnlng his 292 total A. L. Hcm.hmn, pro at v.he Kenwood Country Club, is to be the vanguard of the local invaders. Houghton will leave Washington by automobile for Toledo next Saturday or Sunday. Monro Hunter of Indlan S and Fred McLeod of Columbia, the other two local qualifiers, plan to leave the osplhl 9{0 train Monday night, arriv- ledo in time for two days o( Mee before the opening of the show the July 2. T chance have the Washington entrants to go anywhere in the open? To be perfectly honest, not one of them has more than an out- side chance to win, and the odds against any of them finishing in the first 10 are large. When you gather to- gether the cream of the golfers of the world, all shooting at a pot of which may total up to $75,000, with the monetary rewards that go to the winner after he has won, the chances of any individual are small. Houghton, Hunter and McLeod are not fine golfers, capable of performing well in any fleld. They are fine golfers, but playing and winning local tournaments is a far different chmg from winning a national. Nevertheless, it is a fine thing for Washington to be represented by three such fine players as the three who will go to Toledo next week to play for the national championship. If one of them goes out and shoots him- self four 73s he will not be so far away. But it is that round of 78 or 80 or worse that ruins any competitor. If they can keep away from 6s they are bound to do well. All of them are tak- ing the championship very seriously and one of them may do weH. 'O any man who has not played in & lot of big tournaments the job'of holding his game together through four rounds of championship play is.a far different task than that of the men who have been playing in many big eyents. He may have a good round or two and then his game may fall apart. With the men who have been under fire all Winter and Spring it is dlfler- ent, for they are ened under the fmumt tests and know what they have Furthermore, the Washington entnnu have not been playing a great deal of golf. Freddie McLeod, for ex- ample, has played exactly three rounds of golf in the past two weeks. For the balance of this week he will play frequently, but the playing of golf, to him, is incidental to his main job—that of giving lessons. The same thing ap- plies to Hunter, who is the working pro at Indlan Spring and only plays golf once, and sometimes twice, a week. Houghton - probably plays more golf than either of the others, but even he has none too much golf behind him this year. When you compare their Jjobs with those of the touring pros who are playing every day, you can see why they have only & slim chance to g0 anywhere. You ean't win national championships working at a bench or teaching ng duffers how to swing out there under a broiling sun. NTRIES for the competition for the Herald Golf Trophy closed this afternoon with Mrs, Frank K. Keefer, president of the District Wom- en’s Association. A few post entries evy Chase holes medal phy, with handicaps up to 16 to count. with the GLEN ECHO PARK CRYSTAL -GIRL from 10 A. M. to "11:30 P. M. ADULTS 50c KIDDIES 25¢ Under Expert Instructors Ladies & Children Mondays and Fridays 10 A. M. to 12 Noon Ladies, Children & Men Tuesdays and Thursdays 10A. M. 1912 No. &lh&_— J. | Pull SPORTS e R. McCALL! ]mnmmmemn&zacgum towns and cities who have g}. lull.ned ,‘t,lulr seventeenth birthday fore June 30 was announced r.oan American yby the the District of Colllmbll A 36-hnl¢ ‘The cpen | Milles habilita partially by the activity conducted by the ganization in boys’ base ball. blanks may be obtained at Legion head- uuartefl or at East Potoma k. strokes. tered 40—45—85 to hldvlrllnhl’weinflmummtut. Pope_scored 95. In third place wu Mrs. E. A. Rule who scored 102. C ASHMEAD FUL FULLER, defending his Chevy Chase Club title, must pick up 11 strokes on Frederick Hitz over the third and fourth rounds if he is to retain the title he has won for the past two years. Hitz yesterday added a 78 to his 76 of the opening round of the 72-hole title chase, while ler scored a 79. Hitz' total {or the first 36 holes of the tourney is 154, while that of Fuller is 164. Richard P. Davidson turned in a fine motuwmwhuuotmm ing round and crept into second hee at 158. Emmons 8. Smith is onl morning of Thursday, | stroke bel Britton has cards of Gl—al—l“. nd G. Brv'n Miller, jr., has 88—84—. fiz A. Jones, jr., and Richard Lunn plcked up. The third round was scheduled with the final tomorrow. o O tournaments held yesterday at Oolumbh resulted in victories for B. Asher, playing in '.Iu Rohry Clllb event lnd for J. F. M. novle. Dl.lyln[ he tourney of the Mlur lhot & fine 35 on the out nine, but took 46 for the return journey for a score of 81, to win low gross in the mryevent Second ‘went A. A. Paldot with a ca nfld. L. J. st low with 85—18—67. Bowie won 2:; glymx. G. Hayden esen! )y the president of il;—e_%flg‘gn b;J]ub with a m{:ffl of 86— erel lnnem t ne in class A. George R. fllmu 2 m low gross in class A with a low gross in.class Michaelson with a card of 96, while e low net went to Thomas W. Brahany 95—22—13, In class C the low gross James L. Wright, Whfl scored 108. Low net went to Walker 8. Buell, with 103— 24—79. Warren Wheaton turned in the low net card for the entire fleld with 86—18—88. The kickers’ handicap Wwas won hy Tudor Morsell, who hit the mémg.e;d:ll the mheld wgm 78. won the prize with 129. G A. MERKLE and Ray Esher, who « tled for first place in the low net competition at Manor last week ;;‘n‘d‘;‘cnl s:d :lnm‘ &hyfifl on sundlg’. erkle three strokes. iy Mrs, J. William Har Harvey, jr., won the l!-hole handicap for women of the Br Golf Club, with a card ol 100—! 6, theuby winning the h’onhy presented by Mrs. A. C. Heap. J. F. Gross was second, with 102—12—00 and Mrs. Heap was third with 106—10—96. Parishioners of All Saints’ Church played in a blind bogey tourney at Kenwood yesterday, in which a tie re- sulted at net 88—the lucky w between G. P. w:mer and D. C. Walser. RACER BELIESJ‘AME Depression Wins Chicago Race and Pays Prosperity Odds. CHICAGO, June 2¢ (P.—J. W. Parrish, a banker from Midway, Ky., who maintains a racing stable, ap- parently thought so little of one of his fillies that he named her Depression. winner was | the FRIENDLY SPIRIT 15 SHOWN BY BOTH Service Folk Fraternize at Regatta—Objectionable Grid Plan Out. BY LAWRENCE PERRY. EW YORK, June 24.—Plans were in the making to play the Notre Dame-Navy game next Fall in this city the Saturday before the Army-Navy game. But they have been dropped as a matter of good will to West be Point, where obviously a gridiron contest between the South Bend team and the eleven from Annap- olis immediately preceding the traditional Army-Notre Dame set- to would make no sort of an ap- peal. It appears that the Navy wanted this game played in New York at the time in question, if the Army did not greatly mind, and Notre Dame ceferred decision until she learned the Army attitude. Apparently West Point authorities made their views perfectly clear as to the g:aject, and so all the chances seem to that the Irish and the Middies will meet in some other Eastern city, prob- ably Baltimore, Big Wigs Settled It. An interesting phase of the boat race at Poughkeepsie was the meeting of Navy and Army athletic authorities upon the most terms. Repre- of | sentatives o{ me two service institutions fraternized for two days, as Navy and Army men should, and who can say what good may come of it? year or 80 ago the situation involved in the Army-Navy break was too com- plex to be handled by those in charge of athletics at West Point and An- napolis. Big wigs of the Army and Navy and the National Legislature were all mixed up in it. President Hoover did not enter simply because he refused to have anything to do with what he As time has gone on—save for an oc casional flare-up in Congress—the tend- ency has moved steadily toward the President’s point of view. Thus concen- to | trated, it is as certain as anything can be that in course of time—not as re- mote as some may think—the Cadets and the Mldsh!pmen will be once more reunited in foot ball and other athletic contests. Change of Policy Seen. xc has become clear to the authorities of both institutions that the spectacle e National Naval Academy and the National Military Academy at odds is not a wholesonre one. It sets a poor ex=- ample, for one thing, to the youth of country and breeds enemies to the present system of intercollegiate sport —which has enemies enough as it is. ‘The writer believes that the new ath- letic regime at Annapolis will be marked by a less intolerant attitude toward con- ditions of eligibility at West Pont and will be inclined to let the Army handle its internal policies as it ceems wise, proper and fitting. So far as the Mld!hlpmen are con- cerned they want to meet West Point athletic teams in all sports and they will not be entirely satisfied until HARVARD, YALE ELECT. NEW HAVEN, Conn., June 24.— Following Yale's 4-to-3 victory over Harvard in the deciding game of:their serles yesterday, both teams elected captains for 1932. The Crimson players elected Albert J. Lupien. He will be a senior next year and lives in Man- chester, Conn. The Yale squad chose Edgar. W. Warren of Westwood, Mass. :le has played shortstop for the past WO S_C&l\! TROUSERS To Match Your Odd Coats EISEMAN’S, 7th & F Panamas, Leg- horns and Milans Cleaned Blocked By Modern and Scievtifie Factory Metl Vienna Hut Co. 435 11th St. The Bill Tilden Tennis Ked $3.50 Seonsonep by Bill Tilden, this Tennis Shoe has two virtues mtmhmwmmwflm fiono{uuy.l:hnsspeudaprh;hahh:mu- ~ cushion, and absorbs jolts and jars. And it's canvas uppers are easy to clean. Worn by Tilden, and other famous stars. $3.50. Bill Tilden himself sponsors this Tennis Shoe!

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