Evening Star Newspaper, April 21, 1921, Page 22

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SPORTS. THE 'VEN I STAR, WASHINGTON, \D. (.. - Nationals in Boston to Help Red Sox Open Home Season : Beat Macks Before Going, 6-4 EAGER T0 REET TRBE VETERAN HURLERS HOLD ANNEX THIRD STRAIGHT | BY MAKING FINE FINISH Score Six Runs in Last Four Turns at Bat After Going Into Fifth Four Tallies Behind. Gharrity’s Triple Decides. | o [ BY DENMAN THOMPSON. > OSTON. April What Sox under their present owne B f hip is scheduled amo: the last Jon son for the Red, ) be opened here | ve op today. when they clash with the Nationals in the first of a series of three games. Gov. Cox was to ch out the first ball. The weather is cloudy, with a threat of rain beiore night. Last spring, when the Grifimen also assisted in inaugurating the Ame League campaign | in the Hub, the smallest ope way Park was recorded. and his methods. f Babe Ruth fol- . lowing a _jong 1 stars was fresh in Their n the Yankees have bern strenzthened | at the expense of the Sox through the Schang deal, and then the oid reli Harry Hooper. a veritable landmar: and ‘one of the most pop! r per- formers ever to wear Boston livery, w dis d of to Chic for th pose of sidestepping his sulary for the job of pilot, for which he the logical heir. uffly a Wise Selection. Selectign- of Hugh Duffy for the Red Sox was on the part of Frazce. tive former with the Nati " exceedi h the home folks | and his acquisition has served to in a measur~ placate the fans. but although Duffy is a smart and resourceful leade! he can hardly make a winner out of, the wreck of a club handed to him b Frazee. It was Frazee who wrocked the fans know it. and when m | finds the Red Sox trailing in the dust| of a majority of the other teams they demands was a m and st old Boston ¥ popular w son may be expected to ar in rightecus anzer and demand Fr: acalp in a maaner the leagu d manner « # cannot ignore. of the simpi~ from the ball pari Ordinarily on in the count: one of the 1 League at le 2 veritable miracle man and Keen: club up in the race the insistent ¢ for a Boston-owned team in _ undoubtedly. will _mean that v | Frazee, the New York theatrical mag-| £ the best ball towns Boston v st. in tire. Club Way te Victory. | Prior to their departure for the Hubl - yesterday the Nationals again demon they are a lusty clubbing lot of ball players, unbeaten until the last man | “is retired. Apparently stunned by a break that gave the Athletics a sub- stantial lead, McBride's charges were easy prev in their first four turns at bat. Then they took a new lease on! life and proceeded to make the after- - noon miserable for a trio of Mackian _ slabmen. 2 The four tallics obtained off Erick- sion ended. and a vigorous attack in the Nationals before the seventh ses sion ended and a vigorous attack in the eighth netted enough to make the count 6 to 4, with McBride and com- pany on the proper side of the ledger. All but four of the eleven players used by the nome club contributed to its success by efficient use of the ash. The A's blew themselves to an ex- pansive lead of three runs right at the outset. Dykes led off with a sin- gle to right, took third on Witt's double to left and scored with Whit- ey when Clarence Walker's smash to left was lost in the sun by Lewis and went for a trivle. Tilly counted on a safety by Brazill. who was left on first. Some good fielding kept the Macks “at bay in the next three innings, but they earned their fourth and final _ marker in the fifth. After Witt had skied to O'Rourke, Clarence Walker propelled his second three-bagger to the limits in left and tallied on the squeeze play, with Brazill doing the squeezing. Nationals Easy for Aw “ In the meantime, the Nationals were taking the count with startling reg- ularity, although it required some sensational work on the part of the Mackian defense to keep th na!hs' clear. Until the fifth. Shanks was the only member of the home clan 10 ger cn base. He got a life after | 4wo were out in the second. when in_front of the plate i McBride's men showed their first, signs of life in the fifth. . Marris opened with a blow to right. Witt made a desperate stab for the and netted ball. but it escaped him Staniey two bases. Harris counted| on Shanks' smash that bounded over | Clarence Walker's head for three . bases. Hank was trapped when O Rourke rapped to Has o D_uu-‘...l - took third on Gharrity's single, the latter advancing a notch when Brower, batting for Erickson. grounded to Brazill, and Judge walk- ‘ed to fill the bases, ouly to be forced Wwhen Galloway cleverly handled jlan’s crack. M rvan Harris temporarily vh.-rked[ the Nationals after being rushed to Hasty's assistance in the sixth. Sin: gles by Rice and Harris. with Lewis Geath sandwiched in between, pro- duced a run that caused Hasty to get the gate. The rally ended when How Griffs Are Hitting | G. AB. H. SB.RBIL Pet. Miller . S 1 1 0 1 1000 Johosen. V. 2 4 2 0 O 500 Harris, 2b 7 27 13 6 4 481 Rice, ef 7T 20 14 2 4 .48) Gharrity, c. 6 17 8 0 9 470 Piciaich, ¢ 2 s 201 W Zacoary. p... 3 3 1 o 0 .333 Judge. 1b 72 9 1 5 310 | Shanks, 3b...7 24 7 0 5 201 | Milan, 7 2 7 0 3 .269 Tewis, If. .7 26 6 0 6 280 O'Rourke. ss. 7 26 4 0 2 .153 Schackt, p. . 2 8 1 o 0 .125 Brower 3 1 o 0 o0 000 Ericksoa, p..3 5 0 0 O 000 Ellerve 1 o 0 0 0 .000 Acosta 1 1 0o 0 0 .000 Shaw 1 o 0 0 O 000 Foss 1 1 0 0 0 .000 Away Your Cares—Come in and See our Big Line of Tackle 50c Double “dlooks. Best ity. Dozen.. $1.50 Shakespear Reel .. s 50-yard Hig b Tent SIik Line. $2.00 Value .. Big sssortments Lines, Sinkers, ete. of the Hub |} Perkins made a wild throw of a tap | () ning day attendanc The raw, chilly tor, of course. but that only about 6,000 § for, in large part, by the fact that the town had soured on Harry COMING F2CM BEHIND | in the history of Fen- o prevailing was a fac- rurned out we ns accounted ; was razee | | i extent { unimp ity ad Bri tha t ! became o 1y ol than Of rushed { hurler. oo only against fered fice fly three ed for Romm: 1 for Erickson in ifth. phia 000 0o o1 xcellen Teh! B n. 6. mate, will more or less gracefully Tes|p oy oo Strated in no uncertain manner that|in the seventh after he had been ham- ple the 41 the fifth. Under onl n Apri 1 againet though x0 Dufty’™~ = the r Yankee lefthander at Tampa mive n good account of ix to make ub consixt- of right- osky being h hix debut against a almost nded hitter start Red r Joe Bush prooably yiteh for the Red Sox. Twice Robbed. b, re on the to with | Clarence Walke { Ordinaril sco ! funner from s worl with one out, the Athletics had run- ners on third and first and failed to produce any tallies. t Rice had to tr; such th pa e in the plate had Tiw ruffy ring cond. in Athletics Erickson’s pitching was by no means nt him from the rt of Mana ry 1 when the ) *s chanc not el Dykes. mean: batting place the ffort su third, run cf to loft to left-center. would have spe the ball, holding the smash to a sacri- instead of a cker netting two runs. efrcumstances, would have been little chance for Witt 0 make third, and Brazill's single to }f! was not long enough to count a Erick did some the Mogridge Picked to Hurl Initial Fray in Beantown BOSTON, —George iven hix first n Washing- hampionxhip e having Sox. nd ix ex- ERCK 0T DRVEN 0UT 1Luck Against Swede When Macks Score Three in First—Rice Although damaged to a considerable yesterday, ve. It was not lack of abil-| me, b to toj tionals | way to hit idered stronger the former was i of the | The big Swede probably would have s emerged from the opening inning with three hits and one him nte cate there whe! all three fields be- arged red || YOUNG EVERS IS “CHIP OFF OLD BLOCK." ut p-1 r- ch with hix xon Jack getting a few pointers for future usc. ARRESTE AT BALL PARK RUEY NS FOR KED n, Placing Bet With Detective Dodgers and Pirates Take THURSDAY, Here is Johnny Evers, manager of the Cubx, watching hix team In action, San Francisco Man Is Accused of Bats in Decisive Run in Ninth. APRIL 21, CLI is le: Wwill t Record Crowd Is Expected When Indians and Browns Play in the homecoming today of the Cleve- his initial appearance in this ¢ity fourteen times up and his fielding has been sensational. The usual festivities are on the pro-| mond for a match of Richmond, and Gal| 1921. SPORTS." ] BY JOHN B. FOSTER. Cleveland Today. N EW YORK, April 21.—Possibilities of pitchers do not manitest ELAND. April 21.—Interest in themselves, so iar as the veterans are concerned, until they can land Indians for the first game here perspire freely and are satisfied in their own minds that they can sinoe the world base ball champion- . 2 > N s a s s Shin casiior'd base ball champlon | go. An experienced old wizard. who knows when his arm creaks, play star second baseman, who is making | that fact against the manager of the team with a great deal of stealth. He He ading the regulars at bat with hits out of twenty-four shortens his swing. develops lack of control occasionally, when its really twinges of rhcumatism, and loses his speed when his shoulder feels as 1 sandpaper were scraping the bones. So, too much never must be tak for granted in the spring about the old fellows. They'll go through lat Cleveland and St. Louis are sched- | like steamroliers if they think their arms can respond. uled to open the local season and| It is a study to note what has hap- cords. Two years ago Heinie had only preparations have been made to|pened to some of them this vear. xay the word and any one in ¢ handle the largest opening day crowd | that Ruether and Marqua cinn would take him automobils in local history. The 11,000 reserved em has been st viding seats have been sold for weeks. has won. Boston a ve felied Ruether. ¥From what observers say. the Cai- |gram, with Mayor Fitzgerald slated | Louis have dinals can't get their pitchers to ¢ to piten il Atscibal props from under him. Ruether has a ordinate with the remainder of the Indications are that Bagby will | 1ot of #0od games in him and Marquard | team. The Cards have been hittin Diten for the champlons and Davis or | has some. “The Rube has been fn a1 well enough to xet somewhere, hu Schotker Tor the Brewms. long tim: and has worked hard their pitchers have failed — e Fall Opening Games. « i Mmck - DSk Walter Johnson. in the past. has been |, 4 @Rol€ Mac U1 begin to think i | 5 at there isn't use of trying t jons of the cons t winners of the |yt T can'e et out of ba first_game of th . but | D A 3 ~ “ place when your team looks better M . ed this year Red than for v s s, However, he came back agains: i it A ——— i ks and won. Cleveland started with its st ) and he couldn’t_win. Ada r of Pittsburgh. (CAPITALS OPEN SEASON Play Bridgewater Team To- WITH GIANTS OPPOSING n't win morrow—Indulging in Game the dependable southpaw of the Chicago Sox, couldn’t win. 5 -, 1 s ireini onh Fhand, Mays has mot iny Manager West's Capitals will mak With Virginia Poly Today. o e e Sres [ their bow before the Washington Tomorrow's game at the Hilltop]if he can keep taut pace—and he willl publi \‘h_'»\_ afternoon at rican between Georgetown and Bridgewater | be wearing the laurel of the front row | Lezgue Park. srben they encounier { the ond of the season. Faber won [ the Norfolk ¢ s - will be the last college game of the;pis ‘ttart for the Chicazo o Bm_‘ of the series to be played by’ th week here, although two of the local Cleveland veteran, nmered in the | ColoT d l"“'f, nincs. Play wil nines will be in action Saturday. inninz. stuck it out and won. Ty-| =Tl &1 L0 been n s e Al e ler, fanzuid and effective when he is' (The apitais have be i IVEISLtYs D=1079 ner 0 | o 200d terms with himself, started w R b {cleven innings over Univers| of !y victory on Cub soil. So did Alex- [ Perfotm Saig on““;; Maryland yesterday, will go to Rich-|ander, the National star. Luque, | 80K 8 e are abroad. . i has won twice for| hot-headed ~Cuban, Cincinnati. i He may have a great vear this sea- with University udet is sched- | INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE. Bmith, Indian in uled to visit Westminster to face Western Maryland. Virginia Poly- | SN My, technic Institute, which was to sta Schacht of Washington has won in Je City ot play against Georgetown at 3:30|Dboth starts. He believes that an arm | Rafalo., b {oclock this afternoon. will be the|Which bad twinged once in a while]derey City et v { guests of the Marylanders at Coliege | h2s been put in apple pie order. Hel Batieries ers and Rengough: Lecarr and t Park Saturda ; FolleEe iy " a " spring_and autumn pitcher.; s The engagement with Bridgewater ! Works to a shadow in ,"“‘_““‘“‘l L At | should ‘result in an easy victory for |Ccause he is naturally lean and lank.| Sae the Hilltoppers. The Virginians have ; Two Indians in Game. 1" Datreries e g i played few games this season and in | Pitisburgh ha ;¥ Hastr, 10 off B. Harris. 1: | fore poking a safe hit, but it re- |- on Game. Battles—Giants Score. none have they shown much ability. | <5 case. aft as claimed E Ll > Gired some sensational felding 1o ! Teams of the preparatory Al = lowhorse was : 1 in s ed_some nal fielding to RANGTS 5 : | Teams o atory school class | fo g owhors s . 2 Aan lonine: omiaay | T in the frst tWo times at bat N FRANCISCO. Calif. April 21.—| Wilh one exception. all of the Na- | have taken the measure of Bridge: | ihe sole Mohiean »c well as the Jas te ssisc Sl Tebings. "Strork | 1n the opening inning. Sam shot | The first arrest for alleged gambling | tional League gan were Ditter| water, so tomorrow Coach O'Relily |of a recent crop. He ism'l. Sammy |t o Bleke aad Maddox; Brown asd bs lom- | liner down the first-base line that|in connedtion with base ball games SUFU=gles vesterday. The Reds had toiMa¥ decide to give a number of hisjStranz has corralled Blue Hawk for| At Raltimor THE pitcher—2 osing | logked £o0d for two Sacks At least.| was mude here sesterd R INghC 10 the last diteh to overcome | S€CONd-SIring players an 0pportunity | second base on the Chattanoogi team. i Toranto. ..o ooooooooo oo 1 AT Time of game—1 hout and| Brazill Killed the Pit when he jumped |y o = 5 Toa harlesy the Cards and the Pirates were forced | (0 Prove their worth. 5 Hawk is even more picturesque and | Baltimore.. 2 9 14 3 6 P to ‘Shear the bail: Nam iried jeft | LoEan. a laborer, was ted by ato battle all the w Dunn's single, Curran’s sacrifice and | a lot more poetic ellowhors Baiteries: Fortune, Reis and Bevinc: icid for his next target in the fourth | dstective. who e 1 place | of the Cuns clout in the eleventh produced| sammy, Stank ssye n Beuties and Egan i #nd i ;i e v hin a on EEbatrreani] ing gav e versity hat de- [Indian can run fas — 10 Brazill for a .;(,.,mif'},(];f"d tossed | ¥ rhe sphere e ‘\?hlsllinz on its | 108 Angeles and O; st Dodgers . verdict over the R e L e R Taled 1 :,cu ”nor. e e aiEhene s s P et < ! The Giants, who drubbed the nd victory of the scason | hitters who coun aledo. 7: Indianapoiis, 5 (11 innings). Rl Walle da Tt elken T e iha pall made| Riuth Must A i cere the only ones to have an casy e oklanders” over the Old | == i . Harris failed to last one complete|, back-hand catch with his gloved » Must Appear in Court. { Linc nine and ended the first base ball| Steve O'Neill, Cleveland catcher, has| Columbus, 3 Louieville, 4. nning. being derricked with one down | &, 02U s - UBHEI0¥ NEW YOEK. April 21.—“Babe” Ruth, | With one down in the ninth. Ri ceries_won by Catholic University {up_and _done it again. April 15| Rewsas it 13 81 Pacl. 11 paw. \‘ax';o 'Im[den_u‘i,hku'& (1}:0\”“ e l] e Uth | 0 Ditehor, won his own mame sicy | from Maryland in the history of ath-| against St. Louis, he had neither a put- TEXAS LEAGUE. mered for two runs to tie the score. | bay toaiird Conter in the sixth inning e B e e that beat the Carc 1o '3 {letics between the institutions. out, assist. nor error in nine inning: TR With O'Rourke disposed of, Gharrity a“‘ :‘ et N e Engle. o m's fomous home-run hitter. who a4 had singled, Crane ed | Jickson. who had downed the Mary- | zccording fo the official figures. July| lix, 13: Shreveport ;‘;fi"fifi and Zachary. Judge and Milan l(-;np!’:d }l)a“()'l’{nurk; ’rna Loy was al-| was served with mmons charging | 400 Wingo walked. Haines had [landers in the early mecting of these|d. 1918 in a 1171]-‘1\!;'m:‘ ame. the! Antenin. 3: Galveston, 0. s ed a clamped on the > % L HEGC ¥ j while en wQute to the i'olo Grounds: ¢'ub. Duncan o e winners made | the e ., whe % or | o =, s 1id by lnoo Bl on the | sult of his base hit and Dug; ac-| Veuterday, So required 1o appeas in i @ homer and two singles In three|three runs. Dollard. his successor.only caicher wearing a mitt \“ith two ro D I R rifice, Perkins sent a slow roller 101 LUt here Aptii ot @ | iniee st | was reached for two more taliies be- | no-fielding-chance, nine-inning games SUNDRIES ommell suicred e’ vame: fuls as|the National sort eer, O ourk: | s Ve Bits, thirtecn going ne ! fore the 81 lanig, Keene piiching | (o bis ereait {| Howard A. French & Co is et ©in the eighth the t hall and ediately . : Syt x winners, were register. ege Parkeis, was bom- = . Nationals compiled two runs Aftes|tossed to Shauks for a play on Brazill. Will Aid Umpire's Widow. in the game that the Diratec took, barded in the third and.fourth for a| Rarlden han hinted that he may be| Distributor for Indian Harmte Bag mbioa) we, runs. Atter | C deqision favored the Athletic rm-| CINCINNATIL Apr sresident 8,10 5. from the Cubs. The clan of | trio of markers and the Erooklanders a returned prodigal if the Cincinnati| Shanks singled through the box be.|Der. but it was an evelash pla i John Hevdler | it i erat ““ Eve attled pluc but the four-|tied the count in the seventh. Mary-|team needs a catcher. Bill quit by Motorcycles fore O'Rourke lofted to Welch. Then | Probably would have resulted in an National L. w“ Seiit run bombardment put on by the Pi-|land threatened to win in fhe fenth|Honorable resignation 424 9th St. N.W. Sharrity tripled to left, counting|Out With a more experienced third ow o Tre S s n the sixth decided the issue. | when Semler started with a triple. but z W, Shanks, and when Galloway, relaying | Sacker handling the ball s "ot her. huthana. Lehyia Rit, thatl becaint ' \afh- | ieSyasininped 7t Shoy plate waienta i S Whe musae of Melule Gl al’ LiCots || Knell MnteesyEteh e i) Welch's return, shot the ball to the _— Harrison died | winterafter a 16n when it bounded over Base- ' squeeze D was attempted. in ( nati was received with dis- ! £y é\,,(_hz;,go;m e “cateher aiso scored. = Sioge with Com o iee [ man” Miller's shoulder, scored two % ancn. & | runs for the Dodgers after two were | In the last four innings Zachar: tout in the ninth, and enalled the the Mo e oEs Zachary had ] Summa Goes to Rochester. ague champions 1o eid their losing first” batter to face Jezebel In the . PITTSBURGH, Pa.. April 21— Homer oy e colnt w to 2. Sher-1 sixth. hit sately to lefi. He was sac- _— | Summa, outficlder has been sent to the | hod Smith, of Brookl & aths. One option Ly the ates, S m . e L, Seane ) a 5 vas saved thro a ’ the Virginia League, Srson, Ul e B ENOh ol fielder's choice. en Babe Ruth’s Homer Starts i Leagy | Yorkers won 1o 5 Nehf and Barnes | ; = {also were hit freely by the losers. | Yanks to Victory. Hofman to Coach School Nine, . | The Giants clinched victory with al RI se: Mou today with Petersburg at Richmond, Suffolk at Newport News, Norfolk at Portsmouth and Wilson at Rocky Marriot to Join Cubs Soon. JOPLIN, Mo., April 21.—Bill Marriot, 'outfielder of the Chicago Nationals, ex- pects to Join the club the first of May. | He operation for appendicitis. Virginia League Starts. CHMOND, Va., April 21.—The 1921 on of the Virginia League opens nt. has " been reguperating from an | PiCKINg AMERICAN LEAGUE. W. L. Pet Established 1503 Mertz Tailoring satifies the dis- criminating—because it is quality Tailoring. The fabrics are smart in appear- ance. The designing and Tailor- ing the best that experts of many years’ experience can produce. E ery garment is guaranteed. Quick delivery if you want it. Mertz Tailoring is High-Class— Not High Priced Mertz and Mertz Co., 906 F Street League vesterday, Yankee-Red filled with hits. went on a wild spree to overwhelm the world champions and the Yanks in the seventh and eighth, poling long | clouts that buried the Bostonians under ! a scoring avalanche. the White Sox-Browns c When the Tigers, in winning 9 to knocked Walter Mails out of the box by | at i seven hits in the third|and & inning, the Indian southpaw suffered his | - first defeat since comi can League late las ords credited Mails with and no defeats until vesterday. the second time that the Detroiters had Sox for Cobb's. Rain h. & to the Ameri-|’s, The re xix victories | ason. Standard in Quality and Alway Satisfactory Sluggers were busy in the American the Tiger-Indian and | engagements Ty rallic prevented | i SPECIAL SUITS Made to Meanure, Can’t Be Duplicated Under %35, three-run ninth inning. CHICAC April A T Circus Solly) Hofman, v-u,.:m.\:z"m ¢ e and | fleider from 1906 to 1619, has retured | MISCELLANEOUS BASE BALL. being | to base Lall «r nine years in the, Catholic University, Maryland, 3 (12 stickers | CoMmerc world. He v couch a ™ high school team here JAC ONVILI ST Furman Florida State Coll a Noire Dume, 4: Enlamazoo. 3 I e | l:‘lo_rida League Opens Today. ': —| season ey Swartlkmore, Pennsylvania. 6 Facksonville i Auburn, 4: Washiogton and Lee, . Petersbirg at Tampa S e i R E R f 4000000000000 “By Their Clothes, Men Judge Men” R routed him, the first occasion being o o 5 Louix. one of the closing serie games la A * vear. Heilmann of the Tigers made | [ A f"‘l e bs ToMORROwW. | four hits in four times at bat i & i } oL z ngton at Fastay,| Babe Ruth turned in his sccond home q! . 14 q - N New York at Phita. | run_of the season when the Yanks| g & CADYD KL Loui at. St. Louis at Cievelind. | drubbed the Red Sox. 8 to 4. The hit| A Jetrait at Chicago. Detroit at Chicago. | was poled off Russell in the seventh \ Results of Yesterday’s Games. |inning, scoring Peckinpaugh ahead and | —made so perfect ¥n con- ¢ W Sant 6: Philadelphi breaking 1—1 tie. In the eighth, . . B Gl & When Thon W1 tuth were.on the pahs. |8 § struction and style that they 3 New York. Meusel 16 the game with a ci A . " (rmiay. | eUIL drive. Quinn wax not hit hara by & $ command attention. You « 3 | the Red Sox until the ninth. l s 5 NATIONAL LEAGUE want just such a suit—let us % .. Pet White Sox at Home Today. § make it for you. Our prices - New York. 4 1 .800 Cincinna CHICAGO. April 21-—Preparations are ri g 2 oy o iaia were made for a record-breaking e right. Boston ... 4 3 St Lonis... 1 4 ‘e |crowd at the first home game today of | GAMES TODAY GAMES ToMoRRow | the Chicago White Sox, with Detroit | at Brooklyn Phila. at Brooklsn. e T Clncinaed 't B ea Leads Princeton Matmen. i “The Tailor Wh e Tailor o Makes % Results of Yesterday’s Games. Robert Morrison of Chicazo has, § Stylish Clothes - Philadelphia, = been elected captain of the 1921-19: Chicago, wrestling team at Princeton Univer- rk. 9: Bo He is the intercollegiate cham- 5 ° ® ° Cincinnati, in the 145-pound cla: b Sreessees (o DRESS UP. WANT SNAP? SAY IT WITH TAILORING! WANT SAVING? THAT'S YOURS, TOO, IN THE BERNSTEING i | Taitlored-to-Measuzre SPRING SUITINGS $35 $45 $55[ OUR OWN CUTTERS—OUR OWN SHOP —MR. BERNSTEIN PERSONALEY ON THE FLOOR—THESE PUT STYLE IN YOUR SPRING SUIT HERE. SEE Jack DBernstein 814 F STREET NW in- 1319-1321 F Street E April 21 STORE NEWS 1319-1321 F St. | Exclusive Washington Representatives of “Stratford Clothes” as tailored by the makers of our clothing, have a pretty general appeal. They’re populag with the young business man, the proféssional man. the clubman and the chap of high school age. Any discriminating young man is quick to appreciate the smartness and dignity of Hoot Mon Tweeds. ‘We have thoroughly anticipated the big demand that there is bound to be for Hoot Mon Tweeds this season, and no matter, what your size, taste or desire, you will find it easy ! to secure just the suit you want in our large stock.

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