Evening Star Newspaper, March 16, 1930, Page 82

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)

) THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON. D. C. MARCH _ 16. 1930—PART _FIVE ./\;ew Bowling Star at ' BILL WOOD"'STAKES. |CAPITAL’S GOLF HISTORY EARL WAGNER, 16, ISSUES CHALLENGE TO ED ESPEY .. ; Bowlers in National Tournament at Waterbury Invited to Shoot in Rich Sweepstakes.—News- paper Men’s Schedule Announced. has been discovered by J | Jenkins on 1 STAR of sufficient magnitude to be viewed with the naked eye 5i’m:°n? 3 im Raney, bowling manager at Kensington. This one’s named Earl Wagner. Lam] Earl has been doing right well for sometime, but nobody | gave him a serious tumble until shot a score of 1,300 for 10 games. Then Raney reviewed the lads performance for the last several ‘L weeks and quickly concluded Earl's brilliance was not a flash. the other night when he up and He had totaled 1,742 for 15 games rolled in the Kensington mixed doubles and had dropped in other fat marks here and there. Jim tried out the youngster Friday night when the Kensing- ton Firemen met the Falls Church Firemen and he responded with a five-game set of 582. This helped a | let to give Kensington a margin | of 75 sticks. | Young Wagner's next important test probably will be in a challenged match | with Eddie Espey, the Arcadian, who | holds rank as the best of this season’s youngsters. On_behalf of Earl. Raney | has challenged Eddie and the latter is expected to accept. Raney was one of the victims of his | protege’s sensational 10-game streak. | The scores were: 169, 124, 146, 140, 118, | 121, 153, 109, 109 and 112, | His sets in the mixed doubles. in | which he paired with Mrs. Gladys Grierbaur, were 312, 335, 347, 364 and 384. Note how he improved from set | to set. ‘Washington bowlers who fail to lift | prizes in the National Duckpin Bowling Congress' third annual tournanfent at Waterbury, Conn.. may come away with | & profit anyway. The opportunity will be presented them in the shape of a “mammoth” sweepstakes, promoted as an unofficial | son, Frank J. Sloan, Prank E. Money. Serge W. Folk, J. P. Hill, George Berg- ling, J. B. Deloe, Egbert Tingley. C. G. Carr, Charles Harris, W. E. Mower. Maury Fitzgerald, K. G. Hawkins, E. R. Broyles, E. A. Hummer, R. J. Atkinson, | R. D. Thomas and Shirley Povich. Evening squad—M. L. Oberman. Charles G. Groff, Phil HefTelfiiiger, Willlam Beatty, Anthony Fabrizio, Wil- liam W. Rodgers, Hoke Bailey, C. M Johnson, A. Harper, Julius Martini, Cy Burriss, Bill Peake, Clinton Curtin. Ben | McAlwee, Floyd L. Montgomery, Walter Collier, John A. Ferrall, Ray Lange, Robert H. Rebholtz, Leland S. Dodd, Gordon H. Scott, Malcolm E. Lawrence, C. McKee, Anthony Horner, J. E. Ellett, Henry Tait. Rodier, Elmer Eckloff, Thurmond Hager, H. B. Shepherd, R M. Bohlayer, Leo Callahan, Roy K. Whitford, C. J. Sterner, arvey K. Hadway. Willlam F. Horner, Samuel Rubinson. R. C. Lehman, Mickey John. son, D. H. Burrows, Norman R. Hutch- inson. Thomas Griffin, J. F. Smith and Otis H. Lawrence. WEDNESDAY. Consolation Flight. Affernoon squad—Joe Allen, J. W. Morris, Ed Finnell, Edward Feindt, Ed Conway, A. W. Suess, Walter Haight, Noel Lynn, Paul C. Smith, Edward H. Blk. Gnd. . Tot. Tot ] 9—484— 1,084 30 st k. 560 523 03 100 101 1083301 00 328 101 110 9 5131 328 101 110 93 101 108—513—1,04 Lrles Marceilino 503 Marvel 9295 '94 107 110308 |y 586124 103 86 104 9951 303108 3% & B b 02108 97 83 #8103 ATo— 9T 485 91104 06— 7 | 940 1,052 2 026 | 9 | 1:100 37 | Al Taym RN Sk i fompson” 330 102 111 '90 i0i 133 057 | Thornb's . 531 108 117 118 99 101 X Torney "... 468 104 95 106 100 108 981 | alenta .. 528 84 91 85 86 99445 973 | 495126100 99 91 95—510—1.005 39 116 100 96 493 1,052 47 | | 337 10 4 85 101 304181 100 108 58 18Ty T A | | Lohmar .. 483 '34 i3 100 '35 ii5—534—1.017 | Oldfield .. 515 7t —446— 961 | Warn. AE 473108 103 108 117 95—828—1,001 | Keveer " 31890 ‘98 ‘91 8106 —47a— 801 £ IS WRITTEN ON TROPHIES ring Sport Tradition Behind Them—Stevinson’s Name Not the Least of Those Inscribed. BY WALTER R. McCALLUM. stirring sport spectacles hover around the atmosphere of the \ | | historic golf trophies which are the chief prizes for the win- | ners of four of the invitation golf tournaments held about | YEARS of tradition, of breathless battles for golf supremacy and x.g;; Washington each year. EH How many people know that the main prize in the Chevy Chase STRAIGHT OFF THE TEE HE meeting of the Washington Golf and Country Club golriglmm‘ committee the other night turned out to be a_ spontaneous | tribute to the personality and ability of John I. Power, chair- man of the house committee for nearly four years, who is to leave Washington in a few days to The golf committee business over and completed satisfactorily, the meeting turned into an outpouring of affection for the genial personality who has pre- sided over the affairs of the house, and who has contributed no small part to the humor and fun on the golf course of the club. Power, be it known, used to be a very fine golfer, but has not had much time for play in recent years. He was at one time champion of a club in Upper Montclair, N. J.. and is known at Washington as the “demon putter.” using an old-style aluminum-headed putter of the Schanectady type. He and Dr. James T McClenahan, chair- Club invitation tournament was given to the club two decades ago|man of the Washington club greens Congressional tourney was presented to the club by President Hoover, and that ultimately this trophy will doubtless become as rich in tradition and as hallowed by memories of stirring golf deeds as the more historic Taft trophy. Pive clubs about Washington have in their trophy cases permanent cups which are played for each year in the club invitation golf tourneys. In the | order of presentation of the trophies | they are Chevy Chase, with its Taft and Sherman Cups: Columbia, with its| | Wardman Trophy; Washington, with its | Carlin Trophy: Congressional, with its President’s Trophy, and Manor, with its Manning Cup, presented to the club last year by J. Webster Manning, a prominent member. Names Great in Golf. Names great in golf grace these his- | toric trophies, names of men who have | 9 | done great deeds with driver and putter | on local golf courses and on flelds far | from Washington. Names of men who | have held big championships, even to the natfonal title, and men who have been winners of only minor events. A roll call of the names which grace the | 9% by the late William Howard Taft. then President of the United | States, and that the runner-up in the tourney is presented a replica of the trophy donated at the same time by Vice President Sherman? 7| How many people know that the chief trophy played for in the | committee, have been an inseparable ombination and one that has been c hard to be: peeches in praise _of Power were made at the:dinner by President Charles take up new duties in Philadelphia. H. Doing of the club, by Risley G. Hunt, who acted as toastmaster: by A. G. Rice, | the club secretary, and by J. Edwin Rice, who presented Power with a new leather golf bag, with unusual fitments. A _quintet, composed of D. C. Gruver, A. B. Gault, W. R. McCallum, O. L. Veerhoff and Dr. W. R. McLister, sang songs composed by Hunt, to the tune of “Marching Through Georgia,” in eu- logy of Power. A complete schedule of one-day tour- | naments and the four big events an- {nually held by the association will be drawn up by the Women's District Golf Association at a meeting at the National Women'’s Golf and Country Club tomor- row afternoon at 4 o'clock. Before the meeting Mrs. Willlam S. Corby, the re- tiring president of the women's golf organization, will give a luncheon to a Kensington Flashes 1,300-Score for String of Ten Games small group of committee chairmen. The big tournaments handled by the | womens will include the'event for the District ehnmpimshtf(. The Star Cup | tourney, the Phyllis ler Miller Me- orial tourney and the Corby Cup Professional golfers of the Midatlantic | sector are to gather at the Indian | Spring Club at noon on March 24 to | play golf. hold their annual meeting of the Middle Atlantic Professional Golf- ers’ Association and attend a dinner [later. Arthur B. Thorn of Woodmont |is the retiring president of the organi- | zation which presides over the destinies | of the professionals in this section. | el Manor has closed down the first or “woods” nine until the weather opens up and fairways become more set {and in the meantime the gollers are | using_the-old 18, which includes the so-called inside or short 9. The sec- |ond hole also has a temporary green. Chair=an :*ve Thomson of the greens committea 15 considering chang- ing the fifteenth au:c seventeenth greens and trapping them more severely. and Chairman Garrity of the golf commi- tee is arranging his season schedule. Iwhlch will not include an invi‘ation tourney this year. \ Wateh Out h f tl p the side show of the congress cvent by the | paker, Carrol Klotzbach, James .| ‘Wooster bowling plant at Waterbury. Thers is & $10 entry fee and a prize | COldsiein, Fred Hersog, Clarkson Gem. | fund of $500, with first prize to be il Charles E. Feller, C. C. McDevitt, | worth $250, second $150 and third $100. | Johnny Smith Jack Cudmore. G. C.| Pokir games will be rolled. | Dixon, Paul E. Bergiing. Alilson A. 1t he entries exceed our expecta- | Hancock, Ed Fuiler. L. Abner Perry, G. | L. Selcshaydre, Gino Simi, William Dunean ', " & Dwyer, E. K. Dwyer, J. J.8 Ebersoll Engler. Ertter Fenton Ferguso; Findley Fleisheli 2eSo2e: 2223222! 2258 2 99 103—521—1,085 112 x#—sm—nfiw classic_bases of the golf cups at clubs | 4 | about. Washington would literally be a | | roll call of many of the great [olfers‘ 41 | of other years. 5¢ | The late L. Lee Harban, beloved of | golfers of the Capital for a score of | years, has won both at Columbia and 88—518—1.047 | 8 122—531—1.067 | Chevy Chase. George J. Voigt and tions " reads the Wooster announce- | ment, “the prize money wili be in-| creased. sweepstakes Competition in the opened Wednesday and will continue through March 30. Each contestant may shoot the same day he is sched- uled in the congress’ tournament. ‘The first elimination found of the newspaper men’s tournament will be held Tuesday and Wednesday at the King Pin, No. 2, with afterncon and evening squads scheduled. ‘Those who rolled 469 or better in the qualifying round will perform in the championship flight, and the others wil! shoot it out for consolation honors, Tuesday will be given over to the championship division, and only the consolationists will roll Wednesday. Both squads will be cut in half after | the first round. ! Chairman Pop Evans has drawn up the following schedule:- TUESDAY. Championship Flight. | Afternoon squad—Ollie Smith, L. A. Hancock, Floyd Montgomery, John Evans, Clarence J. Herman, C. W. Kolb, | W. C. Darnall, C. M. Mills, William C.| Sherwood, Al Costello, George A. Simp- | Kuell, Willlam Dismer, ‘William Smith, J. W. Fox. Evening squad—R. 8. Gall, E. C. Johnsori, Willlam J. Smith, Fred Cole. J. H. McCullough, C. B. Hamilton, Con- rad P. Stultz, Elmer Bradley, Oliver Coburn, Sydney Katznell, Alvin Gulli, i Prank A. Hughes, R. F. Chenowith, J. A v ain ‘Willlam Anderson, ‘Thompson, Hipps, N. horn, R. Donald, Percy Sutton, Mier L. ton B. Schreiber, Henry W. T. Mason, John A. ‘Matthews, Elmer E. Silve: ‘W. Downs, James G. Zimmer- man, William K. Brown, Archie Onyun, | Louis M. Dorsch, jr.; E. N. McWilliam- son, Wallace Hughes, R. E. Carr, J. C. Jacobs, William E. Nosek, Gerald Grif- fin, Lawrence Stafford, S. T. Kennedy, | Gr W. A. Smith, Myron Glasser, E. A. Kennedy, W. A. Graham, R. M. Sulli- | Ben! van, Al Howe. CHICAGOANS ROLL 1,272 T0 TOP A. B. C. DOUBLES CLEVELAND, March 15 (#)—Ed P. | Bjurstrom and Ed Littow of Chicago | took the lead in the doubles of the American bowling congress tournament here today when they rolled 1,272. Chips From the Mapleways i Bowing Cangress 1s malkin | P wling Congress, is making | a hit in Dixieland organizing | girl leagues. | Blick’s plant at Atlanta is said to be | the biggest money maker, drive for| drive, in duckpin territory. Day busi- | ness exceeds night. I i No scores have been rolled at Water- bury thus far high enough to annoy ‘Was| entrants in the national tournament. « C. and P. Telephone is a pennant | repeater in the Commercial League. | The United States Daily kicked The | Star out of second place by sweeping a set. Peoples Drug and Times-! are fighting over fourth place as though | it really meant something. | Bill Kessler picked the . right spot| to throw in his 426 for high set of | the season in the District League. It | helped Hyattsville shut out Cornells | Lunch and pick up on Convention | Hall in the struggle for third place. | Hyattsville totaled 1,820. Should Northeast Temple tie the King Pins_in percentage of victories | the King Pins probably would win on | total pins in the District League, be- | ing 408 sticks up on the enemy. The Temples made 11 marks in the | last three boxes to win a game from, Petworth. Joe Freschi shot an even 400 at anchor for Standard Art in a crucial match with Mark Blum, but his team | could win only one game and dropped | into a first-place tie with the Blums. | Joe's games were 149, 118 and 133, the | set being a league record for this sea- | son. Golden Rule and Mount Pleasant re- mained tied for the lead in section A of the big Odd Fellows' League by win- ning two games each, but Golden Rule held a margin in total pins. Howard Campbell's 398 for Golden Rule gave | him high set of the season and a com- fortable margin as leader in R. J. Bladen's 396 previously wi Other_high sets of the week were Poole, 382; Ehrlich, 353; Lund, 340: Crutchley, 353; P. Ellett, 346, Cones, 344. A. Lakin finished his third game with a triple-header strike to score 145, top for the week. Oscar Swain’s 180 game, rolled at the | Clarendon Boulevard in the Commercial League, was the best ever recorded in organized competition in Arlington County. At the end of five frames Swain had visions of a 200 score. Up to this point he had made three nine-pin spares and a double-header strike, giving him 106 in the fifth. He spared in the sixth and counted eight, rolled a flat seventh and spared in the eighth and ninth. Heleft only one pin standing in the string, this in the last frame. Thirteen l ORRAINE GULLI, as assistant strikes in his_last nine games have given Hawley Evans atie or the lead in the Masonic League. With Doleman and Stoner starring, Singleton Lodge has won 24 of its last 30 games and recently climbed into sec- ond place with a double-header victory. La Payette, clinging to a slight lead, had trouble with Stansbury and managed 10 Win the odd game in the last box. High sets for the week in the Masonic were: Ulrich, 386; Stoner, 378; Evans, 369; Collings, 359; La Clair, 353; Needle, 351; Ellis, 351, and Doleman, 350. Washington Typographers -took the lead in the Typothetae League by Whitewashing Ransdell, Inc., displacing National Capital Press. H-K Advertis- ing Service won six games from Co- lumbian Printers and Typothetae and became & pennant contender. ‘The surprise team of the Recreation League, according to Secretary Dave Cox, is the Cubs. Nobody gave the Cubs a tumble at the start, but they have to their credit the highest set ever rolled in the league, 1,812, and one of their number, Dey Boston, has the best individual set of 438. The Cubs were marked down for a low place in the standing, but now are in fourth position and hold vic- torfes over the leading Bearcats and the second place Lo Ko Service team. Bert Sheehy of Census s new record holder in the Department of Commerce League with a set of 397. His games were 143, 135 and 119. ‘With one set to go, Washington Cen- | tennial is assured of the Eastern Star | League pennant and Ruth Chapter of second place. Capt. Lucy Owen of Washington Centennial has the individ- ual championship sewed up with an | Doc G. average of 101-22. Jennie Malcolm of Ruth and Helen Whitbeck of Washing- ton Centennial are nip and tuck for second honors, each having an average of 95. fraction: Maude . Youmans is collecting a flock of entries for the Eastern Star tourna- ment to be rolled at the Lucky Strike starting March 24. The list will close | next Tuesday midnight. Capt. Miller of the Economics team in the Aggle Interbureau League, named Kause to substitute for him against Blister Rust and all the sub did was shoot a 161 game. Blister Rust was shut out despite a snappy 355 set by heale. S “matter what its standing. the Shops team is a jinx to Plant Bureau. Shops' 1,653 set was good for two wins. Jennie has a- slightly bet(fl': e5 e EEREE3E55 Folger | Frost Pulmer. | Gart di.. | Gibson. """ | Gingell | Golstein 101 103—497— '978 121 96523 1.011 | 12¢ 83520 1.043 | BESm0el RR222! SoelSalls ERR R 3 = BA=25325E EE5555 00l iS00 . 2288 e Bess S ey e B2252 BE33528255R3 | | 2 | 78— | 473 1,000 | i | " 1/070 | 3833 338 35532 8238585 2 2 2 222523233528 00 522 921 519 2 t s 83 5 5 508 497 102 101 126 95 125549 1.046 554 102 107 130 107 94—540—1,094 | AT ARCADIA (Women). (Prize Winners.) | Amidon Cox . | Pischer | Kohler Dugan METRAKOS VICTOR IN GREEK 'STAKES| ] Pete Metrakos put on a hot hand last | | night at the Coliseum to triumph in the | Greek sweepstakes, his 645 for five | | games added to 571 giving him a 10- | | game total of 1.216. | Louis Pantos was sccond with 1,165; | George Montzourls, third with 1,164: | Pete “Paskalis, fourth with 1,152, and | | Nick Chaconas, fifth with 1,148 The | | scores: | Tot.Tot. 1 5 | P. Metrakos SEEEEE Do nBEEEE . 28RE283]213528! Placos. racop’os Pappas. Chipouras Zah: S 5 s . Chipouras £133 SEEETEeEEEEeTE e = © 22382858388 253 S5 25325883888253888! H 522838 5528 52 Panos ... P. Skiados. John _ Glekas Lambres L. Chaconas 98 126 9t P. HARRISON VICTOR IN KING PIN STAKES 0105 92 It's a walk-in for West Washington | Baptist in the Georgetown Church League. A three-game victory over Peck No: 1, the runner-up, increased West Washington's lead to nine game: ick Wolstenhoime. . Wolstenholm High sets of the week were: Al Huntt, | M | 344; R. Hunter, 340; N. Saul, 332; Reed, 331, and Torney, 329, Doris Goodall was the Ladies’ Federal League for the week he bright star of | with a set of 345 that had much to do | with the whitewashing of Agriculture. Doris’ games were , 107 and 113. The Auditors ha Railway Clerks’' League in almost every department all season, but nine straight losses have dropped them five games led the Southern | out of first place, now held by Construc- tion. Campbell of Operation, with 36! was the big gun when the Auditors we: blown up the last time. A stirring finish_is promised in the | East Washington League between the Douglas No. 2 and Douglas No. 1 teams. The No. 2 quint has only a two-game margin_in first place after dropping two to Ninth No. 1 while the No 1 team was taking three from Lincoln Road. Phil Appel of Douglas No. 1 shot the week’s high set of 353. The leading Balboas in the Knights ot Columbus League lost two to Genoa by healthy margins and barely won the third. Columbia's 1,576 was the eve- ning’s best set. The Sunlife team wasn't live enough to stop the rush of the A. A. R. bowlers toward League flag, Sunlife winning three. Bergholtz shot the high game of the week of 137. ‘While Meyer Davis and Grand Palace Valet Shop were marking time last week in the National Capital League, the champion King Pin picked up a game on the deadlocked leaders and the second division clubs did a general turn over. Howard Campbell had 2 feeble set of 320 and his average dropped to 121-37, falling below 122 for the first time this season. Big games werc recorded on every side, however, and Honey of Service Cafe- teria piled up a 416 set for the third highest three-game string of the sea- son. ‘The James Baird Co. and George A. Fuller Stone Plant teams, respective winner of the second and third series titles, will meet in a five-game match next Thu y night at the Arcadia to determine pennant winner of the the Transportation Bufld\ng‘ LOOMS FOR THIS YEAR | ITHACA, N. Y. March 15 (#).— | Cornell may prove to be a serious con- | tender for championship honors in the newly formed Eastern Intercollegiatc Base Ball League, composed of Yale, | Dartmouth, Princeton, Pennsylvania and Columbia in addition to the big | Red team from Ithaca. | Two veteran twirlers in Bob Lewis | of basket ball fame, and Carl Boies | glve Coaches Paul Eckley and John | | Haddock assurance of capable perform- ances in the box. | A Spring trip to the South in which Cornell will meet Georgetown. Mary- | |land. Duke and North Carolina will | start on March 31 when the Red meets | the last named in the first of a two- | game series. | e ————————— | Bwilding Contractors’ Duckpin League. ‘ | The Birdmen finished the second half | race last week in a blaze of glory, set- | ting a high game mark of 607, the first and only game in the league over the 600 mark, and tying the Charles | | H. Tompkins Co. team for high sea- | son’s set with 1,647, | | Wilkenson of ‘the Birdmen hung up | {a new high game mark for the season | on the final night with a 156 count. | His 372 set gives him a tle for third | high in that respect. Scaletti of the Fuller Plant team had a 371 set. The P. T. McDermott team furnished the major upset last week, taking three games from Southern Asbestos, thereby dropping that team from second place into a tle for third. | smile. | other trophies at the other clubs, the | MacKenzie was the first to have his | first winner of the club invitation tour- | the same names are on most of them. Roland R. MacKenzie, members of Walker Cup teams, also have their names on both trophies. The name of George S. Lyon, noted Canadian gentle~ man and go“?l" who won the cup at the age of 67 years, graces the Taft Trophy. The names of many famous golfers adorn the Wardman Cup, which has been the chief trophy of the Co- lumbia tourney for almost two decades, and for which such stars as Walter J. Travis and Jerome D. Travers have played. Trophies Mean Something. These cups are much more than mere pieces of silver, designed by master jewelers to grace club house trophy cases. They mean something by way of good sportsmanship, fine golf, win- ning with modesty and losing with a ‘They literally mean, as do the very best there is in the game. Roland name engraved on the Carlin Trophy, back in 1923, at the Washington Golf and Country Club. We recall how Ro- land set a new course record in the second round of play, catching Reggie Loftus off his stride and shooting a dazzling 31 for the first nine to smother the young Chevy Chase star under an avalanche of birdies. ‘The Manning Trophy was put in play only last Fall, and Miller B. Stevinson was the first winner. His name doubt- less will be followed by those of other fine golfers. Over at Congressional the writer was fortunate enough to be the ney, but names far more distinguished in golf than his now grace the trophy and will follow as the tournament goes on from year to year. De Sibour-Reyburn Cup. The De-Sibour-Reyburn Trophy, chief prize of the District amateur championship, also has on it a group of distinguished names in golf, but this 1s purely a local affair, and this cup cannot have the names of outsiders on it because of the fact that it is the prize for a purely local tourney. Glancing over the names on these trophies, it is surprising to note that Miller Stevinson's name is on four of them. The only one he has not won is the Carlin Cup at Washington. He has won_the Columbia €up twice, has won at Congressional and Chevy Chase and annexed the Manning Cup last year. If ever testimonial were needed of his greatness in the local field, the mute iestimony of the trophies will produce the evidence. HUDKINS VS. JOHNSON. CHICAGO, March 15 (#).—Ace Hud- kins, the Nebraska Wildcat, and Larry Johnson, Negro light heavyweight, have been matched for a 10-round bout in the Chicago Stadium March 28. WINS SCHOOL TITLE. INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., March 15 (. —Washington (Ind.) High School to- night won the Indiana High School Athletic Association basket ball cham- pionship by defeating Muncie, 32 to 21, in the final game. SO CAB m Dt = f§ AAAl FRANKLIN | 9000| —anywhere in the | city proper for I DY —and we will call for you amd take you to yeur appointment - harge fer additional pas- neors PLY CALL sengers . . . SIM Easy to Call—Easy to Get $1.10 Shopping by the Hour | BARRAAAABABABAR Wm. Penn Shows the Way . . Wm. Penns are made by millions on amasing ma- chines of super- human skill ... Each is rolled, trimmed, tipped, and sealed automa- tically . . . without touch of human hands. W™ 5 cenis « « « For Your NICKELS Before Choosing Your 5-Cent Cigar Penn A GOOD CIGAR Bending over the ...looking at a dozen different 5-cent brands, play fair with your nickels . . . Choose your cigar . . . and name it. NameWm. Penn, the 5-cent cigar smoked 1,000,000 every 24 miles ahead of any hours . . . a record other 5-cent cigar. And here’s the reason why: Wm. Penn’s millions put finer choice long filler outputs can afford. tobacco in them, . +.. than smaller Play safe at the show case ...demand Wm. Penn’s selected color and aroma.; Insist on it. . . . Take no other. World’s Largest Manufacturers of Cigars

Other pages from this issue: