Evening Star Newspaper, March 22, 1931, Page 59

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MEETS GENERALS IN INITIAL BATTLE Will Stay at Lexington to Face V. M. . Tuesday. Has Veteran Line-up. G ball season tomorrow with a game at Washington and Lee. In addition to meeting the Generals, the Blue and Gray re: mains in Lexington over Tuesday to try conclusions with Virginia | Military Institute. The squad leaves here this afternoon, about 14 strong, accompanied by Coach Johnny Colrick. The squad as & whole is in good | shape physically, but of course, lacks practice in real base ball. ‘The weather has not been such as would allow the men, pitchers especially, to develop as they might had warmer weather been !ncounured Howevet, from repo-ts that have eome from Lexington, ‘Washington and Lee and Virginia Military Institute have not had as favorable conditions as have been prevalent here, and consequently BY H. C. BYRD. EORGETOWN pries the lid off the intetcollegiate base best of things and feels that he is get- ting somewhere with ‘h‘l}:. :qgmd H': does hesitate to sa e expect <y my and others in uuwucnmmmmwnkflk'- oa]m has just about decided on his Hine-up to_start against the W. and nine. For the most part the men hlla dotn |uahn: on M yeur's team, made and M bmmwm&n on the ment in which the team may find teelt against & tous tion is in %fl:flwm’ = yumnmel v-':ulnley mmmmoutmfiu t actually there are only d out suffi- from | Pecora, Pri: bination. Personally, I feel rather optimistic over the outlook.” ‘We. ther Geortewwn h | | urday spend Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Baturday getiing ready for its nm Bome game with Dartmouth on Sat- urday. IRGINIA Polytechnis Institute is in rather a difficult position as far as home bese ball games are con- cerned. ‘The oflt.belenetuumo!mvelforcol- lege nines and the trip to Blacksburg | ¢ as a side trip for one game costs more | money than -venn guarantee. Also | nmumonm m‘onepm-thnn qual& allowed, and result is P. L is having dlrnculty sched- uling home contests. It can get all the games it desires away from home. The home game proposition is the one thing that made V. P. L so strong to continue s league th Atlantic colleges. Southern Conference col- III'M ‘ond in South lclt'lllm,}c ucu‘:: share responsibility for see that v P 1 nu & reasonably IMMY DRXV‘R athletic director at Vi a, spent Thursday and part of y here on business in connec- tion with local Virginia alumni interests. Driver's attitude in connection with ath- letics is such that in all pmbnhmt some changes in Virginia schedules wi! stitutions, of course, but at the same time wants Virginia to fhy Princeton, Harvard, Columbia and such nchooh much more often than in In other words, And in pi In(lhb. Driver believes that » big- ger future in mmuu and in lu lnur- collegiate relationships generslly than would be )ulnned in uonnnhu its activ- | mu h this section.. And | unq:uummy Yight, and in | w mu right least dis- | m:lxmx other schools in the South At- | tic States. IN speaking of Vlr'inh it is not amiss to mention that every member of coaching staff there feels that the umvermy made & ten-strike in l! Butch Slaughter, formerly of Carolina Btate, as line coach 10! next season. They not only think he s & fine ch-p penanllly. but also & mighty in talking of his B conching nbmty, Gus Tebell, former h:ad coach at North Carolina State, the statement that he because he wan! type of line play in the country. Tebell lf played at Wisconsin, which :I:hl hhl le:‘kl “v.;aneemk:l‘m &e line deve! chigan com- T is doubtful if any other small ¢dl- | men puts out as good basket ball a8 Wi , located mmmd ot Chesteriown, and Lheeo‘chln(.nnw . The vod n-nfiu’l Bllcbb\lr[ institution is | This 20 YEARS AGO IN THE STAR. son Saturday against the American !ecumy & Trust Co. tossers. Coach an_announces that the mmm @. U, line-up will be picked ry and Feenan, ufichzn “or Gib- e Qulnhn. thitd base; Mcuushun of McCauley, left field; center fleld, and Hunt, The Hilltoppers’ out- fleld is regarded as unusually for- midable. According to plans, the District Base Ball League the coming season will have six teams. - The old Co- lumbia Athletic Club team may re- organize to enter the loop. Work is being rushed on the new stands being erected at American e Base Ball Park to replace those recently destroyed by fire. The new plant will be ready for Wash- ington’s opening game April 12, un- less plans go awry. R. P. Andrews, D. N. Waiford, Chesapeake & Potomac 'relephone Co., Havenner Baking A Moses & ®ons and N‘ew Wflllrd Hotel Co. have joined the Commer- cial Base Ball League, which hu rl;or!ulnlud for the igh. assoway, W. De Neane lnd Richard L. Conner have been a Schedule commlttae i PRINCETON FENCERS STAR IN NAVY BOUTS Qualify for College Finals in Three ‘Weapons—Midshipmen, Co- lumbia Do Well, ANNAPOLIS, Md, March 21— Fencers representing Prlncelon proved the most expert of some 50 bladesmen :?;:mm tfl" teams in the Southern vision of the Intes Association this llur:gg:z‘.:h::n:hg qlullnea in all three weapons in the semi-finals of the annual held at t.he Naval Audemymm.mem ressing them were the Ni fencers, go flr!mu:ntluv-.g New York to lznae in the folls and epee l:)‘::“hv.vhue 'Oolumbh and Pflncewn dl'ldull T e Navy, in both the folls and epee, and oy day "was' Steere of R ot e eludln¢ an%em:lyo !clu’mc m&m‘fi Princeton star in that weapon, who was defeated only twice Other commendable fencers w'el;:w wind of Penn, in the epee, flhhwmmmm..h et summary ':.‘1""1’“?_: i lum| WrcoN LR e fit%’ e efeated Penn. fon, dete e el 1‘-1?215332. B! s NINE AT MARYLAND u. TO START SATURDAY |Faces V. P. 1. at Blacksburg in First Game—Defense Good, but Attack Uncertain. University of Maryland's base ball team. which opens its season next Sat- .gunn Virginia Poly at Blacks- burg, Va., should be fully as strong de- fensively as last year, but it !s not cer- tain it will have as much power of- fensively. Robust clubbing was a big help in the 11 wins in 18 starts chalked up in 1930 by the Old Liners. Coach Burton Shipley has about de- termined upon the Maryland line-up that will m Virginia Poly. in practice sessons vhm m mum- has permitted, in- M 1 Derr, second base; Herbert Cra- mer, right field; Bozey Berger, third base; Shorty Chalmers, shortstop: Hy- mie Gorman, first base; Paul Cronin, left field; Bob Wilson, center fleld; Ralph Sterling, catcher. e pitchers are Jack Batson,. Arthur rn and Harry Hess. e other catcher and iven a chance to e right fleld post. | g Maxwell, fresh- Cramer, in- bsat out Cramer for f‘ t Gorman and nl‘f:lbl st ago, ad Wi h eligible a son, ' who was -uflefln’:‘m 'fio with & bad shoul- der,-uthcsp yers wers on the varsity squad in 1930. Six more games will be played by Maryland on f.he Southern trip aside from that with Virginia Poly, the other dates beln% V. M. 1. at Lexington; 81 Washington and Lee at Le; April 1 and 2, O!m at_Athens: North Carolina State at Raleig] North Carolina at ohnpel Hill, NAVY RIFLEMEN BEST Outscore West Virginia Team to End Season Unbeaten. ANNAPOLIS, Md, March 21.—Fin- ishing an undefeated season, the mvv rifle team defeated West Vi & meet here this afternoon. was 1,392 to 1,343, The high gunner of the meet was | McDougal, Navy, vnn 281 ENGLISH IEAT 8COTS. LONDON, March 31 (#)—England M!Bcodmdb{flmhwl\nln amateur inf jonal soccer match at Stamford Bridge today. nqu would never be able t0 hold a man of Kibler's caliber. HILE a good deal of talk has been xolu mund about the Buavtzeig wants 16 it 18 my of the kind Hopkins 8 a plonecring lnml-utlon. lnd some of its faculty sometimes, in looking tor I field in which to explore, step oft rapidly. However, such just fiwmu'l'vu. and, wi Dimitrijevie, Navy, and Gulbranson of |7 THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTO EATS FOR SPRINT RELAYS PENN PLAN “Qld-Time"” Scheme Will Not Be Followed in 440, 880 at Meet This Year. HILADELPHIA, March 21.~The sprint relays in the Pennsyle vania relay catnival, which will be held on Franklin Field, April 2¢ and 25, will be run in heats, fol- lowed by & final race this year. Heretofore, the 440 and 880 yard relays, two of the features of the meet, were run in heats with the teams making the fastest times being placed one, two, three. Many of the colleges felt that the time beais of deciding places was unsatisfactory. Many thought thelr teams could finish in & better position running in competition than against time, Chicago, Ohio State Win. Last year 14 teams ran against time in the 440-yard relay with Chicago winning in 422-10 seconds. In the 880-yard event 11 teams ren against time. Ohio State with George Simp- son running anchor, winning the event in 1 minute 264-5 seconds. Under the new plan the four teams making the fastest time will run agdinst each other in the final. It is expected that the winning time will be faster than it was under the old system. Manager H. James Swarts expects to hold the heats about 2 o'clock on Fri- day afternoon with the final about three hours later. This will give the teams that win theit wey to the final sufficlent time to rest. There is aleo a possibility that the 1-mile race will be run in heats with a final. This race run on Saturday £fternoon, has been a feature of the carnival since its inception in 1895. The number of entries has increased $0 much in the past few years that the | field has been crowded. Wealth of Mile Teams. It more than nine teams enter the mile this year the event will be run in heats early in the afternoon and a final just before the close of the pro- gram. This race should be one of the most interesting of the program this because of the wealth of mile teams that developed during the indoor nsylvania's team of quarter milers vhlch established a new world record Holy Cross, which finished second, and Harvard, which unfor- tunately lost two of iis best men in- doors, are three teams that should come clon‘h making a new record for the event % |U. OF M. FROSH SHOTS WIN Defeat Central High at College Park by 1,324 to 1,258, University of Maryland Freshmen vanquished Central High's team of this city by 71 points yester- day on the College Park range. The Old Line yearlings shot a total 1. L G. U. ASKS RE-ENTRY | of ‘,ru, 2 good score, MARYLAND FPRESHMEN (1, m) Application and Other Matters Left to Committee—Harlow Again President. STATE COLLEGE, Pa, March 21— The executive committee of the Inter- collegiate Boxing Association met this afternoon, elected officers and referred most matters of business brought be- fore it to a_committee which is_ap- polnwd by President Richard O. Har- lnclmd in these matters wm the 1 to limit competition mcmbm of the assoclation o lhru years, to choose between the Univer- sity of Pennsylvania and Syracuse as post_of next tournament and to comlder the applications of Temple and West Virginia for membership in the association. lorme'r member, also %:d for relnm hard C. H.lrlov, mueue director College, was re- resident o{ the association, snd Swartz of the University of Pennsylvania, Was named vice dent. Dr. PFrancis C. Grant, of Pennsylvania was re-elected secretary and treasurer. Other matters left to the unnamed mwmdennm °¥ o fr":”m‘ umed that in v|ew of its swll- on for reinstatement, that it again will uke up the PRINCETON GOES OUT OF SWIMMING BODY Votes to Give Up Water Polo and Must Have This Sport to Hold Membership. pastime. By the Associated Press. PRINCETON, N. J., March 21—By unanimous vote of the board of athletic control Princeton has decided to lfln- ?ort of watet polo and to wmzdnw its full membership in tln lnurcnneluu Swimming Associa- uires & water u-.mnwenul ing team o rhtun membership and league com- Thndecmvn'umnounudbym Charles W. Kennedy, chairman of the board. n came as .m result of under- graduat the game an lnvemp intc the harmful and health aspects of water polo made by the University Sanitary Committee. Princeton has won the TIntercollegiate Association water polo Swimm! ly | champlonship 10 tims 8. “The dlsadnnu!u conn-cted wmn uuumc mnn! he advanteges,” INTO BOXING BODY|icss BT L Will Addres NAVY COACH TO SPEAK NIVERSITY OF MARY- LAND'S Southern Confer- ence basket ball champione ship team will be honored ‘Wednesday night, when the players will be the guests of the Old Line Club of Washington, composed of Maryland alumni, at a banquet at the Univetsity Club. Edgar E. (Rip) Miller, former Notre Dame star, who now is_head coach of foot ball home the bacon™ and there will be other features. The banquet, which will be a turke{ fllnner will begin at 7:30 o'cloc] R. M. (Bunt) Watkins of the public nrefiln. department of l.he Univer~ ) vlll act as toastmas lld Adams, nmldmt of the Old Line Club; . Westwood White, Chauncey Brown, xmnmm Zalesak, Moon Hartshorn, A W. Valen- tine, Eddie nupgen Alden Hoag, A. C. Buell and Tke McDonald com- pgca the committee in charge of the All former students of any branch of the university who would like to attend may make arrangements by D Gy s Old Liners AT BANQUET WEDNESDAY. EDGAR E. (RIP) MILLER. gtnum in touch with Adams at 807 insylvania avenue, or with any other member of the committee, Georgetown Names April 22 As Varsity “G” Banquet Date INESDAY evening, April 22, has been set for the seventh annual varsity “G" aiffffer of the Georgetown University Athletic Association at the Mayflower Hotel, it has been an- nounced by H. Gabriel Murphy, Hoya graduate manager of athletics. The dinner, which will begin at 6:30 o'clock, will be in honor of the men| who have won the “G” during the current school year. Since it was started, seven years 280, the “G” dinner has become an lnlly unpu'hnt function. ln nu u attended by 200 Georgetown athietic authorities hlv! invited to the dinner athletes who have made their letter prior to 1021, in order that they might be awarded & “@” certificate. Some of the prominent men who have en at former “G” dinners are: J T. McGovern, of Carnegie Foundation; Knute K. Rockne, held foot ball coach at Notre Dame; 1 Ingram, ball wlth at the United States Naval | Academy, now in the same capacity at the University of California; Gen. Douglas MacArthur, chairman of Roper, head foot ball coach at Prince~ ton; Chick Meehan, head foot ball coach at New York University; Tad Jmu. foflmr foot ball coach at Yale; nnzx retired heavyweight chlmplon. Charles Bachman, m'u (;lg:l dl.wll coach at the University of . NAVY PLANS CHANGE IN ITS BOXING POLICY May Leave Intercollegiate Body and List Many Non-Members Next Year. ANNAPOLIS, Md., March 21.—A ¢on- siderable change of policy in regard to intercollegiate boxing will take place at the Naval Academy next season, ac- Comdr. Frederick G. Reinicke, m« manager of athletics. to that officer, the academy team nll of the membal OY the Inf Associa- tion, nul\u"bl:mduluhruhm whlch ‘will include nuen- with eol- 1t ver a considerable h & possibility that t.hl Naval Ac“emy will withdraw from the Inter- cnlleltlte Boxing Association, to which it has belonged llnu it was T AR Sy a in interest in boxi.n‘ lnt:nmm- heroleouquwhle engage in it and they wish memytonmnnud the teams representing 1 institutions which are not mem! the l.-och:hn. - Boxing is very general among colleges of the South and the schedule of the Naval Academy team for next season is ukely to include two Southern colleges, of which be the Unlverfity of Vlrl'lnh the cham- pion of the Southern Conference. The Naval Academy team &mbnhly will meet seven its dual matches and should withdraw from the u-ochtlon tha schedule might be MARYLAND CUBS LIST HIGH SCHOOL TEAMS | s "period D. C. Boys to Meet College Park Outfits in Base Ball, Track and Tennis Tussles. All flve Dllh'lcl hurylmd .hnun ‘Twenty-five conf for the teams, 10 in in tracl 3 teen of the contests will take plac at_College Park. Work already has been started by the Maryland cubs in base ball, la- crosse and track and complete squads soon will be at work. The tennis can- dlmm will start when weather con- e favorable. ‘The Maryland freshmen schedules: il 9] y ar’ Hall May 23—Navy plebes at Annapolis. Lacrosse. 21—Baltimore College. 255 ¢ Battimore oy my ¥ 20—8t. J&'h‘::o (Annapolis) . May lo—mv plebes at Annapolls. Track. Apl:lmll—vmh freshmen at Char- Apfll 18—Catholic University fresh- lny May 13—vay plebel at April 22—Episco) ktr.lllllnh"h 27—Cen! f u—w"-mgag n SAKS QUINTET AHEAD. lnakco walloped Montrose, 54 to last night at cmmmlumwmpmmm High. x May u—mumm at Kendall Green. Annapolis. All-High Tossers Will Be Honored N honor of players who were selected on newspaper lll-h](h teams after the recent public higl 8chool basket ball pluuhlp rl- Potomac Boat Club will enwr- taln at a dance Tuesday night the clubhouse, starting u 10 oeloek Friends of the players and mem- bers of the club are invited. Rich- Curtis Curtin V. P. I. WILL BROADEN FOOT BALL TRAINING Will Organize Cadet Battalion Teams for Intramural Play This Spring. BLACKSBURG, Va., March 21.—Vir- ginia Polytechnic Institute expects to Will | gouble the size of its foot ball squad next Fall as the result of intramural play, which is to start here Monday. In keeping with a program by which C. P. Miles, director of athletics, pians to boost the size of all :thwen&‘ fl. at V.P. 1, mflun!ul-mnnl foot ball coaches, are d. n“ this means Director Miles aims to teach foot ball to the student body and at the same time recruit from the ranks of the eorp- valuable new material for Vvhle. severat 1 le several score likely pi :;e‘ lesrnl iy : game under xmng of varsity sen! Coac! Clark will conduct & n’ ate school for | B SIX TILTS T TOMORROW Four Quarter-Final and a Pair of Second-Round Matches on Tap at Tech High. Four found tournams lt ‘Tech High School, fleld “thinned out considerably this small but select group of survivors are emud to provide plenty of keen lluon uum u usual, will be on the un lass. Mount Vcrnon and the elevu- M Stars, who, led by Billy Woodward and Paul Brown, have proven the ouuundln “dark huum; of the tourney, battle at 9 Mhmnhfirflntllmfldflll- M. E. tangle. rter-final and_ two second- d clase (quarter-fin l oeloex..nann Northy wern winner, (quarter-final round). Jevish Comimuotiy Oomter, 130-pound un! ' 130+ class (quarter-final round). 9 o'cleck, main court—Mount Ver- non vs. Red Stars, unlimited class (second round). 10 o'clock, main court—Mirst Bap- 5 r! M. B, unlimited cliss Varied Sports Polo. i Princeton, 8%. ‘Olub !mu Harvar? E ks Gymnastics, .6 58 Amy, 48; Colgate, 6. former head foot| Robey. the American Olympic Committee; BIll | praios MARCH 22, 1931—PART FIV ST. MARTIN'S WINS BIG BASKET GAME Defeats Griffith-Consumers .in Feature of A. A. U. Tournament. T. MARTIN'S conquered Griffith- Consumers, 27 to 25, in the game that produced the most thtills last night in the District A. A. U. basket ball championship tournament at Tech High School. The win Fut the Saints in the quarter-final in the unnmlud class. It was & real scrap all Yud changed n-equent in the nm h-ll at the end of which Bt Martin's was clinging to a 13-11 edge. The winners managed to stay in front throughout the second half. In anbother unlimited encounter Clovers downed Palace-D. G. 8, 38 to 22. The victors held the upper hand all_the way. St. John’s had an easy time downing 0 etown A. C,, 39 to 21, lnlhl l”- group, to ‘achieve the semi-finals, uoum Rainler took Whitestones of Alexandria, 21 to 15, in the 115-pound group to reach the semi-finais. Boys' Club Optimists was the team to gain the final. The swamping Peck Memorial, 5! Alexandria Buddies downed George- town A. C. sextet, 27 to 19, in & second= round game in the girls’ junior class. Line-ups: UNLIMITED CLASS. St. Martin's_ @71 igusterfer, { 2 npey, ; al .-g-»-.um.‘ 3l e Palace-D. iy @l omcumosAT al noooomwmm; s e ween nlsht, 29 b freshmen who | Uhlans FOR A.A.U. BASKETERS gz REACH CATHOLIC FINAL Jasper and De La Salle Play To- night for lnkut Ball Title. OHICAGO, I, Match 21 (#).—The National Catholic Basket Ball Cham- plcnnup will be tossed up for mb- ht bezvoen Jasper emy of lndlfun nfi. o Minneapolis. !urvivorl of four battles each, they will meét in the final of the eigh th renewal of the tournament at Loyola University. lt wfll be the second time in histo no team was lnvolnd n un cham| game. 1a lk which ble through its first two games, but ved to win lh next two in mfly " M pofullr team in the wurnlment. ouuo Cathedral High of Indianapolis, iy to 25, to reach tho final for the second consecutive year. asssamin UHLANS; LIGHTNINGS WIN Two snappy basket ball games were played yester in um Colorod Oan- munity Center Ball League, the defeating Shaw Night School, 19 to 18, and the htning Five down- ing the Arrows, 27 16, in the Gar- net-Patterson gymnasium. Hockey Scores National League. m Bruins, 3; Montreal Ma- Ph.lMelphh. 4; Canadians, 4. (Over- time tle.) gull.l'-g.l 2; B\lflll?&l 3 ew Haven m , 1; Philadelphia Arrows, 1. (! tle. Indians, 5; Providence International League. alo, 1. HAWKINS MOTORS Conveniently Located on Fourteenth Street Good Used Cars A-n-nmo»um For Prowess MEDAL TO BE AWARDED BY D. C. A A U to |8 1529 f4th St. NW. Dec. 3320 Trophy adopted by association will be conferred on point scorers in its cham- plonship meet for amateur athletes. V. M. 1. NINE TO OPEN ITS SEASON TUESDAY | £ Faces G. U. in First of 19-Game Schedule—Seven Veterans Form Team Nucleus. KOJAC 1S BIG STAR AS TANK MARKS G0 Breaks One of Two Records and Is Double Winner in Collegiate Meet. By the Assoclated Press. EW YORK, March 21.—Two N~ tional intercollegiate records were broken and four new champions were crowned in the finals of the twenty-ffth annual indi- vidual championships of the Intercol- legiate Swimming Association here to- night before a capacity crowd. George Kojac of Rutgers, Olympie star, won the honors of the meet by clipping two-fifths of a second from Eojac, the onl - petior vo"tiles, v the century ln 0:52 2-5, ormet ma Ray formet mark of 0:52 4-5. He tralled were Ray Tnflmptm 50-yard free stile, in the fency dlve. of ceton m 100-1- and Benson Wi of 440-yard free st yxn son was the oniy aouble ing third on the 100 .:‘L‘& euhtn!mmnnlh.m crown for the first time years. ALLEGANY QUINT WINS - Benk | Takes Maryland State Title for Hanover. Oonoh Bill Metty has a nhucleus of seven letter men left from last year's T i ss‘;s%zargg §§§§Ea- ;;E eI 385 2l g EE g» § 5 g ‘Waite probebly will be joined in the outfield by two members of last ‘s freshman team—Bill Bozel and Outten. Bogel was one of the heavy hitters of the year] team last season. Charlie Roller and Flash Taylor, re- in thei PUt probebly wii’ it mmore Hgnrige PO SRS CAPITAL “Y” FIVE BEATEN | Deteated by Baltimore Triangles in Interstate Tourney. BALTIMORE, Md., March 21— The Capital dribblers were put out of the running, 48 to 20, by the WBIXH- more Triangles. Line-ups: Baltimore (48). last year, also are stas - - TRAE D Second Year in Row. Md., )nnn n-— 8100l CUMBER! Mk?m{uket Bell ommm h-‘ o) tonight {or the second defea Ofldl , \ g-hem Bhore, EMC WW tors, The, visttors wi clissed, making only m’ WILL COACH AT CATAWBA. SALISBURY, N. C., Mar¢h 81 Catawba College .‘lth officials mawnoed ‘Warner, & gradu- Oul.lm will three . hmd ol the ea.l education e will also assist uum.wtmnnm ' BOONE HIGH IS VICTOR. DES MOINES, Iowa, March 21 1.“'3 basket ball championship here Galesburg, 3% iéa'st the vait MICHIGAN TRACK umx ARBOR, Mich, March 31 :‘o"‘:;-:uv. e Sovmtietn w&f Prest-O-Lite Batteries L. S. Jullien Inc Nt NOLAN MOTOR CO. Sales Servies 1111 Elghteenth St N.W. Decatur 0216 We can’t make Spring Weather to Order but We can make you a Spring Suit ........ robe in Spring and the well dressed NATURE changes her entire ward- man will do likewise, for no mat- ter how fine a suit you have been wearing in the Winter, it looks hot and heavy for Spring wear. Let us tailor you one from our large assortment of fine, Spring woolens—one that will be fitted perfectly and become you as only a well tailored suit can. Priced from $33.50. Jos. A.Wilner & Co. Tailors Since 1897

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