Evening Star Newspaper, November 29, 1929, Page 50

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

50 - SPORTS. THE EVEN NG _STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1929. SPORTS. Two Teams Provide Six All-Big Ten Players : Mythical Eastern Title Pitt’s PURDUE, NORTHWESTERN STARS LIKED BY COACHES Bergherm of Purple Fullback Pick, Nagurski Being Moved to Tackle—Two Boilermakers Placed in Backfield—Brilliant Line Selected. BY CHARLES DUNKLEY, Associated Press Sports Writer. HICAGO, November 29.—Russell Bergherm, Northwestern’s workhorse backfield star, is placed at fullback on the 1929 all- Western Conference foot ball team, picked for the Associated Press by nine Big Ten coaches, and to place him there the coaches elected to switch Bronko Nagurski, one of Minnesota's great- est stars, from fullback to tackle. The first team, as selected, follows: Wesley Fesler, Ohio State, left end. Bronko Nagurski, Minnesofa, left tackle. Fred Roberts, Iowa, left guard. Milton Erickson, Northwestern, center. Henry Anderson, Northwestern, right guard. Elmer Sleight, Purdue, right tackle. Robert Tanner, Minnesota, right end. Glenn Harmeson, Purdue, quarterback. ‘Willis Glassgow, Iowa, left halfback. Ralph Welch, Purdue, right halfback. Russell Bergherm.kNorth?ster?, fuub:lfil: . — Ends, er, | fensive player, c: g enemy forma- Nm?gsu?-:_u:nd 575';“5 ‘m_ tions ro? his mates, and in four im- nols; tackles, Gordon, Tllinois, and | PoTtant games he intercepted forward Westra, Iowa; guards, Poe, Michi-| " Bovard of Michigan and Barrett of gan, and Parks, Wisconsin; center, | onio s were ranked close to the Kawal, Illinois; quarterback, Hol- | two leaders. man, Ohio State; halfbacks, Phar- e e s, wiseonsin tutiback, Gembis. | SIXTH TITLE IN ROW 'IS ANNEXED BY UTAH holz, Wisconsin; fullback, Gembis. Michigan. Amos Alonzo Stagg, 67-year-old coach of the University of Chicago eleven, ad- hered to his policy of not naming play- DENVER, Colo., November 29 (#).— With its seventh consecutive victory of the season and its sixth consecutive conference win chalked up at the ex- pense of Utah Aggies, the University of ers for “all-teams,” saying that he felt qualified only to select a team from the squad with which he worked during the season. Utah was on top of the Rocky Moun- tain Foot Ball Conference heap today for the third time in the last four years. ‘The Utes, under Coach Ike Armstrong, Bergherm Made Fullback. Bergherm, a tall, powerful player, climaxed a brilliant season with a 27- to-6 victory over their ancient Aggie ‘was the key man in Northwestern's of- fensive scheme, doing the punting, rivals on Turkey day, while the Univer- sity of Denver Pioneers went into a tie and a great share of the run- ning. Coach Dick Hanley probably Trould have had » diffcult time without largely responsible for Northwestern's victories over Illinois and Ohio State. Glenn Harmeson, one of the four riv- eters who played a big part in giving Purdue its first Big Ten foot ball title, was mbfl:k tnunmlmuul chg:lce !0; quarter 3 [armeson pass an ran and was ranked as a superior de- fensive back. Glassgow, Welch Shine. Capt. Willis Glassgow of Jowa and Ralph “Pest” Welch of Purdue were long choices for the halfback positions. Glassgow, playing through almost the ‘whole season with an iron mask to pro- tect a shattered cheekbone, probably was unsurpassed as a ball carrier, and with his ability also to pass and kick, for second place with the University of Colorado by trampling the Colorado Ag- gles, 19 to 6. The Colorado School of Mines, by taking the short end of a battle with Colorado College on neutral Pueblo ground, enabled the Tigers to clinch third place in the season’s standings. Three Thanksgiving day games ended the foot ball season in this conference. Brigham Young University, with four games won and two lost, finished fourth in the race. Other teams finished as follows: The Colorado Teachers’ College, three wins and two losses; Montana State Col- lege, two and one; Utah Aggies, three and four; Colorado Agricultural College, one and four; Colorado School of Mines, one and five, and Western State College, no conference victories and five defeats. was ranked as the man to watch when opponents tackled Iowa. Defensively Glassgow left little to be desired. Welch did not carry the ball as often a3 last season, but was always a ground- gaining threat. His defensive work and blocking was invaluable in the Purdue NAVY TO START HAGBERG AT END AGAINST GREEN LIS, Md., November 29.— Defense against the forward pass, a it of the game in which the local team has not been expert, was long prac- e siressed yesterday in the last tice of the season for the Naval Acad- renenet 3 o — emy icam, A detachment of Squad B T ket T of the snds, the | the Dartmouth taettiod Snd: (oa dtoce ve pic] trouble. ‘Wesley PFesler of Ohio State and Bob ‘Tanner of Minnesota were the class of the wingmen and were paired by almost every coach. Fesler, a 1928 selection, was the pick of the offensive ends and his defensive work was good enough to bear scrutiny. Although closely watch- ed, Fesler took passes from Holman all season and his alert play was a factor in making Ohio State look like a con- tender until the season was nearly fin- of the Navy varsity was fairly good. Coach Bill Ingram has decided to start Oscar Hagberg at right end in place of Byng and this is the only change from the tentative line-up. Hagberg, the most moved-about Navy Elhyer. therefore lands a varsity berth the position in which. he started the season. Starting at end, Hagberg was moved to tackle when the Navy looked weak in that position. Later it was decided to point him for a backfield position with the idea of filling Joe Clifton's place next year. It is stated that the effort to develop Hagberg into a back will be continued next season, HINKLE GETS 50 POINTS TO TOP EAST’S SCORERS Scoring 50 points in Bucknell’s over- whelming victory over Dickinson at Lewisburg, Pa., yesterday, Clark Hinkle, fullback, took = the lead from d | Marsters of Dartmouth in Eastern foot ball scoring records. Hinkle made eight touchdowns and scored two additional Hglenu by rushes through the Dickinson on tries after touchdown, Uansa of Pittsburgh did not score at all in the Panthers’ game and was re- Tanner Great End. ‘Tanner dominated the ends in de- fensive play and was a sure pass re- ceiver. He was fast down under kicks and his deadly tackling kept opposing backs away from his side of the line. Although handicapped by an uncertain ankle all season, Tanner never failed to turn in a better than good performance. Shifted about to patch up holes in & team that lacked reserve power to make great, Nagurski stood out, with Elmer “Red” Sleight of Purdue as the pick of & number of fine tackles. Possesse that gave Minnesota vic- tory over Wisconsin. He was the fast- est man on the Gopher squad andiplaced in the standing by Dowler of Coach 8 chara 85 2| Colgate, who tallied twice. player who rarely made a mistake in| “'The records of the four leaders: Judgment, either as & back or & lineman. Sleight played clever foot ball in the Purdue Iline, keeping his feet well and seldom being caught out of position. His speed and power made him a misery to opposing punters, who found many of their attempts blocked by the hard- charging rmaker star. Player. | College. T.D. F.G. PAT. Tt Hinkle. " Bucknell. .. 21 2 128 Marsters, Dartmouth 18 0 12 wier, 'Coleate 5 0 [] Uanss, Pittsburgh!! 13 0 3 FIGHTS LAST NIGHT. By the Associated Press. 90 ki Al | possible, BRILLIANT SEASON IS ENDED BY.GAELS% Late Touchdown by Oregon Is Only Score All Year Against St. Mary’s. By the Associated Press. AN FRANCISCO, November 29. —St. Mary's College, with only 700 students, today had closed a brilliant foot ball season with its goal line crossed only once, eight victories to its credit. and one score- less tie. As a result St. Mary's is men- tioned prominently as the West’s repre- sentative in the Rose Bowl game at Pasadena New Year day. The Gaels ended their season yes- terday with a stunning victory over the powerful University of Oregon team, winning by a score of 31 to 6, and but for the lone touchdown would have made a record of being unscored on for the entire season. Until the last quarter the remarkable record seemed about to be achieved, but a 15-yard pass by Oregon resulted in a touchdown and the blasting of St. Mary’s hopes. St. Mary's scored 198 points to its nine opponents’ 6. The team, coached by “Slip” Madigan, former pupil of Knute Rockne, numbered among its victims the West Coast Army team, Uni~ versity of California, Gonzaga, St. Ignatius, the Olympic Club, Santa Clara, University of California at Los Angeles, Nevada, and finally Oregon. In the only other outstanding game on the Pacific Coast yesterday the University of California at Los Angeles won from the Grizzlies on Montana, 14 to 0. It was the Bruins’' first confer- ence victory. THE SPORTILIGHT By GRANTLAND RIC GENTLE NAMED CAPTAIN OF 1930 PENN ELEVEN PHILADELPHIA, November 20.— Halfback Richard E. Gentle of Brook- e, Mass., hero of Pennsylvania's 17-to-7 victory over Cornell, has been elected captain of the Red and Blue for next year. Gentle, who is 20 years old, is a junior at Penn. track man, Gentle is also a varsity being one of the best hurdlers on the te: GRIDIRON TWIN BILL ON ALEXANDRIA FIELD ALEXANDRIA, Va., November 29.— The gridiron double-header scheduled for Baggett's Park last Sunday, but call- ed off because of unfavorable weather conditions has been rescheduled for the [ Col Shipyard Field the coming Sunday. Virginia A. C. will battle the Seamen Gunners of Washington at 3 o'clock in the feature attraction, while a colored contest is billed between the Tigers of ‘Washington and the Roamers of Alex- andria, for 1 o'clock. Alexandria High School basket ball players are to get down to practice Monday afternoon in the Armory Hall. The_schoolboys will open their season on December 17, playing Western High School in Washington, and this contest will be followed by a game at the Ar- mory December 20, with Benedictine College of Richmond, Va. ‘The majority of the letter men of last vear's squad have ted, but Coach Reynolds has a fair nucleus in Pete Willlams, Hugh Travers and Sin- clair, the three letter men left over, and Jeff Williams, who starred for George Mason last Winter. With Angela Bell leading the attack with four fleld goals and a free toss, the Flashes defeated the Lee-Jackson High School girls yesterday. Closing Out. ¢ OUR years ago when the Army and Navy teams put on their big classic at Chicago, in a 21-21 draw, there were three outstand- ing figures on the Army side. One was Biff Jones, the Army coach; another was Chris Cagle, playing his first Army year, and the third was- John Murrell, the Army fullback. Tomorrow all three figure in their final Army foot ball show. Capt. Jones, having completed his allotted time at foot ball, goes to Fort Sill. Cagle and Murrell graduate next Spring. Together they have contributed enough foot ball to beat Yale, Harvard, Notre Dame, Navy, Nebraska and many other strong teams. This season the Army has played good, hard foot ball, with only fair success so far as final scores are concerned. With a little change in the tide of fortune these results might have been different. It is a better Army team than the scores might indicate. toughest years. ‘The Army hasn't been able to shake him loose as it did in 1927 and 1928, His best all-around game came against Harvard. Yale kept him pretty well covered. A strong Illinois defense forced from the ground into the air, where he put on a fine exhibition of passing. His big chance to regain part of the prestige that lifted him so high for two years will be given him against Notre Dame, and this is a rough assign- ment for any back. Only a great ball carrier is going to do much running through one of the strongest South Bend defenses ever sent into action. Cagle may have to rely' more on his passing than his running tomorrow, but if a pair of human feet £an move over turf through a Notre Dame barrier, these feet will belong to one C. K. Cagle of West Point and Louisiana. But he will be under the disadvantage of work- ing back of a comparatively weaker line, weaker so far as speed and ex- perience are concerned. him South Bend Speed. HE main factor the Army will have to face on Saturday will be Notre Dame’s greater speed—and one of the best lines any team will have to face. ‘When the first string is working you have the idea that 11 halfbacks are on the fleld, all in a hurry. There isn't a weak spot in the organization. It is seldom that any one foot ball squad has been able to call on six such backs as Carideo, Elder, Brill, Mullins, Schwartz and Savoldi. Most of these are unusually fast. None of them is slow in any way. Backfield speed and line speed can only be offset by terrific and unending Army pressure—by get- ting the jump and keeping it if it is This is-hard to do in & line that has Moynihan at center, flanked by two such guards as Law and Cannon. Not to forget a young man by the name of ‘Twomey playing tackle. If the Army line can hold its own with Notre Dame's line there’ll be a battle to the final play. Given the same chance, Cagle is more danger- ous than any back on the field. But Cagle will have a harder time get- ting loose than Notre Dame backs will have. Murrel, a_hard, fighting line plunger, will have the same trouble. It is al- most impossible to keep all of Notre Dame’s backs under cover. If one doesn’t get hot, another does. Carrideo BUFFALO, N. Y, November 20— Arturo Scheckels, Belgium, outpointed Bobby Tracy, Buffalo (6). Guards Are Powerful. Fred Roberts and Capt. Henry An- derson of Northwestern received the guard assignments over a powerful field. Roberts was not the biggest ilneman in the league, but he looked it in action. He was the best balanced guard in the Big Ten, according to the coaches, being equally capable on offense and defense. His tackling and judgment ‘were far above par. Anderson was a battling type who charged hard and certainly, and was fast enough to fit in well in interfer- ence. He tackled well and was a fine blocker when called out to run ahead of Bergherm and the other Northwest- ern_backs. ‘The place at center was a tight battle between Mickey Erickson of North- western and Ed Kawal of Illinois.. Erickson received the verdict by cne vote, chiefly due to his great work against Illinols. He was a smart de- National 9000 Forct MODEL “T” OWNERS We have a pur- chaser from the South who will buy at once and give us a good price for fifty model “T" Ford ecars, "l types. To supply this un- usual demand we will accept in trade at once fifty model “T” Ford cars on new model “A” cars or trucks, and pass on to you the benefit of this purchaser’s offer. WASHINGTON MOTOR €O. 635 Mass. Ave. NW. Authorized Ford Dealers has been the most consistent performer, but in one game or another Elder, Brill, Schwartz, Mullins and Savoldi have run So far this has been one of Cagle’s amuck. Opposing teams have checked or stopped one or two of them, but no team been able to stop all of them. Carrideo warms them up and then picks out the hattest to lead most of the day's action. And if some one flops he always has another to call on. And he can always call on speed—which is the biggest factor in foot ball today for those who are strictly on the inside of the situation. Speed—speed—and more speed—and it takes speed to match speed. Nothing else can. ‘The Ticket Scramble. E has never been a game played in the East where the loud and clarion call for tickets was so great. Those close to the ticket situation are confident that if there was room :noush more than 200,000 spectators would be jammed around the fleld to- morrow—with a chance that the count would be closer to 300,000 than the former figure. The Army-Notre Dame meeting has become one of the classics of foot ball, second to none other play- ed. It carries a greater appeal to the general public than any two games of the year thrown together. This season the Notre Dame record and the knowledge that has a team capable of putting it to the full test has packed on added inter- est and turned the occasion into the wildest scramble for admission even New York has ever known. ‘The Army may be outside in the bet- ting, but the Army has its chance if the team can click together and strike with everything it has. It will have to play beyond itself to win, but that has been done before. ———— e CONCORD CLUB SOCCERS BEAT BALTIMORE TEAM Concord Club soccerists handed the Baltimore Democrats their first de- feat of the campaign in a 2-1 battle yesterday on the Shady Oak, Md.,, field. E. Koennel scored Concord’s first in the first half and Concord’s second marker also was h up in the open- rom Horning to Kuhner brought the other score. Schaf- the Baltimoreans’ only tally in_the second half, British Uniteds fought to a 2-2 tle with the Fair Lawn Club, also o - timore, at a soccer game on the Silver Spring fleld. on a Brand New // HUDSON SUPER-SIX Down Payment as low as Your present car accepted as cash and may be entire first payment. Easy monthly payments on balance. BUYING OPPORTUNITY of the Year Stocks are limited — Come carly the model of your choice LAMBERT-HUDSON MOTORS CO. DISTRIBUTORS—PHONE DECATUR 2070 Corner 14th and R Streets N.W. Service Station, 24th and M Streets N.W. METROPOLITAN DEALERS 0., ne. to get PANTHERS' RALLY LICKS PENN STATE CORNHUSKERS KEEP BIG SIX GRID TITLE Go Through Season Without| Missouri Runner-up and Dark Loss—Colgate Wins—Penn Upsets Cornell. BY HERBERT W. BARKER, Associated Press Sports Writer. NEW YORK, November 29.—The mythical Eastern foot ball championship has fallen into the hands of Pittsburgh's mighty Panther array, with lgate onfy a step behind. ‘With big Tom Parkinson as a bat- tering ram, the Panthers crunched their way through a strong and battling Penn State line yesterday to wind up their regular season unbeaten and un- tied in nine games. While the Panthers were coming from behind to trounce the Nittany Lions from State Col- lege, a heavy and brainy Colgate eleven was giving Brown a terriffic beating, 32 to 0, to end the campaign with only one defeat on its record—that by Wis- consin of the Western Conference in an early season game. So far as the records go, these two games were the standouts in an inter- esting and spectacular Thanksgiving day of foot ball, in which Penn sur- prised Cornell, with a 17-7 win; Car- neigie Tech ended the New York Uni- versity jinx with a 20-to-0 victory, and Syracuse nosed out Columbia by a single touchdown, 6-0. Penn State stopped Toby Uansa, Pitt's all-American halfback candidate, dead, but_the Nitt;‘l:fl Lions could not hait Parkinson’s -like rushes. The big fullback scored all three of Pitt's touch- downs and kicked both of the extra points. A pass, French to Stahley, and a successful try for point gave Penn State a 7-6 lead which it held through the second period, but Parkinson got busy in the second half and the game was won and lost. Colgate Backs Star. ‘Tommy Dowler and Les Hart, Col- gate backfleld stars, ran Brown dizzy and the Maroons won almost as they pleased, recording their first victory over Brown in 10 years. A 102-yard run from kick-off for a touchdown by, Dick Gentle furnished Penn with the impetus it needed to sweep aside the Red team from Cornell, beaten only by Dartmouth erevloua!y. Gentle's run enabled the Quakers to tie the score at 7-7 after Cornell had led 7-0 throughout the first half. There- after Gentle and Walter Masters ran Cornell ragged to score another touch- down in the third period and a field goal by Masters in the fourth. Syracuse waited until the final period to score its win over Columbia. Through three periods. Columbia battled the Orange fiercely and staved off all scor- ing threats, but the Syracuse offensive finally began to click, and Warren Stevens carried the ball across the Lion’s goal as the climax of a 49-yard march down the fleld. ’ Passes Baffle N: Y. U. A barrage of forward passes so discon- certed New York University that it never really got started against Carnegie. The ‘Tartans from Pittsburgh tallled two touchdowns in the first period and an- other in the last to beat the Violets for the first The passes and the fumbles al matched one another. There were 18 fumbles, seven by Car- negie, but the Scotch made up for this with 15 completed passes. In the other outstanding games of the day Clark Hinkle, Bucknell fullback, supplanted Al Marsters as the sectional scoring leader by tallying 50 points us his team swamped Dickinson, 78-0; West Virginia surprised the experts with a 6-0 triumph over Washington and Jef- ferson, Western Maryland recorded its tenth successive victory with a 7-0 win over Muhlenberg. Maryland waited until the second half to pile up most of the 39 points it tal- lied against Johns Hopkins’ 6, Davis and Elkins, another unbeaten team, trounced Salem, 37 to 6, and Gettysburg, by vir- tue of a 25-0 verdict over Franklin and Marshall, won the Eastern Pennsylvania g:trcouelme Conference champion- ip. Rider, unbeaten but tied, earned an easy 27-0 victory over an all-Coast Guard team. HOCKEY RESULTS. Detrolt Olympics, 6; Niagara, Montreal, 7; Detroit Cougars, New York Americans, 4; Ottaws, 3. Kansas City, 4; Minneapolis, 1. St. Louis, 2; Duluth, 2 (overtime). New York Rangers, 3; Chicago Black- hawks, 2. Tulsas, 0; St. Paul, 0 (overtime), TROUSERS To Match Your Odéd Coats EISEMAN'S, 7th & F , 4 6. or ESSEX 205 Auto Co., Ine 16 . N.W. ’ *‘ln :E;‘?‘ ll"lh 0 b 13 *m"l' o el. Lincoin 6 Horse Kansas Aggies Finish Third. By the Associated Press. ANSAS CITY, November 29.— Running true to form in its con- cluding duo of games, the big six foot ball conference closed its season ' yesterday with Ne- braska’s Cornhuskers triumphantly perched atop the conference heap for the second consecutive year. ‘The Nebraskans, playing for the first year under the tutelage of Coach Dana X. Biblé, made a Thanksgiving banquet of the oft-defeated team of Iowa State as they won at Ames, 31 to 12, Missouri gained runner-up honors in the only other holiday conference game, defeating Oklahoma at Columbia, 13 to 0. The Kansas Aggies, dark horse N -==make " X Coupe and Sedan Top Recovers teed weatberproof. Size 57x571¢ incl 18-Pc. RATCHET WRENCH SET A wonderful gift for the car owner. Contains a socket wrench for every purpose. In metal case. Neee) Onyx Gear Shift Bal Flash Light with . Copper Steel TOW LINE of the circuit, finished third, with three victories and two defeats. Missouri had three victories, a defeat and a tle, the latter with Nebraska. The Huskers won three and tied two. Oklahoma, by losing yesterday to the ‘Tigers, dropped from a tle for second place to fourth, The Sooners gained an even 500 percentage by scoring two victories, two defeats and a tle. Uni- versity of Kansas and Iowa State trailed in that order. Kansas won two and lost three, while the Iowans lost all their five games. Statistics show that Nebraska won its title by developing an offense second only to it of Kansas in the confer- ence, while Missouri's secondary hon- ors were due to possession of the league’s best defensive machine. The Kansas Aggies furnished the only major upset of pre-season dope, defeating the Tigers, Jowa State and Kansas, and losing to Nebraska only by a 10-to-6 score. The final big six 1929 standing: T. Pct. T.P. O.P. g | 93 62 MIDDLETOWN, Conn, November 29.—Hugh McCurdy, a graduate of Of heavy strong material—guaran- $]1.95 98¢ Bowdoin, will coach the Wesleyan swim- ing team. When you think of the gifts you must buy—it will pay you to think of TAUBMAN’S at the same time. For here, you will find a tremendous variety of suggestions—Christmas gifts that are SEN- SIBLE, USEFUL, and sure to be appreciated. And you’ll save money in the bargain. AUTO ACCESSORIES sensible gifts! ical anti-freeze 75‘ Get yours Today. GALLON OF All SPEED BIKE More than = toy, s ner$10.95 every boy ol'lrrl o T ey, e handle bars, leather seat, etc. anty With without it, $5.96. A Small Deposit Holds Any Toy Until Xmas Juet asshown, All metal — w i't regular ar my identification marks and everything. TEXAS TEAMS LOOK TO TITULAR BATTLE By the Associated Press. DALLAS, Tex, November 29.—After a satisfying turkey day menu, followers of Southwestern Conference foot ball looked forward today to the season's title bout at Fort Worth snurd-&; where the 8, M. U, Mmhng will their best to knock the T. C. U. Horned Frogs from the title seat. ‘The Fort Worth Christians have & perfect record, while only a tie mars the Methodists’ season. Although the Methodists are a notch lower in con- ference standings, the odds, at this dis- tance, appear fairly even, and one man's guess is as good as another’s on the outcome, Three teams played in Thanksgiving games without disturbing the confer~ ence equilibrium noticeably, The Texas Aggles and the Arkansas Razorbacks added a little to their percenta materially to their prestige by whipping the University of Texas Steers and the Oklahoma Aggles, Tespectively. Rice and Baylor, the tailenders, serap lation prize tomorro Auto Py W Cores 1n Bioak, ison Radiator res in B4 Wittatatts, 1808 14th. North T177 Also 319 13th. % Block Below Ave, e old battery— INDS AEROPLANE b 'llhl powerful ulvnni‘l&g I_\ W Y'Y —@ Metal Motor Bus RADIO! LR 8 Parlor Croquet Set "o v;ftf-l‘hy ‘buses. c A game grown- A. C. Radio | hiideen sy wn oy @ BE oo h TUBES BOLLO BALL Ed mfifinfi?"fim, wickets, etc. 0; SKILDART b o $ 79¢c | __ 45c 3 e e Cho.ce of 226, 227. 285 An exciting ] and 171-A. game requir- ing consider- fl Freed & Brunswick ik i RADIO SETS Stage | on Easy Terms o%e BANG-BALL Electric Heater qui ably. Specl: “bandles..... 3= 9c Has fine heating unit which warms any room ckly and, comfort- Box of 25. The best to use for hunting. U. §. GUN SHELLS Trap Load; 13, 73 C. 89c¢ A spring in the holder hurls the ball a considerable dis- tance. Object is to catch the ball in the holder. Two holders and balls in each set. HARDWARE!--The Useful Gift U. S. SMOKELESS GUN SHELLS Z TAUBMAN 430-432 Ninth Street N.W. 1005 H St. N.E. 1320 14th St. N.W. 3000 14th 8¢t. N.W. At Columbia Ro: Dozens of other Toys--ine cludin, poait holds any toy for you until Christmas. 59¢ 69c¢ Electric Trains, Buil- ’ Sets, Mechanical Toys, are now on display at v stores. A small de- w:.l with grain ss.gs cellulold handles Wood or Buck Saw with 30 inch blade. . . Men’s H: A 89. ¢ $1.49 Stanley Tool 1deal gife for $4.29. 8594 All Stores Open Saturday Until 11:30 P.M. ) i S 3213 M St. N.W. Open Saturdays Until 11:30 P.M.—All Stores Closed on Suhday,

Other pages from this issue: