Evening Star Newspaper, December 17, 1934, Page 16

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16 NEW RULE SOUGHT TO OPEN OFFENSE Committee Held Unlikely {0 Make Change, Despite College Origin. BY FRANCIS J. POWERS. OS ANGELES, December 17.— Foot ball coaches of the Pacific Coast Conference are on record as favoring changes in the rules to permit forward passing from any point behind the line of scrim- mage, as a further move toward open- ing up the offense and increasing scoring. The coast representative on the Rules Committee will advocate such a change at the annual meeting, and it is likely that the Western Confer- ence also will favor the motion, but it is very unlikely the idea will be adopted. Unrestricted forward passing now has been used by the professionals for two seasons, and there is the rub. The august collegiate rule makers.do not want to be placed in the position of following the professionals’ lead and are cold to what appears to be & very excellent idea. Really College Idea. OWEVER, the thought was not H original with the professionals. The writer first heard the idea of unrestricted forward passing pro- posed by Dick Hanley of Northwest- ern and Dr. Clarence Spears of Wis- consin. It had its original trial in the East-West all-star game in Chi- SPORTS. S SPORTS PARADE T IS what you might e that stirred up such a Hub-bub THE EVENING STAR, WA_§HINGTON, D. C., MONDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1934 The_Height of Form and Fashion By Grantland 30 Years Ago ly call a far cry from this golf scene of 30 years ago to the golfing shorts of 1934 last Summer. If you made a careful study of the hats, dresses and shoes worn on a fashionable course in 1900 you might find a real excuse for the lady who is making a desperate effort to pivot and swing a golf club. There is at least no argument here about getting the left heel off the ground. The main point is—how is she g (Copyright. 1934.) oing to keep her hat on in the follow through? CARREAUD ENTRY IS VIGTOR IN MUD the. SPORTS. Little Pig. Novice and American bred bitches, first, R. M. Terhune’s Southern Belle, From Cincinnati comes word of the formation of a new collie club in that Foot Ball Coaches on Pacific Coast in Favor of Unrestricted Forward Pass BARKS FROM DOGDOM TSTAK[S BOOSTED BY R. R. TAYNTON. 'HILE it may be true that in | Puppy bitches, first, C. I. Creager’s g & young man’s fancy lightly turns to thoughts of love, there is no doubt at all about the truth of the TOBETTERRAGHG Time Supply Prpves Best of Seven Racing in $25,000 Bay Meadows. By the Ajsoclated Press. AN MATEO, Calif., December 17.—First money in the $25,000 Bay Meadows added handicap today belongs to the owner of Time Supply, Mrs. Frank A. Carreaud of El Paso, Tex. The 3-year-old colt outmudded =a field of seven to win the mile and one-eighth race here yesterday in the time of 1 minute 53% seconds. Jockey ‘Tom Luther was the winning rider. Dark Winter finished second, a length behind Time Supply; Fleam third, Top Row fourth, Riskulus fifth, Onrush, sixth and Faireno seventh. Five entries were scratched. Time Supply, carrying 123 pounds, next to top weight, was sixth in the field of seven at the quarter on the heavy track, and at the half had moved up only one place. At the three-quarters the spirited colt start- ed to move forward on the outside of the flield and soon was pulling up on Dark Winter. belief that in December almost every- bodys’ thoughts turn to the possibili- ties of & purp for a Christmas present. If you don't believe it, ask the breeder whose best brood matrons missed at their last season and whose most promising litter of puppies was carried off by distemper at weaning age. ‘There is ample justification for the almost universal desire to give a puppy at Christmas. At this season of the year, when the watchword is love, what more appropriate gift than a bundle cf love incarnate? And in what other form can love be bought? Who is there so mean that he can- not be flattered by the devotion in a dog’s eyes? And who is there so base that he cannot rouse such devotion in some dog? Even Bill Sykes had his canine devotee. *E ok ® dealer. buying is to investigate the seller be- fore looking at the dog. No reputable breeder will sell a sickly pup. The honest breeder will tell you of the faults as well as the virtues of his | pupples and will make due allowance in price if one overbalances the other. Don't expect to get the likeliest show prospect in the kennel for the price It costs real money to city, with a cordial invitation to collie- ites in this vicinity to join. Ruffcote Kennels points with pride to its new Dandie Dinmont champion, All Spice o’ the Ark, crowned at the Atlantic City show, where she took not only best of winners but also best of Dr. Mason Weadon, long assoclated with Dr. Buckingham'’s dog and cat hospital, has opened a veterinary hos- pital of his own at 2119 Eighteenth street northwest, where he will special- ize in canine practice. HE Jonedith Kennels have again introduced a new breed to Wash- ington. This time it is standard HE novice deg purchaser again must be warned against buying s dog from a fly-by-night ‘The cardinal principle in dog poodles. They have two exceedingly well-bred black bitches that they plan on showing at the big show of the year, Westminster, and later in Wash- ington. Although they have bred many other varieties of dog, they have completely succumbed to the charm Kentucky Derby Is Among Events Made Richer to Draw Turf’s Finest. By the Assoclated Press. EW YORK, December 17— Keen competition for the pa- tronage of the increasing rac- ing public has borne fruit in announcement of larger stakes for the 1935 racing season. Officials of New York tracks, per- haps perturbed by losses of customers Iw new courses in New England, have | increased the endowments of several important handicaps. Advices from Louisville are to the | effect the Kentucky Derby will have | 840,000 added next year, an increase | of $10,000 over the 1934 figure. !, The amazing popularity of racing in and intelligence of the large size They also report the pur- chase of a new red, dachshund stud and the arrival of a litter sired by Champion Wuzza Dazzel—such a The region around New York, in- cluding Long Island and New Jersey, has dong been known as the dog mart | |of a mutt. | raise pedigreed dogs. % A% The fleld swung into the stretch with Time Supply a half length]| ahead. The El Paso colt widened the | gap to a full length at the finish. | Top Row, the 2-to-1 favorite, found | the muddy track and blanket of mist at Bay Meadows too much of a handicap. |and gallery, another HE Collie Club of Maryland held an A. K. C. Sanction Show for collies only at the Hotel Alta- mount in Baltimore on December 7. It reported a gratifyingly large entry pointer that PR TR of the United States. But it begins to look as if this neighborhood may be seeking to rival it. Beech Tree Farm in the last month has shipped puppies to California, Ohio, Ilinois and Florida. Other kennels report almost as wide a distribution. | sectors where betting has recently | been legalized, notably New England, | Michigan and Florida, is offset some- | what by the decline of interest in places where racing long has been a | fixture, and the older tracks appear determined to do something about it. By attracting the better horses, they | argue, the gate receipts will increase. Detroit, although accused of trying | to kill the goose that laid the golden egg, offered a race meeting of 120 days’ duration this year and got away with it. Florida has seen lively interest in the sport of kings. The Florida Derby stake has been boosted from $10,000 | added to $15,000. | California, as a racing center, has Time Supply's share of the added | marks the renewed rise in popularity RISH’ BACKFIELD cago in 1932 and soon thereafter was adopted by the professionals. So credit for the innovation really be- longs to college coaches. CHASE LEADS 'GATORS. Lnot yet had a true test Illinois racing lost some ground dur- GAINESVILLE, Ga., December 17 |ing 1934, Texas meetings have made a (#)—Billy Chase of Lakeland, pass- purse was $21,100. He paid $12.80, | $6.80 and $3.60 in the pari-mutuels. Dark Winter paid $5 and $3, and| Fleam $3. of the collje. PFrank Downing placed the dogs as by W.R.MSECALLUM follows: Puppy dogs, first, C. I fair showing, and Louisiana tracks Bill Spaulding, the U. coach, believes the rules should also be made to provide for an additional time out in each half. Spaulding fa- vors that amendment on the ground that it will prevent further the chances of injuries to players, without | slowing the game up to any great extent. Coach Lauds Tackles. INY THORNHILL, the Stanford | I coach, is proud of the all- America honors won by Bobby Grayson, his fullback, and Bob Rey- nolds the tackle. However, Thornhill declares there is so little difference in the abilities of Reynolds and Callo- way, the other Stanford tackle, that he would have difficulty in rating one ahead of the other. Calloway is less spectacular than Reynolds, but a big, powerful fellow, who always did his work to a coach's gatisfaction. And Stanford men also regard Bob Hamilton, the halfback, just as valuable as Bob Grayson. So you can imagine the skill of the Stan- ford eleven with those gents around. IN CHESS CIRCLES BY FRANK Time was when the tournament for the championship of the Capital City Chess Club, now under way, included the best players in the city, but inter- est has slackened and now not more than four or five players take part each year. Last year the title was won by D. H. Mugridge. Martin C. Stark was his principal contender and is the first to sign up this year. Others who have entered are John Alden, jr., a young progressive player, and F. B. Walker, one of the veterans, who has not played in tournaments for three years. (WO international chess tourna- | ments will start this month. First will be the event at Mexico City, in which four from this country, FPine, Dake, Denkur and Herman Steiner, will take part. as well as Carlos Torres, of Mexican birth, but who owes his chess development to his residence in New Orleans and New York. He won the New York State championship as well as the | Western Chess Association title; then suffered a health break-down from which he has recovered. There will be 14 engaged in this congress, which is expected to start on December 15. The annual Christmas Chess Con- gress at Hastings, England, will fol- Jow from December 27 to January 5 This will be made noteworthy by the presence of Capablanca, former world champion, of Havana. Dr. Max Euwe of Holland, the next competitor of Dr. Alekhine for titular honors, will be there, as well as Salo Flohr of Prague, who finished last year in first place ahead of Dr. Alekhine, and Miss Vera Menchik, woman champion of the world, who makes the best players sit up and take notice. A. Lilienthal, the Hungarian, winner of first prize, and M. Botwinnik, Rus- sian champion, also have been in- vited. The best British players will take part. During the hdlidays the colleges will be playing. First will come the annual Harvard-Yale-Princeton-Dart- mouth Chess League tournament, which was won last year by Harvard. The Intercollegiate Chess League will come next. Last year Columbia and City College of New York tied in the regular tournament for first place, and tried twice thereafter to play off the tie, but without success. The tournaments are held at the rooms of the Marshall Chess Club, New York City. In the latter part of next January an international tournament will start at Moscow, in which Capa- blanca and Lasker, both former world champions, will compete. It is not likely, however, that the Russian champion, Botwinnik, will participate. Lillenthal and Flohr are expected to take part. HE “November number of the | American Chess Bulletin con- i tains the correspondence be- tween H. M. Phillips, chairman of the Marshall-Kashdan United States Championship Match Committee, and Charles E. Kelley, president of the Marshall Chess Club, who writes in behalf of Marshall, and states that 8 meeting of the match committee has been called for the purpose of considering the situation and drawing up a report for submission to the headquarters of the National Chess Federation at Chicago. It seems that the committee was unable to raise the necessary finances. John Keeble of Norwich, England, one of the contributors to the Mar- shall-Kashdan fund, writes that the total expenses of the annual tourna- ment for the British championship do not exceed $250, and everybody is satisfied. According to the Boston Evening Transcript, in a school called r- tunity School, conducted under a Fed- eral branch called F. E. R. A in Boston, chess will be one of the educational features taught to grown- C & Al Deal play golf in friendly | comradeship with men of the | Republican politicfl persuasion, they have a group of golf sticks unique in any Club in America. Hung on the walls of that great liv- | ing room where foregather some of the Nation’s leading political figures as the Sunday morning hreakfast foursomes get under way are the favorite drivers of the three golfing Presidents of the United States. The driver of President Taft, fairly short of shaft, whippy and archaic in con- | struction, hangs alongside the favo- rite wooden clubs of Presidents Wil- son and Harding. The Harding driver is the most modern of the three, a fine-looking club with an ivory inset in the face. | The Wilson driver is like any ordinary wooden club of the pre-steel shaft | era, a sweet-looking club which the UT at the Burning Tree Club, | O where Democrats of the New | B. WALKER, | ups by George Hyde, an old-time Boston player. The newspaper says | that in various parts of Europe chess is now a feature of school study. | particularly in Russia. Recently 6,000 chess enthusiasts gathered in a the- | ater in Russia to see a chess match. | HE American Chess Bulletin for November announces the death of Wilbur L. Moorman of Lynch- | burg, Va. Shortly previous he had taken part in the championship tour- nament of Virginia, in which he tied for third place, with a score of 5!2- 215, one point behind the title winner, John N. Buck, also of Lynchburg. Lieut. John D. Matheson of Fort Humphrey, Va., well known here, was third, with a score of 6-2. Moorman formerly was a member of the old Washington Chess Club and also of the Capital City Chess Club, and Washington players were frequent guests at his home. He played in | some of the local tournaments and in team matches with outside clubs. He | was a very dependable player, strong in combinations. Solution to Bill Beers' “Miss Minne- sota” three-move problem, published in The Star December 3, 1934: 1 B— KB, P—Q3; 2 R—K2, KxR; 3 R— Q2 mate. Position in an end game from the San Sebastian tournament of 1912, in which Spielmann resigned to Tar- rasch three moves later: White—K on KR2, Q on KR5, R on K, B on KB2 and QKt, P on KR3, KKt3, KB4, Q4 and QB2; 10 pieces. Black—K on KR2, Q on QKt4, R on QKt3, B on K5 and QR6, P on KR3, KKt2, KB4, Q4, QB6; 10 pieces. Black to play and win. 'HESS brilliancies from the Novem- ber Chess Record: A Bogoljubow win from Ger- 1934. Ruy Loper. ueller, White. Black. Black. Bogoljubow. Mueller. P-Ki 10 P-Qt Q-Kt5 11 KtxP Castles QR R 12 les RxP many, Bogoljubow, M Whit as if QxQ & Kt-K7ch regains queen. Master tourney in Iceland, 1934. Queen Gambit Declined. é“l:"tzss'n. Th‘vl‘Bdlsl'{(l. sll“dlu'n. Th'w'ds.s;;l. hite ack: e. 0 Kt-KKt5 P-KR3? 3 B 3 1) Kibp! | Kxkt 12 13 14 15 Kt-Béch and mates in three moves. ILLINOIS LISTS TROJANS CHAMPAIGN, IIl,, December 17 (#). —An eight-game schedule, featured by the first of two contests with South- ern California, has been announced for the 1935 Illinois foot ball team. Ohio University, coached by Don Peden, former Illinois halfback, will replace Bradley as the first game of the season. Iowa also replaces Wis- consin as a Big Ten Conference foe. The schedule: September 28 —Ohio University, here. October 5—Washington U. (St. Louis), here; 12, Southern California, at Los Angeles; 19, open; 26, Iowa, here. November 2—At Northwestern; 9, Michigan, here; Ohio State, there; 23, Chicago, here. BxPch! KxB Q-Ktich Kt-Q4 KtxKt K-B2 BADGERS BAR TOSSER. MADISON, Wis., December 17 (#).— Robert Knake, ace Wisconsin basket war-time President used to swing with good results in his frequent rounds of golf with Admiral Grayson at the Washington Golf and Country Club Up at Congressional, only two or three miles from Burning Tree, in & | glass case in the grill room repose the driver and brassie of the greatest golfer of them all—Bobby Jones. These two clubs, made by Tony Syl- vester for Jones back in 1925, were | the same implements with which' the emperor of the game set a world rec- ord for a low medal score in the quali- fying round of the British open cham- pionship at Sunningdale in 1926. They are funny-looking affairs, in the light of the sleek, steel-shafted implements now in use, but the Jones boy could wield 'em well enough to win. EFT-HANDED tournaments are running in hard luck around » _ Washingfon these days. First, the Namandji Ninj tourney at Indian Spring was called off because of lack of interest and then the southpaw tourney at Rock Creek Park was post- poned because of snow. And now Earl Jamison and L. D. Byers, who sponsored the Rock Creek affair, have become tired of cold weather and are going %@ throw over the whole thing and take their golf clubs to Florida. Both of 'em will | leave this week for the South. Jami- son was runner-up in the “national” | southpaw championship at Miami last Winter. ACK from the Southern golf wars with a modest slice of money in his jeans won by his prowess | with driver and mashie, Al Houghton does not plan to play in any more golf affairs until the “masters’” tour- nament is staged at Augusta late in | March. Disappointed over his final round of 81 in the Miami-Biltmore affair last week, Houghton decided to pass up the $5,000 Nassau tourney and hopped in his buzz-buggy right after the Biltmore extravaganza to come home. “I had a bad putting streak in that final round,” he said, “and I couldn't get the shots to clicl BY ROBERT R. PHILLIPS, JR. HERE was one very fine touch of worm-turning at the Riding and Hunt Club show last week, a bit which sent a certain young man home giddily happy and his friends away rejoicing with him. We refer to the sudden twist of that whimsical snake, fortune, which at last brought Carlton Eacho’s good 3- year-old Drill into the ranks of trophy winners, and topped it off by splash- ing the show championship right into the bridle of this handsome brown son of Dress Parade-Frock. Driil has been rapping at the door around local exhibitions for some months, meeting with indifferent but obviously promising success. From the : | first fall of the judges’ pencils at the club, however, it was easy ta see the big colt was about to blossom that night. Drill won the opener, a lead in class for 3-year-olds and under. That victory, incidentally, put the initial trophy in the tack room at M. Eacho's establishment. In the next hunter test, the colt was placed second behind Miss Doris Hughes' Catalan Blue. Then in the green hunters, he kicked over the order and finished first after a beau- tiful performance. By this time Mr. Eacho was smiling double strength smiles, in honor of two trophies. So were a lot of other people, who had been investigating what it is that fills horse show cups. Presto—the grand climax, championship, game, set and match. We once made some rather wicked cracks about Drill and championships. It is now a pleasure to eat those remarks in a sod sand- wich, and wish Mr. Eacho great good luck with his horse in the future. ND whilst on the subject of good horses, nothing could have been more impressive than the stunts of that altitudinous’ old trouper, Emery Galliher’s Apple Jack, which skipped off with both the open jumping events, one of them con- tested over a course that would try the nerve of an impalia. We noted that Gardner Holman, a professional, the winners of more than half a dozen ribbons during the evening. It was also observed that the owners of virtually every one of these horses Fknow perfectly darned well how to ball center and veteran of two cam- paigns, has been ruled ineligible for further competition. Knake competed for a semester at St. Thomas College, 8t. Paul. ride, themselves, but remained on the ground. The services of so expert 3 horseman as Holman naturally must be invaluable in training snd school- ing horses. No reason why an owner rode this one, Drill and, altogether, |F. STILL A SPARKLER |Critic Is Impressed With Quartet’s Performance Against Trojans. OS ANGELES, Calif, Decem- ber 17.~They are not the Four Horsemen in speed and |4 style, nor do they possess the | all-arouna adility of Knute Rockne’s last great backfield of Carideo, Schwartz, Brill and Savoldi. But against Southern California, the combination of Promhart, Shakes- peare, Mike Layden and Elser was one of the sweetest backfields this | writer saw through the 1934 season. In the final game of the campaign Elmer Layden found the backfield for which he had been searching all | Fall and the one he can start with- out any worries in 1935. Fromhart a Nifty General ALLACE FROMHART, the sophomore from Moundsville, | W. Va., gave Notre Dame the best quarterbacking I have seen the team receive since Carideo left the “Irish” campus. The boy handled his team cleverly throughout the times when a captious critic might have found fault with his judgment, and he blocked after the fashion de- manded at Notre Dame. Further he showed ability to drive the ball over the bars for the extra point. From- hart arrived late in the season, but in another year he should be one of the best in the game. Long-legged Francis (Mike) Lay- den, brother of the coach, was the individual star of the game. One of the irregulars throughout the season, Mike received his big chance because George Melinkovich and Dan Hanley, the veteran right halfbacks, were in- jured. The younger Layden not only proved himself a fast, dangerous run- ner, but also a powerful driver and a good defensive man. it S - with heavy responsibilities elsewhere should not also engage him to handle green horses in the ring. That is a more or less uncertain proposition. But on their own tried and true hunt- ers and jumpers, they have no rea- sonable excuse for remaining out of the saddle, putting a professional touch on one show which should, for the love of Pete, be run for fun. zh:m matter, boys, afraid you won't n? Hunt Dates This Week. IDING AND HUNT CLUB, tomor- row, 2 p.m., Mr. Plummer’s Cor- ner; Saturday, 2 p.m., Mr. Rid- dick's Gate. Dr. Fred Sanderson and Maj. Wilfrid M. Blunt, joint M. F. H. Redland Hunt, Saturday, 1 p.m., Brooke Johns, Thomas T. Mott, Cobbler Hunt, Wednesday, 10:30 am., Vernon Mills; Saturday, 10:30 am., Mr. Logan Gibson's. Lieut. Col. and Mrs. George S. Patton, jr, joint game, although there were a few ' Dark Winter's share of the money was $4,000, Fleam’s $2,000 and Top Row's $1.000. Time Supply will be taken to South- ern California tomorrow, the owner announced, to enter stake events at Santa Anita, including the $100,000 Santa Anita Handicap. SOCCER LEAGUE LED BY VIRGINIA AVENUE Team Scores Over Takoma to Get Recreation Honors—Millers, Italians in Tie. IRGINIA AVENUE soccers today are heading the battle for the second-half flag in the Recre- ation League, having won yesterday their second game in as many starts, over Takoma by 5§-0. Miller Furniture fought Italian A. C. to a 3-3 tie in the feature game, and the Millers now are second, only one point behind Virginia Avenue. In other league encounters Sun Radio scored over the Occoquan eleven, 6-0, and New York Avenue and Georgeto battled to & 1-1 tle. Team s 3 Virginia_ Avenue Radio. New York Avenue Italian A. C... Georgetown 2 Takoma Boys' ‘Club. Sherwood Occoquan . British Uniteds won an exhibition game over the Sherwood eleven, 7-1. Stonewall Democratic Club booters of Baltimore defeated the German- American eleven, 6-1, in & Southeast- ern League game on Benning Field. ARBITERS MAY TAKE BOXERS’ SPOTLIGHT Baer, Dempsey and Sharkey Will Share Third-Man Duties in Boston Show. P ) > By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, December 17.—The approach of the Christmas holi- days all but knocks out the box- ing program this week, with the Bos- ton Garden offering the only major show of the next six days. Although such top-flight performers as Sammy Fuller, Boston lightweight, and Maxey Rosenbloom, New York's recently deposed light-heavyweight champion, appear on the Boston G: den’s Friday night program, an all- star cast of officials may take the play away from the boys who actually are in there swinging. Max Baer, current heavyweight champion, and Jack Dempsey and Jack Sharkey, both for- mer holders of that title, will share referee duty. Fuller, gunning for a chance at| Barney Ross’ lightweight champion- ship, meets Bobby Pacho of Cleve- land in one 10-rounder on the card, Wwhile Rosenbloom tackles Tony Shucco of Boston in another. Shucco dropped & 10-round decision to John Henry Lewis, Phoenix, Ariz., colored boxer, at the New York Garden last week. Buddy Baer, mammoth younger brother of the world champion, meets Henry Surette of Leominster, Mass., in ‘Warrenton Hunt, tomorrow, 11 a.m., Waterloo; Wednesday, 11 am, Ry- land's Corner; Saturday, 11 am, Alrlie. Amory 8. Carhart, M. F. H. Middleburg Hunt, tomorrow, 10 a.m., Dover; Thursday, 10 a.m., Corner Hall; Saturday, 10 a.m., Chilton. Miss Char- lotte Noland and Daniel C. Sands, joint M. F. H. Blue Ridge Hounds, ‘tomorrow, 10 am, Farnley; Wednesday, 10 am, Chilly Hollow; Saturday, 10 a.m., Red Gate. William Bell Watkins, M. F. H. Loudoun Hunt, tomorrow, 10 am., Lucketta; Saturday, 10 a.m. Lower Rockland. William H. Lipscomb, M. F. H. 0Old Dominion Hounds, tomorrow, 11 am. Prospect Hill; Wednesday, 11 am., Jerry’s Corners; Friday, 11 am., Tucker Cooksie’s Gate. Sterling Lar- rabee and William Doeller, joint M. F. H. Casanova Hunt, meets twice a week on days fixed by the M. F. H, John C. Williams. For information call ‘Warrenton 159 or 73-F-4. Fairfax Hunt, tomorrow, 9 am., the Kennels; Saturday, 10 a.m., Mr. Wheel- er's Mill (Brown’s Chapel). John Fin- erty -and Delong Bowman, joint M. . H. STICKS TO METRIC PLAN. NEW YORK, December 17 (#).— The Athletic Committee of the Knights of Columbus has decided to continue the use of metric measure- ments in the annual Casey track meet in Brooklyn. The meet will be held January 5. 8 six-rounder on the same card. —_ SUGAR BOWL ATTRACTS Foot Ball Fans Eager to Watch Simms-Smukler Duel. NEW ORLEANS, December 17 (#).— A large advance ticket sale for the Tu- lane-Temple foot ball clash here New Year day bespoke the fans' expecta- tions that Little Monk Simons and Dynamite Dave Smukler would stir things up considerably when they ex- change introductions in the inaugural of ';.':e Bunrm Bowl classic. e of tickets has passed $25,000 mark. s TRY THE . Miracle Ride New 1835 STUDEBAKER Champions ALBER & McNEIL Incorporated 1418 P ST. N.W. » Open Evenings. DE. 147 |J. P. Herbert's Flormay's cher's Thane's Sunny Boy Rol | Santa Claus? With woolen prices st in the same direction, of new Fall suits and coats! Creager’s Scrapper. Novice dogs, first, Altonia. | American bred dogs, first, M. Mel- | ing star of the Florida 'Gators, has | been elected captain of the 1935 eleven. Alton Brown of Palatka, cen- f. | ter, is alternate. Suits and Over Held Over for Xmas! Who said there isn’t any ill on the up grade, with linings, materials and labor looking Won- der still carries on this un- expected sale of thousands over- expect a profitable season. Maryland racing profits, track man- agers contend, have been seriously re- duced by State taxation. ONDE CLOTHES Unexpected dale of coats 90 We still have a complete as- sortment to show you, more suits and overcoats at a sin- gle price than any other store in town, and if you're a 34, or even a 52, we'll fit you with ease and variety. Come in! 1012 F St. N NO CHARGE for ALTERATIONS! W. 100% All-Wool All Super-tailored Suits and Overcoats Reduced to $19.90 All Tuxedos with Vest, Reduced to $19.90, also WONDER CLOTHES * 611 7th St. N.W.

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