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SPORTS. TTTF EVTTKnrNT, STAR. WASTTTKOTON, D. C- WEDNESDAY. APRIL 23, 1924. SPORTS. G. U Should Score in Penn Carnival: Leader Makes a Hit as Yale Rowing Coach BLUE AND GRAY COUNTING ON THREE WINS AT LEAST Conficleul of -in Four-Mile and Medley Na- tional Championship Events and in South Atlantic Title Competition. BY H. C. BYRD. Georgetown probably looks toward the Penn relay games Fridav ! and Saturday at Philadelphia just as optimistically as any other I university that is to be represented. Victory in three races, or at ; least an even chance in that many, is just what the Blue and Gray expects, | with the feeling that in addition it may capture another event or so, and that one or two of its athletes in the events for individuals may give a practical demonstration of what is meant by the old saying, a clean pair of heels is a good thing to show one’s opponent. In the South Atlantic Intercolegate Athletic Association one mile relay championship on Friday there is better than an even chance for; victory, says John O’Reilly, who. In sides coaching basket ball and base | hall and helping with the foot hall squad, still finds time to tutor cham- pionship track teams. Virginia Ins a fast quarter and will offer the real opposition to the Hi'ltop four, but O'Reilly feels that Georgetown has su j s l ren S win. At that two of Virginia's relay men, Bohannon and Talbott, do the quarter aroun 1 " seconds. "The two-mile national champion fffiip relay and the sprint medley n; tional championship r< -lay are th other competitions in which the Hf!i toppers are confident of their chance: for success. On this four will com pete Brooks, Sullivan. Holden an. Marsters, all four.of whom are ex pected to bring their marks dowi around 1 minute 55 seconds, and tw of whom, it is thought, will better that time. In the two-mile race ea«-h man. o' course, runs a half mile, hut in tin sprint medley the first man is to go a quarter, the next two men 220 eio ! and the last 880. in this event Heriiht is to run the quarter and he will d ¦ it under 50 seconds if he continues in his present form. I>o\vdlng will run one 220. Kay Haas the other, and Marsters is to travel the half mile. In Other Ills Events. The other relay events in which Georgetown teams will run are the four-rnile championship, quarter-mile and half-mile championships The four-mile team is to be made up of Brcnks. Helme. Marsters and Sullivan, ¦w hile the quarter and half teams both will have as their make-up, in th? order in which they are to run, Dowd- -1 ing. Thompson, J. Haas ami Cushman. 1 he freshman four will have running In order, Swinburne, McClain, Ester- veg and Eastment. Plansky, who tied for first place in the pentathlon at Penn a year ago. is to take part in that competit’on again, Plansky. according to O’Reilly, has not be; n doing as well this spring as he did last, hut has been coming rapidly of late. The battering tlie ' athlete got in foot ball last fall is thought to be hindering him in his track and field work. Shannon also is entered in the pentatholn. Shan- non is to compete in the pole vault, but notwithstanding he does over twelve feet, is not expected to get anything more than a fourth or fifth place, even if he gets that. In Individual Races. Dowdlng and Kearney are George- town's best bets in the events for individuals. The former is in the broad jump and has been clearing more than 23 feet. His best mark in practice this spring was 23 feet 7 inches. Kearney is one of the best high hurdlers in the east and can do the 120 yards over the timbers around In seconds, which is dangerous in any kind of competition. Another event in which Georgetown is to be repre- sented is the 220-yard special, in which several of the best American . sprinters have been invited to com- pete with Liddel, the star sprinter from Scotland. Georgetown may not win in any event in which it is entered. Then again it may accomplish even more' than it expects, but whatever it may do, one thing is assured—that it will have in competition at Philadelphia ¦the most brilliant array of track and field athletes that have worn George- town colors. George Washington has its relay team entered to run in a class in ¦which it seems to have a good chance to win. The Hatchetites have a faster four than usual and the race in which they are placed does not have any indications of being especially fast. Opponents will be Savage » School. Massachusetts College of Pharmacy. Manhattan, Loyola, St. Bona-venture, Ohio Wesleyan, Dayton j and Oberlin. Torn Probey is coaching the squad and he probably will send to Phil- adelphia. to compose the team, the following men: Grass, Tolson, Sim- mons and Peake. Littman is to be the fifth man in case a substitute is Deeded. University of Georgia is here today to meet the University of Maryland In two games, one this afternoon, the other tomorrow. Both contests are scheduled to begin at 4 o’clock. The Crackers have one of the best—pos- sibly the best—base ball teams in the south. East year they made a bril- liant record and this year they are doing just about as well, if not a little better. Georgia ceme close to making it two straight from Virginia yesterday when it held a 1 to o lead until j the last half of the ninth inning. In . that final period, though, a two- bagger with two on sent two runs over the plate and scored a 2 to 1 victory for the Charlottesville men,' , It was Benny Arnold who proved Georgia’s nemesis with the two-sack wallop, the same man who last fall plaved brilliantly enough against the Crackers to give Virginia a tic in foot ball. Geergrtoirn had four runs scored- against it in the first inning of yes- terday's game with Lafayette, enough runs to give the Eastonians the vic- torv. After the second inning the Blue and Gray settled down and pro- * STANDARD MAKE TIRES CASH OR CREDIT CONVENIENT TIRE SHOPS :i2T 13th Street N.W. | S A a new I ; Arrow- ¦ Collar! that Is full In 4 comfort »*IOP 9 duett. Pea body C-Caine j iced a fine brand of play, but could t pet a train st the offering's of itcher Yeisley with sufficient con- slency to score enough runs to . reonte the big lead gained in the poning period by Lafayette. The esult whs Lafayette, 5: George- otvn, 2. Ciithnlir I nivrnitr rallied in the list three innings in its game with he Marines at Quantieo yesterday, i >ut could not prevent the Devil Dogs I urning the same trick, so lost by to 6. for the second lime this sea- -1 son to that team. De Nault’s home- on drive was the most interesting i eat tire of the game from a C. U. iew. ALLEN NEAR CUE TITLE. j KANSAS CITY", April 23. Benny j Alien, Kansas City, took another 'eo i-nv >rd the world pocket bil- liards championship here by defeat- ng italpn ~l'e.nleaf, titleholder. 125 o 114. The game ran 26 innings. Allen’s high run was 26 and Green- lea fs 32. IIAVERS-OCKENDEN DEFEAT HUTCH AND McLEOD, 2 UP "¦— _ BY W. R. McCALLL'M. WITH a victory over one of Scotland’s finest golfing combinations I packed away in the bag. Arthur Gladstone Havers, British open golf champion, and James Ockenden, French open title-holder, left Washington early today for New York, headed for more victories around the metropolis. Havers and Ockenden. playing the course of the Columbia Country Club—a course they had never seen before, but playing it under thor- oughly familiar conditions of weather—outgolfed Fred McLeod, the Co- lumbia pro. and Jock Hutchison of New York yesterday, winning 2 and 1. \ Three successive birdies on the six- teenth. seventeenth and eighteenth in ’ ! the morning round brought the visit- - : ing duo from 1 down to 2 up at the luncheon interval and they never were i headed thereafter, although Mcla?od and the blonde-haired Hutchison, i I laying in inspired style on the final ; nine of the match, made a grand bid ! j to square. : They came within inches of liaiv- | ! ing the match-, for Hutchison's putt : i for a birdie 3 at the seventeenth, with j his side dormie 2 down, just peered ! over the edge of the cup and refused ! to drop. Had the putt gone down the 1 match probably would have been 1 squared, for Jock slipped an iron shot J above the pin on the eighteenth and *j holed the putt for a birdie 3 and a I j card of 77. made under weather con- j | ditions that rivaled in every degree ( ; the far-famed gales of the Scottish | I courses that front on the North Sea. Playing with the precision and punch bred by years of golf over un- familiar courses. Havers and Ocken- den took to Columbia like ducks to water. Unfamiliar distances bother- ed them not, nor rolls of ground that Fred McLeod knows as he knows his own parlor. They have the game, and a golf hall in the air knows no rolls of ground or other natural features that terrorize the less skillful golfer. Havers and Ockenden paired admi- rabily. They were 74 and 74 in the ; mcming against a pair of 72s for | McLeod and Hutchison, and yet were | 2 up. Hutch Low Man tor Day. Hutchison, notwithstanding a rag- ged out nine in the afternoon, was the bright star of the exhibition. He added a 77 tq his 72 of the morning, and walked oft with a pocketful of gold for low score for the thirty-six holes, low score for the final eighteen and the split of a tie between him and McLeod for low morning score. The rugged stand made by McLeod and Hutchison, beginning at the ] fourteenth hole of the afternoon, j i where they found themselves dormie i I 5 down, brought the final thrill to 1 j a faithful gallery which followed j ; them through rain and wind to watch ! I the swaying issue of the match. Five down at the end of the sev- 1 ientli hole—the twenty-fifth of the j match—Hutchison won the eighth ! and ninth with five-foot putts. I Ockenden again pulled the spectacu- j iar at the twenty-eighth, when he ran down a sloping thirty-foot putt for a birdie 3. They halved the 1 twenty-ninth in none of the quar- | tet getting home against the stiff ; wind from the west, and Jock and Havers, who consistently outhit the ; i other pair, halved the thirtieth hole ! j in birdie 4s. Short Thirteenth Produce* 3a. But Havers and Ockenden both ! jreached the green at the short thir- I teenth, the thirty-first, and were ! down in par 3, while Jock and I McLeod took 4s, putting them dormie | 5 down. Ockenden almost threw- the match away at the fourteenth, where I he missed a twenty-inch putt for a half in 4 with Hutchison and both 1 McLeod and Hutchison got 4s on the sixteenth to win. with Havers finding i the ditch on his second shot and i Ockenden's chip shot for his 4 finish- | ing far short of the hole, j Fred McLeod's turn to carry the i : match on came at the short sixteenth. I 1 where tiie fine iron shot of the little j i Columbia professional ended twelve I i feet to the left of the hole and he ran ! ; down the. putt for a douce, equaling Havers’ feat of the- morning. Havers heeled his tee shot at the seventeenth and pushed it out of bounds, but Ockenden w-as there and ended the match by holing a four-foot putt for a 4 after Hutchison's try for a 3 stopped on the lip of the cup. Jock ended with a birdie 3, but it was too late. He finished five strokes in front of Havers with a thirty-sjx- %e FLORSHEIM SHOE * | tasty style and summer ¦*• coolness of Florsheim Skclc- ton Oxfords offer a refresh- ing change to the man who has fi ~ l||| r' not 23 y et satisfied his feet with a pair of Florsheim Low Shoes. \ 1 A jH a ~ 131^G b S^ OP 414 9di It" St *' 233 Pa. Ave. S.E. 1914-16 Pa. Ave. V 1 DISTRICT GIRL SWIMMER IN FINAL OLYMPIC TESTS ItALTIMOHK, >ld.. April 2S.— Ilium liorflW CunDon nmd Aua Mi-Lrarj. Baltimore. anil Miss Klor- cniT “budding of Washington will represent Ihr mmjlli Allan! Ip dla- triet A. A. I . In thr final Olympic tryouts tor woman hnlnunm at Briar I'lilT Ijwlkt, Srarborvufh. A. V„ on June 7 uiui N. 'Mir selections hit nnnoanml by thr mlmniiiiK eo-mmJller of tbr Mouth Atlantic district. Mim Innu>»n mill romprtt in thr him nml fbrrr meter diving final*; Minn dcilrary In the too meter ( Mbn McClrary in <Ar 105-meter Imck stroke and 100-ntrter free style imtm, and Miss Skadding till ivmtcst iu the 300-meter breast stroke. hole varrl of 149, Havers having 134. i Ockenden 155. and McLeod 156. . | Shorter Interrnpta Play. I A squall and shower forced poet- ' jionement of the morning play at the eighth hole, while the high wind which came up after luncheon forced the scores still higher. The British- ers, however, had just as much 1 trouble in the wind as did McL«eod i j and Hutchison. Where McLeod was j 72 in the morning, playing a Arm and I tine game, he was S 4 in the afternoon. Hutchison, with a 72 in the morning, took 77 in the afternoon, while Hav- , ! ers and Ockemlen, with 74 and 75, | respectively, in the morning pastime, j ! were both SO in the afternoon. Scores for Roth Hounds. [ The scores for both rounds follow: MORNING ROUND. Out— Hutchison 43445433 6—35 McLeod 44444443 6—38 Haver* 45444464 4—39 Ockenden 53435544 4—37 In— Hutchison 4 6 4 3 44 4 4 4—37—71 M-Leod 45454534 4—86—72 Haver* 4 5 544414 8—35—74 Ockeudcn 44645683 5—85—75 AFTERNOON ROUND. Out— Hutchison 64546554 sr-42 McLeod 55645564 6—44 Haecrs 44645444 5—39 Ockenden 44646564 5—48 j In—- -1 Hutchison 45444434 3—35—77—149 McLeod 56545425 6—45—84—156 Havers 55435646 4—41—85—154 Ockenden 3 9 6356 44 4—38—85—165 a COLUMBIA NETMEN WIN. BALTIMORE, April 23.—Columbia University tennis team defeated the Baltimore Country Club in a dual contest here, four matches to one. TOOK PART IN BIG GOLF MATCH AT COLUMBIA COUNTRY CLUB YESTERDAY « Left to right: James Ockenden, French open champion; Freddy McLeod, Columbia pro; Arthur G. Havers, British open champion, and Jock Hutchison of Chicago, one of America’s leading paid players. NET LEADERS ASK TILDEN TO “TALK THINGS OVER” PHILADELPHIA, April 23.—William T. TiWen. national tennis champion, today declined the invitation of Julian S. Myrick, chairman of the American Davis cup committee, to discuss his recent resignation from the Davis cup and Olympic teams at a conference in New York on Friday. Tilden stated that he had a previous engagement to play in exhibition games in the south. NEW YORK, April 23.—William T. Tilden, national tennis champion, who resigned from the Davis cup and Olympic teams following the publication of a report by the amateur rules committee of the | tennis association which, he alleged, referred to him as “an evil influence” ! because of his writing, has been invited to meet with the Davis cup com- : mittce Friday to "talk things over.” In the letter of Invitation Julian S. Myrick. chairman of the Davis cup i committee, expressed surprise at the I possibility that an American tennis champion would refuse to represent his country In international competi- -1 lion when called upon. "You have been invited to play for your country as an American cham- pion. and it never crossed the minds ' of the committee that you would re- fuse or even hesitate. You are eligible t to represent this country in the con- ; tests mentioned," the letter read. | “Inasmuch as you were present at j one of the recent meetings of the Davis cup committee.” it read. "it. is difficult to conceive your having any doubt whatsoever with regard to your eligibility or to the committee's view in this regard." Action Stirs London. ; LONDON, April 23.—William T. Til- den’s withdrawal from the Davis cup ; and Olympic competition is attracting . much notice in lawn tennis circles , here. The Westminster tlaxelte. comment- ing on the decree of the United j States Lawn Tennis Association. | which brought about Tiiden's with- drawal. says; ¦ "The purists in this instance have [gone much too far. If such a rule, as the player-writer decision, were uni- j versally applied, the public would be cut off from the descriptive and in- structlvc writings of the best expo- nents of many games, a deprivation which would be seriously resented." Sporting Life, on the other hand, while reading the question as a very big one, says the practice of ama- teurs writing for newspapers has ! led to considerable abuse In Kna- -1 land and implies its approval of the, j association's decision. It is generally conceded that the j American Olympic and Davis cup teams will be considerably weakened by Tiiden's absence. Will Defend Title. ST. LOUIS, April 23—William T j Tilden. 2d. of Philadelphia ha-; tele- : graphed that he will defend his title as national clay court tennis cham- pion in the tournament here the week of July 7. He will play in the doubles with ' "Sandy" Weiner. Philadelphia, also i entered in the singles. Helps Aussie's Chances. SYDNEY, N. S. W. April 23.—The J secretary of the Australian Lawn Tennis Association, commenting on the withdrawal of William T. Tilden j from Davis cup play, expressed the j belief today that Australia's chances 1 to lift the cup were materially en- ha need by the development. Radators and Fenders ANY KIND MADE OR REPAIRED. Corsv installed in ary make 10 DIFFERENT MAKES RADIATORS WIVIS'i.UI * It. Kiid I'. WORK'S 319 ISth. F- €4lO !«i ? Fr. 8036. Your Old Hat lade New Again cS \ Planning. Blocking and I Hemodellng by Experts. Wm j Vienna Hat Company I 409 nth Street HIS PICTURESQUE STYLE IMPRESSES THE OLD ELIS Uses Thunderous Voice in Pointing Out Faults of Oarsmen in Practice—Blue Fast Developing Smooth-Working Combination. BY LAWRENCE PERRY. NEW HAVEN, Conn., April 23.—Yale rowing men are undergoing an experience that is novel. This is saying a great deal, for in the course of the past two'decades aquatics at New Haven have been rife with novelties. Eli oarsmen have toiled under committees of imported Oxonian instructors, have listened to the cockney mandates of Putney scullers, have had all the sorrowful experiences that come from inexperienced amateur coaches, and have known as well the faculty coacL. But never until now have they been roared at by a large-lunged picturesque son of the uttermost west. Edward Leader represents the west as adequately as the departed Guy> Nickalls represented England and Bill Mallory, the 1923 Yale foot ball captain, represents the south. Inside Golf ¦ By Chester Horton What In thiM “flick of Ihr wrl»(»” that golfer* mv told no much about and which I*. I agree, inwntlol to the : making of any effective nholf a> For the moat LJbnL. part the wrb*t rasa action In the golf! \ Nhot In no rapid ff pJF®, \ \ that the player / f ItVwfl \\ should Ik- and II Scntf || moat Im- inrwn- ii ; I I ncloum of If. There \\ > /1 la. however, a \\ f'y / ‘‘Hick of Hit yVBr y // wriMta- Ju*t aa \7T I the hall In hit Ar— ¦ % which the golfer /y j £a. Kbnuld undrr- V | stand. Thia Ik , more a proper “•“O® int'illng of the •¦lulih>..t> inroimli the hail than it la » matter of applying wrlat power 1 at the inatnnf the cbibhend meets he ; hull. That Is if von properly guide the eluhhead the appliratfon of power will he Instinctive. In Kul.Neqneiil di«euKsions I shall try to make this “tllek of the wrista" underatandnhlr to the average golfer. (Copyright. John K. Ilille Co.) TESTS FOR S. A. BOXERS. . BALTIMORE. Md . April 23.—Am | proximately seventy amateur boxers are entered in the championships and di- visional tryouts of the South Atlantic division of the A. A. U.. which get un- der way here tonight Eight classes. i from flyweight to heavyweight, are I carded. ZUNA NOT REGULAR ON OLYMPIC TEAM NEW YORK. April 23—Prank Zu- I na, regarded as America's best pros- i pect/for the American Olympic mara- | fhon until h.- failed to finish the Bos- 1 ton marathon last Saturday, will not ! start in the international run unless ; one of the six men who qualified at Boston becomes ill or suffers a re- I ; versal of form, it has been learned. Zuna's efforts in winning the Bal- timore and Detroit races earlier in the year were thought by his friends to have drained his energy before the Boston run, which previously had been designated by the Olympic se- ; lection committee as the final Olym- pic tryout. Zuna was said to have entered the Detroit event against the advice of a member of the selection commi'tee. Match Your Odd Coats With Our Special TROUSERS up Stive the price of entire new suit. All eolorn, size*. pat- terns, EISEMAN’S Seventh at F | When Jupiter Tonans holds thun- derous sway over the hills of Derby through which the Housatonic River winds its picturesquely tortuous way Edward Leader knows his only rival. And Yale likes it. Yale swears by Leader. And Yale should. For here is a j rowing coach, indeed. Had this man 1 from the west a dozen eyes, it seems impossible they wonld see more than [ Leader sees with his two keen and I comprehensive orbs. All in one ! stroke he will catch an impression I not only of the defects of one man ! but of every man in hte boat, so It I seems. "Hang it all, Xo. 2 you are rusb- I ing your slide; Xo. 3 you are feath- i ering under water. Get your blade ! out clean. Bow, you’re not getting j that kick at the finish." And so on | and so on —a.ll in language much j more colloquial and picturesque than | the writer has set down. Already it is easy to see that Yale i under Leader is developing a splendid I outfit. With the exception of Shef- field the oarsmen are all six footers j and weight average will not fall be- low i.Sfl pounds. The men are well together, rowing i a rather deliberate stroke, but able jto hit it up upon necessity. If ever j there was an Olympic prospect this i eight looks to be one. But there seems no intention of permitting the .. .o participate in tne Olympic trials. ] <me wonders why not. Certainly, if the crew in the early races demonstrate*; j that its present aspect was not mis- ' leading, it most certainly should be a j candidate for the houor of representing the United States overseas. YALE WINS AT POLO. CHARLOTTE, X. C.. April 23 j Yale’s polo team defeated Charlotte j yesterday. S to 5, after the locals had led the collegians, 5 to 2, at the end of the first half, C. & P. TEAM GETS COURTS. Racketers of the Chesapeake and ! Potomac Telephone Company team will have the use of the Friends t School tennis courts from May 1 to I October 1. it was announced by Chair- j man L. K. Fowler today. ON CREDIT “Pay as You Ride” Small Payment Down, Balance Monthly T.O. PROBEY CO. j 2100 Pa. Ave. N.VV. Get this flavor 4. rVO generations of Eisenlohr worked to -f| ? get the Henrietta flavor. Then the |f|f Eisenlohrs set a watch over that distinctive f|? taste quality. Not one man or two, but twelve gffHpjL ; —a jury of judges—each keen in his taste and B I expert in judgment. B % All this effort is worthwhile only if you find ||||||| || in Henrietta the flavor you’ve always wanted. Test it tonight, by smoking the after-dinner Henrietta (the fifteen-cent size). W. H. WARNER J. S'. BLACKWELL & SON Exclusive WnMiington Distributor , Sortlifrn Virginia Distributors '\OV After , satisfies like ci g ar <¦'. Copyright, 1923, O*o Eisenlohr &. Bros., Inc. ka 29

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  • SPORTS. TTTF EVTTKnrNT, STAR. WASTTTKOTON, D. C- WEDNESDAY. APRIL 23, 1924. SPORTS.

    G. U Should Score inPenn Carnival: Leader Makes a Hit as Yale Rowing CoachBLUE AND GRAY COUNTING

    ON THREE WINS AT LEASTConficleul of -in Four-Mile and Medley Na-

    tional Championship Events and in South

    Atlantic Title Competition.

    BY H. C. BYRD.

    Georgetown probably looks toward the Penn relay games Fridav !and Saturday at Philadelphia just as optimistically as any other Iuniversity that is to be represented. Victory in three races, or at ;

    least an even chance in that many, is just what the Blue and Gray expects, |with the feeling that in addition it may capture another event or so, andthat one or two of its athletes in the events for individuals may give apractical demonstration of what is meant by the old saying, a clean pair ofheels is a good thing to show one’s opponent.

    In the South Atlantic Intercolegate Athletic Association one milerelay championship on Friday there is better than an even chance for;victory, says John O’Reilly, who. In sides coaching basket ball and base |hall and helping with the foot hall squad, still finds time to tutor cham-pionship track teams. Virginia Ins a fast quarter and will offer the realopposition to the Hi'ltop four, but O'Reilly feels that Georgetown hassu

    js lren S 1° win. At that two of Virginia's relay men, Bohannon

    and Talbott, do the quarter aroun 1"

    seconds."The two-mile national champion

    fffiip relay and the sprint medley n;tional championship rrd the world pocket bil-liards championship here by defeat-ng italpn ~l'e.nleaf, titleholder. 125o 114. The game ran 26 innings.

    Allen’s high run was 26 and Green-lea fs 32.

    IIAVERS-OCKENDEN DEFEATHUTCH AND McLEOD, 2 UP

    "¦— _

    BY W. R. McCALLL'M.

    WITH a victory over one of Scotland’s finest golfing combinations Ipacked away in the bag. Arthur Gladstone Havers, British opengolf champion, and James Ockenden, French open title-holder,left Washington early today for New York, headed for more victoriesaround the metropolis.

    Havers and Ockenden. playing the course of the Columbia CountryClub—a course they had never seen before, but playing it under thor-oughly familiar conditions of weather—outgolfed Fred McLeod, the Co-lumbia pro. and Jock Hutchison of New York yesterday, winning 2 and 1. \

    Three successive birdies on the six-teenth. seventeenth and eighteenth in

    ’ ! the morning round brought the visit-- : ing duo from 1 down to 2 up at the

    luncheon interval and they never were iheaded thereafter, although Mcla?odand the blonde-haired Hutchison, iI laying in inspired style on the final ;nine of the match, made a grand bid !

    j to square.: They came within inches of liaiv- |! ing the match-, for Hutchison's putt :i for a birdie 3 at the seventeenth, withj his side dormie 2 down, just peered! over the edge of the cup and refused! to drop. Had the putt gone down the1 match probably would have been

    1 squared, for Jock slipped an iron shotJ above the pin on the eighteenth and

    *j holed the putt for a birdie 3 and a Ij card of 77. made under weather con- j| ditions that rivaled in every degree (; the far-famed gales of the Scottish |I courses that front on the North Sea.

    Playing with the precision andpunch bred by years of golf over un-familiar courses. Havers and Ocken-den took to Columbia like ducks towater. Unfamiliar distances bother-ed them not, nor rolls of ground thatFred McLeod knows as he knows hisown parlor. They have the game, anda golf hall in the air knows no rollsof ground or other natural featuresthat terrorize the less skillful golfer.Havers and Ockenden paired admi-rabily. They were 74 and 74 in the

    ; mcming against a pair of 72s for |McLeod and Hutchison, and yet were |2 up.

    Hutch Low Man tor Day.

    Hutchison, notwithstanding a rag-ged out nine in the afternoon, wasthe bright star of the exhibition. Headded a 77 tq his 72 of the morning,and walked oft with a pocketful ofgold for low score for the thirty-sixholes, low score for the final eighteenand the split of a tie between him andMcLeod for low morning score.

    The rugged stand made by McLeodand Hutchison, beginning at the

    ]fourteenth hole of the afternoon, ji where they found themselves dormie iI 5 down, brought the final thrill to 1j a faithful gallery which followed j

    ; them through rain and wind to watch !I the swaying issue of the match.

    Five down at the end of the sev- 1ientli hole—the twenty-fifth of thejmatch—Hutchison won the eighth! and ninth with five-foot putts.I Ockenden again pulled the spectacu-j iar at the twenty-eighth, when heran down a sloping thirty-foot puttfor a birdie 3. They halved the 1twenty-ninth in none of the quar- |tet getting home against the stiff ;wind from the west, and Jock andHavers, who consistently outhit the ;

    i other pair, halved the thirtieth hole !j in birdie 4s.

    Short Thirteenth Produce* 3a.

    But Havers and Ockenden both !jreached the green at the short thir- Iteenth, the thirty-first, and were !down in par 3, while Jock and IMcLeod took 4s, putting them dormie |5 down. Ockenden almost threw- thematch away at the fourteenth, where Ihe missed a twenty-inch putt for ahalf in 4 with Hutchison and both 1McLeod and Hutchison got 4s on thesixteenth to win. with Havers finding ithe ditch on his second shot and iOckenden's chip shot for his 4 finish- |ing far short of the hole,

    j Fred McLeod's turn to carry the i: match on came at the short sixteenth. I1 where tiie fine iron shot of the little ji Columbia professional ended twelve Ii feet to the left of the hole and he ran !; down the. putt for a douce, equaling

    Havers’ feat of the- morning. Haversheeled his tee shot at the seventeenthand pushed it out of bounds, butOckenden w-as there and ended thematch by holing a four-foot putt fora 4 after Hutchison's try for a 3stopped on the lip of the cup.

    Jock ended with a birdie 3, but itwas too late. He finished five strokesin front of Havers with a thirty-sjx-

    %e FLORSHEIM SHOE*

    | tasty style and summer¦*• coolness of Florsheim Skclc-

    ton Oxfords offer a refresh-ing change to the man who has

    ‘fi~ l||| r' not 23 yet satisfied his feet witha pair of Florsheim Low Shoes.

    \ 1 A jH a

    ~ 131^GbS^ OP 414 9di It"St *'233 Pa. Ave. S.E. 1914-16 Pa. Ave.

    V 1

    DISTRICT GIRL SWIMMERIN FINAL OLYMPIC TESTS

    ItALTIMOHK, >ld.. April 2S.—Ilium liorflW CunDon nmd AuaMi-Lrarj.Baltimore. anil Miss Klor-cniT “budding of Washington willrepresent Ihr mmjlli Allan!Ip dla-triet A. A. I . In thr final Olympictryouts tor woman hnlnunm atBriar I'lilT Ijwlkt, Srarborvufh.A. V„ on June 7 uiui N.

    'Mir selections hit nnnoanml bythr mlmniiiiK eo-mmJller of tbrMouth Atlantic district.

    Mim Innu>»n mill romprtt in thrhim nml fbrrr meter diving final*;Minn dcilrary In the too meter

    ( Mbn McClrary in