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Chess 22 Aug 1911, Tue Star Tribune (Minneapolis, Minnesota) Newspapers.comChess
The Western Chess association, after trying Chicago and St. Louis, returned yesterday to Excelsior, Lake Minnetonka, for its twelfth tournament. Several of the old guard were missing, notably Dr. Bigelow of St. Paul, A. Rosen of Minneapolis and Louis Uedemann of Chicago, the latter for the first time since the earliest days of the association. George Wolbrecht of St. Louis, champion of 1910, was restrained by his engineering duties, and Oscar Chajes, champion of 1910, is by invitation representing the United States in the great Carlsbad masters' tournament. But Casia's lure is ever drawing new votaries to her shrine, as the following fairly representative list of entries shows: E. P. Elliott, champion 1909; Dave Barkuloo and W. Bland, Minneapolis; E. F. Schrader, St. Louis; W. H. Widmeyer, Denver, Col.; H. Kline, Kansas City; A. Blieden, Sigourney, Iowa; John F. Seymour, Lincoln, Neb.; J. L. Clark, Winnipeg, Man.; Charles Blake, Chicago; Einar Michelson, Harry F. Lee, Cincinnati.
Besides these who started in the first round, J. S. Morrison, Toronto; B. F. Paul, Blairstown, Iowa; C. C. Kanaga, Denver, and Dr. E. Schrader, Greenwich, Ind., withdrew their names, so that a most representative tourney was short of its promised scope.
The only games of note were those between Widmeyer and Lee and Goldsmith and Elliott. Widmeyer is a natural born chess player, who, without practice, comes to this tournament to lock horns with the best, year after year. His game with Lee, a very strong player, showed this. Goldsmith and Elliot are zealous rivals of equal force, and both played sound chess.