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Hagen Predicts U. S. Ryder Cup Win : College Title Golf Pl VANKS NOWRATED | EVEN MONEY PICK i M- 70 | Shake-Up Effected by “The Haig” Factor in Sudden Switch in Betting. BY SCOTTY RESTON, Associatea Press Sports Wriier. OUTHPORT, England, June 28. —Walter Hagen, 21 pounds lighter than when he left America in February, viewed the Ryder Cup matches from his po- sition atop the water wagon, today, and confidently predicted victory for the United States. The veteran insisted the Americans would have a better chance if “Mis- ter Hagen” was playing foursomes tomorrow and singles Wednesday. The great Sir Walter, looking better than he has in years, is more than willing to gamble on the American team as it stands. “No matter how I figure it I think we will win,” said Hagen, *“I think Henry Cotton will give us plenty of | trouble but we have too much strength all through the line-up.” On the short end—at 6 to 5 odds— when they arrived, the Americans now are even money. Walter Is Given Credit. AGEN'S work has had a lot to do with the sudden swing in betting sentiment. Three davs after arrival the United States played miserably. Hagen shook up the team and found what looks to be the winning combi- nations. He paired Ed Dudley and Byron Nelson, Ralph Guldahl and Tony Manero, Sam Snead and Horton Smith and Gene Sarazen with Denny Bhute. The palrings, stressing the better parts of each player's game for the Scotch foursomes of the cup matches, have made for a vastly im- proved team. After rounds yesterday in which Dudley and Nelson posted & round 4 under par and Henry Picard and Johnny Revolta whipped Sarazen and Shute, Hagen announced the pairings would stick. British galleries, scrambling over Bouthport and Ainsdale’s treeless wastes and sandy dunes, are inter- ested in Hagen's boys, but more in- terested in Hagen, who won the open four times. Whenever he appears they let the others go and cluster around him. Playing Like Hagen of Old. TH!ZY can't understand why he is not going to play in the matches, and they have good raeson. He is hitting like the Hagen of old, scored | & 69 yesterday and doesn't play like | 8 man on the sidelines. Withal he 15 in the best condition of many years. | | NOW THA! GOLF! 1 TH' LUCKY BUM ¢ YUH SAVED 'IM TWO STROKES WHEN YUH FOUND TH ONE HE POKED IN TH'HONEYSUCKLE { AN' HE SAVES HIMSELF A FEW WHEN HE PICKS 1T UP"TOMAKE SURE IT'S NEW DEALERS’ LEAD IN CITY LOOP CLEAR Nine Routs Learys as Cards Beat Sun Radios—Rain Prevents Section A Play-off. NEW DEAL is the only undisputed leader in either section of the National City League today, following its 13-6 rout of H. B. Leary in sec- “I got on the water wagon when I|tion B yesterday, while rain post- got on the boat for New Zealund,"'poned settlement of a triple tie for says the Halg, who lost 21 pounds circling the globe. “In spite of the| heat of New Zealand, Australla and | India, I stayed on the wagon.” | Members of his party substantiated the story, but one look at Sir Walter is the best proof. The blubber has gone from under his chin, he weighs 183 and he breezed around 18 holes every morning like a schoolboy. After the British open he is not going home, but will tour with Alex | Kirkwood in Holland, Norway, Egypt, | Africa and India, returning home via | Japan in the Spring. “At least I'll make my expenses | that way,” he says. “Cost me $20.000 | & year to live in America. Besides, | I want to do big game shooting in Africa.” U. S. AGGIES SWAMPED. Old Milwaukee's soft ball team | ewamped the U. S. Aggies, 9-1, in a | Bunday morning Soft Ball League game. Feature of the winners’ attack | was & 7T-run outburst in the seventh | inning. S el e STEFFES IS STINGY. Harold Steffes held Bond's to one hit yesterday as Procurement’s soft ball team took & 5-1 decision on the Monument lot. Steffes also got one | ended first place in section A. Heurich’s Brewers and Gordon's Cafeteria were to have played the game determining the team to play Rose Liquor, but were washed out. The Brewers, Gordon's and Liquor nines the regular season with the same standings. New Deal has the Cardinals to thank for its undisputed lead, inas- much as the latter did just as much the New Dealers did by winning. New Deal. Right Fielder Brown led New Deal’s attack with two doubles and a single, to share honors with Devers, who pitched steady ball. Steele was the man who pitched the Cardinals to their upset victory over Radio. George's Radio and the George Deoudes took first place in the junior and midget leagues, respectively. Dave Maloney's triple with the bases loaded started the Radio nine off to an 8-6 victory over J. C. Flood, while the Deoudes nine swamped Corr Bicycle, 10-4. o GETS 12 HITS IN A ROW. TULSA, June 28 (#).—Tony York, Tulsa shortstop, set a Texas League record of 12 straight hits when he banged out three last night against of his team's five hits. = SRR DOUBLE EAGLE and an eagle on one golf course in the same day! That's something you won't often hear about any- It all happened A where at any time. at the Washington Golf and Country Club, where A. Herman Wilson, whacking a mighty spoon shot sec- ond, scored a 2 on the par 5 fifteenth hole. It's the first double eagle or 3 under par score to be made on any hole around Washington this year. D. B. Tuxhorn was the perpetrator of the eagle. He got his on the par 4 third hole. an affair stretching out to around 445 yards. The fifteenth hole plays around 475 yards. “That ball of Wilson's was deter- mined to get in the hole,” said Dr. J. T. McClenahan, Greens Committee chairman, who was on the sixteenth tee and saw the shot and watched the pill roll in. “It hit just short of the green, took & long hop and rolled to the back of the green, caught the slope and came smack into the cup.” Several years ago Fred McLeod bagged a deuce on the par 5 twelfth hole at Columbia and three years back Luther S. Steward, jr., holed a spoon shot for a 2 on the par 5 fifth at Con- gressional. They're rare things, these double eagles.” Probably the most fa- mous one was made by Gene Sarazen at Augusta in 1935, when Gene holed & spoon shot on the fifteenth to en- sble him to tie Craig Wood for first place in the Jones tourney, which he later won. A SMALL field of junior golfers started play today at Washington San Antonio. year by Bobby Brownell. not defend his championship. He is 18 years of age and the age limit is 17. Woodmont Country Club golfers today hold the E. I. Kaufmann trophy, won yesterday in a match at Wood- mont against the clubswingers from the Baltimore Suburban Club. Ralph Beach, professional of the Suburban Club, playing No. 1 for the visitors, shot a 67, one over the course record, to lick Gene Larkin, Woodmont pro, by 3 and 2. Gene had a 71. K. A. Brasfield and M. T. Canby tied for first place in the President's Cup tourney at Kenwood with net cards of 135 for the 36-hole affair. Brasfield had scores of 89 and 98, while Canby had 80 and 79. AT BEAVER DAM Mrs. G. P. Luce and S. T. Dale tied with Miss Bessie Taylor and Dr. L. Levine for the Clff Spencer mixed foursome trophy, each team scoring a net 69. Mrs. C. E. Purdy and J. M. Palmer and Mrs. R. C. Mitchell and John R. Miller tiéd for the gross award at 84. Mrs. Mitchell also won the playoft for the Mechau Trophy, scoring 94—14—80, against 115—34—81 for Mrs. C. E. McGowan. Dr. N. P. Campbell and Pat Cook tied in the match play against par tourney at Washington, both finishing 5 up on par. A. G. Dezendorf was third. Mrs. Ethel Anderson, Mrs. Ruth La Bonta and Mrs. Lillereid won in the selective hole tourney at Argyle. W. C. Whittle scored 91 with a handicap of 6 shots to win the blind bogey tourney at the Capital Club. Billy Houghton, brother of Profes- sional Al Houghton, won the gross award with a 75. Billy has been rein- for the District junior title, won last stated &3 an amateur golfer. 1 CALLS SHOOTIN’ I'D GET BACK ON MY GAME " ‘FORE LONG! by bumping off Star Radio, 4-2, as | Star Radio had been deadlocked with | Bobby will | THE EVE IT’S A DAFFY GAME. S WOT KNEW %, & YEAH! A 79- AN WOTTA 70 HOOKS ONE OFF A TREE ON NO.5 T'GIT A PAR--BOUNCES ACROSS TH'BRIDGE FER A DEUCE ON ! THAT DRIVE FER A BIRD! ELSS \\ NN o JIM BERRYMAN. AN'; HOW 'BouT OF HIS ON NO.1272--HITS MY CADDY AN’ MISSES TH' TRAP HE USUALLY GOES IN---TOPS A CHIP SHOT, RUNS THROUGH 7+ SINKS 2 TWENTy-|\ TH SAND AN'SINKS FOOTERS BY HITTIN' TH' BACK OF TH' CUP!... SCRAMBLED SCORES... ARE WHAT WE ALL MAKE... HOW MANY TIMES HAVE YOU SEENOR EVEN HEARD OF AGOLF SCORE BEING ACHIEVED THE ORTHODOX WAY? IT JUST ISN'T BEING DONE! --NOT EVEN By THE TOP-FLIGHTERS ! ?Par Golf Seldom Is . Number of Strokes on Each Hole of Course; Achieved by Using Right | Most Players Just ‘Scramble’ to Low Score BY W. R. McCALLUM. O YOU, Mr. Golfer, figure that when a pro or a good amateur turns in a surpris- ingly good score—around par, D for example —that he’s hit 18 greens | in perfect figures, and that he has | played otherwise “perfect” golf? If | you do, you're very much mistaken, | for it isn't being done, even by the experts of the game. Scrambling to a score, they call it in the upper brackets of golf, this business of hitting around par even though the tee shots and the iron smacks aren't as straight as a string, and even though the perpetrator of the par score has missed & few greens with his irons. And this same art of | scrambling, developed to a high degree by many of the scoring masters of the game, isn't confined to any one class. They all do it. The golfer hasn't yet been born Wwho can play a par 70 course, day after | day, with 34 tee shots and fairway shots and 36 putts. | the old British master, probably came closer to it than anyone who ever hit a golf ball, but Vardon of the imma- culate swing did some small amount | of scrambling. How It Usually Is Done. OU'LL find in your average par score (call it 70 by way of com- parison) that the guy who made it probably hit about 14 greens in par figures, went over par two or three times and made up for these lapses Wwith one-putt greens for birdies. The rest of the holes he played in par in the orthodox manner; to wit, a drive, &n iron and two putts. Of course, the equation is elastic. There was, for example, the 68 made by Ralph Gul- dahl during his win of the Miami- Biltmore tournament, which probably stands out as the finest bit of scram- bling ever perpetrated. Par for that course is 71, so Gul- dahl's score was 3 under. But the rgmarkable part of it was that Ralph “Hit three greens in par figures. On either chipped close, knocked the ball close out of a bunker, or holed a lengthy putt or chip shot. That round stands out among the examples of the gentle art of scrambling to a score, but there are many others just like it. Your pro golfer, or your good amateur who plays his high and mighty par score isn't playing perfect golf all the way—99 times out of 100. Jones Not Perfect Machine. BOB JONES, in his winning years, wasn't always the perfect golf machine—the human automaton who hit the greens and then bowled in long putts for birdies. The truth is that Bob never had better than average luck on the long putts. From 10 feet away and less, Bob holed a lot of putts, but he missed a good many greens in those par and sub-par rounds that used to win champion- Major Leaders By the Associated Press. n§ ehrig. an L3865 alker, Tigers, .388. oo e s——(grx;eenbe‘rk. “Tigers, 56; Rolfe, ed_in—Greenberg, 5 White Sox. a4, v TRers Tigers, 93; -Bell, ik. Browns, ura, White 8o ‘Triples—Averjil. Indians, 1 ang Stone. Sendiore g And Kuhe Home runs—Selkirk. Yankees, and Greenberg. Tigers, 16 Stolen 'bases—Chapman, Red Sox. Tigers. 10. Lawson. Tigers. 9-9: Yankees, and Hudlin. In; 1 NATIONAL LEAGUE. Batun:—Medeck‘ ponrdinals. 412; Y P. Waner. Pirates. . Runs—M‘e'f‘lwkk. Cardinals. 55; Ga- lan. Cubs, 3 uns ba n—Medwick, Cardinals, 70; Demaree. Cubs, 46. Hits—Medwick. Cardinals, 93; P. Waner, Pirates, R6. Doubles—Medwick, Cardinals. g Brack, Dodgers, and J. Martin, Car- dinals. 20, ' Triples — Vaughan, 10; Handley, Pirates. 9. ome runs—Medwick, Cardinals. 16; Ott. 5. alan. Stoien” Bases—Galan. Oubs, 113 4. olen HE A Main, cardinuis ! Feiiis A1 Cardias, b8, O &1 Pitchin fing, Yanke Pirates, Harry Vardon, | the other 15 he missed the green and | | after a while it gets a little wearing | {a stenographic position here. ships for him. Nor are the present- day masters infallible experts at hit- ting the greens in perfect figures. They scramble to scores just as it's been done since the game began, and will continue to be done as long as | golf exists. Among the amateurs around Was ington there are plenty of scrambl: | and the best shotmaker doesn't alwa prevall against the guy vho can miss the green and chip one close. Indeed. | to see the other guy miss a couple of | shots, knock a pitch shot 15 feet away and down the putt. It gives the other | guy the jeebies—plenty—if it keeps up. An Artist in Scrambling. E HAVE in mind one man who has perfected the art of scrambling to the nth degree, and he plays good golf, too. Reese Hair, the lanky, lean former Washington Club champion, has developed the fine art of scram- bling to the point where Reese isn't happy unless he’s fighting the rough, or the woods or the traps. And he scores around 75 or better, too. Ob- viously, he's quite & putter, and quite a chipper, and he’s broken many a heart by gettirig e par from the tiger country. Just one example of the way Recse does it: He put his tee shot on the fourth hole at Washington far up in the woods, on a hillside. The hole is & par 5 affair. He knocked his second shot over the trees to the green and canned a 50-footer for an eagle. That's one way to do it. Whenever vou see a guy who plays three lousy shots and tries just as hard with the next one you're more than apt to find a scrambler, and a gent who's hard to lick. There are more, and we know they know it, too; guys like Jack McCarron at Congressional, and many others. The main or the big shot. They all scramble to a score. The only difference is how they scramble. The duffer loses a couple of shots around the green and the expert scrambler makes up for fairway mistakes around the same spot. Sports Mirror By the Associated Press. Three years ago—Vamarie get record of 74 hours 33 minutes 27 seconds for New Lontion-Bermuda ocean yacht race, but lost to Edlu on time allowance. Record 65, seven under par, gave Henry Cotton 9-stroke lead at half-way mark in British open golf. Five years ago—Ellsworth Vines, Bunny Austin, Jack Crawford and Jiro Satoh reached semi-finals of Wimbledon tennis, Crawford elimi- nating Fred Perry and Satoh de- feating Sidney Wood. Clever Shoreham Mermaids Aim at National Recognition ISSATISFIED with the meas- D ing the five years of its exist- worlds to conquer. Skadding, quit swimming pools to em- “in an attempt to gain national recog- cludes 10 talented young mermaids, White, Helen Flett, Iris Wadsworth, take his new expansion plan too seri- vall and Rita Augusterfer, and, fig- ure of success achieved in purely local competition qur- ence, the Shoreham girls’ swimming team is seeking bigger and better Dudley Gordon, guiding spirit of the | club since its organizer, Florence | bark on the sea of matrimony as Mrs. Morris, is laying plans for a new deal nition.” At present the Shoreham roster in- Anne Bono, June Boothe, “Blondie” Helmick, Betty Strohecker, Elizabeth Betty Everett, Mary Dunn and Lydia Cort. However, before Gordon can ously, he must find two capable per- formers to fill the shoes of Marie Du- uratively speakipg, they are pretty big shoes to fill. Marie May Come Back. ARIE, who played no small part in the success of the Shoreham club, dropped out of competition two years ago to marry Bob Knight, also a springboard ace, formerly under the expert tutelage of Fred Brunner at Central High School. She held the women's District diving championship for several years and was one of those selected to go to the Olympic try- outs in 1932. Marie has recently in- timated that she might re-enter com- petition, in which event the Shore- ham’s chances for national recogni- tion would be considerably enhanced. Rita Augusterfer, although reputedly still & free-lancer, seems to have lost interest in her aquatics and is de- voting the greater part of her time to She | earned the distinction, during her affil- iation with the Shoreham team, of being one of the best distance swim- mers Washington ever produced. Miss Bono, who started from scratch at the Shoreham four years ago under Mrs. Morris’ instruction, now is un- questionably the club’s No. 1 performer. In that remarkably short period of time Anne has gathered in four District crowns—the women's 50, 100 and 230 Dudley Gordon vard free styles and also the 150 yard medley, which is a miraculous achieve- ment in any swimming hole. She is a student at the University of Maryland. June Is Backstroke Champ. UNE BOOTEE, who swam for the ‘Women's Swimming Association in New York before coming to Washing- ton a year ago, garnered the District 100-yard backstroke championship last March and, incidentally, combines pul- chritude with talent to a high degree. Little Helen Flett is figured to be dependable in the 220 free style. She is very good now and constantly is improving. Although small to be com- peting in this event—she's a shade under 5 feet—she seems to grow stilts when she Rits the water. Betty Strohecker will be the one to give June Boothe a battle for No. 1 backstroke honors. In the past year Betty has cut 10 seconds off her previous time—quite an accomplish- ment, Coach Gordon is a firm believer in discipline as a panacea for all ills, and if these girls are imbued with the same Wwill to win in out-of-town competition that they have exhibited for the past five years here, it's safe to say that within a season or two ‘Washington will have at least one athletic organ- ization carrying its banner in creditable style. Rackets Restrung, $2.00 ® AND UP o 1019 15th St. N.W. RACES TODAY DELAWARE PARK STANTON, DEL. 1 train _leaves Union Station 1 AM. Special B. & O. trains leave 11:05 AM. and 11:45 A M. —direct to track, Eastern standard time. FIRST RACE AT 2:00 PM.E.8. T. NAUL 5165 idea is that golf isn't| being played perfectly, by the duffer | 475-Mile Contest Draws 35 Sea-Going Craft in Bt a Staff Correspondent o The Btar. EW LONDON, Conn., June 28.— N less than 3-knot force and with a light drizzle, 35 oeean- across the line off Sarahs Ledge here yesterday noon for the start of the 475- the eastern end of Long Island, down the coast and up the Chesapeake Bay With promise of more wind from the South by nightfall, a select fleet skippers of the East, tacked out and prepared for three to four days and rounding the Chesapeake lighthouse and laying a course for the Gibson sors the longest ocean race in the East this season. for larger boats was R. J. Reynolds’ beautiful new black-hulled yawl Eliza- Close behind was Dr. Frank Caldrone's schooner Tradition, hailing from West- L. B. Dunham's yawl Vryling II, out of New York. George Whitings' cut- Baltimore, was among the group bunched at the leeward end of the YAGHT RACE START‘ Three Divisions. In a light southeasterly of going yachts in three divisions ghosted mile race around Montauk Point, at to a finish off Gibson Island. of racers, manned by outstanding nights of offshore sailing before Island Yacht Squadron, which spon- First across the line in the class beth McCaw, from Winston-Salem. bury, Long Island, and followed by ter White Cloud, & new threat from start. Hersilia Leads Class. LYING the only quadruple-type Jib in the fleet, the cutter Hersilia of Dexter Lewis, from Rhode Island was first across the line close behind the gun for the start of the smaller class. Second over, but on a port tack. went the small yawl Golden Eye of Prescott Wells, from New Jersey. The cutter Sirocco of Paul Sperry, Connecticut yachtsman, was a close third. Sole Washington skipper of a boat in the race, Corrin Strong went across fifth in his cutter Narada. Determined to compete, although he was the only entry in the racing division, Karl Fischer, in the Phila- delphia sloop Mirage, was nearly two minutes late in crossing the line as a result of the feeble airs. Fleetest of boats were expected to finish off Baltimore Light on Wednesday, the bulk on Thursday and stragglers on Friday, at which | time trophies will be presented to winning skippers and approximately 300 yachtsmen will be entertained. VIRGINIA PILOTS STAR Mullen, Rowland Sweep in Two College Motor Boat Clasees. SARATOGA SPRINGS, N. Y., June 28 (#).—Two Virginia pilots walked away with top individual honors in the eighth annual intercollegiate out- board motor boat regatta here last | week end. Jimmy Mullen, Richmond, sent his class C motor over the surface of Saratoga Lake at 51.843 miles an hour, breaking the old world mark of 51.253, to make Princeton’s team high. Bob Rowland, William and Mary star, swept the class B competition to take runner-up honors in individual performances and to give the Wil- liamsburg school second team award Then Jim e&rn fi SPORTS Sports Program For Loeal Fans TODAY. Boxing. John Henry Lewis, world light heavyweight champion, vs. Willie Reddish. 10 rounds, non-title, fea- ture bout, Griffith Stadium, 8:30. Tennis. Final doubles matches, all-Army tournament, Army-Navy Country Club, 3:30, District tournament, Country Club, 4-7. Golf. District Junior Washington Golf Tub. Georgetown in national inter- collegiate tournament, Pittsburgh, TOMORROW. Base Ball. Boston vs. Washington, Griffith Stadium, 3:15. Tennis. District tournament, Country Club, 4-7. Golf. District junior Washington Golf Club. Georgetown in national inter- collegiate tournament, Pittsburgh. WEDNESDAY. Base Ball. Boston vs. Washington, Griffith Stadium, 3:15. Tennis. District tournament, Country Club, 4-7. Golf. District Junior tournament, Washington Golf and Country Club. Georgetown in national inter- collegiate tournament, Pittsburgh. THURSDAY. Base Ball. Boston vs. Washington, Griffith Stadium, 3:15. Tennis. District tournament, Country Club, 4¢-7. Golf. Georgetown in national inter- collegiate tournament, Pittsburgh. Wrestling. Rudy Dusek vs. Reb Russell, feature match, Griffith Stadium, 8:30. Columbia tournament, and Country Columbia tournament, and Coyntry Columbia Columbia FRIDAY. Base Ball. New York vs. Washington, Grif fith Stadium, 3:15. Tennis. District tournament, Country Club, 4-7. Golf. Georgetown in national inter- collegiate tournament, Pittsburgh. SATURDAY. Base Ball. New York vs. Washington, Grif- fith Stadium, 3. Tennis. District tournament, Country Club, 4-7. Golf. Georgetown in national inter- collegiate tournament, Pittsburgh Columbia Columbia ay Opens NEW T. V. GOLF CHAMP Titlist, by 2 and 1. CHATTANOOGA, Tenn., June 28 (#)—Championship honors in the Tennessee Valley invitation golf tour- nament rested today with Bill Nm"velli of Chattanooga, a finalist in the State | tournament last year. Norvell defeated the Norvell Tops Oehmig, Defending | Two-Day Medal Competition Will Reduce Oakmont Contestants to 32. Py the Associated Press. AKMONT, Pa, June 28.—A bustling brigade of 164 col- legians marched forth today in pursuit of the only unpro=- tected national golf crown—the ine tercollegiate championship. Golf's futurity, pernaps numbere ing among its line-up another Pischer, Dunlap or Little, called for 18 holes of medal play, starting at 8:15 am. (Eastern daylight time) today, and another 18 holes of medal play to- morrow to reduce the record-sized field to 32. These survivors will de= termine the individual champion by , match play ending Saturday. There were several favorite con- tenders for the title won by Charley Kocsis of Michigan last year at North Shore Golf Club, Glenview, I, and left vacant by his graduation. Paul Leslie and Fred Haas, jr.. both of Louisiana State, ranked at the top, Leslie went to the finals last year. Haas was medalist last year and runner-up the year before. Turnesa Junior an Entrant. X ILLIE TURNESA, a junior at Holy Cross and member of the “ famous Elmsford, N. Y., golfing family, stood high among the contenders. The same might be sald of Sid Richardson of Northwestern, the Big Ten champion. Swarming over Oakmont in prace tice rounds, the collegians found par must always be called mister on the famous links Slim Jim Marks, Princeton star and member at Oakmont, cheered other competitors yesterday with a ones under-par 71—proving it could be done. b The medal play today and tomor. row will decide the team champi ship won last year by Yale. Twentye five institutions were entered in this competition, with the title being dee termined by the aggregate of the four lowest scores made by players from each school. FINE SPIRIT, AT THAT Russian Asks for “‘Newest Words"” About Basket Ball. LAWRENCE, Kans. () —The in- spector of physical education in the schools of Stalingrad, U. 8. 8. R, wants to hear “newest words about games and basket ball” from Dr. For rest C. (Phog) Allen rector of athe letics at the University of Kansas. From G. G. Kvashneed came the letter addressed: “U. §. A, Kansas, Lawrence, Mr. F. C. Allen,” and say- ing: “I am especially interested in bas«" ket ball, but things are that it is ime | possible for me to buy literature from your country, and in the meantime I need your new book. I want inspira= tion. I want to hear newest words about games and basket ball DENTAL ALUMNI WIN. Overcoming a five-run lead, Dental | Alumni’s soft ball team nosed out the defending | Dean's All-Stars, 7-5, yesterday. The | champion, Lew Oehmig. captain of the | alumni scored four runs in the seventh University of Virginia team, d 1.1 and three in the eighth way~ FEEL fitf— LOOK fif—. FASTER YOUVE CERTAINLY GOT A MORNING- GOSH. PETE, DO | LOOK AS BAD AS | FEEL? AFTE IT WOULD PAY YOU TO TAKE SOME R LOOK ! BROMO-SELTZER ® When you have a hangover, you aren’t fit for work. Why take chances with your job? Bromo-Seltzer stops your HEADACHE—fasler, doctors proved, than anything else they tested. Calms jittery NERVES. Settles your STOMACH. And ALKALIZES—reduces the excess acid over- eating or drinking causes. At drugstore soda fountains. Keep it at home, too. BROMO-SELTZER SURE FIXED ME UP! (M READY TO FACE THE WORLD-AND YES, IT WORKS FASTER. DOES MORE, T0O. CLEARS THE HEAD - HELPS JITTERY NERVES - SETTLES