Evening Star Newspaper, July 24, 1929, Page 29

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‘Jones Sure to Have Plenty of Opposition in SWEETSER LATEST TOENTER TOURNEY Jess, Health Fully Regained,! Appears as Dangerous Contender. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. WEDNESDAY, JULY 24,/ 1929 GIRL SWIMMER BETTERS MARK FOR 100 METERS SEATTLE, July 24 (P).—Helene Madison, Seattle swimmer, unofficially bettered the world record for women in the 100-meter event here last night, covering the distance in 1 minute 8 seconds. The worlfl record is 1 minute 10 seconds and was made by Ethel Lackie, now professional. Knocking 25 seconds off her own recognized Pacific Coast record, Miss Madison swam“the 100-yard event in OH, MAN! "WHAT ' no SEAT IN Te PARLOR CAR ?IVE Beew TRAVELING CN TS RoAD FoR YEAR S AND- " A. A. U. officlals will not recognize RY FRANCIS J. POWERS. I becomes evident with the passing days that Bobby Jones' ambition to win both the open and amateur golf championships of the United States in the same season will be severely opposed when the national amateur battle in September is waged | along the wave-washed fairways of Del | Monte, Calif. Not only will the Geor- gian meet with stern opposition from | George Von Elm, his perennal rival, | and George Voigt and the British stars, | Cyril Tolley and Phil Perkins, but also | from Jess Sweetser. | Sweetser once more is in robust | health, after a long three-year battle | against disease, and is wielding hl.s‘ woods and irons as he did at Brook- . line and Muirfield, where his rusty spade mashie wrote brilliant chapters in the history of golf. Is on His Game. | Jess looked the perfect athlete as he | ®alked in the galleries at the national | open and proved the fine quality of his game recently when he shot rounds of | 70 and 68 to come from behind and win the Jess Sweetser Victory Trophy, a New York championship founded to | commemorate his victory in the British amateur of 1926. With the Siwanoy star playing as he did four or five years ago the ama teur champlonship is bound to be enliv ened. When Jess is at the top of his game there are few greater artists in the manipulation of a mashie, and no greater fighter ever planted a spiked shoe on the fairways of the bunkered | domain. He is one of the few American | amaieurs unawed by the power of Bob | Jones' game and the Georgian's grow- | ing reputation as a “man killer.” for Jess in the past has been something of 8 “man Killer" himself, and Jones was one of his first victim: i There was a rare flash of Sweetser's fighting spirit and his ability as a £hot maker on the last nine holes of the victory cup play at Sleepy Hollow. | George Voigt was giving Jess a stern fight for the lead when Jess turned on the final round. Jess 12 strokes for the first three holes of the inside lap and then played the last six in exactly 20 strokes to notch a 32 for the side and win the cup by 3 strokes. Jess played perfect golf on ' cates that unless Tilden can win bath | French in 1927 will not be realized. | Tound in place of Frank Hunter has | Miss Madison's feats because they were made in an exhibition swim. TILDEN T0 CARRY U. 5. TENNIS LOAD Task of Beating French in Cup Play Is Mainly on His Shoulders. & NPSGOT A CH AR FOR You Boss ™" l By the Associated Press. ARIS, July 24—Upon Big Bill | Tilden's shoulders appears to rest most of the burden in the | United States’ second attempt to lift the Davis France. A glance over the probable line-ups in the challenge round, which opens in Roland Garros Stadium on Friday, indi- Cup from his singles matches the United States’ | hopes of retrieving the cup lost to the | ‘The surprising move that put George | Lott on the team for the challenge | weakened the Americans' position, in | the opinion of some experts. Undoubt- | edly the French will play Henri Cochet and Jean Boroira in the singles and | "ive esen TRAVELING ¢y Tis RoAD FOR 20 YTARS AMD THiS 1S " PULLMAMN TwE FIRST TIME - CONDUC Tof ,// "GooD WORK Georee" Hunter has been a rather consistent jinx to Borotra. ‘With Hunter on the team there ‘ would have been a strong possibility | \ that he would turn in one singles vic- | tory. Thus if Tilden should do no bet- | ter than break even the issue would | |S UN GH]" have been decided, in reality. in the | doubles, where John Van Ryn and | Phillips and Staubly Meet DIEGEL IN SHAPE TODEFENDTITLE He and Smith Go Around in { will retain the cup. Lott, on a good | day, can beat virtually any player in | the world, but he is an erratic perform- that round. Offers Great Outlook. A match between Jones and Sweetser | ©F and most observers expect both | or Sweetser and Von Elm would make | Cochet and Borotra to beat him. It any championship epochal. | Bobby and | that proves to be the case America Jess have met, only once n the naiional | could Tetain the cup only if Tilden beat amateur, and that was in 1925, when | Cochet and Borotra in singles and Van Sweetser beat the Emperor. 8 and 1 | Ryn and Allison won in doubles, wheth- Jones never has had an_ opportunity | er it were against Cochet and Borotra to avenge that defeat and would wel- | Or With Jacques Brugnon or Christian come a match with Jess, even though | Boussus substituted for one or the other | Wilmer Allison, Wimbledon champions, | in Title Tournament on | appear to have a better than even | chance of beating the best Prench pair, Lighted Courts. | Cochet and Borotra. I ARRY PHILLIPS and Alan Stau- | By the Associated Press. | With Lott on the team the expert 70 in Practicing for bly will make tennis history here | MONTREAL, July 24.—Leo Diegel. | has it that Tilden must win Canadian Open. i tonight when they face across it would appear, is ripe for a | the nets at the Monument Park | successful defense of the | courts at 8 o'clock in the first Canadian open golf champion- | open-air_tournament match played un- it meant another beating. And the allery would welcome such a battle even more. A duel between Von Elm and Sweet- ser would be a grim struggle. They have been dubbed the “blond Uhlans of the links.” and the clanking of sabers would be audible as they marched from the first tee. They have similar combative dispositions and are merciless in match play. George and Jess never have clashed championship, but there is a chance they may meet at Del Monte. George Volgt, who is much on the Von Elm-Sweetser type, finding his game Again the 1929 amateur championship Dromises to be anything but a pink tea. ! of the singles performers. | Allison and Van have impressed the | critics with their form in practice ses- sfons. | “It seems as though the best doubles team France can put in the field will be none too good to beat these college boys,” said Pierre Gillou, captain of the | French squad. | ‘That remark seemed to indicate that | French authorities will depend but doubles as vell. In the long run ‘With | that may prove fatal, for Borotra no | longer has the stamina he had a few years ago and three hard matches in | fifi many days may prove too much for ! him. STRAIGHT OFF THE TEE wondering today what it takes to get a hole in one on a hole just short of 300 yards in length. Weyl stood up on the first tee of the 293-yard first hole at the Town and Country Club. swung his mighty driver, and the ball soared high in the air, to drop just past the cedar trees that cut off a poor drive, and roll onto ihe green within a foot of the hole. Meanwhile Marc Goldnamer, his part- ner in the match, stared in amaze- ment as he watched the tremendous arc of Weyl's mighty tee shot, and swung his driver in approved southpaw vle in the hope he might get one near- ly as close. Weyl's eagle 2 on the first hole at ‘Town and Country is one of the few | ever recorded on that difficult 293- vard stretch. and the first to be made this year. By all the gods of golf, he might just as well have secured an ace, for the ball finished straight in line with the pin, and only a foot short. Another near ace was recorded on another local course last Monday, when Fred McLeod's iron tee shot on the 165- vard fourteenth hole at Indian Spring brought up within two inches of the cup and dead in line with it. “That's me,” McLeod said, “usually accurate, but always short. Mrs. Evelyn Glavis and Ellen Voke are to play within the next three days for the women’s public links champion- ship of Washington in the final match of the tournament which has been in progress for several weeks over the Rock Creek Park course. Mrs. Glavis defeated Mrs. Helen O. Rhyne by 2 up in one semi-fina) while Miss Voke was administering « defeat of similar porportions to Miss F. Godfrey. The second flight of the tourney was won yesterday by Mrs. T. P. Hayden, AX WEYL, club champion of the Town and Country Club, is who defeated Lucille Zuendel 2 and 1 | in the final round. The golf committee of the Maryland | Country Club has a quaint old Balti- | more custom which consists of hiding the scores made by the players on the | first day of a two-day qualifying round under a bushel, and not. revealing them until the complete qualification round of two days is over, Scores made today by the seven Washingtonians who are scheduled to play in the first day's| qualifying round will not be posted until late tomorrow afternoon, when the balance of the fleld has gotten under way. i This move is made. the golf commil- tee of the club explainz, to make it im- possible for second day qualifiers to know what they have to shoot, and to put them on an equal basis with the rest of the field. The system has the one advantage of keeping most of the field in ignorance of what their predecessors have done, but there seems no particular reason why the late starters should not know what they have to do to make their proper place in the tournament. When a two-day qualifying round is played at Washington clubs the scores are posted as they come in. And every one knows just where he stands, no matter whether he starts early or late. A half dozen or more of the local golf professionals are planning to play in ihe Philadelphia open championship, to be held over the famous east course of the Merion Cricket Club at Haverford, %a. earty next month. This course will be the scene of the amateur cham- peonship next year, and is the layout over which Bob Jones first won the amateur back in 1924. Among those who are planning to make the trip are Bob Barnett of Chevy Chase, A. L. Hougnton of Harper, Fred McLeod of Columbia, J. M. Hunter of Indian ing A. B, Thorn of Town and Coun- | try and Mel Shorey of East Potomac Park. | | The second round in the two-ball iwumlmem being played by the senior | golfers of the Chevy Chase Club has re- sulted as follows: Walter G. Peter and €. C. Phillips (9) defeated Rear Admiral H. 1. Cone jen. D. C. Shanks (19), 5 and 4: . G. | Brantley and Arlon V. Cushman (13) de- | feated H. L. Rust and Gen. H. P. McCain (8).4 and 3: G. V. Worthington and L. O, | Cameron (14) defeated Maj. H. L. Rice and | E. M. Talcott (7), 8 and /. | Ben S. Minor has won his way to the | final round of the competition for the Peter Cup, defeating H. L. Rice by 2 up | in the semi-final round. Hill and A local record for marathon golf | contests without a decision is in the | making today as W. E. Mehary and Dr. H. L. Weer seek to set a date for the | playoff of their 36-hole tie for the Henry-Williams Cup at Bannockburn, Ten days ago this pair met in what was scheduled to be an 18-hole final round and finished all even on the eighteenth hole, after a see-saw match. Yesterday they met again, and again ended all cven. Mehary had obtained {a two-hole lead at the turn, which Weer gradually whittled down, until they were square again at the thir- teenth. -Mehary won the fourteenth, and the fifteenth and sixteenth were halved. Weer annexed the seventeenth and the match again was square. W reached the green at the eighteenth in three shots, while Mehary had the match in the bag by reaching the put- ting surface in two. But Mehary took three puts on the final green for a 5, while Weer was down in two putts for a 5, and again they ended all even. They will decide on a date to play still a third 18-hole match to decide the ques- tion of supremacy. Mrs. H. A. Knox of Congressional, won the first flight in the miniature | tournament staged yesterday by the ‘Women's District Golf Association over | the Beaver Dam Country Club course. | won by Mrs. the | Club, with a total of 31 strokes. Results of the tourney follow: | Mirst flight—Mrs. H. A. Knox. defeated Mrs. Y. E. Booker. 1 up in 10 holes. Con- solation—Won by Mrs. Frank R. Keefer. Second fiight—Mrs, Alma_ Von ~Steinner, defeated Mrs. J. F. Gross, 2 and 1. C solation—Won 'By Mrs. Third_flight—Mrs. frated Mrs. 5 Yelverton E. Booker of de- Consola- Y Mrs. th fight—Mrs. J. T. Miss Virginia Willigms, 4 and 3." Consola- tion—Won by Mrs. B. G. Simpich. George T. Howard and D. C. Gruver are having a merry battle for the lead in the ringer contest under way at the Washington Golf and Country Club. They are tied at 65, and both have several more opportunities to reduce this mark. Comdr. C. T. Lynes and R. J. Morman, are in second place with 66. Dr. James T. McClenahan, chairman of the greens committee, played yester. iday at Washington, and scored 4 bird- fes. He came in to the clubhouse, elat- ed, because he thought he had a chance to reduce his ringer score. But he was sadly disappointed when he was informed that ringer scores made during the week do not count and that only those ringers made on Sat- urdays, Sundays and holidays count in the final computation. This restriction redowned to the benefit of Heng D. Nicholson and John I. Power, how- ever, for in a match last Sunday they iscored 7 birdies over the first nine holes. 4 upon | in a national | Cochet and Borotra not only in singles | Meets Bob Considine, title holder, to- | The six-hole qualification round was | Washington Golf and Country | der arc lights to be recorded in the an- | nals of Washington. | So successful was the demonstration | given last night on the newly illuminat- cd courts for after-dark play. that the public parks _tournament ~committee decided to schedule one of its en- counters there tonight. The Staubly- | Phillips match—a fourth-round affair, was selected. The winner of this match | morrow in the quarter-finals. | Other quarter-final encounters, each | of which decides a ground champion- | ship, were to be played this afternoon. Surviving favorites were to_perform in | | all of these. So far, there has been no | major upset in the singles play. Frank | Shore and Randy Robinson were to | play at 2 o'clock on the Monument | Park courts for the Potomac title and | position in the semi-final round of the interpark pl At 4 o'clock Maurice | O'Neil, present title holder at Henry | Park, was to oppose Maurice Garnett. | also at the Monument courts, where all play today is carded. Dooly Mitchell, | Rock Creek ace, opposes Maurice Hoff- | man at 5 o'clock in the third of the afterncon singles matches, Yesterday Robinson, Mitchell and Hoffman were all extended to extra sets | in gaining their victories. Mitchell had his hands full in downing Richard Edge, | 6—2, 3—6, 6—1. Robinson had a close call before subduing Everett Simon, {2—6, 6—4, 6—4. and Hoffman ran a | marathon with Douglas Love, “the lit- | tle long man at the net,” whom he bare- ly nosed out. 6—4, , 7—5. Love, although slight of stature, is noted for | his long reach and clever vqlleying from | the fore court. Hoffman found it dif- ficult either to pass him or lob over his head, once he had assumed net position. Doubles play, which was marked yesterday by several fast matches and one 3-set duel, in which Majs. Hun!-’ ington Hills and Leland Hobbs were bested by O'Neil and Shoemaker, 3—6, 6—3, 6—1, was to be continued this afternoon on the Monument courts, the first matches being scheduled at 5| o’clock. Last night's exhibition matches for the purpose of demonstrating the prac- ticability of the artificially-lighted courts proved a complete success both from the standpoint of a demonstra- tion and a tennis show. Bob Consi- dine and Gynn King shot some fire- works in two hard-fought sets which went to Considine at 6—3, 6—4, while Dooly Mitchell and William Buchanan staged a three-set demonstration which was equally as entertaining to the gal- lery of several hundred onlookers who lined the terrace behind the backstops. Mitchell, incidentally, defeated Buchan- an, 6—2, 3—6, 6—3. A doubles match, following the sin- gles, resulted in a 7—5, 6—0 victory for Mitchell and King over Bob Con- sidine and Maurice O'Neil. All of the players declared that the lighting was highly satisfactory. The courts are open now for general use. A fee of 75 cents an hour for a court or 25 cents for a single person is charged. ROCK Singles. | rell by Lou Cumming, Toronto; Mehl- ship he won last year for the third time. Touring _around course, near here, where the cham- pionship opens tomorrow he clipped two strokes off par figures when he turned in a card of 70 during a prac- tice round, Horton Smith, the Joplin youth who burned up courses right and left during the Winter season, was an- other who went around in 70. These two, along with such other American stars as Walter Hagen, Tom- my Armour. George von Elm, Gene Sarazen. Bill Mehlhorn, to mention few. will be watched closely. The competition consists of 72 holes of medal play, 18 tomorrow, 18 on Pri- day and 36 on Saturday for all those within 20 strokes of the leader after the first 36 holes. Horton Smith will be the first of the better-known Americans to leave the first tee tomorrow. Smith, with C. Ross Somerville, the Canadian amateur title-holder for a playing partner, will begin his quest of the title at 10 aim Diegel, with Andrew Kay of Toronto. lfor a partner, will leave a half hour ater. Other pairings find Armour partnered by Nicol Thompson, Hamilton, Ontario; Von Elm by Willlam Lamb, Toronto, Canadian professional champion; Sar- azen by Jack Cameron, Toron! Far- the Kanawaki horn by Jack Young, Montreal; Al Watrous by Jimmie Johnstone, Toronto: Hagen by Robert Cunningham, Toronto: Abe Espinosa by George Cumming. Toronto: Maurice McCarthy by K. March, London, Ontario: Johnny Gold- en by Gordon Taylor, jr, Toronto; Ed Dudley by John R. Brown, Montreal; Wiffy Cox by D. A. Ferguson, Toronto; Joe Turnesa by Jack Littler. Toronto, and MacDonald Smith by Karl Kef- ferm. Ottawa. Plavers from the United States have won the championship for 10 years in a row. Diegel winning it thres times in | 1924-25 and '28. i NINE-YEAR-OLD CADDY | GETS ACE AT TORONTO| NORTH BAY, Ontario, July 24 (#).— Believed to be the world's youngest golf- er to accomplish the feat, Maurice Regimbal, 9 years old, has achieved | the golfer's dream and shot a hole in one. | One of the youngest caddies on the | North Bay Golf Club, the lad sank his tee shot on the ninth green. a distance of 125 yards. The feat was witnessed by three other boys with whom he was playing and the club professional. Throws Clubhead Toward the Hole BY SOL METZGER. Miss Maureen Orcutt, recently CREEK—Frank _ Shore _defeated George Shoemaker, €—2, 8—6: Randy Rob- | inson " defeated ~ Everet'Simon, "2 —4, NUMENT—Bob_Considine defeated A. E._Yeatman, 60, 6—3. s HENRY PARK—Maurice O'Neil defeated Murray Gould, 61, 6—1; Muscoe Garnett defeated Bill Seidell, 6-—1. 62 POTOMAC_PARK—-Dooléy Mitchell defeat- ed Richard Edge, 62, 3—8, 6—1: Hoffman defeated Douglas Love, 6—4, 3—6, T—. Pirst round—f Edgar and Tris 5 i Neale Birch defeated Davies and Scrivener, 6— 6—3, 6—3; Love and Staubly defeated . Crews and Wallenstein, 6—4. 8—6: Silva And Hermann defeated Byrne and Glasmire. | 6—4, 4—6. 8—6: Moncure and Pollard won | by default; Robinson_and Shore defeated Veach and Whitne: 3 |, Second round—o’ and Shoemaker_ de- | 21 5 Thon and Newby' deleated Willls ‘and Drown. 64, 82 Mitchell and Buchanan defeatéd Grant and Krause, 6—1, 6—3. {ALL-AROUND CHAMPION TO COACH AT PRINCETON PRINCETON, N. J., July 24.—The appointment of John Kenneth Dohert of Detroit, national decathlon cham- pion, as assistant ack coach at Princeton University has been an- nounced by Dr. Charles W. Kennedy, chairman of the Princeton Board of Athletic Control. Doherty will succeed Archie Hahn, who will beccme track coach at the University of Virginia in the Fall. Doherty won the national A. A. U. decathlon champlonship for the second successive time at the reccnt meet inl Denver. He will assist Keene FPitz- patrick, who has been track coach here since 1910, crowned Eastern women's champion and always a dangerous competitor in national events, has a sound iron game, It permitted her to down Miss Billie Hicks, the sensational school- girl player, to win this title. Miss Orcutt, like all good iron AHROW CLUBHEAD THROUGH BALL AND ON TOWARD HOLE Mi$5 MAURE.E! ORLUTT~ EASTERN players, whether on_chips, pitches or long n{lpmchu. has the much- desired follow through; that is, the head of her iron, after striking the ball, follows out after it toward the flag, as all irons must do if the shot is to be played correctly. But a follow through with irons is not practical unless one has a firm grip, for on nearly all such shots & bit of turf is taken. PRICE 23c 2¢ Road Tax | Included STANDARD —BY BRIGGS “"GEORGE - Ypu HNOW | VE BEEN TRAVE LING W TH You FOR Yz aRs You WNOW TiaAT- CAN T YouGET ME A CHAIR THE REST OF THE JOURNEY I THE SMOKING ROOM e ] NN SN 3 N N NN N = (009 ® w | Taaune Fe SPORTS. 29 Amateur Championship Tourney BossS = Jus AS Soont A% THEY 1S A EMPTY TRADE MARK REG.V.5-PAT. OFy THE GIANT POWER FUEL | in the third round. | Charles Hubbard and Margaret Blake llra'rd Miss Cruickshank, 2—6, 6—2, Four National Champions WOMAN’S NET EVENT In Amateur Golf Tourney PROMISES FINE LIST i i i NEW YORK, July 24 (P)—Na- | tional champions of four countries | With the exception of Mrs, Clarence :Normont, jr., and Mrs. Hugh Rowan, | will be in the fold when play begins who are out of town, all of Washing- in the national amateur golf cham- o plonship at Del Monte, Calif, Sep- |ton’s ranking feminine net talent will tember 2. | be lined up for the District of Colum- Heading the list will be Bobby |bia championships opening next Mon- day on the courts of the Columbia Jones, who is to defend his United States crown. The others are Cyril Country Club. In addition, a number of out-of-town entries are expected. Tolley, holder of the British title: Ross Somerville, king of Canadian Doris Perry of Chicago has alread: amateurs, and Jack Westland, who | SNt in her name. Her entry followed close on the heels of the announcement recently won the French title. yesterday by the committee that Mary- More than 200 entries for the ; champlonship had been received | Wil Wakeford, former District cham- | pion, was to journey from the South when the lists closed last night, virtually every first-rank amateur in [ e o ke U once ot eMw 10T the tue ey e R de | e A ces M ricol A hahice crommia matically are eligible because they |champion, of course will defend her e uaine i thesastiiinree | LS e Dcsear i Frazier and Dorothy Kingsbury, last year's runner-up, will be among Miss | Krucoff's challengers, according _in | notifications received by Mre. H. Clay HELEN JACOBS DEFAULTS IN TENNIS TOURNAMENT | Srmorpracading the committee in | Entries in the singles will close Satur- _MANCHESTER. Mass., July 24 (P)— | day night et 6 o'clock with Mrs. Thomo-. Five of the eight seeded players in the | son and her committee, which includes fifth annual Essex Country Club wom- | Mrs. J. H. Ford, Ivy Jane Wymore and en’s singles tennis tournament have ad- | MrEaIet Byan, - s vanced to the quarter finals. Helen | play. consolation singles will be run off Jacobs of California defaulted her sec- | for the benefit of those who fall by the ond-round match with Louise Packer of | wayside in their initial matches of the Boston. The latter was defeated by | title event, Clara Greenspan. New York, 6—2, 6—0,| Doubles entries will remain open until The most surprising upset o e ol Fise: st s i % is planne start double: y scored by Sarah Palfrey of Brookline, | Wednesday Afternoon. S «p};;nw vear-old national girls’ It is belleved by the committee that ) : | the earlier scheduling of matches this rence A. Harper of San Francisco, 7—. | year (none are to be carded after 4:30 8—0. ; |in" the afternoon) will increase the ‘The only other unexpected victory of | number of out-of-town entrants, and the day came in the doubles when Mrs. | hence increase the value and impor- itance of the tournament. | N | | of Cambridge and Boston defeated Marjorie Morrill, Dedham, and Jose- phine | Cruickshank, San Prancisco, | MRS. ROLLER SEEKS DIVORCE. —86, T—5. F. I Mallory. New York, de—} NEW YORK, July 24 (P.—Suit for | divorce against Dr. Benjamin Franklin in a singles match. Mary Greef, | Roller, retired heavyweight wrestling defeated Margaret Blake, | champion of America. has been filed in . 8—6. Edith Cross. San | Supreme Court. by Mrs. Tracy H. Roller. Francisco, defeated Mrs. C. J. Hubbard, | They were married in 1910 in Fort Cambridge, 6—8. 6—3, 6—3, | Erfe, Ontario. Mr: (= - Smoothes Out the Hill Roads and Gives You Greater Power Higher . . . Higher . . . Up to the hilltops—and over— of gears. ESSO makes ribbons of Flattens them hill roads. highways. For ESSO is a red giant for power. More pent-up energy than a swollen river—or a cyclone. But ESSO is flexible power. Throttle down to a lazy crawl. Or open up to seventy. It’s all the same to ESSO. o1IL % hout a shift into Of course ESSO ha new life to any car. s the best anti- knock qualities. But it does more than cut out motor “pings.” Gives Thousands of users say it’s the ESSO — uniform in Esso contains tetra-ethyl-lead COMPANY oF N best alle’round motor fuel on the market. And there is only one quality — sold at thousands of silver ESSO pumps with ESSO shields. mistake the name or the results. You can’t w

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