Evening Star Newspaper, October 4, 1935, Page 51

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4 . Ld . . ~ SPORTS. ' Champ Defends Title Against Pupil : Mechanical Niblick Aids Grass Experts L] DEVICE IS PRECISE Lightweight King Is 8-to-5/ Choice, but Young Rival Has Many Backers. By the Associated Press. EW YORK, October 4—A cou- ple of first-class fighting men, N Tony Canzoneri and Al Roth, meet tonight to see whether the pupil has attained a higher degree of boxing efficiency than his former master. The lightweight crown waits at the end of the 15-round trail for the squatty Roth, if he can outpunch the champion for whom he once served @s a sparring partner. Canzoneri has been fighting for 10 years and has 125 fights in his record. He only 26, but a fighter's age is reckoned more by the number of blows he has taken than by the number of years he lived. Roth is 22 and has had 45 fights over a period of four years “ Canzoneri was an 8-to-5 favorite to defeat Roth, but the latter had plenty of backers who believed he would take t Canzoneri had to offer in the early rounds and then come on to outslug the Italian. Has Had Three Titles. ANZONERI has held the feather, junior lightweight and junior welterweight crown once each and the 1tweight twice. When Barney Ross abdicated® the lightweight s to take Barney's place. Roth earned his place as outstand- ing contender a few months ago when he decisively defeated both Leonard del Genio and Davy Day, the latter a stablemate of Ross. Five other bouts, all six-rounders, ¢ill complete the card. Steve Halaiko, | Syracuse, will meet Wesley Ramey, | Grand Rapids, Mich.; Indian Hur- tado, Panama, encounter Julie Katz, New York; Fritz Zivic, Pittsburgh, fight George Salvatore, Houston, Tex.; Eddie Zivic, Pittsbur battle Lou Lombardi, Jersey City. N. J., and Lew Feldman, New York, take on Pete de « Ruzza, Bridgeport, Conn. DROPKICK AGAIN Weather Suits Ex-Gridder, Who Subdues Raines in Grappling Brawl. OE SAVOLDI, accustomed to J foot ball weather, dusted off his dropkick last night at Grif- | ’ fith Stadium to boot Dick Raines to the mat before 2,500 chilled and | cheering wrestling fans. One of the roughest matches of the season, the brawl was climaxed by Bavoldi’s specialty after 22'2 minutes of kneeing, elbowing and strangle holds. The former Notre Dame All-America halfback, disqualified on numerous oc- casions for foul tactics, met in Raines & grappler who was more than will- | ing to mix it. For the greater part of | the bout Savoldi was on the receiving ( end of knee butts. | Booted From Ring. RALLYING after 20 minutes had i ticked off, Jumping Joe streaked across the mat to plant his tootsies £quarely on Raines’ chin, sending Dick sailing through the ropes into the laps of the cash customers. Dick came back but met up with the same treatment, which proved encugh. Dean Detton's viselike legs pro- vided the winning margin over Emil Dusek after 32!2 minutes of the semi- final match. Throwing each outside the ring, the tough torso-twisters continued their scrapping on the turf Cespite the protests of Referee Benny EBortnick. Dusek bounded off the ropes with the intention of ending festivities with a flying tackle, but ran into a flying scissors, which pinned his shoulders for the count. Hans Kampfer and Dr. Len Hall wrestled to a 30-minute draw, while Silent Abbott met his first defeat in seven starts at the hands of Clff Olson in 3'; minutes of the opener. = 7 G. W. Cock . (Continued From Second Page.) quested that a block of 500 seats be Teserved for a cheering section. A further C. U. announcement was that all Washington high school stu- dents may view the game free upon bresenting their 1935 athletic associa- tion ticket. The entire C. C. C. unit et the Government’s Experimental Farm at Beltsville, Md., also will be guests. I\IARYLAND‘S game with Virginia 4 Tech tomorrow really is crucial for the Old Liners, especially for the revised coaching staff. A win for the Terps, which seems fair to expect, would instill needed confidence for the nine tough games that are to follow. A defeat might easily shake the team to such an cx- tent as to lead to an unsuccessful cam- paign, even though the material is above par, as Maryland squads go. It will be the first strictly Curley Byrd-less Maryland eleven to go intoa big tilt in 24 years, and the followers of the Old Liners will be watching for any radical departures from the meth- ods of attack and defense that proved 8o effective in his long regime, Tomorrow's situation is particularly acute for the tutoring staff and team in view of the fact that Virginia Tech, & really powerfu] outfit, has beea greatly underrated hereabouts. Terps in Hot Spot. —_— GOLFERS TAKE DRIVES Many of Washington's well-known golfers will convert themselves into bowlers tonight when the Country Club Golf League opens its season at Lucky Strike. Doubled in size over last scason, the loop will have 16 teams shooting for the championship, now held by Beaver Dam, No. 2. 2 ‘The pros have banded together and will roll as the Professional team, under the captaincy of Al Treder, popular Manor Club tutor. Emerson Moore of Manor is presi- dent and Billy La Bille, Beaver Dam, is secretary-treasurer, ‘ TIE JINX WORRIES Budge Best of Young Netmen, Tilden Paragon, Brookes Holds T the equal of Tilden when the latter Big Bill Tilden never had an started his outstanding career, and has a sounder game than Ellsworth equal, was the opinion expressed yes- terday by a former Davis Cup star, Vines, regarded by some as one of the best players in the world today. But at his peak, Tilden was the best who played with Australia from 1907 | racketer he ever saw in action, Brookes through 1920 and who is in the city | continued. for a few days. The middle-aged Australian was not Norman Brookes, who faced Big Bill's blasting bat back in 1920 and who in 1909 defeated Maurice E. Mc- surprised by Wilmer Allison's victory Loughlifi, then champion of the United over Fred Perry at Forest Hills, as it is Allison’s style of game that gives the British champion the greatest States, believes that the California | trouble, said Brookes. Allison plays redhead is head and top hat over the | a forcing game and Perry doesn't like world’s youngest players, possesses all [ to stand at his own back line and the shots and has a fine chance of | take the fierce volleys which players becoming the best of them all. Brookes wants Budge to accompany him back to Australia, for which he like Allison can smash over from the sails within a fortnight, in order net. £ that the 19-year-old sensation may Brookes said he was expressing, not only his own, but also the feelings benefit by playing in December, Janu- ary and February before starting of all foreigners, when he praised activity in 1936. the U. S. L. T. A. on its courteous At present, Brooks says, Budge is HAT Donald Budge is the out- standing young tennis player who came here from abroad for matches at Forest Hill. GRID FANS WARNED AS TO TRAFFIC JAM G. W. Advises Patrons to Start to Game Early—19,000 Seats in Stands Available. Foo’r BALL fans expecting to drive to the George Washington- Alabama game at Griffith Stadium torhorrow were warned today against an impending traffic snarl at the intersection of Seventh street and Florida avenue, & few yards from the B o main entrance to the stadium. striving to break the “dead-| " crrent excavating work at that lock” jin, the only drawback | 00 threatens to barricade the inter- to a good seacon in 1934, and | G vion against northbound vehicular if they succeed, St. John's foot ball | ¢ o thys creating the liklihood of team doesn't have to be any better o'y m in the event autoists converge than it was last Fall to assure the |, ., ine intersection at a late hour. Cadets a banner year on the gridiron. | Both of St. John's biggest BAMES | yiewing the excavation advised per- | last year—with Gonzaga and George- | song with autos to start for the scene town Prep—resulted in ties. The one early. A preliminary game between with the former was a scoreless battle, | 11,0 100-pound teams of the Police and | G. U. Prep evened the count at 7-7. Georgetown Boys' Clubs has been ar- | It will be the games with these two ranged to entertain early comers, | traditional foes, who are fighting for starting at 1 o’clock. and considerate treatment of those ST. JOHN'S SCHOOL Aims to Avert Deadlocks With Arch Foes, Only 1934 Drawbacks. BY BILL DISMER, JR. P ON Vermont avenue they're | Colonial athletic authorities after | CARD FOR HORSE SHOW 1S FLASHY Charity Affair Tomorrow at Rock Creek Offers Great Variety. FFERING the most attractive program since its incepton in 1933, the Montgomery County Charity Horse Show will be held tomorrow on the Rock Creek show grounds adjoining the Meadowbrook Sgddle Club, in Chevy Chase, Md. Not only is a complete list of hunter, saddle horse and pony events to be presented, but officials in charge of the meet also have arranged for musical and jump rides by crack troopers from | Fort Myer, Va., and an old-fashioned tournament. “Knights to Compete.” 'HE tournament will bring into competition 10 of Maryland’s best “knights” beginning at 11 o'clock and will continue throughout the luncheon period, leaving the ring clear for the resumption of the regu- lar show classes at 1 o'clock. Maj. James T. Duke will lead 24 crack riders from Troop E onto the grounds at 2:15 for the two exhibi- tions he and his men have agreed to give to help the charity event, the progeeds of which will go to the county’s Social Service League and the Mental Hygiene Clinic. Two pony jumping and saddle classes are to open the day's pro- gram at 10 am. and each class is to be divided into three sections, offer- ing competition for all sizes of ponies. A riding competition for youngsters 14 years of age and under and the opening of the tournament round out the morning session. Card for Afternoon. 'HE following classes will be held in the afternoon and will be run | |oft in this order —model hunters, | open saddle class, ladies’ hunters, non- thoroughbred hunters, hunter hacks, family class, thoroughbred hunters, all-Montgomery County saddle class, A Couple of Mighty Grid Warriors THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1935 SPORTS. Tuffy Leemans (seated), ace of the George Washington backfield, has a wounded arm, but if it bothers him, looking to tomorrow’s classic clash between the Colonials and Alabama at Griffith Stadium, one never would guess it. The other fellow, “Tarzan” White, right guard of the Crimson Tide, is a hefty what am. Using hare ness he can lift 3,000 pounds and without the straps can hoist 500. HEURICH PINMIEN a championship cup for the first time More than 9,000 covered grandstand SAVOLDI WINNER this year, to which Coach Irving Hol brook’s youngsters will point. Has Tough Schedule, ITH one exception, St. John's plays more games against high school elevens of the city than all the | | other seven prep schools combined. As | | does Gonzaga, St. John's has three seats still are available. These may be procured at the ticket headquarters, 2016 H street northwest, until mid- night tonight; at Spalding’s, Fourteenth street northwest, until 5:30 morning beginning at 9 o'clock. | of the inter-high foes on its schedule, | playing Western, Eastern and Central in its first trio of games. The earliest | true line on the little soldiers will be given today, when they meet Western on that school’s field in Georgetown. Without Bill Kirby, all-prep guard, who broke his wrist while scrimmaging against American University last week, the cadets will line up with four vet- erans from last year's team. Jimmy Vogts at center, Red. Lacey at guard, Leo Dunn at quarterback and Buckley at halfback are the seasoned cam- paigners, Holbrook thinks he has spotted sev- eral newcomers who will make good, however. Donohoe, Cahill, Gross, Mickey, Rowin and Wise all have looked impressive in early scrim- mages. The team’s weight is about average for a prep school eleven, Cady’s 210 pounds at a tackle post being an exception. Linemen and backfield candidates keep the scales in the vicinity of 165. The Gonzaga game comes on Octo- | ber 25 and the one with Georgetown | Prep on November 15. Both dates are encircled in red on the little fighters’ calendar. Mat Matches By the Associated Press. CAMDEN, N. J—Ed Don George, 224, Buffalo, N. Y., defeated George Zaharias, 231, Pueblo, Colo., two falls out of three. CINCINNATI. — Everett Marshall, 218, La Junta, Colo., defeated Hans Schnable, 212, Germany, one fall. bleachers for 10,000. €( ] HAVE fished from Maine to Florida, landed sails and many I other species of salt-water fish, but I think the bluefish is as game as any that swims,” says Victor Kauffmann. “I had no idea there was such excellent fishing within a short distance from Washington. It was my first experience with the blues and I never enjoyed greater sport,” said the newspaper man and sports- man. Mr. Kauffmann was speaking about a trip he took Wednesday with the writer, Malcolm Major, Larry Linthi- cum and W. B. Garrison. We first went to Millstone Landing, in St. Marys County, to get three bushels of alewives from Capt. Harry Wood- burn, who brought them across to us in his own boat. In half an hour we were at Point Lookout, where Capt. L. M. Spriggs picked us up for & trip to Southwest Middles. When we arrived on the fishing ground we counted about 40 boats, all chumming for the blues. We anchored about & mile above them and started our chum. On the trip across the bay we ground up a good quantity of chum. On the ride down Mr. Kauffmann bet $1 he would not catch a blue. He had his line in the water and the bet was promptly paid. Here are a couple of samples of the type of * Incurables at Grifith Stadium last night, ’em back into the ring, Emil Dusek and Dean Detton Here Detton, the evenautl winner, springs some new ‘Mm to untangle them. neck twisting, N ) N thian class and championship. | show, has donated a beautiful cham- 717 | plonship bowl which must be won | three times to be retired. this afternoon and before noon to-| presented on the basis of points morrow, and at the stadium tomorrow | scored in the model hunter, ladies’ | hunter, non-thoroughbred and thor- In addition, space is available in the oughbred hunters, hack and hunter | | and corinthian classes. touch and out, handy hunters, corin- JOLT OCCIDENTAL Harry H. Semmes, chairman for the It will be | Supreme by Taking Two of Three Games, HE supremacy of Fred Bucholz's crack Occidental Restaurant bowling team in the District League was somewhat a ques- tion mark today after the stinging two-game victory of Chris Heurxh's band of expert duckpinners lust night at Convention Hall. s Show Crack Outfit Is Not| just a short time when a blue struck | Maulfests Delight Ruff Rasslin® Addicts | Our total number was 29, weighing under five pounds. When we reached the wharf on our | return to Point Lookout the courteous lighthouse keeper was given two nice blues. He was most appreciative and, to our amazement, said: “I have been stationed here for 18 years and | this is the first time that I have ever been offered a fish.” none Sports Mirror | By the Associated Press, Today a year ago—Schoolboy Rowe | pitched Tigers to 3-2 triumph over Cardinals in second game of world | series, Goslin's single breaking up the game in the twelfth inning. Three years ago—Walter Johnson deposed as manager of Washington Senators after four years. Five years ago—Bill Hallahan shut out the Athletics with seven hits as Cardinals took third world series game, 5-0, SCOUT TROOP BOOKING. Boy Scout Troop 40 is booking tilts | with 115-pound teams. Write Charles ! Huber, 1901 Columbia road. “wrestling” that went over in a big way with some 2,500 mat As the announcer dodges and Referee Bortnick tries to haul carry their battle outside the roped inclosure. Lower right: with ropes, on Dusek, as Bortnick futiley —fllrlufl?*ou& Rolling a set of 1,877, a record mark for the two-week old campaign of major circuit, the Heurich Brewers won the first two games handily with counts of 595 and 652 against 551 and 617. The brilliant rolling of Bill Krauss in the final tilt, when he smashed the head pin for 155, gave the Occidentals a five-pin decision, 635 to 630. Blakeney Gets 405 Count. SHOO’I'ING in midseason form, Capt. Ed Blakeney, with a 405 set, led the charge of the Heurich crew, while Biil Clampitt’s 154 and Tony Santini's 130 were timely efforts for the winner. The Arcadia team greeted Mike Ri- naldi back into major league bowling | after an absence of five years by trim- ming his Grand Central team two games, although the Valet Shop crew ran up a greater pinfall with a 1,788 count to 1744. Capt. Dave Burrows’ timely double-header strike paved th way for the Arcadians to land the odd tilt. Lou Pantos, shooting 379 set for the losers, topped the match. It will be recalled that it was Mike who sent the first Washington team after the scalps of the famous Con- necticut Blue Ribbons at Hartford. The match terminated at the Coliseum, with the then crack Grand Palace team winning a close 10-game battle, but not before Georgie Friend had turned in one of the most thrilling and sensa- tional bits of pinch-rolling ever wit- nessed here. Gene Hargett's 150 and Howard Par- sons’ 369 were the telling punches that gave Northeast Temple a two-one ce- cision over Lucky Strike, ANOTHER BEATING SEEN FOR VIRGINIA Davidson, Making First Visit to Charlottesville, Is Favored in Tomorrow's Game. UNIVERSITY. Va.,, October 4.— Davidson will be making its first foot ball appearance in Scott Stadium when it comes to play Virginia to- morrow. It will, in fact, be the first gridiron | game between Cavaliers and Wildcats | since 1921. Davidson has been winning from | V. M. I, Washington and Lee and other State teams much more fre- quently in recent years than have the Cavaliers and is the favorite to- morrow. Hampden-Sydney upset Virginia last Saturday, 12 to 7. PRO EAGLES GET HANSON. PHILADELPHIA, October 4 (#).— Homer Hanson, former varsity center at Kansas State, has joined the Phil- adelphia Eagles professional foot ball L.S.JULLIEN. | 1443 P St.N.W. N0.8076 l i modern By expert 'Ic'or)‘d;i':x T::;n sl s hdw{:fl. Reasonable ) STRAIGHT OFF THE TEE by W. | OU might call it the rejuvena- tion of a duffer, if you had a little sarcasm in mind. Or it might be due to .assiduous practice in traveling and judging singing contests and watching big- time tournaments. But whatever the cause, one of the more unusual phe- nomena under observation today in that Columbia Country Club cham- pionship is the progress of Luther C. Steward, sr., better known to golf fol- lowers as “Pop.” flight at Congressional last year, wh he was generally ranked as the worst golfer in the club. By a couple of | lucky defaults and a sprained wrist | on the part of an opponent, he man- aged to get to the final, where Maj. F. MacKenzie Davison, who had thought himself the worst, plastered “Pop” with a 5 and 4 licking. During the Winter “Pop” and his son, Luther, jr, moved over to Co- lumbia, where “Pop” decided that that “worst” golfer monicker wasn't good. Now “Pop” travels a good deal. ing meetings of Government employes, from Frisco to Boston, but in between | he manages to get in time to visit such important divot lifting occasions as a national amateur championship. You can't keep on associating with good golfers without picking up some | of their habits, and by and by “Pop” | began to knock his score down. First | he broke 100 and then, on one grand nd glorious day, he made a 90 at | Columbia. He had a 4-footer for | an 89, but, awed by the solemnity of the occasion, the gallant heart that had stood steadfastly against the wrecking of the merit system in Gov- ernment service, quailed and broke be- fore a 4-foot putt. Today “Pop” has reached the semi- final in the seventh flight in the Co- lumbia championship. Out there they call it the “Duffer’s Flight” because it | is being played for a special trophy | put up by Capt. N. M. Shaw of the Marine Corps, a gorgeous dragon-em- blazoned bit of silver which the cap- tain picked up in China. Today he meets Bill Geleng. and if Bill wants to do a really good deed, he will drop his match to “Pop.” No man could be happier with a little piece of silver than “Pop” Steward. Up in the championship flight his son Luther was battling Louis W. Laudick today in one semi-final, while in the other Clyde B. Asher met young Harvey Johnson. Asher contributed the big surprise of the tourney yes- terday, whipping Miller B. Stevinson, six times champion, on the home green, while Steward was whipping out an extra-hole victory over Martin F. McCarthy, holing a 20-foot down- hill putt at the twentieth to win, after sinking a 12-footer to halve the nineteenth. ASUALITIES among champions were not limited to Columbia yes- terday. Dr. Calvert E. Buck, the Episcopal clergyman who won the Washington Golf and Country Club mined last-ditch stand of young three holes to Thacker, to lose on the home green. Thacker finished with three pars and Buck was unable to match these figures. Columbia’s lengthy twelfth hole, an easy par 5, and a tough 4, is to have a new putting green, now under con- struction, between the present green BRAKES RELINED 4 Wheels Complete FREE ADJUSTMENTS Studebaker waun 7. R.MECALLUM D3 IN'BUNKER SHOT |Perfected by Department of Agriculture Corps for Greens Tests. BY W. R. McCALLUM. T ALL sounds funny to gents who can’t get out of bunkers with their own brawny arms and a sand wedge and a mighty heave at the ball, but the Department of Agrie culture, continuing its work of ime proving America’s golf courses, has devised, through its greens section, a mechanical niblick by use of which putting greens may be made to react to the spin of a ball carved out of a bunker. Over at Arlington, Va., birthplace of any number of improvements in grass technique and of betterments in putting green grases, Dr. John Mon= teith and his corps of zides are seek« ing to find cut what type of grass holds a bunker shot best. To find out required some me= chanical device which would play the fall from sand in the same way countless numbers of times. The hu= man factor had to be removed, for bunker play probably is the most une certain angle of the game of golf of all, as played by the great American cuffer. So Monteith and his men rigged up & mechanical niblick to add to their collection of devices, which include a mechanical putter, and today the nib- lick carves the ball out of the sand with precision and accuracy. What they are seeking is the way the ball reacts when hit to different types of grass, They really should get Fred Mec- | Leod and his little niblick over there at Arlington. Fred can do more things better with a narrow-bladed niblick than any golfer in the world. He is as nearly a mechanical man with the niblick as you could find. Golf Feud Flares, BUDDING links feud between two District officials is about to break out into the heat of actual combat, “Pop” played in the eighth and final | | For weeks Capt. H. C. Whitehurst, and the twelfth tee. The new green | engineer officer of the District gove will be in use next Spring, and will | ernment, has insisted that Maj. Daniel | shorten the hole about 20 yards. From | J, Donovan, District auditor, is not the front tee it will be a long par 4 as hot with golf clubs as his conversa- affair, while from the back tee it will | tion would make you think. Dan in- remain as a 5. | sists that he can lick Whitehurst any time, any place. They will clash next Wiffy Cox, Kenwood pro, has set a Tuesday at Washing Golf and real record for his home course. Wiffy Country Club in the annual District played Kenwood yesterday in 65 employes’ tournament. | strokes without teeing up the ball. It | Interested onlookers to the little feud happens to be five shots better than Will be Commissioners Allen and Sul- the par of 70. Out in 34 over the tan, with Allen probably due to win | easter front nine, he blazed home in the 8ross award if Eddie Brooke, 31, to set the record. Al Houghton |building superintendent, doesn't fore played Kenwood in 63, but Winter 8t his position and nose out his boss, He goes up and down the land, attend- | title last year. fell before the deter- | Johnny Thacker, dropping the dast | rules were in force at that time. ANY ONE of 15 leaders had a chance to win the Keefer Cup today as the last round in the final big tour- ney of the year for the District Wom- en's Golf Associaticn was being run off at the Chevy Chase Club. It is | & considerable tribute to the Handicap Committee of the women's organiza- tion that the first round of the tourney, played in a high wind yes- | terday, found so many players bunched | within a few strokes, showing that the handicapping is precise. ‘Winifred Faunce, the tall all-around athlete from Manor, who holds the District championship, and Jean Por- | ter, another Manor girl, led the scor- |ing parade yesterday with net cards jof 82. “Winny" scored 86—4—82, while Miss Porter had 96—14—82, But these two led by only one stroke the net 83s scored by Mrs. Harrison Brand, jr., and Mrs. Landra B. Platt of Chevy Chase, and Mrs. Florence Godfrey of Beaver Dam. Back of these came four women with cards of 84, while many others, all with a chance, scored up to 87. One of the better scraps out there in that final round today lay in the battle for the gross award between Miss Faunce and Betty Meckley, the |Maryland champion, They tied at 86 gross yesterday. She thought she had broken 100 by only one shot and, as is the habit of those wWho break the century mark for the first time, she staged a little impromptu party. But when the Tournament Committee at Congres- sional started checking the card of Mrs. R. E. Burks, they found that in- stead of a 99 she had scored a 97, cracking the 100-mark by 3 strokes. B':“ Mrs. Burks is a happy woman LAUREL TOMORROW—SATURDAY, $6,500 CAPITAL $5,000 RICHARD JOHNSON STAKES—6 Other Great Events 25 Minutes to Track by Special B. & 0. Tra Union Stati T If you believe the other contestants, both Donovan and Whitehurst are ham golfers, The committee in charge of the tourney includes Brooke, Dick Tennye {son, Douglas Brinkley and John | Meaney. | Nolan Hits Long One. PARKER NOLAN, Congressional Country Club champ, is a good hitter who knocks the ball a long way when he meets it right. But Nolan never hit a better shot than the one he walloped to the sixth green at his home course the other day. The hole measures about yards, and Nolan, with a big wind the ball. smacke done to within 6 feet of the pin. To make it better he holed the putt for an eagle deuce. | FightsLast Night By the Associated Press. ALBANY, N. Y—Willie Pal, 138, Albany, outpointed Johnny Jadick, 140, Philadelphia (10) PORTLAND, Me.—Ad Zachow, 161, Portland. outpointed Cowboy Jack Willis, 160. Texas (10) Lowell, Mass., light-hes | ford, Mass. (6) (weights unavai PORTLAND, Orez.—Henry Woods, 138, Seattle, outpointed Battling Giz zey, 140, Pittsburgh (10). | HEATERS | SALES AND SERVICE 1 hfi.g"llli N.lnc. | St.N.W. N0.8075 RACES SCTOBER 5th HANDICAP ins leavin on at 2:35 12:10 FIRST 5 RACE AT 1:30 P. ADM. *1.6573% TAX DAILY TIL OCT.307 PRICES PREVAILING ALL BRAND NEW—FIRST QUALITY—1935 STOCK GOODYEAR FIRESTONE TUBE FREE With Esch Tube Purchased ONE YEAR UNCONDITIONAL GUA! 359, to 0% Off Retail List THE ABOVE MAKES IN NEW-CAR EQUIPMENT GOODRICH U. S. ROYAL ZES 6.00x16 6.25x16 6.50x16 RANTEE—TIRES MOUNTED FREE Savings VARIOUS MAKES—ALL FIRSTS 19335 STOCK 4.40x21 $3.25 4.50x20 asoxzt } 3.45 4.75x19 ..., 5.00x19 . l..h!.} 4‘95 5.25x18 5.25x20 5.25x21 5.50x17 5.50x18 5.50x19 6.00x17 6.00x18 ! 5.45 f 5.95 } 6.75 5.25x17 5.25x18 6.00x19 6.00x20 6.00x21 6.50x18 6.50x19 TRUCK TIRES ) § 695130 ) g gg } 8.95 } 33x5 3x1... 30,95 31x4 . 5-95 All Other Sizes 32x4 O ehishtly MAIN WAREHOUSE and SALESROOM AMERICAN STORAGE BLDG. 2801 GEORGIA ‘. (i ENERAL BRAKE SERVICE 903 N ST N.W_DE.5483 Oven Evenings—Sundays AM. AVENUE N.W. SALE by CONSOLIDATED SALES Telephone Col. 4138

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