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— SPORTS. THE EVENI 5‘ 5 TUESDAY, DECEMBER 295 1936. : ) Griffith Scorns Subsidization PROISM “COLLERE ATHLETIC KILLER” Would Not Last Long Under | Such Methods, Declares Big Ten Leader. BY BOB CAVAGNARO, Associated Press Sports Writer. NEW YORK, December 29.—Recog- nizing the existence of professionalism in intercollegiate athletes, John L. Griffith, in his annual report as presi- dent of the National Collegiate Ath- letic Association, said today “There are fewer boys per thousand today being illegitimately subsidized in our colleges than was true 25 or 50 years ago.” While he devoted most of his. report to the work of various committees throughout the vear and the problem of professionalism, Grifith also sug- gested that the colleges seek even wider representation on future Amer- ican Olympic committees than they had this year. “The colleges whole-heartedly sup- ported the Olympic Committee by sup- plying the men who helped as mem- bers of the different committees, by contributing money and by providing most of the outstanding athletes who participated in sports that are on col- lege programs,” he said. “This was the first time colleges have been given A fair representation on committees that had to do with college sports.” “What to Do?” Is Question. RIFFITH, Western Conference commissioner of athletics, said he knew of no one who “has any knowl- edge of the situation ever has denied the fact that some college athletes in any given year have been paid for playing on their respective teams. | “What I am interested in is the question of what we can do about it,” he added. To suggestions that the Carnegie Foundation conduct another study for | the “purpose of revealing the fact that our college athletics are not perfect,” Griffith said all the facts are known | and that “colleges in a given district | Capital Kid Making Good NEW YORK, December 29 ton, D. C. (left), shakes hands Rochelle, N. Y., whom he defeated, 6—1, 6—3, here last night in the third round of the boys’ national indoor tennis champion- .—Maurice Cowan of Washing=- with Herman Blumberg of New | ~—Copyright, A. P. Wirephoto. ADVANGE INDOORS D. C. RACKETERS Ritzenberg Takes Testing| Junior Match, Cowan Is Boys’ Squad Victor. By the Associated Press. EW YORK, December 29.— Two New York boys have fur- nished most of the excitement in the national junior and boys' tennis championships at the th Regiment Armory, with the seed- ed stars moving into the third round today without an upset. Robert A. Low of New York, who was seeded tenth among the juniors, barely escaped defeat yesterday at the | hands of an old rival, Peter Lauck, & | Princeton student from Montclair, N. J. Low dropped the first set and | barely pulled out the second, but finally rallied to win, 4—6, 11—§, 6—4. Meanwhile, the top seeded pair, team« mates at Kenyon College in Ohio, Don McNeill of Oklahoma City and Morey Lewis of Texarkana, Ark., found the going easy. McNeill, ranked first, did not yield a game to Alfred I. Jaffe of Brooklyn, winning, 6—0, 6—0. Lewis, who drew a bye in the first round, bettered his teammate's open- ing record, when he chalked up 11 straight wins in whipping Orme Wil- son, jr., New York, 6—1, 6—1. Ritzenberg Carries on. ALTHOUGH one of the juniors from Washington, D. C.. seeded | Al Ritzenberg. advanced into the third round by a victory over Robert Keefe | of Brooklyn, N. Y., the other Capital BIG NEWS OF 1936 15 Major Events to Go on Air Tonight Over Colum- bia Stations. IFTEEN major news events of F 1938 will be dramatized during the “Twelve Crowded Months™ program on WJSV and other Columbia stations tonight at 11:30 o'clock. A cast of 40 prominent radio actors and a large symphony orches- tra under direction of Howard Barlow will take part. The events to be dramatized were selected as a result of a poll of the country’s newspapers and press asso- ciations. Heading the list are: Abdica- tion of King Edward VIII, re-election of President Rooseveit, the Spanish war, Hitler's reoccupation of the Rhineland, Italy’s conquest of Ethi- opia and execution of Bruno Richard Hauptmann. LINKINO of the Mutual Broadcast- ing System with the famed Don Lee Broadcasting System on the West Coast will be celebrated with a gala program which WOL will broadcast from 10 pm. to 2:30 a.m. Special features will be picked up in New York, Chicago, Cincinnati, Detroit, Toronto, Philadelphia and Pittsburgh. Scheduled to contribute to the elab- orate program are George M. Cohan, Gabriel Heatter, Benay Venuta, Guy Lombardo, Horace Heidt, Eddie Du- chin, Ted Weems, Nat Brusiloff, Henry Weber, Shep Pields and a number of | other radio personalities, THE Caravan show on WJSV at 9:30 will begin a new series star- ring Jack Oakie, Benny Goodman’s | Band and Georgie Stoll's Orchestra. Bob Burns, Alice Faye and Harry Stockwell will appear as guest artists on the initial broadcast. Junior, David Johnsen, lost to Marvin Kantrowitz, the fourth seeded player. | Ritzenberg had to show all his cunning to turn back Keefe in three deuced sets, 8—8, 5—7, 1—5, Keefs | at one time being only a few points eliminated by Kantrowitz, 6—2, 6—2. | In the boys’ division Top-seeded Harper H. Ink, jr, of San Diego, Calif., gained his second easy triumph, downing Donald Fairbairn of Scars- | dale, N. Y., 6—1, 6—0. Playing “Cali- | away from match point, Johnsen was | A Wesleyan College also will send three groups of prize-winning singers and musicians to the microphone for | the premiere. L JOLSON will sing three dreamy melodies of a few years ago, con- trasted with a rhythm number, dur- ing his program on WJSV at 8:30. Jolson's program includes a medley | composed of “My Blue Heaven,” “Mel- | ancholy Baby” and “I'll See You in CarrtaL’s Rapio Programs THIS AFTERNOON’S PROGRAMS DECEMBER 29, 1936 PM. WRC 950k | WMAL 630k WOL 1,310k WISV 1,460k |P.M., Band Lessons ‘Words and Music Wakeman's Sports Page [Song Stylists - - b » Harold Turner, pianist |George Hall's Orch. Mary Mason Music Guild Wakeman's Sports Page Science Service ot > - hyd Palmer House Concert Happy Hollow Pepper Young’s Family Wakeman's Sports Page (Al Pearce's Oang Ms Perkins o - 3 - Vic and Sade Sammy Kaye's Orch. ‘The O’Neilis b b Cheerio’s Musical Mosaics| Chick Webb's Orch. | Chasin’ the Blues Consumer’s Program Sundown Revue ‘Tom Mix Jack Armstrong Little Orphan Annie U. 8. Marine Band Have You Heard? 'Rose Bowl Luncheon Concert Hall |Billy Mills & Co. 5 Dog Heroes Evening Star Flashes Your Health The Singing Lady Pop Concert | Folio of Facts Johnson Family John Kirkpatrick Tito” Guizar Blue Flames 'The World Dances |Terry and Ted i NG'S PROGRAMS Tony Wakeman En Dinant Editorial and News Dinner Concert Hal Kemp's Orch. Arthur Reilly Dance Music Del Casino Arch McDonald [News—Three Aces Renfrew of the Mounted Poetic Melodies Rubinoft Doris Kerr Boake Carter | Music Hall “w w “ - /Amos 'n’ Andy Voice of Experience Jackie Cooper Quest’'n Mark Hittenmark Teo Reisman’s Orch. Lowell Thomas Easy Aces “Battle With Life” Radio Joe Five Star Final Christian Witness Dance Music Detective Mysteries ‘Washington Amateurs A!( _Wien |Balute to Don Lee Dude Ranch 5 :30 |Wayne King Edgar A. Guest Al Jolson 5 S 55 pe Ben “Bernl: ‘Waring’s Pennsylvanians Bllll:lndl- and Wives ' The Caravan Frank 8imons’ Band The Caravan [News Bulletins {Dance Hour Slumber Hour Hollywood Gossip “New South America” News—Night Owl Lee Brown's Orch. Midnite Prolics Salute to Don Lee Mark Warnow’s Orch. |Buck O'Neill Hal Kemp's Orch. i“12 Crowded Months” Night Watchman Guy Lombardo’s Orch, iCab Calloway’s Orch. |Eddie Duchin’s Orch. |Horace Heidt's Orch. Night Watchman (1 hr.) | Hal Kemp's Orch. Emerson Gill's Orch. Dance Music (1 hr.) EARLY PROGRAMS TOMORROW DECEMBER 30, 1936. Jerry Blaine's Orch. “12 Crowded Months” Mario Braggiotti'’s Orch. Sleepy Time Sign off Sign oft 6:30 |Gordon Hittenmark ‘suh ; p |Musical Clock [Today's Prelude {Wake Up Club |Morning Devotions William Meeder, organist| Cheerio Art Brown Gordon Hittenmark = know which ones of their members | l | fornia style” tennis—a forcing serve | My Dreams.” use ringers and paid athletes. There | {and a hard net game, Ink had the is no one, however, who can force these colleges that do not wish to maintain athletics on a paid player basis to schedule games with those that do use mercenaries. “Still others suggest that if the standards were lowered and if the col- leges would openly subsidize their athletes just a little bit that then all hypocrisy would disappear. “There is no reason to believe that if a college conference, legitimatized the practice of paying athletes at the rate of $50 a week there would not be some who would now and then raise the ante. “Athletics Couldn't Endure.” WELLING on the proposed idea to divide profits from athletics among athletes, Griffith said athletics could not long endure the practice and asked: “Can you imagine the students and alumni being enthusiastic about a team of paid gladiators, or can you imagine any self-respecting board of trustees, ‘would long be able to justify the pr: tice of hiring foot ball players to en- tertain the public?” HUNTERS TO HONOR DECEASED MEMBERS Maryland Fox Chase Yo will | Perpetuate Memory With Special Trophies. TH!: memory of deceased members of the Maryland Fox Hunters' Association is to be perpetuated through the presentation of challenge trophies at the annual field trials of | o that organization. | A committee, composed of J. B. Bland of Suitland, Mrs. H. B. Mont- gomery of Lanham and S. L. King of Rockville, was named at the annual meeting in Rockville to arrange for the awards. The first trophy will be in memory of Clarence L. Gilpin of Olney, one | of the association’s most active mem- | bers until his death 10 days ago. It 15 to be presented at the 1937 trials, which were fixed for October 18 to 23, inclusive. A. G. Rolfe, Washington contractor, whose kermiels are located at Suitland, was elected president for the ensuing year, while George Willson, jr., of Lay | Hill was named vice president; Mrs. Bernard T. Brosius of Rockville, sec- retary; J. J. Hutton of Brookeville, treasurer. Z. M. Waters of Laytonsville and | Whitney J. Aitcheson of Laurel were chosen to serve with the official staff on the Advisory Committee. Waters, King and Mrs. Brosius were selected to draft an appropriate resolution to be presented to Gilpin's family. Headquarters for the annual field trials next Fall are to be selected at 8 later meeting. PHILS IN 17 GAMES. PHILADELPHIA, December 29 (#). =Jimmy Wilson, manager of the Phil- adelphia National League ball team, announced tonight a 17-game exhibition schedule for next Spring, topped off by a five-battle “city cham- Pionship” series with the Athletics, HOOSIERS WELL TAPED. Members of the 1936 Indiana foot ball team used 13!, miles of tape dur- president or faculty that | | grinned the Washington pro. l L | good club-swingers play a par 70 course with a better | ball of 69 and lose by two holes, but Ralph Fowler and Rudolph Harrell finaly have had their revenge on Dave Thomson and L. H. Whitten at Wash- ington. The latter pair licked Fowler and Harrell something like five times in a row, usually by a hole or two. which kept 'em coming back in the hope | that it might be reversed. | Their latest match found 'em halv- | ing the first seven holes in a row, one | the ninth, 1-up. And exactly the same thing happened on the second nine. Fowler grabbed another bird at the seventeenth after the four had halved the first seven holes, winning that nine also. score of 72. “This game really is getting tough when a fellow shoots a 72 and loses,” Golfers Find Caddy Shortage. [T WON'T last forever, but while it does the present run of balmy weather is bringing out many a golf kit that had been laid away for the Winter. Indeed, so heavy has been the play at the local courses over | clare they never have seen anything | like it in the middle of Winter, and for days at some of the clubs there's been a caddy shortage. Many of the regular bag-toters pick up odd jobs during the Winter, going back to caddying from April to December. For several days there haven't been enough boys to go around, even though they have dou- bled upon the bag-lugging. Quite a different picture from last | Christmas season, when the ground | was covered with snow and the stretch of bad weather spell—six weeks, in fact. The good golf weather is general throughout this sector. Down at Pine- hurst, that hot-spot of golf, some- times called the American St. Andrews, in the high 70s. A round of golf as warm as the weather found George T. Dunlap, amateur champion of 1933, bagging successive eagles on the fourth and fifth holes, This is the first time in the histery of Pinehurst this stunt has been recorded. The holes both are par 5 affairs, of 467 and 476 yards in length. Jock Hutchison did it in the British open championship of 1921, but one of his eagles was an ace on a one-shotter. Aces Barely Missed. RALPH FOWLER'S greatest links ambition is to get a hole-in-one. He's been playing now for around 15 ing the grid season. Net Match, Wire to Dad Brief Ink, California Boy Who of Advance in By the Associated Press. years, and while he has been close Flew to New York, Tells National Play. door championships in his division. Ink sent the message to his father sfter whipping Donald Fair- bairn. Today he was to play Costa Leodas of New York, who also won his second match easily, but did not look good enough to match Ink's smashing service and streng | of them in birdies, only to find Fowler | canning & bird on the eighth to win | | Fowler and Harrell had a better | ball of 67, and Dave had an individual | the last week that the club pros de- |J: lasted for quite a | D they've had temperatures ranging up |%- match under control at all times. Cawan in Third Round. “HLLIAM UMSTAEDTER of Mil- OLP really is getting to be & | many times the ball has refused to Californian, defeated Warren D'Ales- drop. Ralph has one of those shallow-faced | little spoons which come in so handy for shots around 190 yards, and he | plays it very well. The other day at | Washington he knocked one toward | the pin at the fourteenth, a hole of about 190 yards from the present tee. The ball disappeared and he thought it had gone in the cup, but when he |came up to the green it lay an inch or two behind the pin. Appareatly | it had hit the cup and spun out. A few days ago at Congres- sional he had another, on the par 3 twelfth, where he knocked a spoon shot within inches of the hole. The Middle Atlantic Association of Greenkeepers will hold its monthly meeting in Baltimore next Monday, but unless the weather stays good the | boys won't play golf. Another Middle Atlantic meeting has been set for next month. It's the annual meeting of the Middle Atlantic | Golf Association, and it will be held | at Congressional Country Club the night of January 16. | burn, N. J., seeded behind the sandro of Staten Island, 6—3, 6—2. His third-round opponent will be an- other Washington entrant, 13-year- | old Maurice E. Cowan, who turned in | an impressive 6—1, 6—3 victory over Herman Blumberg, New Rochelle, N. | Y. Cowan, fust over 4 feet in height, | may give the ranking player trouble. | EW YEAR resolutions and cures | for “stay-at-homes” and “knowe | it-all” husbands will be discussed dur- | ing the “Husbands and Wives"” broad: cast on WMAL at 9:30. |Sun Dial Melody Graphie |Richard Maxwell Betty Hudson Betty and Bob Modern Cinderella | News Bulletins Gordon Hittenmark = e Breakfast Club Morning Concert Police Flashes—Music News—Music Views of the News {Singer of Hymns | | The Streamliners Morning Glories Mrs. Wiggs |John's Other Wife Air Sweethearts Viennese Sextet | JBEN BERNIE and his orchestra, on WMAL at 9, will have Gertrude Niesen as guest. Star of the “Zieg- | feld Follies,” Miss Niesen is now u Hollywood making her first picture. | John L. Jorgensen of Chicago, | ranked sixth among the boys, had | some trouble winning from William Witkin, New York, 6—2, 6—4, but an- | other Western entry, A. Allen McDon- | ald of Wichita, Kans., seeded eighth, | easily defeated Joseph G. Dilibra of | Plainfield, N. J., 6—0, 6—4. | Only one seeded junior reached the | third bracket without playing. Isa- | dore Bellis of Philadelphia, eighth on | the list, received a default from Alex= ander Guerry of Chattanooga, Tenn., after drawing a first-round bye. The leading Southern entry, Billy Gillespie of Atlanta, easily advanced at the expense of Christian Gide, | New York, 6—0, 6—2. | R R r R Five years ago—Maribel Vinson won national figure skating cham- pionship. Bowling (Continued From Tenth Page.) 2 SSERTITRC IO SRTR 1 5—591. Julia Young rolled 60—583 to trail Mrs. Wootton. Following are the scores of the Con- | vention Hall and Rosslyn roll-offs: CONVENTION HALL. 1 . Krauss 109 . Schroth 130 oS pomx T e e ertupor) Bt R R St ek ettt et SAtet et B3RS RIRIIRIZLER o B g2 <8 e oSl iy Pty 23, E} FRA392E BRI RRRnRENIS T e et T 2RRIBHIWZERZ S 9= 2 ABOINSDR ot bt b ieirEt] feririmety BEIRBIEEEIREIR2IBRIGI ¢ 31355 3 4 3 SRR3353 338E8ESRT o35, 3532328313308 S pee it 3Bt D i 3 BSORI2REET bk s s Reocenciacs 3% &5 SEIE D0 oM. - : 223! =030 e (e R et 4 RRRRBE2BLIRITIRARRE! RFR2ICEI53232353 323 2353 R255323592328352 FRRUIANERIE353322230388 - A EOPN 0" & ] atemlihiidaniiol BEREE = omgueg % i DRt s e Tt ey PR CE I LT e It B Attt et b et i bt SRIRAIZ=R oo e 23355 tonight for finalists at the Lucky | Strike, Hyattsville Arcade, Takoma | and Northeast Temple. | Following are the bowlers who will | roll the finals at these plants, with the | starting time 7:30 o'clock: | LUCKY STRIKE. Men, Alley. Alley. 29 42 o 43 Jarman. C. Benjamin. 44 yer. Vingfeld. 47 LaBille. 48 Sam Simon. - Wolstenholme. A. Thompson. Carthy. McGuigan. Grimes A Beavers. on. Wita. Pollaid. Nicholson, ttin. Harvey, wis. . Coarad. 49 50 urd. rd. Sincindiver, aloney, 5 S 83 51 Y x. I, wis. wolla. Youngblood. 52 2y F a3 Y ; 53 OO g ek 54 el ,lNulIelL s w20 5 2 PRETOOOmIFHNP HEON SR INENROPNOZOR . §IKD) €; B 0S=0RP>Ho>H>0) N, 3332 Rt . M. McElwee. QuzEr P ompson,’ . Brown. HYATTSVI Men Hdp. Ttl, 5 673 J 5 643 71 » 2 82 tor__ 48 620 . Browning 48 616 . Bobb.__ 48 810 .'Chaney ~ 55 610 Hilliard~ 18 609 nok] mEgzSRWY rent ssell - 28 . Ap’ler 40 A meo, | § gowopmey B Fal I g LTkl VERSATILE ATHLETE McLeod, 'Bama Star in Trio of Sports, Bemoans Idleness. 'UNIVERSITY, Ala (#).—Time hangs 50 heavy on the hands of Ben McLeod, ‘Bama 3-letter man. He's just finished his three years of eligibllity on the gridiron, and will be inactive until base ball season. He'd like to play basket ball—but and Rosslyn/will be the targets McLeod bas used up his allotted three Air Headliners Domestic. 4:00 p.m.—WJSV, Billy Mills & Co. 4:45 p.m.—WMAL, Evening Star Flashes, Evening Programs. 8:00 p.m.—WRC, Leo Reisman's Orchestra; WJSV, Ham- merstein Music Hall; WOL, “Five-Star” Final.” 8:30 p.m.—WRC, Wayne King's Orchestra; WJSV, Al Jolson. 9:00 pm.—W M AL, Ben Ber- nie’s Orchestra; WJSV, Waring’s Pennsylva- nians. —WRC, Fred Astaire; WJSV, the Caravan. 10:00 p.m.—WOL, Salute to Don Lee network. —WJSV, “ Twelve Crowded Months.” Short Wave Programs. 6:30 p.m.—LON D ON, “Bristol and Beyond,” GSD, 25.5 m, 11.75 meg. 845pm.~B O STON, Pan- American Nations. WIXAL, 496 m., 6.04 meg. 9:15 p.m.—LONDON, “Children of the Stars,” GSD, 25.5 m,, 11:75 meg. 12:00 Midnight—TOKIO, Over- seas program, JVH, 20.5 m, 14.6 meg. 11:30 EARNS “TARZAN” TAG | . UNIVERSITY, Ala. (#).—There may be more appropriate nicknames, but | none ever was more justly earned than | that of “Tarzan” White, Alabama’s | underslung guard. | As a boy, living near the swamps of Atmore, Ala., White read the novels of Edgar Rice Burroughs and emulated the hero by taking to the swamps, swinging from tree to tree and killing his own meat. You Can’t Afford NOT to consultant, to your place and A. Eberly’s Sons 1108 K N.W. “Our One Jeandard—One Responuibility—One Modess Profit §320N. Y. Ave. ¢ | Herod's slaying of all babies under 2| Community Center organized the first | | | years of age in an attempt to do|indoor league in the city's history. = Be Good to Your Home Wear takes toll of everything. The march of time makes the old obsolete. Repairs and renovations are natural necessities. Upon how they are done and by whom doing them depends the resulting satisfaction. Perhaps you have definite ideas already of what should-be done. Or, maybe you are still in a quandary as to what improvements could be made. In either event let us send an Eberly Plan confer with you. This incurs no obliga- tions, but it will crystallize thought into interestingly tangible plans, for the Eberly Plan man will put himself in |Just Plain Bill |Today's Children David Harum Backstage Wife How to Be Charming Voice of Experience TO! | Prances T. Northcross 'Songs of Romance Hymns of All Churches | John K. Watkins Josh Higgins |The Doctor Says The O'Neills Personal Column Vic and Sade |The Big Sister Edward MacHugh Dr. Allan Roy Dafoe MORROW AFTERNOON PROGRAMS Honeyboy and Sassafras Don Pedro, pianist The Gumps Curbstone Queries | News—Music Between Bookends Farm and Home Hour Dance Music Helen Trent Pomance - . | e G _ |Rich Man’s Darling _ (Tonic Tunes |Art Giles' Orch. 58538l; |t e i 11:30 11:45 P.M. 12:00 Midday Merry Go Round 12:15 |Story of Mary Marlin 12:30 |Preddie Rich's Orch. 12:45 Joe White, tenor Dick Fiddler’s Orch. The High Hatters Dan Harding’s Wife {Music Guild iMusic Guild “Angelus” g 85858585858 Music from Texas |The Hollisters Concertairs Harmony Hall | Sports” Page Parm and Home Hour Vaughn de Leath | Dot and Wil i Wil 1Mll! Believe Words and Music 3 In a Woman’s Eyes {Harold Turner, pianist Madison Ensemble |Melody Matinee Dr. F. B. Knight S Happy Hollow Sports Page Manhattan Matinee Marjorie Souders, songs “ 2 Sports Page Today's Winners Jean Dickinson, songs Bailey Axton, tenor Continental Varieties |Pepper Young’s PFamily |Ma Perkins (Vic and Sade ‘The O'Neills 00 |Henry Busse's Orch. s e e 4:30 |Men of the West 4:45 Sundown Revue "5:00 Sundown Revue 5:15 |Tom Mix 8:30 jJack Armstrong w w0 ns a0 e e il |Melodic Moments Institute of Music Von Unschuld Piano Club ~ |Parents and Teachers Gogo de Lys London Singers I'rhz World Dances Alice Hutchins Drake Afternoon Melodies Folio of Facts Johnson Family Frank Dailey’s Orch. UNITED MOTORS SERVICE CARBURETION SERVICE ON ALL MAKES NATIONAL SERVICE | ESTRBLISHED 1919 30 14TH ST.N.W. Meet the Orchestra Evening Star Flashes The Singing Lady | | | has been functioning for 10 weeks. It 200 CHILDREN OBSERVE | SOFT BALL POPULAR | ek o clce during e coming HOLY INNOCENTS FEAST! SR L week with the title safely won by the ‘Becomes All-Year Pastime in Cap- Sogimas, a group of local college - T — | athletes who formerly starred for The Feast of the Holy 1""0‘*'“-‘; e L s | George Washington, Catholic Univer- was celebrated yesterday by approxi-| The successful attempt to make it v Georgetown and Maryland. mblaly zmh“"‘:“;";m‘m YePre- an all-year sport attests the tremen- sent pri and sisters of variou: i Catholic orders—at the Church of 90Us popularity of soft Dall in Wash- Our Lady of Victory. | ington, which saw more “tens” entered Except for blessings bestowed by | in the multiple struggle for the city's Rev. Louis C. Vaeth, the entire service | championship in 1936 than ever before. was conducted for the first time in After a Summer of activity which ‘Washington by children rehearsed by was climaxed by Ehrlich Poultry Co.’s the Sisters of Mercy of Holy Trinity | capture of the championship in a city- Convent to mark the tragedy of King | wide play-off series of 16 leagues. the | away with the infant Jesus. Pour-ipuym; at Tech High School every year-olds took the part of the Wise Tuesday and Saturday night, the loop ' DONT MISS THE FUN by children in Rome for generations. TUNE IN TONIGHT! BREEDS GRIDIRON STARS. Franklin, Tenn., is the home town | of the following Vanderbilt stars of | today and yesterday: Innis Brown. Allen Brown, Nick Brown, Ammie | Sikes, Josh Cody, Harry Guffee, Carl “ Hinkle, Pete Gracey and Tommy Henderson | ¥ Renovize The Eberly Way 'WITH SPECIAL COLLEGE TALENT and BENNY GOODMAN'S “SWING” BAND GEORGE STOLL'S CONCERT ORCHESTRA HOLLYWOOD FAMOUS SINGING STARS AND COMEDIANS ‘Tonight and erery Tuesday night 2t 9:30 pm E.S.T., 8:30 pm C.S.T., M.S.T., 6:30 pm P.5.T. WABC i 3 ¥ i i Here's the irrepressible Jack Oakie himself as the “Dean” he ‘You'll hear tonight! 30 pm -CBS. SaveTime—Save Worry—Save Money by parking your car in the CAPITAL GARAGE Saves Worry ~—because your cer is out of harm’s way and the weather; nobody is bangin into it—and domag ing something. Saves Money —becouse if some- thing does heppen, there's expense and loss of use of the cor while it's being fixed. Saves Time . —because it's handy and you don’t heve to keep an eye on the clock to escape an overtime parking ticket make a survey and Your car is safer here than in your own garage—for here it has constant supervised super-service—from the moment you drive in until you drive out. Theater Parking—6 P.M. to 1 A.M.—35¢ Complete repoir, edjustment, oiling, paint- ing, weshing and towing—24-hour service. Z = Capital Garage advise accordingly. 88th Year” I ‘ - 2