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Evening star. [volume] (Washington, D.C.) 1854-1972, March 05, 1937, Image 49

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Finance Big Widener Favorite : Size of Golf Cup Starts Debate
a .__—.— -*• ♦
FLEET FIELD FILLS
Denemark Luck, Record of
Horse Sway Fans—Victor
May Get $65,000.
BT the Associated Press.
MIAMI. Fla., March 5.—This
sun-baked Winter sports
capital is seething with ex
citement and speculation as
to what will happen tomorrow after
noon in the $50,000 added, mile-and
a-quarter Widener Challenge Cup at
Hialeah Park.
With the boost in added money
from last year’s $10,000, the second
running of the closing .day classic
promises to threaten turnstile, betting
and racing records.
The major share of pre-race at
tention is going to Finance, 5-year
old bay gelding by Bull Dog-Bourse,
who will go into the race backed up
by four brilliant victories this Winter
and the amazing luck of Chicago’s
Mrs. Emil Denemark. As running
partners. Finance will have the sturdy
fillies. Two Bob and E. D. Shaffer’s
Floradora.
Dozen Likely to Start.
'T'HE three-ply entry, trained by
Big Bert Mitchell, probably will
be held at just short of 2 to 1.
Finance started six times at Hialeah,
winning his last two over the mile
anda-a-furlong distance, last Saturday
falling just one-fifth of a second
short of Brevity’s track record of
1:48's.
Earlier In the meeting Finance
equaled Steel Cutter's mile track rec
ord of llSS'r,.
Behind Finance a half dozen or
more horses are closely figured. In
all, 12 or 13 crack routers are ex
pected to start, although nearly 20
have been regarded as possible can
didates. Should an even dozen com
pete, the net value of the race would
be approximately $65,000.
Whopper to Be Figured.
JT p. HEADLEY’S whopper, largest
* horse in training and second to
Finance when they met Saturday at
even weights of 118 pounds, will com
mand plenty respect.
Maeriel has trained exceptionally
well since losing a nose decision to
Finance in the McLennan Memorial.
But the workout prize must go to
W. J. Hirsch's 4-year-old filly Co
lumbiana. Between races Tuesday
the daughter of Petee-Wrack covered
a mile and a quarter in 2:02 flat,
going easily, for one of the most bril
liant trials ever witnessed by old
horsemen.
Should the track be heavy, such
campaigners as Columbiana, Maeriel,
Count Morse, Two Bob, Count Arthur,
Our Reigh and Floradora would be
right in their element.
SEEKS SPEED RECORD.
DAYTONA BEACH. Fla., March 5
(JP).—Joe Petralia of Milwaukee,
United States motor cycle racing
champion from 1931 to 1935, has an
nounced he will attempt tc break the
world straightaway speed record for
motor cycles here between March 10
and 24.
Mat Matches
By the Associated Press.
NEW YORK—Jim McMillen,
220, Chicago, pinned Robert Bruns,
217, Germany (body spread,
1:38:03).
PROVIDENCE. R. I. — Curley
Donchin, 190. Milwaukee, defeated
Cowboy Hughes, 200, Northampton
(2 of 3 falls).
CAMDEN, N. J.—Chief Little
Wolf, 215, Colorado, defeated Gino
Garibaldi, 218, St. Louis (Gari
baldi counted out outside ring).
HARTFORD, Conn.—Gus Son
nenberg, 205. Boston, defeated
Count Zarynoff, 204, Russia (2
of 3 falls).
. Wrestling Pretty Tough on Referee, Too
Laverne Baxter plants Arbiter Al Bakash on ropes after the grappler had been disqualified
for rough tactics in his bout with Hank Barber at Turner’s last night. —Star Staff Photo•
AS
Referee Bortnick, Blinded
by Kick, Makes Illegal
Courrt in Mat Tilt.
BY THE grace of Referee Benny
(Balloon) Bortnick's tempo
rary , blindness, the result of
a boot in the face, Joe Cox to
day added the scalp of John Katan
to his list of local victories, but a
rematch of the grapplers is inevitable.
Benny was the only person in Tur
ner's Arena last night who didn't see
that Katan’s leg was entwined in the
ropes as he counted him out. Benny,
however, was having his own troubles,
what with nursing his eye and count
ing, so that little matter of the ille
gality of the count failed to disturb
him.
Encounters Stray Foot.
/""OX and Katan had been pounding
on each other's frames near the
ropes and Bortnick, trying to pry them
apart, collided with a stray foot and
was bowled over. Finally he rolled to
his feet, saw Joe on top of John and
quickly counted out Mr. Katan.
Joe, while Benny was groveling on
the mat, raced over and untied
Katan’s leg from the ropes before
Bortnick fully recovered his senses or
something. The spectators, taking up
the cause of Katan, swarmed about
the ring and booed themselves into an
other Katan-Cox brawl.
Baxter Is Disqualified.
T AVERNE BAXTER, who gets
rougher and rougher as the weeks
roll by. was disqualified after 7 min
utes of action against Hank Barber j
in a scheduled 30-minute time limit
squirmfest. Baxter tied a knot in the
ropes and forgot to leave Barber’s
head out of it. When Referee A1
Bakash tried to release Hank. Baxter
gave him the same dose. Bakash re
taliated with the disqualification.
In other preliminaries, Henri Piers
and Nick Campofreda actually wres
tled to a 30-minute draw, Ed Meske
spilled A1 Billings in 21 minutes with
a Japanese arm lock and body roll,
and Floyd Marshall and Bill Sledge
staged a hectic 30-minute stalemate..
Montanez, With Fabulous Ring
Record, Packing ’Em in Where
Champions Draw Small Gates
BY SCOTTY BESTON.
Associated Press Sports Writer.
EW YORK. March 5.—Pedro
Vega Montanez, the golden kid
from the Carribee. paced the
floor of a Forty-ninth street
hotel room today and told the fabu
lous story of his fistic wanderings.
His two managers. Lew Burston and
Jimmy Bronson, were the willing in
terpreters. though it could not be es
tablished that either Mr. Burston or
Mr. Bronson knows a single word of
Spanish.
In that mystic corner of Man
hattan where Harlem tumbles care
lessly into Little Spain. Montanez is
the unofficial lightweight champion of
the world. He is undefeated in 23
fights in this country. And even on
Eighth avenue, where the ticket sellers
are the final critics, Montanez is con
sidered the most valuable piece of
fighting machinery below the heavy
weight class.
Kayoes All Spanish Foes.
'J'HESE facts being the justification
for the story, here’s the story:
The boy was born in Cayey, Puerto
Rico, 22 years ago, the son of Jewish
Spanish parents, who earn a pre
carious living trading cattle. He seems
to have learned to fight in self-defense.
"We jus’ fight,” he blurted in Eng
lish, not understanding people who
do not fight. This fact seems re
sponsible for his success. In the ring,
chin down, he hounds his opponent.
He lets the right go from anywhere
and seldom misses.
He remembers his first fight was In
1931, and that by 1933 he had ex
hausted the fighters of Puerto Rico.
He went to Venezuela and picked up
a number of unimportant titles. Then,
knowing Spanish and nothing else, he
drifted to Spain, fought 11 bouts and
won them all by knockouts. His fame
reached Paris, where Burston was pro
moting fights, and the pair struck a
bargain.
Burston took him to Italy to meet
Carlos Orlandi. pride of that penin
sula's lightweights, and Montanez
beat him so badly Italian boxing au
thorities made Carlos quit the ring.
Back through Europe Montanez fought
and finally Burston brought him to
New York in 1935. Madison Square
Garden authorities told him to go
FmiiNfi-& liwnNfi
BY GEORGE HUBER.
GEORGE COOK, local scientific
angler, passing through Chi
cago earlier this week found
the annual sports show in
progress. Connected with the show
was the usual casting tournament
Cook borrowed an outfit, tied for first
In one event and pressed the winner
of another.
This comes as no surprise to those
who have seen Happy George in ac
tion at local tournaments at the Lin*
coin Memorial Pool. He can drop a
fly on a dime. In the wet fly accu
racy event he tied with George and
Howard Chett, star casters of the
Middle yiest, for first place with a
score of 96. In the Illinois Casting
Club event he lost to Eugene Frank
by a score of 95 to 93, after both had
tied for first with 98.
Frank Bell, Talbott Denmead, Ira
N. Gabrielson and a host of other
Washington sportsmen and officials
have returned from the second an
nual North American Wildlife Con
ference, held this year in St. Louis.
One of the important aspects
of the conference was the dis
cussion of a broader interna
tional waterfowl conservation
program.
This point was urged by Hoyes Lloyd,
superintendent of wildlife protection
work, in Canadian national parks.
“Canada is doing its part in conserv
ing wildlife resources, especially water
fowl,” be said, “but adequate protec
tion for migratory birds is needed in
both the United States and Canada.”
Investigation Service Increased.
'AS OUR part in this wildlife man
“ agement program, Ira N. Gabriel
aon, chief of the Biological Survey,
pointed to the 55 waterfowl and four
big game sanctuaries established in
the United States last year.
“There is a growing understanding
that regulations governing the human
take of game species must be based
on the knowledge of numbers of breed
ing stock and their reproduction,” he
Mid.
"To draft regulations that
will perpetuate the sport of
wildfowling the bureau has
strengthened it investigational
service on the waterfowl sit
uation.
“Information thus gained enables
us to get a fairly accurate picture of
the waterfowl situation and to draft
regulations that will give birds the
protection they need. Only by holding
down the kill will we be able to in
crease the breeding population in the
nesting grounds in this country and
Canada.”
Wallace Praises Conference.
secretary of agriculture
° HENRY A. WALLACE also at
tended the conference, and praised its
purpose of a broader and more in
telligent conception of the fundamen
tal principles of conservation.
"The past history of the wildlife
movement is filled with evidence of
lack of unity on the part of those who
have been most interested in perpetu
ating an abundance of birds, animals
and fish,’’ he said.
“It is the reason important
legislation on the subject has
been retarded, sometimes for
many years from the time of its
original proposal, or allowed to
die of inanition.”
As an example of this, he pointed
to the establishment of Federal water
fowl refuges, first proposed 20 years
ago, but which were not established
until 1934.
"One of the tasks before this con
ference is that of bringing about the
federation of all private conservation
interests so that the adoption of
worthy and necessary measures can
be advanced and be made effective
at the times when the need for them
is greatest,” he declared.
The ' Washington Chapter of the
Izaak Walton League will hold its
monthly meeting at the Raleigh Hotel
next Wednesday at 8 p.m. Feature
of the program will be a three-reel
movie, “A Month in Maine.”
Possible Starters in Widener
By the Associated Press.
A/TIAMI, Fla., March 5.—Following is a line-up on probable, as well
as questionable starters, in the *50,000 added ltt-mile Widener
Challenge Cup at Hialeah Park Saturday, along with weights, probable
Jockeys, owners and probable odds:
Horse. Wgt. Probable Jockey. Owner. Probable Odds.
aPinance _115—C. Kurts lnger. . ■_ Mrs. E. Denemark_ 9-5
aTwo Bob ...._109_J. Westrope_Mrs. E. Denemark_ 9-5
aFloradora ...... 114_E. Porter_E. D. Shaffer_.... 9-5
Whopper _117...E. Arcaro.H. P. Headley_ 5-1
Maeriel _108...E. Litzenberger..Dewitt Page_ 7-1
Columbiana_103...H. Leblanc_W. J. Hirsch_ 7-1
Bow and Arrow.. 106...J. Renick_E. R. Bradley_10-1
Count Morse-110...I. Anderson_Warren Wright_ 12-1
bCount Arthur... 114...J. stout_Mrs. J. D. Hertz_15-1
bOur Reigh.. 107...L. Balaski.Mrs. J. D. Hertz_15-1
Azucar -... 120_L. Hardy_..._F. M. Alger, Jr....... 20-1
White Cockade... 117...H. Dabson_Ogden Phipps_20-1
Brush Hook-105_C. Stevenson_Mrs. Payne Whitney— 40-1
Top Dog-... 106.__L Hanford..—..A. J. Abel_50-1
Mucho Gusto-102...No boy_Mrs. Walter O'Hara..100-1
Black Gift-- 106...M. Corona ..._Leon Carter_100-1
Gyral ._102...N. Wall.T. D. Buhl.i_100-1
Dusty Dawn__ 108 W. Wright... Hickman As Jeffords..100-1
Old Comrade_ 98 C. Bierman_B. F. Lister_100-1
aMrs. E. Denemark-E. D. Shaffer entry.
bMrs. J. D. Hertz entry.
Questionable starters: Our Reigh, Brush Hook. Black Gift, Gyral.
Dusty Dawn, Old Comrade.
and get a record—and Montanez did.
He fought every lightweight he
could get, and beat them all. He
moved into Little Spain and became
the quarter's idol, a fact reflected at
the box office. Lightweight Champion
Lou Ambers recently fought at a small
club, and they paid off on $3,800.
Soon afterward, Montanez fought at
the same club and the net was around
$11,000. Three weeks ago at the
Garden, Freddie Steele and Babe
Risko drew about $17,000 for a mid
dleweight title fight. The following
Friday Montanez thrashed Enrico
Venturi and the gate was $31,000.
Now Burston and Bronson are dick
ering for a match with Ambers, and
if they don’t get it they are willing
i to step among the bigger boys and
fight either Jimmy McLamin or Bar
ney Ross.
-•
ROOKIE ELATES MACK.
MEXICO CITY.—Manager Connie
Mack was impressed with the work of
a rookie southpaw during part of a
j game the Philadelphia Athletics took
j from the Mexican Comitras, 12 to 3.
j Edgar Smith, struck out five Mexican
players and did not allow a hit in
three innings.
Fights Last Night
By the Associated Press.
NEW YORK —Havana Kid, 125,
Cuba, stopped Pete Vitello. 129,
Brooklyn (2, technical knockout):
Jose Hernandez, 134, Cuba, out
| pointed Lou Fortuna, 140%, New
j York (6).
PORTLAND, Me.—Roy Chap
man. 158‘2. Uniontown. Pa., out
pointed Ad Zachow, 160, Portland
16, newspaper decision): Harvey
Caswell. Dover, N. H„ stopped Paul
Roderique, Lewiston (5, technical
knockout).
• MIAMI BEACH—Joe Ghnouly,
130, St. Louis, outpointed Johnny
Cruz, 135%, Havana (10); Gene
Bonin, 183, Willimantic, Conn.,
outpointed Benny O'Dell, 191, Syra
cuse, N. Y. (10).
One Would Enlarge, Other
Shrink Can to Equalize
Skill on Green.
BY W. R. McCALLUM.
WR. STONE thinks the golf
cup should be bigger in
diameter to equalize skill
• on the putting green. He
would, as a result of his mathematical
experiments, enlarge the cup to a
diameter of 5.04 inches.
But another thinker on the game
of golf and a guy who has been
practical enough about the thing to
win a few championships, believes
the cup should be changed alright,
but should be made smaller, also to
equalize difference in skill in the
game of golf.
A1 Houghton, who holds the Mary
land' open title, and who has been
a pretty god golfer for the last 10
years pr so, holds that Stone's scheme
of enlarging the cup is all wet, and if
he had his way he’d decrease the size
of the cup from its present diameter
of 4 Vi inches down to 2->* inches, or
about an- inch larger than the size of
the ball.
Tried Variety of Sizes.
“VVE TRIED out all sizes of cups
at Virginia Beach last year,”
says Al, who used to be the pro at Cav
alier Country Club. “And we found
that the sound golfers—the men who
were hitting the greens in correct
figures—were not much affected by
the smaller cups. But the reduction
in the size of the cup had a big effect
on the men who were missing the
greens by a few yards and chipping
back hoping to get their pars. Now
after all golf is a game played from
tee to green, but how many times
in a tournament does the fellow who
can't hit a lick from tee to green, but
who happens to be a fine putter, whip
the fellow who plays pretty good
golf up to the green and is a lousy
putter?”
“But wouldn't the smaller cup place
too much emphasis on putting, which
already is over-emphasized?” we asked
Al. "Nope,” he said. “On the con
trary it would de-emphasize putting in
that it would give the man who hits
the green in the right number of
shots a better chance than the guy
who misses the putting surface with
the proper shot.
vtouia ,M4Kf r.m i jrriui
"¥T WOULD cut down the number
of one-putt greens and would
restore golf to its old degree of skill,
and bring back the value of good
shots from the tee and through the
fairway. The way the top notchers
of today are scoring is by cutting down
on their putts. You hear any day of
a good pro getting around in 67 or
68 with about 26 or 27 putts. They
miss three or four greens in a round
and chip the ball close enough to hole
it for a par. But they wouldn't do
it with the 2*i-inch cup. They'd be
trying to get on the green and they'd
be a little more careful with all their
shots.”
"Gosh, when I think of the tourna
ments I've lo6t because I missed a
three-footer it hurts.” grinned the
Houghton man. "But I think I'd have
a better chance with the smaller cup.
I hit a lot of greens in a round.”
C. C. C. BOXERS IN MEET
Five Teams Entered in Event at
Twelfth Street “Y
Five or more C. C. C. camp teams
will compete in a boxing tournament
tomorrow night at the Twelfth Street
Y. M. C. A. gym. starting at 8 o’clock.
Bouts will be staged in eight weight
divisions, with prizes awarded in each
class and to the winning team.
EORGETOWN UNIVER
SITY'S hopeful club swing
ers, hopeful of getting some
where in the Eastern Inter
collegiate League matches this year,
have 10 contests lined up for their
Southern trip, which will start on
March 22. Between that date and
April 5, when they'll be back in Wash
ington, the Hoya lads will play nine
different schools, so you can see their
trip to the South won’t be all in the
nature of a lark.
Jim Lee, captain, will head the Blue
and Gray boys on their trip South,
with Maury Nee, Billy Dettweiler and
Harvey Johnson the local lads on the
squad, which also will include Charlie
Pettijohn. the boy from Rye, N. Y.,
who plays a good game of golf.
If they had Bill Shea and
John Burke on the team, they'd
have an outfit which could just
about whip anything anywhere,
but Shea and Burke are classed
as freshmen.
The schools to be played by the
Georgetown boys are: Rollins College
(twice). University of Florida, Augusta
Junior College, Georgia Tech. Emory,
Wake Forest, Georgia, North Carolina
and North Carolina State. The Hoya
lads hope to take in the Pinehurst
North and South amateur champion
ship, but that hasn't yet been decided.
If they do they may have to rush
through some of their college matches.
Russell Brown Resigns.
pUSSELL M. BROWN. Golf Com
mittee chairman at Beaver Dam
for five or six years, has resigned.
Russell has moved to Chevy Chase,
Md., and will not have the time, he
says, for close attention to committee
work at Beaver Dam. His successor
has not been named.
William Ullman. mouthpiece for Bill
Ullman and himself one of the great
putters of the game around Wash
ington. is back in circulation, breath
ing dire squawks against Jack Mc
Carron, who partnered him in a match
against Dr. Robert A. Keilty and An
drew J. Walker. It seems that Bill
and Jack laid in the dough against
Keilty and Walker, and then Jack,
according to Bill, forgot to play for
the foursome and concentrated on
j winning money for himself In the
"animal" game.
So good was Jack at animals
that on the first six holes of the
match at Congressional he used
only seven putts.
He three-putted the eighth green
and still got over the first nine with
12 putts. “Looks as though Jackie
forgot I was his partner,” cracked
Bill. “But I got him on the extra
bets."
Out at Chevy Chase Bill Hardy, the
boss clubmaker, who is always in
venting new gadgets, has come out
with one that looks good. It's a con
traption for ascertaining the angle of
lie of golf clubs and can be used for
any club. Bill puts the club in the
machine, pushes a button or two and
there you have the exact angle of the
lie, in degrees. It makes easy the job
of duplicating a golf club lie in a new
club. Bill says. H° worked it out him
self and it's his idea, and it may not
be long before all golf shops have
similar gadgets.
Give Par a Lacing
rjTVE under par for four holes.
A That's a fairly reasonable start
for any golf course. Pour public links
lads who play regularly at Rock Creek
Park got warm the other day and
started out that way. D. H. McLinder
walloped a tee shot up close at the
Irst hole, a 300-yarder, and then rolled
In a pitch shot for an eagle deuce.
George Marlow, a World War
flyer, whacked in a birdie 3 on
the par 4 second hole, and then
knocked a tee shot within a few
inches of the cup on the par 3
third for a birdie 2.
Then J. P. Stanton got a bird 3
on the par 4 fourth. They played the
nine with a better ball of 26 strokes,
which happens to be seven shots under
par.
No more will those little ditches in
front of the seventh and fourteenth
tees at Chevy Chase trap a topped tee
shot. Dick Watson, the club green
keeper, has tiled those little hazards
and filled ’em in. "They weren’t
much good as hazards anyway,” said
Dick, "and they made hard walking."
\yiTH their committees appointed
for the 1937 season, Washington
women golfers now will go forward
with the biggest Job of the late Win
ter—the drawing up of a schedule of
a dozen major tournaments and a
series of team matches involving eight
clubs.
Mrs. Karl S. Giles of Indian Spring,
new Tournament Committee chair
man. whose appointment was an
nounced by Mrs. Ralph W. Payne,
president of the Women’s District Golf
Association, at the Executive Commit
tee meeting yesterday, shortly will
gather committee chairmen together
to talk over the schedule In advance
of the regular meeting scheduled for
March 29. Mrs. Giles is a prominent
woman golfer and is one of the few
stars among the women who play left
handea.
A left-handed woman golfer
is a comparative rarity.
With Mrs. Giles on the Tournament
Committee will serve Mrs. R. F. Thom
son of Armv-Navy as vice chairman.
Other committee heads were an
nounced as follows: First team cap
tain, Mrs. Roland MacKenzie, Con
gressional; assistant, Mrs. L. B. Platt,
Chevy Chase; second team captain,
Mrs. E. M. Amick, Columbia, assisted
by Mrs. C. B. McGowan, Beaver Dam;
third team captain, Mrs. Frank
Kramer, Beaver Dam. assisted by Mrs.
R. E. Joyce, Kenwood.
Rules Committee—Mrs. Harry A.
Knox, Congressional, chairman; Mrs.
J. W Beller. Columbia; Mrs. L. B.
Schlcss. Woodmont; Mrs. J. F Dow
dal), Congressional: Mrs. W. S. Mas
ten. Washington, and Mrs. Y. E.
Booker. Chevy Chase.
Handicaps—Mrs. C. P Medley,
Manor, assisted by Mrs Gale E. Pugh.
Manor.
Prizes—Mrs. H L. Simcoe. Manor,
assisted by Mrs. Frank Helan, Manor.
, Year Book—Mrs. R. E. Burks, Con
gressional.
I Publicity—Mrs J. H. Bullock. In
dian Spring, tournaments, and Mrs.
N. J. Waldron, Beaver Dam. team
matches. Mrs Waldron also was
named team captain. Miss Susan
Hacker of Chevy Chase will head the
intercity team -
Volney Burnett. Indian Spring
champ, and District champion Bobby
Brownell put on a hot brand of golf
yesterday for the benefit of the Earl
of Carrick. a visiting nobleman from
Britain. The earl, a young man
around 30 years of age. and Bobby
were licked 1 up by Burnett and A. H.
Tetrault. Burnett- had a round of 72.
winding up with a bird 2 at the ninth,
while Brownell scored 75. The earl
got around in 80 and liked the course
so well he made a date to play again
today.
■ •
DYKES LIKES THORNTON.
PASADENA.—Thornton Lee. 205
pound southpaw pitcher, obtained by
the Chicago White Sox in a three
cornered deal with Cleveland and
Washington, will be a starting hurler
this season if work and faith will help.
Manager Jimmy Dykes likes Lee.
METZ GAINS LEAD
WITH GOLF MARK
Cracks Course Record, Goes
Into Final Hollywood 36
Four Shots Up.
By the Associated Press.
OLLYWOOD, Fla, March 5 —
Stocky Dick Metz, ‘‘one of the
most promising young play
ers” of the P. G A. year book,
led by four strokes today as the $3 000
Hollywood open entered the final 36
holes.
The black-haired, smiling Chica
goan rounded the par 70 course yes
terday in 63, to break the course rec
ord of 64 established last year by Tony
Penna, and take the lead with 132.
Ky LafToon, another Windy City
golfer and Metz's partner in the in
ternational four-ball matches begin
ning at Miami Sunday, equaled
Penna‘s record and wound up with a
36-hole total of 136 to tie for second
with Johnny Farrell, the home club
pro. and Jimmy Hines. Hines had
yesterday’s third lowest score, a 65.
Runyan Close Behind.
C'kN THEIR heels were Paul Run
yan of White Plains, N. Y.. with
137: Johnny Revolta of Chicago anc
; Walter Scheiver of New York, 138, and
Byron Nelson of Reading, Pa. and
Jack Patroni of Shawnee. Pa., 139.
The amateur brigade was headed by
Bobby Dunkelberger of Sedgefield. N.
C.. and Frank Strafaci of New York,
former public links champion, with
143s. Ten amateurs went into th"
final day’s 36 holes, along with 60
professionals.
[STEWART BATTLES
FORMER CHAMPION
Brooklyn Boxer Is Matched With
Hough, Ex-International
Amateur Ruler.
QSSIE STEWART, Brooklyn mid
i dleweight, will dash with Mark
Hough, talented colored scrapper who
j formerly held the international ama
I teur welterweight championship, in an
eight-round semi-final to the Eddie
Mader-Hobo Williams feature fight at
j Turner's Arena Monday night.
In his last appearance here Stewart
trounced Sammy Williams, local col
ored middleweight, who twice had
defeated Hough.
Williams, who has scored four first
; round knockouts over medioere oppo
sition, also has been chilling spar
mates this' week regularly. He in
jured Popeye Irving so seriously that
the former middleweight favorite here
may abandon his comeback attempt.
A four-round opener will pit Frankie
De Angelo, popular featherweight of
several seasons ago, who now is in
the midst of a comeback, against Joe
Letto of Baltimore.
j
Hockev Results
m
B/'tl'e Associated Press.
National League.
Chicago, 6; Montreal Canadiens, 3.
Detroit. 2; New York Rangers. 1.
International-American League.
Pittsburgh. 3: Cleveland. 1.
Ameriean Association.
Wichita. 3: St. Paul, 1.
Tuls«, 0: Minneapolis, 0 (tie).
St. Louis. 6; Kansas City, 0.
GOULD KATHANODE
BATTERIES
Guaranteed as long as
you oxen your car.
L.SJULLIEN.I/u’.
144} P St.N.W. N0.8076
l ——— ■ gw—i———. -mi
Your Razor Blade Need No Longer
Scrape Your Skin
New-type shave cream forms a
protective film which allows blade
to cut off whiskers closely without
scraping or irritating your face..*
DOES your face feel tender after shav
ing? HERE’S WHY:
The thin outside layer of your skin is
made up of horny little scales—like the
scales of a fish.
Many men, when they shave, tear and
rip this scaly surface with their razor
blades. Naturally, this daily scraping of the
skin leaves the face raw and sensitive.
A new type of shaving cream has now
been developed that covers these homy
scales with a protective film. Your razor
glides over this thin film swiftly, smoothly.
Cuts off each whisker at the base without
irritation.
mm
■ >,$ NOT
.,^4* GREASY
‘ WON’T
CLOG
RAZOR
m
This new shave cream is called glider.
You spread it on with your fingers—never
use a brush!
If you are troubled with tender skin, try
Glider. It is easy to use. Faster, too. Softens ,
the toughest beard instantly.
Glider has a soothing action. It leaves
your skin soft and fresh—never greasy or
sticky. And it won’t clog your razor!
Try a tube of Glider tomorrow. Then feel
how smooth your skin is! In a few days,
sore spots and ingrown hairs will disappear*
THE J. B. WILLIAMS COMPANY
Glastonbury, Conn.; U. S. A.
Makers of fine shaving preparations
for over 96 years
1

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