Evening Star Newspaper, June 20, 1935, Page 42

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C—4 Lynch Carries Hoyas’ Golf Title Hopes in Collegiate Tourney Here Next Week < TAKES GOOD GAME 10 COLLEGE MEET League President’s Duties May Handicap Joe in His Play, However. BY W. R. McCALLUM. EORGETOWN UNIVERSITY is given more than a slim “ chance of winning the na- tional intercollegiate golf erown next week when the college lads from twoscore universities gather at the first tee at the rough-fringed Con- gressional Country Club course to joust for the title now held by lanky Charlie ‘Yates of Gawjuh Tech. The main hopes of the Hilltop cen- ter around rotund, chubby-faced Joe Lynch, the New England amateur champion from Boston, who is one of | the longest hitters of a golf ball to be found anywhere in the land, despite | his small stature. Others from Georgetown will be there, including Joe Galvin, cocoptain | of the Hoyas; Ken Corcoran from Chicago, Jim Lee and Dick Kreusberg, | 8 local lad who plays from Indian Spring. But the big shot among the | Blue and Gray lads will be Lynch. Must Bear Tourney Burden. OE'S chances to grab the college | crown hinge largely on whether he | — will be able to play golf without being | annoyed by the thousand and one mi- nor details that hang around the neck of the president of the intercollegiate league and the responsibility for be- ing host to the visitors. It was largely through Lynch’s ef- forts that Congressional obtained the intercollegiate — the first national championship to be played in Wash- ington since 1923, when the public | SPORTS. || 20 YEARS AGO IN THE STAR W’ALTIR JOHNSON limited De= troit to two hits as the Sen- ators defeated the Tigers, 7-0. Johnson's three hits, including & double and triple, were instrumen= tal in Washington's scoripg. J. C. Davidson, Columbia Coun- try Club, defeated his fellow club member, E. B. Eynon, jr, 5 and 4, to win the Middle Atlantic Golf Association championship at Wil- mington, Del. R. D. Morgan won the annual registered trapshooting tournament of the Analostan Gun Club yester- day, with 147 out of & possible 150. Lester German was second, with 145, while E. H. Storr, H. H. Stev- ens, E. W. Ford, W. C. Blundon and Edward Bartlett tied for thigd place honors, with 144, Karl Knight, Reginald Ruther- ford and Jim Burch, all of the ‘Washington Canoe Club, finished in that order in the 100-yard free- style race yesterday in & swimming meet held under the auspices of the Washington Canoe Club. Other winners included Petre, Bamman, Ansley, Bridget, Bennett and ‘Thompson. Roger Peckinpaugh. with a dou- ble and triple, led the New York Yankees to their seventh straight victory, defeating Cleveland, Only a dozen batters in the American League are hitting over .300. Ty Cobb leads the loop with & 393 average. No Washington player is among the 12, Lists fo;sunday In Sandlot Loop 8 Following is the schedule for nnd- lot league competition on Sunday: NATIONAL CITY. Section A. Miller Furniture vs. Murphy's 5 & 10 Store on South Eilipsé. Army Medicos vs. Blue Flame at Wal- links title tilt was played at East Po-‘ er Reed tomac Park. And the responsibility | for a successful tournament will be | Joe’s, even though Congressional has | Cherner Motor vs, Pig 'n’ Whistle on East Ellipse Rinald, Coalmen vs. Union Printers on North Ellipse. Section B. gone to bat with a large and well-or- | §anized committee. If the Lynch lad can toss off the detalls of the running of the affalr, | crowd them out of his mind when on the golf course and play the golf o!‘ which he is capable, it isn't at all im- probable that he can grab that college | crown, even against the accomplished | fleld which will gather here next week. ( Main Hopes Center on Lynch. GALVIN is a good golfer, but not a | great one. Kreuzberg is good and 80 are Corcoran and Lee, but these | lads are hardly capable of combating such great shotmakers as Yates, Koc- sis, Fischer, Gandy, Emery, Haas, Banks, Stewart and Dwyer. So the main hopes of the George- town cheering section center around | the rotund, muscular form of Joe Lynch, the man who mauls 'em a mile | and then knows what to do with the ball on the putting green. If there is one of the college lads who will enter the fray with a com- plete and thorough knowledge of the layout over which the tournament will be played it is this same Lynch boy. Joe has played Congressional steadily and consistently since last Winter— sometimes down as low as 70—and he knows every wrinkle and angle of the 6,696-yard course as few players know it. Has Game to Win. COMBINE that knowledge with a game of golf good enough to place him among the top-ranking amateurs of the Nation over any course and you have the tip-off on Joe Lynch's chance to win. His main hurdle will be on the mental side; thrusting off those little mental worries that the man re-| sponsible for the affair always has to shoulder. Michigan, winner of the team cham- | pionship last year with such stalwarts | as Fischer and Kocsis heading the list, will be favorites to repeat. And | the same two can go a long way 1n" the individual championship. Pischer won the Big Ten title a few weeks ago and wants to add the national to his | collection. He won it in 1933. TIE FOR GOLF TROPHY Houff and Dudley Shoot 77s in Fort Stevens Post Event. George Houff and Doc Dudley tied with 77's in Fort Steven's Post, No. 33, golf play for the post trophy at Argyle yesterday. The play-off will take place Sundey. Rob Wannan, former trophy holder, had & 78 and garnered the blind bogie prize. The guest prize went to Lou Ritter David's Grill vs. Warwicks on No. 1. | Pairia sunshun- A. C. vs. Georgetown A. C. on No. 11. Monument. Capital ' Transit vs. District Grocery Store on No. 12, Monument. All games at 3 o'clock. Junior Class, Wizard Lock vs. Montgomery A. C. on No_ 1. Fairlawn. Simpson's macy Flour on East Ellibse Petworth Nationais chants on North_ Ellipse vs. Washington vs. Hilltop Mer- Ellipse. All games at 1 o'clock. Midget Class. Petworth Eagles vs. Versis Foor Prod- uets on No T’:lom‘l Playground vs. Jack Pry Nats on, Troians vs. Nolan Motor Co. on_ No. O'Donnell’s Sea Grill vs Wllhl"lmn Boys' Club on No. 1. Fairlawn. All games at 11 o'clock. Maryland County. North Washington vs. Silver Spring Giants on District Line diamond. Hornink Jewelers va. Washington Clowns at Wheaton. Cabin John vs. Mount Rainier A. C. at ClbIn John. nt Rainier Grays vs. White Haven at 'Mount Rainier High School Field, All games at 3 o'clock. NORTHERN VIRGINIA. Red Section, Arlington at Ballston. Falls Church at lllddl?burl Herndon at Manassas. ‘White Sectio Aldie at Vienna. Millwood at Fairfax Station. Marshall at Purcellville. DEPARTMENT STORE. ht's vs. Kann's on South Ellipse. lais Rnyll vs. Llnlburlh‘l on East Ellipse. Games at 11 o'clock. A &P Yonl vs. Bokar on West Hilif v ipse. POLICE BOYS' CLUB. Michigan Park vs. Colmar Manor on No. 3 nt 1 o'clock. New Dnl Young Men's m-on vs. Modern cxunm on N No 4 at 1 o'cloc 11 Dike & Otey Club vs. t3 o'clack No. 5 Boys' Ctub on No. by W. O WONDER Lawson Little, the American and British ama- teur champion, couldn't reach a higher spot than No. 3 on the Stanford University golf team. “Spec” Stewart and Tommy Dwyer, the two lads who pushed Larruping Lawson down the ladder until he rested on the third rung of the Palo | Alto outfit, are demonstrating out at Congressional the whys and where- top spot in his university outfit, dem- onstrating it in their practice rounds | prior to the intercollegiate title tour- ney next week with booming tee shots | Natlon-Wide Grocers vs. Auth's on South | STRAIGHT OIF THE TEE fores of Lawson's inability to make the | THE EVENING MORRIS' 141 3ETS DIXIE GOLF MARK Eight Strokes Too Good in « Southern Test—Howell, With 160, Is Out. By the Associated Press. ICHMOND, Va, June 20— Medalist with eight strokes to spare, the biggest margin in the tournament’s 33-year his- tory, Johnny Morris, Birmingham youngster, turned today to his first match play test in the Southern ama- teur golf championship. His sensational 141—one stroke lower than Gene Vinson's at Birming- ham in 1932—was behind him and ringing in his ears was the doleful chant that “medalists never win.” He had plenty of confidence as he battled Polly Boyd of Chattanooga to- day. Right down the middle was the way he was hitting his tee shots through | 27 holes of the qualifying 36, but he | had to pull himself together at the | 36th tee after a shaky nine coming | home. | Hed set a new amateur record for the James River course of the Coun- | try Club of Virginia. Posting a 68, four under par, for his first round and reached the turn yesterday in 35, one under regulation figures, all he needed was 38, two over, coming home to beat Vinson's record, but he had to | get a birdie 4 in the home hole to card it. ‘prm McCLURE of Shreveport, t ~ medalist last year, whose 149 was eight strokes back, was paired with | Dan Sage, jr. of Atlanta, while the | defending champion, Preddy Haas of | New Orleans, who didn't have to | qualify, was paired with Judd Brumley of Greenville, Tenn. | Sam Perry of Birmiugham, twice a | | champion and runner-up last year, | faced Malcolm Jones of Richmond. Perr: qualified with 155. | Conspicuously absent from the| championship flight were Billy Howell, who shot 160, and was just outside, and Dick Pa Payne of Norfolk, finalist in the Middle Atlantic, who soared to 162. Morton McCarthy ¢f Norfolk who | whirped Payne for the title, almost | kicked himself out of the running | with 159. | Ewing Watkins of Chattanooga was | thiri yesterday with 151, and Bill | Castleman of Louisville and Bobby Riegel of Richmond were next in line | with 152 Watkins was paired with Charles | Kent of Richmond, Castleman faced | James Tupper of Nasiville and Riegel met George Hester, Richmond left- | harder. | Other pairings: Lewis Johnson. Charleston. W. Va. P. C. Holliday, Richmond. Ross Puette. Richmond, vs. 1. J. Osbu; .I Atlanta. | Charlotte. vs. A. A.| Orleans, vs. vumm‘ i to burg. Ma.. ",: W B, Wiliamson. Chatlotte, vs. Earl| Stokes. Louisville. J. 8 Dave venport. Richmend. vs. J. O. Lebourgeois. r. New Orlea: Brown Ralnwater. Atlan . John | Kerr. Richmond. Clark uu mchmund vs. George Tread- | well. Memph | PLAY today were to bring the Dis- trict women's championship tour- ney up to the final tomorrow, but | there will be plenty of competition | | for the women who do not reach the | | final reund The District Women's | | Golf Assoclation has booked an 13- | | hole medal play handicap mmnev | tomorrow for the beaten players in {all flights. R.MECALLUM to leave Washington early Saturday | for Greenwich, Conn., where the East- | ern interscholastic title tourney will | | start next Tuesday. The field in the local junior tourney is small. The tourney was to start with an 18-hole qualification round today, with the finals carded for Saturday. TY-FOUR teams will start play this week end in the two-man team matches at the Argyle Country Club, with the following pairings: W. H. Arnold and P. O. Columbus va. C. Olmsted and_L. B. Beeber; P. W. STAR, WASHINGTON, THURSDAY, D. C, JUNE 20, 1935. OCCOQUAN NINE HOST. Occoquan All-8tars ‘will play hast YALE TIES UP SERIES. CAMBRIDGE, Mass, June 20— D. C. GUNNERS TRAVEL A number of District of Columbis urday and the Gambrill Sluggers on | nual base ball suries with Harvard by Sunday. beating the Crimson yesteruay, 8 to 2. tourney t» be hela a% Towson, Md., tomorrow and Saturday. SPORTS., CORKELL MAY GET BID. LOS ANGELES, Juune 20 (#).— to the Procurement Division team Sat-| Yale, aided by errors, evened the an- | shooters will compete i1 the skest | Cornell probably will be invited to row in the 2,000-meter Olympic games course event at Long Beach against | Commerce, said, Pennsylvania, Syracuse, Wisconsin, California, Washington and the Unie versity of California at Los Angeles, Clifford Rawson, secretary-manager of the Los Angeles Junior Chamber of Western Auto Stores A National Institution.- 170 Bi¢g Stores 728 13th St. N.W. 911-15 H St. N.E. 3113 14th St. N.W. 923-25 7th St. N.-W. 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Resists kink- ing amvery lensth fully suaranteed. 1935 TRUETONE Auto Radio —For All Cars It st necsssary to pay 337,50 get a good radieo v eon, Trietoncs are. todey wivh ng istactory service. nelus! Iroof of how good ',hl'] Y!lHy ® New super-power tubes. ® Automatic velume centrol. ® Fleciro-dynamic speaker. © Tiuminated airplane @ial 10-DAY TRIAL in Your Own Car $19.95 Easy Payments - T~ | Small carrying charge on 25 WEEK balance only. “De Luxe" Sent Covers Heavy, hard woven fabric. Pre-shrunk. Fast colors. Extra fine tailoring. Laeun- der perfectly. s1.3l For, Ceuves and"oldee 1984 and older sizes offered yubject to stocks on hand. ...wlowest y prices /A and an all-around game that is going | i to push them far along in that in-| gOF dividual title tilt for Charlie Yl(el'l crown. - Busting the ball far down '-hew"m .OOD-PENN" 2,000-Mile 100% PENNSYLVANIA K oil and ease - from get- on shoes ‘with an 81, Van Nichols being second with 91, Other scores: Beeber, 78; Howard, 78; Lake, 81: Lakin, 84; Warren, 85; Hogan, 86; Hile, 89; Wilson “International Cup” tring ied Eand grung, mseurs e, e ey, Fyralin trim. Lons. siender grip. “ACE” Bike Tire and re- frame. Hargrave, 100, L R YODER GOLF LEADER. NIN! ‘Washington golfers were play- ing today in the opening match play round of the Maryland State amateur championship at Five Farms, with ths prospect that not more than four of them would be left in the tourney tonight, when the first two rounds will have been completed. Two of them clashed in the open- ing round today. Levi Yoder, Indian Spring ace, and winzer of the Manor tourney, grabbed the medal yesterday with a 36-hole card of 153, nosing out tall Ernie Caldwell by a single stroke. Pair- ings and scores of the Washington contestants: Levi Yoder. Indian Bprlnl Hald MePRall " Belimore Si50: ier rpe. Ohevy Chase . Hi 4 Baltimore; "Tod 171 'i-m Hice: Indian s‘t‘finc M:. Overto Bnluat Mld rough-fringed fairways, these two luh chin-dropping with more to come to- | day and tomorrow as the bulk of the entrants in tite title chase come to Congressional for their practice flings. Dwyer, handicapped by a bad ankle (he sprained it two weeks ago), and Stewart played yesterday. Dwyer quit on the twelfth hole because of his ankle, but Stewart ankled around the course in 75, one stroke above the 74 posted by Ed White of Texas, run- ner-up to Yates last year. Yates is due in town today, while Johnny Fischer, the lanky postman’s son from Fort Thomas, Ky., and his teammate, sturdy Charlie Kocsis, also are ex- pected for a work-out. Meanwhile Congressional isn't going to be any snap for the lads. In addi- tion to its usual great length, a new tee has been put in use on the thir- teenth hole, 60 yards back of the regu- m lar tee, making it impossible to go over the top of the hill with a booming ng, | shot, and making this one of the 186 vV vs. Pred 3 The !ollowtnl flfled “to qualify: Maury Pitzgerald, Kenwood, 177; Rob- ert Stead and Emmons S, Smith, jr, Chevy Chase, no cards, toughest par 5 hole holes anywhere. BILLY DETTWEILER, Maryland junior champion, was out at Ken- are causing & lot of eye-popping and | Jiit ‘wood teday seeking the District junior crown, despite the fact that Billy wants E G Vanno Hutchinson an ‘White an and B. Dr. L L. A . fnn; Willisms vs. C D, Conway and A." McMillan, ‘Winifred hunce, defending cham- pion from Manor, who has won her first two round matches with little beating of drums, and by comfortable margins, met her first real test today in Mrs. Roland R. MacKensle, who trounced Helen Dettweller convinc- ingly yesterday. In the other bracket Mrs. Leo Walper of Kenwood, who sprung the surprise of the tourna- ment by beating Mrs. Betty P. Meckley on the nineteenth hole, clashed with the free-swinging Elizabeth Houghton of Chevy Chase. Miss Faunce yesterday whipped young Virginia Pope of Kenwood by 4 and 2 in the second round, while Miss Houghton advanced through a default by Mrs. J. F. Dowdall. The Teal match of the day came in the ‘Walper-Meckley contest. Mrs. Walper was dormie 2 up, but Mrs. Meckley put on a great rally that squared the contest, and then, on the nineteenth knocked her third shot into & trap to lose to a 5, when her lengthy putt falled by an inch to drop. 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