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S PORTS. THE EVENING ST, WASHINGTON, D. C, THURSDAY, JUNE 1925. SPORTS. Diegel Has Great Chance for Open Golf Title : Fighters to Get $4,000 a Minute LEGAL STEPS TAKEN; |$200,000 DUE TO BE PAID IED FOR LEAD WITH 141 . AS THIRD ROUND STARTS ormer D. C. Player Begins Final Drive on Even Terms With MacFarlane—Others Close on Their Heels—Jones Gets Away Badly. BY W. R. McCALLUM. ORCESTER, Mass., June 4—Leo Diegel, late of Friendship, Wash- ington, now at the Glen Oaks Club of Great Neck, Long Island, stood this morning on the threshold of the natianal open golf hampionship ready to catch the professional crown as it totters on the ¢ad of Cyril Walker, who uatil tonight will be the open title holder. Leo started the third and what the pros term the crucial round to- 13y, with William Melhorn of St. Louis, the Western open champion, in a ie for first place with Willie MacFarlane of Oak Ridge, New York, behind im a day of the finest golf he has ever shot and with the greatest chance has ever had to win this championship. Many thousand dollars, endless prestige and a surety of undying fame, ith soft professional berths for years to come, await Leo if he leads PMacFarlane, Gallett, Ouimet, Sarazen, Bobby Jones, Hagen and the others o were bunched near him at the conclusion of yesterday’s play. Diegel started today tied with Mac- lane at 141, made in a day of heat and the finest scoring seen in the ppen championship since Jock Hutchi- on went around the Inwood course 'Wo years ago with a palr of 70. Leo d a 73 and a 68 for his 141. Mac- rlane was 74 and 67, setting in his St round, a new competitive record or. the course of the Worcester Coun- Club. He literally burned up the ourse on his first nine with a re- narkable 31, four under par Chance for a Record. Diegel today has a splendid chance break the record for scoring in the pen championship, now held by Chick vans of Chicago, who won at Minik- da in 1916 with 286. Two rounds of ! or better for either Diegel or Mac- arlane will shatter that record and probably establish a mark that will tand for yvears, as next year the light ball will be in use Five years ago, at Toledo, Diegel vas tied with Jock Hutchison and limme Burke for second place, the pear Ted Ray, mighty smiter from [England, won the title. In the inter- ening years he has always figured 1l up. but has never had the chance b win he has today. On Tuesday, the day before the championship, Diegel was in the depths of gloom, for his Dutts were going off the line and his x:m in generak lacked snap. Late terday @fterndon, even after he had iaken three to get down from the edge Of the eighteenth green, he was on top 3 of the world. PAR FOR THE COURSE ols. | You, Par; Hole. Ydu Par 5 5 P LEADERS IN CLASSIC OF AMERICAN LINKS 8 6—74 7—141 In & mood such as that Leo will be | W 'very hard to beat, for he is a great front runner, and today probably will set the hottest sort of pace for the men back of him. Nervous and fid- ty to outward appearances, but with 0se nerves well under control, Die- ! is a better bet to win than the n and lanky Macfarlane, and, of oourse, a better bet than Jones, Oui- wet, Gallett and Sarazen. for he has several shots on all these. In addition to the future pecuniary Yeward and the check for $500 that will be his from the United States Golf Assoclation, is an offer of $1,000 in cash. put up by the Southern club, for which _he will play next Winter. The Golf Park Club of Tampa, where he will go in December with Gene Barazen, offered $1,000 to ghe golfer who wins this titis or the British open. Predictions Go Wrong. Yesterday's twin rounds showed the #xact value of pre-tournament predic- tons, for at the opening of the third round today Jones, Hagen and Mac- donald Smith, all picked to win, are well back of Dlegel and Macfarlane. Jones is in a good position, 6 shots back of the leaders: Hagen is 7, just & little too far. and Smith, 11, practi- cally out of it in g0 far as winning is eoncerned. In the place of these pFé-tournament favorites, as the final nds got under way, there were r;i:cls Gallett, a ‘young Scotchman Montrose, now at, Manitowoc, TWis.; Al Espinosa of Chicago, a goifer with a Mexican name, who plays the Seettish game in great shape, and ncis Ouimet, great golfer and nd sportsman from Boston, who zs the amateur contingent, all tied 143. 'hen comes Gene Sarazen, who had t for a tabal ‘well consistent rounds of 72 of 144; Johnny Farrell, gbwn in Washington, at 145; Mike dy and Laurie Ayton at 146, and Pob Jones and Jack Forrester at 147. 'hese are the men with the big nce. The others may win, but likely. Even the great Hagen is ttle too far behind. Cyril Walker, the champion. plodding, pitiful figure, ut of the title chase. Even though shot a 73 yesterday afternoon, he tagk 31 on the first round and started téflay at 134, 13 shots back. Z Barnett Has Bad Day. $ob Barnett of Chevy Chase ran a string of pushed second shots Eg finished with an 82 and an 81, tertotal 163. Bob put a ball out of nds for a 7 at the second hole morning and afterncon, and picked up a pair of 6s on the afit nine. Golf of that sort don't pelp in medal play championships. e fallure of Bob Jones and Hagen deplay their usual scintillating brand . ‘Soundvie: Joe ‘l'urmm‘ By 44 Ge. an, Pasad's. Cal. 75 S0 Cehibors: Weetmorciand. 78 of golf, combined with the great rounds of Diegel and MacFariane to make yesterday a day of real excite- ment. Jones, pushing all his long iron shots to the right and putting badly, was 77 in the morning, but went out in the afternoon determined to redeem himself. He did, with a great 70, accomplished without get. ting a long putt, recovering splendid- ly when he needed to and missing a short one on the sixteenth when he had three 4s for a 69. Hagen, with whom Jenes played, was great in the morning and a sorry spectacle in the afternoon. Where Jones was out in 34, Hagen was out in 37. It was a great match until Hagen cracked. Missed putts at the eleventh and twelfth were climaxed by a most amazing putting exhibition at the fourteenth, a drive and pitch hole of 350 yards. Here Hagen took 4 to get down from the edge of the green. putting over the hole, missing his return putt and then carelessly hitting a two-footer, which obliged by staying out. He finished the last two holes with a brace of 3s, however, showing a lttle of the famous Hagen come- back spirit. Diegel Is Consistent. Diegel's first round of 73 was just a gallop for the District open cham- pion. He scored an ordinary 73. missing a putt here and there. but going along smoothly and without effort. A topped tee shot at the six- teenth was his only really bad shot through the fairway. In the after- noon Leo started in ordinary style with par on the first five holes. Hé& gave an inkling of what was to come when he holed a 15-footer for a 2 at the sixth and finished the nine with another birdie for an out of 33. Then Leo saw visions of the championship before him. His pitch to the short tenth he should have holed out. It hit the cup on the first bounce and stopped 3 feet away. Leo missed his putt for another deuce. But that didn't hurt, for played the next seven holes in one under par, missing an 8-footer for a -birdie 3'at the four- teenth, only to get down a 10-footer for a birdie t the fifteenth. With three 4s for a 67, Leo took great_pains at the sixteenth. . But here he got a par 4 and a birdie 4 at the seventeenth, which should be a par 4, but is 460 yards long. Leo hit a great tee shot at the final hole, Standard. Cigar and Tobacco Co. 635 Louisiana Ave. N.W. OHIO MARBLE SHOT GOES FAR INTO VAN| - AS' BIG PURSES PREVAIL| Fié By the Associated Press. ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., June 4.— Jimmy Cambeas of Youngstown, Ohlo, added another string to his victories in the third national marble tourna- ment here, breaking the national tour- ney record and pushing far ia- the lead. He won 19 straight games before los- ing by a deciding marble to Dopald Halpin of Cleveland. His record for the three-day contest is 20 won and 1 lost. The league winners who will enter the semi-finals today are: North. eastern, Springfeld, Mass., Howard Robins, won 15, lost 6; Atlantic, New- ark, Stanley Smith, won 17, lost 4; Eastern, Pittsburgh, Louls Weiss, won 16, lost 8; Northern, Youngstown, James Cambeas, won 20, lost 1; Cen- tral, Evansville, Charles Brunson, won 14, lost outhern, Owensboro, Thomas Raley, won 15, lost 6; South- western, Fort Worth, George Forga- son, won 15, lost 6; Western, Fresno, Selwyn Jackson, won 14, lost 4. Marie Lawley of Harrisburg, who by her superior playing throughout the tourney was able to enter the last day of the preliminaries on a “triple en- tente” basis with Philadelphia and Pittsburgh for the leadership of Eastern League, entered the ring yes- terday petulant and nervous, S| “mugged” her first shot, bit her lips and whiffed another. From then on she dropped three straight games in short order to Frank Kasbeta of Wilkes-Barre. There was still a chance for her in the next mateh during the afternoon, with Wil- liam Jackowitz of Scranton. She lost the breaks, however, after a brave fight and dropped another three games by the deciding marble. Repeating his in-ring shooting of Tuesday, Louis Welss of Pittsburgh easily captured three straight from Cloyd Bookwalter of Altoona. This, added to the two defeats suffered dur- ing the day by “Rusty” Hamllton of Philadelphia, at the hands of Francis McFall of Wilmington and Frank Kasbeta of Wilkes-Barre, put the Pitts- burgh midget on even terms with the latter for the leadership of the Eastern League. GREB, FIGHT CHAMPION, IS HALTED BY BULLETS PITTSBURGH, Pa., June 4 (#.— Harry Greb. middleweight boxing champion was arrested yesterday on a disorderly conduct charge after an automobile chase over several blocks on a North Side street. As a policeman approached an au- tomobile on a street corner to inves- tigate a woman's scream, he said Greb stepped into a taxicab and drove away, haiting after the officer fired several n shots. Five other occupants of the automo- bile, including two women, were also arrested. All a $30 forfeit They failed tg appear for a hearing. only to put his second shot on the bank back of the green, with a fine lne to the hole. He wanted to he sure to be up as he struck his sec- ond shot, for a deep pit yawns in front of the final green. He really tried to hole the chip shot down the last green, running over on to the lower terrace 8 feet beyond the hole. He had nothing to lose #nd everything to gain, and it the ball had been struck a little lighter it ‘might have dropped, for, owing to its speed, it failed to take the break into the hole. A 66 would have put him well In front. His putt for a 67 hung on the lip, and he was down in 68, happy and full of fight. MacFarlane, a lean Scot, deliber- ate of disposition, wearing glasses and with a great golf style much like that of MacDonald Smith, unleashed the finest streak of golf of the day on the first nine with that wonder- ful 31. Holing them from all cor- ners of the green, MacFarlane wound up. by nearly sinking a mashie from a trap on the ninth. - He started with a birdie 3, got down a 20-footer for another birdle 2 at the short sixth and holed a 3- footer for another birdie 2 at the 178-yard eighth. Coming back, he missed just one shot, his second to the eleventh, where a ball a foot shorter would have been trapped. ‘Willie was just par for the last nine, finishing with a trio of fours, his putt for another birdie at the eight- eenth just stopping on the Hp of the cup. MacFarlane will be hard to stop. He hasn't the fighting heart that Hagen has, but, now he has a chance, he will play all the golf that is in him. Francis Oulmet, amateur of Boston, led the fleld over the morning stretch with a score of 70, one shot in front of Jack Forrester of Deal, three ahead of Diegel, four In front of MacFarlane. Ouimet tired in the afternoon, finish- ing a 73, for a score of 143. He is one of those with a good chance. Fully protes: P.h-o?d)‘iylr'm A Knockout Ever sce such conven- ience as this? Step thru —button two. No la; ing. Notlpiu, ls: 3 aundries don’t phase them. ou wonder they're elors’ buddies?” $1.50 and up. ; sizes, 95c. ‘Wholesale Distributors Guy, Curran & Co. 315 9th St. N.W. MATMEN NOW IN GLORY, By the Assoclated Press. C HICAGO, June 4—The wrestling game at last is following in the footsteps of boxing in the matter of big purses. In addition, not since the day Frank Gotch came out of the Towa cornfields to win himself the heavyweight crown has interest in the mat ‘s‘:’»on been so pronounced. hile boxing matches, particularly the championship encounters, have been attracting tremendous crowds and purses, wrestling has been more or less of a localized sport, with each succeeding champion tra ling about the country meeting contenders, virtually night after night in “champion- ship” engagements. This is changed now. Thé big pro- moters have taken '‘a hand in the game and the grappling contests are being advertised on a scale of boxing proportions, with purses at a healthy figure. This situation has been brought about to some extent by theé contro- versy as to who is champion, with two men in the field claiming the honor. The caliber of the four con- tenders in the recent St. Louls and Michigan City matches, all onetime holders of the title, also enhanced large purses. ¢ Floyd Fitzsimmons, who promoted the Lewis-Munn match in his bluesky arena, Michigan City, bullt for boxing, collected 12,000 spectators for the Dia- mond belt match, not as large a crowd as _expected, but still above the usual BASE BALL CUP GOES TO WOODWARD TEAM As a prize for having won the 130- pound interprep school base ball cham: plonship, the Woodward School nine was nted with a_silver loving cup last night at an athletic banquet at which 200 Woodward fans gathered to honor the young athletes. Lewis W. Mattern of McKinley Technical High School made the pres- entation. Hedley Clews, captain of the cham- plonship team, also was awarded a silver trophy for having made the highest batting average in the league, and his teammates presented him with a fountain pen as a token of personal esteem The following members of the lw were awarded minlature gold balls: W. Hedley Clews, Horace B. Haddox, Willlam Thompson, Charles B. Merryman, Thomas Rooney. Kent Pety, Grant Van Demark, Eugene Gilbert and Albert Ehrhardt. St. “Alban's Episcopal High and Friends School were the other teams in the Joop. BUSINESS ATHLETES ARE GIVEN LETTERS Tennis, basket ball and base ball men at Business High School were presented with the school letter this morning at the anual award assembly. Capt. Ernest Rice, Raymond Herzog and Le Roy Marton received the ten-. nis awards, while 9 members of the court squad and 11 diamond athlete: were presented with the “B.” Basket ball letters went to the fol- lowing: Sam Lafsky, Anthony Stew- ard, Charles May, Hugh Rivers, Ed- ward Ford, Willlam Evans, Uriah Brist, Capt. George Furman and Man- ager William Sullivan. The following received the base ball monograms: Capt. Louis Fridinger, Manager Carl Holmberg, Harry Yaffy, Ellsworth Taylor, Ray Walter, Wen- dell Moyer, George Yeatman, Donald Nevius, Sidney Block, Randolph Shreve and Edward Marosy. BLOW SCHOOL VICTOR. Blow School base ballers yesterday captured the graded school champion- ship of the eastern section of the city by coming from behind to defeat the Lenox nine, 8 to 6. Government Printing Office base ballers of the Colored Departmental League swamped the Treasury nine and piled up an 1i-to-1 score in six innings. . your tie is right ' No fumblingtofind outif yourtie’s askew, when you want to make & good impression. You arrange the Spur Tie just as if you had tied it yourself,asneator asstudiedlycare. less as you like. Then you forget it. The patented H-shaped Inner- form makes it keep the shape you give it. There's a Spur Tie style ool e ity 08 tie — bhck‘otvh(u. Look for the red’ Spurlabel on the backs of the Spur ‘Ties you'll see displayed on smart shop counters. e Hewes & Potter, Boston, Mass. Makers of Spur Sport for Hat' EESaRE. wrestling turnout. The purse, origi- nally set for $60,000, later was reduced to $30,000 when Munn suffered defeat at the hands of Stanislaus Zbyszko, but remained an attractive figure for mtllna The yszko-Stecher bout at 8t. Louis drew 8,000 at the gate and the purse was advertised for $50,000, but apparently fell short of that figure. Now comes Pauddy Harmon, whose forte has been the promotion of six-day bicycle races, with an offer of a $50,- 000 purse for a go between Lewis and Stecher to definitely settle the title. After viewing the Michigan City bat- tle Harmon made up his mind that wrestling offered an attractive fleld for promotion, and he is making every endeavor to sign up the two contend- ers. = MARKET TEAM AGAIN EARNS TIE FOR LEAD Center Market's base ball team again tied the Chestnut Farms Dairy nine for the lead in the Commercial League by handing an 11-to-4_setback to the forces of Thompson's Dairy. Standard Oll continued its winning streak, when it nosed out W. B. Moses & Sons, 11 to 10. Government Printing Office tossers of the Government circuit and the In- terstate pastimers engaged in a close cor;tm which the Printers won, 10 9. Potomac Park defeated Agriculture, 13 to 7, in the Departmental loop, while Liberty Loan trampled on the Treasurers, 13 to 7, in a Treasury League game. In the Potomac Park group, Build- ings and Parks chalked up a 10-to:6 triumph over the War Department. SUZANNE DROPS FIRST GAMES OF NET SEASON PARIS, June 4 UP.—Suzanne Lens- len lost her first games of the 1325 French open champlonships, but she defeated Evelyn Colyer of England. 6—0, 6—2. The two games were the only ones she has lost in reaching the semi- finals. The English player was com- Dletely bewfldered by Mlle. Lenglen's ling play. Jean Washer of Belgium defeated Henri Cochet of France, 5—17, 3—8. Washer, Jean Borotra, Rene Lacoste and Andre Gobert are the semi-final- ists in the men’s singles. e PENN STATE HONORS HOUSE, D. C. ATHLETE STATE COLLEGE, Pa., June 4.-— Willlam B. House of Washington has been elected to the student council of Pennsylvania State College to re- sent the senior class in the school of engineering. House is a former McKinley High athlete, and has been a regular guard on the Penn State varsity foot bail team for two seasons. He also filled a regular berth on the lacrosse twelve this Spring. He combines a fine scholastic record ‘| with his good work in athletica. SereEp, accuracy, eentrel —you will find all these in New Dayton Rac- QUET. The new twisted teel strings are stretched drum-tight — and stay tight. They.are un- -urz:aud in resiliency by urnament gut. This racquet is beauti. fully balanced and. im- famous players. Truly, a.r= h’th’ctcr:‘ tn’t nnis racquet value on the market. $10 at Jead ing dealers everywhare. Durable too — abso- Lut-ly unaffected by mpness—or even rain. Ask about The New Dayton today. AYTON S SPORT , MART 914 F St N.w, " 1303 F St N.W. 1410 N. Y. Ave, _"Let Us Be Your Sport Spectaties® order to show cause as to why 10t should - be m club's attorneys ‘hthh :nmhlsé by. Julll:n Hitz of preme E ; Hfll’g order is returnable ““I'In oflllzr is virtually a tempo- notion the am! Stribling him. self, arrived here today, but will awalt the arrival of his seconds fore going agalnst Stope. OLD RIVALS PREPARE FOR DIAMOND BATTLE Rob Roy Mackey and Wee Willie Glascos are due to strut their stuff Bunday at Phillips Park, when their respective flocks. the Mohawk and Shamrock unlimited base ball nines, come together in their first clash of the season. Weeks ago Mackey went about ar- ranging his line-up for the big game, and belives that he has rounded up a team that will'respond to the old bat- tle cry of the Indians, ‘“‘Beat the Sham- rocks if you don’t win another game all year." Among the recent acquisitions to .he Mohawk aggregation is Du Four, catcher of the Catholic University nipe. Both teams have had hard luck in several of their starts, but both man- agers are confident that come-backs will be the order of the day when they clash on the Sabbath. The game will be the first of a series of three. ST. JOHN’S COLLEGE TAKES PREP TITLE After winning five straight victories, 8t. John's College yesterday clinched the prep school base ball champion- ship of the Distriot by taking Devitt to camp by a score of 11 to 5. The Johnnie's star hurler, Mudd, turned in his eighth straight win, while Morris registered his eighth home run of the season when he sent one of the slants of Dezendorf, De- vitt's pitcher, screaming over the head of the Prep infleiders. Callan and Dunn alse got in some good work with the stick to add to the winner's score, while Collins led the Devitt team at bat. Twenty-two Eastern gridiron candi- dates turned out yesterday at the Lin- coln Park stadium for the first round of Spring foot ball practice. Western High, leader in the inter- high school tennis series, was to meet 3t. Alban’s School this afternoon. BATTLE FLEET OFFICERS BEAT SCOUTMEN AT GOLF HQNOLULU, June 4 #).—The bat- tle flest officer golfers, led by Vice Admiral H. A. Wiley, defeated the scout fleet officers, 12 points to 5, on the Oahu Country Club links here. Vice Admiral J. 8. McLean, leader of the .scout fleet players, defeated Vice Admiral Wiley, gaining two of the scout fleet’s’ five points. When Better Division of General Motors' Cofporation Fourteenth and L Streets N.W. Automobiles Advance Sale for Tomorrow’s HTS TOMORROW| TO TUNNEY AND GIBBONS Battle Indicates 60,000 Will Pay-$400,000 to See Scrap. Gene Is a Slight Favorite. By the Aseociated Press EW YORK, June 4—Payment on a basis of more than $4,400 a min- ute will be made Gene Tunney and Tom Gibbons for their 15-round heavyweight battle tomorrow night at the Polo Grounds if the bout_goes the limit, it is estimated. e advance sale of tickets indicates an attendance of 60,000 and re- ceipts of $400,000. Thirty per cent will be the share of Gibbons, givin him $120,000, or $8,000 for each three-minute round. Tunney's share w be $80,000, representing 20 per cent of the receipts, or more than $5333 per round The fighters are resting today after a month’s preparation for the battle, which marks the opening major r outdoor clash of heavyweights this season in the elimination series by which promoters hope to produce an outstanding challenger to meet Jack Dempsey. Both are pronounced in erfect trim, Tunney weighing 182 at his Saratoga Springs camp and Gib- Pons scaling 180 in hs New York headquarters. They will appear before the State Athletic Commission tomorrow after- noon for the official weighing-in. In spite of statements of the two fighters they are bent upon terminat ing the fight by a knockout, experts are almost unanimous in forecasting that the bout will go the limit. Many belleve that the match will be so close that the position of the judges will not be envied. BY FAIRPLAY. NEW YORK, June 4—That mix-up between Gene Tunney and Tommy Gibbons at the Polo Grounds on Fri- day night is a hard one to dope. For that matter any battle these days is hard to dope ‘When a poor boxer like Berlenbach wins over a good boxer like McTigue on points it {s like a wallop on the chin so far as the poor trusting critic i8 concerned, and he is inclined to lose faith in mankind generally and fighters in particular. Physically the two men will enter the ring on equal terms. Gibbons has the edge on ring generalship and ex-/ perience, but Tunney offsets these advantages with his youth and the sympathy of the home crowd. Be- sides, has any one ever heard of ‘Funney getting any the worst of it irom the referee and judges in his| New York bouts? | Both Are Confident. wuch possesses confidence, but/ whether or not that confidence in- cludes the will to fight and win at all hazards remains to be seen. Madison Square Garden was the scene of Tommy Gibbon's lapse in the heat of battle—the Greb fight—and New Yorkers have not yet decided Jjust what caused him to step back instead of pushing onto the attack with vigor. This was when Tommy had driven Greb to the ropes with a hard body blow and then let the middleweight champion recover and 80 on to a decision. So he did with Carpentier. He's a queer guy, is Gibbons. But last Fall Gibbons gave a good exhibition by knocking out Kid N folk in six rounds: it remains impri sive even though Harry Wills did bet- ter in stowing the Kid away in two rounds. Tommy's fight with Dempsey at Shelby was certainly impressive from the standpoint of defense, and convinced the writer that if Tommyl does not care to take chances no one| in the world is going to do him much | damage. As for Tunney, he has rested his somewhat fragile hands, and the as- sertion that he is in the best condition of his career sounds entirely reason- able. He made a great fight against Harry Greb a few months back, showing a Are Buile, body attack that bothered Greb, and may bother Tommy more Age is not an insignificant element in fistic encounters and in the case of a man of Gibbons' age a body blow is 2 punishing thing, indeed From the manner in which both men have been training, those who are looking for a masterly exhibition of the manly art at long range are apt to be disappointed. The two have been concentrating on body attack, and if one may judge by pre-battle dope the fight is likely to be waged at close quarters—with lots of work for the referee—and the advantage in point of administering devitalizing punishment lying with the younger Tunney. Looking at the fight from all angles Tunney seems to stand the best chance. He can hit hard, is young and will be right at home with his friends surrounding the ringside and encouraging shouts from every part of the ball park spurring him to mighty effort. The man that wins will be in line for a chance at Dempsey probably. Harry Wills being groomed for his great act entitled “shunted along the switch.” C/flan JoMan ROI'TAN oA cigar you'll like “Out where men are men— and ROLTAN PERFECTO EXTRAS are extra wel. comelEh, OldTimee™ (10¢) uestion: How is a de- ciston made to incorpo- rate an improvement in Buick design? ¢ At least one hundred thousand miles of test by Buick engineers are required. This determines positively whether a suggested change really will improve Buick's*fine performance. BUICK MOTOR CO. WASHINGTON BRANCH . Phone Franklin 4066