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26 5P ORES THE EVENING ST Griffs Flunk at Bat POOR PITCHING MATCHED BY INOPPORTUNE HITTING Champions’ Weakness on Attack in the Pinches as Much to Blame for Double Defeat From White Sox as Ineffective Slab Work. BY DENMAN Sports Editor, bited OR all the putrid pitching ext ing that neverthe have completely lamentable a fact that seance at eless is a Twenty-threc letes stranded tale of why W Sox, 10 to 5 and Zachary proved flat t chamy lost more ground trail game and half the of in back ng a THOMPSON, The Star by the Washington corps dur Grifiith S it just a few Clark few lium yesterday timely raps would | altered the complexion of things on the runways as tritely tells the the Nationals absorbed a double-jointed licking from the | and 6 to 2, as the fact th ts as pill propellers, Russell, Ogden | with the result that the for the pennant and now arc Athletics, despite the fact that Johnson, race the Mack’s maulers were upset by the Tygers in Philadelphia 1gles the Griff- recording a tota the e the but of was else As to quantity men did w of 20 in long afternoon, their bat again, in b enough of quality safeties cour the music something half of their swats having ab-| the ast 13 bearing was in the | eliness af the The aliens galbered fewer bingles by two than the Nationals, but only four of them fafled in the run scoring. evolved when they dam- age. It was a sorry cut on their after try. solutely This 1 on outcome. direct oc to Chisox clouts. to figure Their blows were would do the most figure the Nationals rst appearance at home three-week tour splendid turnout of close to 25,000 was on hand to welcome the| boys and see for themselves how a team that had been crippled could travel after baving its full strength restored, but about half that| number stil present some six hours late darkness cut the| sad spectacle of its regulation length a of A the coun only was when short Schalk’s Feat Tires Johnson. Schalk paved the way for a pair of Sox counters in the third inning of the Initial combat by his feat of foul ing off ball ball that Johnson dellvered. This was not calculated to mprove the effectiveness of a veteran | making his first appearance after a onth of inactivity, due to illness. he toll of extra toil in the heat be- came apparent after Lyons sacrificed, when a wide delivery struck Mostil| on the head and felled him. Barney | contrived to whiff Davis, but he failed to locate the pan for Collins, and the sacks were jammed. Johnson worked | hard on Sheely, but with the count| worked to three and two, he failed to fool the t-sacker, whose sharp single to “halk and Mostil Fall then dr to a force play. | Goslin was doubled up_ stealing as Bluege fanned after the Goose singled in round two, but the Griffs got one f those Chicago tallies back in the llowing frame when McNeely walked | ter Peck and Johnson each had | slashed a single to left, and Stan Harris sent a long fly to Mostil | Rice was unable to keep things going. | Poor team work between Goslin and McNeely served to present the Hose with a run in the fifth. With Mostil | fanned, Davis raised a little fly to| left center that both Goose and Earl| got under, but neither froze onto, a cheap double being the result. Collins’ real double to the bleachers in left | center, which followed, proved how | costly ‘such a slip can be, for it not | only scored Davis, but put the| tors in a position which only a fine bit of work Goslin pre\’enled additional scoring. It was after Falk | walked, following Sheely's death, that Hooper connected for a single to left. Goose grabbed the bounding ball while on the run and with a perfect peg to Ruel flagged Collins sliding into the platter. Griffmen Knot the Count. Facing a 2run deficit the champs proceeded to knot the count in their | half of the fifth, with some assistance from the enemy. Peck and Ruel both | got bingles and Johnson shoved them | up with a sacrifice. Roger tallied while | Davis was tossing out McNeely and | Muddy checked in when Collins st bled Harris' hot smash. Rice safety and a pass to Goslin gave Judge . fine chance to clean up the bases, but Joe's best at this point was roller to Collins. A timely single by spencer Harris, inserted Mostil in the sixth, produced a run| for the Sox and started Johnson fDr’ the exit gate. Kamm h-w! opened the | session with a safety, stolen second as Schalk whiffed and taken third on Lyons’ death, when Spence came through. Barney lingered long enough to pass Davis and then gave way to Marberry, who ended the threat by getting rid of Collins on a fly to Goslin, Fred held the aliens at bay for the next two frames, then was withdrawn for a pinch hitter who didn't. Russell as on the slab when the ninth opened left after two hits and a_pass loaded the bases with one out. Ogden then essayed to do the slabbing, but with such poor effect that the Hose collected half a dozen tallies. Curley vielded only one hit, but this was a home run by Spencer Harris with the | bases loaded, Ogden having walked | two of the first three men to face him He issued two more passes after that | circuit clout and might have been handing 'em out till nightfall if Stan | Harris hadn’t pulled a snappy play to catch Davis snoozing off second base. An alien error and safeties by Gos- Jin,_Judge and Bluege netied the N RAD IATORS, FENDERS BODIES MADE AND REPAIRED NEW_RADIATORS FOR AUTO WITTSTATT’S R. & F. WKS. 19 L3TH ST. N.W REAR TROUSERS To Match Your Odd Coats EISEMAN’S, 7th & F after Pinch Hitter to bat for| Main 7612 NASH Distributors , Salesroom and Service Station 1709 L St. N.W. Wallace Motor | the | Peck { tours of duty conceal | tories, after he had been set adrift by { no value whatever this year and his! Company the in the ni two runs Connally Ydn't mean anything. ‘The Champions got off to picous start in the nightc Zachary was mulcted for at the outset. Singles by Barrett, an error by Peck, Falk's suc rifice and a quartet of free tickets were involved. Three of these passes came in a row at the end of Zach's regime, two tallies being forced in thereby. Marberry was summoned from the bull pen with the bases loaded and ended the parade An error by Ruel enabled to increase their run total by in the third with a pair of Hosemen o1 the paths by virtue of a bingle, and u | b Muddy pounced on Connally’s bunt and hit the pitcher in the bacl | with his throw to Judge. This loaded and allowed Kamm to score | pencer Harris' long f Failure to execute an e: play cost the Griffs anothi the fourth. After Colli Sheely rapped to the box and Mar- berry’s throw drew Stan Harris far off the midway only one out could | be recorded. This gave Sheely a life and enabled him to score on Ba double to left center. flugged trying to stretch the blow on rel om McNeely. Cvengros awn in the | second after unsteadiness had | louded the bases. Connally crawled out of the hole by disposing of Me-| Neely, but he vielded a brace of mark- | ers in the fourth when singles by | Bluege and Peck. Ruel's sacrifice fly, a pass to Ruether, who batted for Marberry, and Stan Harris' Texas | league double materialized Thereafter Connally and the veteran, Vean Gregg, pitched shut-out ball un-| | til Umps Geisel called the game on | account of darkness at the end of the | eighth inning. expense of George h inning, but they n inaus- p when four runs Davis and the ox on sy do counte single, was his PITCHING WORRIES HARRIS; SWAPS OGDEN FOR BALLOU RIM, rather than day, of their homecoming yesterd glum, G of wresting top place from the Macklets, who were halted by the Cobb- | the champions not only failed, they dropped farther men in Quakertown, behind the league leaders, but they are merely ¢ discouraged. “No, we're not feeling very ptr,” is the way Manager Harris put it, “but what are you to do under the circumstances. We can't stop, you know. There's no use wasting time | worrying about something that can't be undone. We looked pretty bad out there vesterday, but there are many more games to be played and they are what we are going to concern ourselves about. One off day, or a whole lot of them for that matter, isn’t going to stop u His Pitching Worries Harris. Buck frankly admitted he was in a quandary over his pitching prospects, for today, particularly, and in a general sense for the remainder of the campafgn, due largely to the erratic manner in which Jezebel Zachary has been performing. Having called on all his flingers vesterday, with the exception of Coveieskie and Ruether, both of whom had tough | as recent as l:l\'t‘ the boss made no effort to | the fact that he was up it for capable slabbing this afternoon, being confronted with the necessity of either using Ruether without allowing the Dutchman suffi clent rest, or taking a chance in | sending Zach right back, a risky | proposition in view of Jezebel's failure to last even one round yesterday. Ted Blankenship was expected to toil for the Sox. Harris hopes he has strengthened his curving corps by arranging for the immediate acquisition of Win Bal- lou from the Chattanooga club of the | Southern Assoclation. The original | deal for Ballou, made some weeks ago. | called for his delivery in the Fall, but atter Curly Ogden’s miserable exhibi- | tion vesterday President Griffith got busy with the Jong distance telephone and effected an agreement to_ have Ballou report this week in exchange for Ogden, who has been notified that he now is the property of the Look- outs, chip- | unday, against Harris Displayed Patience. Harris displayed a lot of patience with the Swarthmore sheik, who ren- dered a ton of valuable service to the Nationals last season by turning in a sizeable string of consecutive vic- the Mackmen, but Ogden has been of | showing vesterday finally convinced the skipper that Ogden is through as a_big league | retain their shape under all condi- tions. Durable,too! Men’s, $3.50, $5, $6.50 i as Totals WASHINGTON, MeNeely, Stanley Ha Goslin Judge,’ 15 Marberry, Russell, FRan for Ruel b Chicago cha eft an buses—Chic off Johnson, L, [ Time of game— « Elsh, cf. Spencer Harris, of oy Totals, ... .. AR, WASHINGTO 'MISS EDERLE TO TRY FEAT NEXT MONDAY By th BO ier | swin teen nel « at 6 hour its hy o 7, i i She Enri tine nel mint to Dy o chan, urin 8b. Batted for Marberry in H | prob She hat tion o Collins: g0, 1 tis to Judge. Washington, I A: off Connally, rherry, 1; off Rus’ 1: ol Ogde the w + pelle the mini In & by Minson (Sostil) . Wi witehes losing pitcher, Johuson. —Umpires— Hildebrand, ‘Geisel and Moriarity Hours und 50 minutes. mint will the TY HICAGO. . R. H. 0. 00 0 0 0 3 i 1e 0 12236 2 © @ 1 000 o L3 o 1. aia o 00 0 0 0 0 o o 00 0 o o A. E. 00 0 0 \ros, b WASHINGTON. Peckinpaugh. Ruel, Severe rett’s | Gregx. atter was | Ruethers The latter was | Ruciher Totals - *Batted for Marberry +Batted for Gregk Tn elgh Chicago Washington Game called on ¢ or’ ber inn describes the at following the dual disaster they o How | company is who has e his seventh-place club ern tha ris’ to defez zained a the | throu Eddi grea Thy runs losin, Ba and run 000 000 darkness. o—a o—z & 0a 200 foul engros. 1% off Marberr. ally, 1 a; off Connlly, Zachary, 2 in 3 hmln:. o 14 innings: of {ng Ditcher—Connally. hary. Umpires—Messrs, and Hildebrand. Time of g | M ent Linad Eent Brav half | to-1 | “Br | 1ast early Grin Cul out Phil. hits. ude of the Nationals encountered on the occasi Confronted with the opportunity rather than appointed | cH | tional Ballou will in fast but he thiete s with Southk shape up remains to be seen, comparatively youthful joyed enough succe: in the | comp | leg Ame ociation to warrant the belief ? t he possesses possibilities. Har- | attitude is that he has e\er\(hm;:' gain and nothing to lose in (Iu\r Ballou-Ogden transfer. Johnson's compelled to retire after ylelding a quartet of tallies on half u dozen hits the hot dozen culated to prove beneficial to a hurler | just recovering | and his accidental beaning of Mostil in eithe; to time out Mostil w: he him wide hook wa bench he today. Hoseman that delivery he stopped was a ter’s Atlanta, 4 Nashville, New Orleans, Mobile, showing yesterday, when in the sixth round Wash was not such a bad service after a mont chalk’s feat in making work overtime in the fouling off close to a| round 3 was not cal-| Cleve § New big fellow sun by balls GA in from a seige of iliness, the sixth didn't help Walter an: He may be expected to appear much hetter advantage his next Ch game. | Ne | De Johnny Mostil Was Lucky. s heartily applauded when resumed play after Barney struck in the back of the head with a nd although he later e to a pinch hitter and sat on the throughout the second was expected to resume activities It was lucky for the New v GA low curve, rather than one of Wal fast balls. SOUTHERN Bl ASSOCIATION. i : Ne 3; Birm Pi 5 4 Miss watched | three scored contest with a sensational catch of a v into the West, by Iri Cubs only But specta adelphia, morial to V Chicago at Wash. Detroit at Phil St. Louis at N.'Y, Cleve. Cleveland Boston at Pitts. ila. at | Brookiye at G Associated Press ULOGNE, France rude Ederle, the American girl nmer, has decided to make her mpt to conquer the English Chan- on Monday, August 3. lderle ‘will take to the water o'clock in the morning, four before the tide is due to reach eight, weather conditions permit July 28. e will follow the route taken by que Tirabochi, the Italo-Argen- swimmer, who crossed the chan- August, 1923, in 16 hours 30 ites. Tirabochl swam from Calals over. erts nel who have followed would-be swimmers in their attempts the past 20 vears after hav- Miss Iderle at work for hours daily since she arrived believe she will succeed and 1bly make the trip in record time regarded as the best swimmer ever came under their observa- es through the water with a ul overhand stroke and a crawl Between her first contact with water with one tthe water si rlike effect. swimn mum of times, with a pro- The whole action of accompanted by a effort and of splashing. ctice Miss Ederle has been ning from 28 to 38 strokes per e, but for the channel swim she rely on from 24 to 25 strokes to GERS BUNCH HITS TO BEAT MACKMEN YORK, July k7 youthful —Phila- Athletics, though ited yesterday by Detroit, 4 to 3, half game more leeway in American League leadership ugh the almost unexpected aid of e Collins, once a member of a t Quaker City team Tygers bunched in ‘the fifth & pitcher, be Ruth was himself once again poled out a homer that scored a ahead and also got a single that another. He then closed the e hits for three Rommel was the fly as it Under entered the such conditic pavilion is the Browns accepted a beating from the Yankees Cleve ind treated unmercifully, registering 16-to-7 victory. w's Giants made a triumphal with two homers and one each by Gowdy and Bentley. hurled in _exceptional Rabbit Maranville’s five hits, and won, 10 to 3. Pittsburgh again downed the es and remained a game and a in the van in the race. Be- cled Lee Meadows gained a 5 triumph. okiyn piled four innings Cardinal 1es four Red Sox s 24 rish Meusel strom, ley also lowing up 11 runs in the to overcome an lead, giving Burleigh onquest, 12 to 9, while the Luque, scored the only shut the day, Cincinnati beating 3 to 0. He gave five an, of MEMORIAI. TO CAMP. ICAGO, July 29 (®).—The Na- Collegiate Athletic Association, rising 225 of the leading col- and universities, will erect a me- ilter Camp, the father of foot ball. rican BIG LEAGUE STATISTICS AMERICAN LEAGUE. Won. Philadeiphla . Tund York Boston GAMES TOMORROW. Chicago at Wash. St. Louis at 3 Detroit at Phila. Cleve. at Boston. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS. icago. 10-6; Washington, 5-2. . 8 innings.) 165 Boston, 7 Fhiadelphing MES TODAY. at Boston. (Second w Yorl troit, NATIONAL LEAGUE. Pittshurgh York cinnati |m..mm & e | Philudelphia gam alisash Chiictigo fleet | Boston 100 i06 GAMES TOMORROW. Boston at Pitts. Phila. at Cincinnati. N.'Y. at Chicago, Brooklyn at St. L. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS. w York, 10, MES TODAY. Sincinnai. at Chicago. Philadelphia, 0. St. Louis, 9. Mr. I—_Iyde had corns ... Dr. Jekyll had none! At the root of many a bad temper, there's'a corn. It is hard to keep the disposition serene when a corn is jabbing and baiting it with pain. You can cover the tip of a com with a match-head. But this tiny pain-centermakesonefeel may ous jay. mean all over—and act that way. Doctorsknowthatacorn endacomn and the corn itself in 48 hours. Business men appreci- ate Blue=jay par- ticularly, because it is scientifically efficient. It leaves nothing to the user'’s work. You do not have to decide how much or how little to put on. Each plaster is a com- plete, standardized treatment—and it does the work. irritate the whole nerv- system—so the patient withacorn s told to use Blue= A Blue-jay plaster will inin ten seconds, Blue-jay THE QUICK AND GENTLE WAY TO END A CORN arm and the finish | the stroke with the other her feet | | D. C, WEDNESDAY, JULY 29, 1925. SPORTS. ell as in Box : U. S. Girl Swimmer May “Stand Alone™ 'CHANNEL NEVER HAS BEEN NEGOTIATED BY A WOMAN Eyes of Sporting World on Gertrude Ederle, Who Will Try Herculean Task Shortly—Only Five Men Have Accomplished Feat. Capt. Rutherford, who will descrite the Gertrude swim for readers of The Star and its allied newspapers, is an all-around at lete and captain of the Dover Swimming Club. He has followed every cro channel swimming attempts since 1898, and has been an official ob, more than 40 attempts. He was a war correspondent for the London Mail during the war. Ederle cross-cha Da BY CAPT. ALEC RUTHERFORD, Famous British Expert on the Cross-Channel Swim. Special Correspondent of the Star and North American Newspaper All APE GRIS 2 France, July continents—Europe, North 29—The eyes of sport fa America and South America- C focussed some day soon, probably next week, on old Cape Nose, here on the northern coast of France, where Miss Ederle, the young American swimmer, will try for the wor | classic,” the cross-channel swim. Never yet has this feat been scores have tried it Only five times has it been done by e | three continents. The first crossing V'ebb, an Englishman; the second was an Englishman, naturalized in France; 1923—Henry Sullivan of Lowell, Mas Argentinian_of Italian desc The fifth who crossed from France to England on 54 minutes. Webb's feat, which ed by an impressive stone monument at Dover, was accomplished his second attempt. He swam a zigzag cours ng 32 miles in all, and his 21 hours 45 minutes (r.unlo He has be He swam from England to France.|Ederle’s racing Webh a tew years later lost his life | gradually to his stan while attempting to swim the Niagara [per minute, and similar, Rapids. | her “kick.” While thi |loss in pace, it lea | serve for the spurts sary in order to catch the most f able tides. | Plans Are Made. The feeding arrangeme final effort are all com Gertruc performed by a woman men, and these five men represe vas made in 1875 by 1911, by Tho! the ar and Sebastia was Charles September 8 hird .[“ 192 is commemorat- | assist her in developing a style appro priate to the tremendou or fore her. I GERTRUDE EDERLE. NINES ARE TO BE BUSY IN UNLIMITED LEAGUES All three of the recently organized unlimited base ball leagues will be in full swing this week end, Finally Succeeds. Burgess succeeded only after 13 un- successful attempts. His time was 23 hours 30 minute, and the distance covered was 42 miles, owing to his very irregular course. He also swam | from England to France. He was fa vored with a water temperature of | menu during the swim will | 66 degrees, the highest in a decade, | Principally of beef tea, g |but he was stung 100 times by Jjelly- | chocolate. Taking food during a sw |fish on his way across and several |iS a new experience for Miss I times narrowly ped collapse from | but it is necessary in the cros seasickne Burgess now at Cape | Bel effort. Nez as coach for Miss Li n As a means of counterac arrison, the Buenos Aires swimmer. | effect of the cold and the 1 Sullivan and Ti conquered | Vating soakage in sea water the channel on only a week | Preparation of a rt, in August, ullfvan’s time | cover Miss was 37 hours 45 ining on her 3 e th ke tance was 56 miles. It was his seventh | Whole swim. For protectic o r '\""“,"'{'\"b'f"",',f',-".‘."‘f“f":“lj“”"]' ’hluf‘,':’r" attempt In 10 years of persistent ef-| her eves against the salt water Wheeler, Tank School hurler, { ¢, 'He lost 20 pounds during his|Will wear special fitted gogles stru Sithe rtiuet ol Of heir clash yes | swim. Tiraboschi, the South American | 10 her face in a linen . e Che B neace demond. butiiqol, followed a week later in a whirl- There are two or setiate) e g wind effort, which conquered the chan- | stacles which she s like nel in the amazing time of 16 hours | during her swim, but 33 minutes. Tiraboschi had spent | Preparation can be made. If she er $25,000 in two previous attempts. He | COuUnters bad tides, she 1 g am from France to England, and | them to prevent being carried off her Miss Ederle will follow exactly the|SoUrse. Seasickness in the water same course in her attempe. defeated several channel & Her swim will start from the sloping | While stings from jel | are ar beach under the cliffs of Cape | Sther ‘h“!”_'f“‘_‘y\ e e thenearest tpolntito Mg ipe rater ave not infreque Jabez Wolff hopes to plan things| The temperature of the so that Miss Ederle will catch a| Yater now aver ees, direct tide in midchannel, near | JeBTees colder than that encountere Ridge Samds: thence the tourse wiil| by Webb and Sullivan in their cr be set to catch a flood tide back of | Channel swims | Goodwins Sands, swimming the last ‘Wg;;,‘;,"‘m:fi&l;)j;g \y;,;':"_:\'" | few miles in slack water, driving on to the Dover Beach below Shakes- YANKEES GET INFIELDER, TWO PITCHERS, CATCHER pears Cliffs. Miss Ederle is undoubtedly very NEW YORK, July 29.—Further in |field and battery strength has ctad six teams of the Prince Georges County two in Arlington loop playing games Sunday the Washington regular .\‘lurda)" schedules circuit and their first and League fol thei is nines in Sunday wing ar requested to | h street south ng fast company day tilts, games in the series being Warwick for the District chan Thirt ship now held & the Shamrocks are clude an encou °r between Nation: Circle and Aloysius club teams Union League Park, a meeting of the Pullman and Shamrock combinat at Fifteenth and C streets north a White Sox-Hol Comf tilt Washington Barracks and a Knicker bocker-Warwick clash at Georgetown hollow. Sunday the Eastern team the Aloys on Eastern Athletic Aesoci ation diamond, Knicks and Com e play at Georgetown and Dominicans and Petworth furnish the at the Barracks field The Prince Georges County schedule opens with Mount entertaining Seat ' Pleasant, Athletic Club playing h ) Plerce Club of Hyattsville and Kenil worth invading Maryland Park dia mond. g Arlington, which stepped out in front of the Northern Virginia series defeating Addison last Sunday. prevented action betwe Cherryd and Clarendon, meets Clarendon at the Arlington diamond Addison and Cherrydale play at Lyon Village Field N Saturday conducted res other v to encounter ainst which no the Toney Demma is expected to be back in the Barle Theater line-up Sunday, when the Fort Myer team is encou tered at South Eilipse diamond. The e starts at 11 o'clock. tackles 2 gar ot a sh Elliots are seeking games with Hess, | _HeT Liberty, ¢ and other senior | ARV, be: nines around th Call Manager |;2ng =% Honey at Lincc — chanr Taking a 5-run I n the first in- nt ning, the Yankees defeated the Tigers, 11 to 9, in_Thomso League. The Tigers are out in front with six wins in eight starts, while| the Athletics have broken even and the Yankees have won two and drop- ped six By winning from the Arrow Preps, to 2, sth wist St. Joseph's and Benning nines will come meet for the second time at Bennin, Field Sunday at 3 o'clock. In the pre vious engagement Benning emerged with the long end of a 3-to-0 count Saturday the Josephites play at Sany dy Spring. ' Mrs. F. Cheseldine’s Lafayettes are For games with the Rex Peewees call North 3835. | fortunate in having the services of { Wolff. He knows more about Chan- Harris Insects registered their | nel swimming than any other living | win in 40 starts. The Harris|man, having himself made more than ors meet the Molines today and|2¢ gallant but unsuccessful attempts. |out of the west to the New York Yan to book a game with the Senecas. | Although he had never had the luck |kees, once champions, but now among to win success, his experiences have {the jowly in the American Leag | taught him practically evervthing| From St. Joseph of the Western Ct there is to know about the difficulties |cult they gulned Walter Gilbert, third N and dangers which make for failure, | baseman, and Jimmy Marquis and | CLEVELAND, July 29. P.—Carl|as well as the factors, tangible and |Ruel TLove. pitchere. . emaine and Johnny Farr boxed 10|intangible, that are essential to suc-| Marquis will report at once, while having trouble finding opposition after | furious rounds to a draw at Taylor | cess. Gilbert and Love will come after the having defeated Congress Heights, Bowl last night. The referee's decision | In his training program, Wolft's | Western campaign closes. 14 to 1. Mohawks, Knickerbockers, | was unpopular with the crowd. which [plan is to conserve the physical re-| Roy Luebbe, a catcher from Omaha Dominicans, Union Printers, Comfort. | thought that Tremaine had won. sources of the girl champlon, and to|has arrived. H THURSDAY, FRIDAY and SATURDAY JULY 30, 31—AUG. 1 The Most Conveniently Located and Best Equzpped Gasoline Filling Station in Mt. Pleasant 14th and Belmont Sts. N.W. A Filling Station Lacking Nothing ;o Supply the Requirements of the Motorist NINE VISIBLE PUMPS—INSTANTANEOUS SERVICE—SIX LUBRICATING PITS FREE AIR AND WATER SERVICE FACILITIES REST ROOMS FOR LADIES AND GENTLEMEN SULLIVAN & HELAN