Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
24 Home Stand May Seitle Fatle of Griffs : HERE FOR THREE WEEKS STARTING N Champs Then Are Expect Field—Everett Scott Now Delivering Goods as Sub f BY JOHN EW YORK, July N their performance tion that will get under way in Was The club that chicken the hom world with clipped wings is exp strength into the b W n it retu the regular organization fur June prospects will be bright as falls below the standard it set in Jun to be content with second-place mon Tw stand. To follow the June standarc That’s a big order, but handling big Time was when the Nationals ap- pea nugly d with their position. They ked upon their second Western of the season almost cocksure that the Athletic well drubbed by the Yankees after taking a sound thrashing in Washing ton, were at the turning point. When the A's fell so miserably before the Indians in the first series in the West, the Nationals were quite certain that Connie Mack's team no longer was °d a menace in the pen champion em trip nant cl 3 Then things happen °d. The Nation- als’ weakened pitching staff became an | , target for the opposing batter ington batsmen lost their and finally the defense wavered the same time, the Athletics fine form re 1 and won handily while the champions were so buffeted about that they found themselve: second place with their underes mated rivals at the top and “goin’ strong.” . Hard to “Come Back.” As in any other line of athletic en- deavor, in base ball it is dificult to “come’ back.” That is true of the club as well as it is of the individual. So the Nationals grim task of catching the A’ fully realizing the power of ageregation of young fellow: Following the slipshod pla cago and the disastrous v Louis, the champions began themselves together in Detroit, where they produced some good pitching and fair hitting, but not enough to take the series. They were coming out of the dark in Tygertown, though, and in Cleveland jumped briskly into the light. Everything done by the Nationals in the Forest City seemed to be ab- solutely right. For the second time this season National pitchers did not have to be relieved on three consecu- tive days. Vean Gregg, Dutch Rueth- er and Stanley Coveleskie toiled with- out a break. Hits off National bats were plentiful and timely, and afield the club performed with the machine- like smoothness that characterized its work during the home stand in June. Spurt May Be Continued. Perhaps that spurt will be carried into the three-game series starting m New York tomorrow. If it is carried into the last block of engagements with the Yankees in the big town this year, the Nationals may reasonably be expected to begin the 20-day home stay primed to repel the invasion of the Western clubs and the New | Yorkers, who are to be encountered. But a reversion to the slump the club wallowed in during the greater part of the Western tour probably would be disastrous. They frequently “come back” once in base ball, but rarely twice. One of the most pleasing features of the trip through the West was the fine manner in_which Everett Scott stepped into the position that an injury forced Roger Peckinpaugh vacate in the firét game in St. Louis. | A trifie wobbly at the outset, the Deacon looked none too good, but once he accustomed himself to working with the other parts of the infield machine he improved rapidly. iding, in the Cleveland series especially, was noteworthy, while he became one of the leaders of the club in batting during the ‘orfp.” He made 14 bingles in 34 times at bat, most of | them of the timely and his efforts on the runw of high order Peck’s injured ing, and it may der of the b wh > not at last Mack’s in Chi- to St to get thumb is fast he that the regular ationals will re- he club is nd_himself ready champions cott contin- ues to romp around the shortfield and shine at the plate in the efficient way he did in the past week MOUNT RAINIERS BOOK GAME WITH BRIGHTWOOD Mount Rainier Athletic Club un- Hm nine will play its last game the opening of the Prince Georges County 1e with Bright wood Athletic ( nday at Mount Rainier field Despite the fact that the District Line boys earned a 9-to-5 decision early in the season, Brightwood has rounded a formidable combinati shape and is promising a ri for followers of the diamond Entry into the county league n it necessary for Mount Rainier cancel a game with Randle Highlands | scheduled for August 9. | MINOR LEAGUE RESULTS INTERNATIONAL LEAGU Toronto, 14-6; Baltimore. 11-3 Buftalo, 10: Reading. 0. Others not scheduled ASSOCIATION. 1 SOUTHERN ttle Rock. 2: Birmingham. Nashville, 4; Mobile, 1. Memphis.” 3% Atlanta. 1 New Orléan: AMERICAN Toledo. 5-4; Kansas City, 0-10. Columbus, 9: Milwaukee. 5 t. Paul, 11 Indianapoli ouisville, 10: Minneapol SOUTH ATLANTIC Asheville, Spartanburg. 3. Macon, 3. Colunib VIRGINIA LE Wilson. 8: Rocky_Mount, Richmond, 10 Greenville, Augusta, 6 Charlotte, 6: Danville, isbu: LEAGUE. BLUE RIDG ames oned_(r: LEAGUE. All TROUSERS To Match Your Odd Coats B. KELLER. —The fate of the Nationals in the 1925 flag campaign of the American League probably will be determined by ity-one games are to be played in 20 days in the next home had to settle to the | | vears old, . | champion SPORTS. EXT TUESDAY ed to Put Full Strength in or Peck. ne stand of nearly three weeks’ dura- hington next Tuesday flopped about the West like a ected to be able to thrust its full irns to its own stamping ground. If as it did during the home stay in ccond pennant in Washington. If it ne Clark Griffith’s hirelings may have ney at the close of the campaign. in 1 the champs must win 16 of them. orders makes a pennant team. GRIFFMEN WIN, 3-2, FROM JERSEY CITY NEW YORK, July | tionals stopped’ in Utlca yesterday long enough to play an exhibition game with the Jersey City club of the International League. The big timers won, 3 to Vean Gregg, Curly Ogden, Allen Russell and Fred |Marberry did the hurling for the champions, and it was off the last- mentionied that the Skeeters got their tallies in the ninth to deadlock the game. But Bucky Harris' pass, Sam Rice's two-bagger and a wild heave by the Jersey City catcher soon gave the Nationals the decisive marker. The game was staged as a benefit for Utica Post of the American Le- gion and was well patronized, despite rainy weather. All of the National regulars, with the exception of Ossie Bluege, were in the fray. Oswald got his first rest of the year, Bucky Har- ris shifting to third base, while Spen- 3 dams toiled at second. The champs did_some good hitting, but the biggest hit of the s ‘made by the Altrock-Schacht team that en: tertained the ns before, during and after the contest. Score by .innings: i | | | The N R HE 10°1 43 Ogden Can: 0011000 1— 00000002 Russell, Wasl Jersey Cit 2 ;" Spaulding. Batteries — Gregg_and trell. Keifer and TWO TRIPLES AND WALK Crackerweight base ball players were given a mark to shoot at yester- day, when Harry Vignau of the Lang- ley Insects connected for three homers, two triples and walked once in six times at bat during a game with the Nationals. Langley. won, 17 to 16. CHIEF BENDER BACK AFTER EIGHT YEARS CHICAGO, July 22 (®).—After eight | years' retirement from major league | base ball, Albert “Chief” Bender, the | pitching star of Connie Mack’s pen-| nant-winning Athletics a dozen years | ago, returned to the box vesterday. | The Chief pitched the final inning | of the first game for the- Chicago | White Sox against Boston, and was | touched for two runs. He walked the first batter, and after forcing the next two to hit into easy outs, Carlyle hit_ a home run. The Indian, who adr to be 41| left the Athletics in 1914, | going to the Baltimore Federal League | team in 1915. He pitched for the Phil- fonals in 1916 and 1917. some time thereafter he was base ach at Annapoli: Since joining the Sox the Chief has been working hard to get into shape, and yesterday he was placed on the active list “I can still pitch as good as two- | thirds of the men in the American | League,” Bender said, “and I hope to" be able to take a regular turn in| the box soon.” Manager Collins gives credit for many s “bull pen,” through the Chief's advice to the younger twirlers. Blankenship, one of the Sox younger stars, is Ben- der’s special pupil. Collins pointed to the difference in Blankenship’s style in the second game against Boston to- day, when the young Texas collegian coolly held the Red Sox to 7 scat- {tered hits and won the game. the Indian GAMES ARE CARDED FOR COUNTY SERIES A schedule of games for the newly | | organized Arlington County Base Bail | League was issued last night at a | meeting of the managers, at Cherry- | dale fire house. Leo F. Wise is manager .of the Arlington nine; Walter C. rendon, Melvin Finisecy and Mickey Johnson of Caton of of Addison Cherrydale. ] . Cherrydale ve. Clarendon at Lyon Village: Arlingion vs. Addison at Arlington Pas ust 2. Clarendon . vs. gton at Lyon Viligie. Addison T rydale at Arlington © le | Ye. Arlington at Lyon don vs. Addison at Arlingfon: August'16. Cherrydale ve. Clarendon at Lyon Village, Arlington vs. | Addison at Arlington: Aj 23, Clarendon | vs. Arlington at. Lyon Village, Addicon v Cherrydale at Arlington: Auguit 30. Cherr. dale vs. Arlington at Lyon Village. Claren- don ve. Addison at Arlington YAN:KEES BUY CATCHER. OMAHA, Nebr., July 22 (#).—Ray Luebbe, catcher for the Omaha club of the Western League, has been sold | to the New York Yankees. Luebbe,| former sandlot player here, is 21 years | old and has played with the Phila-| delphia_Ameri: | Distributors Salesroom and Service Station 1709 L St. N.W. Wallace Motor EISEMAN’S, 7th & F Company | back game won in the -8 major leaguer, established a record BELIEVE IT OR NOT. In S times at bal {or atolal of 1§ bases n one game Suiy (e, w25 NS _of Baltimore \ WAS ATIENDED 254 FUNERALS JLas her ¢ Aoy WASHINGTON SCORED 6F RUNS W ONE NNWNG | — back In 1867 ARE BACK IN By the Associated Prei N EW YORK, July 2 out effort on their part. Rain, which drove the Giants from the lead a few weeks ago, boosted | While they sat idly by as a gentle shower canceled a | Spring them yesterday. game with the Reds, the leading Pit delphia typhoon. a homer by Eddie Moore, bingles to breeze in, 4 to 2. A holiday found Washington sitting comfortably with folded arms | while the St. Louis Browns beat off a belated attack of the Athletics, 6 to 5, pushing Mack’s team back into second place. A pass to Robertson ith the bases filled forced the win ning run acruss for St. Louis in the | } eighth. The Giants today had a margin of only three percentage points on the Pirates, while Washington was but one more point removed from the Mackmen. In the cne other game in the Na- tional, the Chicago Cubs had a hit- ting fest at Boston. Seventeen safe ties were garnered by the Rabbits off three Hub pitchers. The score was to 3. Maranville led in the carnage with a brace of doubles and a pair of singles. By breaking even Sox the White Sox were forced to make room at third place for the Browns. Chicago dropped the opener, 6-3, after calling to the mound in the ninth the great Philadelphia pitching | hero of yesteryear, Chief Bender. | The Chiet ‘was hit for a home run by | Carlisle, but the fans gave him an ovation after he had retired the side. | In the other half of the twin bill Ray Schalk, in his thirteenth year as with the Red Ly catching his 1,576th game. He contributed to a Chicago victory with a single. An_error by Fred Haney defeated the Detroit Tygers in the eleventh inning of a game with the Yankees, 5 to 4. A REAL LONG SHOT. RENO, Nev., July 22—Delhi_Girl, entered in the fifth race at the Silver State Jockey Club race meeting now being conducted here, vesterday paid the longest price in the history of the Reno track, $446.40 for a 32 mutuel ticket. HURLS NO-HIT GAME. MOLINE, Ill., July 22 (#).—Harold Johnson, veteran right-hander, hurled a no-hit, no-run game as Ottumwa de- feated Moline in the Mississippi Valley League, 5 to 0, vesterday. Johnson walked one man and fanned thrae Clarence Mitchell limited the Corsairs to four hi while the Phillies STAR, “WASHINGTON, (Beg. U. S. Pat. Office.) SN ofthe PLAR ~—the famous Saint of Lebanon DWELT For 30 YEARS « UPON THE NARROW SUMMIT OF A MARBLE COLUMN. (Food and drimk were horsted. 0p to hem) \GIANTS, LIKE NATIONALS, ST. J0SEPH PLAYERS LEAD AGAIN —Washington and the New York Giants were | back in the pacemaking saddles of the major leagues today with- |afternoon, when the Fort X tsburgh Pirates sailed into a Phila- one nicked Kremer for en BIG LEAGUE STATISTICS AMERICAN LEAGUE. ‘Won. Lost. Pet. Washington . 3 o ladelphia [ Detroft Cleveland New York Boston . GAMES TODAY. GAMES TOMORROW Washington at N. Y. Chicago at Detroit. ton at Phila. Cievetand at' St L. No Games Scheduled. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS. Boston, York, Louis, ' 6 o Washington- : Detroit. 4 (11 innings). Philadelphia, 5. i Clevelund game plaved June NATIONAL LEAGUE. Won. Lost. Pet. New York . B2 Pittsburgh Brooklyn Cincinnati . St. Louis Philadelphia Chicago ... Boston . GAMES TODAY. Chicago at Boston. Pittsburgh at Phila. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS. Philadelphin, 4: Pittsburgh, 2. st o York (ratm) St Touls-Brooklyn (not scheduled) . ‘480 433 an GAMES TOMORROW. New York at Boston. BREAKS SWIMMING MARK. NEW YORK, July 22 (®).—Walter Spence of the Brooklyn Central Y. M. C. A., set a national record for the 200-yard breast stroke swim last night, when he covered the distance in 2.34 2-5. The time is one and one-fifth seconds better than the old record, held jointly by Robert Skelton and Spence. NORFOLK STANDS BURN. NORFOLK, Va., July 22 (#).—Fire which started from some undeter- mined cause last night completely de- stroyed the grandstand and damaged a portion of the left fleld bleachers at the Virginia League Park here. WHY PAY CASH? WE GIVE YOU SIX MONTHS TO PAY EXPERT AUTOMOBILE REPAIRING PAINTING—BATTERIES - ALL STANDARD MAKE TIRES AND TUBES We Buy and Sell Automobiles WE RENT CARS AND YOU DRIVE YOURSELF AT THE LOWEST RATES IN TOWN 100 CARS TO CHOOSE FROM' ALL TYPES AND MODELS We Also Loan Money on Automobiles GLASSMAN’S GARAGE 1319 L Street N.W. 2101 14th Street N.W. ‘T. 0., WEDNESDAY, Slexandrelta WILL KEEP ON MOVE St. Joseph's base ball tossers are preparing to keep on the move during the next four weeks. They start their travels Sunday er soldier | nine is encountered at the Cavalry | post diamond, and on the following Sabbath will journey out to Sandy Md., for a game with the | Sandy Spring Athletic Club, | 'Benning is to be encountered | Sunday, August la trip will be made to Annapolis for |2 game with the Eastport semi-pro team. on 9 Members of the Rialto nine, winners of the Jewlsh Community Center Base Ball League title, will meet tomorrow night at the home of Manager Bill Warsaw to reorganze and lay plans for their Sunday encounter with the Lord Reading team of Richmond Sun- day at American League Park. Maryland Athletic Club will attempt make its victories over Petworth when Buck met at the to three straight Sunday, Grier's combination is Maryland field. ‘White Sox clubmen will go against the strong Walter Reed Hospital nine Friday at 5 o'clock on the Soldiers’ diamond Hess Senior players will meet on the west side of Pennsylvania Avenue Bridge today at 5:15 to journey to Randle Highlands, Camp Holabird Sluggers, who yes- terday won from Washington Bar- racks, 11 to 1, in a four-inning contest, are booked for a game with the Alex- andria Dreadnaughts Sunday. Hess Juniors and Moose will clash at Fifth and L streets southeast to- morrow at 5 o'clock. Sunday at 1 o'clock the Hess nine takes on the Montours at the same field. Players will report at Virginia avenue play- grounds at 11:45 OUTSIDiB WINS STAKE. KALAMAZOO, Mich., July 22 (®).— Tarzan Gratton, an outsider in the betting, won the $25,000 American pacing derby at the grand circuit meeting here, taking the first and third heats after losing the second to-Ribben Cane. Tarzan Gratton stepped the first and on August 16| JULY 22, 1925. HOOVER IS SATISFIED BETTER SCULLER WON ~ PHILADELPHIA, July 22.—Walter M. Hoover, former American singles sculling champion, has returned here from England, where he met defeat in both the Diamond Sculls and the Philadelphia Gold Challenge Cup races at the hands of Jack Beresford., jr., the English oarsman. ‘‘Beresford is a splendld oarsman,” sald Hoover, in commenting on the events in which he rowed. ‘“He gave me two of the best races of my life. 1 had some unpleasant experiences in trying to arrange a meeting with Beresford for the Philadelphia Gold Challenge Cup, but so far as that race and the Diamond Sculls are concerned I'm perfectly satisfied that the better man won.” Speaking of the Diamond Sculls, Hoover sald it was perhaps the most sought-after trophy in the whole world of amateur sport. “‘But I cannot believe that the Dia- mond Sculls actually represented the world’s _amateur championship,” he sald. “The Henley stewards have laid down such strict regulations regard- ing amateur standing that a surpris- ing number of both English and for- eign contenders are barred from com- petition. ““These amateur regulations are per- haps the most stringent in the world. Any man who has done manual labor or any sort of mental duty is barred. The English oarsmen who compete for the Diamond Sculls are hardly ama- teurs from the American point of view. “‘G. H. L. Gollan, who lost the final of the Diamonds to Beresford, devotes virtually all his time to rowing. Beres. ford himself does exceptionally hard training, and I don’t believe there have been many days since the last Olym- plcs that he has not rowed over a lengthy course.” Hoover declined to make any state- ment in regard to his controversy with English racing officials over the hold- ing of the Philadelphia Gold Challenge Cup race until he conferred with the cup committee here. BERESFORD WINS AGAIN. PUTNEY, England, July 22 (®).— Jack Beresford, jr., winner of the diamond sculls in the recent Henley for the fifth time since 1914, captured the London cup in the Metropolitan amateur, which ranks next in impor- tance. SANDLOTTER TWIRLS NO-HIT, NO-RUN GAME SR Duke Hardy, Shipping Board hurler, reached the ideal of every pitcher yes: terday when he twirled a no-hit, no- run game against the Public Buildings | and Public Parks nine to bring his | team into a deadlock with the Marine Corps combination for top honors in | the Potomac Park Base Ball League. While Hardy was serving them up {in big league style his team mates | were getting in some heavy work with | the willow and ran up an 11-to-0 score. Hardy issued two passes and two more of the enemy batters reach- ed first base on errors. Union Printers collected the slants of Edelin and Laycock, Bu reau moundsmen, and earned an easy victory by the count of 15 to 2 in a Departmental League clash. In the Commercial League Chestnut Farms continued piling up a lead by nosing out Williams-Webb, 4 to 3,| while Evening Star ran its winning streak to six games by taking Thomp- | | son's Dairy to camp, 4 to 3. | neral Accounting Office of th Government League, which yesterday received a forfeit from the Comm sioners, will attempt to halt the vic- torious march of the Government Printers Friday afternoon at East Ellipse Field. hits off | {DE PAOLO AND MILTON WILL RACE IN EUROPE Tommy Milton, world-famous auto- mobile racer, while in Washington on & visit with Delloyd Thompson, pioneer aviator, disclosed that in company with Peter de Paolo, the young sensation of the automobile racing world this vear, and Pete Kreiss, he would participate in sev eral European races, including the Italian, French and Spanish Grand Prix events. Milton and De Paola are to drive Duesenberg specials in the three races, their cars being patterned after the same mount with which the latter driver finished first in the Indianapo- lis, Altoona and Laurel events this season. A third car will be carried in which Kreiss will make at least one start. YACHT RESOLUTE SOLD. PROVIDENCE, R. L, July 22 (#).— The Resolute, victor over the Sham: rock IV, in the 1920 races for the America’s cup, has been bought by E. W. Clark of Philadelphia, and will make her next appearance afloat as mile in 2:03% and third in 2:043. Once they called him the “0Old Crank” *“New dispositions for old corns.” . . . Thatisn'tan impossible bargain . . . Doc tors know that a corn may a corn isn’t just a local pain. a pain-station on the - “main line” of the nervous system. Tiny nerves tele- =but that was before he lost his Comn a schooner. SPORTS., NOW TIED Fences to N Hornsby’s record of 24 by his first- Athletics yesterday. Hornsby hasn’t been in all of th. he keeps on batting them the rest to kee, about 45 homers, Williams, considering the numb: may pick up in a sprint at the finish, however, seemed to be 39 or 40. Neither Hornsby nor Williams shows indication of coming up to the record of 59 swats held by Ruth, and the Babe, of course, has no change to come anywhere near his best figure, having lost out on so much of the season because of liness. There still is interest in home runs, as there always has been in base ball, but the mania that was created by Ruth’s hard hitting, with the public- ity that accompanied, is gradually passing out. The home run is being taken more as an accessory to the game and is not being advertised as the main show any more, which is quite proper. Home runs never are skillfully placed hits. They repre. sent a swing, a slam and a prayer, and are the culmination of base ball on the farm, where the boys would rather hit one home run and strike out three times than to get safely on base in less spectacular ways every time. Battle Is Fairly Even. One feature of the race between Hornsby and Williams is that it is a fairly even affair as regards condi- tions, because both of them play on the same fleld at home and both have a chance at the same fences. Hartnett of the Cubs isn’t a home run hitter by profession, but he has run up a big total this year batting over the short fences of the Chicago grounds. Til Huston, when he super- intended the construction of the Yankee Stadium, argued for short ing. ficial flies to sink under the R water. For this purpose he puts o I have a letter from a Pennsyl vania man pointing out another, and what I consider a more interesting, way of differentiating between the two methods of fly fishing. He says “The fundamental difference be- tween wet and dry fly fishing lies, not | in the method of fishing, but in the insects which the flies imitate. The flies on -vhich the fish feed are water born. That is, they live their first phase of life as water insects, water bugs, etc. “Presently they come out of the shell which they inhabited as a bug. When they emerge their embryo wings are, of course, sticky and wet, just as a butterfly is sticky and wet when it first comes from a cocoon. They remain in this state for a lit- tle while, floating around in the cur- rent—a sort of half bug and half fly. Then they come to the surface of the water and on the surface they stretch thelr new little wings and become real files. “This is called a ‘hatch,’ for usually thousands of these bugs become flies at the same time, the ‘hatch’ depend graph its twinges all over the circuit . . . So Blue~jay offers this fair exchange—"New spirits for old corns.” . . . Solid comfort comes the mo- ment you put on the soft and W Nearly All Our Men’s $5.95 & $7.50 White & Sports Shoes ES, SIREE! downy plaster. Two days later, you remove the pad— and the corn comes out —geatly uprooted by the little brown disc’ of magic | Bluesjay THE QUICK AND GENTLE WAY TO END A CORN D 1928 $7.50 Sports | §3.35. him a little, because he can’t get back the chances he has lost. isn’t running quite as well as Hornsby. He is giving battle, howe and that he who used dry flies kept his e e erry Race On for Home-Run Honors WILLIAMS AND HORNSBY AT 24 APIECE Duel for Slugging Title Between Brownie and Cardi- nal Is Fairly Even, as Both Have Same Home Shoot At. BY JOHN B. FOSTER. EW YORK, July 22—Kenneth Williams of the St. Louls Erowns and Rogers Hornsby of the St. Louis Cardinals are having a merry little race for the 1925 home-run batting honors. Williams tied inning swat in the gams against the e games this season, which handicaps But if of the year at the rate he has been going—and if he can avoid arguments with umpires and other things likely him out of some of the games—he ought to finis the race with er of games in which he has played, and , while a fair estimate of his chancks, to see the ball batted over ries, but somehow the bubble has lost its C Huston's theory that the game was than, the game its Lou Blue, the Detroit first man, came up with six as: game against the Yanks body pretty much overlooked it was within one chance of record for first base and when a first baseman can get six ass: days of the forsaken old Arm which made everybody bunt and all, there must have been thing doing around the first corner. A freak situation developed in bo major leagues yesterday when leads shifted with both ru idle, either on account of cause of a break in the the National, the Giants took t from Pittsburgh without turning a hand because Philadelphia defeated Pittsburgh while the Giants were idle on account of rain. In the American League, W ton, on the road playing a tion, found itself lifted into first place because the Browns defeated the Athletics. This is the first time in the leads in both leagues sh day without a struggle on t of the new made leader (Copyright. 1 If, has gone blooe som base I THE CALL OF THE OUTDOORS BY WILL H. DILG, President Izaak Walton League of America. ECENTLY I wrote of the difference between wet I pointed out that the wet-fly fisher surface of t ure dry il on his f | equipment than the wet-fly fisherman. ing on weather conditions pheric pressure, etc. “The we sherma his wet fly, the water ir it is emerging from its journey to become s dry-fly fisherman, w I feel thet | sist amateur f1 | select lures course.” . And I think so, too. fisher: and dec RUGBY, Englan the close of play cricket match betwe and Haverford College of Haver Pa., the English eleven runs to 91 by the Amer | SAGINAW, Mi Davey Robertson, Ford's Dearborn cour: position as champion ¢ fessionals by winning t | tournament with Z treat! \ . iy } Il This is “On the House”! Choice of practically all our $5.95 and Shoes—zipping away at Whites, tans, whites trimmed with black or tan. Crepe rubber soles as restful as a balloon going fast! Not at “City Club Shop” tire. But going, men— Cor. 7th & K Sts. 414 9th St. NW. 1914-16 Pa. Ave. 233 Pa, Ave. SE.