Evening Star Newspaper, November 29, 1936, Page 27

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\ STAR HALFBACKS | Guckeyson, Kaufman Stand Out—Talent at Tackle Found Scarce. | BY FRANCIS E. STAN. | RYING to harness the surge | of Georgetown's line, George Washington's balance and resourcefulness, Maryland’s spasms of brilliance and the versa- | tility of a single Catholic University | gridman who played the game up to the hilt, we rise today in humble | voice to offer a version of a mythical | all-Washington college team of 1936. | Whether the best combination has | been selected is open to reasonable debate, but the hypothetical team named, were it called upon to take | the field, would embrace a couple of | consistent ends, tackles and guards | of proved worth, a brilliant center on defense, and a backfield embodying all the requisites of a ground-gaining quartet of ball carriers. Left out in the formation of this backfeld is Georgetown only but the Hilltoppers, nevertheless, provide a lop-sided quota of five linemen, in- cluding the entire left side of the forward wall. A Maryland guard and & Georgetown end are picked to round out the line, while the Colonials Joey Kaufman, Catholic’s Bill Adamaitis and Maryland's Bill Gue- | keyson and Johnny Gormley compose | the backfield. And now, before the brickbats fall, | let us get it all off our chests. Halfbacks Are Bountiful. 'HE choice of three players, at least, | is likely to invoke sparse criti- | cism. Guckeyson, of course, was & “natural” and, next to the Maryland | star, the fleet, accurate-passing Kauf= | man probably attracted more local PORTS. attention than any back in the city. | § Singularly, Joey achieved recognition on a team that had no other indi- vidual standouts. George Washing- ton, the best balanced team of the year, seemed to be composed either of no stars or all stars There was a bountiful crop of good halfbacks in the District this season. Vie Sampson of George Washington won his spurs and Herb Reeves’ play on the same eleven was consistently acceptable. Maryland bobbed up with one of the brightest prospects, since Tuffy Leemans and Guckeyson started their careers, in Sophomore Jim Meade. Burke Vid- novic rose to prominence at Catholic University, which already was gifted with Bill Adamaitis, Irish Carroll, Bud Munhall and Howard Walker. At Georgetown a number of good half- backs with promise of sharp im- | provement were in evidence, notably in the persons of Joe Keegin, Tony | Barabas and Bill Valiquette. Yet, above the crop, Guckeyson and Kaufman stood head and shoulders. Gormley Choice Debatable. | JOT so bountiful was the supply of quarterbacks and Kaufman is selected for this position, although | he played only at half this season. Still, Adamaitis seemed to stand out | over the quarterbacks and there is not | much question but what Kaufman could do an adequate job with a little practice at the post. Adamaitis was one of the few Car- dinals who played consistently. He Js one of the most expert blockers in this sector and is just as capable a passer and runner. The choice of Gormley is likely to | be debated more than any other back- field selection, chiefly, however, be- cause he was buried under the ava- lanche of notices given Guckeyson and Meade. Gormley. nevertheless, prob- | ably was the best blocker of all and | unquestionably one of the finest de"\ fensive backs of the local campaign. | No ball carrier is Gormley, nor need he be when smoothing the paths for | such gifted runners as Guckeyson, Kaufman and Adamaitis. The big Marylander had the edge over George- town's Bill Duff, George Washington's Jay Turner and Catholic’s Bob Ma- kofske. The mythical backfield, in addition to possessing plenty of ball-carrying ability and unusual blocking from two of the backs, also would show two kickers in Guckeyson and Kaufman | and uncommon passers in this pair | as well as Adamaitis. No Doubt About Hardy, | T IS difficult to stray far from Georgetown for linemen. Five oli the seven named are Hoyas with only Mike Surgent of Maryland, a guard, and Ray Hanken of George Washing- ton, an end, creeping into the picture. Al Snyder of Georgetown and Hanken | were named as the wingmen because the former probably was the best de- | fensive end in the city and the latter not only adequate in the same de- partment but doubly valuable for his knack of coming out of the line and carrying the ball. If there was a dearth of any type of finemen in the city this season it was at the tackle positions. Georgetown had far and away the best pair in Clem Stralka and Al Vaccaro, who distinguished themselves in every | game. Vaccaro, especially, was adept at blocking punts and recovering fum- bles, helping to win the West Virginia game by grabbing a loose ball in| Mountaineer territory and blocking a kick by Jim Meade to turn the tide of the Maryland game. | Maryland’s Surgent, a big, rangy youngster, proved himself a rock on defense, a forward-pass intercepter of no mean ability, and an adept downfleld blocker. He is named at one of the guard positions, with the other going to Joe Frank of George- town, a steady player whose value to the Hilltoppers was overlooked even in the ranks of Hilltopper supporters. As for Hardy at center there can be little question as to his right on the team. All season the lanky ball snapper has played sensationally on defense, knocking down punts and extra point kicks and intercepting passes. Naming “Seconds” Is Difficult. TRYING to name a “second team” was almost as difficult as climbing out on the limb for the so-called “first team.” Snyder and Hanken had plenty of competition from several good ends. including Vic Willis of Maryland, Hermie Schmarr of Catholic, Holt of George Washington and Maury Nee of Georgetown. Willis, chiefly for his pass catching, and Schmarr for his steady, heady play all season were se- lected as the No. 2 ends. Dale Prather of George Washing- ton seemed to this observer to come dfl;m to matching the Georgetown A THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, NOVEMBER 29, 1936—PART ONE. G. U.; 8—John Gormley, Md.; 9—Bill Adamaitis, C. U.; 10—Joey Kaufman, G. W.; 11—Al Vaccaro, G. U. mbination . lost to Bullis and Landon. 1—Larry Hardy, G. U.; 2—Clem Stralka, G. U.; 3—Mike Surgent, Md.; 4—Bill Guckeyson, Md.; 5—Al Snyder, G. U.; 6—Ray Hanken, G. W.; 7—John Frank, Gormley, Valiqueite, Reeves Unsung Grid Heroes ‘IERPS HAVE TASK Help Other Stars Into Spotlight—Turner, Hardy “Money Players”—Yanchulis Luckless. BY ROD THOMAS. OO0 few of the folks in the stands appreciated Johnny Gormley of Maryland, Bill Valiquette of Georgetown and Herb Reeves of George Wash- ington in this waning season. Gormley and Valiquette seldom carried the ball, but the Terrapins and Hoyas gained many a yard be- cause Johnny and Bill knocked the tacklers out of the way for the lads who did. Reeves got more attention be- cause sometimes the leather was under his arm, and he was a hard runner, but much value was placed upon Herb for a reason hardly to be noticed from the stands. To quote his coach, Jim Pixlee: “Without Reeves as a constant threat, Kaufman and Sampson wouldn’t have gained as freely as they did.” Kaufman and Sampson alter- nated as climax runners. ‘‘Moreover,” Pixlee points out, “Reeves could play any position in the backfield and play it well. All things considered, he was pere haps our most valuable back.” Joe Yanchulis of C. U, a cork- ing center for any man’s team, played through his senior year with the dash and determination of a sophomore and but for the Car- dinals’ disappointing record you'd be hearing much more about him. Yanchulis last Fall won Coach Bergman's most valuable player award. He'd be a candidate this time except that Bergman doesn't name the same player twice, Georgetown proved in nearly every game that a strong line con- stantly applying pressure will force the breaks that win. With another back or two of the class of Keat- ing and Keegin, or fewer injuries to the ball carriers it possessed, tackle duo of Stralka and Vaccaro. The rangy Colonial is teamed with Katalinas of Catholic on the “second,” Wwhile Tim Stapleton of George Wash- ington and Lew Shuker of George- town are given the call at the guard posts. Stapleton was an invaluable cog in the smooth-running, resource- ful Colonials, while Shuker played consistently all season and brilliantly in the Maryland game. Joe Yanchulis of Catholic U., heretofore a fixture at center, was ranked just back of Hardy this season and far ahead of any other ball snapper in town. George Jenkins, Colonial quarter- back, was not a prominent, colorful figure, but he probably was the most efficient in town over a sustained stretch. When he played in the early part of the season Georgetown's Tommy Keating seemed to be the brainest of the play-callers, but Tom- my was injured and slowed down toward the close, allowing Jenkins to prove himself the standout. Charlie Ellinger of Maryland gave him a close run. Irish Carroll and Bob Makofske of Catholic are awarded the halfback berths, Carroll by virtue of closing the season with & rush and Makofske for his steady plunging and punting. Makofske is a fullback, but is moved to half while the fullback post is given to Bill Duff, the only George- town back to figure on either team. Duff was outshone even on his own team, but it is 10-to-1 that Jack Hagerty would rate him the most valuable back on the Hilltop team. He is & fair ball carrier, a punter in & pinch and little short of & defensive marvel, Now to climb into the storm cellar for & few days. Georgetown’s attack would have been immeasurably stronger. Backstage information is desir- able in sizing up quarterbacks, for one can't be sure on occasions whether the general or the coach is handling the strategy. In seve eral instances this season fleld pi- lots have had their ears burned by the coaches for disobeying instruc- tions. Bruce Mahan of George Wash- ington, a youth of pronounced de- cision, called the plays when the Colonials, employing a varied at- tack, marked 80 yards against Rice for a touchdown, and this im- pressed the writer as the outstand- ing job of quarterback he saw all Fall. Maybe you haven't heard the one about the quarterback, given ad- amant instructions to punt on sec- ond down, ran 90 yards to the en- emy’s 1-yard line, where his team was held for a down and who, on second down, kicked the ball out of the lot! Public interest in foot ball zoomed this season. The Georgetown- Maryland game attracted over 12,000 against 8,000 last year, G. W. almost equaled its 1935 attend- ance in spite of adverse weather at three attractions and with a disap- pointing season C. U. fared better than usual at the gate. ‘The name of Jay Turner, Colonial fullback, may not appear in any all- star selections, but he was a man of the moment in two of the most dramatic bits of the campaign. He received the pass that beat Wake Forest and the one that brought & victory over West Virginia. The G. W.-Wake Forest game, & drama hardly surpassed by Merri- well's biographer, was won on & touchdown remembered only vague- 1y by the player who made it. On the preceding play, Turner was jarred and was “half out on his feet” when he made the victory catch and plunged across the goal. Turner, a sophomore, hastens to deny the report he is turning pro- fessional. Keep an eye on him next Fall, you star gazers. ‘Turner is a “money player” clean through, which reminds us that Red Hardy, the Georgetown center, combining the same characteristic with other qualities, is almost a cinch to make every all-District eleven, and in a year of high-grade centers, too. Incidentally, Washington had a young citizen at Dartmouth this Fall who did right well. Jack Kiernan. former Central High School student, plunged for Dert- mouth’s tying touchdown against Princeton. It was his final varsity game. But foot ball honors appar- ently are minor compared with others heaped upon Kiernan, who is president of his class, president of Psi U Fraternity, president of the Casque and Gauntlet, senior honor society, and president of Paleopitus, student government so- ciety, but still inds time to perform with the glee club. Four V.M. 1. Gridders Placed 1936 All-Virginia On All-0ld Dominion Eleven; W. and L. Is Next With Three BY BARTON PATTIE, Assoclated Press Staff Writer. ICHMOND, Va., November 28. —Head coaches of Virginia's colleges named four members of the V. M. 1. flying squad- ron to the 1936 Associated Press ell- State foot ball team today. They are Jim Farley, who was the ‘ unanimous choice for guard and thereby becomes captain of the myth- ical squad; Billy Roberson, halfback; Dick Strickler, tackle, and Andy Trzeciak, quarterback. Strickler and Traeciak are sophomores. ‘Washington and Lee, State cham- pions, placed the rugged Frank Jones at end, Duane Berry at guard and Wilton Sample at fullback. The coaches were undecided as to who they would start -as Jones' running mate, and tied in their voting between Wal- | ter Zable, Willlam and Mary, and Jack | Sanford, Richmond sophomore. Jones Gets Center Job. M TODD of Richmond was the choice for the other tackle, and AILD. C. Gridmen Stralka, G. U....L.T..Katalinas, C. U. -L.G.. Stapleton, G.W. Guckeyson, Md..R.H._Makofske, C. U. Gormley, Md....F.B......Duff, G. U. Honorable Mention. Ends — Nee (Georgetown), Holb (George Washington), Smith (Mary- land), Brown (Catholic University). Tacklés—Zulick (Meryland), Brad; (Georgetown): & Guards—Sochon (Catholic U.), Cot= tingham (George Washington). Center—De Armey (Maryland) Backs—Drake (Gallaudet), Howard (American UniVersity), Vidnovic, ‘Walker, Munhall,. Foley (Catholic U.); Ellinger, Meade, Headley (Maryland); Reeves, Turner (George Washington); Moulin, Keegin, Barabas, Keating, &VAIM (Georgetown). A Virginia Tech's versatile captain, Dave Jones, was selected as center for a second year. iewicz of Roanoke College was given margin. . Coaches who joined in picking the all-State team, aided by their assist- ants and scouts, were C. A. Bernier, Hampden-Sydney; W. E. Tilson, Washington and Lee; Frank L. Sum- mers, Randolph-Macon; Glenn This- William and Mary; Gus Tebell, Uni- versity of Virginia;, W. C. Rafferty, V. M. I; Henry B. Redd, V. P. nd Gordon C. White, Roanoke. The backfield contains three triple- threat performers in Trzeciak, Rober- son and Wroniewicz, and the State's nding line-buster in the 200- ‘gr'\: Sample. Each of these first ree men won their positions by wide riers, but Sample nosed out V. P. L's Foots Dickerson only by one slim bal- | lot. Dave Jones captured his center honors in the same fashion, Ed Schaaf, Richmond’s sturdy pivot man, by a lone vote. All but four of the all-State players are Virginia natives, two from Richmond. Farley, Berry, Wronie- wicz, Sample, Dave Jones and Todd have completed their college foot ball careers. The others will be back next year. Plenty of Good Backs. coaches were unable to agree on the second team backs, with & five-way tie resulting for two posi- tions. Those deadlocked in the vot- ing were Al Paliscak and Jimmy Bair, Randolph-Macon; Mel Henry, V. P. I; A. B. Conner, Virginia, and Pres- ton Moore, W. and L. - Brittingham and Kane, V. M. I, were the wingmen for the reserve squads; Ochsie, W. snd L. landed one tackle berth, while Weeks, Vir- ginia, and Robison, V. P. I, polled equal votes for the other tackle post. Randolph-Macon's capable captain, Joe Uram, was teamed with Mike West, University of Richmond pilot, 8t guards; Schasf was at center and Dickerson at fullback. ‘ The flashy Greg Wron- | the other halfback berth by a good | tlethwaite, Richmond; Branch Bocock, | margins over other crack ball car- | Foot Ball Teams BY the Associated Press. Player. School. Frank Jones, jr, W. and L._ Walter Zable (tied), W.and M. | Jack Sanford (tied), Richmond._End Dick Strickler, V. M. -Tackle Tom Todd, Richmond Jim Farley, V. M. I._. Duane Berry, W. and L. Dave Jones, V. P. I__ Andy Trzeciak, V. M. I.__ Billy Roberson, V. M. I ‘Wilton Sample, W. and L. Second Eleven. Brittingham, V. M. I Kane, V. M. I._ Weeks (tied), Virginia. Robison (tied), V. P. L. Ochsie, W. and L. West, Richmond_ Male, Virginia. Conner (tied), Virginia. Moore (tied), W. and L. Henry (tied), V. P. I._. Paliscak (tied), R. Dickerson, V. P. Honorable Mention. Backs—Clark (V. M. 1), Pendleton (Richmond), Martin (Virginia), Nis- tad (Virginia), Vaughan (Richmond), Bunch (W. and M.), Saunders (V. M. 1.), Bernier (Hampden-Sydney), So- daro (V. P. 1), White (Hampden- Sydney), Dunlap (W. and L.), heart (W. and M.). Centers—Rogers (W. and L.), Irby (V. M. 1), Boone (Randolph-Macon), Farmer (Emory and Henry). Guards — Harshbarger (Hampden- Sydney), Piland (V. P. 1), Larson (Roanoke), Marino (W. and M), Echols (V. M. 1), Moncure (Virginia), | 0T ¢ ‘Worthington (V. P. 1), Tackles—Siddall (Richmond), Ow- ings (W, and L.), Vecellio (V. P. 1), Gray (V. M. 1), Szymanski (W. and L.), Steed (Hampden-Sydney), Bru- baker (Roanoke), Haskell (Virginia). Ends — Marchant Shockey (V. P. 1), Doxey (V. P. L), Coiner (W. and M.), Borries (W. and L.), Spessard (W. and L.), Sargent (Virginia), Davenport (Virginia), S. Snidow (Roanoke), Dougherty (E. and H.). AMBERS DIAMOND FAN. Lou Ambers, the lightweight cham- pion, is & base ball fan and plays with neighborhdod teams. 1 PLAYING TERRORS Will Be Underdogs in Tilt Saturday—Vacation May Prove Big Help. ARYLAND'S hard working M the season’s finale for this section next Saturday when it goes to Baltimore to clash with Western Maryland in the big stadium in the Monumental city. The teams will be playing for the State championship and the Mayer Howard Jackson Trophy that Mary- land brought home last year with a not considered in the State series, as it meets none of the contenders for the honor. The Maryland gridders, whom the dopesters have made the underdogs in next Saturday's battle, will resume work tomorrow after having been on vacation since Thanksgiving day when they beat Washington and Lee in Bal- timore, 19 to 6. Rest May Prove Helpful. THE Terps, however, despite the size of the score were not overly | impressive in beating the hefty Gen- erals, who also played well under the (Richmond), | 5¢ form the m-.cerial justified. Western Maryland, on the other | Thanksgiving day by the impressive | score of 35 to 0 without having to | use its regulars for any length of ened by their lay-off and if they can | rise to the form of which they are capable they should have a good chance to repeat last year's victory. It will be the eleventh game of the season for Maryland and the tenth for Western Maryland. When Your Dog Begins to Scratch YOU OWE HIM THIS RELIEF Don't blame animal nature when your dog ins to scratch and shed his coat. It isn't nature’s way at all If your skin was like his—non-porous—and you could- n'ldnenmu. the itching would "drive you mad. A dog’s blood is continually infected with impurities, caused by the restraint of domestic life, prepared foods and lack of natural exercise. ey set up an in- tense irritation under his skin. No won- der he is fretful, nervous. He is in tor- He looks to you for help and you can give it—instantly. Rex Hunters Tasteless Condition Pow- ary capsules—for Dogs of all the natural larly on quickly end ra tite, eczema and oy make your Bet happy, healthy an contented Easy to administer, inexpensive. x ters _ Cone Powders—the famous prescription celcbrated English | Veterinary Surgeon; are for sale at leading Drug Stores an Pet Shops. (3 unsble to obtatn locally send 35e S e frect to " makers. J. Hilgers & Co d n‘::{'.' 171. Binghamton. N. A Their six-fold action benefits every vital ey ’s body. You'll ver organ in & dog’ . You'll never know fine your d n be until you have D the m uf;lllllll‘l"“lll- fon of a foot ball team will figure in | 22-to-7 triumph. Navy, of course, is ! SPORTS. B9 Georgetown Places Five Linemen on All-District Gridiron Team BY BILL DISMER, Jr. LTHOUGH only two local prep schools, Bullis and Landon, | finished the 1936 foot ball campaign with better than ;| even records, the eight elevens on the whole raised the total of their won- | anc-lost averages by nearly a hun- | dred points over the 1935 season, a | summary of the 54 games played n-1 | veals. | | Eighteen victories in 54 games| gave the eight—Bullis, Landon, Gon-l zaga, Devitt, Georgetown Prep, St.| Albans, St. John's and Friends—a percentage of .333 this Fall, in con-| | trast to last year when the same | | group was able to win only 15 in 47 starts for a meager .243 figure. | | But marked differences are noted | |in the standings of the teams this| | season which saw the three leaders |of '35—St. Albans, Devitt and Gon-| | zaga—experience rather unsuccessful seasons, none of them winning as many games as they lost. Bullis and | Landon, each of which finished be-| {low the .500 mark last season, won | 9 of their combined 11 games, Bullis taking 4 out of 5 and Landon 5 oul.‘ of 7. Bullis Strong Defensively. MOREOVEH, Bullis established some kind of a defensive record when it held its five opponents to 12 points, | Massanutten Military Academy's pow- erful eleven scoring one of the touch- downs and Devitt the other. The low scored-against record of Capital prep teams last year was 37 points. Landon, the highest-point scorer of this year, with 108, failed by 87 to equal the high-scoring mark of St. Albans’ crack team last year when 195 points were rolled up by the Cathedral lads. But Landon's defensive record is second only to that of its foremost rival for top honors, the Colonels allowing only 42 points by opponents and holding three of its seven opponents scoreless. Bullis' unquestioned power and right to the title of the Capital's best prep team is seen through its 32-0 rout of Woodrow Wilson and con- quest of its traditional rival, Devitt Woodrow Wilson defeated two prep teams, St. Albans and Friends, but If com- parative scores mean anything at all, its 18-0 defeat by Landon, followed by its 32-0 rout by Bullis is self-ex- planatory. Landon, however, is on the upgrade and a return of 20 of this year's squad of 29 should spell continued success in 1937. Moreover, the boys who just gave the suburban school its best grid | record in history were all green at the start and their compilation of a | winning record during their first year | together is a tribute to the co-coach- ing of Béb MacCartee and Paul Ban- field. The secoring punch was pro- vided by El Berkeley and Huc Hughes, who accounted for 12 of the team's 17 touchdowns between them. Although their list of victims in- | clude St. Andrew’s and St. James' of | Maryland and St. Albans and Friends, the Colonels take greatest satisfaction | {out of the comparative score rating which leaves them equal or superior to | Central. Landon’s three-touchdown | defeat of Woodrow Wilson, which nosed out Western, which in turn tied Central, is the way Press Agent Bill Russell figures it. | i Gonzaga Again Champion. ONZAGA won the championship ! 1“3 "of the Little Three for the second year in a row, its victories over St John's and Georgetown Prep compen- sating for losses to four of the five | inter-high foes it faced. Three of its| | conquerors—Central, Eastern and| Western—won only after hard fights, | Tech alone being convincing in its victory over the Purple. Devitt disappointed, with a flock of Position. | pang, defeated Mount St. Mary's on | : [ Tackle | e Terps, though, should be fresh- Every DAY WITH A Bullis, Landon Make Strides As St. Albans, Devitt, Gonzaga Fdll Below Standards of *35 former high school stars failing to click, and Georgetown Prep suffered through injuries after winning its first two games. St. Albans proved dis- tinctly inferior to the Cathedral team of last year, beating only the Church Farm School of Philadelphia and St. John's again defeated Georgetown Prep for its lone triumph, its second in two years. Friends, for the second successive season, failed to win a game, scoring but 14 points in six starts. Season records follow: Team. s Bullis b v Landon Gonzag: Dovt "= T _ Georgetown Prep. §t. Alba St. Joh Priends _ *Tied one. COLONIALS MAKE PRO DEBUT TODAY {Jenkins, Hanken and Prath- er Face Washington Pros as Orioles. ONSIDERABLY bolstered by the addition of Ray Hanken, Dale Prather and George Jenkins, who completed their collegiate foot ball playing days for George Washington Thanksgiving day against West Virginia, the Baltimore Orioles will invade Griffith Btadium today at 2:30 o'clock to clash with the Washington Pros in a Dixie League encounter. Hanken, a 180-pound end, is con- sidered one of the finest flankmen ever developed by Coach Jim Pixlee at George Washington, while Jenkins, quarterback. and Prather, tackle. also are expected to strengthen the Balti- more outfit, Washington Pop-Bottled. ’I‘HE first battle between the Orioles and Pros, last Sunday at Baltie more, ended in a 7-7 stalemate. Near ly 3.000 aroused spectators tcssed pop bottles on the field when Washingion, stalling for time, attempted to draw penalties by rushing offside when the Orioles advanced to its 3-yard line, The plan failed, however, and Balti« more tied the score. One of the most irritating factors in last week's fray from a Washington standpoint was the punting of Ted ‘Wright, who has played here under the alias of Jimmy Bankhead. Wright several times set the Pros back with lengthy boots and also reeled off seve eral sizeable gains. IS YOUR DOG OFF His FOOD? Improper care will make your do, languid and “picky" about hyis foof Exercise, fresh air, sunlight and GLOVER'’S CONDITION PILLS stimulate the appetite. and exerta tonic effect. 50 pills per package. GLOVER'S WORM MEDI- CINES are safe, sure. In cap- suleform forRound worms, Tapeworms and Hook- worms. Also liquid Vermi- fuge for Puppies. Each 60¢ per package. If your dealer cannot sup- ply you, write direct to Glover's. Famous DOG BOOK— Veterinary advice, FREE. Address GLOVER'S, 468 Fourth Ave., N.Y. ER'S mei®fues STARTS SMILE When You Use a SCHICK meaning in shave d_comfort, time.

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