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A—16 s Municipal Golf Tournament and Harry F.| Test Will Be Sent to Indianapolis. HUGE field of local public links A golfers will gather at Rock Potomac Park July 9 to fight over the 72-hole medal play route for represent Washington in the national public links title tourney at Indian- ‘The trip of the lucky quartet to the Indiana town will be on the cuff, as| for again Severine G. Leoffler, jr., the Santa Claus of local municipal golf, | lads who qualify for the national. Each boy is allowed $6 a day while at | eling expenses are paid. The four leaders in the twin qualifi- | will represent the National Capital in the championship itself and in the | Cup. Last year five public lnks | golfers made the trip to Pittsburgh to | Rippy, top-ranking public links golfer; John Connelly, the present public links sional; John Baer Saunders. VER and above the qualification | rounds for the national, the en? for the ephemeral title of District pub- | Jic links champion, a title which car- | Four Leaders in 72-Hole BY WALTER R. McCALLUM. Creek Park July 8 and at East four positions on the team which will apolis beginning July 29. far as the competitors are concerned, has undertaken to pay the way of the the scene of the national and his trav- | cation rounds will make the trip and | tourney for the Warren G. Harding | play in the tourney. They were Claude champ; Harlan Will, now a profes- Field May Exceed 100. trants in the 72-hole tourney will scrap ries with it no particular fame, but | nevertheless. Connelly beat Rippy for the crown by a single stroke last year, | | positively would not play. PORTSK. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. €., WEDNESDAY, JUNE 19,. 1935. STRAIGHT OFF THE TEE by W. LL set for the defense of his club championship next week Frank P. Reeside, the Chevy Chase Club titleholder, is go- ing to be a great big nuisance to the hopeful lads who want to dethrone him, if he keeps on going as. he has been going for the past fortnight. Scores of 72 and 73 have rattled off the clubs of the tall champion as he whetted up his game for what he hopes will be a successful defense of his title. It is not the usual thing for Chevy Chase champions to repeat. But if Frank has his way, and his erring putter comes back into form, the Reeside man is going to go a long way in the 72-hole tourney for the F. Oden Horstmann Trophy next week. The Chevy Chase Club cham- pionship for years has been played over the 72-hole’ medal route, with one 18-hole round scheduled each day. Other prominent competitors will be Beverly Mason, Emmons S. Smith, Fred Hitz, Reeve Lewis, jr.; Page Hufty and C. Ashmead Fuller. DOUBLE-BARRELED deal by which Nathan H. Kaufman. president of the Maryland State Golf Association, promised the sectional qualification rounds for the national amateur championship to Indian Spring provided Roger Peacock, Indian Spring ace and present Maryland title- holder, started in the tourney today at Five Farms found the Peacock man over at Baltimore facing a fairly strong fleld in quest of his third Maryland title. Two days ago Roger said that he affairs would keep him out of the affair, he declared. But along came Kaufman with the statement that if entered. theless. Roger is out of condition, hasn’t | would have put the match on ice.| ke Mazurki, the Slovenian Irish- in a hot finich at Rock Creek Park.|played any golf for ‘a fortnight or|Another mild upset came in the de- | man and Floyd Marshall, who prefers Business | R.MECALLUM thoricy to promote any kind of exhibi- tion match and my first effort will be to bring Gene Sarazen and Babe Did- riksen here.” AND did you notice that down at Richmond there isn't a single Washingtonian entered in the South- ern amateur championship? After all the fuss that Billy Howell and his boys made when the Manor Club tour- nament was listed for the same week as the Southern, too. Seems to us the lads make too much importance out of these little things. And, after all, the Southern tourna- ment did upset the local golf schedule no little. Two Washington clubs are members of the Southern Association, but they are not going to have any one in the title tourney, in which match play starts tomorrow. FOUR fine matches today will find the District women's champion- ship advancing to its semi-final stage tomorrow at Indian Spring. Matches today brought together such good golfers as Winifred Faunce, the cur- rent champion, and Virginia Pope; | Mrs. Roland MacKenzie and Helen Dettweiler, the 193¢ Maryland cham- pion; Elizabeth Houghton of Chevy Chase and Mrs. J. F. Dowdall, former Congressional titleholder, and Mrs. Betty Meckley, reigning favorite to win, and Mrs. Leo Walper, the med- alist. That last match was slated to be the real scrap of the lot, for both women are playing good golf. Mrs. Meckley scored a 39 on the out nine yesterday against Mrs. L. T. Powers, which gives some indication of how she is stroking the ball. The major upset of the first round came in the defeat of the favored Mrs. Jack | Scott of Congressional by Mrs. Mac- | Roger played in the Maryland ama- | Kenzie. Mrs. Scott was runner-up in | ou¢ for one of the 30-minute prelims. teur Indian Spring could have the |the Maryland championship 10 days | amateur sectional tests, and Roger |ago, but Mrs. MacKenzie licked her It all sounds like a lot of on the nineteenth hole, after MTS.| peske an oversize Tarzan. which the boys like to tote around | horse-trading, but there it is, never- | Scott missed short putts on the sev- | = | enteenth and eighteenth holes which The entire field (and it probabiy will | more, and may not even qualify. But |feat of Mrs. Lucille Pray, last year’s o above 100) will play 36 holes at |he will be in there trying just the|runner-up, at the hands of youthful | Rock Creek Park July 8, and 36 more | same and he may get back on his | Virginia Pope of Kenwood. holes at. East Potomac Park July 9, |stick at just the right time to thwart | with the low quartet making the team | the aims of Ernie Caldwell, Eddie |drizzle of rain, are to bring the tour- | fore ‘Jong he will have some of the and the low scorer over the route be- ing the city municipal champ. Entries for the local test will close Semmler and the rest of the lads who crown. Meanwhile it is now settled that on Today’s matches, played through a | ney up to its semi-final phase. links | hope to Win the OId Line State links | 'OLLEGE lads are rolling into town | in preparation for the intercol- with either Harry Graham at East August 20 the hopeful amateurs of | legiate title tourney which opens at Potomac Park or Ed Burns at Rock | this sector will gather at Indian |Congressional next Sunday. Latest to | Creek Park June 28. And there lsn'tl any fooling about the closing date either, according to Graham. The | man who doesn't have his entry in by | that time isn’t going to play, Harry | says. As soon as the local qualifiers | are determined their entries will be | filed with the United States Golf Asso- | ciation. This must be done by July 13. | Rippy’s Status Undecided. | ]UST what will be done about Rippy | *" is an open question. The brilliant | Claude, who is one of the finest golfers ever to show his wares around Wash- ington, is working at East Potomac Park in the office. But undercurrents of gossip and insinuations swirl around Rippy’s head, with their gen- eral tenor the assertion that Rippy is no longer an amateur golfer. Meanwhile Claude, smart lad that he is, is keeping his mouth shut and | sawing wood. Personally we think | that Rippy is an amateur, and that he | did not obtain his job by reason of his | skill as a golfer. Certainly he does not give golf lessons and his job as a clerk at East Potomac Park is much preferable to slinging groceries out of a delivery wagon, which was his means | of earning cakes before he became | identified with the Leoffier organiza- tion. JOYCE PRESSES BOBBY Jones Is Only One Up as British Girl Has 74 at Atlanta. ATLANTA, June 19 (#).—Bobby Jones ran down an 18-foot putt on| the eighteenth hole green yesterday to square an exhibition match in which he was paired with young Dorothy Kirby against Joyce Wethered, the British star, and Charlie Yates, na- tional intercollegiate champion. Miss Wethered's medal was 74 : equaling the woman’s record for Jones’ | home course at East Lake. | She had five 1-putt greens and 3-putted only the first and seven-| teenth. On several holes her drives | outdistanced those of Jones and Yates. | She was over par several times, but | carded three birdies. In match play against Jones Miss | Wethered was beaten, 2 down: won, | 1 up, over Yates and 6 up over Miss | Kirby. | S L | SPORTS EXPERT RETIRES | Enright, Builder of Fields at Harvard, to Be Adviser. CAMBRIDGE, June 19 (#).—The Harvard Athletic Association has an- | nounced the voluntary retirement of | Dennis J. Enright, who has cared for | the Crimson's athletic fields since | 1888. | Enright, who built the stadium foot ball gridiron, its famous quarter-mile cinder track, all of its diamonds and Spring to contest for about eight places in the national amateur cham- pionship. It's the fourth consecutive ear that Washington hac had the amateur tests. UT at Indian Spring, Al Houghton is going around with carpenters, bricklayers and painters looking over the old locker room and predicting that within & month Indian Spring won't be what she now is. “It's a shame the way this property has been allowed to deteriorate,” Al said, as he received estimates for rehabilitation of the old wooden structure, which is the locker room. “I hope we will be able to bunker this course to make it a little tougher, for I want to see it become one of the great courses of the East.” “How about this exhibition match conversation?” we asked the playing ro-executive, secretary and manager. “We are going after those things in a | big way,” Houghton said. “I have au- arrive are the six members of the Stanford golf team, headed by Spec Stewart and Tommy Dwyer, the lads who relegated Lawson Little to third place on the university team. Others in the party are Jack Hoerner, Don Edwards, Morse Erskine, Geeb Halaby 'gnd Coach Eddie Twiggs. Hoerner and Edwards played the course yesterday and scored approximate 76s. More of the rah-rah boys, including champion Charlie Yates, are due in town today, and by Friday the course will be all cluttered with lusty swing- ing boys from a score of colleges. The on Friday. Winners in the match play against par tourney staged at Beaver Dam mittee were: John T. Money, C. W. | Criffin, Sam Markowitz, Charles Young, Mrs. R. C. Mitchell, Mrs. R. M. Brown, Mrs. R. E. Zuber and Mrs. | N. J. Waldron. Another similar affair | will be held July 10. 2 entry list will be made public probably | yesterday by the Membership Com- | IN MAT TILT HERE | for Marty Missing. to the Capital tomorrow night the Griffith Stadium bill, seemingly his opposition, the red-thatched Jack an idea he was going places in the vbell!ve they “control” wrestling began showman. put the kibosh on the “drop-kick.” again. He does not care whether dangerous dogs. bring together Little Beaver, a red | the reservation, and CIiff Olsen, who | ‘selu at the Auditorium some yexu'sJ /Savoldi Aims to Use It on | Donovan Tomorrow—Foe BY JOHN B. KELLER. UTDOOR wrestling comes back with Joe Savoldi, one of the principals in the main go on more interested in being privileged to use his pet “drop-kick” here than in Donovan. The ex-Notre Dame foot baller had lug-and-tuck racket until the various State athletit commissions who fondly to ban his brand of foot work. Then he became just another wrestling “They handcuffed me,” wailed Sa- voldi as State board after State board But the District officials don't seem to bother about it at all, and Joe is happy Donovan has that “Irish whip” crack- ing so long as he can throw those Show Opens Bi-weekly Series. 'HE semi-final tomorrow night will | man who finds wrestling a softer oc- | cupation than fishing for his food on used to drag the boys out of their | | beck. | A pair of huskies will be trotted | Walter Podolak, built along the gen- erous lines of a grizzly bear, and Ed | are to | mix for the first time here. There also will be offered a tie-up between | the mat game to working. This show will inaugurate a series of bi-weekly wrestling wrangles at the | ball park, says Promoter Turner. Be- | ‘really big showmen of the business ‘ here. No Foe for Marty, ’ IF‘ MARTY GALLAGHER, the Foggy Bottom riding master, fights here | this Summer it will be against some one other than King Levinsky, the Chicago fishmonger, or Buck Everett, sportingly referred to as the District | heavyweight champion. The King- | | fish will have no part of a Gallagher battle here. and Gallagher will have no part of a battle with Buck. | Matchmaker Goldie Ahearn thought | he had a Levinsky-Gallagher tussle | all sewed up, for Gallagher was ready | to go and the Kingfish's managing | sister, Lena, had listened agreeably to | overtures for such a match. But the | Levinsky interests have lost all in- terest, so somebody else will have to | be found for Marty if he is to show | { here. In the meantime, Ahearn is banking | on his bill here next Monday to bring back to boxing the crowd that was ready to swear off after the recent | | Canzoneri-Klick fiasco. Goldie figures | the Phil Furr-Tony Rock headliner, ‘supporu-d by a block of bouts that promises to be bristling, will knock the ringworms cold. JUNIOR PONY SHOW TROPHY IS AT STAKE | Rives Brothers, Mrs. Wagner Due to Battle for Challenge Cup at Warrenton. By the Associated Press. VWARRENTON, Va., June 19.—A stout contest between the Rives brothers of Cobham, and Mrs.-Samuel ‘Wagner, 3d, of Philadelphia, for per- manent possession of the Sunset Challenge Cup is expected to mark the Warrenton junior hunt pony show Saturday. Both Mrs. Wagaer, who is the former May Ferneyhough of Warren- ton, and the Rives brothers, have won the cup twice and need only one more victory to acquire it for good. The trophy, given by the late Temple Gwathmey, jr., is one of three show cups for which there will be keen competition. The list, which went to press with 365 entries in various classes for 97 ponies, shows a record number filed for the road hack class. Ponies have been entered by owners from Rich- mond, Fredericksburg, Washington, Middleburg, Leesburg, Rockville, Md., and elsewhere. The first class is called at 9 a.m. ELLINGER IN STAR TEAM. Charlie Ellinger, Maryland sopho- more in home, has been named as member of the all-American lacrosse team that will play a series of games in Canada. STELLA WALSH ELIGIBLE. Daniel J. Ferris, secretary of the tennis courts, will serve the H. A. A.| National A. A. U. has ruled that| in an advisory capacity after he Te-| stella Walsh, whose status was ques- turns from a vacation trip to Ire-|tioned, still is eligible for amateur land, where he will advise Free Stale‘ government officials on the location and building of athletic fields, LONG SLABS AND HITS. Long not only kept Bethesda’s nine hits scattered, but he also slammed a single and a triple and scored two runs as he pitched Washington Athletic Club to a 6-to-1 win. ROAMERS CAPTURE PAIR. Running wild on the bases, Roamers, in a double-header, defeated Gaithers- burg Independents, 15 to 7, and Pet- worth, 17 to 7. Bovello and Brown hit | heavily for the victors. Sports Mirror By the Associated Press. Today a year ago—Helen Hicks quit amateurs to become “business woman golfer.” Pie Traynor named manager of Pittsburgh Pirates. Three years ago—Laurl Lehtinen, Finland, set new world record for 5,000 meters and 3 miles. Five years ago—Bobby Jones, with | 142, led British open golf field et half- way mark. | track competition. ————— TARHEEL NETMEN GOOD. North Carolina won 19 of 20 tennis matches in the season just ended. It lost only to Princeton. Mat Matches By the Associated Press. INDIANAPOLIS.—Jim Londos, 202, Bt. Louis, defeated Bill Edwards, 216, Dallas, Tex., one fall; Jim Coffield, 215, Kansas City, and Joe Cox, 222, Cleveland, drew. MINNEAPOLIS. —Bronko Nagurski defeated Lou Plummer, one fall (30 minutes); Hal Rumberg, Spokane, pinned George Harbin, Chamblee, Ga., 23:07. AU OFFICIAL PHILCO SERVICE I..SJUllIEN.In% 1443 P St.N.W. NO.80 # ) « Workman’s Win Mark Is Highest By the Associated Press. LTHOUGH he has not ridden as many winners as Wayne ‘Wright, Paul Keester or Joe Wag- ner, Raymond (Sonny) Workman, Washington, D. C., veteran, is show- ing the way to the jockeys on the basis of percentage. Since the first of the year he has accepted 273 mounts and brought 78 of them home in front for a mark of .29. Keester and S. Young follow with .23 and then Wright with .21, HAS REVENGE CHANCE. Pearson & Crain team, beaten, 6-5, | yesterday by Gallinger in a Washing- | ton Playground Soft Ball League up- set, was to attempt a comeback today in a loop clash with the unbeaten Sports Center outfit at Tech Field. Play was to start at 6 o’clock. EAGLES PLAY CULPEPER. Special Dispatch to The Star. ALEXANDRIA, Va., June 19.—Cul- peper A. C, Valley League champion, was here today for a game with the Eagles. " At home yesterdsy, Culpeper scored its fifth win in six starts in an 8-to-5 game with the Alexandria All- Stars. SARAZEN TIES GOLF MARK. ROSLYN, Long Island, June 19.— Gene Sarazen shot a record-tieing 140 to win a 36-hole invitation event on | the Engineers” course yesterday. WANTS SATURDAY GAME. A Saturday date is desired by the | North Washington nine. Call Geor- gia 1359 at 6 p.m. FURA FE WOULD OPPOSE MIDGETS. Jack Pry Nats seek midget oppo- sition. Call West 2446 after 5:30 p.m. Lt GRAYS CRAVING ACTION. Chevy Chase Grays crave action Sunday. Call Cleveland 8770. 31.50 Round Trip INCLUDING ADMISSION 10 CHARLES TOWN RACES May 29 to July 4 SPECIAL ‘TRAIN Leaves Washington 1230 PM Leavés Rockville 1255 PM Returning after last race B&O e —— A ‘| victor and vangquished, SEVEN YANKS LEFT | IN CANADIAN GOLF |Some Are Rated Real Obstacles | in Path of Somerville, Tour- | ney Favorite. By the Assoclated Press. | ANCASTER, Ontario, June 19.—The | Canadian amateur golf cham- | | plonship went into the second round | today with seven players from the | | United States still in the running for | the crown which Albert (Scotty) | Campbell decided not to defend. C. Ross Somerville, former Ameri- | can amateur champ and four times | winner of the Canadian amateur title, | | was the favorite to-win, but several | | clever shotmakers from across the | border had different ideas on the matter. The American survivors and their possible opponents today are: P. White, Augusta, Ga., vs. J. G. Adams, Cedar Brook, Ontario; Fred J. Wright, Weston, Mass,, vs. G. R. Rayner, jr., Niagara Falls, N. Y.; Allan V. Ellis, Boston, vs. Dick Moore, Vancouver; Jack Ahern, Buffalo, N. Y., vs. Dan Kennedy, Winnipeg; Richard D. Lunn, Washington, D. C., vs. Ted Charlton, | Vancouver, and Wilfred Crossley, Ded- | ham, Mass,, vs. J. B. Nash, London. There was some misunderstanding about Harper Stephens of Lansing, Mich., who was charged with a default yesterday. Officials said a final deci- sion in his case would be made today.’ PLAY IN DISTRICT LOOP. City Refuse and Highways teams, respectively, yesterday in District Building Soft | Ball League games, engage tomorrow | on Rosedale Field. City Refuse beat City Engineers, 13-0, and Highways was defeated, 7-1, by Work Division yesterday. MEDICS PLAY HECHTS. Army Medical Center’s nine will be host to the Hecht Co. team tomorrow afternoon on the Walter Reed dia- mond. Play will get under way at 4:30 o’clock. BRAKE Whests Comatiin Plymouth . Essex Chrysler « De Soto Dodge po.ox. - 15 A | formation and entry blanks for any | This 102-pound sea turtle was hooked in the fin on a recent trip to Solomons Island by Herbert Huff, who is not in the picture. However, he looked on as his wife, astride the turtl left, and Mrs. Carrie York had some fun with the catch. SPORTS. Which Starts on July 8, Offers Double Incentive SCHOOLBOY NEAR le; Mrs. Donald Hambright, on her PACKED PRORAM AWATTS TANKERS Nine Meets Are Announced | by D. C. A. A. U., Two for IN CHESS HE latest word from Dr. Ale- | khine is that he will play on | the French team in the bien- | nial natches of the Interna- tional Chess Federation to be held at Warsaw during the latter part of Au- ust. s . . It was for a time thought his forth- National Titles. coming match with Dr. Euwe would | prevent it. He will be supported by | MATEUR swimmers of the |Dr. O. 8. Bernstein, also a Russian, Washington area will have | now living in Paris, and M. Muffany, many opportunities to collect | Victor Kahn and J. Betbeder. Other | titles and trophies in compe- | nations who have entered teams are tition in home waters this Summer. | United States, Czechoslovakia, Poland, The District A. A. U. has announced | Sweden, Norway. Denmark, England, a program of nine events to be held | Ireland. Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Pin- under its auspices during the remain- | land. Estonia, Rumania, Yugoslavia, | der of the outdoor swimming season, | Austria, Hungary, Palestine and Ar-| National juior 10-foot diving cham- a— pionships for men and women and ’I‘HE Massachusetts State champion- the national junior soft ball water ship tournament, which began polo championship, as well as Dis- lon Washington'’s birthday, is com- trict of Columbia titles, will be at | pleted, except one game between lvl,l stake in the series of events to be Morton, former champion, and S. S.| concluded by the annual 3-mile race | Coggan, former Harvard and H. Y.| for the President's Cup. | P. D. champion. Coggan needs to | draw to win the title and Morton | needs to win to pull into a triple tie GARDEN Dol Tt sl b between Adams. Morton and Coggan. Gardens, Crystal pool at Glen | In the following position, according Echo and the Takoma pool will be |to the Christian Science Monitor, used for the meets. The President’s | Schlechter discovered the winning line | Cup race, to be sponsored by Wash- ington Canoe Club, will be swum over the Potomac course. A. Earle Weeks, chairman of the D. C. A. A. U. Swimming Committee, | at 3727 T street, will furnish in- Three Pools Available. Pistayan, in 19i2: White (Yates)—K | KB5, P on KKt3, KB4, QKt5, QR2; eight pieces. Elack (Schlechter)—K on KKt, Q or KR7, R on K, B on| BY FRANK G. WALKER. | gentina; 20 teems. | 2 too late in his game with Yates at |1 on KB3, Q on QB4, R on QR7, Kt on | 1 CIRCLES Zukertort Opening. Botwinnik PxP. Ktx Morris Has 68—Needs Only 73 to Beat Qualifying Mark in Southern. By the Associated Press. ICHMOND, Va, June 19— Johnny Morris, Birmingham high scheol senior, had a four- stroke advantage at the half- way mark in his quest of an all-time 36-hole qualifying record for the Southern amateur golf championship. Morris' 68 over the tricky James | River course of the Country Club of Virginia knocked two strokes off the amateur record. It lacked only one of equaling the | 67 fired by Bobby Cruickshank, Coun- try Club pro, and was one of the four rounds in the course’s history that cracked 70. Cruickshank had the other three. If Morris can add a 73 or better for the second 18 qualifying holes he'll whip the low of 142 set at Birmingham three years ago by Gene Vinson of | Meridian, Miss. Comes Home in 32. JNTIL Morris came home in 32, | four under par, after a par-equal- | ling 36 for the first nine, Ewing Wat- | kins, the Chattanooga veteran, and Brown Rainwater, Atlanta lad, were setting the pace with 72. Fred Haas, the defending champion, who elected to take a place in the qualifying 32 and let the medal go, and Mogris, Watkins and Rainwater, | almost certain qualifiers, left only 28 places open in the championship field. Dan Sage of Atlanta, George Hester, the Richmond southpaw, and Lansing Eubank of Richmond were well up at 74, while five entries, including Edwin McClure of Shreveport, last year's | medalist, had 75. Tied with him were | Vincent d’Antoni of New Orleans, | Ross Puette of Richmond, Lewis | Johnson, Charleston, and Morton Me- KKt2, P on KR2, KKt3, KB2, QKt3; f::::;:’m:( S eight pieces. How can Black Win? | Erwin Laxton of Charlotte, who A specimen of Russian chess played | CAME In With a par-cracking 34 to at Moscow thar was full of action: | overcome & tough outgoing nine, had five others for company at 76. Sam | Perry of Birmingham, twice a cham- | pion and runner-up last year, showed , as did six others; four were tied at 78 and 10 had 79. Botwinnik Tchekover. QK- GIRL’S 92 WINS MEDAL Virginia Fox Leads in Play for Pennsylvania Title. HANOVER, Pa., June 19 (#).—The qualifying medalist and the defending champion lead the field into match play for the central Pennsylvania ; \;nmen'< golf championship over the s o' e Dlayed recently by | Hanover Country Club course today. Helsingfors. He had to work for all | turned in a 92 score yesterday to set he gained: the qualifying pace, meets Mrs. Robert St Sl i | Myers of Hanover in today’s opening Spielman. Candolin. Spielman. Candolin. | Match-round play, while Mrs. John 1 ;:34‘“ P- 4 i Kt-K'3 P-Kt3 | Gove, defending crownholder from RS nae Carlisle, is opposed by Mrs. N. B, KtB3 P-B4 Bertolette of Harrisburg. $995 BARS KING SAXON. A mere matter of $995 makes C. H. (Pat) Knebelkamp's King Saxon, ruler of the milers, ineligible for the $25,000 challenge cup at Detroit July 29. The conditions of the race provide that a horse must have won $40.000. The Resigns August 4—Garden Pool. Open meet for boys 15 years of age and under. August 7—Takoma Pool. D. C. A. A outdoor championships for men and wom: en t n. 50. 100 and 200 yard 1 back. 200-yard 300-yard_mediey relay and low-board dive: wome: and 100 yard free. 100-yard back. 100-yard breast. 150-yard indi- vidual mediey swim and low-board dive. August 12—Crystal Pool. D. C. A. A. U. championship _ 10-foot dive for men; | 220-yard free championship for men and women. Open events for men. 60-vard free. 180-yard medley Telay: for women. 60-yard free. 1K0-yard individual medley swim and dive (10-foot_board) August 21—Garden Pool. D. C. A. A. U."8R0-yard free championship for men. August 24—Washington Canoe Club. Washington. D. C. Race for Presideni Cup. :3-mile team and individual in Pot mac River over a 1-mile triangular course. 1 5%c A" A7 0" 3'mile swimming cham- of the following events scheduled: July 4—Garden Pool. Marylacd Club Gardens. Marlboro pike. 1 mile from Dis- trict line. 440-yard frée_D. C. A. A. championship. pen “events * for women. 100-yard b 100-yard breast. Open events for men, 100-yard free, 100~ yard back. 100-yard_breast. July 15—Crystal Pool. Glen Echo. Md. National junior 10-foot diving champion- ship for women. Open events, men. H0- yard free. 120-yard back. 440-yard free: women. 10-foot dive, $0-yard free. 120- yard breast. 6t d’ novice. and 60-yard free for boys 14 years of age and gnder. July 22—Takoma Pool. Nationa! junior 10-foot “diving championship for ' men. | Events for men, 100-yard_free. 100-vard back 100-yard breast. 150-yard medley | : women, 50-yard fre 100-yard er July * — tional ju- nior_sofi-bali_water polo championship. _ plonship for men. l Drive for 1,000 Customers! Amazing Offer! 4 Days Only! TIRES ON TIME Your is good with No red credit FISK WINDSOR TIRES 4.40-21 . . ....$4.85 FREE! Heavy Red Tube FREI 4.50-; $4.95 FREE! Heavy Red Tube FREE! 50-21 .. ....$5.20 FREE! Heavy Red Tube 47519 . . $5.40 FREE! Heavy Red Tube FREE! FREE! Heavy Red Ti 5.25-18 ......$6.25 FREE! Heavy Red Tube FREE! 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