Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
B SPORTS." THE TVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, TUESDAY, MAY 10, 192T. SPORTS.’ Nationals Are Facing Indians Today in First East vs. West Tests of 1921 Campaign e e e M __——__—_/—*—h———_‘————.——— GRIFFS FACING HARDEST |"het Ma» Happer, |CANARIES S| FOR WIN [_5uxts awo smvues | ARROW A. C. TOBE BUSY MAJOR LEAGUE PILOTS | in Base Ball Today — ASSIGNMENT AT OUTSET| susnicax i 1o, |Oct an Farly Start 0F Dahle of e S 0E T2 | Wine Wil Open Compaign Against USE VARYING TACTIC + w. > e 5 played. No_ tracs of a lik rd . Machinists in Commercial B be founa,TH® ©f & lko record | pory View Team, Then Hold " i 13 Ji Aust ing T BY GEORGE CHADWICK. League Engagement. 1 UL Bith g Browns served Meeting Tomorrow. fi T lcast a month is necessary to get a real line on the tactics of bi BY DENMAN THOMPSON. LEVELAND, May 10—An accurate line on the relative power of ! ‘ east vs. west will be obtained in the first intersectional clash of R. P. Andrews Paper Comp: ed honestly and faithfully, and it is| Arrow Athletic Club will be a busy league managers. A first series in base ball usually tedls little. I iits to an 11-to- tough to have an arm broken at the|organization tomorrow. Besides open % . i . : _ the season opening today, with the Griffimen guests of the Indians nins vietory over the j twlligne of his career, perhaps retir |jgpits season with 1 game against finds the "‘“fh"s I’“*_‘ back from spring training camps. nervou s T g ) of Machinists' 3 ing hi ermanently. & ¢ o ¥ : st i here, the Yankees in Detroit, the Red Sox in Chicago and the Athletic Wil 5 I atanies : the Park View nine on the Monument a']"l mellow. Even the old “""}“,"‘ fidgety. Most important of all, th in St. Louis. Judging the strength of the rivals by the manner in which it hle for three runs in the Th-,v‘f. -»vltn._,.:'t.:t- balls and notijot at 5 o'clock in the afternoon players very often are not sufficiently conversant with signs and play : b distributed in the league 1d indicate the invad Totg and continued their wal-) the W3¢ rinners in the Southern AS-| wiy nola a meeting at 8 o'clock to go at the game right. ihs are dis in the league standing would indicate the invad- f t0 tolalea clevens X ) =7, the; clubs are distributed i Lie A all thet huh ane e Resulis of Yesterday's Games: | L e e tetalen | ) night at 408 10th street southeast | OnCe in a first series Chief Mesers, when the team has the pitchers to ke x;xg outfits yv.”.' , chan m“ o :( S nyu' (":nrcv.u;‘nk he 3 RIS i » in cheek until the last When| Many a day has joined the silent|Boys desiring to afliliate with the Ar-|threw to second base to catoh a run- | lhv-flnl:\( e .m;:L z;l;v f you can't g days they will be performing on alien soil, bu ere are reasons. aside Detroit, 7; St. Tomis, 5. S ioine last se jority since the Sox we: s are urged to attend the meeting. good pitching it is dangerous. from the fact that the westerners will have the advantage of appearing | of the \Worla mosed out|the bottom of the ladder Independent Athletle Club wants a | mon D o T e MO iny | Connie Mack and Wilheri Robinso ir own lots and that they boast in Cleveland a club which undoubt- | Masons the 5-to-3 Fraternal|berry time. game for next Sunday. Teams inter-|T4n™ . | haven't varied their tactics a shado on their NATIONAL LEAGUE. edly is the class of the circuit, which incline critics to the belief that | N = cont A pair of runsi (o o hol s s ested should communicate with Man-|however, and because the second H&';l mem u'vhfnr the run in sl v will em he sixty battles 2 PR A cided the game. e sveland, the - more victories to their credit than will be shown by the seaboard dele- S Iuihes. pitehing for Express, held| that Cleveland ever had beheld, even i Park Midgets will meet x‘f"(fimln the runner on third was chased back | Mitchell has boen letting his batte ation L Jortation to twe hits and won|the wind paused in curiosity to|%:3¢ ook With D aene €T | when he tried to score. Years after | hit out in Boston, and it has got hi 5 o Tige! a R 1 >, 6 to 0, in the Terminal . |greet it s b 53 the ohief had a good laugh about the | Nothing because he can't make enou These reasons are the Tigers andy = i —— 1 2 IS gue. He fanned - M@nager Wrenn of the Owls would | runs to keep up with the raid which Rrowns. “Cobb's Junglemen. led 0| | How Griffs Are Hitting | 5 : R e aanon| By mutual conent the name of the |1ike to hear from the Yosemites. Tho | Play. made constantly on his weak pitchi Harry Heilmann, Who is showing the | | Ty Are Saing | ; 3 base ball inclosure at Cleveland has|Owls beliove they can give the valley Speaker Likes Saerifice. staff. way to all the sticksmiths with more | | . AP, H, SB.RBL Pet. “d Commeres, | been changed from League Park to|boys a good trouncing. iy s than half as many hits as the number | | ST T Govermment. Tengae, | Dunn 1. It the Clevelands fail to| Washington Eagles defeated Shep.| After the first three series it is Dsneves AMinta i Dp. of tin | i 50 Ber Ot e Wanen win the championship in some- | herd Athletic Club, 1 to 0. May and |Possible to gather information about | Bill Donovan with the Phillics h and with Tyrus hi i g 32 ARt et ! body will caill it Dunn brown. Leowe starred for the winners. the shifts and plays of managers. |been mixing. He uses sacrifices and ball for an average much ex q A o 3 ditors easv ‘ i 2 g b = batting a nd may be ex 2 0 Results of Yesterday's Games. » oo Hayden® of i |ter ¥ his. Ty's| 38 O by Cinotti that cleared filled | FTOM mulling over the srores and | seems to warrant, and If he had thrq ed to make life miserable for vi nel o 5 il i hits | ““‘l‘ i ;::Zl'f;xe’;rs s in the eighth won for the Bells. | reading the accounts of the games or four better players in certain pos| ers ¢ i sojourn in the 30 o Telpt H B ok S-to- revolutionary. old days . i i S ' tiol he woul 1] 1 worrie 3‘:&‘ '\';d \l\?:fn\ Sk ' 2 0 Philadelphia i P s an St “ M march into @ town with twe pli eminole Athletic Club wants games | it i8 apparent that Speaker isn't Mf"su“{ h;fl]"i hs}; hal :;;;: n.uT - 3 - i i 13 2 ——— weas of Treasury watloped | and seven cast-offs and inform every h teams in the thirtecn (ourteen- | varying his style of attack much from | 0T |10 3 KO ” e Bae b fanCiWorking macotnly | 10 o actrents ithouteiocd for strong for base stealing in 1920, de- | T e is good enough for hi & as his gan; ork 19 6 nent P potn | — _ 2 fons v now, as is indicated by the fact i 38 . U, O | To Veach has fallen the pa . g spite the fact that he had some speed hamplonship playing th the Browns gathered forty-two rumsj , 00 in_the 11-to-5 colored De-|0BCe Was so ably filied by Sam Craw- Princeton Elects Stinson. on his toam. and he doesn't seem to (i TU] AT and Trasting 1o Mk e ey e | | 1 irimental Leacuetenmagomiont [Hax L s ota il ‘isers | Edward Stinson, r., of Raltimore has e e e kg fmy [men on the bascs. He has never va ay, a $ a pretty | st H 2.2 ilton_made a triple and two singles| {obb. | o s s [been elected captain of the Princeton | unnecessary ris o ried his style. Lised fact tha: both the Grittmen and | | 0 Game at Kendall Green Tomorrow for (00, Davis of the Josers hit af that Crawford could read CopLE| BT o e toam. | Stinson was recently jear. He is plaving an oocasional | " Guorgn Gibson In Pittshurgh. with es _conal homeelves Tucky . homer nind, : e ot her Sam hever |chosen to lead the Tiger swimmers |hit-and-run, but more often goes aft- ever to win a battle in the Mound|yjen with the colors in France and Will Be Second of Season \n‘“y-gpfl\.;y)z.}]}.dn;7:,.::;‘::?‘{;'1‘ p T 2 Hluse awimmera | e ‘r“m Dltan mose st :?;"o'rmr'n:m;:hnf“d fantor hail thr city. s he 15 u le to withstand the ® . . iag Eod e -< |the varsity foot ball eleven. when it looks as if a score is coming. . paghs Granting that the White Sox. whom | climate in the Between Teams. “Rabbit” Is Being Feted. started one of his unexpected plays. . 1o Sobb tr ta;r}uz and tun quite a lot g:'o':_“e‘rlg’r"fzf‘" "m“"“hff":‘n');"n:‘:' ha western critics have doped as the mo- Y o satholic University’s ba ci RBOSTON, May 10.- Abhit" Maran- o of Detroit a great hand e is always likaly to try it when he i = 2 dimm_theoueh which Connic Jimms O°Neill, the National short-| Catholic Universit’s ball team willl (1" yrned o Hraves' field, Tormer | 1o dg. & 10t of hitting in one day. Heads Basket Ball Body. on the bases himself, because he has| With the speed which he posscsses can use both to good advantage. Th he 18 not afraid to g0 after runs wit s ; i s a rush when the opportunity ope nooting at Baltimore, but it 100ks 43| Cket ball rules committee. George | BW to be E1ving a signal to some of his | TN VA3 G, G007 GLT Wia tea the Orfoles is yearning for i 1 Hepbron of New York has been | other playe ry it tha ix-year lease on the cellar apartment | stop, who will be canceled, prove a sof {of pneur for the N . there certai e { season that no others in ht. and_the outlook | ance for uffered such a severe attack | carry a good record L after the close of 1ast|(ajaudet at Kendall Green tomorrow | day, wei life hung in the bal- R p i | Pittsh will not be abls to m_(y,“m, rnoon, and from what the latter! 1..‘,“. v"r. to its 2me With | <cone of his shortstop activities, to- — it confidence in his own ability as the lead n the alien uniform of the| AN the International League is e liam I B ot vew Tork has|man in a play of the sort. He scems shortstop here is the chest of the ball this season. 1iis brother Steve of | elub has shown during the seasor the | polgs 1 cem of = Lee Fohl, with St. Louts, is playing a | has shown inclination to score bloc Just one week azo the Griffs he Indians says Jimmy never has re- | Erookl ought to add their | 1oen1 f. day | Johnmy Sumes is still pitching and |Made secretary and Ralph Morgan of | yery conservative game and not getting | Of them ever since the season began. only 39 points in the rear of the In-|gained his weighing only | Prior t _morthern | 1 g " Ihatting in the Southern. To Ilose|Philadelphia ireasurer. much result, dus somewhat to the fact| Rickey of the Cards. Hugh Dufty dians: now 164 points separate them. | ninety eventy under v Catholic U inny Sugss a tidal wave would | that hin team is ot batting together. the Red 5;:( u,:d I,}fl’ens;m of the w‘:u Whera the Griffs last wee normal 1 eleven of fifteen PR fiom ihé oD 12 he could met the: tom of Bis batting Sox play the sacrifice heavily, so do with Chicago for the poo ‘pected, e tour it triumphed have to t v ¥ Ruth Hits Another One. £ he could get the top 3 winning onjy one of five gam X ‘Tribe dropped but a 1= con faneed e Ve TIGERS TROUNCE BROWNS e o ove| BEFORE RAIN ENDS GAME |- There is gait at which {tomorrow. fi 'with the aid of a home life pre- |and Bob Meusel t homers as the Tt's hard to tell what Huggins ia try- | who come to his rescue with long hit server. New Vork Americans defeated the |ing. One thinks he might use the sacri- | If you have a slugger to follow t Toronto Internationals yesterday, 4 |fice. Ho goes after runs like McGraw— | good waliter, part of the combinatic atother| to 3. a grand slam or nothing. That's good of winning pennants is in your gras team RE land when it receded Johnny would order on the bases he has good clean- McBride of Washington. The laj ¢ "."lSI(E N tprobably be around At floating | TORONTO, May 10.—“Babe” Ruth|up men to help them. |named has two or three hard cloute: Hohl I J R at \mn;n\: - - x Tris Speaker has signed it “has an even Stops McCarthy in Second Round. I‘,';"”"" D lot of diffc 1 the trav- eling. In the cast Wash on had to ‘,";‘ ”"‘\"" & '”"\‘ 8 "“'PI: {chance with the Midshipmen. Ti Mike Gibb Finishes M | called Indizn contend with comparatively few for-|to their wir merican { jatter fell before Johns Hopkin ike Gibbens Finishes Maguire led Indiay he only Indlans | midable boxmen. Boston had | Leagne y 3 s got!aucient rival of the old line institu- U [in Alabama o mln(:" ma;zh;nmoqz New York had two, Mays ar Y toa and if rain had | tion. at Baltimore Saturday and noth in Sixth | the Hooch tribe, ai y st | Piercy, and the W a couple. | not interfered in the first half of the |ing would plense Maryland more than . - | extinet. Perry and Ind cith inning. they would have handed | 1o the Rlack and Blue | Minn., May 9—Bil have four first-class hurlers on « trowns a severa drubbing. Four | [ee the College Parkers' Bl ut o o ils and Uhle roit ru ere chased across in the | moundsman, probably will start b el knocked out Tommy ITECH NINE HAS CONTEST th before the deluge. At that, the | against Navy. ably in that order. | s made_enough in seven sessions | Playing against Bethany College at Bagby and Covey have been in gilt-! to win, 7 to 5. |the 'Hilltop vesterday, Georgetown e | A edge shape since the start of cam-| Cullop, who started on the slab for |won casily, 18 to 0. Bissonetts and| pHILADELPHIA, May 9—Mike| Tech High School's nine, runner-up | paign, and the other two demonsirat-| the Erowns, lasted two and two-thirds | Reynolds did the pitching for the|Gibhons of St. Paal knocked out|In the championship series, will go| ed in’their last starts that they are|innings, and was reached for seven hits | locals. One hit made off the former | grankic Maguire of Willlamsport, 1., |to College Park tomorrow _afternoon in top form, Mails bianking the White|and six runs. Bolund also suffered |during his six-inning performance |jqe the sixth of their sched. | for @ game with the University of Sox in impressive fas | punishment. The Browns kept pecking ituted the visitors' safety total |ylcq eight-round bout with a puneh | Maryland freshmen. Play will start | while TUhle pitched jaway at Oidham, but could not make | getown made fourteen safe wal-iiy the stoma at 4 o’clock. Eastern and Business are | against the Gleasons Sunday untiljup ground. lops, Sheedy, Hyman and Kenyon get- | battling in Central stadium th 4 latternoon _in the last of the titular| were hopelessly swamped, and | | ting homer sed up, the final count b | The was scheduled to e India have L 1 st | 3 2. formidable staff of flingers in the cir- PHILS GET EVEN BREAK | Cubs Sell Pitcher Fuhr. uit rehe ro but Thelr srensn by IN GAMES WITH ROBINS | xassas crrs. o, day 10.—he M heavyweisnis ") WITH MARYLAND U. CUBS L kY on team tackled . G P ton Unive jday in the tional League. The cir- ‘moat clubs, jans are | CUit champions took the first contest, : | not bothered by any type of | 7 10 2, but lost the second, 2 to 3, when | Penn State Nine Unbeaten. | PITTSBURGH, 2 10.—Kid Wil- pitching, Speaker having two sets of | the Phils drove in a run in the tenth | n /o (OrLEGE, Pa., May 10.—Un.|liams, former bantamweight cham i inning. atche 0 et 13 gunners h he employs according [IMGRE. | e wild throw of | defeated fo date. and with a record|pion. has been matched to meot Pats vesterday and won, § to I I pps HiT A 7 U ting the ba t @ pace seco e p local ¢ of American Associa- | held: the. F xmen to ‘Six e Ul T ’ ) ,5/,(# that of the Tigers, three of them— i, Preaking even in a double bill with | tion has purel 1 Oscar Fu left- nd fanned tweive, while his ik Burns, nd Wood—being listed | the Phillies cost the | handed piteher, from the Chicago Na- tes swatted ten sufeties. sonnrm Mo, beers with” mharka] BOINLS in the standing of clubs yester- | tismaa | { and 419, |CAPS’ GAME WILL HELP | "SALVATION ARMY BUDGET Lr:vrl,g;i.k:;:nd <r\g;:;;g ??;}:{dh::d'(r;‘(s Konetchy’s bunt gave the Dodgers |Of ¢leven straixht victories, the Penn S\f‘rll'];&‘ Pittsburgh, at ten rounds| Thursday's game at AT‘m'ir‘un Jimieson, Johinston and Smith per- | three tailies in the eighth inning for a | SLA4° Varsity nine lres ot 1t ol ay: & _ Lfi,‘,,‘;;{;”:(‘; ‘a,‘,t;;f“séé.‘r‘;“{\i‘é o e form, and when a southpaw is facing|decision in the opening encounter, | : 5 ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. ; Lest colored professional nines of the 5 country, will be playeld as a benefit aining for his champion-| e, (he'Salvation Army. A generous h Georges Carpentier in | orijon " of the proceeds will be uly 2 | turned_over to Rudolph Jo: = man of the exccutive commitlee pre- tin, the Arm; budget to the people of Washington, Tickets were | placed on le at Spalding’s 14th strect store today. them thoy eive way-to B Burns | Doubles by Causey and Meusel scored | Lha%, Will have considcrable bearing and Wood, in left, at nd in | the Phillies’ winning run in the second | {1, ope: h P tomorrow, | work_in t right, respectively. contest. followed by, games with New Yori|ship bout The ‘P‘r;'e"(‘:‘?:.;";; »"t';l';::m“"m ! University, Yale and Lehigh. | Jersey City J was illustrated in the last two games| Cicotte Gives $10,000 Bond. - 2 played by the dTibe, ABainst 4 pairy CHICAGO, May 10.—Bond of s10,000| Ball Player in Fatal Brawl. White Sox Saturday the Indians with| 8 Peen deposited in the state at-| FORT WORTH. Tex I office by attorney for Eddie| Street of San A n oy has b their string of southpaw pitche £ A GUIsHE collected _fourteen hits for twent :) tte, indicted in connection with wounded. Jimm ‘,.;‘:“:?Qfllri’, bases. Sunday, when a eouple of; the 1919 base ball scandal. was seriou s yes ho oot off To 2l § the first inning,| rallied in the | portsiders parformed for Gleason, the right-handed club artill the ¢ hoth !uortl_. cat ort Wort { Texas League e received minor | | injuries. in on e erowd- 1 downtown s rinth, | land line-uy Indians Release Guisto. the box, finishing with a| LEV B Ohio, May 10—Op- | wenty safetics and scve of First Basiman Lou! and, Pacifie A& ! a SRICAN ASSOCIATION. League, has been announced by the ! nea Clevelagd Americans. He had been| Haneas City, 4 Minaukee. 3. AM e Red Sox, Tigers and ically on an ev with the Nationals, a couple of them| .. ‘ . nre due to take & turable in the stand. | ¥#8sed during the world war and wus | and- . a h the teamt G _]unzsbln to stand the climate in the ng of e teams, and with the Griffs Americs League cities. ‘encountering the most formidable op- = +, 6; Ralei position of the lot right at the outset, Wimtomaion, B Danvitie, & t would appear they are due to re- . . Greensboto, 4; Durham, 3. Jinquish their precarious position of Signs Base Ball Bill. s i r“l;‘:f‘;::‘never can eIl $ base bl Sl:\CR'\MFTNTO, Calif, May 10—A FLORIDA STATE LEAGUE. - e DA 2 bill making bribery of base ball play- Daytona, 12; Tampa, 9. They may make monkeys out of the|ars or umplres or the accentance of| Tarensd. s: Jeckomriie, 1. Tribe, ju.t as they did with the Yan- “ bee Orlando, 19;" St. Petersburg, 6. kees in thelr inftlal clashes, but if| hrirog,® felony has been signed by Oriundo. 193 e this happens it will be even more of A m of Japancse wrestlers, numbering forty, under the direction of K. Sasaki, the proprietor | of the Yorodzu of Hawaii, will leave | Yokohama by the steamer Siberia| Maru, June 24. They will at first visit ' Hawali, and afterwards San lpmnmsm and southern California. PIEDMONT LEAGUE. Zbyszko Arranges Bout. L PRODUCTO is not merely a brand.name for COLUMBUS, Ohio, May 10—Stanis- : / a cigar. It means far more+than that, does SOUTH ATLANTIC LEAGUE. Gov. Stephens. 1 = an upset to the dope than their feat| ————— tans Tyigk 3 shamplon b of taking four of five games from B Golumbia, 18: Charleston, 8. aas Zoyscko.World champlon heavy: 4 (5 Producto.”” [y New York. i Lookouts Get Cunningham. { Greemrile. 7 Avguua, € WelRht wrentior, has been matshed | § A El #To a great army of smokers it with George Kotsonaros for a bout here tomorrow might. $ ; means ‘“Real Enjoyment”—the greatest enjoyment 1 ¢ that cigar smoking can give—a distinctive, satisfy- ing smoke, obtainable only from the finest tobacco. It means a remarkable blend of choicest Havana —a blend with a character different from any other —a blend that can’t be copied. It practically is aswured that Jim| CHATTANOOGA. Tenn. May 10— Bagby will be the flinger to face the|Chattanooga has purchased Pitcher| Nationals this afternoon, but Mec-| Cunningham from Detroit. | PBride will have to watch his h 1 warm up before he mukes a choice. | i Johnson and Mogridge are eli "‘:l What's What in Base Ball from consideration, not yet | EY BILLY EVANS ' Babe Ruth was asked for the short. | est definition of a base hit. “A guy's | pay voucher,” was the reply. S SOUTHERN ASSOCIATION. New Orleans, 5: Littie Rock, 3. Birmingham, 5: Chattanooga, 0, Nashville, 3; Atlanta, 0. ;" Mobil Annualfi i"afr and Spring Races Hagerstown, had suffcient rest vious exertions. by Schacht, | Portsmonth Richmond Ttk | thar used by | -header is played, which | Cleveland [z [ game is o regularly schedule 3 < 1 (RAIN OR SHIN Ry = i i ino—: e s | Ea,for T FpiATy "”:‘ |3 R s, PARMucucs Synicon =S It means quality in the making—a smooth, even in the race th o P s W kes o base y ., 10; o8 May 17-18-19-20-21, Inclusive 3 . . . = % o weme ¢lub othe i before an.| Oglethorpe. 8. : T2 RUNNING RACES DAILY—7 smoking cigar in shapes and sizes as distinctive -as . ppens? 5 i i Purses—$400 to $500—Purses the National Lea s with the batter | Asroplazes the blend will be hes i mronbe on to steal INTERNATIONA Exhibition by Now Maryland Stats 1| & mext Octo home, what is Police; azricultural attractions; good E, The Nationais draw w: e Al e Gato cpon § . Rboen 2 Yes, “El Producto™ means quality—and-whatis provs ?.,’.‘,,?(f;‘.‘-& oy ) K | Teadmg 00 Foronte, & | Ten s and more, it means quality that never varies. The next for th nfurling of the r P’ y ze o Loe the wnturiing ot the 5 v s et sl b e Sirons et | 77200y price from 10c “‘El Producto’’ you smoke will prove-that. notable throng is expect ur ven ounces, while Ruth's bat weighs fifty- out for the ccremonics. y i The first game is always as the The ot enthusiasts § regularly scheduled game with & doubleBeader . D. Loughran Co,, Inc. ! , | "4 The proper batsman fs al called out, ry v ' whon an ‘et of an improper bateman 1s dis (o) ) 1 ] 14TH AND PENNA. AVE. WASHINGTON, D. C. s r |a in timo. The improper batsman is re- B frem: the basss. Our Beginners” Outfit a catcher so interferes, th it to first and the ruzner tr: 0, is grauted that base regardless of | The Tnd to the ¢ consists of three clubs— 3rassie, Mid Iron and Put- ter—one Caddy Bag and Ball. The outfits are not claborate, but meet all the requirements of the novice. The prices start at— $11.00 Let us show them to you. Roberts’ Photo Service— Kodaks and Cameras, Films and Plates, Paper and Supplies. Six-hour developing and printing. Let us show you what a great difference printing your negatives on Velox Paper will make, Velox s best, G. H. P. CIGAR CO., INC,, Philadelphia, Penna. | | | i can Leag e Ttatisn was = olc=——lolc—o—}olc} SUITED JUST RIGHT- Yes—that is the way we baild clothes. TO SUIT YOU— TO FIT YOU— and to Please You in Price. | 2 IDEMONT e Tits Fke a starched cdlar Feels like a soft collar an 2 A Distinctive New Hess Shoe At %7.50 —that portrays the last word in style— andlthefvery highest measure of value in Zephyrweight quality footwear. Shown in black and the “Everyt YOUNG MENS STYLE wanted shades of tan. 3 rg::ng’or i That tve mhlum is s W. Fu Rm e ey o ooy 8 (B ' 77 Come up and see us and get a suit you and your friends will admire. Grady & Webb Gentlemer’s Tailors 1109 14th St. N.'W. Just above L street Pol——lol——]o]| » i 1, : : 5 i \