Evening Star Newspaper, August 29, 1931, Page 11

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SPORTS. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON ©D. C, SATURDAY, AUGUST 29, 1931. SPORT S. A—11 m Sun Beau’s Mother Is a Lady of Quality ROESCH PASSES UP DEFENSE OF TILE 72-Hole Tourney September 8-9 Not Likely to Have Marked Favorite. | HICAGO, August 39 (%).—The | advance battalion of the army of 150 players who will march over the greens and fairways of the Beverly Country Club when the thirty-fifth United States Amateur Golf Tournament begins Monday satisfied S . MsOATEUM. ftself today in sampling the course. HE annual joust for the Dis- | Those who battled high winds yes- I trict amateur golf cham- |terday discovered that the Beverly | bunkers plonship starts on Septem- | formidable handicaps to next week's { play. At least, e mi ure ber 8, and all the amateur | PRV, O %0 jondscape into strange stars of Washington are taking shapes and twisting many a drive and the tournament so seriously that |iron shot far out of line, the hazards most of them are practicing as- pert c!onwsrl;nu. e a-| In fact, the wi were so discon- i e e i w;"‘:‘ | certing to several players during their ment at the Burning Tree Club. trial "’,’“’:fis‘y”"{""{:y ‘hr m'ylm:;fly in many | bagge eir sticks and wen me ye::sh:;: 'Zf’ufi?.ié‘l’.ff n:ufi be a | Without bothering to post their scores. 72-hole medal play affair, stretch- | Little's 73 Is Best. ing over two days, and if you think | Willlam Lawson Little, jr., the modest that isn’t as much a test of stam- |5 San Franciscan, who told Bobby Jones 1929 that he would have eliminated r- |him if Johnny Goodman hadn't, ina as of golf shots, enter il YOUr- | Sl 0y (e hest round of the day, self and see how you feel at the | ;"ng "tuo over par. end of the route—if you go that = George Voigt. the New York star, far. A yho waited unil he was almost 30 ‘Not since 1920 has the District simon | before grabbing at laurel leaves, pro- pure title been held at match play. | duced the next best, a 74. Dr. O. F. Shat vear it was held at Columbia and | Willing of Portland, Oreg.. the dentist, and sandtraps might prove | did strange things to otherwise ex- | P. | Dayton, Ohio, today, Poor Scores Prevail as Wind Hampers Amateur Golf Stars ' In National Tourney Tune-Ups took & casual 77, while Russ Martin of Flossmoor held himself to 78. Other practice scores were yesterday by T. Philip Perkins, former British amateur champion, and one of the favorites for the title, 83; Ross Somerville, n amateur cham- lon, 81; Max Marston, national title older in 1923, 88; Watts Gunn, Bobby Jones' one-time protege and runner-up | to his tutor in the amateur in 1925, 82; | Roland MacKenzie, medalist in 1925, 82; Lester Bolstad, former Big Ten and | public links champion, 82: Ellsworth | Augustus, who will start the tourna- ment with Jack Westland Monday | morning, 82; Arthur Sweet, 82, and | Johnny Goodman, Jones' conquerer in the 1926 meet, 82. Tolley Changes Mind. | ‘The tournament proceedings were | made more interesting yesterday with | the sudden entrance of Cyril Tolley, former British amateur champion. Un- like his fellow Britons in the meet, Johnny and Alaric De Forest, Tolley | had not signified his intention of en- tering. He will be exempt from quali- | f7ing, as were the De Forests | " Pive former champions, Jimmy John- THE THRILL THAT COMES ONCE IN A LIFETIME.—By WEBSTER et Ton G\RL WHO W 1IN STEAM U NECKTIE CcLASP OoF PHOTO o v FounTane PEN WITH SAFETY CLIP NOVELTY FeencH RING WITH VIEW OF ston, Francis Ouimet, Max Marston, | | Jesse Guilford and Chick Evans, will| | perform in the Beverly battle, but the | greatest of them all. Bobby Jones, will | be present only in the role of spectator. Bobby is scheduled to play a match at | but is expected | | here tomorrow night ! s man almost unknown to golf here-| abouts won his way to the final, to lnse‘ in the ultimate round to Robert Fin- kenstaedt of the host club. That virtually unknown competitor Events in Water Are Carded Here 'ATER sports fans ave offered both swimming and power boat entertainment here this after- noon. A stellar fleld is slated to com- known drivers are to show their peedboat program on the last four years, was e = not now affili- | Washington club and & e ated with any gol! organization about it | GLANCE over the list of players | who are among the possible win- | ners discloses no club-wielder who | is & standout to win. Harry G. Pitt of | Club_might be classed as| outstanding fevorite were it | habdit of having one bad | 80 is not likely to win. VETERANS BATTLE o INWOMENS GOLF o mprescive_season.|Mrs. Pressler, Mrs. Hill in Spr Columbia Final of Western Title Tournament. ing, | Club tourneys | round by Ted Burrows, NERNA REPEATS NG SHIH, QTS Ravior Easily Wins Ontario Marathon and $5,000, But Won't Compete Again. By the Associated Press. ! ORONTO, Ontarfo, August 20.— Margaret Ravior of Philadelphia, | has won two successive National | exhibition women's marathon | swims and thinks that two triumphs | | are enough. [1-]1- 3 “TRE COMPLETE LIST CF ACCESSORIES THAT. WENT WITi4 TRE WELL DRESSED MAN . e— | After winning easily yesterday she | said she did not expect to return for | the 1932 race. She had not intended }m compete this year, she sald, until | her mother influenced her to have an- other try for the $5,000 first prize. She made the task of swimming 10 miles through the rough waters of Lake Ontario seem easy. Undisturbed when Evelyn Armstrong of Detroit passed her in the second mile. she made her own ACTRESS SAFETY K€Y CHAIN WITH METAL IDENT (FleaTOoN — eneck SATETY CHAIN FOR KNIFE LEATHER WATEH IN CHESS CIRCLES BY FRANK B. WALKER. EPORTS from Europe womi-'med‘:‘ct gmt Alekhln;' !;;Ll kg }un: nently set forth the surprise 2§ain. We base our on the fact given European chess players ‘D8t Alekhine is more a ive, can | McGraw May Need | An Organ Grinder YORK, August 29 (CP.A.) — John J. McGraw is making heroic efforts to put more drive into the Giants as they go down the BLADENSBURG SHOE DATES ANNOUNCED Duffers Pitch Monday and Experts Thursday and Friday at Carnival. ORSESHOE pitchers from throughout the Metropolitan area will take part in special .events to be held next week in conjunction with the Bladensburg, Md., Fire Department carnival. The dates were announced today by Andrew Casper, secretary of the Metropolitan League, who will be in charge of the horseshoe program. ©On Monday night a duffers’ tourna- ment will open, to run through the week. This will be open to all who have not won major honors in The Star's Metropolitan Championships. On Thursday night there will be an event for experts and the best pitchers |of ‘Washington, Maryland -and Virginia |a expected to compete, along with | several from Pennsylvania. Friday night the play will switch | to doubles, with Harry Saunders, metro- ‘gom.m champion. and Clayton Henson, irginia titleholder, taking on all-com- ers, |be_flled with Casper, phone Columbia 9670-J. OBERT M. WILLIAMS and John Bowers, champion and runner-up, looking hopefully to the Montgomery County finals, to be played next week at Silver Spring. inty Chatrman Brooke Grubb will announce the defi- nite date later. Millard E. Peake, who retained his title as champion of Bethesda, will be the defending titleholder in the county glly-ofll and several, Including Wil- and , are hot after his scalp. For two years Peake has ruled the county pitchers, and those of South- ern Maryland, for that matter, with ease, but this time there are breakers ahead for him. In a play-off to determine which would carry on with Champion Ed Kruse of the Interior De; ent in the Wi n divisional play-offs, C. Bell defeated F. Jackson, 21—17, 21—19. SUN BEAU GOES AGAIN | Champlon Cotn Winner Races To- " | day in $25,000 Lincoln Handicap. CHICAGO, August 20 (/).—Sun | Beau, greatest money winner of all turf | bistory, went out in search of still more gold today, u uas a topheavy and-a-quarter dash for the $25,000 added Lincoln Handicap at Lincoln The Willls Sharpe Kilmer veteran | was expected to poke his nose at the Challenges for this event should | respectively, at Boyds, Md., are| lining {avorite against 11 rivals in the mile- | SLUR ON ANCESTRY * HELD UNFOUNDED Leading Winner of Turf Refutes Reports. Kin of Man-o’-War. Owner of | | | By & 8taft Correspondent of The Star. ARATOGA SPRINGS, N. Y., August 29. — Willis Sharpe Kilmer of Binghampton, N. | Y,. capitalist and breeder of i thoroughbred horses, who races an | extensive stable, says Sun Beau is | the greatest horse he ever bred or | owned. [ This relegates, at least in his | opinion, Sun Briar, sire of Sun | Beau, which he bred; Reigh Count,; | champion of a few years ago, | which he bred and sold to John D, Hertz of Chicago; dear old Exter- minator, a large money winner like Reigh Count; Sally’s Alley, Futu- rity winner, one of the great filliés of the decade; Sun Edwin and oth. ers. Sun Beau, with several more big stake engagements to fill this year before his retirement to Kilmer's famous Court Manor Stud, in Virginia, where he was bred, already has become the largest money winner in the world, with $334,~ 044 in stake money, and goid cups, plate and trophies estimated at $75,000. The remarkable part of this is that the 6-year-old son of Sun Briar and Beautiful Lady has had few large stakes and no derby or futurity to swell his winnings, like Reigh Count and Gallant Fox in their 3-year- But he has plugged away tneuun‘h!{‘.n great strong glant now 17 hands high:’ He was locking better than ever before in all his career when he arrived from Chicago the other day at Saratoga. Breeding 0. K. on Both Sides. Sun Beau is richly bred on both sides, contrary to reports that his dam was | ot a iady. Possessing such a sire a3 Sun Briar, lKumer scanned the cata- ]t see a bit deeper, is equally as good a by the win of the United States e 3 0hs the * { defensive player and has the confi- | team at Prague over all competitors, dence and psychological ego gained from especially ‘considering the distance the Naving downed the Cuban in his pre- | American team had to travel. { vious encounter."” | Three rounds from the end Austria had lost but a single match and was looked upon as a sure winner. Then | iakower of Poland, who tide with 131; ame three successive defeats. Hans wins and 4!, losses. The score of | | Kashdan of the United States was 12-5. | End-game No. 8 by H. Rinck, a; combination of knights: White—K orf KBS, Kts on KR3 and Q3, P on Kt5, 4 pieces. Black—K on KR2, Ps on Q K6 and QRS6, 3 pleces. White to play and win, FTER the tournament at Prague,| that Spring. five of t_heg:lnym med la Ham- —_— b the wa and com- peted with six Beigian piayers for| HARDING TOPS AGAIN one - half match | Drizes, but did nolgr T ] | e L O A Hmere s!m:& 2!;: !R{L‘g“;‘:'of"fi |G. P. 0. Player Has Average of 2 .558 in Government League. 3 » | United States, Ru- {Ut g ey, won 3and 2% | penstein of Poland L“ and Yates of Great Brother Harding, G. P. O, hitting for 558, topped the Government League batters during the season just closed. | of Toronto, who won $250. but | game and a result one way or the other United States. The winner was de- B! cided by the number of games won. Harding hit safely 24 times in 53 tries. Bridges, Naval Hospital, was a fine golfer as well. He plays cross- wouldn't cause any surprise. } e " pimaia " at is his left hand is oo The two have met bu once betore. SHORE AND LATONA top of the | Deutsche Schachblaetter of Leipsic, | ‘ventiona] contains a review of the tourney, p:nd‘ with 481, and Brown and Hargett, both of Interstate, were tied for third, each shaft as opposed to the con- and that was in the semi-finals in 1928 1 | the blame for Germany's defeat is put with .474. | barrier a neven-money favorite, with |Plucky Play and Paul Bunyan his | closest rivals. | pace and crossed the finish line in 4 | hours, 56 minutes. 44 2-5 seconds. Mrs. Stevinson i ¢ ’ “slev ity siaged ol 7 "TIRGLAND PARK. 1. upus | B, Borle Oaryof Xev Yk bunne "m‘“m' through the early I e it & Sournament vietory, 20—Two of the stoutest- | behind when Miss Ravior finished. but lstely he has been knocking the | hearted campaigners of golf, ‘The lake was so rough that it was ball around Mrs. Leona Pressler of San | necessary to shift the course from the Oolumbis st & fast clip, | usual trianglular route extending off scoring well down in the lows | Gabriel, Calif., and Mrs. Opal 8. Hill | gnore to semi-protected course nside ‘Herrman of Wi of Kansas City, faced today in the final | the breakwater, but even then the swim- the District title event, the | fight to the finish for the women's : mers often were half hidden by the ‘will have to I foam. | oo this slabe of this | oo CHESSSmip. | “I feel & bit tired,” she said after | ter and smoke G Somter from Oblo. Jimmy has| Mrs. Pressler, who wore the crown 10r | the race. “The choppy the Capitol, which he expects | two successive years, in 1927 and 1928, | from the gasoline launches bothered | next Winter. But if he o o slight favorite, mithough she was | Me at times. But I knew I was swim- | District_amateur, he may | oo 000" aimeutt task in dis- | ™ better than ever and that the | 1 title. He is good enough | girl who beat me would have to swim | has shown in the few postig of her rival, who marched | some " . | which he has played | through the hardest bracket of the two | Mrs. Gary received A‘:.csoo rudr flni;o‘;} about : ing second. Third place and 81, Bl Di Esté of Indian Spring and :,"" f’::" ;’M &,‘megfi oy ‘:"m"w ot %0 Bthel Moty of How, York:{ Argyle, who finished fourth in the Virginia Van of Chicago in & 18- | [ gy Riley of Keansburg, N. Y.. took Jast year, is one of the | hole overtime match. | $750 fourth place money, while Evelyn marvels of golf. Always smoking a = Mrs Hill, who succeeded Mrs. Press- equipped with a gadget |, h Armstrong of Detroit won $500 g: cigar, his putter - ler a5 champion in 1929 by winning | finishing fifth. Sixth place went to O N D o S Pk the ball from | thiat notabls match from Grese Lites ng plac | first Canadian finisher, Ruth Downing the hole without stooping over. Bill not | of Los Angeles, was very much on her | stretch, and what he may need is vne :{l tl’ler tonic he discovered in emphis & few years ago. Hilly Bee, 156 Afgeler most Tabid | The others were in the long-shot base ball fan, recalls the incident. | Clase. Arriving in Memphis for an exhibi- | tion game, the Giants were so un- nerved by the jolting they got on the rattlers and their irregular hours for meals ti0it they were zipless and zestless, McGraw was irritated and fretful. He sought a& remedy and found the right one. He pounced on & hand-organ man and hired him to play for his team during practice. When the grinder ran into “The Wearing o' the Green” the New York Irishman | made him play it continuously. It ‘was the best workout the Giants had links Juminary. Next to Pitt we | as one of the g, ;p, pssociated Press. public 228 o Fgbi — | The leading scores were made in the Prague team tournament by Alekhine of France, Stoltz of Sweden and Tar-| TRIS TO RADIO SERIES Former Star in Diamond Classic Will Assist Reporting It. NEW YORK, August 29 () —Tris Speaker, who appeared on the field in three world series as a featured per- former, is to have a new role in the 1931 games. This is to assist in the broadcast of the games as one of the National Broad- casting Co. staff. He has been report- ing games in Chicago over the ‘micro- phone this season. gi i §E2 & Hy . EEE i Zeitung in attempt- ing to explain it.| He suggests that| [lthe American| team was 3 g i Seant g e o ‘Was! TAKES LEGION GAME. HOUSTON, Tex., August 29 (#).— vy |S it s S a 13- TIP FOR FISHERMEN. gnr Columbia, 8. C., in the first game junior base ball world HARPERS FERRY, W. Va., lmoffihei Potomac and Shenan by the . 29.-—~The American Legion. Rivers both were muddy this morning. only six hits and fanned nine. grip with the left hand up- |at Indian Hill. Mrs. Pressier defeated permost. He also is = |on its seventeenth round, in which the | possibility to win. | Mrs. Hill in that battle, but the { er-up—John G, | Ble jasted to the final putt on the final AST year's runner-up— German team was defeated b o { y the leorey of Kenwood—is figured by Had the score of Your Sunday Dinner going on to win the crown. took Al green, Mrs. Pressler winning, 1 up, and | many folks as the logical contender to win the championship. Shorey has Wie yestere d surely 18 | pattle of the tournament. ists about | at nine and 1 down at 16, Mrs. Hill not. anly one of the finest Mrs. Hill's match against Miss Van day was the most stirring Two down | Meet for Capital Honors; Paired, They Battle | s 3 British, 3% to 15, City Singles in."\aien’ between the British _teams been reversed, Germany would have won 481 games and been in_first place. German and respective- [ . Rubenstein lost to Koltanow- ski of Pointers on Golf Problem Solved-- pincin the Capital, but one of the finest golf- came back to square the match on the ers. If he puts on a fighting streak 'seventeenth, hold her rival even on the such as he showed at Burning Tree eighteenth and then win with a shaky last . the other competitors will 6 on the extra hole, when the heavy have to show a lot of golf to beat him. 'head wind carried Miss Van Wie's sec- for Doubles Crown. l There were 18 matches to be played and only 14 playing days. so that on | four different days each team had to Prank Shore will meet Anthony La- | pla This - required tona for the singles title in the Capital who recently | the plindfold simultanous record. play- | ing against 30 boards, of which he| won 20 and drew 10, in 111z hours, | BY SOL METZGER. One of Washington’s Newest and Finest Seafood Houses trenuous efforts against the best play- with one hour for lunch. The score | The United States sent over five of the game between Rubenstein and | Koltanowski follows: pening. Rub'st'n Koltanows] it Blaci . White. 19 Kt-Q3 20 B-B When driving, all t cham- plons—Burke, Von Elm, Jones, Barnes and others—swing the club- head through and on after the ball | in much the same way. Their idea is to follow through low, the club- head staying close to the grass as it goes after the ball. Young Monro Hunter has been shov- | ond shot out of bounds. Miss Van Wie ing the ball around his home course &t excelled in everything but putting, but Indian at a biistering pace. For | that shortcoming enough to enable five mm rounds recently he | the Kansas City golfihng mother to come averaged 71 over that long and hard | from behind and win. layout. m‘,b’l(lr;. Pressler lnto the finals pace as Burning Tree would | e other extreme, defeating June u.';“."z'x: balance of the field flounder- | Beebe, 18-year-old Chicago girl, 5 and ing beiplessly in bis wake With him | 4. Miss Beebe, visibly nervous and un- it is & matter of holding his iron shots 'able to cope with Mrs. Pressler's great on the Mne and regaining his putting ' iron play, falled to win a hole on the touch. journey.” The Pacific Coast star won Here are the other possibilities: | the first and eighth heles to make the Everette Eynon of Columbia, Leroy turn 2 up, halved the first two coming Sasscer of Indlan Bpring, Thomas P. back and then ended the uneven strug- Bones of Columbia and Jimmy Drain gle b nning the last three holes. | of Washington. Not since George Voigt Today's match was over 36 holes. Jeft the Capital fiat on its back early in - 1928 has there been such an open champlonship race as this ore. mafi&fl may step in and shoot four hot vounds to win. but probably the title lles between the men men- tioned. City Tennis League Closed Tournament Mongay on the Henry Park courts. {plavers who were fairly even in play Shore and Latona will face the win- | ing strength. They all recently had| ner of today's match between Pat Deck |taken part in the New York Interna-| and Bill Seidel and Gene Hermann and | tional Masters' tournament and were Maurice O'Neill for the doubles crown. |in good playing condition. The work Shore gained his final brackets in the | was divided up among the players, | singles yesterday, when he overcame |Kashdan playing 17 games, Marshall Hermann, 12 to 10. He won the first |16, Horowitz 14, Dake 14 and Steiner 11, | set of the match Thursday, 6 to 1, be- | total, 72. It is believed no other team fore rain halted play was as well equipped with five good Bhore and Letona gained the title players. Sweden had but four repre-| round in the doubles by defeating Mur- ' sentatives. The talk about the United ray Gould and Hyman Ritzenberg, 6—4, | Btates team being well supplied with | 6—0. money is foolish. ~Nothing was further | rl E v %! s R Taoh L] Ll SWING CLUB~ HEAD THROUGH LOW AFTER BALL | St Wl e e-i3 AAOA 5%5 SR LaJal TR » Summaries from the facts. zom SINGLES | )‘C Shore defeated Ner- 4 Packer de- s, 7. 8.0 pl ed Doyle and Gar- Paris, world champion, has taken the | RING CHAMP INVADES d and Ritzen- |lead at the end of two rounds, with| - ubly, 2-6. 6—4. wins from Stoltz, champion of Sweden, R Suiaied Jonbaet | A0 1o s Fasiakom ot Poans - | Vassis of Greecs, Middlewelght, to ) Seek Fortune in U. 8. Deck and Belde 45" | M. Vidmar of Jugoslavia and R. Spiel- | mann of Austria are tied for leeond‘ | place, 135-1'5. I Kashdan of the | CHICAGO, August 20 (#).—Constan- | United States drew with Dr. Vidmar tine Vassis, middleweight boxing cham- | (he won from the doctor at Prague) | pion of Greece, is coming to America in and Dr. Lajos Asztalos and is in a tie | Search of fame and fortune in the ring. ::;::;::Oonqnunuu-—g N the International Chest Masters' | tournament at Bled, Jugoslavia, 14 | rs participating, Dr. Alekhine of | MRS. LOTT ASKS DIVORCE Becond feated Garber and ¥ Deck and Seidel defes Davis Cup Tennis Player Says He ‘Will Not Contest Action. 4 PHILADELPHIA, August 20 (#).— BRITISH CHAMP TO VISIT George M. Lott ir. Devis Oup tennis tar, told the Philadelphia Bulietin over long-distance telephone yesterday that be wouid not contest a divorce aetion Look at the sketch of Barnes' driving. One of the main reasons for not finishing the stroke correctly, ac- cording to Barnes, is hitting too soon. Sol Metzger offers an fllustrated i -gnal Goula ound. Ritzenbere. 6 | | | | i feated Enid Wilsom Sails to Take Part in fled here Thursday by his wife, the U, & Golf Tournament. former Abigail Stapleford Allen. The LIVERPOOL. Mngland, August 20 suit listed no cause for the divoree ac- () —Enid Wilson, British women's golf tion. START FILII;INO TENNIS | Pairings Are Made for Annual Af-| fair Beginning Today. with seven others, 1-1, for fourth place. | Aron Nimzowitsch of Denmark, one of | the outstanding players, lost to Pirc of | Jugoslavia, and Spielmann won from | ed The 21-year-old boxer will sail Sep- | tember 10, according to word received | today. His ring campaign will be direct- | leaflet on “Driving” which will help every golfer having trouble off the tee.” Send stamped, addressed en- Address Sol Metsger , has sailed aboard the lmer Aske¢ what grounds for the divorce %flf; @uebec tn make use of a Were, Lott said: “The grounds prob- ¢ given her by het father to cele- | &bly never will be revealed.” Prate her 2ist birthday anniversary “I have known sbout this for some The present is & trip to the United time” he added. “Mrs. Lott and I dis- States for the natéona! women's golf cussed things a month ago before we ip opening at Buffalo Sep- came home from Europe. I have no 1. definite plans at present.” Miss Wilson also will compete in the Mrs. Lott is visiting in French, Wyo., ps at Rosedale with her parents. Her mother said | over thc telephone tbat she did not | know why her daughter sought a decree. Mr. and Mrs. Lott were married in A D. Play in the fourth annual Filipino | Club Tennis Tournament was carded | to start this afternoon on the Monu- ment courts at 3 oclock. P. N. Rul-| loda, 1930 champ, is seeded No. 1. Cesar | Caraballo, A. Tomelden, P. Eugenio and | F. Pinfera are other leading players | entered. Today's pairings | Pirc. from Chicago by a group of his | velope for it. in care of this paper. countrymen who are financing his trip. HE British Chess Federation Con- gress is in session at Worcester. There are 12 contestants for the | British championship, including Sultan | Khan, Bir George Thomas, E. G. Ser- | geant, W. Winter, Tylor, Mitchell and | Yates, London players, who took part | in the cable matches. At the end of | four rounds Sultan Khan leads with four victories, followed by Thomas, Win- ter and Yates. The British women's Columbia’s Position at Odds To Have Early Grid Practice Despite President ENTERTAINMENT and MUSIC Here you will find only the best and Butler’s Tirade Against Game. | October-at Elkton, Md., championship has eight entrants; the they eloped. P i -~ major open tournament 12 entrants, | mcludln% Miss Vers Menchik, woman world champion, and the major re-| serve tournament 12. | finest seafoods . . . arriving fresh daily . . . you are cordially urged to dine in our delightfully cool and spa- cious restaurant, Tables Reserved for Ladies—No Couveért Charge HAVANA JOE’S SEAFOOD RESTAURANT 10th St. N.W. A0, on. Domingo vs. Fon P. Mamaril_ Piniera ve | A Tamsi. Ballesteros vs, Butuyi \v- J. Martinez. V. Dulay vs. C. 29 (A —Cyril amateur cham- Plon nae Seeies o' “ovisun %o NET STARS TO INVADE champlonship at Beverly Country | | IN TENNIS FINAL. e | He will be entered Cohn and Wallace to Compete in HARBOR SPRINGS, Mich., Aumt;mfi_ editor of 3:1:hcumh£|.u¢ | —_ juirer - Junior Tourney Here. 20 (A —Harris M. Coggeshall, Des discusses. consider- Moines, will play John F. Hennessey, able freedom the contention of the A junior tennis tournament in which friends of Capablanca that the result| Jay “Junior | Indianapolis, today to decide the Michi- | of his match with Dr. Euwe compared | , | plon and 1930 boys’ national Will | semi-finals Hennessey wom from Scott - | gan n tennis championship. In the | with the results of the matches of Dr. | Rexinger, Chicago, 6—, ), scored over Lewis Thal- of District juniors, including Gilbert | heimer, Chicago, 6—32, 6—3, 6—32, keep- Hunt, Ricky Willis, Clyde | ing him o y éline the en- | it 'Mh' | ing him back near the baseline the - | tire Hotel courts, starting Mon- | T BY LAWRENCE PERRY. ences throughout the count may #W YORK, August 29.—No be taken to mean that the m:um objections have been heard with respect to Lou Little's call for foot ball practice at Columbia on September 1, two weeks before the opening of college. ‘The summons, quite the contrary, players from practice September 15 has good points and It enables students who 4 fHE it NET TEAMS IN BATTLE. 4 4] ir gas 1

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