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THE SUNDAY § TAR, WASHINGTON, D. ¢, 74 DECEMBER 13, 1925—SPORTS SECTION., Georgetown Books Formidable Grid Foes : Maryland’s Foot Ball Schedule Heavy FIVE POWERFUL ELEVENS LISTED BY HILLTOPPERS West Virginia, Syracuse, Pittsburgh, Fordham and Navy Will Be Among Eight Opponents of Blue and Gray Combi EORG X G for lection, by graduation next J next Fall that success. Five of the eight dates liste eleven The Hilltoppers will open their against Drexel and will play through November 20. an extra contest may be procured for nation in 1926. OWN will lose five star foot ball players. including Capt. Jack Hagerty and Touy Plansky, the latter an all-American se- une, but it has arranged a schedule will require a formidable team to drive through to d for 1926 are with unusually strong season at home on September 25 It is possible that November 27. New names on Georgetown's schedule are West Virginia and Syra- cuse 1ey have never been met by 1 s pair of teams will give George- town enough to do. but the ambitious local ingftution also will encounter ! Pittsburgh, Navy and Fordham. When | it gets through with that lot it will be | ready to call it a season RBreather | games on the schedule, in addition to that with Drexel, are with Washing- «ton College and Lebanon Valle May Play on October ! ame has been booked for Octo- | | N ber 23, the Saturday following the day allotted to West Virginia here. The Hilltoppers are dickering with several teams and hope to arrange & home af- | fair with some minor college. The game with Lebanon Valley will follow | on October 30 After that Syrac Nav and ordham will be met on | successive Saturda, Bucknell and the Marines, who have been on Georgetown foot ball sched- ules for several years past, are con- spicuous by thelr absence. George. | town did not intentionally drop these | institutior s forced to forego | the pleas ceting them because | dates n satisfactory could not | be_selec | This most when mouth Georgetown ful season defeated the Lehigh, ha Lebanon Valley, Mary's, King and Drexel were wal- loped by the Blue and Gray. Its lone defeat was administered by Bucknell, which triumphed. 3 to 2, on a gridiron more fit for a regatta than a foot ball contest. In that game Bucknell made but one first down, while Georgetown registered eight The scores by which the Hilltoppers trounced various opponents provide a falr index to the power of the team compared with that of notable Eaat ern elevens. Bucknell, which beat Georgetown, no.wl out Detroit, 7 to 0, while Georgetown defeated the same team 24 to 0. Lehigh was beaten, 40 to 0, while Lafayette could score only two' touchdowns against the Bethle- hem team Lebanon Valley held Penn State to two touchdowns, then succumbed to orsetown In @ 50-to-0 encounter. re was swamped by a score of 41 10 3, one of the most Severe beatings sustained by the Praying Colonels in d its | 1916, Dart- el since strong Centre, Ford- Mount St vear s it team the the Hilltoppers in foot ball recent years. Fordham, after van- quishing Holy Cross, was praised to the skies by New York critics and was a heavy favorite to win over Georgetown, yet it'was crushed, to 0. 4 The Quantico Marines that had run roughshod over the Hilltoppers for three seasons were met on Thanks ©1ving Day and defeated, 16 to 0. Plansky Real Star. Since the end of the season the team has been rated by many critics | among the leading teams of the coun- try. Plansky, who Is the champlon all-around athlete of the Nation as well as one of the best backfield men of the East, was named by Tad Jones, Yale coach, as the greatest fullback of the country and was accorded a place on the all-American squad selected by Jones, Knute Rockne and Gien War- ner. Besides Plansky and Hagerty, play- r3 who will graduate next June are Metzger, a sterling halfback, and Jawish, a local product, and Murtagh, first string guards. However, there are some excellent replacements avail- | &ble In the second. scrub and fresh- | man team: 80 that while these five players will be missed considerably, deperdable performers will be ready to_take their nlacas Lou Little, former University of Pennsylvania star, who has coached the Georgetown elevens the past two seasons, will be at the foot ball helm at the Hilltop again next fall. Little | has done much work of high quality for the Blue and Gray and despite the unusvally heavy schedule his team is to tackle in 1926, he very llkely will have his men well prepared for the t The Schedule. The new schedule follows September 25—Drexel. Oclober 2—Pittsburgh, burgh. October 9—Washin, October 16—~West Virginia. October !o—hbmonr{'dk)'. November 6—Syracuse, Syra- cuze. ovember 13—Navy, at Annapolis. = N;:\ember 20—Fordham, at New ork. at Pitts- on College. ROCKNE SIGNED, BUT GETS RELEASE FROM COLUMBIA By the Associated Prese N tonight that they had withd: EW YORK, December 12—Columbia University officials announced rawn their offer to Knute Rockne of Notre Dame to become head coach of the local foot ball squad. Action by the Columbia foot ball committee followed a long con- ference this afternoen with Rockne already under contract to for cight years In an official statement, the Colum. bia committee also sald Rockne had signed a three-year contract to coach foot ball at Columbia, effective next Spring, but failed to reveal the ex- istence of his contract with the Indi- ana institution. Columbia’s statement follows: ‘Mr. Knute K. Rockne signed an agreement on December 1 to act as head coach of the Columbia foot ball team for the period of the next three vears, at a stipulated salary subject 10 the upproval of the Columbia Uni- | versity committee on athletics | The foot ball committee presented | eement to university com- | athletics on December 11, recommending its approval. There. upon the university committee on athletics approved the agreement and the announcement of Mr. Rockne's sppointment as head couch followed. “At the time this contract was made, Mr. Rockne stated that he was mot_under contract to the University of Notre Dame. It now appears both from statements by the Notre Dame authorities and by Mr. Rockne him- self, that Mr. Rockne was in fact, and still is, under contract to the University of Notre Dame. “The Columbia committee would not have offered contract to Mr. Rockne or to any other man, or ap. pointed him as head coach, if it had known that he w under contract to enother university, and regrets the entire situation. In view of the fore going, the appointment of Mr. Rockne is withdrawn.” Coach Rockne in a statement de- clared his acreement with Columbia was made contingent specifically upon his release by Notre Dame and that he had not been consulted in connec tion with his appointment to coach foot ball at the New York institution. Rockne asserted further that he had written James R. Knapp, chalr- man of the Columbia foot ball com- mittee, on December 7 that he had not been able to obtain such release, He asserted that Knapp had “‘made effort to have me break my with Notre Dame’ last . and described the statement announcing withdrawal of Columbia's ofter unfair” because of failure of Columbia officials include his viewpoint 1he mittee on s a t SOUTH BEND, Ind., December 12, #P).—*“Notrs Dame will not stand in the way of Knute K. Rockne if he wishes to go to Columbia University,” President Matthew Walsh declared to- night_when informed he had signed the Columbia contract without in- forming the Morningside representa- tives of his contract with Notre Dame. “‘Rockne can stay at Notre Dame or | he can leave. It is up to him. The contract means nothing to us. If he can better himself at Columbia T will be the first to congratulate him.,, Father Walsh declared. NORTHERNS TO TACKLE KNICKERBOCKER PREPS sam Ormes’ Northern foot ball eleven tackles the Knickerbocker Preps today at 2:30 on the Tidal Basin Field. All Northern players are ex- pected to report at the Park View playgrounds at 12:30 for a final brush- ing up prior to the clash. ‘Although beaten by the Wintons last Sunday, the Northerns refuse to drop out of .the race for 135-pound honors. Manager Ormes believes that if the Stantons defeat the Wintons today his team will have as much right to clalm the title as the Stantons, wh he says, have refused the Ivortherns & game, .~ Notre Dame, N during which he admitted he was where he has acted coach 130-POUND ELEVENS T0 CLASH FOR TITLE the Mount Rainier Senior Athletic Club hope to bring home the 130-pound foot ball cham- plonship today when they entertain the Trinity eleven on Mount Rainier field at 3 p.m Both teams boast of clean for the seascn, Trinity having gone through seven contests without being defeated, tied or scored on, and the District Line club having made the same mark In flve games.. Mount Rainier won from Kenilworth, Wood- ridge, Notre Dame, Dreamland and the Georgetown Celti Bill Flester has been named to referee the clash. Hip Canvin prob- ably will umpl Members ° of records LEADING MEMBERS OF UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND’S VARSITY BASKET BALL SQUAD DONALD ADAMS Forward or Cetiter BUDDY INPOR. Forward 'THREE DARTMOUTH MEN ON A. P. ALL-STAR TEAM By the Associated Press 1925 have taken their place . . sociated Press. Their recognition is the resuit of staff of the Associated Pres: created for them by the country EW YORK, December 12—College foot ball's outstanding stars for s in the all-American hall of fame wide compilation of the As- first-hand cbservations by the sports combined with opinions gathered from other experts and coaches who trained most of the players picked for the first, second and third elevers. In this comprehensive concensus 100 qualified critics who witnessed t record-breaking season on every sector of the gridiron battlefront mouth’s great team carries off principal laurels by placing three players | on the first eleven. The honor accorded these three wearers of the green — Tulley at end. Diehl at guard and Ober- lander at haifback—not only testl- fles to the widespread recognition of Dartmouth as the country’s outstand- ing team, but is the chief factor in giving the Fast the buik of places on the three teams selected. Selections: Widespread. Six places on thefirsteleven go to the Eakt, as compared with 3 to the Mid- dle West and 2 to the Far West, while on the entire squad the East has 14 representatives to § for the Middle West, 6 for the Far West and 4 for the Bouth. Twenty-three colleges and universities are represented. No team outside of Dartmouth has more than one player on the first ag- | gregation, aithough Michigan's for- midable outfit, by placing four men altogether on the squad, equals the Green's total representation. The Wolverines' showing, however, does not measure up to that of their rivals with only one position on the first team, two on the second eleven and another on the third compare with the big Green's record of thres on the firat team and one on the second. Dartmouth’s record gains added distinction in the fact that Swede Oberlander, forward passer extraor- dinary and triple-thréat star of the first magnitude, is generally regarded as the country's outstanding indi- vidual performer. Though not ac- corded the spectacular publicity of Red Grange, who gains the quarter- back post on the mythical all-star tewm, Oberlander’s consistent bril- liancy in all of Dartmouth’s big games , representing the views of more than he high spots and bright stars of a found unusually widespread recogni- tion. All Pick Oberlander and Weir. Oberlander shares with 1d Weir glant Nebraska tackle and captain, the honor of being the only player | unanimously picked for their places. | The Dartmouth’s halfback's work was ymore mensational but Weir, showing an uncanny ability to diagnose pla stood out both defensively and offen- sively. Grange, as the result of an up-and- down season, was the subject of di- vided opinion, but, although not all observers agreed he was entitled to a place on the first eleven, the verdict in his support was little short of being unanimous. ‘While the 1925 season was notable for its production of an unusually bright galaxy of ball carriers triple-threat stars, especially in the East and Far West, there was a short- age of outstanding linemen by com- parison with former vea THEY LIKE FOOT BALL. LYNCHBURG, Va., December 12.— Twelve hundred and fifty-six boys took part in 47 foot ball games played here during the past season in three leagues—the midget, boys and junior— which were organized and sponsored by the municipal playground depart- ment. ANNAPOLIS, Md., December 12— Playing as brilllant a game of soccer as has been seen here in a long time and clearly excelling in teamwork, passing and dexterity, Pennsylvania Won from Navy today, 7 to 1. . Dart- | and | THUR BovDp Forward or Guard ARTHO Protos By Uriderwood! STAR COLLECTIONS | | | December 13.—The second and third tewms for 1925, ted Press from is as follows: Ooste NEW YORK, make-up of the first | ail-Ame; | compiled country wide opinion FIRST Ends Benny Dartmouth | ebruska | Mike Tully Ed Weir Ralph Chase Carl Dzehl Dartmouth | Herbert Sturhahn Yale | Ed McMillan Princeton arold (Red) Gras ge | inois George Wilson U. Wash, Andy (Swede) i Oberlander Ernie Nevers Center Quarterbaci Halfbacks Dartmouth nford | Third Eleven. Hanson, Syracuse Lowe, Tennessee re, Goneaga Cdwards, Mich Mahan, W. Virginia Carey, California higan Center Hutchinson Nebr'ska Mich. Quarterb’k Hyde, Colo. Ag. o Halfbacks Keefer Trown Brown, Alabam Fullback Positions. Ends Second Team. Thayer_ U, of P. Born, Army Parker, Dartm’th Tackles Lindenmeyer, Mo. Hews, Ohio Sate Guards Buckler, / Brown, | Erfeaman, | Tevon, Colg Flourney, Tulane | Slagle, Princeton Fullback MENTION. Stanford; Sloan, Drake: Kassell, Swarth! Cornell; | Henderson. Michigan: | Rives, ¥ | Sprugue, Army ; | PG arde—F. 1 Wisinge | Hifinol Kilgour. weh: Lents, Nav Wiseonsin; 'Griffen, Californin; Northwest: Fittabu: tipek, Southern Lowry, Quarterbcks—Penke, Columbin Pennsyl: Drury, 'Southern ¢ Kelly, wttormsen Washington : Marvard: Fol i Graham, For Minnesot; i Hubert, i Kaer. South- | d Kuiveh, Marek. Ohio . La Fayett Pennevivani, Fullbacks—Kreuz, Pennsylvantu: McCarty Molenda. 3 eorgii Teel Amos, Washington and JeTerson; Gustafson, Pittaburgh: Plansky, Georgetown; Khodes, Nebraska; Fry, Town. TWO-COUNTY TITLE IS GRID GAME STAKE Clarendon-Lyong and Northern Vir- ginfa All-Stars of Falls Church will stage a benefit foot ball game today at Lyon Village for several members of the Clarendon team who have been out of the game with injurles. The championship of Arlington and | Fuirfax Counties will go to the win- ning team. o The Falls Church team includes a number of former college players in its Jine-up. Among them are Daugh- ton of Virginia, Jones of Harvard, Kietta’ of Oglethorpe, Millard of Army and A. Kendrick of Navy. Turner of Tech will captain the team. The clash starts at 2:30. QUINT SEEKS GAMES. - Cavalry Methodist tossers, leaders in the ,Sunday School Basket Ball League, are seeking opposition for Wednesday and Saturday nights of {this week. The Calvary Reserves already have booked opponents for the games to. be played in the chugch gymnasium. Senior or unlimited fives wishing to meet the Methodists should Pittsburgh | ¥ make arrangements through Manager Gottwals at Adams 7358-W after 5:30 o'clock, ’ } FRED Lingous Cetter or Torwed CAPT BILL SUPPLILL Cetifer- | g, LELAND CARDVELL Guard Adams, Supplee, Boyd, Faber' and Cardwell all are former Washinglon high school players. VIRGINIA, V.P. L, W. & L. TO FOLLOW 8. C. RULINGS JACK FABER Torward or Guard Associated Press NIVERSITY, Va. Deccember 12—Athletics the U Virginia are not to be regulated by the recent rulings of Southern Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools at that organization's mecting in Charieston, S. ( In making that announcement Dr. George O. Ferguson, jr., faculty | representative of the university on the executive board of the Virginia | Athletic Association, pointed out that the university is engaged to live upder the rules of the Southern Conference and cannot be controlled by By the at University the enactments of any other body. Commenting on the stricter rulings | of the association, one of which pro- ; vides that no athlete shall engage in | ATLANTA, December 12 (P).— two consecutlve sports in point of | Georgia Tech will abide by the recent {ruling of the Southern Assoclation of | time unless he has maintained an 85 | Colleges and Secondary Schools for per cent average in his class work, |bidding the participation in two suc Dr. Willam H. Faulkner, who rep- |cessive branches of sport of any ath- resented Virginia at the Charleston | lete who fails to'make 85 averages in meeting, said that the new regula- | his classroom work tions were passed “under a, misrepre- | Dr. M. L. Brittain, president of the sentation of facts.” He voted for the | institution, declared that while the as- measures himself, he declared, after | sociation granted a six-month period listening to an address by President | befor Association of Colleges and hools. outhern Secondary making the ruling effective, Sanford of the Southern Conference | Tech authorities would enforce it dur- and with the understanding that the | ing the b: ball season new rules were favored by the execu- e e - tive committee of the conference. SOCCERISTS TO STRIVE TO REPEAT VICTORIES It has been pointed out that Vir- ginia would lose at least four mem- Walford, German-American and Fort Myer soccer elevens will try for their bers of the varsity basket ball team this year under the new regulations of the association and that living under the rules would place the scnool | second victori at a distinct disadvantage in its ath- | Washington So letic relationship with such inetitu- | noon at 2:30. The German-. the Reserves of the same organization at Washington Barracks. At the Mon- tions as V. M. I. and Maryland, which are members of the Southexn Confer | yment grounds British Embasey and Monroe teams will battle, wh cer League this after- ence, but do not belong to the asso clation. BLACKSBURG, Va., December 12 (®).—V. P. 1. will follow the rules of the Southern Conference in its ath- letic policy, C. P. Mfles, director of athletics, sald today in commenting upon the rulings of the Southern A sociation of Colleges and Secondary Schools at the recent meeting at Charleston, 8. C. RICHMOND, Va., December 12 (#). Washington and Lee will be governed by the rules of the Southern Confer- ence and not by the rules of any other organization, R. H. Smith, grad- uate manager of athletics of that in- the Walfords. " RADIATORS, FENDERS BODIES MADE AND REP, NEW _RA roR AROR. DIATORS WITTSTATT'S R. & F. WKS. 319_13th_ST. N.W. 1423 P. REAR [ YouTt quitkhy Trade for | one of the leading point scorers | December 12 |and star {foot ball team, today confirmed rey literated his former | them early in th merican Club tackles | le at | Foft Myer the Soldier eleven takes on | on October 9—Virgini Will Be Met at NIVERSITY OF MARYLAND' U next Fall. With an 1l-game College Parkers will be on t until the end of Thanksgiving day an be such that the squad will have to finish the campaign with a fair winni Two games with Maryland team two with clevens from farther South, others are again on the schedule for ECKERSALL SELECTS ALL-WESTERN TEAM By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, Western | 12. tonight The all b December team selected Walter Eckersall of the Chicago Tri-| bune is composedyof seven of his all- | Western Conferer with additions from Nebraska and one each from Marquette and Notre Dame. Eckersall, leading foot bali critic of the Middle West, puts Enright of Notre Dame in at fullback in his ail Western eleven, retaining the other big ten backfield men. right, who | displaces “Five Yards” MecCarty of | Chicago in the all-Western team, was in the | e team two Middle West Ed Weir, Nebraska captain, wh was on Camp's all-American team vear at tackle, and Hutchison braska center. are regarded as among the outstanding players of the Mis. souri Valley Conference. | Dilweg of Marquette is chosen for | the flank position opposite Bennie Oosterbaan, the Michigan forward- | pass snatcher. Four other Missouri Valley Confer- | ence players are chosen for Ecker sall's second team, which includes | some of his first-team selections for the allbig ten The first and. second all-Western teams as picked by Eckersall are First Team. Pzfl;‘lons Second Team LT Lindenmeyer. 3 Hs Walak, M1 Edwards, Mich Dilwes. Maraueite Eriedman Aflch. R ¥ 2 Mis » rty. Chi $25,000 | FOR FIVE CONTESTS By the Associated Press STANFORD 1 —~Ernie fuliback of that he had signed a contract to plas professional foot ball with a Jackson ville, Fla., eleven He sald he had closed a deal with a | group of Jacksonville capitalists to ap Dear In five games, which will net him $26,000 cash and § per cent of the gate receipts | He sald his agreement stipulated that after the first five games he is to draw $5.000 a game and 10 per cent of the gates. If the venture is a fi clal success the Stanford star will be offered a contract next season | SEATTLE, 'Wash., December P).—George Wilson, mentioned as an | all-American halfback, who will gradu ate this vear from the University of | Washington, stated today that he had | rejected an offer of $3,000 to play | professional foot ball in Florida dur- | ing the Christmas holidays | LINCOLN, Nebr., December > Ed Welr, leader of the 1925 of Nebraska foot ball team and all-American tackle selectfon, re announcement to day that he would not accept an offer to join an all-star Jacksonville, Fla., professional team MERCS AND APACHES | IN TITLE TILT TODAY| The unlimited sandlot foot championship serfes, left in a muddle last Sunday when the Mercurys over- | came the Mohawks, starts on lts sec- | ond round today at American League | Park with the Wingfooters encounter. | ing the Apache crew, which won from bal | season | 1 battle to the last | ch, as the victor is promised a | | meeting with the Mohawks next Sun- | day, and a triumph in next Sunday h means the District title. Although getting off to a poor the Mercury club has shown st Improvement and reached its best | form last Sunday in the game with the Hawks, which went to the Meres | by a score of 8 to 0. The Apaches have had an off-and-on season. The game is listed to start at 2:30| o'clock. A double-header at Union League | Park opens the 150-pound title series this afternoon at 1 o'clock. In the opener the Anacostia Eagles take on the Palace eleven. National and Wa verly teams face 3 o'clock Mercury Juniors, 125-pound cham- pions of the city, play their annual ®ame with the Collie Merten All-Stars today at 1 o'clock at Four-and-a-half and Maine avenue southwest. Marion and Friendship elevens ar. booked fof a clidsh at 11:30 on the grid. iron at Fifth and L ctreets southeast Moose and Celtic teams will play Falrlawn Fleld at 1:20. Moose players are asked to report at'12:30 g 912 14th 912 14th stitution, sald in commenting upon the action of the University of Virginia in reference to the rules passed by the ;Studebakeri Pawer Uyral{i!iiw’ Fioish.| Wootton E. Young match with a District combination are « Two of the opponents will be entir B CHICAGO TO BE TACKLED BY OLD LINE GRIDIRONERS Big Maroon Team to Be Encountered in Windy City a and North Carolina College Park. ill be kept busy for them, the S foot ball tea: schedule arranged heir toes from carly in September d the caliber of the opposition wil play a fine brand of foot ball tc ng percentage s, four with Virginia aggregation two intgrsect conte: the Old ' 1926 ¥ to Maryland while two the first time in years The team Is due to engagement on September vlay through ember Turkey day. N n: Maryland book are Chicago and South Carolina. The clash with the Maroon will take place in Chic on Octobe 9, and will be the first a Marviand eleven has ever plaved in the Middle West. It probably will inaugurate eries of annual n with some m the Wesiern (‘onference 1ew ests of Will Tackle Gamecocks encountered uceessful ttles South ba n both spor 1 Gamecocks, but heretc been able t with them Columb Carolina in October In recent years South Ca been quite a factor in Sou t Under the Bocock . foot Georgetown veloped powe was strong t of the 1925 tion, there Columbia. ne For the the Old Liner Randolph-) Randolph-Macc the same day ginia Polytech amecocks T remaining to combina e a fine team at new game as the match Instit with Vir du sey land might co \e arrangemen Tt Collega Park, while \ met at folk possible tandolph anced to October t both will be Marylanders Norfolk to tackle Gobble: a reserve squad st the Ashland outfi was when the dered one irst of aga Time Gallaudef Maryl progress in the sport has not: been backed by tradition, the renewal likely will prove quite {nteresting The Old D proba keep the Old gridiron. In con, three strive to topple be of major ver of Virginia Lee and V. P. I give any outfit a =0 sy - will on the Randolph- teams will 1 and all v ss {n the South. Uni Washington and vens that will of trouble. ners g itic irg! Taryla 1 are el Yale Game Retained. The Marylanders, of retained the Y s beaten > Parkers g opposition rea contest. Nortk as one of Mar foes and the ¢ is becoming one course, have Although lis. the Col e made t 1 a foot b too, is rated ost fmportant 1 the Tarheel classles of | Di The Co be opened 2 ton Colleg: will close ing day cient ri met ‘en men Maryland will be 1 June . reg campaign Washi h town, Md., an y Baltimore on ThankKsgiv when th A landers’ an I, Johns Hopkins, will be bers of the squad at through grad are Beatty and the 1-Southern te choice: Bror ley. guard; Besley, halfback: Waters Bonnet-and Lanigan. who were reg lars at the outset of the season; anc Seth, forwards, and Parker and Trox backs. However, prospects material will be at hand for the formation of a team next Fall. The veterans due to return to college are capable and the freshman class of this year will send many good gridders to and that plenty | the squad. The Schedule The schedule for 1926 follows September 25—Washington lege. October 2—South Columbia, S. C. October 9—University of Chicago, at Chicago. October 16—Virginia Polytechnic Institute, at Norfolk. October 16—Randolph-Macon October 23—North Carolina. October 30—Gallaudet. November 6—Yale, at New Ha- ven. November 13—Virginia. November 20—Washington Lee, at Lexington, Va. November' 25—Johns Hopkins, at Baltimore. 2 Col- Carolina, at and See Libbey FOR LUMBER APty You'll find what you need in our big stock of lumber and millwork. Do FRANK LIBBEY & CO. Lumber and Millwork—>Main 1 6th and New York Avenue NEW LOCATION St. N.W. 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