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SPORTS. Only Two D. C. Men Sure to Qualify in Amateur Golf Tourney : Youths Set Pace STANDIFER AND MACKENZIE YESTERDAY'S SCORES PLAY OF GIRLS IS BRIGHT ¢ LEAD SIX LOCAL ENTRANTS OV HINIKAHDA LINKS THE EVEXINT STAR. WASHINGTON, D. €. TUESDAY. SFOREST AUGUST 29 1927, SPOT IN U. S. NET EVENT, N NATIONAL TENN'Si APITAL GIRLS LOSE_ HOMANS, A NEW YORK LAD, AT TOP OF LIST WITH 71 Telen Sinclair, s [ ¥ Homaue New York 7 44— former District | Fhillie Finiay, New Yaor ] gz . S : e junior tennis champion, and Corinne | - - . s Yo r T i i) BY CORINNE FRAZIER. the foreign stars in particular, while | " & o o | - T . : fGuy Shoots 75 and Roland 76—Voigt. Victim of i (ST HILLS. Lone Tetand, tu | Miss Wills was cheered to the echo | Frazier, who won the women's title!F nlay, His Buddy, Another Gothamite, Is Only One i Ot 23— bévy of yOURE Firls, | When shie made ner way with char |0l FEBIEE, TS, YERE, DOth of Wash ke Back—Von El Ch . H < i o P od Edee i L s S | acteristie reserve to sourts Inte fn/| Ington, were eliminated 8 < —V Bad Breaks, With Hufty, Is on Ragged Edge. Still in’the junior ranks, claimed | !ot*tistie Teserve to the courts Jate in |, ounq or piay in the natfonal women's troke Bacl on Elm, Champion, Has 79, > i | a large share of attention from | ; R championships got under way | : = 0 3 e initial match with her fellow states. ©! ) ot ur . ~ - . evinson and Houghton Are Far Back. i eams EallsEof HaRI (N8 RO Goman, osephine Crogkananic, iy s ALHOTCH HIllS NoY seaterday. 0| and Jones, in Much Trouble, Gets 75. i witnessed the opening round of the | N0 Josepbi | e nzus o eeling gzl s e 4 women's national singles champion- (<UD display, of tenis, [ val defeated Miss Sinclair, 6—2 and DU : |ships on the turf courts of the West |, .yracy and power is the rhytnmic|$—3. Mrs. IL. L. Richards of St. By the ted Pr tarted, th i i , BY W. R. McCALLUM. | had a 4 left for an §1 h e Top | side Club vesterday. | grace of her every motioh, which is \m‘w_ vanquished Miss Frazier, F ke \X\'\: “(’y: ‘ it 5:1‘:".h’t"er;'\;l-(r;nvxnxelxilva"y;q’wnh 1 birdie 3, holding a foot putt IRD R AL | ot simply that the eager | .specially ceable to one seeing her | N4 6—0. NNEATOL L4 e CLE G st 28 wite, " Hunting |1t was not simy he _eager | capecially noticeable to one seeing her | A0 6=0. - T3 " Yook ., S o=t ¢ “goit | Clean from the edge of the green to w A0 | faces of the youngsters were refresh- |for the first time. As she moved| The local girle will follow the re- 2 ok | o Donina ShistamsntsItle wae e gloomy depths of golf | soyra an 0. & i i ek SRR i bl - 3 ! mainder of play from the stands youth, fast friends, today |many well known tournament play- oblivion yawned today for | " 4 i ma Ohio N | ink and lovely, although they were all jabout the court with sure-fobted ease | topped champioas and former | ers who faced the task of improving S1But Wout of tiiewanh: | o hen When George came 1n he itk Mgl £ | that.” T was 'something more which | vesrer she scemed equally as| = ———— e e ia they stavted) thale secritg T fhe sl o & Gt \a. | Clubhouse, he found that xome one Miune. |drew the eve to them as they fought |wraceful as the famous Suzanne Len | ___champlona é o ol e sec Bl 10 ot them, Ralana i, Mackensie | \onE Bell In thewoush at the four- | o L or sl Dot matic serenity of her bearing m: Pizeon racing has become one of | (ouiamiant over Minikahda Club |Omaha vouth, present title holder, and fnd Guy M. Standifer of Columbia, | (oMl i b W0 i von - 1h 1t something was an embryo ten- | her motions seem effortiess in con- | the most important sports in Europe, | UM Eddie Held of St. Louis, former hold- ve better . Gl ] Mnea st Wbl haves el ausE < zame exhibited by each and every | (rast to the hombastic fire which mark | and the prizes in big events sometimes | 1 o e Fe . X fave better than an outside chance | .o, There was nothing to that. || B o Mgl b b ¢ oAb it 6 1 000 Foremost was Eugene Homan who | er of the transmississippi title, and §5tvialie the o R i Wit s e e i | one of these schoolgirls which holds | the movements of Suzanne Amount to $15.000 B in < from the first round | Ross Somerville, formerly Canadian eld that lit burned up the Al that : goming on i i|forth glowing promise for the future e = = S to bowl over the|champion, with 78 each; Willlam C. BEiin pinoinas contse yestoraay. st Nt | (1] [of women's tennis. As one onlooker | . hopes for premier honors of his golt- | Fownes, Pittsburgh, formerly nation. Two more, Geo J. Voigt of Ban-| e om S D e R remarked, watching young Marle Fen: | WII I q.MAI I OR‘ I;A I I I E ing mate, Phillips Finlay, who tallied, | al champion, and Rudy Knepper of pockburn and Page Hufty of Con, aft on as he st 1 out to- | oY « | sterer of Englewood, J., extend | . L < 36-36— Par is — |Chicago, one intercollegiate title pional, need fine rounds today to :if:\‘uf‘f:‘ l'“‘\-;.fi“"{‘;‘, i h‘y‘g oS S| Mrs. Howard Chapin \]\‘u. surprising 1 | " Just one stroke behind was Don Car-| holder, at 79, . while Miller B. Stevin : e | % [ <kill, “A match like this makes one ~ rick of Toronto, Canadian champion " Jirbla and A. L. Houghton of Ma S oot ol y R Ay by §|realize what strides have been taken | I by for. tha sécond time inithvee years, ak Many Stars Take 80. yirtually are out of a chance to qu at least rokes, and qualify ®|in women's tennis during the past though on ) years old. Ehle of Asheville, Southern fy. victims of Minikahda's terrifving | [The, trnited States Golf 4ssocty X ftive years.” And he might well have | A S o N | "Ana then came some of the world's' champion; Bon ‘Stein of _Seattle, d fie i [committee debated the sixth-hole % | added, voungster like that makes | > s ents of the game. Western champion; Geor Voi; $kpanse of bunkers and wire & et e % : | most famous proponents of the g m; ge Voigt of Sough. (,u‘v‘ at some lenzth a 3} ': l\‘ Alv” < fus vealize what strides it going to i ated Press. irl’s opponent for the second round |Chief among these was Bobby Jones of | Washington, D. C., North and South and e I . L make in the next five years, YORK, Auzust 23. — With ' was Mayme MacDonald of New York. | Atlanta, who lost the title last vear |champlon; Bob Gardner of Chicago, Pretty ifying round [Moved b ”\"l*'fl bl ) ity Alliconte i | the national women's tennis Unber Halr |at Balustrol to George Von Elm of | twice national title holder; Frank Dolp Eets under w George Von | Webster of Tos Angeles, and he HEY (L -COTRG G ales championship in _its second | g yound—Helen Wills defeated Jose- | Los Angeles. The British open cham- [of Portland, Oreg., Western champion Elm’s amateur crown, Standifer with | Would have to repl ST e sttt e 4 s round of play at Forest Hills | phina Crooksh (i, 1 Mre. Lilian | pion took 75 and deserved a_larger |in 1926, and Clarence Wolff and James A 75 and Mackenzie with a loosely | replaced ball he scored a 3, and th s B T today, a venewal of the duel|scharman Hester defeated Edith Toush. | core, he said. As for Von EIm, he |Manion of St. Louis, once trans. played 76 behind him, which might |i¢ ]mx“:.‘"n:[.(xmxlw Ii-w;vrlv' W “_h‘fl )1«‘\ v(“:‘y':k»(l‘ ‘5:’]}\”;"“”1_“ u‘{: ,‘:.-.'ud:,kffll-‘”“Y“""” Helen Wills and Mrs. Molla | Elan Trabel e “".,H,\,‘, Hill took a -Iau pulling and ‘“‘;”,“ r\x\n}:: \;xmkn ;;rmwk- \\';re arr,nnn: 23 ist as w have been a | 80. ay neeg troke tod starte ong g Lo e | e ol g eric defeate 6—1: Mrs. J.|did Jones. Buf not recovering so we 0ok 80 strokes for the 6,669- eh c‘\n}\ll"‘{‘ 2 Hutty are bracket.| Hufty wrecked his score over th el o l’:').“ml Sthtu itle i ::\ ';Yum\“ml"r »1:’:'*"“ HO ety m"']'f:»!I condemning the greens for refus:|yard link o : e i e | 1ast three holes of the first nine, whes | No more do we see the youthful|title seemed to be in nrc 4 joren | ANC COMS s b e cup. alai s ; .8t §0. the Bannockburn star the vic- | Jast three holes of the firat nine, whov player who has a good drive, but can | Heading the opposite halves of the 60t Mayme |ing to engult his ball in the cup. Lo ey o OktaRomis s St Sl e e R e e came back in 38, but { be slaughtered on her backhand, it |draw, the California girl, out to regain B Five Have 71 Cards. ; 3 ‘ern_champion, had an 5 ’ : s for 42. He 82, while Carl - cumstances which came just at the L . . he last held in 1925, and T . | hile Carl Kauffman of Pitts- Rime he promised to 3 in| it was too late. He decla he never |drawn into the mnet. These sturdy |the laurels she last hi acobs._de Ahead of Jones, with whom Were|burgh, recently crowned ki rome fabulous figure, and Hufcy, the | Wos hitting the ball betier, but he P R e i I R T et e tied Chick Fvans, Francis Ouimet, | public links players, took 83 o5 di > fabulous figure, a . the | ¥ 3 T il of Miss Fensterer, they are all of a |ing the championship, appear to stan s Bl e Nl 2 eSS s wien he seemed certain to get out in Stevinson Starts Poorly. e | court. (Thav mov be srratic. orlct vo oy & esult of the first day's | Mary Hanselt [ mond Da of nicago _and « Fork B igver iy inson started tadly. 1 ) | mis”in” sudgment, they “may not | e o " " oy el I weto Timmis | ne sy, DouEHAS | mHOH wanithe i started badly, p { o dgment, they may not|p 5 b er, scoring 4 each, were | | national " titl Must Do 138 to Qualify. second shot over the fence at th 3 S [ vet have acquired an eve for place- | " Foth came throush their opening e, Wiliam 1 b O etunt oF the Hosie: cluby Mix Mar ’"’;”_‘“fl title years ago, scored b ipwin 5 irst hole and taking a 6 en three 1. Seattie ment, which would give them the win- | cncounters easily, although Miss Wills heodore, Johnson. ERLLERLG i aial A e D) oL entants In the iretiel ralionkaion i threr e Nel 'ning edge, but they can handle the |was more impressive in disposing of e LU e :uhhrv'l‘ri‘, ey e duectacule sy 4/ Off it Found started today, It was a virtual | Rone of them the results of down S Js—ho | ball wherever it is sent to them |Miss Josephine Crookshank, Califor | [ Hal. in one over : Clarke Corkran of Phil- [ jiot Toufs were an eagle 3 by Gar. pertainly that no score higher than 157 | Migbt bad golf, but rather of rouch | Outstanding in this group in addi- {nia junior, at 60, 6—1, than was gie, M3l feated | adelphia and George Rotan of Hous |.n"eagle 2 on th’le‘ 44?-‘;;1:1;“"‘:';::? % would make the grade to play [ breaks. He was out in 43 and back |y tion to Miss Fensterer, a slight girl|Mrs. Mallory in eliminating Mrs. Phil-| | ton | where A. € Gilewof Norator,. Comn. e o . chin, Aad | in 40 and had little chance of qualif are Midge Gladman ang Edith |ip B. Hawk of New York, 6—1, 6—3 1w | ¥here A, C. Giles of Noroton, Conn., omorrow for the championship. And | in 40 s ekl e , are Mi 1 d | oig 4 g et D | There were 34 contestants with|sank a lorg iron shot. ed on the way the boys romped |ins today. 3 o 3 of California, Anne Page of | Miss Wills was drawn against Mrs. |1 e e oty nt . »round® Minikahda's rm,,zhvy,(,md.,rpd}m- d 39. but xdo.}k a l»x:n' of vw‘ml “-lw R0 Gardher: ! E . Dorothy Andrus of Stam- | Lillian ‘Scharman Hester of Brookly " W'“ ' ialiflars WoblA nieed ta tota Bobby 3 FzR - Mt . . te L centh to get back | LAY ord, Conn., & Palfry sisters, | for the second round, but her princif i | the 32 qualifiers woul | Bobby Jones was only 14 years of caches erday, it might drop down | thirteenth and fourteenth t pape ortind. Orex.: . | ford. Conn., and the Palfry sisters, {for th nd rounc she . 4 | y 'r‘ $or ods l‘hgo Bay the mm: |0 #%; He also is too far back to hope Do ethiehom, Pa. 40 0—30 | Mianne and Sarah, the latter just|opposition in the way to the final is rs. | l'\ 10},' ':w:"’]f‘d“;‘;‘ {mprove his| A% ‘When he competed for "the na- bitious youngsters will take off the | to_qualify except with a great round Thomas. Chics o b |14 years of age and recent winner |expected lo come from Mrs. John ll.}l‘ vens | 1"';" mA;j""hl to wuslifys bote for Ll:l)nv‘;_l amateur golf championship for s vthing | toda fames & Manion. St of the national indoor junior cham- |of ngland, Kea Bouman, the hard-|feated | same, Iy to gt . the first time. mrraps and go out to hole everything = T ¢ - | Robert & . | 8 - | deteated | o reach the 18 a8 he | o ——— in Might, knowing that only the best | Von Elm is the only one of the bix fiobit i pionship {hitting” Dutch champion, and Helen | fiEat e L SR e B e e they have will get them in the title | leaguers who is in a rough spot, and | 0, we are not forgetting Betty | Jacobs of California 3 Richords ‘defeated Co-| (00 oq™has his title would not quali- i . Im will need one of his good . e Y e Boltinn cive avidbnos bEHen Mrs. 7. ‘Saunders | Advised th: title would n¢ thise ] 5 Nuthall, the fair English lassie whos e m, Von Elm was worried It seems strange today to see an un- | T ) 1o ey plag i id TN | . Chicarg charm and beauly captivated Amer-|stroking jower vesterday in disposing Ueteated Na Followere: off champlofiahips freals Kknown out there in front as the second | f his championship. for the wayv the | . B Niw York. > jcan tennisdom when she first made|of Beryl Robinson of Bermuda with enelor sredicted today that both Jones and Found starts. B N e e | W Tarhes Gt her appearance in the States. But |the loss of only two games, and prob Von Eim stood a good chance to be Eugene V. Homans, 19, a schoolboy | reaches yesterday augurs badly for|gmmett J. Rosers. Okla, G Betty did not play yesterday, having |ably will meet Miss Wills in the quar- Bing “defeated. Mrs."John | aiminated by some one else besides i b A e ¢ sonsa. | another 79 if Von Elm shoots that to- armichael | Minncapols. ilsed a detanit 5 er opponent | ter-finals Thursday. Unless Miss Ja- i—1: ‘Betty Nuthail ‘won | : Y some b from Englewood, M ot 4 | Loren’ Bunning re d a default from her opponent fila Mitton by defadlt | each other, as has been the case in onal 71, one under par. to lead the|day. ot Whith: St Louis. - in the first round, so it is not pos-|cobs is upset by the young Eng e Bl = + el o lact AL e ¢ . Well dow: the list, as usual, are w . | s il this tourney for the last three vea d of 160 entrants Right at his ell down on the eeb g il ORI bie to discourse at length upon her | star, Eileen Bennett, the two Califor Ao THE Scoul Tl ol AR BN heels was another yvoungster, young | 1ot of comparative unknowns, who | ii zame. Needless (o say, Miss Nuthall nin Helens will meet in the semiinals. | ROOM FOR 300 HORSES < = Phil Faley of California. Last year he was a student at Exeter and is 3)1,«1‘:19:1 to enter Harvard in the L. He got home the first day with card of 72, which just equaled par. ust behind him came Jimmie John- on and George Rotan at 74 and Rob Jones and Chick Evans at 75, tied with Standifer. Von Elm himself is sitting on th przzed edge at 79, and the prospect is r sight tomorrow of seeing the am cur champion joining the disconso- late group of non-qualifiers who will watch other and better medalists bat- tling for the title. Standifer Gets 36 and 39. Standifer, who came here from the | Paci na even though he had two 6's on the irst nine. he got out in 36 and back in 39, He was bunkered at the first | bole and took three putts, repeating | the performance at the seventh, but ! In between he scored birdies on the | £ifth and sixth. His 75 was made up of sound, well played golf. MacKenzie, out late in the after- noon, attracting a large gallery, got through the turn in 36, notwithstand- 4ng a 6 on the tricky par 5 ninth, and e started back, 5, 2, 4, getting par 5s et the thirteenth and fourteenth, feaving him par for a 73. At the fif- teenth he hooked his tee shot into a ®orrible lie behind a bunker and play- ed one of the great shots of the day, a high mashie shot that left him but an eight-foot putt, which he sank for a Dbirdie 3. So he then had three pars for a tie with Finley's 72. He pushed a tee shot to the rough and got a zood 5 at the sixteenth. And he then c Coast to play in the tourney, ¥t a niblick shot half way to the seventeenth to get a 5 against the par of 4 ut at the eighteenth he gave a able exhibition. Here he had a 1he tee that he had nothing left but a short niblick pitch. Again he plaved a memory shot and the ball careened Acyoss the green onto a steep bank at the back. Yet that wasn't all. For after getting back on, he took three putts for a 6 and a 76. If he had plaved all the holes as badly as he rlaved the last three he would ha heen 85. But even playing that way Roland looks good and he may step out today and tear off a 70 Voigt Strong at Start. Voigt started out like a house afire g down a 30-footer for a birdie 4 2t the fourth. He played the fifth in par and then came to the pond hole, the sixth, where all the trouble start- ed. Here he laid his tee shot 12 feet from the cup on this 195-yard affai nd from the tee his partner’s ball struck that of Voigt and caused it to roll a half foot. Neither plaver knew ist what to do, so Voict plaved the all from where it had been rolled and oled it for a 2. He then plaved an- other ball and had a 3. That started lots of conversation, and George took a 5 at the seventh. it the real blow-up came at eighth. where he had 3 and 5.for a $5. Here his tee shot to this 232- vard hole lay on the inker. deep in the matted stuff tha recked many a good golfer. ‘ried to punch the ball out and it went one foot. He then got out in { and barely missed his putt for a 4. His tee shot at the ninth was only half hit, and he missed a three-footer par 5 orge got a zood break at the tenth, for he hooked to the woods and a strongly hit mashie shot struck the pin and dropped down 10 feet ay. MHe. missed it and took a 5 Three putts followed at the eventh. and George again the rough at the twelfth over he was 5 thirteenth in 10 the rou wn a six Finds Trouble at Sixteenth. e plaved the fourteenth and fif- teenth in regulation figures and had hooked scoring hut worse ok a 6 at the hooking 1o a bunker and finally getting for the & pa a ooter par left for a 79. But a fine second #hot caught the edge of a bunker at the sixteenth and, trying 0o hard for his 4, he ran past and missed coming rk sult was a 6. A 4 nteenth and Voigt IRESTONE ¢ Tires—Tubes When you have 4 {ried other tires on @M \our car and find alh hem very unsatis factory, drive in and have us equip the old bus with Firestones! RODERN DOWNTOWN STATI R SERYICE STATION l‘&“? A hlock helow the Raleigh CREAOBIVBIGOIBOG - out in front of the big fleld, and | ;. today in the invitation tourna for a 74 and he hit one so far from | the | short | | | | i i | | | | | 1 | | | R R R R R LR R R SR LA R R R R R R R SR AR R R AR LR LR AR AR SRR may displace some of the biz guns in the match play rounds tomorrow. But on the whole, the match play rounds | will find few of the championship fa- | vorites watching the tournament from the gallery tomorrow. There will he no such havoc as there was at Oul mont two years ago. The regulars i nd the slaughter won't be ONCE FAMOUS HARVARD STAR TO PLAY TILDEN WPORT, R. L, August 23 (®.—| George Owen, jr., one of the greatest athletes Harvard ever produced, was drawn to meet Big Bill Tilden at ment here. | “I'd rather be beaten in love scts and love games by Tilden than a close one to a second rater,” Owen. ‘With foot ball, base ball, hockey and enough other sports to win him his letter nine times at Harvard, Owen | had no time to play tennis in college, | but since graduation in 1923 he has learned to swing a racket as hard as he used to hit the line. ‘ HOWARD, WILLOW TREE lose said WIN BASE BALL GAMES ! Howard defeated Cooke, 17 to 6, and Willow Tree squeezed out a 3-2 win | over Briggs yesterday in the first games of the Municipal Playground Department’s Colored Base Ball League. There are 14 teams in the series, which is divided into two sec- tions.” The winners in each will meet for the title. RN WILL TEST BETTING LAW. SAN BRUNO, Culif., Aug —A horse race, a bet and rest A “staged” game to test California's | anti-betting law oceurred at the foran race track here yesterday in preparation for the opening of the | in October. Thus the test | case was launched to determine | whether the “investment system betting is legal in California race season of | - and get a new set on— Branc U. S. Royals 1l be goin Just show blowout worries. they your No finance or Store No. 1 3303 Conn. Ave. Store No. 2 2250 Sherman Ave. Store No. 3 3539 Ga. Ave. Store No. 4 634 Pa. Ave. S.E. :’ Store No. 5 “ 3009 14th St. N.W. : Store No. 6 | 912 H St. N.E. | ROYAL TIRE SYSTEM Open Evenings—and WRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRAERRIRRRRY S0 MW ve ’ 4 | Ros: RRththRththth Rt thtR AR Rt tR R thtRtRtRthtRthLh Credit Plan Are Your Tires Nearing the Blowout Stage? hen it's high time to stop at one of the stores listed below The Easy Payment Plan l-new —made and warranted by the United States Rubber Company- strong long after the last registration Mr ndicott Mallory, facing M is keeping pace with the others of her | of Boston in 1ge, in fact she outstripped the junior field in her peeformance in Europe this season and promises to be one of est test at the hands of Jo round, seemed likely to meet her rs, the William | second | stiff- 21 NASH AT MARLBORO MEETING| ; | UPPER MARLBORO, Md., August g * m ¥ v‘ g W ban Fr Ty i Mol share of praise and admiration 3oq~| _The withdrawal of Mrs. Kitty Me-|nium th lack of space have | MOTOP CO Biichana 0 teeday, Helen Wills, elen Jacobs. |Kane Godfree, British team captain, | turned their ention to the five.day . O FOURT Coctian, Wichita Falls. “Chicago . Rew York i MeDon iam F. Herrick Gene Coolk. Atlanta. . ... ... Carl Kau Pittsbursh A. M. Hoxie, Boston... hompson 3 Lanman Colum+ A an st ir 16K Webriat. Lo ’\'v’».-»\.-. Stevinson, Washingto 2 STorricon. St dncenh, Mo. Wattles. jr.. Buffalo.. dus. Tilsa. Okla.. Sorton Boston Lightner. St. Paul Findlay S. Douglas. New Fred Brand. sr. Pittsburgh Albert Seckel. Chicago. George Dawson. Milwatkee., e Fawreti ncie B Minneanolis.. I Ru Q [ ceman. Winnines. Herlert W. Gardner. Milwaikee | Sherman. Schnectady. omipsan. Pasadena \iran. Minneapoli ng. Wichita Falls batt. Minnear Dudie Allen” M 40 rence . Semans. Beallsvil e Yo ) am’ W Dean, S P 5 \AY it L. Josivn. Chica A vorett L Brooks. St. 1 R Aifred €. Ulmer. Jacksonville. ] R Lyon H. Johnston. Miyneapolis Ay Knox M. Voune. ir. Pittshurgh 43 ) c Minneapolis.. ... 43 H ke Chicago & ¥ Minneannli i I.. Edward Mart. jr Chicazn | 43 Tivid N. Tallman. Minneapolis. 41 nard Fens. Milwaulne 0 . ‘Comstock. Hambiirs Rvan.” Detroit 0 G. Sanhorn. Madison. W Wilfred A, Ouimet. Dedham. Mass. drew on’the thirteenth hols. [ OLYMPIC FARES REDUCED. By the Associated Press he directors of the Belgian rail have decided to allow to the | Modern people spend more for the joys of living than in any other age ever known. But they demand the utmost value for their money. Present-day smokers find their sheerest ~ enjoyment ~ in Camels ! competitors of all nationalities in the | Olympic games, 1928, a reduction of 33 per cent on all through tickets. | | and USCO’s is made. from payment card and drive away interest charges = e SR <22 sz T = 2\ l P g z é Sundays Until Three = < eSS e = =5 = == GRS LSS R e = 7z = = 2 THE people of this age spend millions for the good things of life. And they place Camel first among cigarettes. Modern smokers make money, but when they spend it they insist on quality, and more people today buy Camels than ever hought any other cigarette, Camel value has won the modern world. Money cannot buy choicer to- baccos, nor a more glorious blending. That’s why increasing millions in the modern age single out this famous smoke as their favorite. You. too, will find it yours. “Have a Camel!”