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SPORTS. T HE EVENING STAR., WASHINGTON, D. C.. THURSDAY, JULY 1. 1926. SPORTS. L&) Cincinnati Once More Bitten by Championship Bug as Club Cleans Up Pirates REDS PARALLELING PACE AMERICANS ADVANCE | SET IN TITLE YEAR, 1919 Victory Then Due to Confidence Instilled in Them by Pat Moran, and This Season Jack Hendricks Is Following Example of Predec BY JOHN W YORK. 30. June N the amazed Pittsburgh Pirates four full games in the iead today SSOr., B. FOSTER. Cincinnati has been bitten by the base ball championship bug again. and it is no wonder the Red fans are warbling hosannas after seeing their team take five straight from The scries with the Pirates put the Reds Cincinnati won a champio.: in 1919 for the first and only time in that <ty of base hall tradition guide for cities that ncver had won the race by making them think the G something to do with Philadelphia’s winning of the Mayvbe that had The Reds won because Pat Moran, the boss _base hall pennants. kept the Reds in nants were airaid of them. pennant when Moran managed the Quakers. The Phillies haven't won since and will have a hard job coming an the club give Whether Jack Hendricks is able to e the Reds helieve the Giants are afraid of them is something di ferent. It doesn’t matter so much this vear. hecause there iz only an cxtremely slim chance that the Giants il even get inlo the thick of the ht. Hendricks must instill courage into the Reds axainst Pittshursh, St Louis and the Cubs. He can do that hecause he is a Western man and he knows all about the different styles and cuts of courage in region When the in 1919 they were of June and the This vear the end of June finds the Redgs first and St. Louis second. That, of itself. is something of a reversal. Started in Lead in 1919, In 1919 the Reds started in the lead. as they had done more than once before. and dropped back to third place in the latier part of May. They had made one Eastern round at that time. On July 12 the Reds were in first place. but the next two week ends found them in second place. The Reds climbed back into first piace on August 2 and they never were ousted from it again during the seazon. The Giants kept after them, but sometimes the Giants are not as good in a chase astern as ‘they are when they are the leaders. This happened to be one of those It was in this vear that the Gi took Nehf away from the Boston club, »nducted by George Washing nt, although unquestionably f Reds won the cond at the end nts were first that | pennant | 4 vywhere near one unless the owner of Art F etcher more lat'tude as to players: | controlled by New York capital. With | Nehf the Giants sought (o make a last grab at the pennant, but without avail, This vear the Reds started in third | place, dropped to fourth early in May, |80t to second on May & and were in rst place by May 15, | to be lifted out of it. although they | have stazgered worse than they did in | 1919 | Similarity in Records. It is not quite the same record that | the Reds made in 1919, and vet there are enough resemblances this season | to make it worthy of notice. The Reds [in 1819 really carried first place on their shoulders from the first of Au- gust to the end of the season. They were first for a week in the middle of [ July, but they were crowded out by | the’ Giants and no one belleved Cin | cinnati would stay up. Pat Moran did. He was one man- ager who had as little fear of John McGraw and -his influence as any manager who ever lived. Pat did not have the fingsse that McGraw always has had and was not as good a gam- | bler in base ball chance. but time and |again he outwitted the New York mah ager in the handling of pitchers. The late manager of the Reds was so con- fident that he could beat McGraw in guessing over a pitchers’ duel that ne ufled to brag about it. 3 That’s one place where 1've gol ' Pat used to say, and he had s on both the Philadelphia gnd cinnati clubs who thoroughly be- lieved it. (Copyright. 1926.1 LOCAL AND NEARBY NINES MAKE PLANS FOR SERIES D IVIDING of the District and nearby Maryland and Virginia un- limited sandlot base ball clubs into a league of three di night marked the first active steps toward the organization of a sions last championship series under the direction of the Capital City League. Teams were selected by a committee appointed for the purpose on their past records and present strength, Mount Rainier, bockers. the Shamroc Printers. St. Joseph' PRINTERS END SLUMP BY DEFEATING PEPCO Union Printers got busy yesterday in the Commercial League and turned in a victory after dropping their first two starts of the second series. The Typos nosed out Pepco. 8 to 7, lower- ing the Powsar (o.'s team’'s average from 666 to an even .500 Pepco registered 12 bingles to 9 chalked up by the Typos. Robbins and Deck of Pepco hit three-baggers, and Dunn connected for a eircuit clout. Lowery of the Printers also hit for four bases. Patent Office supplanted Govern- ment Printing Office heside Treasury at the top of the Government League standings by nosing out the Govern ment Printers, 8 to 7, with a ninth inning rally that netted four counters. Hickey hit a homer for the winners, while Simon of G. P. 0. also clouted for the circuit In the Potomac Park loop. Public Buildings and Public Parks defeated TLabor in another close match. 12 to 11. R. Hamilton and McGrath were the opposing moundsmen throughout the 10 innings that were necessary for the deciding of the clash. HITZ WIN Chevy Chase HELLEN AND CHEVY CHASE DOUBLES| Arthur Hellen and Bill Hitz con cluded a successful defense of their Chevy Chase Club doubles titles ay and won the champion: a second time by defeating Capt. R. Train and C. R. Train, jr.. tennis courts. The match went to five set and Hitz winning, 6—1. 46, 6—4. The final of the women's singles. ingi together Laura 3ryn and A in. was postponed un til toda GLENEAGLES, Scotland, July 1 (P).—George Duncan, veteran British zolf star. headed the list of 32 quali- fiers in the Glasgow Herald's 1.000- guinea tournament. Duncan turned in 139 for the two days’ qualifying round. The Argentines. Perez. with 146, and Jurado, with 152, hoth quali fiad. & “?v;% Dependable as aiwaysy & many mwfumm,l_,s ofgraceandbeauty Cuts 84 Actual Wrist Radiolite Stands the bumps of outdoor use better than higher priced, delicate Tngersoll 1f an aceident puts your Ingere w of commimion, pack carefullyandsendiolnoERsoLL WATCHCO,,Ine, SemiceDept., watches, Tells imeinthe 34,50 Wi by 3 LG ' Why Risk Your » Expensive Watch? The New Yankee | Section A contains the Knicker- Maryland Athletic Club, Union and Arlington. Addison, Anacostia Eagles. Comfort- ers, Marlboro. Kenilworth, Cherrydale, Bladensburg and Pullman nines were placed in Section B. The roster of Section C- includes the Lafayettes, Wesleys. Modocs, Hyattsville, Vir- ginla White Sox, Ballston, Clarendon Stephen Athletic Club, Fort Myer and the Auths. { A franchise fee of $30 must be posted hy the managers hefore 10 p.m. on July 6. The series is expected to open on July 11. Cherrydale’s pilot ha< added a double-header with Purcellville to his schedule of week end games. Addi- son’s nine is being encountered on Sunday at Lyon Village field, while the Cherries go to Purcellville on Monday. Mount Rainier, in addition to play- ing a double-header with Arlington on Sunday, will see action at Alexan- dria_on Monday against the Dread- naughts. Washington Klansmen are to min- gle with the Dreadnaughts on Sunday. Washington White Sox tackle Co- lumbia Engine Company at Alexan- dria Sunday. Cabin John tossefs want a Sunday game with some unlimited uniformed team. Call Bethesda 201-F-14 be- tween 6 and 7. Wisconsin Juniors are after games. Call Manager Fuchs at West 1573 be- tween 5:30 and 6:30 Linworth Midgets nosed out the Ar- rows yvesterday. 5 to 4. . ASKS WAIVERS ON KERR. SAN FRANCISCO, July 1 (®).— Waivers on Pitcher “Dickie" Kerr, hero of the 1919 world series between the Chicago White Sox and Cinein- nati, have been asked by the San Francisco club of the Pacific Coast League. Kerr, purchased from the White Sox this Spring, has had little | success on the mound for the Seals. . iy In a contest between Ad Wolgast d Joe Rivers at Vernon, Calif., in g a double knockout was scored, an almost unprecedented occurrence in_the a: 1s of the rin, | She who would re. tain her youth ere is al health in a daily bottle or_two of VALLEY PORGE DISTRIBUTING ©O. 624 L 8t S.E. ‘Washingten, D. O. Phone Lin. 5410 They have vet | AT WIMBLEDON NETS WIMBLEDON, July 1.—Howard Kinsey, the steady-playing Califor- 1an, stood out as the hero of contests 1+ the jubllee tennis tournamen! In five.set battle for a place in the inal of the men's singles. Kinsey outplayed and outgeneraled the vete. ran Frenchman, Jacques Brugnon, 4nd emerged winner over his brilliant, | but sometimes erratic opponent. who | not less than five times had the match | in his grasp. The score was 6-—4. 4--6, 63, 8—6, 9— | In the other semi-final in this divi- | sion Jean Borotra outplayed his French teammate, Henri Cochet. to hecome the American's opponent in | the match which will decide the 1926 Wimbledon championship. The score in this contest was 2—§, 7—3, 2—86, =3, T—5. Equally spectacular, though on a different plane, was the victory of Kinsey and Mary Browne over Baron von Kehrling and Senorita de Alvarez, 6-—8, 6—4, 6—2. thereby becoming the |first semi-finalists in the mixed doubles. In this match the American pair had lost the first set after carrying it to deuce. and had seen their Hun- garian-Spanish opponents take four games in the second set before they were able to speed up sufficiently to | win. The victory of Vincent Richards |and Elizabeth Ryan over George | Crole-Rees and Mrs. Marion Zinder- stein Jessup was a tame affair. The Americans won in straight sets. 6—3, 6—4. Today will witness the staging of the semi-finals in the women's sin- gles, with Mrs. Molla Mallory meet ing Senorita de Alvarez. and Mlle. Didi Viasto playing Mrs. L. A. God free ‘The American contenders for the championship are Kinsey, finalist in the men’'s singles: Richards and Kin- | sey. semifinalists in the men's doubles: Mrs. Mallory, semi-finalist in the women's singles; Miss Ryan and Miss Browne. semi-finalists in the women’ doubles; Richards and Miss Ryan, fourth round, upper bracket, and Kinsey and Miss Browne. semi- finalists, lower bracket, in the mixed doubles. Yesterday's summaries: Men's Singles. Semi-Gnal round—Howard Rinses P (o Tean ochet United France, Borotra, France. 3 Mrs, Jackson Feilden and X Welch land, defeated Joan Fry and Mrs Enllll\d 6—3, 6-—4 Semi-final _round—Mrs. v McRane Godfree and Evelsn Colyer, England. defeat- a4 Mre. Jackson Feilden and N. Welch, 'S land, 6—2, 6—3. Eng- Hazel, Mixed Doubles. Elizabeth Ryan and Vincent United States, defeated Mrs. M. stein_Jessup. United = State: Crole-Rees, England. 6—3j, 6—4. Mary K. Browns and ' Howard Kin United” Staies, defeated Senorita Lilli d Al° varez, Spain, and Baron von Kehrling. Hun- eary. .6t B8—2 T. H. Harver and J. B. Gilbert, England. deteated Mile. Didi Viasto and Heiri Cochet, France, 8—3. B—7. 6—4. Mr.and Mrs. I, 'A. Godifree. England. de. feated Miss E._Petchell. F. _Aeschliman’ Switzerland, 6—2, 68— Senorita Lilli_d'Alvarez. Spain_'and Baron von Kehrlinz. Hungary. defeated G. and M. K. Lester, England, 6—z, Men's Doubles, Randolph Lycett and H. V. fustin. Eng- land, defeated N. H. Latchtord and R . Pryce-Jones, England, 6—2. 6—2. 6—3 STURDY HOME FIRST IN 500-MILE FLIGHT Sturdy. a pigeon out of the loft of W. 8. Hixon. won the 600-mile flight over the Southern course that closed the National Capital Concourse Asso- ciation’s old bird series. The winning bird was timed in at 7:3¢ am. on the second day of the Richards. n Zinder- D90 Ry PrEpm fivers from John H. Holmead's loft. Twelve owners were represented by the 148 birds taking part in the flight First returns with speed in vards per | minute follow: w. S. Hizon Manor loft. .. Manor Toft! .| H. D. Copenhaver F. J. Voith. Greenyard loft.. H, Willis. .. Wehause: orwood | final aggregate. George | J England. and C.| ;" race and was followed closely by two |} By the Associated Press. (\ OLUMBUS, Ohio, July 1.—Gues .S 'miliar with the course and the who wiil compete, are that Bol Jones family of Atlanta, Ga. Results of a questionnaire submit- ted to members of the Scioto Country Club, where the tournament wil® be held. the local “‘pros” and others, just made public, make the youthful Georgfan a heavy favorite. Bobby had practically twice as many votes as MacDonald Smith, the runner-up, and still more of an edge on Walter Hagen in third place. Predicted scores for the winner of the tournament, to be played next Friday and turday, ranged from 278 to 298. Many re; istered guesses between 290 and 29 with 290 having the most followers. Alfred Sargent. 17.vear-old son of George Sargent. Scioto Club pro, also was placed among_ the possible win- ners of the title. Young Sargent was one of the two amateurs who quali- fled for the tournament. His home course is expected to be heavily in his favor. The elder Sargent. who won the title in 1909, predicted that a dark horse would win the championship. No. 2 hele at Scioto. according to more than half of the replies, will be the toughest hole on the course. No. 11 Is the choice as the easiest No. 2.4s a 430-yard hole, featured | JONES TOURNEY FAVORITE, WITH HAGEN THIRD CHOICE national open golf championship added to the other heirlooms of the ses of local rail birds thoroughly fa: abilities of most of the golfing stars bby Jones as good as has the 1926 by a hog-backed falrway, sloping off on either side to severe rough. It calls for perfectly straight driving of 200 yards or more to avoid trouble. No. 11 is 360 yards long, of the drive and pitch tipe. NEW YORK, July 1 (#).—Robert Tyre Jones, jr. known as Bobby wherever golf is played, tomorrow will enter the city in triumph, and thé municipal brass band will be out to meet him. When first plans were made for the reception of the British open and American amateur golf champion-- hero of the battle of St. Annes—it was thought that a committee of 100 would make the welcoming pa large enough when the Aquitania ar- rives from England But 80 much enthusiasm has been aroused that a band will lead a march through the lower Broadway canvon to City Hall. where Mayor Walker will bespeak the appreciation of New York. After he escapes the clutches of city officials. Bobbv will feast with triends at the Hotel Vanderbilt. There will be a dance in his honor there tomorrow night. A tug will take him off the liner at Quarantine | YALE GOLFERS ANNEX COLLEGE TEAM TITLE SOUTH ARDMORE, Pa.. July As fine a battle as ever was waged for intercollegiate golf team honors found Yale on the winning end today at the Merion Cricket Club by a margin of two strokes over Harvard, three over Princeton and five over Dartmouth, its nearest competitors among the 10 teams that started. Yale for its best four of six men | scored 1.205 strokes for the 72 holes of medal play. Harvard had 1.29% Princeton 1,298 and Dartmouth an even 1,300, Nione of the others was really in the fight and several failed to post a Four leading’ teams YALE (1205 . 187 Wattles 188 H. Flinn . Haviland nman. Parker Stoddard HARVARD 11 3 SRS 3333 i 35 3o Stimpson orril] . . Parker. ir i DARTMOUTH H._ Batchelder pse Brush 3333 uvalifiers for indi- 1) title % Westland Waghington Hiser?. Chictzo ox. F'nion Merritt. Penn 8 ht Barniim vard Sherman. Yale I Wartles Yal MacDouzal. ir. Princeton & Brush. Dartmouth M. Batcheider. Dartmouth Yale k1. ‘Princeton impson. Harvard Hutchison. Harvard. obbins.Prineeton amprecht. Tulane cCrars. Drake D Herser. Princeton 8. ir_ Dartmouth Sullivan,_Dartmoith ewitt, Penn Stata for match play 20, e 2 =% 3. 3,3 S>30 am Pripeeton . rion. Brown iliams. Williams Coltart. Penn . osisn. Dartmouth Tlen. Drake tuart, St..John's . PAIRINGS UPPER HALF. Weatland ve. McCrars. Bamnum vs Flinn Cox vs. Hersey. Waitles vs. Kellerman. tchelder vs_ Morrill. Hackl vs. Coltart. iland vs. Horton. Hutchineon vs. Allen. LOWER HALF. Hisert v& Hales. Shermaa ve Merritt v Besse MacDongal BR2BBIEBRRAIBRR SIIR2AZ22232332 Sullivan. art. Brush Hile r Br C. me E. H W, H Dil LY E will! H “BV.D” suit every tim Wear. + “NEXT TO MYSELF 1 Howirt. Robbine ve W-lliam: Joslyn. Lamprecht ve. Stuart v Stimpson 1934 Tve B. V. . Co.. Tae. “Let’er Sizzle— I’ll be Cool!” e has enough to have a fresh e he dresses! “B.V.D.” is always cool and . matchless in Comfort, Fit and Be Sure to SEE it’s “B. V. ._”‘ It ALWAYS Bears this Red-Woven Label LIKE ‘B. V. D’ BEST” GUY, CURRAN & CO. ‘Wholesale ‘Washington, D. 0. Distributor i | Inside Golf By Chester Horton. Here are some pointers for the in- side of your hat band regarding the golf swing. They are things that al- ways must be watched after. Do not hurry the back swing. Keep the “lubhead low to the eround in the first few inches of the hack swing. Keep the clubliead in- side of an imagi nary line runnin, through the ball | toward the hole ahead. Pause slightly at the, top of the hack | swing to main- | tain balance while turning Unwind vour body slowly and g evenly in the forward swing. letting body action and club co- ordinate. Let your weight pass| slowly forward in the forward swing START CLU® BACK Low | until’ it all rests on vour left lex. | Then stiffen the left leg to with- stand the hitting action. About the | time all your weight is on the left| leg. begin throwing the clubhead with the wrists. And be sure you | see the ball all the time. | oosright. 10281 E. Popper & Co., I | Teated Cant |of Fort Myer. Va., D. C. TENNIS EVENTS NEAR TITLE STAGE With the exception of one match. scheduled to be played today, singles players in the District champlonship tennis tournament have run off all their preliminaries and are ready to stage the semi-finals and final of the annual affair tomorrow and Satur- day at Dumbarton courts. -+ Tom Mangan, Clarence Charest and Eddle Jacobs afe the three favorites who already are listed to compeie in the semi-finals. Either W. Carter Baum. coriqueror of Capt Nan Vltet. or Bob Burwell will get the assignment against Charest, while Mangan meets Jacobs. Man- gan has beaten the Baltimore young- ster twice already this season and is expected to add a third vietory to his string. Charest, who holds two lezs on The Evening Star Challenge Cup, is the favorite in the lower bracket. Doubles teams quarter-finals today seeded teams, Johnson-Van Vliet, Mangan-King. Elljott-Jacobs and Anderson]Charest, came through yes- terday. Results and pairings for to- day follow: Today's Singles Pairings. Fourth round—Bob Burwell vs. W. Carter Baum will reach the All four of the Today's Doubles Pairings. round-—Mangan and Kine va Schofield: Detwiler and Rutley ik Johrimon and Van Viiet ve | Anderson and | neidine: Harding | | Second Dodge _an: s, Love “Third Mitchell _and MeDiarmid; Charest va. O'Neill and C: and Baum ve. winner of King and Dodge-Schofield mateh and - Elliott ve. winner of Detwiler Rutley and Love: Kisluik mateh Yesterday's Singles Results. Fourth round——Tom = Mangan _defeated Jack Thudley. -1 Eddie Jacobs de- W. A Andérson. 8—3. 4-—8 =1 arcnee Chareat defeated Gwynn King, 4—& 60 Third roun b Burwell defeated Hush McDiarmid. 4 6—1. A2 Yesterday's Doubles Results. First round-—Detwiler and Rutley defeated Buchanan _and Guilford. 6—4. 68—1; Man gan and Kiog defeated” Yates' and Dudis d—4. 6—0 ley. resgiond round——Johneon and Van Viiet ds- eated Burwell and Howenstein. 6—1. 6—0. Miel and MeDiarmid dfested Newby and imon. 6—3: Harding and Baum d featad Benton and Dowd. #—R. A Jacobs and_Elliott defeated Kuwaski and Trige 3. -6 t—0: Anderson and Chareat defeated Purinton and Judd, 6 8—3:. GNeill and Consdine defeated Abrams and Tavior. $—8. §—2 6—4 ARTILLERY POLOISTS and. ound: | | RED BANK, N. J, July 1.—Two| well matched polo teams in the tour- | | nament at the Rumson Country Club | clashed vesterday in a special six period game for cups presented by Thomas S. Hasler. and it resulted in | a victory for the 16th Field Artillery | over the Rumson | Elephants. 6 to 5 | These same teams met in the final| for the Southwestern circuit cham- | pionship last Sunday. when they bat- tled eight periods to a tie. and Rum- son won in the extra chukker by the score of 8 ta 7. They will meet again on Saturday in an eight-period game for the Abram Elkus cup nc., Manufacturers D. C. GOLFERS GET HOME FROM ABROAD TOMORROW OBBY JON B by Mayor Walker. On the same boat will be Wachi of Albert R. MacKenzie, Roland R. The younger MacKenzie and the two pros will not remain in Washing- ton long. for early next week they will start for Columbus, Ohio, to play in the national open championship to be held over the course of the Scioto Country Club, in the Ohio city The annual Spring tourney of the Washington Newspaper Golf Club for the McLean trophy will be played to- morrow at the Columbla Country Club. Although Congress will probably ad- journ on Saturday, the newspaper golfers believe they can hold a suc- cessful tourney {omorrow, fearing that if another postponement is made nany of the contestants will have gone north with the President or west on political assignments. The tourney Is an 18-hole handicap medal play af- fair. Chris J. Dumphy and James F. Sal- keld tied for the low gross prize in the first annual golf event of the Rac- quet Club, played yesterday at Burn- ing Tree. They had scores of 79. The | tie will be played off shortly. Low net went to John L. Barr, with a card of 81—14—67. Other prizes were awarded as fol- ows: ‘Snr‘hnd low net, won by James F. Salkeld, 79-—10—69; third low net, won by Powell Browning. 92—22—10; high gross, won by H. A. McLean, 143 high gross on any one hole, triple tie between H. A. McLean, R. B Fleharty and J. M. Biddle, all with 15 trokes. 7M. Biddle dazzled the eves of the committée and walked away with the prize for the best dressed golfer. with his resplendent pink shirt leading a professional of sartorial examples. The scores follow: John L. Slavin. 89—18—71: tosh, RO—18—71; C. H. Strand i, Dyfanes. 96—21—15 Tmaphe. 7H—d—T| W. P Meredit! toy I, F. Salkeld. Earl Mcln: To—ga— amateurs, and Fred McLeod and Tommy Armour, 3 S, bearing with him the British open championship cup, { never before won by an American amateur, will arrive in New York tomorrow to be met, feted and dined by a committee headed ton’s golfing delegation, composed cKenzie and Donald Woodward, grofcss\onah. 119-726—03, R: B, Fleharty, 118—24—04: rd_112—17% w.D. 12—17— D, Or F. Fooshe 132— per. 118—20—08: 1 No_ carde—G. D_Ellsworth. jr - J. Philf Pepper. C. R. Hough, er.: C. C. Carlin. )'rlnz es. Sidney E. Kent. J_Floyd Cisse! 3 F. Meegan. ki i Boone. Hobert Wiison. H. A. Miniils. Mrs. Emory Smith and Morven Thompson annexed, the mixed four- some event at the Chevy Chase Club yesterday with a card of 84—4—80. Second place went to Mrs. L. O. Cam- eron and Robert Stead, jr., with $7- 5—82, while third place went to Miss Susan Hacker and Dr. T. M. Foley with 91—8—83. ONLY FIVE ARE LEFT IN COLLEGE SINGLES HAVERFORD, Pa., July 1.—Ed- ward (Bud) Chandler of the University of California, the present holder of the title; Cranston Holman of Leland Stanford. Neil Suilivan of Lehigh, John F. . Whitbeck of Harvard and John Va Ryn of Princeton Uni- versity were the survivors vesterdav in the annual national intercollegiate singles champlonship tennis tourna ment being staged on the turf of the Merion Cricket Club. Holman, Sullivan and Van Ryn are in the semi-final brackets, while Chandler and Whitbeck are one round behind the leaders. This afternoon Chandler and Whitbeck will play their match to determine which shall oc- cupy the vacant semi-final bracket in the lower half of the draw. The semi-final matches will be played tomorrow, Holman facing Sul- livan in the top half and Van Ryn meeting the winner of the Chandler Whitbeck match in the bottom sec- tion. The final for the championship 1] be staged Saturday I Cammines, 92—14 2478 W. de Sveah: M, Frye. 97—18— 5—16—70: 'Spencer Clark Grifith, 81— J.W. Warner 7 W de Sihaur SS_—8—80: John W. Rrawnas, RO—0-—-R0: W. E. Paul. 104— 232280 Charles Daly. 'jr.. 88—16—R0 H K Hicver. 0R—1k. 3 on. 0. —16—20- Dr. H. 105— Fred B HT 107 —25—8 R Taslor. Montgomars. 103—18—85 01—18—RB- M. Carter Hall Gormler. 97—12—85 — SR A H F 14—R6: Georze P. James 01—4—87 : E, 9 Gordan 1779 Harre w dick: 80 AN—10—78 Dr Kanfman 2481 1 Voreall 208 0 Ouirk, 1 5 Wallace Motor Co. NASH Sales and Service Greene. 101—13—&8:S_F_Tahaferro. 12—88: Ezra Gould. 100—21—8R Huffman, 98—10—&8. John B. 103—13—R8 H_ M. Southgate Riddle 110—20—00 11—90: Rugsell 119— 10 w McDonald, R—A1: Raphae 1709 L Street N.W. Just East of Corm. Ave. Main 7612 2 forl5¢ In the Be._rt Condition | Right on the counter/ - - We had to bring it out so often that Daniel Loughr: - now we keep it out an Co., Washington Distributors 1347 Penna. Ave. N.W.—Phone Main 391 POPPER'S EIGHT 8 CENTER