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SPORTS NEITHER VISITING ELEVEN WILL RECEIVE ANY MONEY ‘Aa Midshipmen Cannot Charge at Home They Will Get Nothing Out of Clash is Shifte BY LAWRE! Baltimore ball game of October 17 next A Two Contests, Unless d to Baltimore. NCE PERRY. Md., May 26—With respect to the efforts which the ark Board is making to have the Princeton-Navy foot transferred from the Naval Academy to Baltimore, it is important that certain arrangements between Princeton and the Navy relating to their two-year renewal contract shoul be known. From a financial standpoint the agreement is unusual. In the case of the two games to be played in 1925 and 1926 the visiting team will re- #eive no money. Princeton, for example, is comn jitted to come to Annapolis next Fall at her own expense, but will be entertained by the Naval Academy. The game is likely to be without financ ial return to the Navy, either, since spectators are not charged for their seats The following the Navy tes and the Tj the Middi penses will, h I di Comdr. officer at expenses and of vear, October, 19 m will go to Princeton s will not have to give arantee nor ited without cost sing ment McCandle the of the game & the conduct t are defr: nd the naval that the ide home- mes appealed to the Academsy srities as much sporting Iy desir- than alien that all Annapolis ball at the en- cademy pmen . and and-home Naval more eble center. So far to have to the ind playing in some as tl the 19 Venable erned, it would efforts of Baltimore transferred con- games Stadium em that the mat- Ler rests entirely with the Navy au thorities, Princeton not being finan- ally interested wherever the game i played Whether nancia t or not the disinterested views of the naval people set forth by Comdr. McCandless will remain proof against the obvious 'pportunity for a rich return by hav ng the contest plaved in Baltimore remains to be seen West Nt appears e reward of $0,000 crowd at ear, but the tion vice institutions in a may by no means be ac dicati what the other r It ma be said that J the former 1le player who succeeded Bob Folwell ach here, made a strong im- sression at the late Spring practice en those who were inclined to re- gret Folwell's depurture are now tdly back of Owsley. D.C. ATHLETES GOING T0 BALTIMORE GAMES Numerous organizations those made by give an intercity Atlantic junior track and f m: pionships to be run off Park, Baltimore, Saturday Aloysius Club, Washington | Club, stern High School id Devitt | Prep are among the Capital teams | hat will be rey ented. Their great- est competition will come from repre- sentatives of the Baltimore Athletic Club, Cross Country Club. Emorywood Club and Central Y. M. C. A Of special interest is the modified marathon, which will start at 10 o'cloc and finish in the park Just before the championship program Eets under way The junior champio for registered athletes who have neve won either a junior © senior title. Immediately upon winning a junior | event a contestant nior and cannot other events lis ciate n 1ppr Bowl e one of given m epted ay do. ek Owsley. ind coach, the or the ter in- of as entries from Washington rivaling in _ numbe Baltimore cl will 't to the South five-mile hip events a in the prograr REGATTA IN PHILLY * DRAWS 47 ENTRIES compete on the PHILADELPHIA v-seven entries , are on the reg of May 26 () of them from gram for the the American known as the the Schuylkill yual Rowin, Americ: River Saturday. The list of entrie crews in the race Pennsylvania and Pennsylvania, Svracuse, Navy, Har- vard and Princeton are entered in the race for junior colleglate eights. Pennsylvania, Harvard, Princeton and Yale are entered in the event fo collegiate 150-pound eights. The 150- pound crews of Harvard vania are undefeated this ve Other entri e First singles joks and Codman, Poston, and Hoover and Cos. téllo, Philadelph Thicd interc vard, Yale Freshman vania, Syracy SHARKEY GETS DECISION. BOSTON M: Jack Sharkey bston ward- ed the decision over George Cook, heavyweight champion of Australia, at the end of their 10-round bout on shows only two for first eights— the Navy. te eights—Har- Pennsylvania eights—Navy, Pennsyl Mass., pay ex- | egiment | | sehool, ) |ca 'NURMI RUNS FINAL U. S. RACE TONIGHT By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, May 26.—Paavo | Nurmi will run his fatewell race in | Am at 10 o'clock tonight at the | Yankee Stadium in what is considered | the hardest tasit of his fivemonth | campaign. He will compete in a special | balf-mile event against his chief rival, Alan Helffrich, Penn State star, and | will try to improve upon the 9-year- old record of Ted Meredith of 1:52 1-5. Conqueror of all in races from three-quarters of a mile up to 10,000 meters since his arrival in this coun- {try, the wonder Finn is now the | under dog. Most critics favor Helffrich to_win. Nurmi will strive to do 1:30 against | Helffrich. 1le plans to cover the first quarter in 54 seconds and the second !in 56. Lawson Robertson, head coach of the American Olympic team last vear, declared Nurmi would have to be capable of a 50-second quarter to break Meredith's mark or to keep pace with Helffrich. | Albin Stenroos, Finland's Olympic marathon winner, makes his Amerl n debut on the same card in a race against a dozen of the best long-dls. tance runners in the United States, including “Chuck” Mellor of Chicago, | American marathon champlon, and | Jimmy Henigan of Boston. ithletic | IN THE HE stage is set for the first Dis: sex, which will be held on th: mborrow. i PTCHING FOR, SHREVEPORT AGAINST SAN ANToNio GAVE 7 BASES oN BALLS WT A BATSMAN MADE A WILD PITCH AND ALLOWED 3 HITS INTHE FIRST INNING GIRLS’ ATHLETICS DISTRICT trict champion rifle meet for the fair e range at Eastern High School to- J. W. Crockett, rifle instructor for the high schools, is acting in the capacity of ‘match official. the match. Firing wil begin prommtly at 2:30 and will cease at 5:30. Any shots fired after that time will be counted as | misses. One team is allowed from each six girls to a team. Entries will be made at the range preceding the meet. All competitors must be eligible under the rules of the board of education regarding athletics. Any .22-caliber rifile welghing not over 10 pounds and choice of ammuni- tion will be allowed. The targets used will be N. R. A. feet decimal and 50 feet junior rksman. o coaches will be allowed on the range except team members. argets will be drawn by team cap- tains ~ immediately preceding the match. 50 ma Marjorie Webster School's swim- ming meet resulted in an overwhelm- i victory for the juniors yester- day afternoon at the Y. W. C. A. pool. A total of 790 points was scored by he victors. The seniors finished with only carried off but they claimed . second and third places in in- dual honors as well. Betty Langenfeld, a junior, took first place with a total of 160 points. Norma Cressy came second with 120 and Grace Jarrett third with 105. Frances Church won highest honors among the senfors, coming in first in two events, the float for time and 1 juniors not ss honors, | the candle r A thrilling rescue, not mentioned on the program, was staged during the lull between events. An absent- minded little girl in gingham dress E sunbonnet strolled along the springboard and walked off the end of it. A learned professor seated beneath an imaginary tree on the shore, poring over a heavy volume— no doubt “The Rise and Fall of the Holy Roman Empire"—left Rome to its fate and rushed to the assistance the uggling demoiselle, after refully removing his tie and spec- es; brought her to shore and ied her limp figure from the scene in the most approved Red Cross life- saving style. The heroic professor was Ruth e, the gym swimming instructor c Jast night. The verdict was not pop- ular. Figge, who took this clever of the school, means of demonstrating life-saving THE CALL OF THE OUTDOORS BY WILL H. DILG. President Izaak Walton League of America. S you sit in a perfectly appoi A painfully over that same route. 1 have been watching the most land trail across the great plains ar Oregon, slip behind my train all day The Union Pacific railrodd was built over that old trail, and as you look out of the window you pass many a sheltered plain where the covered wagon trains stopped at night, whirl over many a creek that spelied life to more than one pioneer, and all da and all night you screech over hil lains that once were painfuily ::got';med, one by one, by the cumber- some trains of covered wagons. For a great deal of the way vou feel as though you were going over a care- fully prepared trail, for vou travel plong perfectly level ground flanked by rolling hills perhaps a mile away on both sides. The fact is that the pioneers, guided only by nets, found the very best tr: the west the first time th it. The engineers and surveyors mapped the route of the railroad were unable to improve on it. In fact, Father De Smet, the Belgian priest, who traversed it in 1851, declared it, “aithough unimproved by man, one of to realize that some pioneer nted observation car and watch the miles stretch out behind you at the rate of one a minute it is hard s, some time or other, once moved famous trail in America, the Over- 1d over the Rockies from Omaha to the finest highways in the whole world.” The Overland trial was more than 2,000 miles in length. But a mere. 2,000 miles, every mile holding unknown dangers and hardships, was nothing to the hardy Americans of another day. Travel over the trail reached a peak in 1849. More than 500 freight wagons often passéd Fort Kearny in aday,and 883 westbound wagons, drawn by 10,600 oxen were counted between that post and Julesburg in a single 24 hours. One transportation company alone employed 75,000 oxen. The famous Overland stage line was | established in 1861 between St. Joseph, Mo., and California. The equipment nsisted of 100 Concord coaches and 700 horses and mules. The journey required 18 days. The pony express was established a little later, and the mail was carried to California in 10 days by 18 expert riders. Beset upon as they were by Indians, only one mail bag ever was lost, ) He has announced the regulations to govern | methods. Norma Cressy, a junior, was the thoughtless voung lady Nell Gibbons, Evelyn Bradford, Claire Carswell, Peggy Wooten and Katherine Mary Hackett acted as judges, assisted by Dorothy Greene in the diving events. Summary of events. 25-YARD DASH—Won Jr.); second, Jarrett (Jr.): Jr. 40-YARD BACK STROKE—Won hy Cres Qr.): second, Trick (Sr.): third, Jar- by Langenfeld third, Mowery sy rett (Jr.j. DASH, SIDE STROKE—Won by Langen- feld: second. Cressy: third, Rupprecht (Jr.) FLOAT FOR TIME—Won by Church second, Smith (Sr.): third, Sapp BRELLA RELAY—Won a Mowery, Royce front,’ won by genfeld (Sr)% third, Mowers. second genfeld style, won by Lan third, Day (Jr. Juniors Wolf second, Arnold back, won by Arx third, Day. €. fr genfeld: sacond,’ Arnold CANDLE RACE—Won by _Cressy Church: wecond, Jarrett and Ellen Mowery and Smith, and third, The Seniors turned the tables in the evening by capturing the school cup in the indoor meet held in the Marjorie Webster gymnastum. Amid much cheering and enthu- slasm, the class of '25 rolled up 3123 points while their younger school- mates were gaining 18 1-3. In & unique program, including all phases of the school’s work, the victors won first place in natural gymnastics, heavy apparatus, folk dancing, clogging and characteriza- tion. The Juniors won a volley ball game by 1 point. The score was 11-10. The Seniors had the 10 when the Juniors had only 4. Three other events were won b the Juniors: Sight reading, the rel race and public speaking. Marjorfe Trick and Mildred Smith, both senfors, were awarded school sweaters for individual performance in athletics, and emblems were re- celved by the following: Misses Arnold, Bradford, Costello, Cunning- ham, ' Carsweli, Cressy. Collins, Goodin, Jarrett, Langenfeld, Mowery, Probasco, Pitts, Rupprecht, Royce, Sapp, Stempert, Wipoki, Wolfe, Zeigler, T. Smith and Kimball. TREASURY NINE AHEAD. Treasury base ballers of the Colored Departmental League defeated the Government Printing Office team, 9 to 6. STRIBLING WHIPS INDIAN. HUTCHINSON, Kans., May 26 (#).— Young Stribling, Georgia light-heav ‘weight boxer, defeated “Chief” Meto- quah, Kansas Indian, bout last night. “HAIR-GROOM” Keeps Hair Combed, Glossy Well-Groomed all Day Hair-Groom" is a dignified combing e¢ream which costs only a few cents a jar at any drugstore, Millions use it be- cause it gives that natural gloss and well-groomed _ef- fect to the hair— that final touch to good dress both in business and on social occasions. en stubborn, un- ruly or shampooed hair stays combed all day in any style you like. “Hair- Grgom” is greaseless; also helps grow | thick, heavy, lustrous hair. B. | in a 10-round , y ESTHER BEHRING THREW A BASKETBALL Inside Golf | Swinging an iron calls for an action | commonly understood as “putting | speed into it,” yet this speed must be | most carefully ap- | | plied in_order not to lose the rhythm of the swing. The iron swing is just | a little faster i pace than the wood | swing, the action | with the iron be- ing more of a hit. Because of this the player must be es- pecially careful to | | give his club time | 1o turn at the top, | or he will begin to | hit down before he | has finished going up. Another thing | to watch out for| is not to grip too tightly with the right hand because 1of the faster hitting action with the |iron. Too tight a grip with this hand causes a slice. (Copyright By Chester Horton B- GIVE CLUBHEAD, TIME TO TURN AT TOP - 192 — | CHANGES CREW COACH. NEW YORK, May 2 (P).—Fred filler, coach of Columbia University’s owing crews for a year and a half, retired from his position through mu tual agreement with the rowing com- mittee. Bill Haines, coach at Mas sachusetts Institute of Technology, will succeed him, reporting immedi: ately ~ter May 30. A Shot That Bordered HE strangest shot I ever made T cisco Golf and Country Club, with stop mashie niblick. Perhaps it was the accentuated back: niblick that made my play. possible. After a drive and second shot I had left @ 125-yard pitch to the green. I sent up a fairly high ball which head- ed straight for the pin. From where my playing partner, Joe Martin of Los Angeles, and I stood it looked as though the pin was going to stop my ball. That meant disaster, because the collision proba- bly would cause a rebound that might send me into one of the traps guard- ing the green. The pip was of iron, a bit more than half an inch thick and 11 feet high, as we afterward ascertained. The direc- tlon of the wind was such that the flag was floating away from us. The ball hit the pin, all right—a fraction of an inch from the top, ac- against 6 for the Baltimoreans. | tion at MacDonald Smith Tells championship three years ago. The championship was contested over the course of the San Fran- wood, and I having a stiff fight for the lead. This shot was pulled on the 520-yard ninth hole and 1 used a dead- It was before the ribbed clubs had been ruled out. ARROW £ Correctly interprets the Style —~ Cluest, Peabody & Co. Inc o Makers Hero ofthe Olympuds i 1S Dreal and ms:\‘gshus lipa together ~To BREAK A CORD BOUND ‘ROUND HIS HEAD THROUGH FORCE OF THE SWELLING VEINS OF His TEMPLES D. C. WOMAN GOLFERS BEAT BALTIMOREANS A composite team of woman golfers from three clubs about Washington | defeated a team of woman players | om Baltimore clubs vesterday in a | team match over the course of the Columbia Country Club. The Washington team won 15 points Those who plaved on the Washing- ton team were Mrs. C. L W. V. Freeman and Miss er of Chevy Chase, Mrs. J. M. Haynes and Mrs. J. R. De Farges of Columbia and Mrs. E. R. Tilley and Mrs. H. A. Knox of Indian Spring. Frailey, Mrs. usan Hack- | More than a score of woman players from clubs about the city are playing today in the monthly tournament of the Women's Distrift Golf Associa- the Congressi Club. The last tourney Chevy Chase. -— MARSHALL NOW THIRD IN CHESS TOURNAMENT MARIENBAD., Czechoslovakia, May 26.—Marshall, the American expert; Rubienstein of Poland, Saemisch of Germany and Gruenfeld of Austria were the winners of the fourth round of international chess here. Rubienstein _defeated Tartakower, Austrian. and went into the lead: Gruenfeld is in second place. He de- feated Halda, Hungary. Marshall, who defeated Opocensky, Hungary, 'stands third. Janosky, France, drew with Torre, United States. was played at on the Supernatural came up during the California open the Australian champion, Joe Kirk- spin permitted by the ribbed mashie cording to the spectators. But instead of bouncing away it pulled the well- nigh supernatural by running straight down that 1l-foot pin and into the nole. What is more, it stayed there, giv- ing me an eagle 3. When we picked it out of the cup it had a narrow belt of rust around it, gained in its trip down the narrow rod. How it managed to cling to the track I don't know. Perhaps the back- spin helped. 1 The two strokes saved. however, were very much worth while. In the end Kirkwood and I found ourselves in a tle, each with 29 strokes. In'the play-off, however, Joe got 2 74 to my 76 and won the title. THE GUARDS HOLLAND WILL STAGE OLYMPICS, IT STATES PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia, May 26 UP).—Hoiland today officially in- formed the opening session of the Tuternational Olympic Congress that Holland formally engages to stage the 1928 Olympic games at Amsterdam. FOUR CHEVY CHASE NET TITLES DECIDED Mrs. Clarence Norment, jr.. H. B. Irwin, Betty Hills and William Hitz have been declared senior and junior singles champlons, respectively, of the Chevy Chase Club as a result of play in the annual tennis events for club members. Men'’s doubles, women’s doubles and mixed doubles still are in progress. Young Hitz starred in the feature match of yesterday's play by his spec- tacular defeat of Robert Glazebrook in the final round of the Jjunior singles. The match went four sets. With a set apiece, the youthful rack- eters fought for 18 long games, most of them deuce, for the critical third set, which Hitz finally captured, 10—8. In the fourth set Glazebrook seemed on the point of again tying up the score, but Hitz ultimately took nu; and the match at 6—2, 4—6, 10—8; | 7—5. Mrs. Norment won the women's singles title by defeating Mme. Wal- lenberg, who formerly held the cham- plonship of Sweden, in the final, 6—3, 4—86, 6—2. H. B. Irwin captured the men's singles crown by his defeat of Hamil- ton Fish in the final, 6—3, Miss Hills defeated in the final, 3—8, 6—4, 6—2. Matches ‘will be played today In men's doubles, women's doubles and mixed doubles. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Norment, jr., defeated Betty Hills and Millard | Lewis, 6—1, 8—6, yesterday in the mixed doubles. Semi-finals and finals of the com- | pleted events follow Men's singles—Semi.fi | defeated Artbur Hellen, ton Fish defeated L. A 3 2 Final—Irwin defeated Fish, 6—3, 63 Women's singles—Semi-finals—Mrs. Clar- | Norment defeated Mrs. Jackson, 6— Wallenberg defeated ~ Louise b0 Norment defeated Mme. Wal- lenbherg. Girls’ singles—Semi-finals—E. Wells_de- feated M. Bouve. 83, -1 Betty Hills aret Boss, 6—4. 6—1 | v Hills defeated E Wells, | 3—8. 63, 6-—2 | Junior singles—Semi-finals—R. Glazebrook | defeated S Wooten by default; W. Hitz de T. De A =t v defeaied R Glazebrook, | GOLFERS ARE TO TAKE TOURNEY TEST Br the Associated Press N morrow of the Eastern qualify Many a professional who reckon his home course in the low 70s has h: in tuning up at Lido Bobby Jones, however, has done a | 76. This so scared friends who ac. companied him that they sent word to Atlanta that there should not be t00 much optimism about his chances, because he might not capture the| title for the second time by more than | a stroke or two. Cyril Walker, the champion, who will not have to qualify to defend his | title, has been trying out the Worces- | ter Country Club course, where the | title tournament will be held June 3| and 4. A pulled tendon in his left | hand is worrying him CHICAGO, May 26 (®).—Final prac tice rounds were played today at On wentsfa by most of the 139 entrants for the Midwest elimination rounds for the national open golf championships. | Only 27 players and those who tle for | twenty-seventh place in the scoring of the 18-hole rounds on Wednesday and Thursday will be eligible to go to the meet at Worcester, Mass., next month to compete with five from the Pacific Coast and esome twoscor from the East. The Onwentsia course is reviving | from the cold wave and wet weather | of the last two days, and. barring fur- ther rain, should be in prime condi- | tion for the official play tomorrow. Some good golf has been shot, al- though most of the contestants have | not kept cards, contenting themselves with getting the roll of the undulating fairways, the texture of the turf and the distances. Bobby Cruickshank of Oklahoma City, who was runner-up after a play'off to Bobby Jones for the open title _two_years ._yesterday shot fl x,,'h m 'y i i) Man—you don’t know the meaning of underwear com- fort and ease until you slip ;".l. Sealpax Twin-Button it No seven or eight buttons to fuse over. Just step thru— buumn“ you're all Less buttens to button: no buttons to lose. A boon for the bachelor; a pal for every man. Get next to the biggest sensa- tion in underwear todayl Made for men and boys. Wholesale Distributors GUY CURRAN & Co. 315 9th 8t. N.W. Phone Main 931 Sedlpax EW YORK, May 26.—The winds. long sea grass and decp sands of the Lido course at Long Beach have put fear goliers who have been practic g play | WARDMAN PARK DOUBLES SPORTS. MACKENZIE’S GREAT GAME INSPIRING D. C. LINKSMEN Youngster Not Only Has Caused Other Youths to Do Better Work, But Also Has Led Veteran to Decrease Size of Scores. BY W. R. McCALLUM. NSPIRED by the leadership of a youngster who has developed into national championship caliber within the short space of two years, the golfing personnel about Washington has raised the standard of first flight golf here, until today the game around the National Capital stands on a higher plane, in so far as scoring is regarded, than ever before. The three tournaments held here so far have shown that it takes consistent golf below 80, and sometimes well below that mark, to figure as a tournament winner or even a semi-finalist. For not only has the splendid golf of Roland MacKenzie stood out, but the competition of the several youngsters who have broken in during the past brace of years has spyrred the veterans of the tournament game hereabouts to renewed en deavors, with the result that the standard of the game is better than ever before. MacKenzie won the medal at Indian Spring with a score of 75, won the medal at Washington with a card of 74 and was consistently below 75 in his matches at Chevy Chase. To keep anywhere near him his opponents had to shoot their best games, and that is just what resulted. Game Is Better. With such a standard as th other players about the Capital have set their game at a her notch. Of course, Roland MacKenzie stands Where an 85 made the first flights in out. His game has improved so in will find the standard still better. We |there is not a man axound Washing- note that at a tournament held a short | 190 Who ¢on beat as of ;hg Chevs time ago At Gavden ‘City. ithe! mesal|&n00 0N Wie fina) ddv jof fthe Che was wen with a score of 78. Compare | - 25 puLhamen ades e"CL Yo this with the 75 and 74 shot by Mac i 2 holes in three is Kenzle at Indian Spring and the 73 |SNOUBh to prove that statement, and by Donald Woodward doubtless had he been pressed, he | would have gone on to a new course courses, all comparing in scoring diffi- | WOU S ‘ T ith Garash Crr record in either his semi-final or final The same process has worked out in | Match. ’ s the match play rounds. es of 81 Other Youngsters S or 82 won many matches the past| The remainder of the youngst and it has not been unusual to a | Charles M. Ma, T Kell final round won handily with a sc {man, jr., John F wner, James C of 78 or so. " | Davis, jr., and Reginald A. Loftus—are Not 30 nowadays. To get anywhere [ not quite od as the junior Mac in first flight golf about Washington | Kenzie, but their golf aiso has im the scoring must be around 75 or 76. | proved to such degree that it is out Few matches are won with scores over | of the ordinary to find them above 80 , while many are lost with scores of course. Their improvement. this nature. cted upon the older The logical conclusion to be reached | oretanihon is that the quality of golf about the | TUNING UP city has progressed, while the courses have been stiffened. The competition is better than ever before, and to meet that competition the quality of the game itself has improved. It would not be idle talk to say that the golf of the leaders of the game about the city is on a par with that of any o 11 | city of any size about the Nation |over an | too, has golfers The inevitable cycle has come about. IMine golf inspires better golf, as it has done about Chicago, Boston and New York, and although Wash ington has not vet held a natic amateur champion, the day is not far distant when one will fr It probably will be Roland M zie, but there are others who r make the same rapid improveme: he has Boxers under 21 years of age cannot engage in bouts of more than stx rounds in New York into scores of star ing in preparatior r the start t ¥ for the national open Tournament. | s himself off form if he does not do | ad to be content with an 80 or more | the first nine in 3 Other famous 1 shown streaks of Cy are Jock Hutchison British open champlon: Bill Western open titleholder; Harry Hampton, Larry Nabholtz and Bob MacDonald. Eddie Held of St. Louis is the favorite out-of-town amateur, | while Chick Evans and Bob Gardner | of Chicago are among the local ama- | teurs who are favorites. The entire field will play 18 hol tomorrow, and all who wish, will play another round on Thursday, the low- est aggregate scores for the 36 holes qualifying for the trip to Worcester. formerly | Melhorn CHMan to Man ROI-TAN cf cigar you'll like WILL BE PLAYED TODAY inalists in the doubles of the| Wardman Park tennis tournament were to meet this afterncon at 4:30 wet grounds vesterday having caused the postponement The decidi a b s togetlh thot MBeee Flana e e he “A round full of pep—now Charest-Graves team. Mangan and | for a round of ROI-TANS Haas have a two.game advant | full of comfort.” the first set earned on § | MB. RES — fore rain caused a cessation f (Al ASSADO 15<) hostilities. The Hupmobile Four is noted for amazing reliability under the hardest driving conditions. It offers maxi- mum economyand long life. It assures brilliancy of per- formance. It provides comfort and dignity of appearance unequaled at anywhere near its price. STERRETT & FLEMING, Inc. 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