Evening Star Newspaper, January 24, 1924, Page 29

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o] . SPORTS. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 1924, SPORTS. ——————————— = Pittsburgh Fans Hopeful of 1924 Flag : Dog Racing New Fad of Jaded Society BELIEVE PIRATES ARE DUE | QU T T 2 O] N NOVEL SPORT IS POPU TO BEAT “FADING” GIANTS ngl ions and Chancg_ FESet | | WITH MIAMI SMART SET Owner Dreyfuss Still Seeking to Bolster Team After Copyright, 1983, in United States snd Great Britainm, Cubs, J¢ d South America by North Americ N Al . All rights reserved. . g sl Rl s s T st s Fashionables Flock to See Greyhounds Chase a Stuff- Rejecting Dean and Combs, Minor Stars CHAPTER V1, ed Rabbit—Uniqu ing Sy ai ) g s i aaatsnis et que Betting System Prevails Corralled by the New York Clubs. ! BY TEX RICKARD, and Bookies Reap Daily Harvest. s E were sitting around a stove - - ” 7 % T BY. JOHN B. FOSTER. I W one night in a combination . BY'ROBERY. 7. SMALL. EW YORK, January 24—Pittsburgh had first chance at Dean and | ardware, grocery, feed, clothes and . © o ; ; ;’. ' e M Th atiseic rack of i Maoes Eesaes oo oo EUTTTTTHT A Combs of the Louisvilie club, the writer learns, but turned down ' I{L_;uc;‘r store in Henrietta, when one ,The guarter-mile track of the Miami Kennels Club at Hialeah both players. And this despite the fact that Pittsburgh is not |91 'R° cattlemen got a-letter from o, W : : [Park daily is the scene of one of the most novel fgrms of sport Guite sure of ifs pitchers for 1924 and that if Bigbee's injured leg keeps | JiM Roberts. who had left his ranch PELA i s P this country has ever known. The thing is a typical running race meet- bothering him will need a good outfielder {in 189 to go up to A'aska. 1 7 1 ? B : . : ing in miniature, sleek bluc-blood greyhounds taking the place of horses President Dreyfuss rejected the pair of stars because he has implicit | 1 was the town marshal of Hen- % Ton Sk 4 The local newspapers print daily “charts” of the races, with all the races th in his own judgment. No owner in base hall goes farther in the ' rietta then, wearing a blue uniform, % % . indexed so as to furnish a “dope” sheet for the past performances of the cction of payers than he does. But he has been balked for the last | broad-brimmed hat, gold star and ¥ o> v i dogs. fifteen years in winning a pennant because his teams have developed some | ¢verything. And, let me tell you, I b G . . 2 o2 ]| Naturally there are no jockeys, and, therefore, no “pulling” or crowd adical defect every vear. 5 | was getting mighty tired of the job. 5 i _ 2.7} \ing or pocketing, and, consequently, no claims of foul. might be a Dreyfuss still 'is” attempting a deal which will add str@ugth to the ' We hadn't had any excitement for a 3 " 4 2 - : i foul if one dog would start biting another, but they can’t do that, for team and put a chunk of white lead in one or two places that must be month. % 2 ’ ’ < B~ > they are all carefully muzzled. plugged if the pennant is to be won. E Listen what Jim says.” said the nitted on tie races Grim, gt first hase in 1923, pleyed | —————— ——— i man who had got the letter : “So cold : ’ > P 5 21V Rl I5 d0ne iy | M le will be supplanted at short | LACKS P".OT Now ‘cause some fool'd come along and . B, vy . 5 e o | sions into t ni. They are right, and Rawlings is always : leave the door apen. ol s P ’ i é 3 ‘ ' . = among the greatest plungers on tie - | | &ible for second, but there seems 1 “Yes” sald one of the old men in ) are Very keen » 10 be an impression that he will not | i the group, “and they tell me whisky BY FAIR PLAY. make the grade. Tl is not likel iy res . .. ifreezes up there so hard that vou can G i made on however, for Rawlings h's gone w NEW YORK, January 24.—George carry it around in your pocket like a 3 h v S NEW YORK, January 24— Jack |the ruces wou the o1d-time Imr: every cll]rh with which he has | Sisler, new pilot of t St. Louis nl)ul; of tobacco an' bite off u chew : o, e 77 » 7 : : : Zivie's showing in Newark against, Al ""01'-[‘"" of Sheepshead Bav and Mor- Leen connected. e v i o will | Whenever you feel like it ; : 4% i : . i Delmo "ues g s an |8 Pa water at the mouth. The As & mbtter of fact, Rawlings was | ETO%0S. and Dave Bancroft. who willj Wigncver you teel lee 0 ) 1ol ¢ ¥ Tl ; 4 ; : o Delmont on Tuesday night was an|percentage in favor of the bookies tied for third place in the 1995 fields | €S a sl r role for the E ithe. readse: 01 Tim Sav le wa i % 4 2 4 2 5 7 ye-opener to the Jersey fan In | must be something tremendous. For e SNerauesiof National Leniue Braves, are the only newcomers in on a gold strike and thev dug out : o 3 e i ¥ : beating Delmont as decisively as he instancein one race yesterday after- DRd _ bas vhne of Cincinnati 924 g S ajol g more'n $50,000 worth of gold in a . % « o i R, did the P veig - {noon, in a field eight starters. finished first, with an average of six ;he 1924 gallery of major league Morch & iE 5. Y . . Sl l!l"IAFTIlut{klll showed WA therd was & 3-to-2 favorite, a 2-to-1 chances accepted in every game that | helmsmen. Washington may add @i “Phe crowd thew went into a lengthy o : * \vas favorably regarded Ly the | second choice, two third choices at he played. Grantham of the Chicago | new’ face to the picture, but as yet|dircussion of what they'd do if they s s e i % i critics {3 to 1, fourth choice at 4 to 1. fifth Cups” was second. with - H no manager has been appointed to:had a million dollars, like they i oy % Since Jack has beaten Charley | Sholce at 6 to 1, with no better than lingss und Tierney tied for third with i DihieBaE T Ui o sught Jim had. by 5 White, Joe Tiplitz and 3 | o ered the antsiders 6.0, Frank Frisch, (he Giane scan | succeed Donie Bush, This is the onty | tIquEht Jim had. =~ © o 2 Wevs . x plitz and other good | The bookics couldn't lose, no mattet Wis next with 5.6, Frisch, of course, ¥ now on the list Banks when it came to him. “I reck'n.| |9 ’ % 4 {boys recently, the chances are that|which way the cat, or rather, the A»l{..-"r«‘«r b-ulvr‘_ "r:“l n;wer base 3 saw 192, hm el;irun ra it on my debte—far.as it é g 3 7 he will begin to do stuff at the top |998% Jjumped un an any of them, but in the zue service have shift- | wen 2 . of nesting sucl = H Unique Betting System. field Rawlings has but two superiors, | ¢d Frank Chance going The old fellows talked on about the S cine e neriom e NEUIIE Er s s viie. T en puper. from Boston to Chicago, where he|noney, but a young fellow named , s ers at Nate Goldman and P'al Moran 2 ineiayaam e mgque 3.0 for L paie of hat Rawlings has done succeeds Kid Gleason, while Lee Fohl. | Will Siack T f got to think- 3 s = EP— - Wwithin the next six months, The ul-;don't bet at all. You buy an Interest « ‘ittsburgh, however, the owner | former with St. Louis, supplants i about 5 The upshot of it timate objective, of course 3 in the race. The little card you get— foohat club hankers for a second | Chance with the Red Sox. ¢ e s ded to hook up to- Carting supplies for the Alaskan gold mines was a wagon-bresking task in the nineties, when Tex Rickard first | Lognard e S Rt wur 1l Gl [of s eabioe <emit o take his memory | Bancroft. former n_of the er and go after gold. It wasn't 2 ains. Some day t ghtwej 04 r1 2 " back to the davs of Claude Ritchey, | New = Yor ceds I'red | ong before we were on our way. { seugglcd gveeithe mountsin Jtake Benny wit! soise: " Zivies Gold|Lt Le—certifies that tne ‘holder o ATy T ths B n awiul stick of | Mitchell inehar) s Braves. Be-! In 1895 we landed at Juneau, Alaska, |lake at the bottom, frozen solid.|back to Texas and was killed in a |more gold dust in small stacks and |man, Moran or some lad as yet ca- | bearer of this ticket is entitled to an D tie e m,“:]xix'xi w 'ui.]\\l\h.h sides ]l;.; managerial responsibilities but found we hadn't really 80t |sinck stopped and looked at me. Zun fight ltell us to roll. We rolled ourselves|vorting in the sticks will enter the |approximate interest of the purses. fnSand other qualities added, w L) u”:\mr:n:'x’\ ":‘fr :h;-uu.;p Joh, |tarted ek T anil ‘TexBRay e short Goex Through With It. |nxm out of house und home. At the [ring and send the Leonard ship wi,.,,,,« or premiums, if any. earned by = 5 Co; s the first player-pilo " ex, : a ay be sho aking us ha e bottom o sea. w S 2 Hambone L enityants 1t is willing to take an ar 3 . To begin with, we had to get @ |cold weather. too S Folugl thronap Wi de o al As I 'say, the gambling house wasenough which dog are blue, sald dog to be hnts el ppaut the Pirate chieftiin | Sixler, providing he recovers from | ¥ear's supply of grub and take it over | < : tad e e TheraTile City ind Ino cinch. " Later 1 will teil of a more - bt T i Tootts me e havho s experienced ; the eye malady which kept him out | the Chilkooi pasy to the lakes on the Usti She samo we, DUec 1D h \out from there in the SDring lexciting gambling adventure—of my | Honest, you can't belleve anvthing | "Ny 2% SUEHET0 0 g o sl if he can come throush. j of the game last season, will add a ' other side—about forty miles sleds, hitched ourselves to them L Wis Wicky cnouch to buy out the |rise 1o wealth in that country. This|You hear about out-of-town AEhts |yi’was Yhe favorite at & to . But Comus euns s passed up Dean <er to the American | One night Slack came in after talk- |and pulled them 300 miles over|No 8 and No. 4 claims of the Bonanza | (ime, though the finish is sad, 1[After the Pete Latzo-Frankie S 1§ Ha bone ot for e moub: that they were quaoted ot $130.000 .eaguc roster that now includes Ty the coldest, wildest region that any [ginae: (EOls bowever. was afier 1 Aeft [yrarfed in with $57,000 that I had jeft [battle at Scranton the mail was filled | 0" (he deseription of the race, writ- Pittbaren paoted MOl el Gobb of Detroit and Tris Speaker of e said, “do you know that man ever saw. It was well along to- | “IEEE I0E SO Kot Theo thee HIOPEIKE: |out of the Bonanza strike und lost |With letters to the scribes Protesting 1oy Ly the chart keeper, tell the sad 4 igure this to be | Cleveland. after we climb that mountain over all | ward fall when we covered the ¢ "i""* Qiscovered the Bonanza lead, |€YeTY Dickel of L. 1 was flat broke jagainst the decision in the Buffalo{yiory” Here it i Clark Griffith, Washington presi- | that ice we zot to hiteh ourselves up | of lukes and reached the head of the fpply (G SCQEFSE (T PORERER 00 land It was gettink colder. fighter’s favor, saving that the Penn | puch Reuben drew clear of the field dent, may be forced to take active |[and vuill a sled more'n 300 miles.” Yukon. We pa the spot where @4 squaw man. That Is what every Don’t worry, my boy,” a friendly jboxing solons would sure investigate, 1, a good lead. just outzamed Checker charge of his club from the field. That made us think. But, being |Da ow stands without <ce- | Bogy ealled Cormack b old miner whispered to me the nextetc, cte. Bill to win. Latter closed a gap enter- far he has been unsuccessful | d full of pep, we planned Lo as a house. We were| "The gquaw man had been on a moose | 98Y: “They're striking it rich down| Now hear what Bert Finch of Buf- ;0 e 1 challenged winner in quest for a capable pilot and, acc 5 Circle City, so named be- | hunting trip. On his way down a little jat,_Rampart.” falo. who is Frankie's manager, has{go.) grive. Red Raven, closing strong. o ing to reports, he is considering fill- | First, we had to carry our stuff up!cause it is just inside the Arctic!river which he afterg@rds named the| That night we were busy packing |to say about that hattle. Latzo, he | o icreq Hambone for third > > LAND'S MAY BE REFEREE ing the job himself when the club |the side of that steep mountain five | cirel Bonanza, he stopped Mr water. Right,UP- s not a big favorite, as|OGFTRICE S e goes south in the sprin ;miles to the top—one pack at a time. | ‘To describe that trip would take @ fon the edge of the stream his eye fell reported, before the fight. Even | Hambone Bavine Tcd e, N ext [That was a job. We had to take & | book or twe, and men like Rex Beach |on 4 piece of 5 Temorrow: The 4th of July, 1509, |money prevailed and such odds as | Hied LG recoup on Bue O SR IN GIANT-NEWARK SCRAP et wes o Job Mo had o take X |uak or two sud men ke Rex Beach |on & piece or ot Fue rocii wad smad e 4tk ot auiy Rone bred e A (2 ine tn Lot |race, Biue Juy s a_blue greshound SN R H €ip until we had the whole outfit it lots bet than 1 could exvectigold until i ol e ‘e favor. These odds, Finch thinks, |It was the first BT 3 WSEW YORK, January 2.—Commis HOPPE PLAYS BADLY, lon top. 1t took us more than a|to do. I o T e e ehatlen |'Were matural. since. being a home: |Writer had ever seen, hence the hunch. loner Landis probably will be given month. On top we could load the| Will Rlack stuck until his h=lp was | citement there is over a gold strike H-Bflow cANINEs {town boy, it was figured Latzo would bl once iiother_Job by reason of the base ball Stuff on sleds and slide down to the no lonzer needed and then told the |Phi"odd pare of ic ts that Cormaes got @ little the better of the dec R She heimalol oo ecrap between the Giants and the New- other side. After working ourselves | world that we could have Alaska and |oven with millions in front of him. Schoell's live manager inclosed clip- | HE, JOCE (5 10 ed improvement, internationals, centering on Howard into a perspiration we would nearly | Eed take Texas. Will Slack was one |had not struck the richest part of the oN lew TOMORROW“‘”":” trom Scrantom's three news. |named like that?) showed improvement. Newana g, fucher of the _— |frecze when we stopped to rest. We |of the best fellows in the world, but{gold at all. There were many fortunes [papers, all of which report that Pete jeame o the rail, enterBe the ftret fatiner, owhers oe e hshase from e tainly’ cooled ofi—and cooléd off | hw liked his comfort more than Klon- | (v’ what he found. but on i little branch ot a gdoditrouncing. S0 undoutits tiader to win going away. The Myeters ormer o rs of Newar! ub | CHICAGO, January 24—Willie | quick dike gold. 1 don’t know but that he |of the stream a little further up, called tedly, that's what he got ¥ _ lleades win going 5. e dlamounged severul (days age bY | Hoppe of New York, veteran cham-i When we eventually reached the|was scnsible. at that. the Eidorado—well, It was simply stud-| The Coliseum, which has housed wres- | There hax been talk that Schoells | Grive, ook place without e head of syndicate which recently ae- |Plon at 182 balk-line billiards, took | ffiflnf‘«‘i‘r“,flflim‘é o e tf‘ui';‘.":,‘i,‘:“k*; Avalisagy W ek, ey M eing. mrobably. Latzo |tion. Sitting Bull, closing strong, wi auired the New Jorsey club's fran-|the last block of a poorls-plaved of there. Btie e e e Monds ifound them all ight. apparently. In |easlly third. Blue Jay forced the eariy Plavers purchace: ang adareh the |challenge match from youns Jake Anyway. 1 staked out those twolwiill put in the benching today for the |other words, it looks as though ipeee, it Wod ) . vitcher had s g BreB Hey L ter heve. T = Bonanza claims and had a half Inter- | tenth annual beneh show of the Wash. | Frankie had made a great comeb: 4 piicher hid signed a 1924 contract to | Schacfer here last night, 500 to 417 est. They brought me in & lot Of|ington Kennel Club, shich will be peid |and is up with the best of the| Treated Just Like Race Horses. viay With Newark. . rried by the |20 UIeTebY retained his crown, 1300 T money. y tomorrow and Saturday. " With 537 [welte . o The dogs are treated just like race ®|to 1186 5 » | When we got back to Circle City In | blue-blooded canines on cxhibition, it is | Ciseadtond | horses and are handled with the same new Newark owners to John. Cone My we T [ “ eard some b ews. > way Toole, president of the Inter-| Young Juke, son of the “Wizard" {74 Tnan namoed McKiniey was elect- | FCUEhIY estimated that there will be seriousness. They have their warm- national League. Precedent Is said | Of other . was threatening on the & i ‘ H P - 5 more than $150,000 worth of dogs un- etais: = 10 favor the new Newark owner-|frst night, when he mot 500 to ¢ ; : : ¢4 President last November.” an old|Gerthe oof of the Coilseum for the | JIM LONDOS WILL MEET | inc-up sailops, their trainers ana ship. Hoppe's 369, but curled up Tuesday 2 : " 9 To tell the truth, I hadn’t. en | 128t two days of the week. | their grooms. When the bugle sounds ;. . Then ————————— night when Hoppe brought the score g ; we got the details of the campaign with | Champion Rosemont Fortunatus. | =l at post time, they are led upon the {10 1000 1o 738 by not ing quite s ! Bryan. The talk of sixteen to one had | the \nternational champion erevhound: .., pondos, the most feared “lttle” ! track in leash and paraded before the BELMONTS IN SWEEP {80 poerly asaid th izer. . ’ v fixed the price of gold in Alaska. We |T¢vently imported from England by ! (M G0V vvveight wrestling set, | grandstand and judges. Then they ) Last night's block w repetition o 5 used gold dust for money and it was,John Sinnott, the Philadelphta million- {87, "3y ear at the Coliseum on Mon-|are taken to the starting boxes. Each of the weak balk-line play of the pre- 4 e : always worth sixteen dollars to the |iTe, Will be the most valuablg dog in ® february 4. Promoter Joe Free-:dog has a box, but there is a common ROLL SET Of I 694,\.;4.us night, it taking the champion | e S ; A ounce. the show, its owner refusing $10,000 | Ja¥. FebTUamy &, Toodl HodViveiaht | pate in front. Leashes are removed ’ | twenty-two innings to get the neces- o : - for it a few weeks ago. No dog shown | hampion to meet Gene Muzzine | and the shrinking hounds are shoved sary 500 points, an average of 22 §-22 s 5 e They Det o8 13 awd 35 wiil be worth less than 100, and a fair ' L 0000 the Ttallan strong man. in a | into the narrow boxes or stalls. The while in one inning fewer Schaefer . oy s 1 sold out my Bonanza interest and [average of value is about $300. This{gnich match. This will be welcome | f h “buff” that got left at the S e averaged 2116-21. \ . ¢ o had about $60,000 in gold dust. Just| would place in the Coliseum tomorrow | pewcd' 1o Washington Greek ATREAd N BOmE N o tar Belmonts, of the National Capital | Hoppe because it appeared S ik ey » i ilike the others, I went in for a good |and Saturday $161,100 worth of dog€ i hom Londos is extremely popular. around in his stall, and was headed Duckpin League, rolled a set of 1,694 | that he better able to over- i z jtime. Then it was that I first got m,'flosh. | ¥ Weighing less than 140 pounds, Lon-| the wrong way when the barrier was In games of 566, 5 d 56 = [come dicultie : — : gambling fever. Handsome silver plate, almost $3,000 | dog has been forced to spot his 0Dpo-|sprung and the shout went up A R e e 1 s i e aa ; % A man named Tom Turner had|in cash and superb rosettes are me|ne.-;,= Anvawhere from ten to thirty | “Theyre off. heen from the Fost Office gmint| GF 10 Tie Platers throhe oot ¥ q 3 ] |come in from the outside with news |prizes for which the compctitions will | pounds in almost every match. In| ‘Naturally the question arises, What Lead-off man Little of the win-iivory balls, and also, It - secmed. } Bt ;i . 5 of how badly they needed a gam-|be held. The rosettes, of purple and! Spite of this handicap he is rated as|were they off after? That is the cu- rers put over a set of 364 and the|through faulty judgment by both of 3 , i bling house at Dawson. The miners |gold, are a new departure in dozdom, | one of the most dangerous contenders |est part of the whole game. The dogs best game of 15 Phillips of the 1 of the ta £ ) wanted amusement and also wanted | Fplacing the old-fashioned _ribbons ; Strangler Lewls' heavyweight | ch. & atiiffed rabbit. He is Taounted 08 BRINENOC AVE BUHDs Jof the |l aaad! of the table. (Luck ‘uiso ! st some fellows with whom they could | These rosettes arc more artistic and | crow Muzsie will have & big 88-|on a wheel, which Tuns on & cingle same team shot 140 and 133, but|Plaved its DEECSSDA) thie mAOHGH or ) 4 . leave their gold for safe-keeping. |more valuable than any ribbons ever | vantage in weight over Londos when |stcel track all around the race cours spilled the beans with an 86, men Tdiliea loppe’s favor. The R : The proprietor of a gambling house | §iven winners in this country ! they climb through the ropes for their | There is an arm from the rabbit to o 2 0 tharbed in uch matety play, XY o : was much like a hotel or innkeeper. | Entries from out-of-town have wready | bout here. | the outer track fence, where an elec- Triumph Cafe grabbed the odd ;#nd that was held partly responsible % 3 It was no cinch. - There wasn't any |begun arriving in Washington. They ave | e tric motor propels the contraption from Columbia in the Mount Pleasant | {07 the “slow" billiards exhibited. | ’ graft. Nobody preved on suckers |being stored until tomorrow morning at| prypy A SPELLBINDER | The rabbit is given a good start. He | their year. because New York weaker than it w The G haven't shown much of that weak- ness yet, (Copyright, 19 League. J. Dolfas of the Cafe had | Hoppe's average for the 1,500 point: There were no sucker: 3 -y he: art £ ¢t s forward in leaps and bounds, and : 1 ). as of 1 1 D 5 . ; g e s, to tell the |the temporary headquarters of the club, T D: 3 the high set of 321 while the best |Wis 274254, and that of Sehacfed | ; 3 s . s truth. A gambling house was sort of (2130 P street northwest. A special train ATI, January 24.—Pi < e is controlled by a man’ sit- game of 120 was turned in by Schott. e Ylnm;e had a high run ¢t ¢ % socfal headquarters. will come in tomorrow mor oaded | p y of the Cincinnati tower. Just "fl_‘f‘"]d _‘hj Manosic. Neagme. Mount| Boo young Jake 170, o 3 I went in with Turger and we |with barking and yowling canines o be { tionals is in demand as a spe i hing post there is a switch, anc Rt Won two ot o rree tant | odouard Horemans hes challenged opened up a gambling house, drink- |bench here. Entries from New Eng-[hy ciubs and organizations which { When the race is done the e st s i Hoppe and that contest probably will 5 G 4 ing and eating place. We lasted |land, New York, New Jersey and Penn- ve base ball fans in their member- | appe to a hole, mu ":,mm“.” ACoumpid »llml'\“?fl ”“,’,'“’"";'l" played within sixty davs at New 7 about four months. sylvania will fill this train chips. He has filled a number of [ chagrin of the poor, foolish hounds. Tso. captured the odd from Armin: | L Ok after Hoppe and Schaeffer finish v One night & lot of fellows came in| Tomorrow morning judging will begin | engagements and tonight will talk at | Une day recently one of the dogs fuse Olfver ot Columbia Al the best |* Sour Which now is being arranged. ” A . 3 to bet on the middle column and|at i1 o'clock in three big rings. It will | Wilmington, Ohio, the former home |caught the blooming rabbit just be ek Nading et he best) The two will start at St. Louis im- 2 A o Y number seventeen and twenty-three |be resumed at 2 o'ciock and again ut|ecf Charles W. Murphy, one-time|yond the finish '}’f..':”"""' off one of bl oG TR 1 mediately. and then play through the | ¢ 7 i of the roulette layout and hit us hard. |8 o'clock in the evening. The same |owner of the Chicago National League | Iis funny stuffed legs {larze middle western cities into the . ; . If they won they'd simply pile on |schedule will be followed on Saturday. | club. (Copyriht, Rerberich f the Business | ©4st it % e = Men's League. €wept the hoards. | S— H : - ‘Wonder wgl' Mertz Will Say Today? Joyce Emgraving Company, of the MAY FIGHT NEXT MONTH Typothetae League, won two out of [ MACON, ¢ g hree 'from the Lanman Engaving | ing a i Sanuary 3¢ Joliow- Company, and the National Capital | tween Bas Seriplien " oo O e ¢ . Press did the same to the Simmon || Collins, Newark, N. 4. promoter Tase o o ompany. Grailey of National Cab-\night it wwas anvorners moter last f{. : s ttal had a game of Younk Stribling may sget another : : Rock Haven, of the :\':min‘:‘l\"l.uu)‘;ur»l_ h;:'\{y‘\vgi‘ :.’z“(nen\g‘i;fffb:t f':h(‘];":..“,,;‘h(, was fiving high last night and | “opneoue with Mike Burke, sehed- Jhad Jittle trouble winning all three % DORE WAL Mike Burke, sched- ‘ : games from the Potomac shot | B ontica Wity 3% in Newark, hus ; . ! » o earnta e "546 and 520 for a total of 1617, G Ot of the winners had a set of | he Will have more time to train for, 85 ght with McTigue, it s . i S d e of 1 zue, if that carf 0 851 and high game of be arranged, and -Das Seetbling soan ! Se i ual in the Navy Department League, l"»lHns assures him there was every JgBEN| mi Ann n the A. C. E. quint won two out ofjindication that the scrap can be \ thres from the Lithographers. and e | ¢ e Marines grabbed the odd from = ~ = - C CE the Marines gral e odd trom the @ Steam Auditors. Moore rin d a game of 133 and a set h SALE NN NO cigar ever before attained N 8 . the remarkable popularity of of 3J . Service, of the War Department Collared Le , won two games from thel Surkeons, and Statistics captured the " dd from the Auditors, Starks of ervice had the set of 326 and John | GBvien o 'stadistica” nigh ‘game’ of i HE well-groomed man is always sprucely collared in = FIVE DIAMOND ATHLETES . s : REINSTATED BY LANDIS 3 h"elfly }nen neckwear. If CHICAGO, January 26—TFive base . e's comfortable — it's TOL- 2 fatt gl bers hime Sl 2| B et e e i e MANIZED! the voluntary retired list '“L'Z‘Dr.e Cutshaw, former inflelder proper operation of your of the Detroit Americans and God- motor car or truck, frey Brogan of the Washington club had been ‘.oluntul;fllycre’ured. s ! EBONITE slips between o an Del Gainer, who was e Ineligible Nist of the St. Louis your gears, a lasting film on the ineli Nationals; |§flemer Leo Taylor on the of smooth, oily lubricant, ineligible list of the Chicago Amer- = jcans, and D. J. Hickman, jr. on that puts friction and noise Brooklyn's ineligible list, were re- out of business. stored to good standing. Taylor deserted the Greenville elub of the South Atlantic League in 1923 and Hickman refused to report 1o the Toledo club in 1920. Gainer deserted the St. Louls club in 1923. o . 2T : White Owl, the cigar with a million Slllt Ol' . Gk friends—only the most extraordi- " N nary VALUE could possibly make R so phenomenal a demand in every Overcoat X ) * part of the country. ] G Zabianal frond i TO ORDER 3 SRS Vs toVs Off { @ THE TOLMAN L AUNDRY . F. W. MacKenzie, Mgr. 6th and C Sts. NW. & T Q N ISR Priced As Low As =) sroumanizen [l sl 8’50 ‘ board design pump and nervice station sigm. EBONITE Has No Rival— bet CONCANNON PLAYS TODAY. There Is No Joe Concannon, who showed the way to Joe McGann and Willlam Parsons, is booked to appear in twe pocket bil- liard matches today at Miller's Acade- S my, JSLE - street. ¥ He s to meet . V. N. Tracew: 2 « ) Triompson &t 8:30 o'elosk - o ror (iT5. SHREDDED OIL) Rl = e e R FOR TRANSMIS SIONS Radiators and Fenders s e TR K 1 MAKPS IATORS * NTIAL XD MADE OR ey (RS ON OIL WORK, FRIE WITTSTATT'S I, and F. WORKS PR RO MR T N P T . b e . - g the spic-and-span ap- #1601 MAN _ pearance. Phone Frank- | AUNDRY < lin 7L ¥ - ..z & Mertz Co., Inc. 1 . —-- LR E Ry

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