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NG__STAR, WASHINGTO D. C, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 24, 1936.' : SPORTS. A—17 .Higher Education Will Take Helen Dettweiler From Golf Here Physical Training Work Is| Girl’s Aim—Trouble Seen Ahead for Rippy. BY W. R. McCALLUM. | ELEN DETTWEILER, young Congressional Country Club star, who recently set a new record for women with a % score of 74 at Beaver Dam and fol- lowed it a few days later by going to the final in the District championship, intends to take a course to fit her as & physical instructor, and will not play any golf around Washington next Fall. Helen plans to enter Wellesley Col- %, lege late in September, as a student in & course for girls who will teach phys- ical training. She wants, she has told friends, to make physical educa- tion her life work. If the tall Congressional girl car- ries out her ambition she will not be | able to play in the Middle Atlantic | and the other tournaments which will be held in the Fall, although she wants to play in the national women's cham- pionship at Cherry Valley early in September. The Dettweiler girl is one of the best golf .prospects ever developed among the feminine divot-lifters of the Capital, although her only major conquest to date was her victory in the Maryland State women's cham- pionship two years ago. Last Winter she played the Florida circuit of wom- en's tournaments. Competition for Rippy. LAUDE RIPPY, tall Washington public links champion, who went to the fourth round in the -national championship last year, is a cinch to qualify for the national this year if he keeps on playing as he has when the sectional qualification rounds come off next week at East Potomac | and Rock Creek Parks. Rippy played course A at Rock Creek Park in 29 last week, and probably again will win the Dis- trict municipal title in the 72-hole tourney to be played next Wednesday and Thursday. But the tall boy from Shelby, N. C., will be pushed to the limit again by the same men who have been hot | on the trail over the last two years since Rippy established himself as the best public links shotmaker. Bobby Burton, the slim Navy Yard mechanic, and George Malloy, who hustles beer - barrels around for a living, will be among Rippy's better | challengers for the municipal crown Oliveri Angling for Berth. A NDY OLIVERI the Roosevelt High | School kid, who has the smoothest | swing of any golfer playing the public | courses today, will be angling for one of the four spots on the local team, | and may make it this year. Oliveri lost by only a couple shots last year, but has added experience in his favor this year. | ‘The tournament is open to amateur ¢ golfers who, since January 1, have not been’ members of nor enjoyed the privi- lege of private clubs maintaining and | supporting their own golf courses.i' The entry fee of $5 will be paid after the qualification rounds on July 1 and ! 2, and the four men who qualify| will go to the national as the guests ©f Concessionnaire Leoffler. HEURICHS SEE EASY | SAILING TO PENNANT Beat Coffey Sales to Win First Half—Procurement Division Gets Piece of Flag. LESSED with three crack pitchers in Bob Lyon, Everett Russell and Shout Taylor, the Heurich Brewers, who won the first half pennant of the Industrial League yesterday by drub- bing Coffey Sales, 9-5, visualize an eesy sprint to second-half honors. | As Taylor limited the Coffey Sales nine to seven safeties, his mates bunched bingles off the slants of Jack Hudson to win going away in the seven-inning struggle. Huck Stahl, Heurich catcher, paced the winning atiack with a single, triple and home run, although Knight, Rus- sell and Bennie chipped in with two hits each. Giovenetti, with a home run and single, was prominent in Cof- fey Sales stickwork. Coming from behind to tally the winning run in the final frame, Pro- curement Division annexed the first half championship of the Federal AA League, edging out G. P. O. Federals, 6-5. Bookoff and Cauliflower con- nected for home runs for the winners. Results: Investigation, 5: Treasury. 0. orFrocurement Division. 6: G.'P. O. Fed- rals. 5 Heurich Brewers. 9; Coffey Sales. 5 Green Belts. 19;'G A. O. (P. 0. D), 0. Little Taverns, 33, Y. M.'C. R.. 4. Ossie Blueges, 11; Shamrocks, 0. Ossie Blueges. =’ Eagles. 0 Mount Vernon. X: Metropolitan, 7. Chestnut Farms, 15; Thompson's Dairy. 7. ncotieships No. 5 17 Battle Cruisers = Congress Heights, 10: Rock Creek. 2. Conaress Heights. 18 Colvin Run, 4. Addison_Chevrolet, Glover Park. 7; Columbia A.'C.. s . Tremont A. C..13; Buck Newsoms, 6. Fooith Pharmacy Senators. 9: Sham- s, 0. xeA DN Towers, 2; Connecticut Yan- Lasky's. 13: Randle & Garvin. 4. Anacostis. %: Bozle Berger Sluggers, 0. Kennedy Service Stations, 1flf'nenmnx | girl pushed the quest for her second " Mohawks. 15: Lyon Village Lions, 0. PAIR BLAIR, DUBLINSKY Conquerors of Furr, Canzoneri Will Fight Here Monday. Frankie Blair, twice conqueror of Phil Furr, District welterweight cham- Dplon, will clash with Harry Dublinsky, credited with administering Tony Can- woneri, world lightweight champion, the worst trimming of his career, in | the feature 10-round boxing bout at Griffith Stadium Monday night. Dublinsky, in local fights, has scored & first-round knockout of Bob Wilson and recently held Furr to a draw. ‘Blair's last two appearances have re- salted in a split-decision win ‘over and draw with Mickey Serrian. SEEKS SATURDAY GAMES. ‘The Rockville base ball team desires games for Saturdays with crack un- limited nines. Call National 2520, branch 1711, WANT WEEK END GAMES. ~Games for Saturday and Sunday are wanted by the Mount Rainier Grays. Call Manager Bob Newell at Green- ‘wood 2701, s Here’s the Dizzy One in a New Role JEROME HERMAN DEAN, : “Delegate” from the St. Louis Cardinals, five minutes after strolling into the Democratic con- vention hall at Philadelphia last night, was rig ht in the thick of things. “Never mind the key- notin’,” said Diz, grabbing a horn, “let’s go on with the demonstration.” FAIR GOLF CHAP FAGES TOUGH FOE Marion Miley, Mrs. Solomon Play Second Round in Transmississippi. BY LOUDON KELLY, Associated Press Sports Writer. ENVER, June 24—A fellow golfer from below the Mason and Dixon line was the sec- ond to cross Marion Miley's path today as the Lexington, Ky. | successive title. | Her second-round opponent was | Mrs. Leon Solomon, tall, blond Ten- nessee champion from Memphis, who has been hitting her shots well across the long, tree-studded layout. women's Transmississippi | Patty has Ersy Round. 1SS MILEY was forced to shoot | no better than one over par yes- | terday in pinning a 7-and-6 defeat on her first opponent, Mrs. J. L. Bailey, Emporia, Kans. Miss Miley's foe in last year's finals, 18-year-old Patty Berg of Minneap: olis, eliminated Mrs. Channing Fol- | som,, Kansas City, 8-and-6. | Miss Berg, one under par, was | paired today with Mrs. J. W. Phil- lips, Bartlesville, Okla. Mrs. Dan Chandler. Dallas, who | tied with the Minneapolis girl for the | medal Monday at 74 strokes, was | paired for the second round with Shirley Ann Johnson, Chicago. who | won the only extra-hole match yes- terday. She nipped Ann Sue Ken- nedy of Columbia, Mo, on the nine- teenth green. Hofmann-Barrett Tough Match. RS. CHANDLER, former Texas champion, made Mrs. Ben Grimes of Denver her victim by a 7-and-6 count. Helen Hofmann, the Utah cham- pion, had a tough foe today in Bea- trice Barrett, daughter of a Minne- apolis pro, who was a semi-finalist in the 1935 women's national. The rest of today's schedule: Sally Guth, St. Louis, vs. Mrs. James Rae Arneill, jr., Denver; Phyllis Buchan- | an, Denver, Transmississippi titlist in 1933, vs. Betty Botterill, Salt Lake| City; Mrs. Charles Newbold, Wichita, Trans winner in 1932, vs. Dorthy Traung, San Francisco, national finalist two years ago, and Mrs. R. D. Roper, Arizona champion, vs. Mrs. William Zech, Chicago. _— Homer Standings By the Assoctated Press, Yesterday’s homers—Simmons, Tigers, 2; Foxx, Red Sox, 1; Cronin, Red Sox, 1; Trosky, Indians, 1; Moses, Athletics, 1; Demaree, Cubs, 1; Terry, Giants, 1; Whitehead, Giants, 1. The leaders—Foxx, Red Sox, 19; Trosky, Indians, 17; Gehrig, Yanks, 16; Dickey, Yanks, 12; Ott, Giants, 12; Goslin, Tigers, 10. League totals— American, 307; National, 267; total, 574. /\ 'E pa® ef.m. ™ {3 of that kind, we like'em and want more of 'em.” ‘That, according to Robert Stead, jr., Golf Committee chairman, is the sentiment among the golfers of the Chevy Chase Club regarding the | tourney for the Treasurer’s Cup, do- nated by William F. Ham, which wound up yesterday. “Why, we had 38 entries in this affair and usually we barely have enough to make a flight of 16,” Stead added. The tournament was unusual around Washington and was the out- come of an idea given to Ham by Stead, who saw such an affair played in Massachusetts several years ago. | It was a two-ball best-ball affair with full club handicaps, with the | higher handicap man to receive the difference between his handicap and that of his partner. Charles D. Hayes and Stanton C. Peelle, jr, two of the higher handi- cap men of the club, who haven't figured in the winning of any of the other important club trophies, won the final round yegerday, whipping the brother combination of W. Bererly Mason and D. K. Mason on the final green. Hayes and Peelle won their way to the final by beating Henry Ravenel and James P. Nolan 5 and 3 in 36 holes, while the Mason brothers won their final bracket at the ex- pense of P. S. Ridsdale and D. D. L. McGrew. “That tournament certainly was popular and probably will bring out a big field next year.” said Stead as he congratulated the winning pair. IT'S far too early to forecast what may happen when a bunch of kid golfers get together to shoot the works, but it isn't altogether im- probable that the final round in the District junior championship tomor- row afternoon will bring together the two kids who are generally regarded as tops in junior golf about the Capital. Billy Shea, the lanky title-holder from Congressional, who won the medal in the tourney at Woodmont yesterday with a five-above-par mark of 74, and Bobby Brownell, the young | Manor sharpshooter, are in opposite halves of the draw, where victories today and tomorrow morning will bring them together in Bill put together rounds of 38 and 36 for that rugged little Woodmont course to lead Brownell by two shots. Today's pairings were: Bill Shea, Congressional, vs. Jullan Murphy, Indian Spring; Jerry Brode, Wood- mont, vs. George Flather, Columbia; Buddy Bowie, Columbia, vs. Frank Loftus, Columbia; Buddy Pope, Co- lumbia, vs. Ralph Bogart, Army- Navy; Don Miller, Kenwood, vs. Earl Skinker, Columbia; Don Walsh, Co- lumbia, vs. Jack Robinson, Indian Spring; Bert Yount, Army-Navy, vs. Joe Kahn, Woodmont; Jim Thompson, Columbia, vs. Bobby Brownell, Manor. Two lads—L. P. McLachlen and Pete Wilson of Columbia—failed to break 100 and qualify. WOMEN golfers of Washington will virtually swamp their guests from Richmond if they do as well today' the final. | —Copyright, A. P. Wirephoto. IVE us more tournaments |in the concluding match of a two-day series at Chevy Chase as they did in the opener at Woodmont. They whip- ped the visitors in four-ball matches by 14!2 points to 312, sweeping three of the matches and winning points in all the others. The affair at Chevy Chase was a two-ball Nassau match. A return match will be played at Richmond in the Fall. Summaries of yesterday's match at Woodmont: Mrs. Elsie Haynes and Mrs. Bishop Hill, Washington, 2!z points; Mrs. J. T. Priddy and Miss Lillian Wood, Rich- mend, one-half point. Mrs. C. P. Medley and Mrs. C. E. Purdy, Washingtoin, 1'; points; Mrs. George Owens and Mrs. Grayson Dashiell, Richmond, 12 points. Mrs. Theodore Peyser and Mrs. J. F. Gross, Washington, 1'% points; Mrs. lQu‘\ncy Martin and Mrs. W. R. Graham, Richmond, 1'2 points. | ~Mrs. R. C. Welton and Mrs. W. H. | Bailey, Richmond, 0 points; Mrs. Theodore Lonnquest and Mrs. Wild: Martin," Washington, 3 points. Mrs. E. M. Amick and Mrs. F. D. Letts, Washington, 3 points; Miss Margaret McVey and Mrs. T. A. Bal- this, Richmond, 0 points. Mrs. George Parker and Mrs. A. W. | Tucker, Washington, 3 points; Mrs. Jack Howard and Miss Roddy Wat- | kins, Richmond, 0 points. Mrs. Hill of Chevy Chase scored an 85, the best card of the day; and her | best score of the year. Mrs. Haynes had 87 and Mrs. Priddy 88. | HERMAN ALLEN, straight and short; Milford Stein, a husky | youngster for Central High; Andy | Oliveri, the kid with the smooth swing, | and Harold Bowers, the guy who looks | like John Revolta, were the semi- finalists in the Rock Creek Park open tourney today following a first day of hectic battling that ended just before dusk last night with an extra hole match in the second flight. Nick Al- trock and Phil Ward, co-medalists, both were dropped in the hot firing of the first day, along with Eddie Stolark and Pat Axtell and some other good golfers. Nick, his ankle only recently healed from an injury, was whipped by Allen, 5 and 3. Stein went to the last hole to beat Stolark after the Central boy had opened the show by driving the first green, 300 yards from the tee. Oliveri defeated Harry Yates |1 up, and Bowers went to the last hole to beat George Keene 2 up. Semi-finalists in the second flight are B. R. Baer, Ed Lightbown, L. Abrams and Joe Rodgers. The latter lad won the Ed Leapley With a birdie on the first extra hole. The entire District municipal cham- pionship, originally scheduled for both East Potomac Park and Rock Creek Park, will be played at East Potomac Park, on July 1 and 2. It will be & 72-hole medal play affair with the first four scorers to compose the Harding cup team to represent Washington in the national championship. AFTER SUNDAY DATE. A game Yor Sunday with a fast un- limited base ball team is sought by the Petworth A. C. Call North 1370-R after 6 p.m. ® 14th & P Sts. N. ® 9th & H Sts. N. ® 7th & Pa. Ave. S. HAAS 1S MEDALIST IN COLLEGE GOLF Louisiana State Ace Cards 146—Team Championship Goes to Yale. By the Associated Press. HICAGO, June 24.—Freddie Haas, jr., of New Orleans and Louisiana State University, the tournament medalist, opened another drive for the national intercollegiate golf title today against a Notre Dame sharpshooter, Louis Fehlig. Haas reached the final of the 1935 tournament at the Congressional Country Club at Washington, D. C., but bowed to Ed White of Texas, 5 and 4. He fired off a workmanlike 35—36—171, one stroke under regula- tion figures for the North Shore Golf Club’s 6,927-yard layout yesterday, which, with a 75 Monday, gave him 146 and the medal. Fehlig, the Southerner’s opponent for the opening round of match play, qual- 1i®d with 158 strokes. Eshelman Is Runner-up. THE runner-up for medalist honors, Herbert R. Eshelman, who led Yale to the team championship, was matched with R. B. Parker of Prince- ton. Verne (Spec) Stewart of Stan- ford’s second-place team, drew Win- fleld Day, jr, another Notre Dame qualifier, for his first-round test. Willie Turnesa of Holy Cross, who had 151 strokes for fourth place, and Buell Critchlow of Amherst were paired in another feature match. The first two rounds of 18-hole match play were on today’s schedule. Yale replaced Michigan as the team champion with a four-man total of 625 strokes. Stanford had 628 for second, with the others finishing as follows: Notre Dame, 630; Michigan, 631; Princeton, 633; Louisiana State, 638, Texas, 641; Northwestern, 644; Illi- nois, 645; Pittsburgh,; 653; University of Dayton, 655; Harvard, 657: Wash- ington University of St. Louis, 662; Michigan State, 676; Loyola of Chi- cago, 681, and University of Buffalo, | 700, — |T. H. Brown, Jr., Is Made Assist- ! ant Diamond Pilot at Princeton. | &rectal Dispaten to The Star. PRINCETON, N. J., June 24—Thad | H. Brown, jr. '38, of Washington, |D. C., and Guilford Jones, jr., ‘38, of Wichita, Kans., have been named as assistant managers of the 1937 Prince- fon base ball team, it was announced oday. Dean Hill, jr., "37, of Bronxville, . Y., has been elected captain of the team, while George S. McElroy, '37, will manage the Tiger nine. Robert G. Clark, '38, of Mount Vernon, N. Y., and John M. Searles, '38, of Leonia, N. J., will be alternate managers. Guara D. C. YOUTH IS HONORED | Z > = . ND you'll do it again next A year?” If no other praise had been forthcoming, that single question, repeated by countless tennis players at the Edgemoor Club yesterday, would have left a feeling of complete satisfaction to The Eve- ning Star, which has just brought to a close 25 successive days of the most complete tennis competition Wash- ington ever has known. Assured that the City of Washington tournament, embracing events for men, women, mixed dotbles, junior and boys, has been appreciated by the Capital’s responsive racketers, The Star took pleasure in assuring them that it would sponsor the tournament again in 1937. And this newspaper's vision, born the latter part of May, that the City of Washington could become the big- gest and best annual net event of the local season has been clarified into reality by the focus which the Edge- | moor Club has been for every racketer ~Precedent has been set and will be this tournament has repeated itself. When Allie Ritzenberg sent a siz- 2ling drive over the net yesterday to in the city during the past four weeks. | repeated, but in one respect history of | L | /4 : , osls;%yyouw&% win the junior singles championship from Harry March, in the tourney’s last match, he not only established the supremacy of the Ritzenberg name in junior tennis for the fourth consecu- tive year, but continued the unbroken line of dual championships won by every titleholder in the tournament. ‘Throughout the whole expanse of the competition, each singles cham- pion has repeated in doubles play. For memory’s refreshment and for the final record, we give you the names of the champions in all events: Men's singles—Barney Welsh. Men’s doubles—Barney Welsh and Ralph McElvenny. Women's singles—Margaret Rob« inson. ‘Women's doubles—Margaret Rob- inson and Edith Clarke. Junior singles—Allie Ritzenberg. Junior doubles—Allie Ritzenberg and David Johnsen. Boys' singles—Leonard Sokol. Boys' doubles—Leonard Sokol and Byron Matthews. Not forgetting, of course, the cham- pionship of the mixed doubles tourna- ment, in which Miss Clarke repeated her triumph in the women's doubles by teaming with Tom Markey to an- nex the first mixed doubles title awarded locally for years. COLLEGENETMEN PLAYING T0 FORM One Upset Only Occurs in Singles and Doubles of Na- & tional Tourney. By the Assoclated Press. HICAGO, June 24.—Sixteen survivors in the singles com- petition faced severe tests to- day as the national intercol- legiate tennis championships went into the fourth round on Northwestern University's clay courts. Eight of the players still in the running were in the seeded list, with two of them opposing each other. They were George Ball, Northwestern, No. 6, in the select list, and Ralph Minnich of Princeton, No. 9. star, who vesterday disposed of Fred- erick C. Whitman of Princeton, 6—1, 6—0, meets John Law of Stanford, while Vernon John of Southern Cali- |fornia, regarded as a strong threat [ for the championship final. opposes | Edgar Weller of Texas, who eliminated {the tenth seeded player, Norman | Bickel of Chicago, 6—3, 6—2, in an upset, Continue Doubles Play. JOUBLES play also continues, with the defending champions and |v,op seeded pair, Dick Bennett and Paul Newton of California, favored to reach the finals. Yesterday they elim- Ernest Sutter of Tulane, top seeded | 20 YEARS AGO IN THE STAR ASHINGTON lost both ends of a double-header at New York, 6-5 and 5-1, and dropped to fourth place in the American League. The Yanks made 11 hits off Walter Johnson in the first game, scoring five runs in the first two innings. Harvard made a clean sweep of the three crew races with Yale, its great varsity eight breaking the 4-mile record of the Yale crew of 1888 by rowing the distance in 2017 minutes. William W. Price, Dr. Arthur N. Meloy and John W. Hurley were among nwmerous anglers who par- ticipated in the week-end outing at Rock Point. Others mentioned in The Star’s Rod and Stream col- umn were Bernard Harding, Harry Jones, William Bates, Robert Young and John McCauley. CLARENDONS BOOKING. Earl Marcey is booking base ball games for the Clarendon Juniors, who are anxious to schedule a tilt for Sun- day. Call Clarendon 1439-R after 6 pm. inated Charles Hulick and Albert Winston of Amherst. 6—0, 6—1. One seeded doubles combination, however, fell by the wayside. Burtz Boulware and Tony Morrell of Georgia Tech, seeded fifth. lost to Ramsey Potts and Eddie Fuller of North Caro- lina, 6—4, 7—5. Three schools had two players each through yesterday’s third round. They were John and Charles Carr of South- | em California, Weller and Lindsey Franklin of Texas and Ben Dey and Law of Stanford. CIGAR a ntee We Guaranise this cigar fo be made of EVEN HIGHER GRADE TOBACCOS than the Excellente that sold in the SEVEN HUNDRED MILLIONS at 10°%, Svts the INEW STANDARD | OF CIGAR VALUE 'CAPITAL CIGAR & TOBACCO COMPANY, Washington, D, C., Distributors A Ritzenberg Junior Winner, PPROPRIATELY climaxing the tourney’s close yesterday, the and a boys’ doubles title decided looked on as Allie Ritzenberg outclassed three-set match from Taylor Chewn- ing and Tom Wadden in finals of the While the losing pair in the latter match upset the dope by giving the from the the Tech High athlete with March in straight sets, 7—5, 6—4, of the second set. He was matching his rival stroke for stroke and chop | of the second stanza, Ritzenberg took 10 of the last 13 games. 15 games he served. Moreover, he cracked 8 of March's 14 deliveries and middle set. Play Exceptional Tennis. | gle between a pair of the city's senior | teams, 2o well did the quartet of Sokol, ing drives, the Sokol-Matthews come bination patterned the tactics of th3 | by their opponents. Refusing to give up when every one | setto, Chewning and Wadden went after The Star's first prizes in d:ters | game in the last set to deuce, they | could not match the all-around ganw joined with their conquerors and David Johnsen and Charley Channing in Baltimore this week end when it was learned that runners-up were made Sokol-Matthews Annex 9 Boys’ Doubles. A largest crowd ever to see a junior singles championship Harry March, and as Leonard Sokol and Byron Matthews won a hard Star-sponsored event at the Edge- moor Club yesterday. favorites real battle, 6—0, 3—8, 6—2, Ritzenberg also surprised by running 6—1. Harry was in the fight until midway for chop in a bristling man-to-man | duel, but starting with the fifth game The champion's service was devas- tating, Ritzenberg winning 11 of the the latter was unable to win on his service after the eighth game of the THAT boys' doubles well could have passed for & championship strug= Matthews, Chewning and Wadden play. Taking the net after deep, forc- major champions, Welsh and McEl- venny, but in fight they were equaled else had counted them out in straight | sets after that love score of the first mined fashion, evening the match, | But although they carried nearly every | of the new champs. Far from discouraged, the losers signing up for the Middle Atlantic | boys’ and junior championships at | eligible by The Star's tournament as well as winners. CORNELL LOSES ECKLEY. ITHACA, N. Y., June 24 (#)—Paul | Eckley, base ball coach at Cornell | since 1924, has announced that he would leave the Ithaca institution September 1 for Amherst, where he will coach base ball, assist Head Coach Lloyd Jordan in foot ball and teach physical education. LA PALINA EXCELLENTE