Evening Star Newspaper, November 18, 1935, Page 14

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SHINGTON, D. Unbeaten Elevens Face Rugged Finish : Mexican Gridmen A SpOl‘lS Program ONLY MANESDTA Sz rosean R0SE BOWL DOPE | PLAYS WEAK FOE . 5= | NOW SERANBLED A—14 C., MONDAY, re Gaudily Arrayed "UNIFORMS FLASH - * NATIONAL COLORS COLORING THE GAME. —By JIM BERRYMA HOW ABOUT THIS ? = OUR CEATRAL HIGH BoOYS WILL VERY LIKELY NEED A FEW GLARE -PROOF HELMETS WHEN THEY TAKE THE FIELD AGAINST THE GLITTERING RED, WHITE 10 vs. Gene Buffalo, rounds, all-colored card, Lincoln Co'nnnade, 8:30. Wisconsin Game Will End Gopher Card—Princeton | Battles Dartmouth. BY HERBERT W. BARKER, ‘ Associated Press Sports Wr EW YORK. November 18.—The mad foot ball campaian| draws rapidly to a close with only a “baker's half dozen” teams still unbeaten and untied | The crushing defeats suffered last week by North Carolina, Marquette and Syracuse reduced the field of front-rank contenders for the mythical | national championship to seven— Princeton, Dartmouth and New York | University in the East: Minnesota in the Middle West: Southern Methodist and Texas Christian in the South- | west, and California in the Far West Of these, only Minnesota, aiming at its third successive undefeated cam- | paign, appears certain of winding up with & perfect record. The Gophers close out their season against Wis- consin’s Badgers at Minneapolis Sat- urday. All the others have major hurdles to clear, either this week or e little later on. | | Princeton, Dartmouth Battle. Y SECTIONS the championship situation seems to line up about as follows ast—Princeton and Dartmouth. battling in Palmer Stadium in Prince- ton Saturday, probably will decide the | eastern championship. although the Tigers still will have Yale to contend with, and Dartmouth still will have Columbia in the way Dartmouth snowed under Cornell, 41-6, last week, while Princeton substitutes were whipping Lehigh, 2-0. N. Y. U., third of the section’s undefeated and untied | elevens, swamped Rutgers, 48-0, and now will rest until its objective game with Fordham Thanksgiving day. From the standpoint of tradition. nothing this week will compare with the clash of Harvard and Yale at Cambridge. Army. tied 6-6. by Notre Dame in a thrilling finish before 80.000 spectators in the Yankee Sta- dium on Saturday, will tune up for the Navy game at Philadelphia No- vember 30 in a ‘“breather” Saturday against Vermont. Navy, easy victor over Columbia, 28-7, will be idle. Temple's Owls, who stopped Mar- quette's winning streak, 26-6, will face Villanova, while Colgate. hitting its etride with a 27-0 rout of Syracuse's previously undefeated eleven, takes on Rutgers. COLUMBIA and Brown, Lehigh and Lafayette and Bucknell and Penn Btate are the other leading Eastern pairings. The principal intersectional engagement will be Duquesne, 19-0 conqueror of West Virginia, against Detroit. Penn, which stopped Penn State. 33-6, and Pitt's Panthers, who halted Nebraska, 6-0, will be idle until | Thanksgiving day, when the Quakers will play Cornell and Pitt tackles Car- | negie Tech. Middle West—Big Ten—The confer- | ence campaign will close for the year with a five-game schedule that almost certainly will find Minnesota and Ohio State winding up in a tie for the title. Minnesota, victor in 16 successive games and undefeated in 23, will be heavily favored over Wisconsin and Ohio State should be able to handle Michigan. beaten last week by Min- nesota, 40.-0. Northwestern's flashy Wildcats, who trounced Wisconsin, | 82-13, will meet Iowa, surprisingly up- | #et by Purdue, 12-6. Purdue will play ‘ Indiana’s Hoosiers, who shellackcdj Chicago, 24-0. Illinois, nosed out by ©Ohio State, 6-0, meets Chicago. Big Six— Nebraska already has elinched the crown and plays only one more game—with Oregon State, on November 28. Kansas has a chance to clinch at least a tie for second place bv beating last place Iowa State this week. Kansas State, beaten by Okla- homa, 3-0, plays Misscuri in the only other conference game, Big Eastern Games. | Below Mason-Dixon Line. OUTH — Southeastern Conference: Louisiana State's 13-0 conquest of Georgia, virtually clinched the cham- pionship for the Tigers. They eased up against Southwestern of Louisiana thLis week before closing out against Tulane on- November 30. Should | Tu.ane, 20-13 victor over Kentucky, | do the unexpected and halt L. 8. U, Vanderbut, Alabaina or Mississippi would have a charce to share in the crown. Alabama crushed Georgia Tech, 88-7, last week and will face Vander- bilt, 13-7 winner over Tenuessee, cn 'fhaaksz.ving day. Mississippi, after playing non-conference Centenary this weex, winds up against Mississippi Btate on November 30. The confer- ence program this week sends Auburn egainst Georgia, Georgia Tech against Florida and Mississippi State against Bewanee. Southern Conference: Duke's smash- ing triumph over North Carolina, 27-0, previously undefeated and untied. put the Biue Devils in an excellent spot to 1egain the conference champion- ehip. Thev wind up against North Carolina State this week and a Duke vistory automatically will give the ham outfit the title. South Caro- (See MINNESOTA, Page 16.) Foot Ball. Cardozo vs. Armstrong, Stadium, 3:30. TOMORROW. Foot Ball. Roosevelt vs. Western, Roosevelt Stadium, 3:30 (public high school game). ‘Walker FRIDAY. Foot Ball. Tech vs. Eastern, Central Stadium, 3:30 (public high school game). Devitt Drep vs. Catholic University Frosh, Brookland Stadium, 3:30. Central vs. Petersburg High, Peters- burg, Va. Washington-Ler High vs. Western, Western Stadium, 3:30. St. James' vs. St. Alban's, Thirty- fourth and Garfield streets, 3:30. Friends vs. Landon, 3900 Wisconsin avenue, 3:30. Dartmouth, S. M. U. and BY PAUL ZIMMERMAN, Associated Press Sports Writer. ASADENA, Calif.. November 18 —Teams of the East and | representing the East in the annual intersectional foot ball clash at Pasa- dena’s Rose Bowl. Dartmouth, Southern Methodist and didates after another week end of sur- prises had been written into the sea- son’s records. Among the missing today were Syra- George Washington High vs. Fred- ericksburg High, Fredericksburg. Va. Livingston College at Miner Teach- | ers’ College. | Carolina, the last of the South’s grid SATURDAY. Foot Ball. Maryland vs. Georgetown, Stadium, 2:30 Wilson Teachers vs. Shepherd Col- lege, Shepherdstown, W. Va | Bullis Prep at Massanutten Military Academy. Grifith | YALEPRINCETON TILT EAST'S BEST Season’s Finale Promises to Be Classic—Tiger Title Up to Dartmouth. By the Associated Press. EW YORK, November 18.— T When Yale and Princeton abandoned tradition a few vears ago and decided it was possible to play their annual foot ball game a week after the Yale-Harvard encounter instead of a week before, they laid the foundation for this sea- son’s classic of Eastern foot ball. As a result of that change Prince- ton and Dartmouth come together in Tigertown Saturday in a struggle that probably will decide the mythical Eastern championship for the year. These teams form two-thirds of the sectional list of undefeated and untied teams and the third, New York Uni- versity, won't be seen in action again until its annual Thanksgiving clash with Fordham. The impending battle completely overshadows the traditional struggle between the Yale Bulldog and John Harvard, although there probably will be 50,000 or so fans who will turn out to see that encounter. THE rest of the eastern program this Saturday, with a number of teams resting for their climax battles the following week, is small. but packed with the promise of action. The leading games being Temple, out- standing in the East despite a defeat by Michigan State, against its neighbor and deadly rival, Villanova; Columbia against Brown, Georgetown against Maryland, Bucknell against Penn State, and Rutgers against Colgate’s surprising Red Raiders. Sharing interest are the Lehigh- Lafayette encounter, backed by the largest, though not the oldest series in gridiron history, the traditional Boston College-Boston University and | West Virginia-Washington and Jeffer- son clashes and Army’s tune-up for the Navy against Little Vermont. On the intersectional front are Duquesene- Detroit, Western Maryland-North Da- kota and Westchester (Pa.) Teachers vs. Western Michigan Teachers. ' . BASKETERS DATING. Basket ball teams with gyms de- siring Sunday games with the Luckett Pharmacy five should call Manager Ware at Atlantic 3036-J. 20 YEARS AGO IN THE STAR GALLAUDET is to play Western Maryland this week in an ap- parent “breather” for the Kendall Greeners, but two other local col- leges have hard battles on their hands. South Carolina is expected to prove & much greater stumbling block for Georgetown than North Carolina A. & M. was last week, while C. U. faces a hard game with Roanoke. Maryland will con- tinue to idle until the Thanksgiving day game with Johns Hopkins. Jim Shaw, Nat pitcher, who ac- cidentally shot himself two davs ago, is resting easily and his com- plete recovery now is assured. Harry Sinclair's failure to buy the New York Giants has resulted in his being active in arranging to put a Federal League team in New York City. The venture will in- volve an outlay of more than a million dollars. Texas Christian Top Po- tential Candidates. I Southwest stood out today as competitors for the honor of Texas Christian set the pace among tiie undefeated potential Eastern can- cuse in the East, a victim Colgate; | Marquette, the Middle West's last out- post, trampled by Temple. and North | guardians, turned back by Duke. Bears' Slate Unmarred. YALIFORNIA kept its record untar- | “ nished as the West's front-rank- | ing team, with Stanford the other | member of the Pacific Coast Confer- | ence still in the running for the right to act as host January 1. These two fight it out in their annual “big game” Saturday. The big Green team of Dartmouth was not the lone undefeated repre- sentative in the East that would be interested in a Rose Bowl invitation New York U.'s Violets have won seven games and Holy Cross, although tied once, has no defeats chalked up against it. But the West was inclined to take the stand that N. Y. U., which must | defeat Fordham, and Holy Cross, with Boston College its lone remaining hur- dle, have failed to play a sufficiently representative schedule. The Rose Bowl fans, on the basis | of Southern Methodist's sparkling de- |feat of U. C. L. A, would like to see !the Mustangs come back. Their’ however, is not the final word. Western sohool selected by the con- ference alone holds that right, Stanford a Possibility. IT HAS BEEN SUGGESTED THAT SOMETHING BE DONE T THE L GRID GARB 50 OUR BOYs WON'T TOTALLY OUTCLASSED IN HUE ... — —— THEIR AERIAL ATTACKS ARE. SAID To BE IN THE FINAL TOUCH OF A W ET N e ucK 5 Y P OCAL BE e —~ KEEPING WITH THEIR UNIFORMS..... v/ =~ ) AND GREEN -CLAD MEXICANOS | SONNNNNWNAN OVERWHELMING COLOR WOULD BE A QUARTET OF SHAWL- SHAKING SENORITAS AS CHEER LEADERS L A 'THE Coast race will decide itself | Saturday when California plavs | Stanford. Should the Bears win, the | vote of the conference will be a mat- | | ter of form, If Stanford is victorious, the bid can easily go to Coach Claude (Tiny) Thronhill's team for the third | successive year. California, it was understood, would like to tackle Notre Dame, despite | its defeat by Northwestern and a tie with Army. Stanford has played ‘Darlmmuh in a past regular season and probably would be glad to invite the big Green team should it be successful. If Texas Christian beats Southern | Methodist, along with Rice, it will | have a fine chance to sell itself to the | Northern California teams when it against Santa Clara, 'ZEH WITH 100 POINTS 'LEADS GRID SCORERS | Western Reserve Player Is Four Ahead of Stanley, Star of Williams Eleven. | By the Associated Press. JEW YORK, November 18.—The national foot ball scoring list | changed but little this week, with Ray | Zeh of Western Reserve, Eddie Stan- | 'ley of Williams, and Meehan of Ca- tawba still ranking one, two, three, respectively. Zeh added two touchdowns and one point after touchdown to his total to head the list with 100 points even, while Stanley collected two touch- | downs to stay runner-up with 96. Hapes of Mississippi supplanted .his teammate Rodgers in the standing, being in fourth place with 11 touch- downs and 2 points, for a total of 68. . Williams of Ohio State, although failing to get a single point on Satur- scoring parade with 60. The leaders: Pos. G. TD.P.a.t. FG.TUl. Midwest— Ray f‘ehA West. R. FB 8 13 0 100 tanley. s-sx‘nmetyh Williams_HB 8 16 0 96 14 84 Meehan, Catawbs_QB 8 Southeastern Conference— 11 68 80 Hapes Mississippi HB 8 Big Ten— williams. Ohio St._HB 7 Southern Conference- - Parker, Duke.r - QB 8 Ryan o Sall Ty o . Utal Soithwest— ‘Wilson. Sou. Me MeCRiler” Rice - ¥ Six— Cardwell Gray. Orezon St__HB 9 10 BASKET HEADS TO MEET. The District of Columbia Basket Ball Officials Association will meet Wednesday night at 8 o'clock at the National Training School gymnasium instead of tomorrow night, as previ- ously reported, day, continued to lead the Big Ten | | | of Score Floors VEN above the noisy din that accompanied Notre Dame’s last long march you could hear the crash of the tumbling turrets that had housed the unbeaten so long. | It was something of a jolt to have | North Carolina, Syracuse and Mar- quette all beaten in one afternoon, but |to have them smothered under 78 points was something else again. Duke, closes the season at San Francisco Colgate and Temple turned in more | than a day’s job. They turned in a triple massacre. Maj. Bob Neyland, Tennessee's ex-coach, still refused to believe the Duke-North Carolina score. ! “I could understand,” he told me, “how Duke could win, but to whip | thgt North Carolina team, 25 to 0. is lall beyond me. For I know what | North Carolina has—not only a good line, but a fine set of big, fast backs.” The Duke offense that couldn’t score on Georgia Tech and Auburn picked up a carload of dynamite in one game. The same thing happened to Col- gate, which had bogged down a trifle up to the Syracuse game, with Temple on the same wide road. All this further complicates the Rose Bowl and the Sugar Bowl assign- ments, and if Stanford takes Cali- fornia—which might well happen—the snarl will be complete. If Fordham stops N. Y. U,, either Southern Metho- dist or Texas Christian may have to play alone. There was no doubt as to Minne- sota’s place, anyway. The runaway Gophers proved their place beyond any argument or debate as the crack team of the Midwest and one of the best you will find anywhere. Notre Dame and Army. IT ISN'T often that a foot ball team scores winning or trying touch- downs in two big games with less than a minute to play. Yet this record now belongs to Notre Dame in her Ohio State and Army games. In each case, the deadly precision of her forward passing attack was more than her two rivals could break PRO HOCKEY By the Associated Press. National League. Montreal Canadiens, 6; New York Americans, 0. Chicago, 3; New York Rangers, 0. International League. Syracuse, 5; Pittsburgh, 4 (over- time). Detroit, 6; Rochester, 4. Canadian-American League. New Haven, 4; Philadelphia, 3. Providence, 3; Boston, 0. | i Duke Perfectly Prepared for North Carolina Game Tarheels Had Bad Day Coming—Southwestern Teams in Line for Rose Bowl Engagement. BY EDDIE BRIETZ. Associated Press Sports Writer. EW YORK, November 18.— Some cheering is in order in this corner . . . You have to give Wallace Wade credit for one of the nicest bits of coaching of the season . . Never was a team better prepared for a certain game than Duke was for North Carolina . . . They told us down there Wade actually got out and played in the line with the boys in practice during the last two weeks . . . Anyway, it was a perfect job. and the result was the biggest upset the South has known 5 since Mississippi State toppled Ala- bama. North Carolina has a real team, all right . . . but it just wasn't in Duke’s class Saturday . . . Next week or the week after it might be a different story . . . Only thing is, the pay-off was last week . .. No flies on Duke, either . . . It's smart and big and fast . . . We'd like to see it against Princeton . . The Tigers might win, but our no- tion is it would be mainly because they've got more reserves. Ace Parker, Duke’s quarter, can step with any of them , .. the all« America selectors ahould «put & cross opposite his name as & I~ minder .. . and the line made you think of those Alabama forward walls that made the Coast sit up and take notice when Wade was & regular visitor to the Rose Bowl, Wade says his team had one great game in its system and got rid of it Saturday . .. Carl Snavely says his boys had a bad game coming and chose to play it Sat- urday . . . personally, we give all the credit to Mr. R. K. Courtney, Duke’s one-man hoodoo, who was persuaded to remain at home . . . we understand Duke will give him his letter. « « . looks as though they may have to ask a team from West of the Mississippi if they insist on an unbeaten outfit . . . it might be a good idea for Southern Confer- ence and Texas Christian to start their press agents West at once « « . North Carolina, Marquette and Syracuse are out . . . Dart- mouth will have earned a bid if it beats Princeton, but that's some- thing else entirely , . . if Cali- fornia is the Western team, it may go right ahead and invite Notre Dame despite that defeat and tie « « « fter all, Notre Dame is the team that makes those turnstiles alick, i THE SPORTLIGHT Duke Victory Is Surprise, but Size Foot Ball Critics. BY GRANTLAND RICI it was Bill the two upset the up, and, in each case, Shakespeare who threw | punishing passes that | scenery, | It is easy to understand why 80.000 people pack their way into an Army- Notre Dame setting. Something nearly always happens that lifts the multi- tude to its feet in some form of dra- matic finish. There is always a battle fought to the last ounce and the last split second. In this last meeting it was 140-pound Monk Mever of the Army—140 pounds of high ex- plosive—who dominated a big | Ppart of the scene. | It was Meyer's toe that kicked Notre Dame into the coffin corner along the | “Irish” one-yard line. | It was Monk Meyer's arm that | whipped the pass to Grove for the 40-yard touchdown. It was Monk Meyer's flying feet B v & e that apparently carried the Army out of danger on a 50-yard dash with only spinning seconds left to play. Just how one man could crowd as much foot ball into a 140-pound system might baffle even the scien- tists. Yet even Monk Meyer's all- i around skill and the desperate scrap- ping of his mates could not stave tically a replica of the 80-yard march score. | MONK | speare gave the crowd an exhi- bition of versatility and foot ball skill it won't forget for some time. They kicked, ran and passed with superb skill. It was unfortunate that the South Bend charge had to reach its climax on an official ruling—but the tangle on forward pass interference remains one of the game’s weakest spots, where so many decisions can be rendered in either direction. There was a general feeling that the play before might have been penalized rather than the final pass from Shakespeare to Millner that was covered by three Army defenders. These episodes all are part of the breaks of foot ball. As the game was played, the two teams were about evenly matched. Army had the stronger starting team: Notre Dame the greater man power and the abler reserves—a big help in that final period, when a worn-down Army team was giving all it had—and something more—to keep some green- clad form from crossing its goal line. The South Bend assault gained most ground in the final period—an assault that gathered more and more mo- mentum as the minutes and then the seconds began to slip away. After the Ohio State and the Army games, no one can say that any other Notre Dame team ever had more heart when surrounded or backed against the wall. You can be sure also that no two teams will hand out finer spirit than this same pair of old-time rivals. The line play on both sides was up to a high standard, ouilt on fast, hard charging from start to finish. And the double show put on by Meyer and Shakespeare will stand out as one of the star exhibitions of the year. Two Star Backs. MEYER and Bill Shake- | off that last Notre Dame drive—prac- | | against Ohio State for its second | HIEH TEAMS TILT 10 AVOID CELLAR | Western-Roosevelt ~ Scrap Tomorrow Promises to Be Torrid Affair. | BY BURT HAWKINS. HE “honor” of battliing for fourth place in a five-team league is a doubtful one, yet Roosevelt and Western promise to wage one of the most torrid scraps | of the high school series when the | teams square off tomorrow at Roose- | velt Stadium, Thirteenth and Upshur streets, at 3:15 o'clock. Considerably strengthened by the return of the injured Johnny Hatch to his signal calling post. Western's Red Raiders will enter the fray a slight favorite to avoid being booted down the cellar steps. { While the combined attacks of both elevens have netted but 2 points in | series competition, the Rough Riders having scored a safety against Cen- tral's second team, the battle never- theless looms as a desperate struggle. Dan Ahern'’s charges will be striving for their first victory of the year, | having dropped four games while | tving St. John'’s. Lynn Woodworth's warriors have lost five frays after win- | ning in their first two starts. Bob Saum, Charlie Wells, Morris | Snead and Hatch pack what scoring | punch the Western eleven might dis- play, while Roosevelt will depend on | Francis Beamer's passing and Spiro | Kolius' receiving for most of its ground gaining The lowly position of the teams be- lies the sterling line play of several | members of both squads. Ed Lloyd | doesn’t have to doff his helmet to any tackle in the series. Bill Shelton, who | returned to action in the Tech game | after naving been injured in the first game of the season, also performs capably at guard for Western. Beamer and Kolius, while shaded by such outstanding ends as Bob Brand and Allan Miller of Eastern and Paul ‘Whedon and Charley Kline of Central, nevertheless rank as top-notch scho- lastic flankmen. Gus Papanicolas has qualified as one of the best guards in the series, while the work of Jake Lewis at center and Lou Hayman at tackle also has been of high caliber. While Central is waving the cham- pionship pennant, the Tech-Eastern game at Central Stadium on Friday for second place is expected to draw one of the largest crowds of the scho- lastic season. - COLLEGE HARRIERS SEEK U. S. HONORS By the Associated Press. YORK, November 18.—The twenty-seventh annual cross- country championships of the Inter- collegiate A. A. A. A. are being run today at Van Courtlandt Park, with the six-mile distance giving way for the first time to the 5-mile route. Twenty-four colleges are entered in the varsity test, while freshmen of 16 colleges meet over the three-mile route. Michigan State, with several highly rated runners, had hopes of continu- ing its two-year winning of both the team and individual titles. Among the colleges entering teams are Alfred, Carnegie, Columbia, Man- hattan, Cornell, Dartmouth, Fordham, Harvard, Lafayette, Pennsylvania, | Pittsburgh, Princeton, Yale, Syracuse and Penn State. Penn State and Manhattan were considered most likely to halt Michigan's reign. Penn State, having won the title four times, needs only one more victory to retire the Team Playing Central to ALREADV offering as many pupil. the Mexico City all-star on the afternoon of November 29, will rival a fireworks display for varied latest dispatch from the Latin American capital. the Wear Red Helmets, White Jerseys, Green Pants. angles as a solid geometry problem to a kindergarten high school foot ball team. which will clash with Central at Griffith Stadium give greater brilliance to the fray by wearing uniforms which promise to hues According to all-stars promise to blind temporar thousands of District fans when trot out on the field in their ra raiment, which features lustrous green pants In accord with the color scheme, | the boys from the neighhoring nation | 1 bright red headgear and the r al coate rms emblazoned acros | Thus the boys will be we | colors of their country anical schools attend will be lettered acr | backs of the jerseys. Local fan: | rest their optics a bit by gazin, h will be white Team From Five Schools. »xS VARIED as the reported dane - gerous passing attack of the vise itors will be the names of the schools |on the jerseys. Nine of the chili-fed group hail from the Superior Ene School, six from the Indus- Technical Institute, five from the of Commerce, one from the School of Construction, and one from ormal School. All of these insti= s are under the direction of the of technical instruction of o City’s Department of Educa- gine hool Mex tion But while the uniforms promise to make the sun resemble a 60-watt b ed vouths from acr e will depend on the provide m hdowns, during Villarreal, triple threat rback. and ique Cortez, clever halfback. will be the men to watch when the Mexicans take to the air. Both equally adept at tossing and receiving, they have run wild against | club teams in practice games Pro Foot Ball. | Mexicans Tune Up Today. York Giants, 3; JLUIS ROMO. bruising 165-pound fullback who shares the ball-+ carrying duties with Villarreal and Cortez, also is reported to pack & punch when it comes ta crack- e li Romo is a full-blooded Indian chief who will be out to scalp the local contingent Thousands of Mexican students were expected to attend the first of a series of warm-up battles for the all-star team today in Mexico City when the picked group was scheduled to stack up against the Centro Atle- tico. a strong club eleven. . Three years ago—Primo Carnera knocked out Jose Santa of Portugal in sixth round at Madison Square | Garden. to a E i { New Chicago Bears, 0 Detroit Lions, 20; Green Bay Pack- ers, 10, College Foot Ball. Mary’s, 10: Santa Clara, 0. 14; gara, 12, Pro Soccer. St. Louis Maccabees, 2 Pro Hockey. Montreal Canadiens, 6: New York Americans, 0. Detroit Olympics, 6; Rochester Cars dinals, 4 Chicago Blackhawks, Rangers, 0. | Syracuse, 5: Shamrocks, 4; Chicago 3. New York Pittsburgh, 4. Men . . . here's the bat all-around glad- stone bag we've seen in many a moon. Made of genuine top-grain walrus leather + .. black or brown; in 24 or 26 inch size + . . real leather lining in inside partition: shirt fold and accessory pockets. Initialed without charge. Charge It—Pay in January KRS 1314 F Street N.W. Charge Accounts Invited Mail Orders Filled

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