The evening world. Newspaper, August 25, 1920, Page 17

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“e's igh wii ot, ate the years “play” “inger grip for “when est rank. of age at when ‘oo When Mitchell became Rs nfhick one, by Mr. Hutchinson, who had days vk grips were common; they af- “Yorded a littie more protection from “Wie'jarring that the gutta bal some- times occasioned. wgvetureily, in those days Mitchell the palm grip, but he has modi- that since to a half-palm, half- his long game; he is within 180 yards of the 1 a finger grip, figh there is no overiapping. Three “or four months ago he told me that “hé’was going to adopt the overlap- grip, but up to the present he mot done so, and no doubt, now that he !s playing so well, he would he nmwise to take any risk whatever “Ot being put off his game. (i. TF MITCHELL OVERLAPPED. td Should Mitchell adopt the overiap- ing grip he would lose ten yards or r of a real club, the grip was |S!shtly op: for that was ding polm grip. In t he changes rom the tee beeause Still, what he latter h: had the bet “World's Champion Gives Playing Form of Abe Mitchell as Model for All Golfers Anxious to Improve Their Shots. hag been euggested that the series of instructional articles which I have written lately would be well led off by an article showing methods of one of our most famous players. * “At no kind of sport can it be said ‘Mie all men arrive at the same state ef'near perfection by the same means, Physically and mentally men are dit- and, 45 a consequence, there uy be that in the play of some one os@@ Our famous golfers which is just Present method of hitting the ball, the thing that you or some of your ‘Wriends require in order to make your more satisfactory to yourselves. I propose to deal with Abe Miteholl, who is one of the few players of in- Japa product who have reached the He was but seven he started Ashdown with any old tick that had a crook at the end of it. PERIOD OF THICK GRIPS. Mitchell, when he started, had his as is the rule in various ricta, he copied as near as e local crack, in this case, was Horace Hutch- Abson, who had won an amateur cham- lohehip a year before Mitchell was the pré the ki hose the © “power which the palms give w ppear. ~dsy distance he would guin in accuracy. | upswing: sHle first became famous as a dviver. ¥ His huge hitting has been made very much of in the press for a long time, sand very little said of his short gw Lhave not seen many swith Ted Ray, but I understand that sacriti f bis battles or of Melogging,” whereas Mitchell has had | athe-better of the figures. emmeht away that {t is his short rame wmhich has placed him right at the! hat proves front, By his short game I mean all distances up to eighty yards. His ap- proaching and putting up to that dis- tance have been wonderfully good. In fact, I doubt if L have ever seen bet- ter. It does not matter whether ic ts & pitch right up to the hole or a nin- up. He plays beth shots with equal accuracy, BEST BALANCED MAN IN GOLF. Mitchell's great idea in golf Is to hit the ball down. He bas not got so near to J. H. Taylor’a method as, I have no foubt, he would Uke, and with his just as the head of the cluo has reached the arc of his swing, I cannot émagine him equalling J. H. Tayier’s Derformances in high winds, There again he has been at a dis- advantage in his inland training, as one seldom gots a wind strong enough to compel one to learn to keep the ball down. Mitchell is about the best-balanced man playing golf to-day, I have little doubt that, had he been trained for running, he would have been an even timer, as he is a born athlete. Any one having the gift of physical balance needs nothing but practice to become expert at any game. He is unusually strong, though he may be deceptive in this respect, but few could wield a club of the weight he uses with the same ease as he displays. His driver is within an ounce of be- in weight. He uses a n stance and fairly full ind | medium swing, By “medium” | mean that the swing is neither flat nor up- right. He eases the tens of the screw of the body or the pivot by an uplifting of the inner side of the right foot ‘caused by a knuckling over and outward of the right ankle, The lat- ter was a characteristic of Edward to Dud in Mitchell's long game that is different from every other player I can think of—tt |is his extraordinary reach out to the hall, It almost seems as if, when his clubhead ts within six inches or so of the ball, his arms become several inches longer, which cuts off the fol- low-through. All his long shots are played in the same way, but the lengthening of the club is not so pro- nounced in the case of a braasle vi spoon, As a matter of fact, that lengthening of the club gradually dis- appears as he gets nearer to the hole. Within about 180 yards of the hole he lets the club go to his fingers and puts a little more tension on the left arm to givé him a shortor and wider the nearest he appears to get to the push shot, however, is that which the ball does when it ia hit at the bottom of the arc of the swing instead of just before that, Quite often he hits the ball when the club- head has passed the bottom of the are It is probable that James Braid has worked harder than any one else to attain to the highest standard of golf. (Copyright, 1920, Rell Syndicate.) but tra wd ced the ‘Wes at Oak Park found most of the fa- the running, of the vorttes )Drnestine *-Club, one of the best of the I ayers, eliminated Miss Dorine Kava- ‘aMaugh, Chicago Golf Club, 4 and 3, DeKalb, “ide holder; Mrs. Melvin Jones, Glew “Oak, medalist in the qualifying Might “yesterday; Mrs. J. 8. Pritchard (Myra Helmer), , champton, and other well known 9lay- ra tre ers CHICAGO, Aug. and Edward Ray, British golfe fered their worst defeat In this when they lost to Je new Ayton, a recent Aidown anid 6 to pi ligopese in Orange with a handied by Jim Knox and the fresh 9 Ca ety club, was y giaarry, Curtis,” wlio was auats Ognd WD. McDoniid, Woolway, was | wih coacH Inst full, third with | Ninety-two golfera took | ——e-—_- part in the tourney SMELT icnneton Bach a mad scramble for hon sulted ‘ountry Club at Nutley, No J Bes committee found it mecosaas ward ten prises in order to plucate low scorers, More than fifty memt rom the metropolitan district ent the elgnteen-hole handicap in CHICAGO, Aus. “dhe first round of match play ‘Bhimplonship fight of tern Golf Association still, in Pearce Perry Fiske of Battle Creek, won their matches, 26. professional cl mpion, ball exhibit @, whe t Conn., Aui yesterday when | Uh if Association hel event in the morping and t! foursome after luncheon. the Mich... t tl Hutchison lee on the links of the \Most of Favorites Still in Run- ®*"hing in Women’s Western “Golf Tourney. 25.—Completion of in Wom tournam Harry Vardon cou! ‘i Hutchison and 1) hird_ de rofessional.| It wis U e vder the Britons in four days In Chicago. NEW HAVEN Pierson of the Wee Burn, Golf ¢ the fall invitation State Golf tourna Played on the Race Brook Countr ErOMB O' pedal he best Miss Skokie former Benton Blows Up And Cardinals Defeat Giants ST. LOUIS, Aug. 2 defeated the Giants in the second game of the series, 6 to 4. Branch Rickey's young men bumped Rube Benton off the mound in the third inning, manufacturing five runs on six the |hits, four of which were of the infield en's|Variety, and @ costly error by Larry pent | Doyle, The Giants made eleven hits and drove Lew North to the clubhouse in |the fourth Inning, But Bill Sherdeil, the young southpaw, who replaced him, held the visitors in chedk during the remainder of the game. In the fifth, the Cardinals added another run to thelr total at the expense of Phil Douglas. ‘The Cardinals jocal m., >--—, Ha: rd Squad to Report Sept. 7. CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Aug, 25,—Tn Harvard football squad has been or- dered to report on Sept. 7, Bob Misher, the head couch, to-day outlined his plans for assistant coaches for the campaign. ‘The staf will be mainly the same as last year, The line and tackles will be Wal urge of © ‘Trumbull, while Ww Will nave dh, 1 r the tackles an suf- niry the ri the feat ldge und possibly Ir ushers. — Wiggleswe > Fisher's right hand or the. of f and it 1s hoped that Ralph Hor ween’ of Inst year's team tained to con ma h the N. 7, Aug. 2 comp and close finishes d' marriage here # year ago to a son OTHER SPORT HOW BALL PLAYERS HONOR MEMORY OF RAY CHAPMAN (Underwood & Underwood.) Harry Lunte, New Cleveland Short- stop, and His Mourn- ing Band. Like all other major league players Harry Lunte, the new Cleveland short- stop, Wears a mourning band on his pitehed bull at the Polo Grounds, plo @ severe burden on Lunte, who for tw? years hud only been a utility Inflelder With the Indians fighting desperately for the American League pennant it fell upon Lun‘e to carry on the great|! work of Chapman, whose untimely death cast the entire baseball world in gloom. Lunte, while not a heavy hit- ter, 1s a capable fielder, Cleveland's final showing in the great race will de- pend considerably on Lunte—how wei he fills his important assignment. Pete kKiiduff Of Robins Hurt As Team Loses bases crowded, and a nasty grounder which struck little Pete Kilduff in the face in the eigth inning were re- sponsible for the Robins losing the second game of the series to the Pirates by a score of 4 to 8. Grimes's wild pitch chased two runners over the plate, while the grounder which hit Kilduff paved the way of the win- ning run. ‘The Robins made a plucky uphill Aight and finally succeeded in tleing the acore in the eighth inning when Jimmy Johnston, the converted third basenmn, tripled to right and‘ scored on Tomm: Griffith's sacrifice fly to Max Carey, Wheat followed with a single, but Hy Myers brought the inning to a’ close by hitting to Cutshaw and into s double play. —— NEW INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Clubs. Baltimore Torcuto eon juftalo Me Games Yesterday, Jersey City. UW) Akron. Rocheater, 9's ‘Toroniv, Games Te-Day Jersey City at Doron! Syracuse ai Buffalo, , heading 61 Ronhester Baltimore at Abron > NEW YORK PRINCESS Former Miss Stevens Loses Puppy Brought From Far East. Princess Golitzine, who before her of the Prime Minister ta the late Rus- sian Czar was Mias Frances Simpson Stevens, Is very aad to-day over the loas of her Pe'ingese puppy Faro Must. “I brought him all the way from |Hangkong after @ ninety-day sea y arriving here Friday,” she ; to-day with tears in her eyes. “And now to have him taken from the kennels before he even bad a chance to get acquainted with his new surroundings. Oh, it's too pro- STANDING OF THE CLUBS NATIONAL LEAGUE, sits Brooklyn at Pittsburgh, Boston at Chicago. Philadelphia at Cincinastt, | wk 59 61 ta-|marked the second day of ¢ voking.” nat ult facing pt the, Huds n River | ro diseppeared Saturday from Watts, took the feature event of the Durland's Riding Acadomy, where he ‘#\ afternoon and the stake of the had be temporarily placed, He is arad | OaLIne, When He geored 4 atraight-neat!@ dark red dog, four and one-half Dall | cluaa trot, with Native Chick weeota faq {months old, His owner is stopping \Hollyrood Naomi th.rd. wt. the home of her mother, No. 167 — — — est 7th Btreet Rete Sane AMERICAN LEAGUE, Tells Hard Luck Story, vo. | Were) Clie, po, | Jacob Zansky, thirty-one, of No. 243 492 4 chi .a76 44 633 | Boston 4m Hast 123d Street, was before Justice 79} Cleveland ...73 48 619 | Washi “ass Freschi in Special Sessiona to-day for 427 | New Yorkss.74 48.607 ‘3a violation of the Sullivan Law, He 4 St. Lowls....58 66 809 44 pleaded guilty to having @ revolver) GAMES YESTEKOAY, Detrolt. 6) New York, 8 ton, 7) Cleveland, 2 WIFE AND $700 GONE. Man Arrested Firing Revolver when he was arrested the night of Aur | ust 5 for firing a shot in his home. Louls, 3: Philadelphia, 1 (first game). 8 Washington, &; Chicago, §, GAMES TO-DAY, Loule, 3: Philadelphia, + Conend game), | Wife He told the Judge he had found an intruder there, Since then, he said, bis pad decamped, taking bis $700 éavings, their four-year-old daughter and the household goods | “It your story je tr } aoe what | can be done for you when you, come Up for sentence on ne jeptember 3," said bina ‘Fresch aaa t walt H There's Uttle ol ei] carried spills the tea and the milk and Tillie is ready to throw up the sponge. Gut ufter Lady Mainwaring good son Dick returns as a lodger for his thirst. THE BVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, “AUGUST 25, 1920. the state line of ‘Téxas with him and MUFFLER SHOULD BE | HELP WANTE! When he Is ar- rested for violating the White Si ery Act, she defends both him and herself in court and wins her cane, The courtroom scene, with its ex- ive an amun- gt end 'g And the use of a cut-out ts unnece | Thorcugh | By CHA, ly wel to ini ‘There’ Mr, Hay, if we may judge him by cordingly, The gon of @ lofty fam- ily rides on @ bus and promptly falls |in love with @ girl whose mother runs a lodging house in Bloomsbury. ‘The two families meet and have their b, as familie marriage is in the air, but Dick of The Towers and Tillie of Bloomsbury have sense enough and love eno to manage their lives for themselve: The meat Bloomsbury lodging house with a hungry baliff prowling about the on the preinises sleeve as a ‘mark of respect to Ray] Mainwaring Chapman, Chapman's tragic death, re-| household. sulting from belng hit on the head b into a butler bravely ife. This acted so well Woods might be ing with pride through 4 monacle, if he chose, the English company has brought to the pleasaat task, O. P. Heggie, as a brvken-down actor who once played part of an elephant in a pantomime, acted the adaptable bailiff with humor equ For goud measure, there was Nellie Hodson playing the lodg- ing house mistress capitally ing enough like Annie Hughes te be her twin sister. ried off the role of the lover with an eusy air, and Muriel Martin Harvey charm of a delightful play. pathic tala, ANTI-BOLSHEVIK FILM STRIKES AT MONOPOLY; PLEA “Democracy, The Vision Restored, is the title drama shown for the first time last Aight at the Casino and advertised as a powerful As a matter drama “Hoppy'GotLucky” RLES DARNTON OWD'YDO! A more than friend- ‘Happy-Go-Lucky,’ comedy from London that arrived last night at the Booth Theatre, for it im the best play of ite kind that has come to us since "Mr, Hopkinson.” Resemblance is to be found only In the fact that once again there ts wer, br, at any rate, a sham battle, be- tween the upper and lower classes. nothing “Happy-Go-Lucky,” pens to be your pleasure to look at , life itself as a farce, written @ thoroughly human comedy, with the and all the toleration in the world, @ comedy that fn its humble way em- bodies the principle of the League of Nations, Hay in so many words, go along foolitg yourself with the silly idea that you are highly su- perlor to your neighbor,” heart-warming monopoly as embodied tn the person of Henry Fortune, the euper-capttal- ist who sought to control the world and ended stripped of his power and friendiess, Henry, whose name and make-up suggested a very wealthy sleep in the open. travagant eloquence, man prominent in tha news, had al iy Human Comedy. ne ee \the. acting by Marie Goff, beg) | time of It, going the way | ice Gerald, Frank , Wood, Clarenc we of Caesar and other empire makers.| iickefeller, John Cromwell J. HL. Glimore got all that ponsibty|Hocketeler, font ine. could be squeezed out of the powers ful and unpleasant role of Henry, the multi-millionatre, He offered power to his two grand: sons, The Dreamet, played by Will jam Nigh, rejected it, while the other brother, played by Leslie A capted ‘the “mantle of gol had an unhappy time, David the dreamer went away to war after se- cretly marrying Mary, the blind girl. The multi-millionatre’s money com~ manded surgical caré whieh restored her vision, but she opened eyes on a world of deceit, The blind wife, restored to sight, flecs the home of wealth, and in humble shack on Christmas Eve he: baby im born, At the bedside gather the blind empire builder, now stripped and alone; the designing brother and the returned soldier-husband. The latter has rebuked capital and labor for attempting to impose force In place of love, The audience ap- —_— come may be extended the °. and 18th. aix and a half acre: about it hap- farcicus unless ren tion. tn rc lan Hay has tennia and swinuming. ir meeting will atinct of & gentleman {ig and important. —_ proved of the theme that "Only tha which {s based on love can endure. Lee Francis Lybarger is responsible for the drama, the original scenario being by Nina Wiloox’Putnam. , ———— “(IMMODEST VIOLET” BROUGHT TO LIGHT. At leash I] gy, A kK to be getting gray hair. At ter more or leas effort to take)| cial work to « y take it this is what he says. root on the road, “Immodest Violet” i S Depart Ae are potted a @ good deal of Dickens IN| way prought to the Forty-eighth “yhown" although they oung mea, ‘The reagon | Street Theatre yesterday afternoon by Manager W. A. Brady for the first of two special performances, There came to light a rather amus- | ing comedy of character by a hither- to unknown author, David Carb, a comedy bordering at times on bur- lesque, Yet there is a great deal of common. sense, as well as humor, in this play, for it makes the point that a girl may be innocent of wroni doing, no matter what the time, the place or the clothes happen to be when she takes @ notion to do as she pleases. ‘As @ matter of fact, Violet goes to |’ the room of a young man In her night dress when he is ready for bed to borrow Money from him so that she may be able to Join a suffragist cele- bration, Then she proceeds to cross All fhe characters } and they behave ac- ared with 165,087 on the ate in 1919. ° This incre than 32,000 1a expected to often do when now Authorized Exchan: NEW AND USED BUICKS Glidden Motor & Supply Co., | "nF wi of the play is in the very day Lady is to descend on the But the bailiff ts turned and the little farce is on until Stillbottle 239 West 5st One door Kast of leaves, her |= comedy that Manager A. forgtven for view~ is he d only by end look- Henry Baxter car- At speed, the National Sextet grips was ‘almple and sincere Tillie, the road with satisfying surety. And Geor Giddens, Oswald Yorke, cy PITTSBURGH, Pa. Aug: 25.—A wild| Blythe. Daily, Alice Edson, G. H. it holds its course without any of Pitch by the dependable Burleigh| Brewer and the irresistible Gypsy the swerve and sway that often Grimes in the first inning, with the|Q'Brien udded to the humor and accompany speed. POERTNER MOTOR CAR CO., Irc. 1759 Broadway, New York 524 Broad St., Newark, N, J. SES SPECTATORS. of a pretentious film] ’§ blow at of fac much more Bolshevism, the photo severe with 27.2 Miles per Galion With 25 Men Driving Economy—27.2 miles per gallon of gasoline on all kinds of roads from New York to San Francisco! 1721 miles to each gallon of oil! Entire trip made on original tire equipment. Stamina—The remarkable stamina of the car was proved by hav- ing 25 men, who had never before seen the car, drive it day and night for seven and a half days at an average speed of over 19 miles per hour, including all stops. Your Overland will have this remarkable Economy and Stamina of light weight, alloy steels and 7riplex Springs. Touring. Roadster, Coupe, Sedan, Telephone cotimiue 0 WILLYS OVERLAND, Inc. Bronx: 2436 Grand Concourse ( 188th Street), Tel, Fordham 8340, Brooklyn: Corner Fulton Street end Bediord Ave., Tel. Bedford 8800, Newark: 526 Broad Street, Tel. Mulberry 4020, Broadway at 50th Street ing and original turn to the play, an ADVERTISING M’G’RS HOLD CONVENTION them, | H But it does not follow, according to a LH. C. Brokaw, of the Weat Hide Y. M. C. A, that the muffier wil | TELEPHONE ‘ 0 give no back pressure, anies® prop- Oreoune: erly cared for, The exhaust carries out ee & large amount of unburned carbon. 0.80 P.M. TO'7 A. M. Sometimes there is more or lees oll with * 4 ‘The Advertising Managers’ Council Of wailg of the muttior and cover the mall M and Accessory Manufactur- Sie Assochaies,commpriaing eee eee eee WhIOh- 180 enme aneS tives of the principal companies tn the Automotive equipment field, witt hold a convertion at Camp Nela, Cleve! on Friday and Saturday, Sept. 2 7 Sivee off & Innge amount of sinose wher Camp Nela occupies a tract of about with ample ac- commodations for copferesce and rec- ‘The advertising managers will put ui tents for his convention and wi o have a/erance to enjoy MANEKE fer retards the passane of the exhaust R Whenever there 1s the least sign of the Recent developments in the automo- #4908, which back up Into the motor ive Industry Indicate that the Septeth: bo extremely interest- BIG INCREASE IN AUTO REGISTRATIONS ‘The problem of handling trafMfe in this city ts sald to be causing a good many of those connected with this spe- In the steady increase in the number of auzomobiles, of which there were practically 200,000, ‘on the otucial records of July 1, aa com- esponding | than 40,000 before next December, As a) matter ‘of fact, offtcialy of the Department belleve that clome to 825. motor vehicles are in the metropolis Dealers iby KEPT WELLCLEANED ~ sh | Modern mufflers are so Gostgned that Ri they ive practically no tack pressure | WOMEN i 21-55 YEARS OF ace, ¥ ry) in fact, manufacturers no longer supply { o rtunity to earn this. 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