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Show , 1 ) ,IL....".) ,,, ,, , . , . , 4 , , TRA ac v:A DON I OWE OF HOW TEACH. I BY HARRY VARDON The World's Most Famous Golfer. t it et - ts s: I; 1; .73 .73 ,TI .67 34 .di .ti !Xi; 313 le lti . abli ill 19 titri Pet, .161 166 11T Mt Id 6411 Ass .its .170 .171 'i ,Iiht I talli :akil eel use t i I lest tin1 profesadonal P111 ,..,, 171; flea le ics aJ sen club-bea- wall rein tiro till NI :toll . ad i I t o r ! jrwnurniomoroktMwgttgaztecAk:' , Ford Owners! ,4 Minutes to Change Your Tires! iii., .4., , imo 61 - We have just received shipment of Standsrd detuountable vetted sato that abeolattelly convert your reviler rerd "dumb lido demountable sad Intembanrable 'Meanfrom and rem. A mare wheel lo furnitthed on which to can, a tire already Inblew-oflated. When you have or pawner, it Is stinpio matter to unscrew your num change wheels and regimes Ms tow num roue minutes la all you need. Mynasa can make the change from common wb II to demountable in very short time. No tools but a common wrench and a round Me aro needed. i I : I - ! 'fa IS - 10000 - g Your Car', Is Safe With This Lock.--TH- E MASTERLOCK Youd agree knew me distrese, fest end incourrattence of a stele unit you coins out name day and And YOURS 10IM, Aar fuss few dollen yom eau ebsehatriy proems your emie allablet theft. The WASTERLOCIL Ma a switch esa the electric rumen of your automobile and sets inoperating the dant or any other Nessereamisses Meow Al yen ore IS a WWI& Oblie I inches wide and 4 inches long ht which Si, tee push bottom. Re electrio deceit , rum he renablished from either the battery ne smagerete to dm ugh th is Stasteriock, by the operatics og Lark plug exceptof thro the pun baton& This tomablestios known e emv I jir , 1 at tlet , irelt) owner. only to yome.-thThe Diantraloch no too Wearied in few minute. The look hidden& by lintai.00 and engineers everywhere. , Comm Is sod In us denominate the Masterlock, . ir.A. , le , - ,.. 1 !latt4 - 0 i... L131,1 , 1 111;;;4 )'t i ?dab : 4A t- -I - '''.. ' II III q111,,f C1411141- 9' WRESTLING TRAP SHOOTING BOWLING , . 1 ,Trk.. ,414frir AUL, terhs. second-rate- -- The wonderful speed le coupled with a wisard-lik- e control of long drives and a blending of accuracy throughout all that he does. a thing that is distinctly tinged with the Oriental. and these are the things he wing by. The match in which R. Lindley Murray. quite properly spoken of as the "California meteor," defeated Kumof the agai' for this final round Achille Challenge cup offered the but for which opportunities comparison have been seen in the vicinity of this beat the city. Joseph J. Armstrong Japanese doughty little player at or a chop 1,011FIVOOd chiefly by the use digstroke, which kept Moulagee ging up the hall. The prediction has made that any player frequently been who would consistently maintain a net attack would defeat him. and Mur old-tim- triumphed. HARVARD STARS NOT LOST TO VARSITY .. tIL .up-to-d- ; ' t t'114e, 4.6,4, IF (Special to The News--) N.w York. Sept. 2.The other day a Yale football player wandered int' the city with a rumor that moms reader'u will welcome and others tefit receive with dismay. Gilman Anil ?nese and Enwright he said he had heard . were not to be lost to Harvard, after ail. According to Ints information, the trio Cr. working in the Harvard summer courses. and if they ware sue; resell!. they will be able to Join the 'varsity early in Novemberin time to be of service in the big games. " q4 ri , LT ik r 41.) 1?,,1 I t ; 61 :: 4t I Ltft IMITATED BUT NOT EQUALED n. It is over a year ago that the present series of Studebaker cars were announced to the public. Six months ago added refinements and improvements on this same series were announced. Since then no company manufacturing automobiles has been able to offer the public a series of cars which equals the Studebaker in dollar for dollar value. For the same power, the stune roominess, the same comfort, in other cars, you have to pay hundreds of dollars more. In its field, Studebaker leads every producer of motor cars in the world. In number of SIXES and FOURS manufactured and sold since July, 1915, Studebaker leads every manufacturer in the world. Other companies have changed their price, changed their designs, and changed their models. They have announced new models. But no company has been able to improve in any way on the style, appearance and of Studebaker designStudebaker continues to be a "year ahead" just as the public said it was a year ago. The people who buy motor cars know motor car values. They know, because they take the judgment of people who have tried Studebaker cars, and found that in actual value and in service, Studebaker lives up to its leadership. Wherever Studebaker cars are used, they sell more Studebaker cars. seven-passeng- er seven-passeng- i4 4 , 44 er I . : t ,lb POINTS OF SUPERIORITY k POWERA PT4 it 5 motor, which. in nimolimti. acemeibility, efficiency, economy. and power. has been proven during the last thirties swaths. in all parts of the world as OM of the most remarkable motors ever used in a motor car. REAR ARIZ Tbe Studebaker hal floating Tedit de, which has been developed through four years of service and experience under bundreds of thousands of $tudebaker can Even the emit power of the big Studebaker 'ILIC" motor amnot tear apart or weer cut the gears and shafts of special Studebaker seed in this Studebaker azia. CHASSISThe Studebaker Golden Chants Is still the most beautiful chassis, aot elegy in appearance. but in scoesability, simplicity. efficiency, and factors of strengthSPRINGSThe efliptie special Studebaker steed springs. with torque arm end radius 'red driving members. are still stendordsof perfection. New Ideas bays beat tried, first by Studebaker in its g three-quart- 1 satentaf - to 14111vi pension hoe yet been found which will equal the three-quart- er elliptic of the Studebaker in minket. road ability, in perfect mechanical opera:kmit costs more than other types. but its suporkeity readers cost aegligible. ELECTRICAL SYSTEM The Studebaker electrical system, developed by four years 'study concentrated on Studebaker, has developed the lightest, mcet efficient, the ea reliable lighting and starting eyetan ever put on an automobds. There is no naiad system in the world, at any price, which is pater in any way, or perhaps even equal. to that now used en Studebaker carsand this 'yams has been designed inclusively for Studebaker. - 4 beautiful body lines of the etud- ebsker car bays not been affected by freakish fads and STYLEThe FOUR , . y. tAIC1 blanks of evosT doleriPtlee txrunged treat tho boot local forma and brourbt strictly A full supply hotly en hood St tho DOOM Ifni Watt SolgroAdvertiew IN. ix rs This time Welsh Home to be workint as hard as hit knows bow. It is reported that be was down Moe to ISO pounds a tow days ago. We kilfe beet weight is something of a lure-heIn his younger dart he could tight at 11 pounds without sacrificing any strength. although he utrueilY favored IIS as tho right notch for his matches. Of late 'ear Ito has Dmitri over ICI almost ea oft.. as be weighed toss asid is betas to look as though hi had outgrown the ellIBIL Bow. my. on itthe low erosions telion he proper to do some real thought training. he bad ao trouble down to the lightweight notch. getting Woleit'e retinal to train for most of his bouts is really part of his seamy Mot orgasm although at ftrot 'WOOS it looks like a strange of eats. But Weigh fiur.4 thatplaying constant training would wear him out and shorten Itie gamer. whores he ran little real danger of being caught out of oonditioa and knocked out in a so declaims bout in which be took as n while the American was always taking' chances to throw away points by bee outside Us lines, log a The Japanese has been brought up In ehe European school of fmreing for an opening and then seeding the ball through. That is what be did le'416 opposed to this WSW tne dash and thee ing, often inexcusably carotene of Poet, ann. which by its brilliancy rhs&hl ;f "L-A- 'Springs Labor day promises to be a big success financially. It is so long since the fax west has seen a chain. pionship fight that delegations of sporting men in all the coast anise aro planning to ntake the trip and tho seen around tho ring will resemble that of the big battles formerly Pulled off in Mn Francisco before boxing was out down to bouts. Both men now are on the ground. avid their training carnos aro thronged with visitors every day. Apparently tho west is taking the match Ver., seriously. although White is Welsh' ovra selection and tho hampion pettedly has shown that he could bold him soon or better and without train-l- a any harder than for bouts with ray made good on that proposition at leabright. Great Driver. battle. great thing about th fur it wa& & furiously fought elision of throe sots. waa that it continually offerod opportunity for comparison. Standing forth above all else, in tho game as tho hipline plays it. Is his that driving. Taking into consideration the length of the court is 711 foot and that Kumagai usually stands four foot back of the bite, lino- - it la a conservativo ostimat that th average length of his shots is more than 70 Not. To control the ball and to place It with ouch a within wonderful mastery radius is no small aocontplishmnt. and that is what Kumagai. does. Lik- Wis. it is the same, sort of thing that our beloved Richard Stevens has don. eseellently well for many yoara and despite all of F.even splendid efforts. it has never won f r him a national championship title. Furthermore a match between Kumagao and Slovens. provided Stevens is goe ing at his clip. would furnish rare sport and a royal contest. Anothor element in tho methods of Kumagai& that etood prominently to the for. wan hio never hasardIng the splitting of the lines. Usually he spotted hia ball down well within court, ii 31r"Ish .nt,:Nuvi,orrlimlis:4;411-triivotAlt.t- r filliiiNg history of ths American game hag been a hard hitter. The list is easy to review; Robert D. Wrenn, Rale C. Wright. Dwight F. Devils. R. Lindley Murray. a Roward Voshell. Irrederick C. Inman, and others of their claire who have stood In the front of the "AM Following this trait that le common to all of those who favor the left hand. Kumagai imparts tremendous power to his shots s87 - L IL . k Detroit fancies. Artistic refinements lima been incorporated from time to time, but it has not been necessary to make radiad changes to attract public attention. Studebaker cars are add on intrinsic merit and beauty. CROWN FENDERSThe mown fenders fiat introduced and still used by Studebaker. have berm copied and imitated by every other manufactincr. FINISHTbe beautiful paint and varrdsh work ors die Studebaker au can Dever be equaled at the pries by any other mantdacturer and will not until other manufacturers poraess tha manufacturing expe- Aeons and facilities of the great Studebaker Corpora- tion. UPHOLSTERYStudebaker continues, bi spite of advance in the cost of genuine leather and curled hair, to um thane 1mm:tria1s in Studebaker Car and no other manufacturer within hundreds of dollars of the Studebaker ;irks can afford to use material of this quality in finishing its cam. SERVICE Syncinatic Service, originated and tv101yJJ rmmv..1 Intat 0Ift amr7, ri.lica.:..11.seow Iva idW0,64betviikittacetiPPr has so large or responsive a dealeri organisation to co- operste throughout the entire country in making this service national. and when you buy a Stadebaker car no matter where you dive, you foul Studebaker ternatic Service. This, in itself, is a feature which makes die appeal of Studebaker cars very strong to the average buyer. STUDEBAKER Back of the Studebaker car there is a history of unparalleled good will and businets success. extending over sixty years, giving assurance to the owners of Studebaker care that their pmkbaas I. not an penman not a gamble but an actual investment, and there is no car in the nutrket In ratio to tint cost. which- has higher second hand value than a Studebaker. This is an indkation of etmfidatos the in public producte of the great House t "4 "- - er; ; s ' i;s7 s 1 et Studebakst. Noir let us consider If you will call at our show roon; we can give you the names of dozens of prominent and reli- able people who have bought Studebaker cars. You can call On them far testimos.V as to the value of Studebaker care and the kind of servioe w give, and in their reply you will underetand why Studebaker leads- - But let us dentossetrate to YOU Studebaker qualities of leadership. - - - -- - - - SIX . 1.085 - Ls.b.DdreIt N BROS. CO. OF STUDEBAKER Automobile 159-16- 1 SO. STATE STREET. p 415i Tiz .,f,J1 Division. SALT LAkE. - Tel&boso , 4 1 kw' m i. 1, ! - , : t I 41' four-rou- ut r; 40 . - .. a , $1' my-"e- lf teem igz1 ' td it the we called to him. but there was no response. He bad got lost. We went In search of him and became sepI shouted to my pupil and arated. then it dawned on me that be, too, had nand trot lout I looked round and for the first time that I had lost as welt It wag at a remote part of the counts. and I think ft was rutty half an hour before our little party Mine together again. (Copyright. MS. by the Wheeler Syndicate. Inc.) iably attributed bia footles to a euckoo which. In its season. delivered ha chant from a tree dime by. the club that 'Every time I awing " he would exbird say. cuck-oo- ,' on earth claim vehemently. could bit a shot in such circum. stances When the cuckoo was not In attendance, he would aay that be had grown so accustomed to it that be expected it, and that it was worse to expect the noise than to hear it. While my pupil is driving three dozen shots in Ms own way, I take stock of him. There are certain principles he eboomance of which cannot produce other than good results, but 111411- - WELSH TRAINING IMO rally we cannot all play golf in pretesely the same manner. Something must 'be allowed for the building of the individual. FOR 1111011 OAT 110111 Prefers Open Blanca Pere luilly, I prefer an open stance (that la with the left foot back a tow (Special to 'The Newel or. g iti This is a little point for which tho keeps a sharp lookout. and when such a fault is detected. the best cure I know la to Mend about a Yard to the right of the performer and a trills behind the lino which he is oocuPling. and toil urm at the begin. to atm the ning of the dewn-.win- g d at oneself instead of at the bell. Taking up such a poultice as that Indicated. I bare often mild to a slicers 717 and bit me as you oome down. rti 'es that you don'tbut try." It to clear that. if he will aim In the dtraction in which ono is standing that is. on hie right and a little behind his linohe mustotarttha club before unscrewing his him, because It he did the latter first the club-bowould be thrown forward (tho cause of Weigle by the eery tact of kis body turning so tar reglad at the beginning he I ABM IN t T 1 a to turn the body very T has blew ludgested that I should of the down owing. Once be is pest inches so this brief initial stage of recovering lightly in the direction of the hole). explain how I toach golf; just what the club from behind ea& but in the case of a slightly built perhe the bead, proeodurs I adopt when a atranger swing for all he is worth with a ravel'. son who instinctively 'geode square, arrives with a request for his faults able chance of hitting the ball there is no reason to diatuads hint practicing that method so long straight; the hit really begins atter from to be points4 out so him or a knowl 1111111 him a feeling of comfort and that little act of recovery and gathers It imconfidence. The only point is that. edge of ;proper playing methods is down. It all the War starting when the power square stance is favored (I parted to his hitherto untutored mind. the bit before getting the club into the mean. of course, are when the two It has been further proposed that I best possible position for the operation In line with one another) the body should fay why It as that an experi- that causes trouble. strain begins .Goner in the and is felt more pronouncedly at the Nothing New. enced pretensions.' claims to be able to There is nothing new under the eun top of the awing. For that reason, it commission of which errors out point I. a "yearn for & lean. Physically fit on as the Them links. fauna are indistinguishable to the average areregards a few unusual ways of doing a player rather than for the man with fine chest slipped down." is matter capable thing wrongly, but they can gotioraill golfer. The latter The stoutly built golfer generally be discovered by the eitini100 of pa. an oat, esPlanakon. does better with the open stance for of the deem of It is part of the stock-in-trad- e the reason that leen body strain is inthe most interesting cases I volved. (ins He should take care, howprofessional to know causes Just aa remember waa that of an ever. not to eand too open, which. in fully as his pupil realises effects. Ho who went Completely off his maahle. most cave, only lead to slicing or club been wont to some other will has to be a kind of physician of the do with which be had fault. For a drive. it is particularly deadly work. Three of EuMcient in most cases to bare the Unite so that he nut elegneo to a came us were in to engage in con- right foot two or three inches in front sad appreciate exactly where the root sultation calledafter close examination, of the left. Four inches I would Thus. his studios we found and, oft the trouble Iles. put of the tape& cause the as the limit The ball should be tall hint th& t. in the instauste of a perThe wee taking down in player question not opposite the left heel, but On a mit who tops the ball time after time the club up almost entirely with the line about four inches inside that heel lead topping is the commouest of all by bending the wrist out. If you had a line drawn from the ball faults emonmat beginners). the dis- left hand the reauit of this bend of the to the feet at right angles to the line wards; be sure to comfited player is nearly wrist was that the arm was securing of play. committing one of three error: little freedom and not rising suffiStance and grip are the find platters He le (I) straightening the body ciently far. Nithen he rafted to come to consider in one who is learning golf. during the down swing and therefore down. was ti es aimost Im- and, while I do not insist that everythe hand or from ball. arms the the (2) littlag hogging the arms up towards the mediately in its original position, and. body should adopt the overlapping it dragged the locket of grip. I have no hesitation in saying cheat as he kite. tor fear of striking consequently, the ground. or (3) swaying to the the club on to the ball mooed of that it is the proper method of holding and felling bringing the face of the implement the club and that nine people out of right during the to recover while bringing the club round smoothly for a clean shot. That every ten could master it If only they I. another example of the kind of would try. Often it is the obvious down- for which a professional has to remedy for a fault People who habThe professional needs to watch his thing itually elk or pull can frequently be . Su011 for only a short while in order look. When a player CMOS to me for a cured by the adoption of the overlapto light upon tke source of the misI lesson. begin by asking him to hit ping grip. because it makes the two chief and then his work consists of shots in his own way. hands work together. and the root of inducing the player to amigo his three dozen their trouble may be that one hand methods in the particular department During thia stage. I do not interfere all against the other. It is a in with him the least degree. It ts I. working in which the trouble is originating. worth remembering that in many necessary first to find out what mis- point A V the swing, and everythe Olaaa stance, takes he is perpetrating. So It is in regard to practically every I do not take him round the course. thing else are correct except the manner of holding the -- club and that a form of golfing IlL Villains the chronic where other golfers are likely to creIn this department is all that is eke IsI concerned. IL is probable that ate distraction. it is a much better change to bring eucoese. If the hands !he player is wrongly plan to elect & quiet corner of the wanted h; gripping ever so club, apart on the or. at the top owing. beginning links where there will be no intruders. are effect isslightly much the same as the very On to tern at the hips before starting the my home green ahTotteridge. near clute--one ia each hand having two dish on its downward tourney. Or he London. there la a spot which might and I do not know bow anybody could may be swaying during the swing. have been designed by nature for this soar to triumph amid such diatraction. but that is a fundamental fault from purpose; a high fence shuts out the Short Leeson& which any sort of discomfiture may view from curious eyes and iret there is ample space for the player to bit I &dried every golfer to be content arias. shot ha fancies. Here that the an with puany hours lesson at a time. As a In most came. the slicer makee the 1. matter of fact. I never give anybody mistake of inaugurating the body turn pil Ca.11 practice in secluarion. more than an hour. no matter how too spoon at the top of the swing. Hainan Nature Studies. on proceeding with Every devotee of lb game ought to What studies In human nature I keen he may be Ivi 410 minuted, he plays know that the proper way to order the have encountered during the thousands the businees. more shots than in a round. and in anatomy when wielding a golf club is of lessons which I have given in that far the second hour he is likely to forget to screw the hip. round as the club sPot I napes. go that the body. instead of There wall an English earl who al. all that be has learned in the first. falling away from tne ball towards ways would burst into a paroxysm of This, at least, was the opinion that I formed a good many years ago and the right. as frequently it does in the laughter whenever be made a ,sae of an inefficient player. turns on shot, and keep it up till the end ol4)014: which has not undergone alteration. I do not believe in asking a golfer 1t5 owe aria lesson. Just sa it is screwed up, so should 4 sa y as be ad- - to drive into a net; it saves the trou"ICs no use." he ble collecting the bells afterwards, the body be unscrewed. but it la an dressed the hall. "I hit it properly. but of it in an artificial system and it almost sure means of slicing to be- I shall lough so mu I shan't be makes nearly all the shots look alike tmaCrillviDir it to able before do gin anything artartingto And I defy anybody to tell with certainty what be said was exactly what what bring the club down. The face of the would have happened to a shot Instrument will cut across the ball at happened every time. He waa a real the impact and so provoke a MUM The enthusiast; be played such a lot that be which finishes tut career 10 yards from the which it was despatched from spot first act at the top oocupiee the veriest wore the flesh of one finger through Perhaps the idea might be permitted &militia of a second. and then the un- almost to the bone, and yet he used to when peoplesNrant a lesson in a heavy winding of the body marts. But unless turn up for another course of instrucI era once teaching a man in the player does start the club first. he tion with the finger wrapped in cotton amist. to thick fog. We had a fore-cadd- ie wool and bandage. Sonoran,' abeam. the fall of the ball and mark listen for There was another man who invarThe Cure. end of a few minutes. down. At of Ate POWER (Special to The News.) New York. Sept. 2 Thos. who deof vote their attention and powers analyst' to the method', by which more lawn or leas famous and tennis players obtained rezults an always impressed with the recurrence of the fact that it is often the player with a single stroke of excellence. a stroke which in many eases amounts to bis only WINIPert. who carved hut a name and a collection of trophies for himself because-h-e does one thing well. This is distinctly true of Itch lye Kumstns. the visiting player from Japan. wielder of the Me is a rcoqut. and for some unaccountable player in the reason every 101IR fat I. MAKES USE HEAT IF IllemonomoONMEEINIminain i 11 0E0 OAOLOL u ON GOLF II! Z11 2 1916 , VIII '2 SERTE3IBER Trb GOLF , NEWS SATURDAY , I 1111 FIELD, AND ET EVENING - TENNis w , , .,..ii1160 Ao 44 I Sow ! 'DES . ' A A , , AliliwAiwooKliboilailibbillaboillegill , -- , ftEnnilmmip. NMIIPMION |