Evening Star Newspaper, January 28, 1927, Page 31

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1ING " SPORTS. I'HE Former Champions to Battle Tonight : America Taking Golf Glory From Britain BERLENBACH IS FAVORITE || Horton's Par Golf Chart WOMEN IN SPORT FOR FIGHT WITH McTIGUE Paul Facing First liurd]e in Px;:l:’-T«;ward Chance at i b ground basket ball sextet nosed [ter: Jennie out the erack Georgetown play- | Dorothy F1 Heavyweight Crown, While Mike Would Prove He Is Making Real Comeback. EVENING STAR, WASI TON, D. 0O, FRIDA JANUARY 28, 1927. SPORTS. U. S. OPEN CHAMPIONSHIP NOW IS CLASSIC OF LINKS, Many British Pros to Seek Laurels in Tuurnamem‘k | | | PRINGING day, the lie ger conter Willne EFGHIJKLMNOPQRS Beamer, side B C » win the championship of the west- | ern divisio the city in the inter- | playground te which at last the final stage etown was the Here This Year——Strong Squad Will Oppose ; i = arjori hool's he Galiau- Saturda on it ound combination, 13 11, | guards as | Invaders in Ryder Cup Matches. e MO Geo western divi o By the Associated Press EW YORK, former champlons at Madison Square Garden, one seeking to climax an im- pressive comeback at the expense of | the foeman who pitched him from the throne, the other alming at the t hurdle in his path to the golden- peaked summit of the heavyweight division. It is more than a y and a half Mike McTigue yielded the 176- mantle to Paul Berlenbach. the dethroned champlon went to a knockout defeat at the hands of Jack Delaney, who subse- guently wrested the scepfer from * Berlenbach, Since those defeats Mc- > has fought his way back to h a decisive victory over Johnny Risko of Cleveland and three successive knockouts against King Solomon, South American heavy- weight; Billy Vidabeck, and Soldier King Tlenbach rules a slight favorite over Mike in their 12-round match tonight, but McTigue has been given generous backing. Critics Dbelieve Berlenbach has impaired his chances by a six-month furlough from the resined battlefield. They also main- tain that McTigue, in abandoning to =ome extent the defensive style of his championship days, is fighting with greater effectivenes: The hout will match Berlenbach': crushing ‘left against McTigue's dan- | gerous right, with the former pinning his faith on an aggressive, determined ttack, and the latter depending on skillful maneuvering to plant a de- ive wallop. The gong will call them from their corners at 10 o'clock. Light-heavy hts also will be on review in two preliminary 10-rounders, sending Eddie Huffman of California fgainst Yale Okun of New York and _Harry Fay of Louisville against Joe “Woods of Los Angeles. T # BY FAIR PLAY. NEW YORK, January 28.—The long ‘bwaited scrap between two former January 28.—Two ight - heavyweight 1 d down | will clash tonight | | mon, BNl | world_champlons, Mike McTigue and | | Paul Berlenbach, is on tap awaiting | the opening gong tonight. Unlike so many battles advertised as grudge affairs, this one really turns out to | be just that. Words have been passing back and | forth between both camps, and this has not made matters pleasant be tween the fighters. One thing is sure, the men will be out there trying to knock each others block off' from the time the bell sends them into action. McTigue has suffered his first and only knockout since he had it out with Berley. Jack Delaney turned the trick. Mike will tell you to this day that the referee had no business stopping the fight when he did. There were only 5 seconds remaining before the end of the round and Mike thinks he could have stalled his way through that short period, recuperated during the minute rest and made things merry for the Lridgeport sharp- shooter. Proves Help to McTigue. The knockout accomplished wonders with McTigue. That is, it converted him from a safety-first boxer into an aggressive, two-flsted battler. Dia Dollings proved to him that a knock- out was not so terrible after all. Be- tween the knockout and Di talk, Mike has been a revelation to the fans. His knockouts of King Solo- Vidabeck and Soldier King prove this. Then Mike manhandled | John Risko, who floored Berley and copped a decision over him. Berlenbach has been away from the game since his mild workout with Francis Charles. It lasted less than a | minute. Berley has discarded all ideas of becoming a boxer and will fight the only way he knows how, tearing in and punching away with his paralyz- ing left and crossing over the right for the finishing blow. Paul has much at stake. He is out after the heavyweight title and has been named by Tex Rickard in the tourney he ls staging to develop a Vo I 0N S = dani as much ning .and swing a players s the HERE !s nothing li body twisitng, puliing in the golf great many learning think there is, and her: picture to prove it. Players of any age, from 12 to 75, could do the exertion shown in these three illustrations, and just wl - ple body turning you here that the fullest of golf quires. Three-quarter swings take even less. In 'the actual swing you add to this natural and easy turning of the body merely the lifting of the arms, or, T should say, you blend this much turn- ing into the action of lifting the arms. For instance, take Figure 1. Let the arms drop into club-holding place from the position this figure has and you | will have the stance position. The player has but to start the club away with his hands, then elevate it with hands and arms—and the shoulders and body will easily and naturally fc low to the point indicated in Figure except that the arms will be out- stretched from the hody—especially the left one. Returning the club to the ball, you direct it with the arms and wing and half | | | worthy opponent for Gene Tunney. throw it with the hands—that s, STARS OF GOLFDOM IN BEST BALL PLAY By the Ascoclated Press. SAN ANTONIO, Tex., January 28, —Leading professional and amateur golfers were entered for the best ball team matches over the Will Springs course here today as a preliminary to the Texas open tournament sched- uled to start Saturday. Walter Hagen, rated at the top of American professional golf, was paired with Jack Speer, Houston eur, against Waldo Crowder, hreveport professional, and John Dawson of Chicago, for pected to draw the la in today's play. Hagen off his game, but been shooting unus ly Bobby Cruickshank. peer has zood golf. New . York < a partner in_the pre- liminary event, while Joe Kirkwood of Hollywood and H. Fleming of Ka & City were expected to attract a jarge galle Recent srains have slowed up the course and caused postponement of the program from yesterday. Mud failed to keep the players from prac- ticing, however, and Harry Cooper of Los Angeles was among those willing to show their cards at the clubhouse last night after he sank iwo 20-foot putts for a 70, which tied the course record. Hagen with- held his card in the face of reports he dug a 76 out of the mud. The first 36 holes of championship for the £10,000 in prizes, is billed for Saturd: if the weuther remains clear, while the remaining 36 will be played Sunday Tncluded in late arrivals : Tom Bo; ‘ox Hills Club, New York: Jim Carberry, Shore Acres, Chicago; Bill Creavy, Bonnie Briar Club, ~ Larchmont, ; Crowder, Shrevepor YR Inglis, Dayton, Ohio; Tom Kerrigan, Mount Vernon, E. C. Nelson, Chicago, and J. Rogers, Pitts. ‘burgh. wer MEETING WILL BE HELD BY CORINTHIAN SENIORS Corinthian Seniors will hold their msecond base ball meeting tonight at 818 New York avenue at 8:30 o'clock. Coach Newman expects to ‘put four teams on the diamond in the Spring. He asks the following members and candidates to report: Bolti, Rice, Clay- ton, Sheer, Hermann, Garfinkle, Zim- merman, Cross, Corbin and Guyer. A. A. U. WRESTLING MEET LISTED FOR BALTIMORE Wrestling championships South Atlantic Amateur Athletic Union will be held the Central Young Men's Christian Association in Baltimore February and 26. intries will close Febr 1 The bouts this year uled a week late entries would be r | of the wera sched- | the hope that eived from some By the Associated Pre 28 ANGELES, January 28—The unwelcome specter of immigra- tion rulings today thrust itself between George Young, youth- ful winner of the $25,000 Cata- lina_channel prize swim, and his fat vaudeville contracts and prospects for mo ie fame. The 17-year-old Toronto boy and his companion, Bill Hastings, faced the possibility that they will be deported because they failed to comply with | immigration regulations when they entered this country at Detroit on their way to Californfa. As a result Young may be obliged to return to Toronto and go through the immigra tion machine in the regular manner in order to satisfy the law and at the same time return to his happy hunt- ing ground here. If the pair cannot produce properly vised permits to enter the United States Young at least, and perhaps Hastings, may be forced to return to their home in Toronto, Ontario. Th: then may reenter the United States and return to Los Angeles and Holly- iwuud. where the swimmer has lucra- ' Tuesday. YOUNG, SWIMMING EVENT HERO, MAY BE DEPORTED | Toronto Youth and His Partner Failed to Comply |t With Immigration Regulations on Their Trip From Canada to Pacific Coast. tive stage engagements and is dicker- ing for a film contract. Hastings al- ready has entered upon a movie career. Young associates said Hastings had possession of the papers relating to their entry into the Inited States, but the document shown by Hastings was a permit to import their motor- cycle for a_period of four months as | tourists. Until it broke down (l)v} motorcycle was their means of trans- | portation over a part of their trek to California. Hastings' papers will he inspected further in a search for the needed permits. Los Angeles immigration officials.| interpreted Hastings’ statement th neither he nor Young had paid a h tax or had visited an American consul before entering the United ates to mean that hoth boys unwittingly falled to comply with immigration reg- | ulations. i Attorneys for Young have begun a | series of conferences with immigra- tion officials here in an attempt to un ravel the tangle of technicalities. | Both youths have been summoned to | appear at the immigration offices | ST. GODDARD By the Associated Pre HE PAS, Manitoba, January 28.—For the third time Emil 8St. Goddard, sensational young French-Canadian musher, has pitted his skill against the best of the Northland's dog derby run- ners and won. ‘The 20-year-old contestant won the tenth annual 120-mile The Pas derby yesterday in 11 hours 25 minutes b2 seconds, after establishing a record of 3 hours and 35 minutes on the first of the three 40-mile laps. His previ- ous wins were in the 200-mile non- stop race in 1925 and in the 90-mile lap derby of 1626. Earl Brydges, 20, was second in this year’s event, Leo St. Goddard, 7-year-old brother of the winner, was third, and “Shorty” Russick, veteran of the race trails, fourth. Two other entries were forced out of the run be- fore the first two 40-mile laps were completed. ‘The winner, who maintained a lead through the three days of the event, was credited with rare skill and en- durance in the handling of his team of seven grayhound huskies. He sur- of the Interscholastic wrestlers, prised the spectators yesterday by IN CLASSIC DOG CONTEST AGAIN FIRST driving at the same furious pace that had marked the first two 40-mile laps of the race. All of his dogs finished strong “with their tails in the air and rearin’ to go,” as a prospector spec- tator put it. One of the dogs contracted a sore paw on the third day and St. God- dard whipped a mocassin from his | pocket and covered it, continuing the | race within a few seconds. St. Goddard's speed on the final lap probably was due to his desire to aid his brother, who battled all the way with Brydges for second place. Leo started the third lap 14 minutes be- | hind Brydges, and though he failed to oust his rival from second place he cut the margin to 7 minutes. Emil got his brother placed directly behind him and acted as pace maker for the youth. Brydges finished with six dogs, carrying one on his sled. He drove a hard race on the final stretch, with the knowledge that his lead was being clipped minute by minute. It was| his lead dog that saved him from losing his position. The dog, a pup, | given him by the late Walter Coyne, famous musher, did the work of two in the latter stages of the race. PRO BASKET BALL SHOWS GAIN, MARSHALL ASSERTS EOR(C of the Washington team and member of the executive committee of the American Professional Basket Ball Jmague, has issued a statement in which he d that the first half of the seasc concluded repre- sented on the whole a remarkable fm- provement over the L campaign. Hie points L that all attendance rec- ords for the court zame were broken, und that the Washington team drew “big" gates both ut home and away. A total of close to 30,000 saw the games here On two consecutive hights in Cleveland 14,000 watched the Capital City boys in action. The Arcadia Auditorfum, described by AMarshall one of the finest equipped in the countr made up of stronger splendid help rendered in general, were for the success of the f A An cven keener fight among im proved teams all down the line is pre- dioted for the second half by Mar- shall, who points to the players who have been added to the Philadelphia, izochester, Fort Wayne and New York lubs, and the facts that Johnny Beok- man will manage Baltimore, Garty ~hmeelk will be at the helm of Chi :zo and Cleveland will have an in Just L by the press responsible 1 shape wn additional MARSHALL, owner| As to the strength of the Washing- ton Club, Marshall refers to the show- ing of the locals in the three halves that have been played since organ- ization of the league. In two they were beaten by a lone game and in the other by only a game and a half. Two of the best scoring combina- tions in the league will swing into ac- tion Sunday night at the Arcadia, when the Palace floormen match speed and skill with the Philadelphia Quakers in the first game of the sec- ond half. Called “the-point-a-minute team,” the Quakers will bring to Washington Chick Passon, leading in scoring for the first half, and others of proved court ability. So confident is Jules 1. Aronson, owner of the Quaker City franchise, of winning the second-half pennant that he is making a tour of the cir. cuit with his team. i ! | RADIATORS, FENDERS WITTSTATT'S R. & F. WKS. MOVED TO 1533 14th St. N.W. ‘Wardman Motor Co. Service at Front and Rear | PRO COURT LEAGUE. Won. Lost Cleveland . .. Washington . . Philadelphia i}'pv;' X(orl( ot Wayne. | Rochester Chicugo .. 3 Baltimore 1 LAST NIGHT'S RESCLTS. Chicago, 43: Baltimore, 15. GAME TOMORROW. Cleveland at Rochester. GAME SUNDAY. Philadelphia at Washington BRESSLER OF REDS SIGNS. CINCINNATI, Janu s (P).— Raymond “Rube” Bressler, hard-hit- ting outfielder of the Cincinnati Na- tionals, has signed his 1927 contract. Trico Automatic Windshield Wiper Sales and Service land the back is |NAVY ADDS TWO EVENTS | tral ¥ | fare wrists—and the position indicated in | the last sketch is naturally attalned. Observe how the center of balance runs through the body in these sketches. In Figure 1 you will see a line from “D’ through the point of the right shoulder downward, point- ing to the instep of the right foot. That shows how solidly the weight | rests on the feet. The weight is back arched, as it should be. The balance is not easily lost when it is anchored like this from the outset. Be careful you do not get top ar forward while swinging—very easy habit to fall into. Practicing these positions, tally, is excellent trair player and is good indoor can first rest the head a; support. | nst some TO CARD FOR SATURDAY NAPOLIS, Md., January des the events already announced the sports card tomorro at the Na Academy there will be a| wrestling program between the Mid- shipmen and the team from the Cen- M. €. A. of Baltimore in the | afternoon and the annual gymhanka at_night. The wrestling card will be the first of the season for the Navy. WILL GRAPPLE TONIGHT. Jack Collins and George will come to grips tonight in the las he series of Friday night wrestling ards arranged Jarboe at the Mutual Theater. bout will start after the regular eve- ning performance. i | l | JAPANESE NINE COMING. TOKIO, January 28 (#).—The Wa. seda University base ball squad of 1 members plans to sail for Americ April 2. Among the college teams with which Waseda has scheduled | games are California, Washington, | Chicago and Indian: } With the ONTESTANTS in the biggest “pot” battle ever staged b; Washington bowlers tomoi row night will go through the second block of the sweep- | stakes tournament, shifting their ac- | tivities from the King Pin to the | Coliseum drives. Five more game will be rolled, leaving another five that will conclude the affair to be shot on | the Convention Hall alleys a week | from tomorrow. Right now, some of the bowlers who were not figured to have much | of a look-in at the sizeable cash prizes when the tournament started are| very much in the running, while othel who had been setting the al- leys ufire with thelr sharpshooting | are so well back that they will have to make remarkable recoveries to get into the race once more. However, bowling one of the most uncertain of spor Scoring or- | dinarily one week, the duckpinner is apt_to soar to dizzy heights the next | and the star of one block may find | himself the goat of the following five games. That's what makes duckpin bowling so interesting, It's the un- certainty that's the spice of the game Of course, over the stretch of a campaign, the good bowler stands out. He maintains his high average be- cause he has few off-nights. But in a 15-game block anything may happen. Off on the wrong foot, he doesn’t have much of an opportunity to get back. And to recover lost ground, he usually has to come through with a brilliant performance. g All of this will have the bowling fans watching with interest the work of Clem Weidman and Perce Ellett, long recognized as topnotchers, who now are roosting high in the sweep- stakes standings, and of Joe Mulroe and Freddie Moore, clever duckpin- ners, but heretofore not considered of the caliber of the other two men men- tioned. It also will have the duckpin de- votees keeping their eyes on such drive notables as Glenn Wolstenholme, Howard Campbell, Walter Megaw, Al Work, George Friend, Max Rosenberg and a couple of others who for some ! seasons have been among the first 10| of the Distri These fellows did not | se well in the first flve-game block and have much ground to pick up if they would remain in the run- ning after the second block is rolled. Some of these bowlers now in the ruck are expected to provide plenty of fireworks tomorrow night. It Is to be hoped they will. Let the race for first honors be somewhat tighter after the Coliseum block is ended and there !will be plenty of excitement during | the rolling of the third block at Con- | vention Hall on February 5. | So Al Gardner is in again. And this | time, he not only wants to take on Pop | Evans and Arville Ebersole, his oppo- nents of last Winter, in a match for | the lightweight championships of Crow | Hill and Columbia Heights, but would most import | golf realm | the Unitéd States open championship. From 1860 up to about three or four { on the other side last June | 18% to 11, | are coming over whole | clan life the United States open, which include in the field Roddy Thoma!.; BY RAY McCARTHY. HERE is no gainsaying the | fact that America is “‘taking the pls away from the rest of the universe in the matter of golf, so much so that the nt event of the entire ch year has come to be vears ago, the British open sidered the outstanding links cl Now it has been relegated to sec place, superseded by the American blue-ribbon tournament This year the American open will again be the most valued prize, and more so than usual because of the decision of the leading British profes- sionals to come over to defend the Ryder Cup, which ‘they gained by | trouncing Uncle m's HL fonals This was the most humiliating defeat suffered by an_American contingent in a long time in any sport, the score being The British stars will re. r for the United States open, P | main ov i of cou . N in the his can open have more than two or three continental stars made the trip in quest of our chief pri: w they tle, and_they -establish the tory of the Ameri will fight valiantly to r supremacy that has been yanked from them by Americ ve carried off the British open five times in the last six years. Won Twice by Britons. The Briton ily to play in defense of the Ryder Cup, but actually they coming with the hope of having one of thefr are coming here primar- are has not been carried across the seas since 1920, when Ted Ra: ve the trophy a ride to England. y Var den, back in 1900, was the only othe Britisher making the jaunt specifi y for the United States open title | who achieved his aim. Of course, sev- | eral foreign-born golfers have won the | nited States open, including Jim | 3 Cyril Walker and Will Mac- | , but at the time these men | attached to American clubs. | of the strength of the| invading forces, the Britons are due | for u spanking in the Ry matches here. Of the 10 0 competed in the it is hardly likely that more th will be named again, and the other six to be nominated rate exceeding higher in their trade than do haif dozen who played in last Summer. Walter Hagen, Mehlhorn and pe 1 Al Watrous, bly Tommy Ar-| mour will again' find plac on thf'; American team. Mehlhorn was the | only American to win his match last June, overcoming the redoubtable | Archie Compston Ly two up. Emmett French got the other half point by | squaring with E. R. Whitcombe. The | other America were Jim Barnes Stein, Fred McLeod Bouwlers Quant and Bill Wood. Gard- | ner seems confident of his ability to | wallop Evans, King Pin Annex man- ager, and Ebersole, Masonic Assocla- tion luminary. He also had declared that nothing would please- him more than licking Thomas and Quant, bowl- Statistic | ing writers who long have scoffed at his bowling ability Pin head, who h: and Wood, King been heard to men- tion that as a duckpinner Gardner is a_clever alley manager. Details of | this match that soon will get under | way are being arranged. It will be conducted under special rules, for eac! of the entr s bowling eccentri cities be controlled b: the ular code of the game. Arcadia girls will visit their neigh bors, the King Pins, tonight for a Ladies' District League match and the King Pins are hoping to treat their guests ungraciously. On the drives only, though. Certainly not socially. Lucile Preble’s outfit wants to keep right at the heels of the leading Con- vention Hall crew and believes the Arcadias will give it an opportunity to do so. Those ardent rivals, King Pin and Meyer Davis teams, will clash in a Na- tional Capital League match tonight at the King Pin establishment in upper Fourteenth street and much action is likely. A victory over the other. affords each of these quints great satisfaction. In the other big men’s league, the District, the Pet- worth team will be host to the Con- vl(il!llon Hall crowd on the Petworth alle; In a special match, the Nescos took the measure of the Kaufmans, 1,483 to 1,320, and bagged two of the three games rolled. The Kaufmans scored a win in the second game In the roll- off of a tie. De Molay Reserves and Young Friends hooked up in a special affair with the Young Friends winning, 1,401 to 1,396. The De Mola captured two of the three games, however, taking thk!hh'd with the roll-off of a dead- tock. | After dropping the first game to Federal, the Pentalpha team came back for a_ pair of victories in the Masonic circuit. The Pentaiphas needed their handicap of a dozen pins to register their first win, but they triumphed easily after that. TROUSERS 'o Match Your Odd Coats EISEMAN'S, 7th & F X Service. Station Capacity 90 Cars Rear 1121 19th St. _ Pot. 860 HOLLAND MOTOR (0. ARMENTROUT’S Relinble Automobile Supplies 1710 14th St. & Tenth & Eye \ Display—1636 Conn. Ave. NASH SALES In Washington and Vicinity for 1926 greatly exceed the total Nash_sales in the same territory for the 2 years of 1924 and 1925 combined. THINK IT OVER Wallace Motor Co. Distributor 1709 T Sireet Main 7612 * seven American sionals th Hagen, re y Gene Farrell, Joe en, MacDonald Bobby Cruikshank, Leo Die Harry Cooper. It is a toss-up Cooper and Armour for th | place. The English pr make the trip he: Archie Compston, Ted Ra Whitcomb, Arthur Havers, Duncan, Aubrey Boomer, H George Gadd and F. Robson. There is good authority for that the Ryder Cup matche s who are 1 ved in New York, possibly It was original stchester course. nned to hold this compet akmont a week before the | States open, but the plan is not fe | ble, as few golf followers in the Pitt | burgh district will pay to see the Eng- | tuc lishmen in these matches a | watch them also in the open champion. ship a week later. The ably will be June 7 and § States open begins June 14. (Covyright. 19! 2 WILLIAMS, D. C. GUN LEADER AT PINEHURST | P. Williams, cut. Comdr. mer trapshot champion of th member of the Washingt Club, led in a prelimi sh terday at Pinehurst, N. C., b 94 out of pe le Comdr. Williams vard mark. shot from Fistic fans in Paris mal practice to reward unusuall exhibitions by boxers with medal. st certain to be designate Watrous and Mehlhorn T are Abe Mit 100 targ, | night champion vear and schedule. expected to defend it But the lowans the game of their career. ex-champions’ attack exhibiting exceptionally ized team play in launchin offensive. Georgetown labored a handicap in the absence of one the regular guards, Rena Brvan, Anna Willner. who regularly plays ward, filled the backfield position though it were her accustomed p Iowa hopped into a lead early | the game and was on the long end of |« count when the first quarter stating | closed. Ceorgetown ca will be!in the second, howeve over a|edge at 86 by half guarding made scos at | scarce in the next d|closed with the teams - | 10-10. The sion | dently ¥ aurels played checking the expertly and 1 N profe has this tes, with tk rial in the » Lo overcome advantage th th trie Ay stren, but sev Webst rnesa, mith, gel and between e tenth ow under of bring home Indie ‘Sinclair letic_directors | squad, have ne who will be in the have named t jthe varsity squad Deekins, Katherir Stusser, Betty Hill Peasley, 1beth - | Bell, Helen Vernier | Mason, Jessie Lee | Barbara Brown, Blanc Helen Smith, guards and Pe ri Hicks the d announced the ikely to ¥ i George Jally, F f gainin; centers. time. ¥ ing opportunities sessian, which deadlocked he Church ition Unit g | Western Electrie fosse | much improved Calvary M 13 & nt ed While the or that they k W eld ar teamwork. hodist (*hv last night in the Eleetr contest, their itable in view of 4 new team on the Le circuit i o fourth quarter was ir. Towa sccred then | the foul line, tossed by Anna orgetown had a free Virginia Monk 1, which added two points to! Towans' score, giving them s lead G wn was unable to ite the one-point shot | nior | caged by Beatrice Easterson in they | last-minute ral | squad he western Coach meet the Rosedale sextet, holders as being we eastern division title, in hree series for the city | The first game is scheduled f - |o'clock this afternioon at Noel Hous 1king | opposite the Rosedale playground, | Seventeenth and Krame stre northeas! Towa Av { Monk and ke it a|Kay Jones, v game | side center a g.-miur a nip-and- 1 goal Tu, latt nd v the | which pe creation NER, djvision champs w | i with the is making e Navy vieto on Gun oot ye: br o the 1 expects istered in the near future HOPPE STILL IS AHEAD. BC 'ON Janu [V | Hagenlacher won the eighth b .600-point exhibition match Willie Hoppe, world champion | balkline billiardist, but leading in the 18 to 1,86 9- nue pi Anna enter Vi Virginia Tucker, forwards; Harriett Behrend, Iras Burroughs and Kath- ine Doomis, guards. Georgetown was represented 3 match, ster- Another Great Sale Of Women’s and Misses’ Fur-Trimmed Coats On Sale Saturday Only $25.98 Coats Now $15.98 $29.98 Coats Now $19.98 $35.98 Coats Now $22.75 $39.98 Coats Now $25.98 $45.00 Coats Now $29.98 $55.00 Coats Now $35.98 $59.50 Coats Now $39.50 $69.50 Coats Now $49.50 Please do not judge the quality of these coats by the ridiculously low prices. Every coat is a high-grade, up-to-the-minute style and is guaran- teed to give absolute satisfaction. You Don’t Need Cash New Shipments of Spring Dresses More new styles have ar- $ .98 ful materials. Priced at.. rived. Smart colors in Only $1.00 a Week Over Kresge’s 5c & 10c Store OPflll SATURDAY NIGHT TILL 9:30 history this an Webster Park, Anna Wrig s, exhibiti 1 to pras am wa showin the f Matthews expressed himsel! the chumpion scorins

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