Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
The WASHINGTON, D. C, Foening Star FRIDAY, WITH SUNDAY MORNING EDITION MARCH 22, 1935. Classified Ads D—1 Griffmen’s Spirit-Is Joy to Harris : White Sox Promise to Worry Leaders & ALL-ROUND PUNCH FLATTENS INDIANS A Bat, Field, Pitch in Regular| Season Style to Score 7-t0-6 Victory. BY JOHN B. KELLER, 8taff Correspondent of The Star. ILOXI, Miss, March 22— Bucky Harris is proud of his Washington ball club and wants the world to know it. The earnest way his players are striving to condition themselves, the splendid spirit they carry into com- petition has the manager enthusiastic about his charges. And their fine fight against the first big league oppo- sition of the season convinced him the Nationals will be a serious lot whenever there is base ball to be played. | “They never let any one doubt from the start that they were in there to win,” Harris pointed out after the Nationals edged out the Indians of Cleveland, 7 to 6, yesterday in the initial bigtime contest of the training campalgn for each club. “They went at the Indians as though it was a champlonship season ball game in- stead of a training tiit. I'm confident they’ll pack all that fight into the pennant race. And that will mean all other clubs must reckon with ‘Washington once the race is on.” Griffs Show Lots of Stuff, ’ T WAS a corking good ball club thate I licked the Indians in the opener of the two-game series on Biloxi field. It was a ball club that showed punch and finesse in attack, strength | in defense, a lot of high-grade pitch- | ing and a general will to battle more desperately whenever the opposition | menaged to reach a higher battling | pitch. As the two outfits showed on the | field yesterday, there was no ques- | tion as to the better. Despite the | close score, the Nationals had it over the Indians like the Capitol in Wash- | ington over a red man’s tepee. | The Nationals did their batting against Oral Hildebrand, Monte Pear- | son and Willis Hudlin, right-handers expected to be pitching mainstays for the Indians this year. They col- lected nine hits off this trio and | scored at the expense of each of the pitchers. Heavy hitting marked the Wash- ington attack. The tallying was | started when Jack Stone poled a| powerful homer to the far reaches of left center in the first inning. It was carried on by Joe Kuhel's line | drive to center in the fourth frame. | Newcomers to the Washington club added more scores in the eighth. In | this round Jack Powell, product | of the Capital's sandlots, and gradu- | ate from the Albany club, got a double and so did Lyn Lary, picked up! from the Red Sox. Powell Gets Big Hit. HE most important wallop of the battle came in the ninth after the Indians had deadlocked the game. This wallop was a three- bagger that flew from Powell's bat to left field, a three-bagger on which Fred Sington, another recruit from Albany, rode from first base to the counting block. GPORTGCOP BY ROD T THE request of one of our two readers, we're taking an- other voyage on the sea of facts contained in the new “All Sports Record Book,” edited and compiled and written by Frank G. Menke, one of the snappiest of sports writers and certainly one of the best informed. . . . No heavyweight ring champion from Sullivan down has begun a title de- fense on the short end of the odds.... Tke belt John L. won in the last bare- knuckle championship bout with Jake Kilrain was worth $5.000. . . . Among Dempsey's records: Highest knockout average (47 in 69 battles); a principal in all five fights with million-dollar gates; highest rate of pay—$120.000 a minute for Firpo drama . .. Jimmy Barry and Jack McAuliffe were the only champs never to lose a bout. About 1,500 bulls and 6,500 horses are killed annually in Spain’s bull rings . . . A mata- dor who died recently had a record ho his “credit” of 5,000 slain bulls. . . . Without the ecanoce the progressive settling of the United States might have been retarded for a century. . .. Checkers, one of the oldest games, perhaps has been played by more hu- mans than all other games put to- gether. . . . Newell Banks once played 140 checker games in 145 minutes, av- eraging a move a second; won 133, drew seven, lost none. How's your choke-choo-hongki — that's ancient Chinese for chess . . . Contract bridge, most widely played card game in America and Europe, is not 10 years old. ... A Cornhusking Champ. HE last national cornhusking championship contest drew 65,- 000 spectators . . . Carl Seiler holds the husking record with nearly 37 bushels in 80 minutes. . . . John Hay Whitney’s tennis court is valued at $250,000. . . . For a long time it was thought cricket originally was a woman's game because the earliest players were pictured wearing robes . . They were monks! Some Americans who resent bull fighting may not like Spain, either, for introducing dice into this land This lasting scourge hit us in the sixteenth century. . . . The greyhound has no acute sense of smell, but this is offset by uncanny hearing and remarkable eyesight . . . The fastest of dogs, in full flight, leaps from 12 to 20 feet, as against 25 to 27 for a race horse, but the greyhound almost can keep pace with the bang- tail for a quarter mile. . . . The guy who thought up the phoney rabbit trick for dog racing cleared $500,000 at one 45-day meet . . . Nobody ever has been able to learn the exact breeding of Mick, the Miller, greatest racing greyhound that ever lived (he was owned by an Irish priest who sold him for $4,000, the new owner clearing $50,000 on Mick from 1929 to 1931). Foot Ball Stuff. REEKS of Sparta played foot ball as far back as 500 B. C., calling it harpaston. . . . In its 1930 game with Navy, Notre Dame made 145 substitutions, winning, 26-2. . . For efficiency in lugging a pigskin, there's Grange's 1924 record against Michigan—carried the ball five times and ran 95, 67, 56, 45 and 15 yards for five touchdowns. Only recently it found its way into the record books, but 'way back in Like the Nationals, the Indians made nine safeties, Two were of the | extra-base variety. Hal Trosky made | & triple in the second session to pave | the way to the Indians’ initial run | and Joe Vosmik made another in the | fifth to account for his side’s second score Both of these long hits were made 1906 Bradbury Robinson of St. Louis U. passed a foot ball 87 yards to John Schneider for a touchdown . . . Bert Harris, Rutgers guard, 1930, in prac- | tice, booted 97 successive placement | goals, breaking an earlier record, made | by himself, of 40 . . . A game a week | is enough foot ball for some ‘teams.| | but Sewanee, when it was Unlversufl | and | £ Menke Furnishes a Big Load of Sport Stuff in Little Bits. THOMAS. M., Tulane, Louisiana and Mississippi on successive days and was not scored {upon. ... Alvin Ekberg, Garretson High School, South Dakota, probably holds a record for being in the nick of time on the grid—in three consecutive games he ran 60 yards or more for touchdowns and in each case the final whistle blew while he was running. . .. In_ a Princeton-Yale game, Big Bill Edwards, Tiger guard, lost 30 pounds. . .. Maybe you've heard about the guy who galloped 210 yards for a touch- down—Snooks Dowd (Lehigh vs. | Lafayette)—who sprinted 100 yards in the wrong direction, circled the goal posts, then hotfooted again the field's length. . .. Up in the Air. N A soarer (motorless Richard C. du Pont, American, negotiated 158.299 miles . . . A Ger- man, Kurt Schmidt, stayed up 36 hours 35 minutes in a similar con- traption, Record golf drive—445 yards by R. C. Bliss at Herne Bay, England. 1913: conditions not given . . . There are several instances of holes being | halved in one . . . Tom McAuliffe, | armless golfer, played 18 holes in 98 (no other details) . . . Meyer Franklin, a 9-year-old lad of Jackson, Mich., | made a 164-yard hole in one and }Eddle Rule of Queens Village, N. Y., age 3, drove a ball 58 yards off a | watch. | On a track at Newark, N. J,, | Humbrooke, mare trotter, did a mile in 2:16 without a driver. The most remarkable trotting horse plane), | that ever lived was Goldsmith Maid | of the Fashion Stud Farm, Trenton, N. J, a farm animal until she was 6, | raced only once until she was 8, broke a vast succession of records, made her fastest time at 19 and still was a champion at 20, her earnings totaling $364.200, a world record. Horses disappeared from the Ameri- | can tontinent about 25,000 years ago and did not reappear until the six- teenth century when Cortez brought | some from Spain via Mexico . . . In three days of racing Jockey Gordon Richards rode 12 successive winners . . . Earle Sande's jockey winnings totaled $3,034.858 . . . For durability, there was John Osborne, who died in 1922, aged 89 . . . He began his career on English tracks in 1346 and was an active jockey until 1892—46 years in | the saddle. | For a close hoss race we give you | one at Newmarket, England, on Oc- tober 22, 1865, in which four horses in a field of five ran a dead heat! | il | Boy, Were They Close! T LEWES, England, in 1880, three horses tied for first place and two, a neck behind, dead- heated for “second.. Here's another pip—In an Australian race, in 1896, three tied for first money and in the run-off two again deadlocked: in a | second run-off victory was decided | by a nose...But maybe that doesn't | top this—Terry and Drogheda, trot- ters, in a contest at Dublin, Ireland, in 1918, ran three successive dead heats, then the owners split the purse ...Three of the first four races at | Birmingham Park, England, on No- | vember 1. 1910, resulted in dead | heats Kincsem, wonder horse of Europe, foaled in 1874, went to the | post 54 times and never was beaten. | Tom Greenhill, an Austrialian, punched a bag for 72 hours and 10 minutes continuously, averaging 45 pokes a minutes .. Alex Wickham, a native of the Solomon Islands, made a dive into water of 205 feet 9 inches yeah, he lived. The names of Michalko Goniusz and Wasyl Bezborodny appear no goofier than a contest in which these Russians, in a face-slapping match at Kiev, palmed each other without a let-up for 36 hours...It was a draw. A record for patience—Leuben, cel- ebrated German lunatic, bet he could turn up a pack of cards in a certain off the delivery of Leon Pettit, south- paw slabman bought from the Chatta- nooga club. Two other hits and four passes were yielded by Pettit as he ve innings in his first Page 2, Column 5.) | Scrappy Stuff Wash Schulte.cf Myer.’b Manush f Sington.If Powell.rf. 3 Stone.rt Travis.3b. Bluege.3b (0 Kuhel.1b, 3 Cleve. A Hughes.ss Vosmik.1f Averill.cf Trosky.1b | Haleib. Writht.rf. 2 C'pbeilrf Berger.2b Brenzelc ! George.c Hbrand.p Pearson.p 2 Hudlin,p, 2 A i | 5 0 ) B of 4 K i 1 0l ol ol Holbrok.c Totals Totals *One out When winning run was scored Cleveland 010 010 013— Washingtos 200 00 021— Runs—Hughes (). ~ Vosmik, osky. Hale. Campbell, Schulte Powell. Stone. Trav Lary (2) Avertll, J Sington = ~Hughes (2) Btone (2) “Hale. Bolion, Kuhel | George, Russell. Lary, ' Trosky. | hit—Lary. ~ Three-base | Home run—Stone. Sacri- | Russell. Double _plays— earson to Hughes to Trosky Kress to ver to Kuhel. Bluege to Mver to Kuhel ). Left on bases—Cleveland. 7: Wash- Ington. 5. First base on balls—Off Hilde- | brand. 1: off Pettit. 1 off Pearson. | Russeil. 3: off Hudiin.' 1. Hildebrand. 1: by Pettit. v by Pearson. 1; by Hudlin. Hildebrand. © in_3 innings: off Pearson, 2 in 3 innings: off Hudlin. 6 in 3 innings; off Pettit. 4 in 5 innings: off Russell. 3 in 4 innings. Hit by pitched ball—BY | ®Qussell (Hughes). Winning pitcher—Rus- ell. Losing pitcher—Hudlin, Umpires— | essrs. Cox and Johnson. Time—i:00. 1 ( i of South, played Texas, Texas A. Camp Base Ball By the Associated Press. Yesterday's results: Washington (A), ), 6. Philadelphia a.L), 4. Detroit (A.), 5; Boston (N.). 4. Minneapolis (A. A), 7; Brooklyn (N.), 6. Cincinnati (A), 3. Newark (I L.), 3; Boston (A), 2 (10 innings). St. Louis (N.), 9; New York (N.), 3. Chicago (N.), 9; Oakland (P. C. L), 0. Today's schedule: At Biloxi—Washington Cleveland (A.). At Tampa—Cincinnati (N.) vs. New 7; Cleveland (N), 16; Toronto (N.), 5; New York (A) vs. York (N.). At St. Petersburg—Boston (N. vs. Boston (A.). At San Francisco—Chicago (N.) vs. San Prancisco (P. C. L.). At Winter Haven—Philadelphia (N.) vs. Toronto (I. L.). At Los Angeles—Pittsburgh (N.) vs. Chicago (A.). At Orlando—Brooklyn (N.) vs. Bal- timore (1. L.). At Lakeland—St. Louis (N.) vs. De- troit (A.). At West Palm Beach—St. Louis (A) vs. House of David. order and after 10 years, during which he turned the pasteboards 20 hours daily, he succeeded on the 4,246,029th |try...And after running back over | this column your author is beginning | to feel a little card-turnish! R R 'HOYAS TO GET LETTERS Seven Basketers, Manager Powers Will Be Honored. Seven members of Georgetown Uni- versity's basket ball squad and Man- | ager William Powers will be awarded | letters for their work on the court during the 1934-35 season. | - Players who will receive their “Gs” at the annual banquet in May are Capt. Ed Hargaden, Edmund Bodine, Joe Corless, Leon Essenstad, Don Gi- | beau, Charles Parcells and Ben Zola. S;)orts Program In Local Realm TODAY. Swimming. District A. A. U. indoor swim- ming championships, Shoreham Hotel pooi. 8 o'clock. E | TOMORROW. | Districc A. A. U. indoor swim- | ming championships, Shoreham | Hotel pool, 8 o'clock. | looks as if the Dodgers might have | Adding to his previous batting feats, SOUTHERN STORM CENTER. - “Brrayman - BiLoxi, Miss, o £ HIS SPEED MAKES HIM DANG ON THE BASES...,. Ao == BLANKETY ~ BLANK DEUCES HE CAN HURL A DECK Z ‘l OF CARDS S0 FAR JOE | KUMEL'S MAGIC GAN'T | | BRING IT BACR..... ll ? 55 — YOURE A —By JIM BERRYMAN ’ o {’NICE KID Frep SCHULTE ISNT GOING To HAND | HIM THAT | CENTERFIELD —_SPOT.._ HE has TO EARN (T... & PO \EIGHT CLUBS LIKELY The ,f.,z»?:“:fi{éfi; FOR VALLEY LEAGUE ‘;ur. NATIONALS HOME TOWA.... | OLD TO GRIFF BY CAMBRIA | :ronit | LAST YEAR.... WiTH THUNDER. Make-up of Shenandoah Circuit Will Be Determined at IN HIS BAT AND LIGHTNING IN HIS HEELS, HE IS MAKING Meeting March 29, A SERIOUS BID For A EGULAR OUTFIELD POSITION .... Special Dispatch to The Star. HARRISONBURG‘ Va,, March 22. i —The. Shenandoah Valley J BRAVES PROSPER AS YANKS STARVE Ruth Packin ’Em in as Old Mates Play Before Skimpy Crowds. T. PETERSBURG, Fla. (A — The Braves are making his- tory. Since the beginning of the training camp season they | have played before some 25000 cash customers—which means that for the first time in tribal history they are certain of having their training ex- penses paid before the regular season gets under way. | Another crowd was looked for at, Waterfront Park today as the Tribes- | men meet their American League | brethren, the Red Sox. | Babe Ruth voiced his notice that | his old teammates—the Yanks—drew 364 paid admissions at Tampa against | the Reds Wednesday and less than' 550 at St. Pete yesterday, while the Tribe drew 6467 to Waterfront Park and 3,120 to Lakeland. ORLANDO, Fla—Despite the abil- ity of Al Lopez behind the bat, it (Blimp) season. trouble keeping Gordon Phelps out ot action tnis ihe 230-pound catcher knocked the longest homer ever hit out of Conrad Park at Deland in yesterday's game against Minneapolis. The ball cleared the 40-foot center field wall 381 feet from the plate, | “World Series” Resumed. LAKELAND, Fla., March 22 (#).— The 1934 world series battle between Detroit and St. Louis will be revived here today when the Tigers and the | Cards meet in an exhibition game. Paul Dean, who knocked the Tigers | off twice in the series, is slated to| pitch for Frankie Frisch's crew. Mickey Cochrane is undecided on mound choices. | He used Schoolboy Rowe and Alvin | Crowder yesterday to trim the Braves, | 5 to 4, although the trimming was really done by Charley Gehringer's | ninth-inning triple, scoring Gerald ‘Walker with the winning tally. ST. PETERSBURG, Fla—Fred | “Dixie” Walker, who was listed among the Yankees' dollar-a-year men be- cause Wf the ailing arm which kept him out of action last season, has passed his first test successfully. He Bucky Sees Coppofa as Star Hurler in Another Year Young Fast Baller Rapidly Developing Curve—Johnson Gets Big Hand at Biloxi. BILOXI, Miss., March 22.—An- other tussle with the Tribe here today, then the Nationals will step over to Mobile for a pair of en- gagements with the Kansas City outfit. They will return to Biloxi after tomorrow's game, though, instead of remaining in Mobile overnight. Bump Hadley and Monte Weaver are to make their first hill appearance of the year in the week-end inatch at the Blues’ training camp. Henry Coppola, 20-year-old right-hand pitcher taken over from the Albany club yesterday, should be one of the best in the business in another year, says Manager Harris. Coppola is a fast ball pitcher, but rapidly is de- veloping a good curve. In e change for Coppola the Washirfy= ton club gave Ray Prim, southpaw slabman, to Albany. Walter Johnson got a great hand from Biloxians and the Washing- ton ball club, too, when he brought the Tribe into town. He is popu- lar here, as everywhere. And there were loads of old friends at hand to greet Pat Gharrity, the Nationals’ former coach, now with the Indians. Lloyd Brown, an- other ex-National, also came along with the Indians. Lefty has done nothing more, than pitch to bat- ters thus far, but hopes to get into a training game soon. The Indians don’t Jook so hot around second base. ‘Hughes, who will have to play at short- stop while Bill Knickerbocker is getting over his appendicitis oper- ation, looks a fair fielder, but nothing like a hitter. That goes for Bozie Berger, the Wllhln’wn boy again striving to get a job at Sec{wngd base with the Tribe. The Indians have with them as a catcher one Charley George, be- lieved to be the only player of Greek extraction in>the American League 1f not in the majors. Ossie Bluege made the greatest fielding play of yesterday's game. In the ninth Berger managed to drive one past Ossie, who had re- placed Travis at third, gnd Camp- bell set sail from second base. Bluege rushed far down the left- field line, scooped the ball deftly and without coming up heaved a “strike” to the plate. Ossie whipped that throw under his out- stretched left arm, a most difficult feat. It beat Campbell to the plate by a yard. But it could have been less than that just as well, the way Holbrook blocked the counting block. ‘Mnheu never had a chance to get by the rookie catcher. He bounced back after colliding with Sam. Right after the play was made Billy Evans, the Indians’ general manager, here with them, came to the press box and announced, “Mr. Griffith has just said that under no circumstances will Mr. Bluege be for sale.” Jake Powell surely can run. Sore leg or not he did a tall piece of sprinting to get to Hale's liner in the eighth, and in the ninth when he hit that telling triple that scored Sington from first base he was right at Fred’s heels as the latter turned third. Harris had not intended to use Powell yesterday, bout xt—ho latter insisted his leg was O. K. and the manager took a chance. And Jake won the ball game, U LBE League, which enjoyed a suc- __| cessful season in the first year of its f |revival last Summer, plans to e played left field againt the Reds yes- | i L = and to eight clubs during the com- terday, covered ground well and had Alhng Inheld ACC b mg o no trouble with his throwing. ! S T .b Fl miclamp g?h t wh - s o ulpeper, the pennant winner: Har- ees ribe ac risonburg; runner-up, and Charlottes- ville are retaining their franchises, By the Associated Press. while the case of Woodstock is in the EW ORLEANS, March 22.— air. Invitations have been extended Bill Knickerbocker, brilliant Cleveland shortstop, raised himself on his elbow from his hos- to Front Royal, Winchester, Staunton and Waynesboro to join the circuit Orange also wants in and probably pital cot and predicted the Indians would win the American League pennant. will be accepted if one of the others Furthermore, he said he would refuses. be fully recovered from his appen- The decision of Staunton and Waynesboro depends upon whether dicitis operation and ready to play ball by the Ist of May. the Augusta County circuit continues. “We've got the stuff this time. ™ said the star infielder. “We're a cinch for the pennant, and we'll be TAMPA, Fla—Now that they've | found out what it usually means, six of the Giants’ rookies aren’t so pleased | about being assigned to places in the reporters’ car on the club's overnight trips. This assignment usually is taken as an indication they will be the first to draw their releases. The six are John Leonardo, Al Cuccinello, Joe Martin, Joe Malay, Jim Asbell and Chester Klaerner. | FORT MYERS. Fla.—The Philadel- phia Athletics will break camp today after a final brief workout on their training camp field. They will leave for St. Augustine, the first stop on their barnstorming tour leading home- ward up, with Weyers Cave, Fort Defianc and Midway not desiring to retain their franchises. The make-up of the Valley League 4 will be determined at the meeting hard to stop in the wgrld series here on March 29. President George — e s — — Holtzman of Mount Jackson is con- TAMPA. Fla.—The Phillies, facing fident that at least six clubs will be in the Toronto Maple Leafs of the In-| CHAMP IS INELIGIBLE |tne circuit. possibly eight. ternational League for another game, | ‘ ~ will find a lot of new men on the field. Rumors are that this league will fold, Wright, o CELLAR CHAMPS SEN INPROVED Will Have Pep, No Matter What Happens, Current Dope Indicates. (This is one of a series of stories analyzing major league base ball prospects.) By the Associated Press. ASADENA, Calif, March 22— League cellar in 1934 and off and on for several other sea- Tenants of the American sons, vthe Chicago White Sox expect { to pull themselves out by their own boot straps. Youthful enthusiasm. built about a quartet of veterans, may turn the trick this season. Manager Jimmy Dykes has-added both rookie and proven talent to breathe new life into the organization construeted around himself, Al Sim- mons, Luke Sewell and George Earn- shaw. In the outfield and on the pitching hill, anxious young strength has been posted to the extent that whatever else happens, the White Stockings will have one of the peppiest ball clubs in the circuit. Outfield Shapes Up Well, ITH Simmons, the slugger, moved to center field, Ray Radcliff, up from Louisville and Vernon George Washington Texan, by way of Indianapolis, have been called upon to patrol the garden Washington hit .367 last year and made only one fielding error in 135 games. Radcliff also is a fine fielder, and while his batting average fell short of the .300 mark when he came to the Sox late last year, he hit .335 in the American Association. Veicon Kennedy, Penn relays de- cathlon champion in 1927, and the strikeout king of the Texas League for 1934 along with two fellow Texas Leaguers, Joe Vance and John White- head, have been called in to give the club a lft. Of course Dykes is banking on Earnshaw, Ted Lyons, Leslie Tietje, Whitlow Wyatt, Sam Jones and Lee Stine for the major share of mourd duty but he feels that the young talent, guided by the steviin ment of Sewell back of the 1 turn in a surprising number victories, Sewell, Ruel, Shea Catch. EWELL, obtained from Washing- ton, will have the veteran Harold (Muddy) Ruel and Mervyn Shea as his assistants in the catching assignment There will be little or no change in the infield. Dykes plans to do most of the work at third, with Marty Hopkins, another former Texan, as his understudy. Luke Appling, one of the best shortstops in the circuit is back. with Minter Hayes at seccnd and Zeke Bonura, the home run hitter, at first. Dykes also picked up Glenn a veteran infielder, mn ‘he Winter market and plans to make considerable use of him. While the White Sox do not shape up as the best base ball club in the circuit by several degrees, Dykes feels it is enough improved over last sea- son to move a step or two cut of eighth place and promises it will give the leaders a lot of worry. Ike Boone, Toronto playing man- | ager, seeking to avert a repetition of Return to School. yesterday's 16-to-4 defeat by their National League opponents, says he | Johnson, High Jumper, Fails to PASADENA, Calif.. March 22 (#)— | will give the Phillies a peek at the | Cornelius Johnson, National A. A. U. | other 18 men on his roster. GEORGE WINS EASILY. HARTFORD. Conn., March 22.—Ed | enroll competition this season. for high jump champion, has been de- clared ineligible for further conference Johnson, it was said, had failed to 1 the second semester at | Don George of North Java, N. Y. Compton Junior College within three claimant of the world wrestling title, | weeks after classes reopened. He was | defeated Al Mercer of Springfield in | competing in Eastern indoor track and | straight falls here last night. field meets at the time. | * STAINLESS STEEL ALL MATCHED AND BALANCED 7 CLUB STEEL SHAFTED GOLF OUTFITS 10 COMPLETE MEN'S and WOMEN'S Rq‘. $27.50 We're starting the new Golf Season with a BANG! We bought the entire inven. tory of a famous manufacturer (name on every club) and we're selling them out at almost ¥ of their regular list price! Here’s What You Get: Everv(ful complete with 7 matched steel. shafted clubs (five stainless steel irons with True-Temper shafts) and your choice of 2 woods—Driver and Brassie or Spoon—and a 6-inch, Warp Duck, Golf Bag with zipper hood and pocket. The supply is limited, so come early. Mail Orders—Add 25¢ for Postage. and keep you fit, % GOLFERS! Meet our new PRO—Leo Mc- Nerhaney. Use Our Driving Courts FREE! Where Sportsmen Meet Sport Center thsnsu.--m-:u-o.mq *Open Evenings HAHN DYNAMIC ARCH SHOES *3.90 It’s a smart move to put your feet into Dynamic Arch shoes because they fit, fresh and on top. They’re unusually comfortable, due to the concealed longitudinal and meta- tarsal arches built into the shoe. Well styled, with custom or square toe lasts. In fine, supple leathers: black or brown calf, or black kangaroo. Men’s Shops: 14th & G 7th & K *3212 14th