Evening Star Newspaper, October 5, 1928, Page 35

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S * TWO OTHER FRAYS | HRE SLATED HERE . U. Entertains Susque- hanna and Catholic U. Host to American U. U ington this morning for its game tomorrow with University of yland at College Park. The Tar- plan a light workout today, and scem confident that they are stronger Old Liners. Susquehanna comes down tomortow morn- ing for its contest with Georgetown at ths ball park, and Catholic University and American University are getting ready on their own fields for their meet- ing at Brookland. North Carolina, according to those + that have watched it play and are familia with its make-up, has about the strongest eleven in its history, and at the same time one of the strong- est in the South. According to reports from Chapel Hill, about the only thing that has been troubling the coaches is the possibility of overconfidence. Coaches all week have been admonish- ing the players about that danger, al- though when a team gets to be as strong as North Carolina is there is not much use to try to keep the players from knowing it. Carolina Undoubtedly Good. But at this particular time there is not much doubt about the Tarheels being good. Wake Forest, according to report, has just about the same kind of @ team that whipped North Carolina for four consecutive seasons, yet North Carolina is enough stronger this Fall than in previous seasons to wipe up the gridiron and then dust it off with the Baptists to the tune of 65 to 0, the big- gest score ever Tun up by a’ Carolina eleven Athletic Director Bob Fetzer and Head Coach Chuck Collins have little to say about the game. They seem to feel that they have a stronger team than Maryland and should win, but have back in their minds the belict BY <. BYRD. UIVERSITY OF NORTH CARO- LINA foot ball team, number- ing 32 players, besides coaches and managers, arrived in Wash- at its best. They know that the team, was great against Wake Forest and went better than any North Carolina team cver has gone so carly in the season, and the coaches think that their fu- ture Hes in just keeping up their pres- ent gait. The Tarheels have a big powerful line and a backfield far faster han the average quartet. It depends on an of- fense that it.p ractically the Notre Dame offense without the backfield shift. The ends make the shift as Rockne teaches it, but the backs do not. The forward passing system is good as are the general running plays. Yes- terday in scrimmage against the Varsity at College Park the Maryland Fresh- man, using North Carolina plays, made two touchdowns and if plays imper- fectly learned are so successful then they should be 10 times more success- ful as the equipment of a team for weeks drilled in their use. Maryland Lists Local Bogs. Maryland will oppose North Carolina with a téeam made up in large part of former , Washington High School play. ers. Both ends played on local high school fields, Dodson at Tech and Heagy at’ Western. ‘Two of the three tackles to be used got their training here, MeDonald at Tech and Lombard &t Central. Of the three guards certain to get in the game, Wondrack is from ‘Tech and Heinz from Eastern. Madigan end Owens, centers are from Eastern and Western, and of the four backs who will begin the game Evans is from Busi- ness, Roberts from Central and Kessler €rom Tech. Just how strong Maryland is will not be known until after tomorrow’s game. In many respects the team has a lot of potential ability. It lost heavily last year through graduation, four line- men and four men it depended on most for backfield gains having finished. The team is not as heavy as it was a year ago and not as experienced, but ought to be able to give 2 good ac- count of itself. ‘The contest with North Carolina tomorrow ought to be a real battle. The Maryland-North Carolina con- gest will be one of four big games here this year. The other three fall on November 17 and November 24, two on November 17 between Georgetown and West Virginia and Virginia and Maryland, with Washington and Lee and Maryland on November 24. Other mes to be played undoubtedly will g: real foot ball battles, but no other contests at this time seem to be any- where near as important, generally, as these. Georgetown takes part in three pther big games, Carnevie Tech, Ford- ham and New York University, but all are on foreign fields. Georgetown Probable Winner. Georgetown ought not to have much | difficulty in beating Susquehanna Uni- versity. ‘The Blue and Gray is so much stronger, apparently, than the type of team the Pennsylvanians usually pre- ent that the game itself is likely to ge little more than a good factor in the development process Georgetown is using to get in shape for the big games on its schedule, those with New York University, Carnegie Tech, Fordham and West Virginia. The West Virginia game is the only one listed here, that being booked November 17 as the an- nual home-coming affair. that their team possibly might not be+ PORTS. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, GEORGE (AUGIE) ROBERTS, Former Central High School athlete, who will play against North Carolina in big game at College Park tomorrow. Roberts is a clever runner with the ball, can kick well, heave a pass and is a good receiver of the aerial toss. HOW MARYLAND AND NORT Maryland. Posi Dodson Keenan Heintz Madigan Crothers ¢ McDonald Heagy Kessler Roberts Evans . Snyder Left Left Right Full Maryland: - Linesmen—Wilson, 35; ‘Winterberg, 71; Ribnitzki, 37; Epple, Roy, 21; Butz, 45; Clary, 25 sons, 17; ‘Warcholy, 4; Hanback, 30. Left end Center * Right guard ight tackle Right end Quarterback Left halfback ; Smallwood, H CAROLINA GRID TEAMS WILL FACE IN COLLEGE PARK CONTEST TOMORROW North Carolina. Sapp Howard Blackwood Capt. Schwartz Shuler Farris Holt ‘Whismant ‘Ward Spaulding Foard ition. tackle guard halfback Iback B 4 85 Reserves. “North Carolina: Linemen—Packard, 71; Fenner, 49; Koenig, 95; Adkins, 90; Donahoe, 84; Eskew, 73; Wilson, 48; Hudson, 78; Lipscomb, 67; Schneider, 86; 62. Backs—Gray, 63; Erickson, 5. Nash, 61; Michaels, 83; Magner, 88; Ho Gresham, 53; Jackson, 60; Muas, 55; 92; Harden, 69. . 4 Dix, 40; Lombard, 61; Wondrack, 60; 3; Allen, 68; Fisher, 70; Owens, 11; Le Backs—Pitzer, 10; Radice, 66; Par- SEVEN GRID PLAYERS DEAD FROM INJURIES By the Assoclated Press. NEW YORK, October 5—With the death of Willlam Charles Young, Na- tional Guard player at Monongahela, Pa, yesterday, foot ball's death toll for the season has mounted to seven. Young suffered a broken back in a sandlot game at Monongahela City, Pa. Previous victims were: Miles F. Fox, Navy, sunstroke. James Fenton, Holy Cross, spinal frac- ture. Norman Matthews, Lawrence, Mass,, kicked in a sandlot game. Jack Coffield, Allentown, Pa., High School, injuries to the head. Ross Taylor, Hiram, Ohio, High School, various injuries during a game. Leo Goodreau, Villanova, broken neck. with Georgia Tech and Virginia enter- tains South Carolina at Charlottesville. The Washington and Lee-North Caro- lina State game seems to be just about a toss-up but Virginia Military Insti- tute is likely to take a beating at ti hands of Georgia Tech. However, one thing Is remarkable about that annual Georgia Tech-V. M. 1. contest, which is that no matter what disparity ' has seemed to exists between the teams, V. M. I always has been able to put up a great battle and give the Atlanta team the time of its life winning. This year Georgia Tech is playing its first game and V. M. L is in its third, which should give the latter some advantage. Virginia and South Carolina seem to have great, teams and the game between them ought to be one of the best of the year. Virginia undoubtedly has the MOORE TO CAPTAIN TEMPLE A. C. TEAM ' ALEXANDRIA, Va, October §.— Johnny Moore has been elected captain of the Temple A. C. eleven, a newly | organized 105-pound.team, while Davis Simpson was elected manager. ‘ Simp- son's phone is Alexandria 1248-J. Alexandria Fire Department Preps will practice on Haydon Field Sunday morning at 10:30. The Fall championships of the Alex- andria Gun Club will be held tomorrow in Janney’s lane at 2:30. Iroquois A. C. has organized a 125- pound eleven. Coodles Owens is coach and Claude Violett is manager. Virginia A. C’s game on Shipyard Field Sunday with Winton -A. C. of ‘Washington has been postponed until October 14. Seamen Gunners will ape pear here October 21, MICHIGAN CAPTAIN USES O0STERBAAN OLD “47" By the Assoclated Press. The golden “47” that characterized the dashing Bennie Oosterbaan during his three years at Michigan will be ;l:au'nted by Capt. George Rich this On the opening day of practice Rich, by chance, was given Bennie's sweater with the numerals, TECH HIGH ELEVEN TO PLAY TOMORROW ‘Tech High will stack up against Epis- copal High on the latter’s fleld near Alexandria in the lone game tomorrow involving a scholastic foot ball team of the Capital group. Play will start at 3:30 o'clock. , Each season Tech and Episcopal meet about this time on the gridiron and usu- ally a real fight ensues though Tech has never, at least in recent years, come out on top. Coach Hap Hardell of the McKinley eleven expects to line up his boys for ]the referee’s opening whistle as fol- ows: Hissey, left end; Edwards, left tackle; Geiger, left guard; Mayo, center; Capt. Oehmann, right guard; Piggott, right | tackle; Edelblut, right end; sl)encer, quarterback; Florance, left halfback; l},lebkel, right halfback, and Goss, full- ack. Four games—three on home d- irons and one away—were scheduled for Capital schoolboy elevens today. In contests here Central was to meet Devitt in the Central Stadium, Eastern was to engage Emerson in the Eastern Stadium and Gonzaga and Calvert Hall School of Baltimore were to mix o Georgetown University varsity fleld. Business was at Manassas, Va, to bat- Hle Swavely School. GRID TOGS COME HIGH; OUTFIT NOW COSTS $100 By the Associated Press. Not so many years ago all that was necessary to play foot ball was a mop of hair and a disdain for hard knocks. Today it costs $100 to outfit one player. Most of the regulars use two or more outfits 2 season, while a star back, like a star dancer, gives the shoemaker a laugh. He uses a pair a game, strongest team it has put out since the se, it ssible that Susque-\ Of course, it is po: s Lo Ko e down a better foot b Ty Sanybody expects and | {0 beat the University of Chicago and give Georgetown quite & struggle, but | probably has the best team it has ever pot probable. The Blue and gmygzgg- i had. ebly will win by four or five B 7 T e J .. Last ! er game in the Southern Con- downs without much _difficulty i e i s 57 | ference t] ear Georgtown won the game by 571 0G0 gy ween University of Ala {bama and University of Mississippi at | | Tuscaloosz.. Both teams are likely to | jbl: Sll;‘(;:lg this season, much stronger & 00d beating 2! than they were a vear ago. Alabama Boston 1ast week, but Wil be e % {has back almost iis entire eleven of T e e v & Tine as good ; last season, while Mississippl has been ists | getting so strong in the last two or i Ve s of the! £5 that which wears the colors Of five | three years that it 15 having difficulty ihe brilliant Catholic University backs | getting good schedul | 21l the opportunity they need, to TUD{ qyg other big games in the South their way for long and consistent gains. | wi)) be the Vanderbilt-Colgate clash at | corelgn Field { Nashville and the Sewanee-Texas con- W - F"l“,‘ £ i test at Dallas, William and Mary Col- Gallaudet and George “&‘1‘|ng(“fl}lege makes a journey North to meet : play on foreign fields. The ‘Kendfl“symcuse, and ‘a good line should be | mple versity vaun! S S 2 . un against a real snag. It is sald that | pesides the Vanderbilt-Colgate clash at | 'r]om oy hzml e 0:5 o‘nhe (g;fhmshvg]e llse%ondt 1gter;:cllonuxlt hgame, elevgns in e Easl his se o - is to be layed a urham, wi e lzuusfl' will be against a real team ‘“d“L;uke Umeerilly eleven meeting South | will be lucky if it gets away with a 1oW | Dakota, Practically nothing is known | score. | of South Dakota’s strength, but it would | George Weshington goes to New YOIk { not be a surprise it Duke were to win. | to meet Fordham minus the back Who | e Jast year was elected captain of the ! = 4th St. N.W. team. Ivan Stehman failed to do as well | in his classroom work as on the grid (Drive thru alley on 3d. between H & 1) jron and was thrown off the squad. Lopeman, another back, has been| Saturday Special Chevrolet and Ford elected captain. The Colonials will go| Body Glass, $2.50 to $4.50 against a better Fordham team than ! Windshield Glass, $2.75 to $5.75 they faced last season, and probably | ACME AUTO GLASS CO. will not be able to repeat their victory. 803 4th St NW. m in 445 Catholic University probably will win vom American University, The rooklanders took a good beating at If George Washington holds Fordham | 10 & touchdown or two it may consider | that it has done well. | = | Besides the North Carolina-Maryland | smeeting tomorrow at College Park, four | other Southern Conference ‘elevens in the South Atlantic section ere to take part in conference games. North Caro- fina State journeys to Lexington to face Washington and Lee, Virginia Military Jmstitute Goos to Atlanta for a contest TIRES GONE? GET OUR LOW PRICES ON coonpvEAR TIRES Did your old tires blow out on Jour vacation trip? Don’t wait! Don’t take chances.” Come in now and get your size from our big, fresh stock. Buy at these rock-bottom prices and get genuine Goodyears, too— that is a combination no one can beat. Our expert service goes with every tire. . New Low Prices on Pathfinders 30x3Y; Cl. Cord. . . $5.65 32x4S. S. Cord. . . $10.65 29x4.40 Balloon . . .$6.95 31x5.25 Balloon . . $11.85 All other sizes proportionately low All Tires Mounted Free BEN HUNDLEY TIRES 3436 14th St. NW. 1320 14th St. N.W. $00 H St. N.E. 1010 Pa. Ave. N.W. FRE —ONE HIGH-GRADE TIRE COVER TO EVERY CUSTOMER 4 Stores to Serve You D. €, FRIDAY. OCTOBER 5. 1928. Foot Ball Games Tomorrow LOCAL TEAMS. Georgetown vs. Susquehanna, Griffith Stadium, 2 o’clock. 5 Maryland vs. North Carolina Univer- sity, College Park, 2:39 o'clock. Catholic University v University, Brookland, George g:shlnmn New York Y. Gallaudet vs. Temple U., Philadelphia. EAST. Navy vs. Boston College, Annapolis, 2:30 o'clock. Arl:y vs. Southern Methodist, West Point. Yale vs. Maine, New Haven. Pennsylvania vs. Franklin Marshall, Philadelphia. Prlncel:.on vs. Vermont, Princeton. Marvard. vs. Springfield, Cambridge. Amherst vs. Bowdoin, Amherst. Boston U. vs. New Hampshire, Boston. Brown vs. Worcester Poly, Providence. Carnegie Tech vs. Ashland, Pitts- burgh. “ Columbia vs. Union, Nev, Yérk City. Cornell vs. Niagara, Ithaca. Dartmouth vs. Hobart, Hanover. Delaware vs. Drexel, Newark, Del. Geneva vs. Bucknell, Beaver Falls, Pa. Holy Cross vs. St. John, Worcester. Lafayette vs. Muhlenburg, Easton, Pa. Lebanon Valley vs. C. C. New York, Annville. Lehigh vs. Pa. Military, Bethlehem. Mass. Aggies vs. Bates, Amherst. New York Aggllr! vs. Long Island Ag- ies, Farmingdale. . New York U. vs. West Va. York. Nel’"elm State vs. Gettysburg, State Col- :30 o'clock. vs. Fordham. ‘Wesleyan, lege. t‘l:ittsbllrgh vs. Bethany, Pittsburgh. Rhode Island vs. Coast Guards, Kingston. Rautgers St. Bonevanture Olean, St. Thomas Schuylkill Reading. S‘yr:c‘-se vs. William and Mary, Syra- vs. Albright, New Brunswick. vs. Manhattan, Duquesne, ‘Scranton. vs. Mount St. Mary's, cuse. Thiel vs. Juanita, Greenville. Tufts vs. Colby, Medford. Ursinus vs. Hagerford, Collegeville. Villanova vs. yola, Philadelphia. Wlsh(nmn-lefler;on vs. Waynes- burg, Washington, Pa. \5Illllms vs. Middlebury, Williams- town. SOUTH ATLANTIC. Johns Hopkins vs. Richmond, Balti- mw"e'num Maryland vs. Dickinson, tminister, Md. W;‘l'. John's vs. Randolph-Macon, An- napolis, 10:30 o’clock. \"’anshm‘wll ln:l '{:e vs. North Car- lina_State, Lexington. * V. P. L. vs. Hampden-Sydney, Blacks- ury k Vfrllnh vs. South Carolina, Char- ville. h‘l‘i’lvls-!:lklns vs. New River, Elkins. Dayidson vs. Elon, Davidson. Duke vs. South Dakota, Durham. ¢ Earlham vs. Hanover, Richmond. Furman vs. Chattanooga, Greenville. Hampton vs. Seminar§, Hampton. Marshall vs. Fairmont Tech, Hunt- Inm Citadel vs. Stetson, Charleston. Virginia State vs. Morgam, Peters- . b““fll(e Forest vs. Presbyterian, Wake Forest. West Virginia vs. Haskell, Wheeling. Wofford vs. Erskine, Spartanburg. SOUTH. Colgate vs. Vanderbilt, Nashville. Alabama vs. Mississippi, Tuscaloosa. Alabama Poly vs. CleAm‘l:n. Auburn. Geor, vs. Mercer, . Gefl"‘l: Tech vs. V. M. I, Atlanta. Bi ham Southern vs. Millsaps, Birmingham. 5 Bowling Green vs. Southwestern, Bowling Green. Centenary vs. Daniel Baker, Shreve- rt. Florida vs. Southern, Gainesville. Kentucky vs. Carson-Newman, Lex- ington, Ky. Ring vs. Maryville, Bristol. . Louisiana State vs. Louisiana South- western, Baton Rouge. Louisiana Tech vs. Clarke Memorial, Ruston. ulalll.lvllh vs. Richmond Tech, Louls- ville. Rice vs. St. Edward, Houston. Tennessee vs. Centre, Knoxville. Texas vs. Texas Tech, Austin. Texas Aggies vs. Sewanee, Dallas. Texas Mines vs. Southwestern, El Paso. Tulane vs. Mississippi Aggies, Jack- son, Miss. MIDDLE WEST. Wisconsin vs. Notre Dame, Madison. Ohio State vs. Wittenberg, Columbus. Northwestern vs. Butler, Evanston. Indiana vs. Oklahoma, Bloomington. Jowa State vs. Nebraska, Ames. Illinois vs. Bradley, Urbana. Chicago vs. Wyoming, Chicago. Loyola (Chicago) vs. Loyola (New Orleans), Chicago. Akron vs. Oberlin, Akron. Arkansas vs. College of Ozarks, Fay- etteville, e Cincinnati vs. Cincinnati. Colorado Aggies vs. Fort Collins. Colorado College vs. Montana State, Colorado Springs. Columbia vs. Mines, Dubuque. Cornell College vs. Ripon, Mount Vernon. Dayton vs. Wilmington, Dayton. Denver vs. Colorado Mines, Denver. GLO-CO LIQUID HAIR DRESSING cAs necessary as the Kentucky Wesleyan, Greeley Tech, ‘Wisconsin morning shave American | | Tech, Fai Drake vs. Simpson, Des Moines. Tllinois College vs. Lincoln, Jackson- ville. Illinois Wesleyan vs. Knox, Bloom- | ington. Towa vs. Monmouth, Towa City. John Carroll vs. Kent, Cleveland. Kalamazoo College vs. Notre Dame Reserves, Kalamazoo. Kalamazoo Tech vs. Ferris Institute, Kalamazoo. Kansas vs. Grinnell, Lawrence. Miami vs. Transylvania, Oxford, Qhio. Michigan -vs. Ohio Wesleyan, Ann Arbor. Michigan State vs. Albion, East Lansing. Minnesota vs. Creighton, Milwaukee. Montana vs. Washington State, Mis- soula. North Dakota vs. Carleton, Grand Forks. North Dakota Aggies vs. Superior rgo. Purdue vs. De Pauw, Lafayette. St. Louis vs. Springfield Tech, St. Louis. Tulsa vs. Detroit U., Tulsa. Utah Aggies vs. Montana Mines, Logan. Wabash vs. Danville, Crawfordsville. FAR WEST. Washington U. vs. Whitman, Seattle. California vs. St. Mary, Berkeley. California S. Br. vs. California Tech, Los Angeles. Oregon vs. Stanford, Eugene,*Oreg. College of Pudget South vs. Tdaho College, Tacoma. College of Pacific vs. Chico, Stockton. Fresno vs. Santa Barbara, Fresno. Fullerton vs. California Christian, Fullerton. La Verne vs. Occidental, Los Angeles. Loyola vs. Flagstaff, Los Angeles. New Mexico Aggies vs. Silver City Tech, State College. New Mexico vs. buguerque. Nevada_vs. Utah, Reno. Santa Clara vs. St. Ignatius, Santa Clara. Southern California vs. Oregon Ag- gies, Los Angeles. X . TASKS ARE AHEAD OF MAJOR TEANS Five in East Face Possible Disaster in Contests Tomorrow. ' Montezuma, Al- By the Assoclated Press. YEW YORK, October 5—Five of the East’s major elevens have an outside chance of meeting with disaster in tomorrow’s foot ball games. Navy’s supporters are awaiting the Boston College game with something approaching trepidation, not so much because of the invaders’ reputation as 'because of the Midshipmen’s defeat by Davis-Elkins. Although “Biff” Jones is known to have a great team at West Point, ob- servers are loath to establish the Cadets as overwhelming favorites against the Southern Methodists’ aggregation. On the basis of its rather weak showing against Hobart, Syracuse is accorded little more than an even chance to turn back William and Mary. » West Virginia, another of Davis- Blkins’ victims this year, may be bit- ing off more than it can chew in tackling the Haskell Indians, and New York University, apparently weaker than last year, can expect strenuous opposition from West Virginia Wesleyan, although the latter fell before West Virginia U. last week. Princeton, Harvard, Yale and Brown open their schedules against opponents of a caliber somewhat below their own —Vermont, Springfield, Maine and Worcester Poly. Pennsylvania tackles Franklin and Marshall; Columbia meets Union and Cornell plays Niagara. Hobart, which gave Syracuse a bit of a ‘scare, meets a high-powered Dart- mouth machine. Pitt anticipates little more than some additional practice against Bethany, as does Carnegie against Ashland and Washington and Jefferson_with Waynesburg. Penn State: may find Gettysburg a hard nut to crack and Penn Military figures to give Lehigh some uneasy moments. Lafayette’s high-scoring ma- chine should more or less romp through Muhlenberg. RACING TODAY Laur,eAlT, Md. SEVEN RACES DAILY October 2nd to October 27th Inclusive Special Baltimore & Ohio R. R. Trains Ly. Wash. Ar. Laurei General Admis: Every pipe smoker knows that the better his tobacco the better his smoke. That’s why so many men are turning to ®1a Briar Tobacco “THE BEST PIPE SMOKE EVER MADE!” United States Tobucco Co., lhchnumt Vo, U.5. 4 SPORTS. APACHES-MOHAWKS PLAY DEGEMBER 2 Pilots Agree on Date for Big Game—Number of Clashes on Sunday. PACHE and Mohawk foot ball teams will not meet until De- cember 2. This is the mast im- portant clash on the amateur grid schedule, as the unlimited championship will no doubt be decided on that date. Apache nosed out the Hawks last season, and both teams 2‘:‘1’]! fortified with ex-college stars this Managers of both teams agreed to local college foot ball campaign has closed. It is thought the largest crowd in amateur sports history in the Dis- trict will witness the contest. Patsy Donovan, manager of the Hawk eleven, has announced the follow- ing schedule: Sunday, Seat Pleasant; October 14, Reina Mercedes; 21, Lans- downe A. C.: 28, Homestead A. C.; No- vember 4, St. Mary's Celtics; 11, Rich- mond Blues; 18. Northerns; 25, Hilton A, at Baltimore; December 2, Apaches, and December 9, Olympic A. C. at Philadelphia, pending. Initial games of the Capital City 150~ pound League are scheduled for Sunday. Mohawk Preps are forced to idle, as BU on Prestolite L J stage their important contest after the | ohly seven teams comprise the circuit. Games are scheduled as follows: National Preps vs. Peerless A. C., Georgetown Prep field. Janney A. C. vs. Alexandria Firemen, Friendship field. Yankee A. C. vs. St. Stephen’s A. C., Third street and Missouri avenue. St. Stephen's, Pecrless 135-pounders and Yankee A. C. elevens will drill night. Saints workout at 7:15 at Lin coln Memorial. Peerless players are to report at 7:30 o'clock on Hayes field, and Yankees start at 5 o'clock on Plaza playgrounds. Trojans, scheduled to meet Shabby huskies Sunday at 10 o'clock on Rose- dale playgrounds, will drill tomorrow at 2 o'clock on the West Virginia avenue and Neal street northeast feld. Trojans will meet at 9 o'clock Sunday at Mon- tello avenue and Neal street northeast. Games are being scheduled at Lincoln 4. Brookland A. C. would like to book a 135-pound foe for Sunday. Call North 3219 for arrangements. A practice is scheduled tomorrow at 2:30 o'clock on Brookland fleld. Eddie Cantor would like to schedule a 135-pound foe for G. P. O. Federals for Sunday. Call Atlantic 640-J. R R, Ml Golf authorities in Great Britain propose the adoption of a larger and lighter ball “to shorten drives and make control more difficult.” TROUSERS To Match Your Odd Coats EISEMAN'S, 7th & F our ‘“‘Easy Payment Plan!”’ Nationally Known Products Goodrich Silvertown and Diamond . TIRES and TUBES The New 1929 All-Electric STEWART-WARNER RADIO L] Rubberib STORAGE BATTERIES Standard Quality VACUUM CLEANERS All sold on our new and convenient payment plan Heretofore we have confined our sales exclusively | to first quality, nationally known, standard make tires and tubes, but now we offer in addition Radios, Storage Batteries and Vacuum Cleaners, all sold on our new EASY PAYMENT PLAN. Visit either of our stores —and inspect our new lines before purchasing one or more of these seasonable products. 2801 14th St. N.W. Tel. Col. 9276 1200 H St. N.E. Tel. Atl. 458 9th & P Sts. N.W. Tel. North 8947 2116 M St. N.W. Georgetown West 1967 OPEN EVENINGS

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