Evening Star Newspaper, July 25, 1933, Page 11

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SPORTS ANONG FAVO FAV[]RITES INTOURNEY TRIAL Barnett, Also Seeking Shot at | Dutra’s Crown, Has Im- proved Game. BY W. R. McCALLUM. OT on the trail of another H crack at the second big- gest title to be won by a professional golfer in the United States, two Washington professionals who qualified for the P. G. A. title last year will trek over to Baltimore next Friday among the favorites to win two of the four places in the sectional qualification round for the na- tional pro title which, to date, has been fought more with words than with sweetly hit iron shots. Al Houghton, Kenwood's stellar pro- fessional, who missed qualifying for the National Open this year, is keen for a chance -at the P. G. A. and has been practicing diligently for another whack at the title now held by Olin Dutra. Houghton and Mel Shorey, star pro- fessional at East Potomac Park, were the gents who represented Washington in the P. G. A. last year. Hotighton led the field in the quali- | flcation rounds played at Columbia, n;o;):;nx scores of 69 and 72 for a total o ? | Shorey qualified with a total of 146, Joining Carroll T. McMaster of Rolling Road and Glenn S. Spencer of the Maryland Country Club as the repre- sentatives of this sector in the national title chase. With the tourney itself to start on | August 8 at Milwaukee, the local pros| P. G. A. who qualify will have less than a fort- night to get ready for the trip after the qualification rounds to be played at the Baltimore Suburban Club on Friday. ‘The course of the Suburban Club is on the short side, but is a good test of the game. Hurls No-Hit Tilt; Pulls Triple Play ARTINSBURG, W. Va., July 25. Charles Hill, first baseman and fleld captain of the Reliance team, sprang into prominence here when he pitched a no-hit, no-run, no-man-reach-first-base game, in an encounter with the Boonsboro (Md.) nine at Lambert Field. Not only did young Hill accom- plish this perfect game Saturday, when Reliance defeated Boonsboro, 22-t0-0, but he performed another brilliant stunt in the game here with the Hagerstown (Md.) Blue Sox the previous afternoon when, playing shortstop, as utility, he made an unassisted triple play—caught a fly ball from the batter, tagged a man going from second to third and put & man out going from first to second. SCHULTZ SHOOTS 131 AS P. G. A. QUALIFIER: Troy Shot-Maker Tops Px;i in Tests Played in Five Dif- ferent Districts. By the Associated Press. \ROY, N. Y., July 35.—Posting daz= sling subpar rounds of 63—68 for a 36-hole total of 131, a competi tive record for :the dmfin. Schultz, Troy, Country sional, led the five qullnen o( North. eastern New - York for Nncml P. G. A. Tourniment at 'Mlhfill!e August_8-13. Schultz led the nearest qualifier, Tom Creavy, by 13 strokes. Ed Brown, George Pulver and Alex| Gerlak were the other qualifiers. MANSFIELD, Ohio, July'35 (®— Tied with par-shattering = scores of 69—70—139, Dave Ogilvie and Reggie Miles, both from Cleveland. were the low scorers -among five Ohio golfers|. who qualified here “zlr'h!uu Igm Tournament. others ;;und.s(ltve Zappe, Al Bpln&’” d Bob CHICAGO, July 25 (#.—Jim Foul of Chlcquo. winner of the 1933 St. 'hul Open, put together a subpar 68 and s par 72 X’or 140 to win the Illinois Pro- Beach to Be a Favorite. ALPH BEACH, pro at the Sub- urban Club, will be among the favorites to obtain one of the four places. Ralph learned his game here, first as a caddie at the Washington Golf | and Country Club and later as an as. sistant: pro at Burning Tree and Chevy'| Chase. He has played his home course | in 66 and undoubtedly will be able to travel over the 36 holes in 145 or bet- ter, a pace which should win him one of the four places. Bob Barnett, popular little Chevy | Chase pro, is another of those who are | keen to win a place, and Bob is well | equipped for the job. He is playing bet- | ter' this year than he has played for some time, knocking the ball around his home course tn 70 and 71 almost every time he starts and putting like a master. Bob came North from Florida last Spring with »n idea recarding his golf | that has made him a better player. | NSTEAD of knocking the ball down, I particularly with the long irons, Bob is concentrating on hltkflll it clearily without teo much divot. He'is playing these irons to the queen's taste and he also’ has extended the same | theory’ to wooden club play, with the resnlt that he is straighter than ever. Bob is the mogul of the Middle At- lantic pros this year. As president he handles the job of keeping the boys in line. Naturally, he wants to play in the big - tournament. Barnett Houghton and Shorey will be among the better- playing p jessionals at Suburban next Friday, arfl it would not be surprising | to see Washington grab all four places. | 154 ENTER NATIONAL PUBLIC LINKS PLAY Scotty Campbell, Canadian Ama- teur Champ, Included—Miller Will Defend. Barrett Takes Light. Divat. By the Associated Press. EW YORK, July 25.—Albert (Scotty) Campbell of Seattle, . Pacific Nonhwut title holder and | second American to capture the Cana- | dian amateur crown, is among the 154 | players who will seek the National Pub- lic Links Golf Championship at Port- land, Oreg.. August 1-5. R. L. Miller of Jacksonville, Fla., will defend the individual crown he won at | Louisville last Summer against a field made up mostly of Far Western | players. \ y Louisyille will send six players to de- | fend the Harding Cup, emblematic of | the team championship: Brooklyn and Chicago will be represented by five-man squads and New York by four. BACKFIELD IS RIDDLED MILWAUKEE, Wis. (#).—It's up to the sophomores, says Coach Frank Murray, to “make or break” Marquette University's 1933 foot ball team. Graduation and the three-year rule have riddled the backfield particularly, with Nine-letter Gene Ronzani, De Makes, Elliott and Peterson all having | completed their varsity terms. Records Galore Predicted for Cui;hingham Even Lovelock’s Marvelous Mile Mark Doomed in Mind of Univerg’i&;’ of Ka BY C. E. McBRIDE. ANSAS CITY, Mo, July 25. When that great mile rec- ord of Jack Lovelock, Brit- isher, 4:7.6, made by the Oxonian. to beat Bonthron of Princeton, who himself was setting a new world record only to finish second, is broken, track patrons of the Midwest expect Glenn Cunning- ham to do the breaking. A month ago H. W. Hargiss, University of Kansas coach, said that Cun- ningham should do the mile in 4:7.5 next year, his senior sea- son at K. U. | to lead the Michigan qualifiers for the KING. BEN NEW RIVAL ;spenc:r McElwyn and Sir Raleigh, ning. starting at 1 p.m.. fessional Qolfers’ Championship and | lead the Chicago district qualifiers for the National P. G. A. Tournament. Abe Espinosa- and Harry Cooper tied | for second with 142, and Horton Smith . and Bob MacDomald turned in- 144’s. The other qualifying positions went to oe Paletti, Frank Walsh and Harry | Hampton. bl DETROIT, July 25 (#).—Johnny Re- | volta turned in a 36-hole card of 145 Professional Golfers’ Association tourna- ment next month at Milwaukee, | Al Watrous, four times & P. G. A.| contender, failed by one stroke to reach the select circle. The other qualifiers were: Johnny Revolta, Mortie Dutra, Joe Belfore, Leo Fraser and Ben Pautke PITTSBURGH, July 25 (#).—Vincent Eldled of Pittsburgh, former Pennsyl- ania open. champion, led the four na- 1lon|l P. G. A. tournament lifiers | for the Pittsburgh district with a 36-| hole score of 147. The other qualifiers are Perry Del Vecchio, Ted Luther and Paul Erath. FOR REIN FAVORITES | Seen as Factor in Hambletonian After Recent Showing at North Randall. nding out victory at North ndnll track here .in" the firsf Reat of the second race at the o] {mflu of the “roaring grand” circuff glven horsemen a new element to enter into their calculations over -the rich Hambletonian to be run at Goshen, N. Y., August 16. King Ben’s showing apparently is a new triumph -for Walter Cox, veteran trainer and reinsman. He was trained slowly all season, and although the colt showed well during 1922, horsemen and fans had not given the Good Time Stable trotter much consideration. Believed to have little chance to beat the two Hambletonian favorites, CL!:V!LAND Ohio (#)—King Ben, when a fleld of 10 3-year-olds aces re- ceived the word “go” in the Matron Stakes at the opening of the Grand Circuit here, King Ben calmly out- raced all his rivals to win the first heat in 2:04 2-5. Harry Stokes, who held the reins, was ordered by Cox not to extend the | fast-stepping colt owned by Willlam H. | Cane, since it was his first start of the ear. When the second heat got away, King Ben again led to the quarter pole, then threw a shoe, lost his stride, and was distanced. Spencer McElwyn vindi- cated his backers by winning the sec- ond and third heats, but in slower time than the first. Losing some of his habitual mutlon, Cox declared of his colt, “His chances for the Hambletonian are mighty good if he continues the way he has started.” MEMORIAL SHOOT LISTED. ‘Washington Gun Club trapshots will compete in the Guy Deering Memorial shoot Saturda™ at their traps near Ben- tm; fnais sgaingt England; there were { playrs, overcopfidence And | Sunday might result in permanent ‘in- ket ball coach in Omaha, Nebr., when the news of Lovelock’s remarkable time came in. Coach Hargiss also was there. “That's within a tenth of a second of the time I have in mind for Glenn to do” said the Kansas “Hell do it and maybe something better. The race, of course, must be made to order as was the Lovelock- Bonthron run, no jostling or inter- ference that comes with too mny starters, ideal weather conditions, fast and perfect track and the -t.h- letes keyed to the going. But that race will come and Glenn Cunning- ham will beat the Lovelock record.” is now in Europe with seven other United States tracksters and fleldsters under the tutelage of George Bresnahan, lowa !:anverllty Coach Hargiss expects Cun- ningham to break every world record from the 880 to sovmdl BRIy . inclu S0 the so-called “off-distance races.” This correspondent happened to be & member of an athletic party at .fhe heme of - Arthur Schabinger, -2 direclor and bas- Prom the hills of Berkeley. Calif., famous coach will watch the amazing ] s: LT A.m PROBE | AV ELPDEBARE Slar;inn J’olnt for In- tensive Sift. ™ N!W YORK,’ Iuly '”—flh iclay courts af Auteull may By the Associated Preas., WO! Y_hnd' now-famous ting: spell “ont the red be the starting polntiur an in-| tensive’ inyestigation = into ; this were overtrained and. 'worked up to an excessive- nervous pitch ‘tor the inter- fl explanation for I-I‘le team’s cdhm 1d be demanded a J DOUBLES FEATURED ‘Menand Women Active Today in Muny Tourney—Seeded . Players Advance. OUBLES play will occupy most attention in the public parks tennis cham- : . plonships this evening on the Sixteenth Street Reservoir .courts. Only four singles matches afe’ carded, one among the men ‘nlthuc mou the women, but all may prove hard-fought. Dean Judd and Hugh Trigg face in the lone men’s match st 4 o'clock and among the women Clara Tabler engages Bobsy Turner and Frances Walker faces Dorette Miller at 4 o'clock and Mrs. Ruth -;Martines, " defending- champion, battles Kay Johnson at 5. Men's doubles competition starts at 4 o'clock and next meeting of the mnu Association. m\ ‘s’ little criticlsm” of meflmfll at_the lut’meetm( lw e new MU!. gm of Auuuu upon uf American hopes to m th' mm Cup lenenuy was on the pressure. pl: on thz finally the am poor condition of Vines and VINES DENIES RUMOR OF PERMANENT HURT| Ho Syudflut Has Seen Ankle, He . Say m 8..Davis Cup Pilot “"." ;Replies to Critics. By the Associated Press. ARIS, July 25.—Ellsworth Vines, P jr., and Benton 8. Prentice, cap- tain of the United States Davis Cup team, today denied published re- ports that the ankle injury suffered by Vines in his match with Fred Perry jury. Both said no specialist had examined Vines, as was reported, and the doctor who attended him after the match did not suggest the injury was a permanent one. The report was that Vines might be 5 forced to wear a brace and a high shoe for tennis play hereafter. Answering French criticism that the United States team was overtrained when it was defeated by England in the interzone final, Prentice sald he believed the reverse was true. “Both Vines and. Wilmer Am.mn were \mdenulned if anything.” Prentice said. “Both have been trying to ‘find’ their nme i FIREMEN BATTLE COPS Rotkville Diamond Fans Keyed Up -Over Contest Saturday.’ K Md., July 25.—The, ball game scheduled between the | Montgomery. County Police Force and | the” Rpckvflle Volunteer Pire Depart- ment on “Welsh Pield here Saturday afternon ‘&t 2 o'clock has aroused more than.ordinary interest, Sergt. Roy Bodmer, manager of the | Police nine, has announced this line-up: Jerry Hobbs, catcher; Sergt. Leroy Say- der and Joseph Noite, pitchers; Sergt. Earl Burdine, first base; Sergt. Leroy | Rodgers, second base; Rex McAuliffe, shertstop; Robert Howes, third base- man; Charles Barnes, left field; Tom De Nell, center fleld, and John Butts, right feld, Sergts. Bodmer and Ted Voliten and Officer Ralph Howard are reserves. Francis Lyddane, manager of the Firemen's. team, has not decided upon his line-up, but says he has a group of capable pllnrl STAGE 15-MILE GALLOP Cun;iiérlud Labor Day Event May Be Made Annual Occasion. CUMBERLAND, Md., July 25.—A 15- mile fun will bé held here Labor day from the Cumberland Court House to Cresaptown by the McMullen Highway and return via the National pike. It is l:kmed to make the event an annual air. i Charles. Crunkelton, 6 West First street, 3.in charge of arrangements and wmt f::avu entries until midnight Au- P e BUSCHER, HOGAN STAR. Led by Buscher and Hogan, the Mc- Kinley water polo team defeated a com- bu.muon from ‘Fort Myer, 16-5, last night in the McKinley pool. Green and mn accounted for Fort Myer's PITCHES TWO-HIT GAME. Virginia _Averiue was a 9-0 winner over the Hoover nine in a Pla; | p. m.—Clara | Pr:n;fil Waiker vs. Doretre Miner worien'’s . doubles at 5, with several matehies promising first-rate battling z, listed in'each division. EEDED players continued to ad- vance yesterday. In the men’s singles all the Tavorites now except Judd have reached the fifth round and he is expected to get there today at the expense of Trigg. Pat Deck, another seeded player, has had to quit the tour- ney. because of an injury to an arm suffered in an automobile accident. Frances Stone, a seeded yer, put But another of the select in the Women's singles, defeating Sara Moore, 6—0, 5—17, 6—0. Mrs. Martinez reached the third mmd. defeating Betty Whit- field, 6—0, 6— tuu s Schedule. MEN'S SINGLES. 4 p.m.—Hugh Trigs vs. Dean Judd. MEN'S DOUBLES. AL vs” farty Mesmer and Bob_Ken: 5:30 :.-F-Millrhl Ullfll Welsh Shoemaker. 4 pi l# llru! aries Druch‘tlr ' Rl i S AT aptpen match, wonN § SINGLES. Tabler vs. Bobsy and_ Charl fecker lnl '’ Beidel Turney. m.—Ruth Martinez vs. Kay WOMEN'S DOUBLES. 5 ». m—Loveye Adking and Dorothy Pborette Miller and Kay Johnson 5:30 m—Dorothy lester _ and | Vi Bara Moors and. Bobsy f7 Rrap and Helgn Philpitt attaman “end "borothy "Hobos e and Frances Walker va. Betry d Margaret Ryan. Summaries: MEN'S SINGLES. 'mlrl ullnfl—llulh Trigs defeated M. A. Erane Fourth rounfl—'l‘ony Latona, defested 6—0. 6—2; Maurice David Etteg Biks e “Setested T n o 10—8, 0—8. 6—4 ‘a Stan fi-m feated fl-—. Hinee defenea “Bon” 1ome 2 Gbaries Blanchard won Trom Fat Deck by Johnson. re_defeated 6—4 " Barnes Weish des 6.-0; Otmert Pirst_round—Al Sta Haney defeated Don Garber an 6—4. 6—1; m getesited Bob TR B By, 1o, B c ound-__Harry Mill and Neil Ander- ted n 728 !nry y doldsmitn a 'allenstein def Lawrence 15 Ray Bherry. S50 2T RT WOMEN'S SINGLES. polegond, rou ruuufl—lr::;l:n Stone defeated defested Betty' Whit 6—0. 6—1 Frances Stone defeated Sara Third roun Moore, 6—0, 85—, 6—0. 'OIINI DOUBLES. 1a Moore and Bobsy Tur- erfy Pirst ne; Talbert, 6—| PLAYGROUND TENNIS DEADLINE TOMORROW 240 Championships to Be Decided. Conference Track Meets Un- der Way Today. nmundc s preliminaries to the clty chlmplonlhlu must be filed 'Ith g ground office in the Muni Butl ing not later than tomorrow. will start August 1. Boys' play will be confined to singlés in senior and junior divisions. Eighteen years is the limit for senior contestants and 16 for juniors. Girls will compete in doubles only, with 16 as the age Iimit. 40 “champions_will be crowned on all the grounds. They will be eligible for interplayground compe- tition. | Boys’ conference llmlmry m the city chnmplmmlp- on A‘:flc“k‘ start afternoon at 2 with the Nnrthem Conference affair in o-ntmm.n Stadium. Grounds represented are Bancroft, Barnasd, Bur- roughs, H. D coole nnmun, Phllnps, Bfl:m it Brookland, Takoma Tommmw at the same time the East- in League game. Newman, winnln( pltcher gave up omly two hits. Fowler, Porter and Hamilton hit homers. s Coach. “Ametica’s greatest contribution to the middle-distance running,” Brutus Tton. California coach, recently charag ‘Cunningham. W “FREE Car GREASE ‘WITH EACH 30c QT. OIL CHANGE Htfl;fi 65¢ takes thl m l'll(h Stadium, with Bennm 3 Edmonds, Ludlow, Maury, Puq hmm. for honors. The Western Conference meet will ‘Thursday in Western tral Confer- be held August 15 in the McKinle Stadium, th Southern -zm High Aum..l:dl'l g Cin Smomed$3-5° Up PAINTIA $12 Up Twe-conts ‘or mere l’l 2-“ Gnord- Ave. St | Ritienbers. Ind—8ar | duuua Willie “A’Steen and Dorothy . 6—0. | | | ;| to qualify in the tourney in which he | Stuart and Wheatley | COUIses are to {,m runner-up to Jim Barnes for the 1; Ruth Martines | | affair has been mismanaged this year | | and is not going to play. Ralph Beach is a top heavy favorite | named ON: PUBLIC COURTS| 'I‘H' PRES Dem- WASHIN'Ton T’ it STEAM NAVIGATION SPELLS TRE DoOM OF THE ROMANTIC CLIPPER SHIP D 1953 sy THiounE. wie. "ummllmmm' il 'M’Leod Frowns on Concession To Ryder Cup Team; Passes Up Pro Event; Barnett, Beach Star REDDIE McLEOD is a man of | principle. Once an idea of the | right and wrong of & golf argu- ment is settled in his mind Iv.* stays put. Preddie thinks the P. G. A. | has gone off on the wrong tangent in | letting all the members of the Ryder Cup team play in the National Tourna- ment without qualifying and as a mild protest, he has decided not to attempt has made a brilliant record. It hasn't | been so many years ago that Preddie P. G. A. title, but Freddie thinks the‘» to secure one of the four places in the | sectional qualifying round over his home course on Friday by virtue of an } amazing shot yesterday to | spread-eagle & small field of pros from Wa, and Baltimore in an in- formal s Beach weepstake plaving- with Bob Barnett in a ball match whose oflur manbtn ‘were Gene Larkin and Be- tween them they nthend s bm.er ball of 61, and they gave Larkin d Houghten a 3 score cracked by four shots. The Washington-bred youngster played the first nine in 35, exactly —but he burned up the last & scintilla 28, zeven be- finished wi low perfect second in the sweepstakes event with a card of 34, 36 and 70. Houghton was 71 and Larkin had 78. Roger Peacock, who, won the Mary- land State amateur title last week, went over with George Diffenbaugh and scored a 70. Leo Wllper. unattached, and Wllhr Cunningham, Burning Tree, had 72, and George Diffenbaugh of Indian Spring and Al Treder sf Manor scored T4s. HE public links championship is movln; fast toward a conclusion. W. Seay beat Walter Barrett at ank ‘Creek Park yesterday and was to meet Claude Rippey in a semi-final match at Rock Creek Park today, with the winner to ennn Jobnny Baer, thc youthful medalist, who won his way to the final last week. Down at East Potomac Park John Downey, wianer of the “open” tourney in the Spring, was to match shots with Lee 8weeney in & al contest, and Harlan Will, the medalist, was to take on Ted Barrows, the 1931 public DA FAN BELTS FOR ALL CARS the Loeffler Cup, which will go to the winner of the first flight. Dave Bent beat J. Ruane and Matt | Walker beat Astor Clarke in second flight matches at East Potomac. while | in the third flight E. Lightbown downed N. 8. Perkins. Bobby Marks entered the final round in the second flight by trouncing Mortis Abrams, 6 and 4, at ed Wk‘l‘am s r;"wmim down: er, 1 up. iams won his way to the final of the third fl!(ht defeating Bob Morris, 5 and 4. m:flncko!enmuoomeln ers from thm'wn clubs, To dau cnly a few local players have enteredl the tourney. Tom Belshe of Indian Spring is to play at 2:06 with an un- partner and at 3:12 Mrs. H. A, Knox and “Tiny" Hall, mogul of the Maryland State Golf Association, will tee off with younx Billy Shea and his partner. Post entries will be accepted today and tomorrow. Women golfers of the Washington Golf and Country Club are to start another 18-hole round billed for Thurs- day. Other prises have been donated by M. C. List and G. C. Roney. A R UHLE SIGNED BY YANKS NEW YORK, July 25 (#).—The New | York Yankees have signed George Uhle, veteran Cleveland and Detroit right- hander, to a contract. Uhle was signed by the New York Giants early this sea- son, but was cut adrift after a few weeks. ‘To make room rorvhleonuxemfu Broaca, { the Yankees sent mer Yale mr, to the Newark Bears of the International Lesgue on option. * LEE PREASTENT GLEN ECHO . CRYSTAL THE_NEPTUNE LIFESAVING RPS -OF THE D. C. CHAPTER OF AMERI- CAN RED CROS. IN A SERIES oF LIFE SAVING EXHIBITIONS AND ELABORATE WATER SHOW - CONSISTING OF THIRTY EVENTS NO INC. IN THE USUAL 10e ISSION TO - GRANDSTAND FOR “THIS-EDUCATIONAL SHOW {CLOSE RIVALS® MEET IN JUNIOR GIRL SfllFl Dorothy Bell, Medalist, and Edith | Estabrook Foes in First Round " of Western Tourney. " ° By the Associated Press. . VANSTON, IIl, July 25—Dorothy Bell, 16-year-old Evyanston girl, whose Summer address is Nipper- sink Lod in the Women's Western; Junjor . Golf ched anston. ub coprse |nd posted an 89. Miss Estabrook Had a'91. | ing :lumplnn_ who was exempt from | ualifying, had Alice Ann Ande: | ualified with W as her opponcm er pairings and qmluymgu Scores: vengood, Danville, IlL, 90 |Shizgley Ann Johnson, Ghicago, 91| | Wis., winner of the, med-l '”&lnl jneu Janet' Humphries. Chicago, the defend- Lad Painfully Hurt.in Bow_;g Golf—All Seeded Play-. ers. Advance.: BY B. GREGORY HEWLETT, Associatéd Pfess Sporls Writer. EABRIGHT, N. 7, July 2. Grass-covered courts fail to *worry 17-year-old Frankié ¢ Parker, the lad who rose to naflonat terinis fame on the cli¥s’ surfaced playing fields of -tHe Midwest. . YM Parker is playing this in ihe forty-sixth anpual invitatlon tournament, of the Seabright Cricket. and Tennis Club—his first tourney ef- fort ‘on grass courts, Yet, with all ihie other seeded: stars among both miem ‘and women, he emerged mcemnn’ from his first-round battle .and n‘n reuy Mly for muther like - grass,”. the Lee of Berkeley, trasy and T eink T g on. uunehyulouuul more experi The - nationat clay. court chnmpl. spent week practicing on courts' 6f the Orange Lawn Tennis Clul to get-in trim for . this event and he; had: iearned s lot about it alre Finds Golf Rough Game. NCIDENTALLY, he. took time oyt one‘day for golf and nearly ended” his tennis career. A ball st hh'n Jjust over the eye. - Although hump is néarly gone, enough is left shov just how narrow an eseape Tod-y Parker was to meet Gndy 3 Frank, only one of six Englishmen ‘who_marmaged to pull through the’ Tound Second seeded in draw, h:nr was favored by the ‘ex perts & reach .the finals and meet Frank Shields of New York, a3 he did at ) Lake a little u week ‘ago. ker won that ma in straight sets. 2 Shields was to face Wilmer Hiries: vhfi Nashville in."the second round, Top-Ranking Sidney B. Wood of Héy | Yark, ue!enaing champion, was Perty L. Kynaston of New Mangin, national indoor- title er and seeded tounh was lo play John McDisrmid i Helen Jacobs Off Form. - 77 ELEN'JACOBS, national chlmfltm and defending titlist here, hcnfi ‘to round into better form Mae Ceumm of Wichita, xm u\m showed ° against Mrs, Cmvlyn s‘mm Hirsch of New York yesterday. Now ¥oee st Do biey pencaly lew Yorker and her ne: s c-"t}-:mbcc : y‘:n'e ; ro] ck of Los les drw the Haroness Mauyd Levi as her op- ponent today; Josephine Cruickshan’ of Santa Ana was to play Norm Taubele of New York. and Alice Marh" ol 8an mnciecu tackled Bonnie Mfl‘q of Los Anlelfl G P 0 mm: ll‘PlESSED.;- ' ed 8 stubbors’ and )lcPhennn mked homers. BUICK *Q% Generators Exchanged HARRIS ARMATURE CO.: 611 L St. N.W. National 2470 | Goldie Bateson, lflvuukee. DD. tnd Ella May Williams, Elgin, I, AT PRESENT -——goon. If you act now, car all around wiif: prices. While they last, we caution—don’t delay. -orphonem!oboldl Blowout;Prbaf Generals CAN STILL BE BOUGHT APIDLY increasing cost of all raw materials, plus impending wage adjustments, can have only one result-—a substantial tire price increase Enter from 6th St. Tire Prices MUST ADVANCE SOON DAYS LOW PRICES 3 we can probably fit your . lowspressure Blowout-Proof ' Generals from our stock, bought at present low :you can’ have General's ' famous safety, comfort and big mileage, for less than the future: peice of cheap-grade tires. But ° We cannot - guarantee - present prices after this week. - So come nHoday nt. leeral Trude-m Allowance for Yowr Old Tires EASY PRYMENTS IF DFSIRED

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