Word: pars
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...extraordinarily placid English girl who has won her own national championship regularly for the last three years. Trying to win the U. S. title as well, she failed in 1931 and 1932. Last week she started out by winning the medal with a 76, three under women's par, a record qualifying score for the national. She met her first real match test in Charlotte Glutting, the New Jersey State champion who put her out last year. By winning that match, 2 & I, the British champion reached a semi-final round that was unusually perfect. It contained, besides Miss...
...that putt again;.her opponent had cut her lead to two, with a fine four at the 16th and a good putt for another at the 18th. In the afternoon, with the wind dying down, they halved the first hole and Virginia Van Wie won the second, with a par 5 to Helen Hicks...
...more in dividends. If the value of Chesapeake Corp. stock rises it will benefit their Alleghany Corp. whose assets are now impounded by the trustee of its bond issues. Alleghany's assets include Chesapeake Corp. stock and if Alleghany's assets rise to 150% of the par value of Alleghany's bonds, the income from the impounded assets will be freed to pay charges on other Alleghany Corp. obligations falling due in October. The Van Sweringens' financial structure of wheels within wheels begins to gain power as soon as the innermost wheel starts turning out more...
Tender captains, chugging out and back to the big ships which anchor off Cherbourg, explained last week that the Municipality has set 30,000 francs ($1.176 at par) as the price of permitting a liner to dock, counts on the demands of tourists for an easy gangplank landing to force the steamship companies to pay this price. The tender captains charge only 6,000 francs ($235) for landing or embarking 200 passengers. Thus far tourists have been so scarce this year that no line calling at Cherbourg has been willing to pay the extra charge for the sake of being...
...Fields, Chicago. On the second day of the tournament, detectives discovered that Chicago's Public Enemy No. 4, "Machine Gun Jack" McGurn, was playing in it under his real name of Vincent Gebardi. They arrested him for vagrancy at the eighth tee, where his score was one under par, accompanied him for the remaining holes. Disturbed, Golfer McGurn took an 11 at the 8th, had a card of 86, withdrew...