Evening Star Newspaper, January 11, 1931, Page 58

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PUTS OVER THREE SURPRISES IN ROW Two World Records, Feat of Endurance and Showing in "Stakes Mark Him. BY R. D. THOMAS. INETY-EIGHT games with- out a breather, but the “Bowling Fool” was merely ‘warmed up. 1 Burt Parsons cast a speculative | eye down the line of contestants in the Blick 100-game Sweep- stakes at Convention Hall. He had two strings to gogto have shot the fastest 100 games of duckpins ever rolled. For seven hours he had maintained a steady pace of 14 games an hour. In that span he had bowled more strings than the ordinary regular of the maple | » TEMPLE TAKES LEAD ways chalks up in two weeks. had dissipated more energy than | the average duckpin shooter ex- pends in a month. But he looked regretfully to the finish. Parsons turned to his scorekeeper. “Drop that for a moment,” he said, | “and see if you can't round up some of these fellows for a game afterward.” It was not bravado; nor was there the slightest hint of disdain for his struggling rivals. On the contrary, for Parsons’ urge to shoot duckpins was still alive and he judged the others by himself. His chalienge, you've gue: ‘was not accepted. He's a Speed Demon. Burt Parsons is unique in the annals of the game. He has two notable dis- tinctions. Tmost, enthusiastic duckpin bowler of all time; bereft of opponents after the 100 games at Convention Hall, he hied him- self to the Arcadia where he shot 10 more. On the previous day, when most of the other participants were storing energy, Parsons recled off 30 games, hi workout. Some of your average bowlers would be physical wrecks after that much concentrated bowling, and bear this in mind—most of Parsons’ daily shooting is done without an opponent. He occupies one alley to himself and sometimes two and bowls as fast as the pin boy’s speed will permit. Try that sometime for exertion. As_for the other distinction, the shot highest 3. young man recently the Re and 5-game totais in the history | 33 of hud'ood duckpins. Not since Sam Del Vecchio rolled a single string of 240 for a world record last season have bowling folk bee'n given the thrill by Pa truly phenome exhibition at the the other night. For three games he totaled 507, with strings of 160, 144 and 203. To these he tacked 158 and 115 for a 5-game score of 770, an average of 154. Gets Quadruple Strike. It was remarkable that a bowler ob- tain enough breaks to shoot such a score and it was wonder on wonder , along With. 14 strikes, four in succession his game' of 203, another rarity. Parsons, a member of the Petworth in the District vnn't tential ability. Not until he flashed in the Blick 100~ game Sweepstakes—he took second money though he finished 40 minutes ahead of the total pin winner fraternity give him an appraising eye. But Burt had another surprise in wasn't thought of as a contender for national sweepstakes crown last week at the Lucky Strike but he was fifth and with more care gathering loose sticks might easily have hnlshed Pay High Compliments. | This showing, perhaps more than | anything else, even his Arcadia per- | McKi formance, has won high respect for Parsons. ‘The big money prizes put | Hef every contestant thoroughly on his l’!l:‘;,ue and Burt was coolness personi- Says George Isemann, seffetary of the National Duckpin Bowling Con- gress, of him: “There’s a bowler with- out a weakness. You're going to hear | SO} a lot about him. He's underrated.” Adds Arville Ebersole, secretary of xhe ‘Washington City Duckpin Associatio) been plenty Tolsor Tl take bim sgainst any other bowler in this town for a 15-game set.” Indeed, the boy is quite-all there. And we almost forgot to mention that he is an unorthodox bowier in that he shoots a right-hand ball from the ex- |9, treme left side of the drives, makes it break to the right or left depending on which pin is the target; that he is 24 years old and has been a bowler only three seasons and that he won the weekly prize for high game at the Arcadia 12 consecutive weeks! TAKE MIXED DOUBLES Daly and Mrs. Quigley Roll 634 in | Blind Pig Event. Carroll Daly and Mrs. Catherine Quigley with a total of 634 won lht weekly mixed doubles blind pig bowl- ing competition last night at the Ar-| cadia. Jess White and Mrs. Betty Hofl» man with 620 were second and Phi Goodall and Mrs. Helen Koehler with | 616 were third. DANIELS SETS RECORDS Bhoots lbatfinme nnd 411 Total for C. & P. League Marks. Smashing out a 153 game and 411 set, Daniels n‘fimmuunn No. 1 grabbed off a pair of Chesapeake & Potomac Tele- phone League records last week. ‘The 153 game is a season record and the 411 an all-time loop mark. Hum- phries of Coin Box shot a 384 set for second best of the week’s bowling. Coin Box is holding a two-game lead over "nlmeeu mm:n No. 1 w 2% iting Dept N 2 11 3 19 e Hou, 17 connvcn No. 214 Recor x e, jpdividusl sames Danicls, 153: Van (lén individual sets—Daniels. 411; Hum- b ) am sames—Coin Box. 618; Wi ‘% i averages—Kane, 109-24; Hughes. : Wolfe. 108-9. i .m‘{n_an" unmaker, 22; Thomason, High spares—Wolfe, 93: Grofl, 93; Kane, 92. 1 ‘Boston Red Sox will wear 12-inch | probably lhou on the backs of the. uni- numbers form in 1931, ssed, | Beyond doubt he is the| was about his average day’s | il | Keeler | OMORROW is the ninth anni- versary of the Izagk Walton League of America. The or- ganization was conceived as a militant body of patriotic outdoor en- thusiasts determined to fight against needless destruction of natural re- sources, ‘When the league was first organized it attracted the attention of thousands of outdoors lovers throughout the country. Among the many supporters to rally to the cause were numbered statesmen, civic leaders, authors and writers, sportsmen and nature students. They offered their services gratis to the league, as they saw in its inauguration the greatest means of successfully con- serving America’s natural resources ever established in history. On January 11, 1922, 54 men gath- ered in Chicago to form the first chap- ter of the Izaak Walton League of America. Today it’ boasts of a mem- | bership of over 10,000,000. The league |is not merely an organization of fisher- men and hunters. It is composed of all these interested in the outdoors and the beauties of nature. The name was not taken because Izaak Walton was a fisherman, but because of his keen philosophy of outdoor living and the precepts of true sportsmanship as ex- emplified in his_ famous book “The Compleat Angler.” | "An’extensive program, far @ 7 THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHI Parsons Gives Bowlers a Thrill ROD AND STREAM BY PERRY MILLER: than ever before attempted by any in- dividual conservation organization in America, has been outlined for 1931. Hundreds of chapters throughout the Nation are building larger member- ships, increasing their power and in- fluence in their immediate regions. Chapters of the league e country are urged hy national head- quarters to accept junior members. The juniors accepted will be provided with a special card and bufton. On the back of every junior application blank is a pledge to be si ‘This is the same pledge that every senior signs. The other requirement is that the junlor be sponsored by an adult member. Junior membership automatically terminates with the arrival of the eighteenth birthday, at which time the Jjunior is eligible to senior membership. Among the activities in which juniors can engage, with competent ~senior guidance, are: Tree planting, posting proper signs on streams and in woodlands, planting food and cover for game, Winter-feed- ing campaigns, the protection of song birds, beautification of public school grounds and roadsides, planting fish in streams, building bird houses and placing them at points of vantage, placing logs in trout and bass streams where food is scarce, building dams or obstructions where it is too low, seining fish from smaller streams to be placed in larger ones, etc. | IN DISTRICT LEAGUE| 1Winl Five Out of Six Games, While King Pin Is Grabbing Only Two From Davismen. Northeast Temple rollers swept into | the District League lead last week after | two stellar performances against Pet- | worth. Winning three games on their own | drives, Temples shifted to Petworth’s | stronghold and won two more. Failing to trim Meyer Davis in all three games sent King Pin into second | place. Bernie Frye's 391 set was high. Temple shot the highest team scores | for the week. Maxie Rosenberg counted | 408 and the team rolled 1,866. Henry Hiser's 142 string and Hugh | ‘Waldrop’s 355 total aided Hyattsville in sweeping over Cornell’s Lunch. Convention Hall moved up a notch by winning three from the John Blicks. Jack Whalen made his debut with Ren- dezvous, but it wasn't very auspicious for the team, as Tad Howard’s charges | bowed twice to Hecht. Team Standing. POULOS POUNDS PINS IN CAPITOL HILL LOOP| Hits for High Average and Tops Strikemakers—Prevost Is Best in Spares. C“Whll the mlplel at a 113-7 pace, Lefty Poulos, Blands Lunch greatest number of spares with 98. Blands Lunch holds a three-game lead over Stevens Service Stores, runner-up. TEAM STANDING. w. Bland’s, Lunch.. ] @ T R i SEBRRENEEREEEL B8 Gity Cav Sengstack Plimbes. East Wasb. Iron Works. | Conn. B. 8upply Co. SRy cab “shop INDIVIDUAL AVERAGES, (10 or more games.) BLAND'S LUNCH. [ororonmeney A=t SERVICE 3 | ) 3 38 1 3 caprTOL 12 4 10 38 3 ) BOWL u 3% a f Steiwer FISCE, HARDWARE 0O, :m 8CoTT'S CAFI'I'!RIA 19 | Herbert 4 Murdock Lynch S S |Kane . | Pugtist” " |scott” . | WARNER CO. | P. Guethler 29 J. Guethler ... Hovenner . schmur . Rade: 3 o & 3 S3EENER 8 3epss WASHINGTON Purrr REMOVER Peavers 136 1 131 121 83 8383888 °¢ Latt/ Whikerson” | Madden Wassman . Plertag | Rothgeb oleman . {ower ... | Solomons 111l Pisher ... Furr | Mamakos [ yan sickie Eiione : | Wechte: | wmuuu sznorucx n.uunn us 13 ] s 313 Briniey Kmm- | e-rllu sem 108 1 L | Hayett’ 107 285 ‘ EAST WASHINGTON IRON WORKS. ‘um. Wagner | Garrison | Rohrback | CONN. B. | womersly | Keith tiier ary d: Saith ‘The Las team gear | the holidays over, Potomac is leading | Watson rolled 388. | Grane POTOMAC HAS THIN MARGIN IN MASONIC La Fayette Bowlers Trailing by Two Percentage Points—Takoma Wins 18 Out of 21. With the first. week's bowling after the Masonic League by a margin of two percentage~ points, with La Fayette knocking at the door again. Whiting’s steady climb of late went for naught when Naval swept the set and climbed a few notches. Mount Pleasant was La Fayette's victim when Barrister found Albert Pike an easy three-game victim, while Takoma, with Davis shooting 352, made the only oth- | er clean sweep. "l‘lkonu has won 18 of its last 21 ga King David staved near the top by tossing Acacia for a two-game loss. SR CEEE L S L] s £ RS RSEE RR e Davwsos Brightwood Harding . same_ Potomac, 632 Phillips sei—Cleary (Whiting). 404. b Tadividual TameoGlricn "(Fotomac): 1 High strikes—phillive (ine David Hish spares —Phillips id lEh ome Tuesday O ‘game Thursday—Ma (King High faox " (Barker; 43, LEBOWITZ éfifiéns LEAD MOUNT RAINIER Hold Two-Game Edge Over Dixie Pigs—Miller's 114-9 Is Best Average. George Miller's 114-9 average tops | the Mount Rainier Men’s Duckpin League, Section A, but Miller'’s margin is not secure as several duckpinners are giving the Lebowitz star a close battle for high honors, including several of his teammates. Lebowitz is holding a two-game lead over Dixie Pigs. Team Standing. High game_N. Lilley, 153; Pitzgerald, 153. Hish set_Plisserald, —G. Miller, |11 alleher, 21 es—McCall, 4. “Dixie P} H. 3. Oraw- INDIVIDUAL AVERAGES. 3 H I+ ‘WHATAMAN. 32388 sasae 7 [ 67 2 o RIVERDALE commonnv B Aldridge..... 33 137 381 Moxley . BURROUGHS A. Pitzserald ... 38 133 38 Ha L0 140 358 Barnard © Siimore Waldron 14 H. P Crawley. Ward...... .. 30 G. P. 0. BOOSTS LEAD First by Eight Games in Federal Bowling League. Government Printing Office bowlers increased their lead iIn the Federal League to eight games by winning two trom City Post Office, while Navy was taking a three-game trouncing from Merchants Fleet Corporation. m ‘lm.—flnn!lnundlnl Archi- - . 0., 1,797; Internal it Hl.ll:utnllfl‘nll sames—Kibby, 160; Hart, | Waugh 303 ..clll:nmll No.i 31 High individual sets—Lawrence, 410; Si- on. 401 t it was in reverse lals penalized | the, day the yards. # TON, TWORECORDS FALL INGIRL PIN'LEAGUE Recreation Team’s 569, Effie Moore’s 148 Are High in District League. ‘The holiday lull didn't throw girls in the Ladies’ District League off stride. ‘They marked their return to the bowl- ing wars by smashing & pair of all- time league records. The championship Recreation _girls, in sweeping over King Pin at Lucky Strike, rolled 569 in the second game to establish an all-time mark. ‘The other record was made by Effie Moore of the Queen Pins. Effie smack- ed the wood for a 148 game in her first effort to beat Billle Butler's previous round of 146. Rena Levy set the pace with 125 in the record-smashing Recreation team game, while Anna McCormack rolled 97, Pauline Bradburn 121, Capt. Wil- liams 111 and Catherine Quigley 115. In shooting her record score, Effie Moore made only five marks, a dou- ble-header strike and three spares. Counts of 89 and 103 in her other two games gave her a 340 set. Maria Frere Whalen marked her re- turn to the District League by shooting 104, 105 and 106, to help Bill Woods swe;gnover Meyer Davis. Blicks, league leaders, took all three from Convention Hall. Capt. Lucy Owen'’s 327 set and 127 game featured. Team Standing. John Blick . Rendezvous Bill Wood . Lucky Strike Recreation .. 5 King Pin . 0 Conven. Hm st BRIDGES BOWLS HIGH CHURCH LEAGUE SET Waugh Roller Topples Pins for 392 in East Washington Circuit Jimmy Bridges, anchor man on ‘Waugh, stepped in front of the indi- vidual shooters in the East Wi ton Church League last week and crashed the maples for a 392 set. Jimmy's games were 132, 152 and 108, but the best his team could do was to win one from Douglas No. 1, the leaders. Walter Snellings rolled the high game for the 35 | leaders, getting 134 and Mark Rasp- berry topped the sets with 342. Douglas No. 2 picked up one game on | West. Douglas No. 1, by winning all three from Ingram No. 1. Met United Brethren won two from Ana- | costia M. E. with Viemyer leading both teams with & 135 game and 353 set. Fifth Baptist took all three from Ninth No. 1, thanks to Deuterman’s 340 and Centennial No. 2, with T. Halb leading the attack with Congress Heights. D. /C, JANUARY 11, Keeps Pin Title BESS ACKMAN, ‘Who defeated Billie Butler, 333 to 275, last night at the Coliseum in the roll off of a deadlock for first place In the woman's division of The Star’s third annual bowling tournament. They tied year with 344, CLARKE BOWLS HIGH WITH 119-25 AVERAGE .| New Business Team Duckpinner Sets Pace in Washington Gas Light League. Toppling the sticks at a rate of 119-25 per string, Clarke of the New Business team of the Washington Gas Light Duckpin League is high average bowler by a wide margin. ‘The New Business sharpshooter has registered in 30 games 22 strikes and 80 spares. Clarke holds high game, with 157, and high set, with 385. Corcoran, Meter Shop maple-smasher, is next m line, with a 110-10 pace for 16_gam: Delpfle the record-making superiority of the New Business quint, which holds high team set, high team game and greatest number of strikes, Meter Shop tops the runners-up by a three-game margin. Team Standing. Meter Shop... New Business unt & 56 6 497 558! 8. 97 11 66 535 493 82 18 74 A3 61 1 1 1 1. 1 1 1 1 1 1 1. et 1.369 res (Nine Games or More). METER SHOP. G. 8t. Sp. HG. L1864 41 147 3 332 set, won two from | Nor, Keller won a set from Eastern Presby- | 5o terian. Pirst Brethren took two from | Centennial No. 1, Ingram No. 2 grabbed three _close ones from Second Baptist, and Epworth took the odd game from Ninth No. 2. TEAM STANDING. w. Douglas No. 1.. 39 Douglas No. 2. United Brethren 33 Fifth Baptist . 33 2 Congress Hats. Ninth No. 1.... Ingram No. 3!3:—' S Nint Aimucostis 3. E 2§ SEASON RECORDS. High individual average_Hollis, 111-15. Hushes, 160. High individi Hith ‘iiividuai sirikes—W. Rea and Ed |8 E rr. 29. High individual spares . Snellinge, 116. s No. 2, 595 rethren, 1,697. CLEAN SWEEP KEEPS EDGE FOR KING PINS Leaders Whitewash Rinaldi Team |G Ball in National Capital Loop. Parkway Wins Two. Pin continued to sweep its | | matches in the National Capital League and hold the league lead. Rinaldi Tailors gave the Campbell- managed crew a real battle in the first game, but the King Pinners won on a roll-off. From then on, it was easy for the champs, who were led by Dutch Weidman's 378 set. Red Morgan with 383 and Al Work with 378 enabled Parkway Filling Sta- LR Bauman NEW BUSINESS. .30 22 80 157 385 F 7 1 Clarke Jones 126 122 122 18 u3 DEPARTMENT. 13 53 137 349 1 54 344 321 Newman | Smith . Earner . West . | Duvali Tennyson Stephenson . McGonegel ... Barber ton to win the first two games over | i, King's Palace, but the Parkways dropped the final. Stellar bowling' by Bradford, Stott and Bob Lawrence enabled Packwood odd game from Stott's 365 was high. downed Coliseum in two games, sending 3 | the market, crew into eighth place. Team Standing. L W. L 33 Pack: 'ood Prig. Il 3 Zl ‘lfl King’s Palace. 7 25 5 14 liseum 1! 19 Rtnlldl ‘Tallor: . 18 18 Judd & Detw'r. KENSINGTON BOYS WIN Silver Spring Loses' Team Match, but Scores in Doubles. Kensington Juniors, sweeping the maples for a 2,546 team set, hopped off to a 107-pin lead over Silver Spring Juniors in the first block of a 10-game home-and-home match at Silver Spring last night. Silver Spring’s doubles team of Wat- son and Viers, however, triumphed hlndllz ovell;dmvel Kennnx&;or'l‘odun.hg{ Magruder a agner. atson 365 and Viers 561, while Magruder and Wagner rolled 538 and 487, respectively. Kensington Tho 508 ‘46 517 8182, 348 Siver Epring 469 517 484 504 465—2.4: Meyer Davis. kH Pale Drys Draw Tough Opponents HERE'LL be no rest for the crack National Pale Drys this week. Another ntron( bowling out- fit, organized by Norman Schroth, is scheduled for a shot at Wash- ington’s outstanding pin team Fri- day at Convention Hall. Schroth has banded an all-star, combine to cavort under the name of Fountain Hams. Norman was challenged by Lewis Hopfenmaier, Pale Dry manager, recently to or- ganize a team to be composed of Washington and Baltimore ‘bowlers. Schroth, hmlevcr. declined to choose any but Washingtonians for Friday's battle. Jack Whelan, newly crowned I'l tional sweepstakes king; Brad M: ley, runner-np. M Megaw, mck Northeast Red Morgan, -ho. t.h Georgle Friend, ‘won the United States doubles crown in 1929, and Astor Clarke, who is banging pins soundly in a trio of will for, Schroth’s S~ DORIS GOODALL SHINES Shoots 122-Game to Give Commerce One-Pin Edge on Navy. Doris Goodall's 122-game robbed Navy of a clean sweep in the Ladies’ Federal League. Mrs. Goodall, rolling for Com- merce, saw her big game pull down LTy In| P y los- ing two to Agriculture; Treasury took second place with a _two-game victory tars; Economics copped two from Interstaté; G. A. O. won one from Commerce Juniors; Labor swept its set from Commerce Comets and Veterans’' Bureau twice downed Census. o) oneSESE MARBLEMEN KEEP- LEAD Fuller Stone and D. C. Butcher Tie for Runner-up Spot. Standard Art Marble won two from Fuller Stone No. 2 and remained at the top of the Building Contractors’ League, while Fuller Stone No. 1 slipped into a tie for second place with D. C. Butch- er when it only won one game from C. H, Tompkins. D. C. Butcher triumphed twice over P. T. McDermott. with 336 each. Mrs. Ackllun won last [ In Lugeonr 1931—PART FIVE, TWIN STRIKE PUTS PUNCH IN ROLL-OFF g Billie Butler Beaten, 333 to 275—Winners to Get Prizes Tomorrow. A was the telling punch when Bess Ackman, a member of the Boulevard team of the District Ladies’ League, retained her title as champion of the women’s division of The Evening Star Yuletide tournament in the roll-off of a first-place tie at the Coliseum last night with Billie Butler. Mrs. Ackman matched a three-game score of 333 against Mrs. Butler's 275. the original rolling each totaled 336. It was a close contest last night un- DOUBLE-HEADER strike at a psychological moment )uv‘rwu. LEAGUE. Dritters’ Can. 134 § Wash. Driftery’ Can. 3 g 20 Colonit oe g Wash: El Dorado JHieh team set—Drifters’ Canoe l-l h team game—Drifters' Canoe No. 1. iien individusl set—Eills (Potomac Wood- PR rdividual game—McGolriék (Dritt- sunasneed gusLRRLr Figh’ nmm( sl eames—Felll Steinmeyer i Lindbers, 1 CLARENDON BUSINESS LEAGUE. W L fller’s Service. 34 11 Birch Bros. Joyers Service. 32 18 til midway the second game, when Mrs. [ Dove Ackman spared and backed up the mark with a double strike. From there on the issue was never in doubt. The winning scores were 94, 128 and 111 against Mrs. Butler’'s 93, 93 and 89. Her victory made Mrs. Ackman the first bowler to finish in front twice in The Star tournament. She won last year with a set of 344. ‘Weidman Is-Victor. 3 She will share honors at the pay-off tomorrow night at the Coliseum, at 7 o'clock, with Clem Weidman,. who shot 645 for five games to win the men’s title. Each will receive $50 and a medal. Tournament Chairman Arville Ebersole will hand out $500 in cash. In the men's class, Charlie Phillips, holder of the District record for a league set, with 458, will receive second money, $40, for his score of 627, with J. C. An- derson, third, with 621, collecting $30. In the women's division Mrs. Butler will peceive $40 for second and Alice Burke sthird money, 430, her set be- ing 330. The audited prize list is as follows: = Men. . Clem Weidman. . Charles Phillips. . J. C. Anderson. . W. L. Martin. . Al Pischer. . H. Bromley. . Jack Talbert. 645—$50 627— . Perce Ellett.. . Paul Harrison. . C. V. Joyee.. 9. Frank Miller. S. Watson. ‘Women. *Mrs. Ackmln ‘won mll»ofl 0DD FELLOWS PLAY TATT00 ON HEADPIN Mount Pleasant Team Hangs Up Two Records—Ellett's 399 Set Ties All-Time Mark ‘With the resumption of activities in | the Odd Fellows’ League since the holi- | d; s, scores have increased consider- ably. Mount Pleasant, which shot 1,746 and 618, which stand as all-time team set and game records; Eastern and Langdon still are closely bunched and gradually drawing away from the rest of the fleld Perce Ellett threw in a 399 set to tie the all-time record for individual set 13114 lean. Di 24 18 Madter Plumb.. Season Recerds. leh aversse_Clarke, 113. igh game inne; ) set—Clarke, 413, s —larke, iod s—McCarth: ‘team same._Bover Pharmacy. §12. team set—Boyer Pharmacy, 1,70%. CLARENDON FRATERNAL LEAGUE. U.AM.1 Prlurnll Amer. 28 17 <h Club W. L. ar. 312 Progers . o. 400, O:0oF 4 N3, 193, 1.8 1.0 High team game— ! Foar S5 r!mn'rn LEAGUE. Judd_& Detw'er % 3i ectro. Co. 39 Co. ntral Pre. Ontime. Allth 8Simonds Co. SRENBRLELY S8a888RReRer atl. Eng. Gibson Bros.... 33 33 Typothetae Season Records. High averages—McPhilomy. 117: Hod; 111: “Mavo, 110: Mischou. 108: Beatty. Cole, 108" Pteil. 107 Smith, 107 Goodin High in strikes—Mayo, 36 High in spares—Beatty, 150. GEORGETOWN CHURCH LEAGUE. 'r-n- luulu. ~ Ealvaey Rinars Season Records. Noligh Individual averages —Corcoran (Peck ary B), High' Indlvlduh nme’sgsm-n Episcopal). 156: P. Hart irace). High individual sets—P. Hart (Grace), Hieh ‘fl:aumun ‘Spares—Corcoran, 133; 'fa'i mmvmun strikes—Oliver (Drakes), games—Peck No. 1, 612; West 0. 1, 1,672 West and Ed Donaldson came through with | & 144 game. | Team Standing. | i Mt. Pleasant . Central Eastern . uge28sd ppEr seenuRged P Canton team game—Mount M Hish 3 set—Mt. ant Hllh (ndividusl :m;— naldson, ual set_ ket 350 i F. Don: e_-R, Bladen, 95. m-'h averagencp. Eilett 116-6. Annapolis Quint Enters National ATEST to enter the National Duckpin Bowling Congress cham- plonships, to be held at conve.n~ tion Hlll February 16 to March 7, is . Annapolis, Md., winner of the Annapolitan !mue. Members of the team are Raymond Phipps, captain; Frank Baker, Gor- don Scible, Julian Mn‘h!. ‘William Arnold and Francis Bre: They will roll doubles And singles Ride in COMFORT You no longer need car. Hudson-Essex now gives you Rare Riding Comfort at prices amaeingly low. Both cars are big and roomy. You are never crowded. Seats are deep and wide. There isalways room for you to change your sitting position with perfect ease, Ask your nearest Hudeoo. Eseex dealer a demonstration. THE GREATER HUDSON 8 Bess Ackman Retains Star’s Tourney Title AGRICULTURE INTERBUREAU LEAGUE. Team Standing. int uaufi:uu « élfl,‘a‘r st ccounts . tension ' Parm Board High i d Pl Lo, team leommu and Plant, Hisn team =.muvrllnt. 590; Economics, High individual s De Glantz, 383; Lind- strom, ”Wu—m <l 3 High * individual Lindstrom, 14 HEBREW INTERCLUB LEAGUE. Team Standing. Regents' Club . Season Records. High team game—_Rei Reges iEh tea HiEh inalidaer o High individual res—Sc lat game—Goodman, 98. SANICO LEAGUE. Team Standing. High team games—Diehl's, 616; Bradford, dien team sets—Diehl's, 1,724: Roberts, 1y igh indtvidual fi:fi'fiu’"‘" (Dienl's), 1 ahvidaa slas (Fagans), h individial ssts__Pratt (Diehl's), 44 SOUTHERN RAILWAY CLEARKS' LEAGUE. Tea Standing. fi Traftic . % {"i Disbursing e e gn e KAPNECK ROLLERS CLIMB Score'Sweep to Gain Second Place in Merchants’ League. M. Kapneck Electric pulled up to within a game of first pldce in the Mer- chants' League by sweeping a set from . _Southern Dairies No. 1 lost one to Thompson Bros. Furniture when the latter team won a roll-off of a tie game. Penn Electric and National Glass Shop gained ground by winni two each from District Grocers and th- ern Dairies No. 2, respectively. Team Sta e ? = Southern Dairles No. 1 M. Kapneck Electric Co. 2 3 3 ‘-'335!3:28&!!:::" Wg i ?fi;g ;;i::sniéaui: 5! High team game High team set—M. Rasneck Hecirie "oo.. 1,700. High individual same—Gingell (Southern Dairles No. 1), 181, High Anamlu-l set—M. Kapneck (Kap- individug] average—Vitale (Kapneek), 48 gamen). o meck. 353 348 Lankiord, 396 Ball (Sarber & Roass: 345. i fimn weekly games—McProuty, 130; Wolf, °m'h Notre Dame’'s new stadium has a press box seatiny 250 men. Custom-Tailored Suits, O'Coats and Topcoats Formerly Up to $4500 $29 Vi Master Designing Every garment in this remarkable sale will be [f designed by Mr. Albert Kassan, master dmgner. Mr. Sol Love will be glad to assist you in your selections. Kassan-Stein garments must fit you 100% or they do not leave our store. 1/2 of Including “Tux,” On all Suits and Over- coats formerly selling at $50 and more. For in- stance: full Dress, Cutaways, SSi} Garments Now $33.50 " ” 40.00 46.50 “ “ Uniforms Not Included. ° .gassan-Steln, Inc.

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