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S PORTS. THE 'EVENING' STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, MONDAY, DECEMBER '3, 1923, SPORTS. b14 astern Elevens Lead in Intersectional Play : Trouble Is Brewing in Big Ten TAKE 24 GAMES, LOSE 11, WITH TWO ENDING IN TIE | Midwest and Southwest Teams Do Well, But Grid- men From South Fare Badl | | { {No. 26~TEN THOUSAND —Far West Is Beaten in Only Game in Which It Figures. By the Assoclated Pres: of the thrills of the 1923 grid N Easterners will not soon when in two weeks eleven which had taken Notre Dam call with bitterness Gonzaga's defeat All told, forty-seven contests in the land have been played this se Eastern elevens won fourteen o nents and won ten and tied two with middle westerners, scoring a total ts. to the combined southern and middle western total of 308. of 844 poi tern elevens won all four ved against south- lost the two t middle Midd a4 two we of m rn teams won fiv cir games with ez their three g elevens, their two soythwestern elevens and + with a far western team. rern arrays won six tmes played St taeir three game n and lost their uthwestern elev able on the forty with four games A seet contests Totnts Points | Won. Lost. Tied. ied. for. agast 544 91 224 East Southwest Middle wes South 183 Far west 7 Gamex Attract Throngs. rd crowd I the Rec feat and keen competition throughont the e evens stood out to prem ir; Colorad ntain unbeaten g three” formiduble ¢ R e opinion of of critics, although many powerful ‘Corne'l eleven, unbea years, on an equal foot! the Blue Honors among the b western conference wer Michigan and lilinofs, t &howed clean siates, while in the Mis conference Nebraska and more undefeated aggreza- . ended their seasons In a tie for ten™ of the dlvided b; th of wh for southwestern - hy both univer- \ some. ne ¥ . last year's title “holder.” which pmors to Vanderbilt. the Southern conference Wash on and Lee and Vanderbilt dis- 4 title . neither being o WAGGLING OF GOLF CLUBS | HELD SIEN OF WEAK PLAY| BY FAIR PLAY. EW YORK. December 3.—C city, wh an to play when N cours 1o city, when Mc EW YORK, December 3—Intersectional foot ball furnished many defeated West Point erners will remember the visit of Syracuse to son. one | Mike Kelly of the Chicagos of 1882 was known as “Ten- Thousand-Dollar” Kelly. Two different ten thousands entered into his career. At the time the professional base ball players re- voltéd from the National League and organized . the National Brotherhood of Base Ball Play- ers, declaring that the public wanted the player and not the organization—it was really a fight for the control of profes- sional base ball—A. G. Spalding, who was always a staunch sup- porter of organized base ball, of- fered Kelly $10,000 and a three- years' contract if he would quit the brotherhood and return to the league. Nobly and melodra- matically, Kelly spurned the offer. Kelly was one of Anson’s Chi- cagoans. He was a tricky play- He always sought out the weak spots in the game not pro- tected by rules and he worked to make vulnerable those weak spots. Himseli a great team player, he sought hard to make team work an art—and he sought iron sea forget Notre Dame’s eastern journey nd Princeton; middle west- Nebraska, to defeat an e's measure; far westerners will re- by Detroit. 1 volving teams from rival sections of on. f twenty games from southern oppo- under a system of selection by sports writers, the Commodores were pleked Lest eleven and awardel tne s trophy s “Golden Bear: and twice tied In st four seasons, were monarchs of | all they surveyved on the Pacific coast, though the eleven was the victim of | one of the season’'s surprises when | held to a scoreless tie by Nevada.| In the Pacific northy conference, | ashington Univers: finished at | the top | Chief among the upsets was raska’'s vic over Notre I 5 conqueror P'rinceton, West Point | tanding in- | un- the | on; of @ Te cont the “wonde e until it met reverse h its goal lne previously uncros its eastern championship tiered by Colgate in another | the Orange re-| prestige by downing | er. Nebraska Plenty of Star Players. A host of indi , with an d 138 mpared | ia mes, as ¢ 2 with which F spectacu s nd tie recor George tann, brilliant Cornell quarterback, | at_the top in the east. | w attendance records in practi- | every area marked the rapid | st taken by the gridiron sport. With close to a million witnessing | | the western conference games, more than that number accommods! 1y five of the larger eastern s and generally increased figures e where, it is probable that the total ttend: at all college games was | to 5.000,000 for the year. 400,000 See Fenn Play. | » ! . _playing all nine of {its o Pranklin Field, alons | eluse ew stadia | Dedication of totals, hetped ine new structures incl mouth and anoth where th i to T30 | Yale " bowl. I n s in the | 1 with | asions. which on two of the veteran golfers of New York | St. Andrew was the “most wonderful | yrristown became the center of sum- ONTARIO. AS THEY LOOKED ! WORLD AMATEUR CHAMPIONS -0 THE STAR’S PANORAMA OF BASE BALL A Pictorial Highlight History of the National Game (Copyright, 1923, in U. S, and Great Britain by North American Newspsper Alliance. -All rights reserved.) DOLLAR KELLY AND HOW THE SECOND UM- PIRE CAME INTO THE GAME. to demoralize the team work of others. As captain of his nine at one time the rules entitled him to take any player’s position at a moment’s notice. A man at the bat knocked a foul toward third and over the third baseman’s head toward the bench where Kelly sat. “You are out of the game,” yelled Kelly to his fielder, “I'm in your place,” and caught the ball. But a more tricky thing still occurred when, during a game, while Kelly was on first, a hit sent the next man to first, fol- lowed by the umpire. Kelly, clearing the first bag, sped across the field to third, without going to second, and claimed his posi- tion, since the umpire did not see his sly manoeuver. This proved conclusively that the diamond was too large for one umpire to watch. A second umpire was the result of Kelly's trick. Kelly really got his name from the fact that whgn, in 1887, he was transferred from Chicago to Boston, the transaction was made at a cost of $10000. Players are bought on a larger scale today. There’s a little book written by THE TEN - THOUSAND - DOLLAR BEAUTY OF 188: , BUT WALKED ACROS: FIELD TO THIRD—AND GOT AWAY WITH IT. Kelly—stories of the diamond— full of personal experiences. , He had lots of them. Tomorrow : “Base Ball as a Tourist.” THIS 1S THE MAPLE LEAF BASE BALL CLUB OF GUELPH, WHEN THEY POSED FOR HARPER'S WEEKLY OF SEPTEMBER 12, PFANN LEADS EAST IN GRIDIRON SCORING NEW YORK, December 3.—Capt. George Pfann of Cornell, with the most touchdowns and the greatest total of points; Sunny Sundstrom of the same college, with the most points after touchdown, and Capt. Bill Mallory of Yale, with the most field goals, were the three leading | scorers in their respective depart- ments In eastern foot ball in the sea- son just ended. Pfann made fifteen tc booted elght points but no fleld goals, for elght points. six more than Tryon of Colgate, Hazel of Rutgers and Nardacel of West Virginia, who tied for second place. CORNELL ONLY ELEVEN TO SCORE 300 POINTS Cornell is the only foot ball team among the ranking colleges of the country which scored more than 300 points during the total season, its total being 320. West Virginia was second on the list with a total of 286. C. C. N. Y. and Villanova both failed to |score a single point during the cam |palgn. Among the teams that passea the "200-mark, with their totals ana their opponents’ totals, were the fol- lowing Cornell. .. W. Virgiiia Notre Dume. Holy Cross. . Rutgeis Byracuse Army. CARPENTIER READY FOR BATTLE IN U. S. chdowns and touchdowns, 1 total of ninety. 220 2 L2 270 L 260 287 236 Colgate Yale. V. M Marylacd, .. Washngton Dartmouth. .. 233 73 Jl230 a8 224 23 214 56 200 37| o202 B4l NEW YORK, December 2—A cable- gram has been received by Tex R from Georges { heavyweight, saying he ¥ to come here now ! Carpenticr said he would met either tke Me orld champion in | pentier's on: G Tunney. der of the Hu | Greb. from wh ¢ regained it lor Battling Siki, who wrested th | world erown from Carpentier and lost it to McTigu LYNCH IS RISKING TITLE IN FIGHT WITH COULON, ARK. N. J, Dacember 3—The ¢ hampionship | cet nch | bout New Orleans Abe Gold- | WRESTLE TOMORROW. Joe Turner will g0 to the mat with | {Johnny Meyere of Chicago In t attr: BY SOL M RY little in the way of new foot ball has come to light this season, but the play this fall has proved conclusively the fact that flense t that offense is of little value unless {varied. The t s h have de- | cables with Rome, as they say in dip- | the balit a little bit tempting. | good or so. | for a year, who is golng to get very | How Foot Ball Is Played CONFERENCE GRID LISTS ARE NOT WELL ARRANGED Dissatisfaction Is Caused by Some Teams Getting Only Three Games in Title Circuit While Others Have a Half Dozen. BY LAWRENCE PERRY. EW YORK, December 3.—Conditions that may eventually make for feeling among institutions sufficiently serious to disrupt it de- veloped out of the annual meeting in Chicago of faculty repre- sentatives of the western conference colleges. At least this is the im- pression the writer gets from opinions of big ten alumni in this city As the outcome of the general adjustment of schedules certain im- portant institutions have a minimum of conference contests, while other universities are very well fixed in this matter. It does not seem logical that Minnesota and Wisconsin, where a revival of foot ball prestige i in progress, should be satisfied with but three conference games Michigan, Ohio and Chicago have six. Illinois has not done much better with four, but she picked the Michigan plum for the opening of her | new two-million-dollar stadium—the formal dedication, rather—on Octo- ber 18 of next year, while the Wolverines have also agreed to come to Urbana the following year. DEMPSEY-SPALLA GO IN ITALY PROBABLE BY FAIR PLAY. NEW YORK, December 3. spalla will country for some the swath he is second and third who, incidentally, and eighth here. His claims as heavyweight cham- pion of Europe are questioned, of course. by the fragile-jawed Beckett. who. in his frequent knockouts by | Carpentier, has lost nothing but the ght-heavy title. But make no mistake, Spaila is the king pin in_point of popularity in Ttaly. Spain, Portugal and ever where outside of France, where they know what a real battler looks like Mariano Barberisi, a* well touted | lian. fell before Spalla’s fists in an the other night. and since Bar- w, looked upon as a regular mixe minio’s fame has increased There | sper that one of the reasons for Jack Dempseyv's reported plan to go to Europe late this win- ter is due to the lure of an attractive offer from Italian promoters to come to Italy and meet Spalla. It is known that Kearns has been exchanging Tltnoie dropped Minnesota Purdue and will take on an inter- setional opponent, the Navy, in all probability. Northwestern, Indiana, Purdue and Towa have four games | againet conference elcvens. An ab- | solutely “altruistic arrangement o | échedules would see each member | of the conference provided with as | many games againit fellow mem- . but_complications due to a natural desire to stage at- from the stand- and minio ot jbe | DOUSHC it ”,”. | pout rivalry and the con- month: . despite | gucment conflict of ¢S serves to cutting among the |pre”ent anything adequate that raters o — | mIg7it be done in this direction. —ouis t/ Burope AN for Wisconsi ceems ould rate seventh | havs suffered unju through disqualification of star lineman, Gerber, just when the {important games were at hand. The big ten representatives now have declared him to be an amateur and eligiblo to play foot ball. Naturally, it he |18 eligible to play in 1924 he wan eligible to play last November. It is too bad to the Harvard phychology much on tap this season. Down in Princeton many noted the sagging manner in which Jenkins and Me- Glone conducted themselve: when they were being borne off the field in the Princeton game-—although their trouble was twisted knees in both cases. And also in this game was note the ostentatious bearin to the side lines of an armful (J crutches. Among the players the was psychology, tao. In the Yale game, in the mud anl water, Neale made & very poor punt. Immediately Harvard set up an out- {e The break has was very ber! lomatic circles, and that he has found Here's the break! come! Then in unison, as though they had been coached to do it, although, in fact, it was entirely epontaneous, the Yale team raised derisive faces to their op- | ponents. “Here's the prychology stuff!’ whereat both teams broke into laug ter, In the muck of the line, it appears, a great pastime was to seize handfuls | of mud and stealthily smear the face of a back who had been tackled. Upon one occasion after Mailory had extricated his head from a hand and in turn his face from a six-inch pool of water he looked up at the Harvard man and said “You knaw I could drink a littla pool of water to save myself from drowning, but not the whole grid- tron!" |NEW ZEALAND NETMEN ENTER DAVIS CUP PLAY DBy the Assoclated Press. WELLINC s *t might be business policy for Jack to go to Italy and let Spalla make a showing, for then the echoes wonld fill the United States and th, Italian walloper would be sent forth t-haste to come here and meet champion for a million doilars The fans fall for these battles of the century like fifes. In the meantime, there is no one where Spalla held forth much excited about him (Copyright, 1928.) ETZGE) THE QUESTION. Has this season developed anything new in foot ball? saiand, Decam ber 3.1t has b ded to send a tennis team from New and to com- | | l | pete in the next Davis cup matches. | pended upon shifts and freak foot ball in order to outscore opponents | {in the past have also learned that shift plays are no longer of the value | | they used to be when the element of surprise made them so potent. The | balanced cleven, we'l coached, meets no more trouble in facing a shift than | mer and autumn attractions to an extent that it never has been since, and when the golf ball was not the agile antelope that it is now, has come out strongly against the waggler. “There is for waggling when shooting,” ke said. "It is a waste of vitality and a sign of mental weakness. Once I t~aught ! that it w as necessary to waggle as it was to make a shot. Now I am convinced that all such motion is unnecessary. { l od G lf “A golfer walks to the tee to drive| Instead of helping the — ByCHESTER HORTON__| | & te Is 8 man of convic-|Overcome his fault it adde ::‘u\ ball. If He fs a man of convic-|OVercome hia fault 1t added ons. a m There are two factors in put- tinis that should be instictive. One n who will dare line | yended and his arms waving, “to cerise necktie that had |after the thing had gone on isn ix, let the left hand and lcft fore- arm lead; the right hund should ‘ted by his wife. he will! cleven times mebody would exactly what h and all he do itx work by instinct. Hut just before you make the =t-oe look 1874. THEY LOOK AS IF THEY WERE WEARIN G BIBS, BUT IN SPITE OF THAT THEY HELD THE CANADIAN CHAMPIONSHIP FOR THREE YEARS, AND NOT ONLY CLEANED UP THE DOMINION, BUT BEAT SOME TEAMS THAT WERE MIGHTY FAST( FOR 1874), IN A TOURNAMENT AT WATER- TOWN, N. Y. THAT'S WHEN THEY HAD THE PICTURE TAKEN. NEBRASKA U. TWIRLER TO JOIN THE PIRATES LINCOLN, Neb., December 3—Verno Lewellen, captain of the Nebraska i foot ball team the past season and pitcher of the Cornhusker nine last spring, will join the Pittsburgh tionals when he completes his uni- versity work next June. He is a right-hander. in Lincoln. wagsler to to his sus- and | or His home is wei t any d be to hang fe:t Z his St. Vitus in- his will stead of curing Just Couldn’t Help It. “They bawled him out one after- n without interruption and lhr‘ poor guy nearly went to pieces. He | couldn’t stop waggling, and he couldn't | hit the ball, and his feet got Jing and his head began to wabble his neck. while his teath plaved @ castanet solo. They had to take | hold of him and stop him by sheer force or he would hava scattered himself all over the green. Thats what the practice of wagsling will do. ke a ball and knock it down fairway so far that he will have handicap raised within a week. Shows Lack of Nerve. of these wagglers. What to be? IUs two to one passes the plate in church says a harsher word in his ‘really.” If he was reading Jok on horse breeding and came to the family tree of a famous racer would read it aloud ‘sired by the sud and darned, not dammed, b: Arabella Tha 2 o it ol . i 'An eminent English critic wateh Al A condition of [ ing the younger United States golicrs, e o our wolfers 14 | commented on the fact that they | ration of our golfers is | \uiked to position, driver in hand, ! L o took a look down the course, 4 swing ! pEEierHone ches over their shoulders, batted the ball | ] hl. the :nv| hpl.«“e hu‘ l;n‘lr -"v on the center a}?d wexe on thei Yy 5 gance, ant 2 s 1md 4 e next shot. ‘Far s » o | help him get rid of it Doctor said ggling and squinting, Tl e noeietli e \xpr“:(' nd B f was as 1f you waggle it's be- 000 g Sawing wood | cause you're afraid to hit the ball been all right. but there | anq the more fearful you oecome ANy, wood to. suw Jout hitting it the safer to sav that 1 will bust it out of bounds in the tough and probably lose seve nts worth. Waggling not useless but it's costly. Th fewer lost balls where the waggling | i< “confined to ome hoochy koochy | rather than a serles of ‘em for nine; nings.” At the Sign of the Moon | datly Open Until 6 p. m. no “Wender What Merts Will Say Today ™ SPECIAL | Speed has proved to be the funda- |finally found themselves. Probably ward passes have all depended upon and much may be expected of them | or not. Notre Dame is an example of son with a 3-to-0 victory over Virginia Athletic Club for the cham- runs or passes, to the limit of lhelr‘ failed to advance beyond the 25-yard line. Aiter the first period neither | in facing a team with its formation set before the ball is snapped. | mental around which all great teams | the fault of the older coaches has J\ have rallied. Line smashing plays, |been conservatism. If 80, they have oft-tackle plays and runs and for- well learned their lesson this season, | {ment of deception in the matter of | tainly seen the light. | ldelay or threat to some other point —— ORT HUMPHREYS cleven successiully closed its 1923 gridiron sea- | |speed. It had it in all positions, and, 5 : % = 2 : | because the men knew foot ball, they | pionship of northern Virginia. The soldier team scored in the first | cou1a exceute thelr plays, whether | period, when Hayden drop-klicked a goal from the 42-yard line. The Vir- ginians made desperate attempts to pierce the Humphreys defense, but | gaining power: Big teams with 2 . J AEC slow linemen were unable to get un- side had any real scoring opportunities. der way or to make headway against | Knight Company of Alex- of the Mount Rainfer Athletic C| nents who possessed | arded the winning combina- | 21 to 0. Lewis, Hogan, Farrell L“n'h"“,?.l'i' . ” | cu mbolic of the north- Walton starred for the winners, while | mpionship. The serv- Beliman and Bauman shone for Mount made an enviable rec- | Rainier. ord this n. winning seven con- tests, losing two and tying one. They have met the strongest teams here- abouts. Virginia Athletic Club will end its season next Sunday afternoon, meeting the Mohawks at Union Park. More attention to interference was | OVERSPIN PUTT given this fall than in t s m)na.’ HITS BACK OF CUP, JUNPS BACK,AND/ DROPS INe_THE SIDESPIN PUTT KICKS OUT* Coaches worked overtime striving to get linemen into the of kle plays. Dobie probably best solved that part of the ne, thereby supplanting Warner, who held the limelight as llong as his material was of the { quality he had when first at Pitt. In the st, among the more con- servative we noted a marked tend- ency to open the As a result teams which pre were in the rut, although possessing power, A spirited match resulted Park Road Eagle-Congress Junfor fray. which ended in tie. Joe Lynch and Dunwort best for the Eagles, in the Established 1598 Heights a 7-to-7 h played Emblem Athletic Club ran rough- | shod aver the Cirele team in & 19- pound title of the Dictoi t0-0 fray. Sullivan, Fleste d|to Manager R. Kidwell f Klatta contributed to the twelve first |34 o Kidwell at downs made by the Emblems. Gage | and T. Sullivan played weil for the| losers the cup at leant twice, to per- 1it your muscies (o excite them- xelyes, instictively to the degree of force that shali be aplied to the ball. The player who studies t0o much out juxt how hord he will, or will not, hit the ball in putting s lost. The musclex have n mar- velous wense of thelr own—it In ordinarily called golt psychology —by which they excite themselves for the task to bo dome. There- fore, don't hang too long over it. The chances are that every good putt you ever made was executed was ‘ St. Albans eleven claims the 120- according Cleveland aad | for ¢ {our w “lsn’t it 80? REYEM SHOES Elevens of the Brookland and Chovy Chase clubs produced one of the best games of the season when they battled to a scoreless tie. Chevy Chase threatened to score at one B e of the game, but lacked the necessary punch. Duryee and Murphy of the Chevy Chase and Leef, Voor- fairly he be Then as he be e ——— wame a waggler. I thought himself the Players who came 3 to get nervous preme Being somewhat Ith and bad game, ient he he- tter that he he w 'r him beg: the Su- evantly. Fifth avenue says it’s “right”—and 5th avenue knows. (Copyright, 1923.) JACK BURKE TELLS: The Funniest Play 1 Ever Saw T WAS at the Town and Country Club, St. Paul. Because of the cir- cumstances attending it, I can men- tion no names of the players involved. | It came up through an argument 'in the clubhouse. A player—not the best in the party, at that—having cornered a flock - of highballs clared that, in his opinion, any fairly | competent man ought to be able to play the 125-yard tenth hole in one at least once in ten trials. The tenth hole—since forsaken for a new one— as, at that time, a tricky affair, with a nasty water hazard between it and the tee. ) There were any number of mem- bers glad to get on the green with a single stroke, let alone sink their ball. Our slightly inebriated friend grew extremely confident in his assertions and finally offered to back them with hard cash. He sald he would demon- strate the possibility of the play himself. In no time a stakeholder had sev- eral hundred dollars in his hands and the party was on its way to the tenth tee, accompanied by an ever-growing gallery as the news of the unique Vwager spread. Everybody but those who had bet the stunt was impossible soon had . big laugh. After dropping two balls in the water, the star of the comcdy 1ald his third shot on the green and the ball neatly and accommodatingly trickled into the hole de- | with a look to the cup and then no thought whatever as to how hard you would hit the bail. The iden in all golf strokes i to make the wwing automatic—from drive to putt. (Copyright, Jobn F. Dille Co.) ARMY AND NAVY TENNIS U. S. GOLF ASSOCIATION TO BE BEGUN NEXT YEAR! W YORK, December 3.—Annual WILL MEET "ANUARY 5 team competition for tennis su | NEW YORK, December 3.—The an-!premacy between the United States | | nual meeting of the United States{Army and Navy will be inaugurated Golf Association will be held here|in 1924. the United States Lawn Ten- | i e . s nis Assoclation has announced. |January 5. This session will be pre- | "piiar teams probably will be chosen | { ceded by a meeting of the greens'|through elimination tests held by the | section of the U. S. G. A. on Janu- |Separate arms of the service. ary 4. ‘ !GREB AGREES TO TITLE | GREEN COMMITTEE HEAD MUST HAVE EASY TIME! CONTEST WITH WILSON) | PITTSBURGH, Pa. December 3.—| Besides his ordinary duties in busi- | Johnny ‘Wilson' of 'Boston will be Eiven a chance to regain the wor ness and his home, the chalrman of yqleweight crown from Harry Greb, the green committee at a golf club, the titleholder, on January 18, in | according to Dr. Whitney Waterman Madison Square Garden, New York, of San Gabriel, Calif., is in reality -;gu“;: ;:’}Fn;::tfh:’&e{:ffl-:s ":‘."h‘:‘fld- !city manager, who handles a Breat agreed to the matoh in a telephone many dollars. He must select al conversation with Frank Flournoy, | capable professional, a wideawake Garden matchmaker. caddie master. must understand how | to run tournaments, keep all handi- GENARO INJURES BACK; | BOUT WITH SMITH OFF caps straight. etc.; have a knowledge of seed growth and keep in . touch with experiment stations. i Outside of that the green chairman | has nothing to do with his spare W YORK, December 3.—Frankie time. Genaro, American fiywelght cham- |pion. injured his back in his fight { with Carl Tremaine of Cleveland at | Madlson Square Garden Friday night | land will be unable to meet Midget GEORGIA PICKS FLETCHER. Smith at Philadelphia tonight. | ATHENS, Ga., December 3.—John Fletcher of Tifton, Ga., for the past | two years selected as an all-southern backfleld man, has been elected cap- tain of the 1924 Universit, foot ball team. Bowling was a popular pastime in y of Georgia | England as early as the thirteent century, ? hees and M. Ryan of Brookland per- formed creditably. Exhibiting a fast running attack, Mercury Prep Juniors downed the Golden Tornado eleven in a 12-to-6 game. Mercury scored its touch- downs In the first and third periods. Tiger Athletic Club gridders battled the heavier Clarendon Juniors to a 6-to-6 deadlock. Hamilton's 70-yard rint to a_touchdown and stellar ying by W. Cator, Howard, Hewitt, Cline and Kidwell were the features of the game. Argyle Preps put up a stubborn bat- tle against the Petworth Juniors, but they were humbled, 7 to 0, when Mec- Lear registered a touchdown. Games with the winners can be arranged by calling the manuger at Adams 3930 between 6 and 7 o'clock. Mnrdfeldt gridders made it nine in a row when they took the measure Radiators and Fenders 10 DIFFERENT MAKES RADIATORS ANY KIND MADE OR REPAIRED, Cores installed in any make WITTSTATT'S R. and F. WORKS 819 18th. 425 M. 7443, Match Your Odd Coats With Our Special TROUSERS $4.55 ur Save the price of entire mew suit. All colors, sises, patterns. 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