Evening Star Newspaper, February 9, 1931, Page 28

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SPORTS. entral Victory Over Eastern Might Precipitate a Row in High School Series TECH CASE IS SEEN AS UNCLOSED ISSUF Fight to Gain Forfeit Held Likely if 1t Would Give Blue Title Chance. BY EDWARD A. FULLER, JR. victory for Eastern over A final game of the public high school basket ball would avert a storm of confusion and controversy. Central tomorrow in the championship series doubtless Should the boys in Light Blue fit they’ll win the title and every- thing will be over, but should Cen- tral triumph it would not surprise if there were a renewal of agita- tion especially on the part of Cen- tral adherents for action on the Central-Tech game of January 30 won by Tech and in which Me-| Kinley used Everett Johnson, a player, who at the time, was al- leged to have been ineligible. Business will meet Tech at 3:30 to open tomorrow’s card. A Central win over Eastern would put the former just one game behind East- ern. The Lincoln Parkers would have five wins and three losses and Central four victories against four defeats. Cen- tral supporters doubtless will lose no *time in reminding the world that should the Central-Tech game be awarded to Central by forfeit, their team would | automatically gain a first-place tie with Eastern. 1f Central is not given the game by forfeit, it is thought that its supporters will insist that the game be " ed 14 of the Alpha Delta Omega Fra- defeat the Columbia Heights out- | £& 18 9F 200 A'R% %ce T hnat, with THE _EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C.\ MONDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1931. SPORT S. Railroad Basket LEXANDRIA, Va., February 9.— Flashing once again the bril-| liant form that carried them | to 17 straight triumphs before dropping & pair of Washington Inde- pendent League games last week, the Richmond, Fredericksburg & Potomac Raflroad Co. cagers yesterday downed the Woodlawn A. C. of Fort Myer, 39 t0 32, in a basket bali game. The battle featured a five-game pro- gram presented by the Railroaders, in which the Alpha Delta Omega Frater- nity staged a scoring spree in the final quarter of its contest with the Boys' Club Yorkes of Washington, to cop the semi-final attraction, 32 to 16. Cabell, with 10 points, and McMen- amin, with 9, were best for the Rail- roaders, while Woodlawn's best bets were Faro, who counted 10 tallies, and Fitzpatrick, who scced 9 points. Bottles West and Doc Dreifus divid- | Eddie Gorman giving them a close | race with 6. Robert Vogt, manager of St. Mary Lyceum Five, has arranged four games | for his team next week, as follow: February 16, Fort Myer post team at Fort Myer, Va.; 17, Boys' Club Celtics at Alexandria Armory: 19, Del Ray at Alexandria Armory: 21, Griffith Con- sumers at Tech High Gym, Washington. played under boys' rules in one of the prelimingry games, with the former winning, 20 to 7. Ada Hicks was the outstanding star of the encounter. 22 to 3, in an Al- | feated Friends A. C., 1 hile the exandria Junior League game, W] ordered replayed, this despite that Bert Coggins, Central coach, has made it | plain that he will not protest the game, | having expressed the opinion that he| belicves Tech authorities should take the initiative. Others May Be at Fault. | Then, according to all signs, the fire-, works will start blazing. With Cen tral backers pressing for action on the Tech game, McKinley supporters will, it is believed, promptly move to produce evidence purporting to show that Tech, if it is guilty of transgressing the rules in the Johnson case, as charged, is not alone in the breaking of the regulations. It is understood on good authority that the McKinley adherents have ac- curate information that some of the players in the current championship | series have during the progress of the | set engaged in outside games. These contests, it is stat-d, were playground | affairs and were informal, the players | appearing without unifor=s and the games being staged on the grounds.| They were formal enough, though, to constitute a violation of the rule pro- | hibiting players competing in the cham- | plonship series from outside play, Mc- Kinley’s supporters are convinced, it is said, and will so argue, it is believed. Chance for Tech. Should Tech defeat Business tomor- row, and Central down Eastern, the e‘x'}ly will move into a first-place tie Tales of a Wayside Tee. OW many golfers” writes H. H. F, “have any one stroke from a short putt to a full drive they would be willing to carry over intact through the | next year? I am not referring to the | best of the pros and the best of the amateurs, but to the average variet; who might play between 85 and 110." The average golfer’s game is made up of many startling varieties. ~You can check back on the list of those | vho know and see just how this works out. For a few examples: | 1. The one who drives well, around | the 80 class, and whose iron play 151 poor. Net average, 95. 2. Those Who can't use a wooden club but who are fair with the irons. 3. Those who can't handle the wood- en clubs or the long irons, but who | can pitch and putt effectively. | 4. Those who are not very good with | any club, but are not terribly bad with any club. 5. Those who are poor up to the green, but who are deadly once they can sight the cup. 6. Those who are fair up to the green, but are cockeyed putters. | I think the average golfer, if he had his choice of one high-class shot, would take the drive. A good, long drive | down the middle is at least the most | all around satisfying shot in golf. It may not have any greater thrill than the long iron or the brassie to the | green, but it is the foundation of most | sound golf. | The golfer who is hooking, slicing or topping his tee shots over a good course | | Eastern at five wins and three Josses. Such an eventuality doubtless would only spur the efforts of Central's well-wishers to have the Tech game forfeited to Central or ordered replayed, | as every one knows of the long cordial rivalry existing between Central and | Tech and the consequent lack of favor with which either looks wpon the suc- cess of the other. Gonzaga will face Georgetown Fresh- | 5 men tonight at Tech High at 7: o'clock, in the lone game scheduled to- night or this afternoon_for scholastics basketers hereabout. -~ It is expected that the Blue and Gray yearlings will win, though the Purple players can be counted upon to offer the best fight of which they are capable. Aside from the Business-Tech and | Central-Eastern title games four court encounters, involving schoolboy teams, are listed tomorrow. St. Albans and Takoma-Silver Spring High wlll face at St. Albans, Woodward and Hyattsville High at the Central Y. M. C. A, Frienas and Landon at Epiphany and Western and Georgetown Prep at Garrett Park. LEAGUE QUINTS BEATEN Laurel Guards and Hoplites Lose to Palace-D. G. 5., Waverly. LAUREL, Md,, February 9.—Two In- tercity Basket Ball League teams were beaten in exhibition games yesterday on the National Guard Armcry floor here. Palace-D. G. S. of Washington con- quered the Laurel National Guard team, 22 to 20, and Waverly A. C. of Balti- more overcame Ellicott City Hoplites, 41 to 37, Eagles, a Laurel midget quint, drub- bed Ellicott City Midgets, 41 to 17. is usually helpless. | The Test. “ ILLIE MACFARLANE proved this | some time back. The ex-open | champion had been giving one of | his club members from 18 to 20 strokes. | | willie had been shooting around 170, | | his opponent around 100. | “Nearly all this difference” his op- | ponent said one day, “is in the tee shot.” They agreed to play even the | next time, each taking the other's | drive The 100 player found himself | playing a second from a straight long |tee shot. MacFarlane had to play his | second from various and unusual | | places, about 80 yards back of his nor- | | mal position. MacFarlane had a 77 and his op- |ponent & 78. They played again and | the duffer won by 1 hole at approxi- | mately the same scoring pace. By using” the professional's driving the duffer had taken more than 20 strokes per round off his game. “In place of playing mashie shots or No. 3 or 4 irons to the green,” Willie sald, “T was using brassies and spoons and long irons and I was playing from the rough, from traps and often back of trees.” The missed drive brings about in- stant depression in playing the hole. | There may be a subsequent recovery that makes up for the mistake, but it doesn't take many missed drives to wreck a round Bad putting might be almost as an- noying, but this is used more as an ex- cuse or an alibi than as a confession of some fault. “I would have had an 80, but I took 3 putts on 8 greens"—etc., | You never hear anybody say, “I | ¢ have had an 80, but I missed 9 | wol | dr The better golfers appreciate the long |1ron to the pin, but that is because most of them take a good drive for In Alexandria Card Feature |ory on Wednesday and in Schuler's Hall | week for the benefit basket ball program | gomery County, Md., who have broken - | Il Stars girls’ teams | Was e iin | 5 pm. and the Fraters Pals and Ken- In the other games, Clover A. C. de- | di THE SPORTLIGHT BY GRANTLAND RICE | to the green, but I never holed as many ers Triumph virginia clubmen trimmed Engine Co. Firemen, 42 to 2 The standing of the Alexandria Ju- nior League ciubs follows: oCDlIlmbl: Whitestone' | 5 00 | Friends A. C Central “Cougar! Three home games will be played by the Richmond, Fredericksburg & Poto- mac Railroad Co. tossers this week. The Railroaders plan to appear at the Arm- Saturday and Sunday. _ Manager Robert McDonald is seeking opposition for the Wednesday and Sat- urday games and may be telephoned between 5 and 6 p.m. at Alexandria 2256. Washington Union Printers will meet the Railroad five in the Sunday encounter. Whitestone's Store_and Boy Scout cagers will battle in the Alexandria Ju- nior League game Wednesday night. Tickets will be placed on sale this to be presented at Armory Hall Febru- ary 17 for the Hustlers' Bible Class of the Methodist Protestant Church. Alpha Delta Omega Fraternity and the Kensington Howitzers of Mont- even in 2 games, will vie in,the feature at 9 oclock. St. Mary's Lyceum and | ington Union Printers will play at sington Girls at 7. Alpha Delta Omega and Fraters’ Pals have & double-header set for next Mon- ¢ night at Lecsburg, where they will play the Leesburg Independents’ five and sextet. The next time he drives badly, roaching is all right. And possibly the next start finds the putter | has turned into a corkscrew. It is| these constant shifts that leave the average golfer bewildered and baffled. | But it also affects the best. I recall Leo Diegel before the Open at Winged 'm playing fine golf up to the he said, “but my putting is badly. but_his app terrible. I saw Leo after his first round. “How | did they go?” I asked him. “If it hadn’t been for my putter.”| he said, “I wouldn't have broken 90.| I couldn't hit a shot with any club up good putts, anywhere from 5 to 15 feet.” His entire game had changed around overnight, from one round to another. 1f that can happen to a Diegel, why should the average golfer be astonished at the bizarre turns that strike his own swing? Armour and Tron Play. OMMY ARMOUR was discussing iron play, which he considers the main foundation of any - scoring_game. “It is much easier for the average golfer to swing the club head with driver or brassie,” he remarked, “where the ball is teed up. Under these conditions he can use his hands and wrists and arms more freely. But when it comes to iron play there is a great temptation to let the body take charge. The body is more powerful than hands or arms and once 't gets too active there is no chance to get any speed in the club head. I like to watch a golfer who knows he has a peir of hands and wrists and who also knows they have to be used in throwing the club head, or swinging the club head. “Paul Waner says he is hitting the ball better on days when he feels that his body has stopped in time” I re- marked to Armour. “The same is true of the golf swing.” Armour caid. “What really happens, is that the body gets out of the way and lets the hands and arms go to work. The average golfer hasn't any left hand at all. He hasn't feel or power or ac- tivity with his left hand and left arm. So how can he expect to use it cor- rectly in the swing, where it is such a big part of the swing? It will be quite a help if he will build up the left arm and the left grip by swinging the club with the left hand for a while. Let him get the feel of using the left hand or swinging with the left hand. “I believe it is much easier to get the body out of the way by using the closed stance, with the left foot pretty well advanced. You are then in better start- ing position for both back swing and down swing. There is less temptation to throw the right side around and it is simpler to swing from the inside in place of cutting across the ball. I be- lieve this closed stance is something almost every average golfer should take up if he wants to make the game sim- plet and sounder. Let him stick that left foot out beyond the right 2nd then start his swing back on the inside circle. He will then have a simpler problem to tackle through the rest of the swing.” (Copyright, 1931, by North American News- paper Alllance.) Ring li(LW Put On By Five Nations EW YORK, February 9 (#).— | Eastern FORT ELECTED HEAD OF SHOE TWIRLERS Néw Metropolitan Club Will Have Charter in National Body. League Match Tonight. Charles A. Fort, former Washington champion, yesterday was elected presi- dent of the Metropolitan Horseshoe | Club, which will become affiliated with the National Horseshoe Pitchers’ League. Fort is a Government chemist. The organization meeting was held at the Greenway, on Fourteenth street northwest near Decatur, where the Metropolitan Indoor League is operat- ing. 'R. H. Brown was named vice president and Andrew Casper, secretary treasurer. All pitchers desiring to be- come charter members should apply to Casper at the Greenway. A league match tonight between Ar- lington and Falls Church will bring together several keen rivals. A team composed of Gene MonkEd Pierce and Ray Grissett has been awarded & fran- chise in the league and will shoot two matches this week, meeting M. E. Peake's Maryland Stars Wednesday and Cherrydale Friday. Ex-service men are sending in entries for the American Legion tournament to be held at the Greenway starting Feb- ruary 17. EXPAND BASKET LEAGUE Pros Will Have Eight Clubs in East and Eight in West. CHICAGO, February 9 (#).—The American _ Professional Basket Ball League will be expanded into a 16-club organization for the 1931-32 season, with eight clubs in the West and eight in the East, George Halas, operator of the Chicago Bruins, said today. The eight teams will represent two separate leagues, with a championship ries between the title holders at the nd of the season. According to Halas, the Western | section of the league will be composed | of Cleveland, Detroit, Toledo, Fort Wayne, Dayton, Milwaukee and two| teams from Chicago { The league this year dwindled to five | teams, two from the East and three from the West. COPELAND CUE WINNER. NEW YORK. February 9 () —Frank | Copeland of Cleveland, defeated Joseph | Cosgrove of New York, 40 to 22, in the | open _three-cushion billiard tournament. The game went 50 ii nings. Copeland’s high run was eigh! Cosgrove's, four. Tennyson Midget Golf Pioneer Invented “Tin Can” Game on Spur of Moment to Occupy Playground Lads. BY FRANCIS E. STAN. ICK TENNYSON, director of athletics of the District of Columbia Playground Department, views with a laconic air the multitude of minia- ture golf courses. Dick could get as much nourish- ment from the hole of a doughnut as he got cash from miniature golf, but he at least has the satisfaction of knowing that if any individual invented pee wee golf, he did. Only he didn't call it any of the modern high-toned names. Dick appropriately tagged 1t “tin can golf.” It happened back in 1922, on the old City Park Playground, atSeventh and O streets. Dick was playground director and was figuring one day on ways and means to jeep the boys busy. A shipment of playground base balls was tardy—nothing was left except scesaw. Among the boys present were Goldie Ahearn, Benny April, Jimmy Munro, Mal Simons and Chester Freeman. Not many could picture on of these chaps see- sawing or sliding down the sliding board. A’ youngster dragging a_broken golf club happened along. Dick dug a hole in the ground and invited the fellows to shoot at it. The next day he dug another hole. At the, end of the week half a dozen miniature ex- cavations marred the turf. Dick didn't stop at that. Rather he redoubled his efforts to make up for the absence of base ball. He made a request for tin cans. The next day each’ brought cans, which were deposited in the ground. Artificial obstacles were added to the natural ones, to wit, the seesaw and sliding board. Oh yes, there there was a Maypole, too. As a final touch, flags were added. They raise a fuss over the rabbit ball in'the major leagues. The same problem was presented to the tin can golfers, but it didn't take Dick long to remedy the situation. He bought wooden balls. The golf balls bounded too far when they struck a stone or a hard object. It wasn't long before Dick’s first course was overcrowded. Boys began to desert other playgrounds and | flock to the one at Seventh and O, | which later became the Garfield Playground site. Tennyson’s job be- came bigger. He established more golf courses. Dick at that time was contributing quite a bit of his journalistic efforts to the monthly playground organ. In one of his stories he touched on “tin can golf.” At the annual convention of the playground heads at Atlantic_City he ‘was asked more about it. Many cities followed his example. Tourna- ments were held at Cleveland and San Francisco. It may be that the Blackfeet and Shawnee Indians played the game on the Western prairies, using gopher holes and wigwam poles or it may date further back than that. But Dick Tennyson today eyes the modern indoor and outdoor course | and wonders, “I had plenty of time. i If I only had've patented my ‘tin | can golf.”” | TILT AT HYATTSVILLE Girl Basketers to Entertain Team of Annapolis High School. HYATTSVILLE, Md., February 9.— Hyattsville High School girl basketers will entertain the Annapclis High sex- tet tomorrow afternoon in the National Guard Armory here. Annapolis will be seeking revenge for the 22-19 defeat handed it by Hyattsville at Annapolis recently. Margaret Wolf, Hyattsville coach, ex- pects to start Jean Hamilton and Jean Goss, forwards; Kathleen Hannigan, center; Roberta Hannum, side center, and Dorothy Ordwein and Ada Burns, guards. POTOMAC QUINT ACTIVE Slated to Play Three Basket Ball League Games This Week. Potomac Boat Club basket ball team | faces three games this week, two in the | Community Center League and the oth- er in the District of Columbia loop. | The Boatmen will meet Mercury to- morrow night at Eastern High School | and Griffith-Consumers Thursday night | at Central High Schocl in the Com- | munity Center League matches and Saks & Co. Saturday night at the Boys' | Club in the District of Columbia loop | test. Potomac also has booked a match for next Sunday afternoon with Company | I at Fort Washington. | | Second Half Conquers Patterson | | the Chief’s victory, immediately signed | Washingtonians ahead. A Ping-Pong Event Lures 12 Nations Special Dispatch to The Star. UDAPEST, February 9.—Wild wielders of the ping pong pad- dles from a dozen countries are gathering here today to fight out the world's ping pong championship beginning tomorrow. England is sending a heavy team of six fast players, and frem far- off India have come five of the leading ping_pong players of the Far East. Germany alsoawill be represented at the tables, as will Rumania, Esthonia, Lithuania, Czechoslovakia, Austria, ~Hungary, Sweden, France and Latvia. The United States is not taking part in the tourney. ROSEDALE KICKéRS VWINA Team of Baltimore, 3 to 1. Rosedale booters, champions of the Capital City Soccer League, put on a second-half rally to conquer the Patter- son team of Baltimore, 3 to 1. yester- | day at Silver Spring. At the end cf the first half Patterson was leading, 1 to 0, as the result of a goal registered by Grothmal just before the intermission. In the first five min- | utes of the second half, however, E. Burdette of Rosedale came through with a pretty kick from just outside the net to tie the score, and then Henry Irving made good on a penalty kick to put the long _shot. in the closing stages also by Irving, clinched victory. gy SIMPSON MAKES RECORD | | | | | Does Best 220 in New Zealand and | Equals Century Mark. AUCKLAND, New Zealand, February | 9 (). —George Simpson, former Ohio | Stat= University sprinter, broke one New Zealand record and equaled an- other here. | Simpson ran the 220 yards in 211-5 | 2 seconds, shaving one-fifth of a second | off the national record. He was timed in 9 4-5 seccnds for the 100 yards, equaling the national record. | Harlow Rothert, giant weight man | from Stanford, established a new na- | tional record in the shotput with a | heave of 49 feet 5 inches. | The American middlé-distance run- ner, Rufus Kiser, was beaten in the mile by G. Savidan. Japan now has veral teams composed of women. base ball | TURNER SIGNS INDIAN FOR FEATURE BOUT ‘White Feather Will Meet McMillen Thursday on Mat—Schmeling to Exhibit Punches. While Maxie Schmeling discloses part of his boxing repertoire at the Wash- ington Auditorium Thursday in Joe Turner’s wrestling show, Chief White Feather, champion razzberry magnet of the District and environs, will get s chance to stop some of Jim McMillen fiying tackles with his stomach and break into the rasslin’ elite. The Chief might never have had this chance (which is not particularly en- viable) had not Paul Jones, who was slated to rassle White Feather last Thursday. been rendered hors de combat in a Baltimore hout. Mike Romano, who was substituted, became a victim of the Indian’s vicious bar chinlock and Promoter Joe Turner, impressed with him. Schmeling, while not permitted to engage in actual fisticuffs, will shadow box, ete. A supporting card, including bouts between George Hagen and John Maxos, Milo Steinborn and Matros Kirelenko and Tiny Roebuck and Jack Washburn, is expected to round out a big evening. —_— TROUSERS To Match Your Odd Coats Entire Stock of Suitim and O'coatings T Custom Tailors Mertz & Mertz Co. 405 11th St. N.W. NOTICE TO BOWLERS 25 FAST ALLEYS Stéll doing business at the old n sta 9th and Penn. Ave. ovér Center Market Cofiseum Health Cente: “You are Fighting the Battle of the Health Commissioners”’ EAIR HAVEN, VT Americes C 111 Fifth Wew York against the spitt tacking spit-td ccmissioners 1 S Says: DR. RUSHMORE LAPE Health Officer, Fair Haven, Vermont s pair Baven, Vernos June 24, 1950e 1gar Compenys Avemi®, Citye Gentlemens your advertisements ate pped cigers ‘have You sre fight ing the battle o sving for better sal my comnendatione the health es of your one of 56 health officials from 56 d ifferent points approvingCremo’scrusade against spit or spit-tipping. Every smoker, every wife whose husband smokes Lape’s letter. “Who ar cigars, should read Drq e the friends of ‘Spit’?” YOU MAY WELL ASK THIS QUESTION WH EN 56 IMPORTANT HEALTH OFFICIALS HAVE WRITTEN SO STRONGLY AGAINST THE EVILS . OF SPIT OR SPIT-TIPPING. . 1 am not imterested in your od in public healtbe Leading amateur boxers from dreland, Belgium, Norway and Canada, will battle outstanding Simon-pures from the Metropoli- | granted. Let them begin missing their tee shots and see what happens on a | championship course. The type of | course can make a tremendous differ- igarse 1 am interest EE pit-tipped © Dr. Lape writes: “Your adver- Pointers on Golf BY SOL METZGER. Our golf teachers tell us to use 8 straight left arm in taking the club back and in swinging through. Then we go forth and happen to see such a fine player as Duncan, former British open champ, or Hagen, winner of many national titles here and abroad, and we note each bends his left arm a bit at the elbow. You decide at once that your pro is wrong. But is he? The straight left arm 15 a marke. point in the game of Bobby Jones, and of that Philadel- ja star, Woody Platl. But it fin‘b of many a great golfer. People are continually asking Sol Metger “Why can't I make my a) :h shots stick on the greens?” Metzger has answered the question in his newest leaflet, “The Art of Pitching.” If you wish this leaflet send stamped, addressed envelope to Eol Metzger, in care of this paper. ¥ (Copyrights 1931) ~ |ence. If the missed drive isn't penal- | ized to any great extent it may do no great camage, where the missed ap-| proach may run into far more troubie. | 1 think the average golfer would say. “Give me a long, straight -drive and I'll gamble on the rest of it working out in some way.” | The Great Riddle. NOTHER common variety of golf might be called “the shifting| game"—that is to say, the player drives well one day and approaches tan district in a big international tournament in Madison Square Gar- den tonight. Fourteen of the 16 bouts on the program will be international affairs. Ireland will be Tepresented by Matt Flanagan, John J. Chase, Thomas Hickey and R. J. Herlihy; Belgium by Franz van der Ausweraer, Jan Arnould, Edmond de Lanoit, and Andre de Haan; Norway by Knut Pedersen, Reidar Olafsen, Olaf Lund and Ole Roisland, and Canada by Harold Stewart and Johnny Keller. Prince Georges YATTSVILLE, Md., February 9, —Consumers and Richards Colonials, who are tied for first place in the Prince Georges County Basket Ball League, each with 6 wins and 2 defeats, will clash tonight on the National Guard Armory floor | here at 7:30 o'clock. Company F, Na- | tional Guard, and Hyattsville Southern Methodists then will face in another league match. Company F, following a 20-19 defeat | yesterday at the hands of Griffith-Con- sumers, will be out to take the Metho- dists tonight in order to keep in the | pennant scramble. Battling was close all the way in the | Consumers’-Company F game, with the | former holding a slight advantage most of the ime. Sherman for the winners and Shanklin for the losers, each with 8 points, were leading scorers. Avenue Baptists, 40 to 8, in & prelimina, ary. Watts, Morris and Bassford headed For Lead in County Circuit Company F Reserves walloped Wilson | Quints Scrap COUNTY LEAGUE STANDI w. Griffith-Consumers [ Ri s Colonials, Company F..... Methodists . Mount Rainfer.. Hyattsville Southern Methodists will entertain Maryland Avenue Baptist basket ball team of Washington tomor- row n'ght on the Hyattsville High School floor. Company F has booked a game for Thursday night on the armory court with Second National Bank of Wash- ington. The contest will follow a Prince Georges County League game be- tween Hyattsville Southern Methodists and Mount Rainier Hyattsville High's basket ball team, which used a line-up in_its winning | game against St. Albans Friday espe- cially calculated to check Bob Freeman, scoring ace of the Cathedral School, and which did its job in good style, will present the combination it has been using in most games tomorrow against ‘Woodward in Washington. This is Mc- Chesney and Kidwell, forwards; Evans, center, and either Cogar or Byrd or | the winoers' assault, Headley, guards, r In this period of cold weather and cracked lips, above all insist on a cigar—free of the spit germ. specific produste e You csn Pud wm-xmnv ou care ¥0e tisements attacking spit-tipped cigars have my commendation.” The waragains decency.Join tspitis a crusade of Smoke Certified Cremo —a really wonderful smoke = mild = mellow = nut- sweet! Every clean, sunny Cremo factories leaf entering the scientifically treated by methods recommended by the United States Department of Agricultur: Certified €CImno ... THE GOOD 5¢ CIGAR THAT AMERICA NEEDED.

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