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SPORTS. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTO D. C., THURSPAY JULY 22, 193 Tournaments Costly to Golf Pros : U. S. Davis Cup Team Out of Red DROP FROM 1500 | 10 §2500 A YEAR £10,000 Open Is Big Help. Cotton-Shute Tilt Epic of Concentration. BY GRANTLAND RICE. ROFESSIONAL golfers are the worst underpaid men in sport as far as the competitive side goes. Most of them pay out good money to enter tournaments and take their shot, with no guarantee in return. Competition costs the majority of pros from $1,500 to $2,500 a year, net loss. To help offset this, the Chicago District Golf Association is hanging up $10,000 in cash prizes at Medinah this week end, with the winner facing & $3,000 harvest. And this $3.000 may spin on the turn of a single putt. Medinah, where Tommy Armour rules the terrain, has more than one championship test to offer in the way of courses. The fleld in general will match that of an open—with the pick of the game on bhand—with more than 400 starters. The caddy foundation fund is the main purpose of the tournament, | which includes every known side line of golfing interest, The Winning Factor. [OSE golf pedants who hold that 8 unflagging concentration is the chief factor in & winning game must have derived tremendous satisfaction from the recent battle between Henry Cotton and Denny Shute for the un- official match play championship of the world. Both men plaved superbly, with Cotton knocking 12 strokes off par and Bhute bettering regulation figures by | four shots in his fine but futile bid #gainst the British open champion. Perhaps no golf match in a score of years has been played with such a maximum of concentration and a min- imum of conversation. Except for a brief handshake and a curt “good morning” when they met on the first tee. neither man ever acknowledged the other's presence. And they ig- nored the gallery just as completely as | they did each other. Even on the final | day of the 72-hole competition, when | & whooping throng of more than 10.000 | shoved, mauled, pushed and galloped | over the fairwaws and through the| rough, Cotton and Shuite moved se- renely along, apparently oblivious to ! everything but the next shot that was to be played. Utter Concentration. HUTE has told me that when he is | playing an important match he is | almost completely unconscious of any thing that does not bear directly on | the shot he is making, or getting ready to make. Once off the first tee, he | does not even recognize his own wife | when she passes by. Shute gave a perfect demonstration of this amazing faculty for shutting out all things but the job at hand on the thirty-seventh hole of his match with Harold (Jug) McSpaden in the final round of the Professional Golfers’ Association tournament at Pittsburgh | $n May. The thirty-seventh green | (actually the first green) of the Field | Club lies hard by a much-used high- way. As Shute lined up a 4-foot, down- hill putt, which, if made, would bring | him the championship for the second | year in succession, a traffic officer be- | gan blowing his shrill whistle, nndz several passing motorists sounded their horns. Every one heard the dis- tracting noise but Shute, and even as 8 gallery marshal motioned for silence | Denny tapped the ball into the cup. Cotton plays the game exactly as if he were playing alone, and on a deserted course. A Concentration Week. IP THE average American golfer— meaning the golfer you'll find play ing the thousand and one courses L % Peaceful Looking and Alluring Picture Part of the fleet of the 385 boats, the s a Yacht Club as they started on Long Island Sound’s greatest sailing event. —Wide World - econd largest in the history of the L + chmont, N. Y., Photo. ANT GOLF FIELD READY AT CHICAGO Armour Offers 20 to 1 Some Won't Finish 18 Holes Before Nightfall. By the Associated Press. HICAGO, July 22.—A stagger- ing entry of 442 golfers— every sort, from the hottest of money players to just plain swingers—will start out tomorrow over the Medinah Country Club courses in the §10,000 Chicago open. The field, biggest ever to enter a major event, includes 238 professionals who thought well enough of their chances of bagging a part of the fat purse to pay $10 entry fees and 204 amateurs with enough faith in their games to part with $5. The entry list might have been even larger. A halt was called last night by officials of the sponsoring Chicago District Golf Association, however, when Tommy Armour, Medinah's professional, offered to bet 20 to 1 that a lot of starters wouldn't be able to complete the initial 18-hole as- signment before dark. An additional 35 players, including two former open title holders. Billy Burke and Sam Parks, jr., and the 1936 Western amateur champion, Paul Leslie of Jefferson City, Mo.. and Louisiana State, were permitted to enter yesterday before the Tourna- ment Committee decided that enough was enough. Babe Didrikson Plays. ARMOUR. scheduled to tee off with Johnny Lehman, Chicago vet- eran amateur, and Eddie Gayer, Chi- cago professional, at 1:50 p.m., wasn't certain that he would be able to finish before nightfall. Ralph Guldahl, national open | champion and one of the favorites to collect the $3.000 first money, was slated to get away at 10:35 a.m. over the No. 1 course in company with Alvin (Butch) Krueger of Beloit, Wis., and Johnny Hobart, Rockford, IIl, amateur. Harry Cooper, the top choice, drew 10:50 a.m. as his starting time on the No. 3 layout. His associates will be Chick Evans, open and amateur champion of more than a quarter of a century ago, and Clarence Clark of Bloomfleld, N. J. Mildred (Babe) Didrikson, the lone woman in the tournament, drew Sendy Armour and an individual listed on the program as “the masked golfer” as her partners, from Portland to Key West—would declare a ‘“concentration week,” he| certainly would find his scores drop- | ping anywhere from two to eight shots. Amazing would be the name | for the results if he would say to him- i xt seven days, or on my | next seven rounds, I pledge to play | each and every shot as carefully as I know how. I won't laugh or talk or sing or make a friendly wager after I leave the first tec. I Wou't think of the market on my backswing, or the bridge game of tonight on my | downswing. I faithfully swear not to | let & bad shot upset me, but pmm'm; to forget it and concentrate on the | next shot to be played.” | But—and I ask the question as an average golfer who has found the treacherous and shifting sands of many a trap, the branches of many | ® tree, the dense foliage of many a rough and the dismal bottom of many a brook with hurried, careless, thoughtless shots—would such a weeck be worth the companionship missed? Of all games men play, golf cer- tainly is the most companionable— for the average golfer, I mean. Stop to think. An average 18-hole round requires some three hours to play. During that three hours no more than 15 or 20 minutes is used in making shots. If you are not a Denny Shute or a Henry Cotton the remainder of the three hours is spent in walking | and talking and joking with your | partner or opponent as the case | may be. Silence Versus Fun. SIL!ZNCE is golden, but not much fun if you're not of the tourna- ment type. Since the second man started playing golf, men have en- Joyed telling others how they could improve their grip, their stance or their swing. Since the first man started playing golf one of its pleas- ures has been the right to shake the heavens when a shot goes wrong, and express tremendous happiness when & shot unexpectedly comes off well. And few things in this life are more satisfying than the Comanche leap which is part and parcel of every long putt that is holed. Such things do not lower one's score, no, but they bring hours of comradeship which are even more priceless than pars, and more to be treasured than long, straight brassies to the green. As Bobby Jones and others have pointed out more than once, cham- pionship golf and a friendly round are as far apart as the outposts of a Biberian frontier. They are two en- tirely different games. (Copwrisht, 1037, by the North American Newspaper An‘unee. nc.) e BREWERS PLAY COFFEES. Heurich Brewers meet the strong Coffee Screen Co. nine in an Industrial League tilt today at 5 p.m. on the west Ellipse. Jim Tticomb of the Coffee Screeners and Willle Silverman will be mound opponents. T ED been playing golf for 20| vears and in all that time Representative Paul Maloney | of Louisiana neved had made | and never had seen a hole-in-one | made. He was beginning to think | they were all tricks, or pure luck. That is, until he stepped up to a mashie shot on the ninth hole at the Army-Navy Country Club and ‘whuked his ball into the cup for his| initial ace. 80 Representative Maloney is going around Capitol Hill today tell- ing his fellows solons that there's something to this golf business after all. Witnesses to the ace were Senator Ellender of Louisiana and Representa- tives Colmer of Mississippi, Richards of South Carolina and Waldron of Washington. Maloney scored a 79 for one of his lowest rounds. The hole | plays about 150 yards in length. !OVER the years Stokes Sammons, the guy who never has cracked 50 for 9 holes of a standard-length | golf course (he had a 63 for 18 holes on a hotel drive-and-pitch course last Summer), has said that he hasn't been trying hard to play golf: that he could, if he was pushed, shoot a fairly respectable score. No one called his bluff until today, but out at the Columbia Country Club this afternoon Stokes is engaged in what for him is his big golf moment. Bill Jones and Lynch Younger and Carlton Evans got to kidding him | about his golf and Stokes sald he| | wouldn't try if the dough wasn't up. “Why, I think a woman could give you a stroke a hole and she wouldn't have to be a champion, either,” | cracked Jones. ‘‘Tell you what I'll do, Stokes. T'll| | bet you 50 bucks you can't beat Helen | MacKenzie if she gives you a stroke | | & hole.” Stokes jumped at it, and the match | is on today. It has half the golfers of | Columbia aligned on one side or the other, and Stokes can't afford to pull any punches. Mrs. Hugh MacKenzie isn’t a champion golfer but she is a feminine player who can keep pushing |’em down the middle. She’ll keep Stokes busy falling back on that stroke-a-hole handicap, and if he doesn’t win the boys will hand him gobs of that old razzberry. Stokes, you'll remember, is the guy who has a standing offer of $100 to the pro who can show him how to bust 50 for a standard-length nine- hole course. It's been up for two years and no pro has cashed in yet. HE Middle Atlantic doubles tournament, ostensibly a sec- tional event, opened as a min- iature local tourney today, with not one outside team entered for the championship, which thus will go to a Washington pair for the third straight year. Indeed, the first day's matches at the Army Navy Club took on all the aspects of the late stages of any other local tournament, with only 16 teams entered. One of the few non- | resident teams expected, Price Col- vin and Ed Greipenkerl of Baltimore, were unable to come, dut to participa- tion in the city championship tour- nament of their home town. The same reason was attributed to the absence of other Baltimore pairs. Whether the change in the sched- uled starting date of the competition has anything to do with the lack of other teams from Maryland, Virginia or West Virginia is problematical. The official start, announced last Spring as July 17, was published in both the official guide and the sched- ule of all tournaments sanctioned by the Middle Atlantic Association. But early this month the date was post- poned, and consequently some, with other plans, were unable to change. Several outstanding teams are en- tered, nevertheless, with the singular angle that the only two entrants who ever have won Middle Atlantic cham- pionships were seeded second to_ the potentially powerful, but new, com- bination of Hugh Lynch and Bill Breese. The former winners are Ralph McElvenny and Tom Mangan, rated just behind Lynch and Breese. MCcElvenny, who helped Gil Hunt capture the championship last year, after winning with Barney Welsh the year before, and , former Mid- dle Atlantic sing) nd doubles cham- %b/’j)iymer:Jr pion, are, like Breese and Lynch, playing together for the first time. Jimmy Farrin, Navy Leech Cup player, and Stan McCaskey, president of the D. C. T. A, were seeded No. 3, with the junior champions, Harry Heffner and David Johnsen, seeded No. 4. The seedings failed to include the Harry March-Allie Ritzenberg, Buddy Adair-Buddy Goeltz or Joe Baker-Fred Doyle combinations—any of which is capable of reaching the final. With the field to be cut in half today. quarter-finals will be played tomorrow afternoon, semi-finals Sat- urday and the final Sunday. GIL HUNT continues to advance at Longwood, fulfilling Wilmer Al- lison’s prediction and the beliefs of the best-informed tennis minds here that he is due for big things this year. His 6—0, 6—2 conquest of Norman Bickel, sixth ranking West- e player, yesterday sent him into the quarter-finals easier than any of his seeded colleagues. SM~P’1NALIB’I‘S in the girls’ play- ground tournament were to play their two matches today, following postponement yesterday because of damp courts. Today's schedule called for Hazel (Jimmy) Bishopp to meet Mary Agnes Gray and Lucille Mc- Dowell to play Helen Miller. The winners will play for the cham- pionship at 5 o’clock tomorrow after- nocn on the courts of the Chevy Chase Playground, also scene of to- day’s matches, SALES AND SERVICE RAIGHT O By Walter McCallum | Boston. | tournament. | the bull pen. L.S.JULLIEN. Ix2c. 1443 P St.N.W. NO.80K V[ILDRED “BABE" DIDRIKSON, = the glamor gal from Texas who | puts all her glamor and most of her muscle into tee shots that have the | male links population ga-ga, probably | will descend on Washington next week | for & few days of golf with Helen | Dettweiler, the District and Maryland champion. The muscular Babe is to | play in the Chicago open tourney, starting tomorrow, along with HPIPn‘ Hicks, another feminine golf pro. The | Babe has a new business connection. She is leaving the Goldsmith company, with whom she has been associated as | a pro for several years. The Babe drew more than s thou- sand links bugs to Congressional last | year to see her play with Patty Berg. Another match involving Helen Dett- weiler and two local pros may be held | at the same course. They'll really turn out to see the Babe sock those tee shots. And how she loves to sock ‘em. RALPH S. FOWLER, golf chairman at the Washington Golf and Coun- | try Club, is completing plans for the | amateur-pro match at Washington cn August 16. George Diffenaugh, Mid- | dle Atlantic P. G. A. president, has promised a big turnout of pros for the affair, with some 20 paid players to be on the pro team. All the club champions of the Cl‘lbsi around Washington will be asked to | play on the amateur team, along with | Middle Atlantic Champion Billy Shea | and District Champion Bobby Brownell. The amateur team will be a strong| one, but it's doubtful they can whip | the pros. PARKER NOLAN and C. H. Sever- ance of Congressional are in New Hampshire vlaying in the Bald Peak | colony tournament. This affair ix one of the better invitation events held in the East every Summer. It draws a parade of stars, including Francis Ouimet, George Voigt and most of the leading linksmen from New York and His friends at Columbia are getting | a laugh out of the name they've pinned ‘ on Albert MacKenzie following his vic- | tory in the trans-Mississippi senior They named Albert “Walk-Em-In MacKenzie," because he won all his matches on or before the fifteenth green. P@;]g Off (Continued From First Page) man car and proceeded to throttle him into a state of near-unconscious- ness. What Coffman said openly ‘was felt by nearly all of Horns- by's men. The pitchers com- plained they were used so much their arms were too tired to comb their hair. “Hell,” ome of them said to this department, “soon as we throw two balls wide of the plate we look around and there are six guys warming up in It's plain that Hornsby hasn't any confidence in us. And if he hasn't confidence, how can we have it2” Too Many Signs, Said Batters. TH'E inflelders squawked: “Hornsby used to be a gregt infielder and he expects us to do everything right.” The outfielders yelped: “He used to be & great hitter and so he thinks he can sit on the bench and signal us just what pitch to hit and what pitch to let go. Everybody bats differently. What right has he got to sign us on every pitch?” In short, the Browns main- tained they could do better without Hornsby. Now they have a chance to prove it. If they ever got a new managerial deal this is it. Bottomley is everything that Hornsby is not. Jim is easy-going, happy-go-lucky. He is the back-slap- ping type, like Charlie Grimm. He is & Jimmy Dykes without the witty and sometimes barbed repartee of the White Sox pilot. If the Browns, by and large, are ball players who need & pat on the back to spur them on they will get it under Bottomley. But Hornsby always thought that most players needed a good kick in the slats. Anyway, either Hornsby or the Browns will look good from now to the end. In the meantime Rogers is with- out s job. Could Cleveland be his next stop? TANGLEWOODS IN FRONT. ‘Tanglewood nosed out the Keystone Eagles yesterday in a 17-16 slugfest on the East Potomac Park diamond —_— TFENDER Bent? ‘Booy DeNT?. See Us! Complete Motor Repairs Any Service for Any Car! CENTRAL Woie, ST Nw Dbl L4 rvi GERMANS' DEFEAT ENDS COIN WORRY Crowds Sparse at Matches | With Teutons, Final to Fill All Seats. ‘BY LAWRENCE PERRY. EW YORK, July 22—Out of the red into the black. Thus is depicted the economic sig- nificance of the victory of the United States Davis Cup team over the Germans in the interzone final at ‘Wimbledon, Sporting aspects involved in the gaining of the right to compete Bgainst England in the challenge round are, of course, lustrous and highly satisfactory to all concerned in our overseas tennis adventure. None the less, the fact remains that the financial significance of the victory is no less great. Throughout the German-American Series, attendance was sparse, as it is always at Wimbledon when two foreign teams are in contest for the honor of meeting an English cup holder. English tennis enthusiasts know that they will see the better of the two outfits in the final challenge affair, so why waste money on any court battle preliminary to the ulti- mate test? Coin Scheme Complicated. S A consequence, neither the Ger- man. nor the American side re- elved sums which could be defined | as substantial, even granting a rea- | sonable latitude in appraisal. Defeat for the Germans will not prove so costly as it would have been for the | American team, because the Teutons were under far less expense than the U. S. A. group. Even so, it will be costly enough | As for the Americans, entry into the challenge round against England Wwill be marked by capacity attendance every day, with thousands unable to obtain admission. Thus will be marked | the difference between a nice profit for the U. S. L. T. A. and an appreciable loss which would have had to be made | up out of the treasury of this organiza- | tion, Financial arrangements for these | Davis Cup challenge rounds are rather | complicated. It sounds simple enough | to say that the United States and | England will share 50-50 in the re-| ceipts, but it is not quite so simple as | it sounds. | | | | Wimbledon Gets Cut. 1 JIRST of all, before the money is divided, the cost of holding the series is deducted by the Wimbledon Club. Then the traveling expenses of the teams involved are deducted, But this deduction is not made entirely | from the challenge round receipts. | The association of, every country in which the two teams involved have played interzone matches is assessed in | accordance with the number of spec- | tators who have paid admission, For example, if receipts accruing from a preliminary round in Italy | were greater than those gained, say in Austria, the Italian association must pay a great sum. So finally, after all these nice adjustments are made the two challenge round teams are paid off on an equal basis If Germany and the United States | had played their interzone in Berlin he attendance would have been vastly greater than Wimbledon produced. But various reasons interposed to make a German setting impracticable, includ- ing the important one that they have no grass courts in Germany, and con- sequently teams playing on clay or fabricated courts would not be at home on Wimbledon grass a week later, | NINE CHANGES NAME. Hilisdale A. C. base ball team has changed its name to the Washington Hillsdales, according to Amendez C. Robeson. B. C. A'S TAKE FOURTH. B. C. Americans whitewashed the Little Tavern diamonders, 11-0, yes- terday for their fourth straight vic- tory. Net Doubles Card SCHEDULE of first-round matches in the Middle Atlantic doubles tournament starting at 5 o'clock this afternoon at the Army-Navy Club: Thomas J. Mangan, Ralph McElvenny vs. Charles Channing and partner, Harry March and Allie Ritzenberg vs. Bill Mahaffey and A. K. Tigrett, Harry Heffner and Davie Johnsen vs. Harry Durst and John Durst, Ed Mather and partner vs. Jack Hoyt and Buddy Newcomer, Hugh Lynch and Bill Breese vs. Turner and Merkel, Frank Goeltz and Ralph Adair vs. Ed Becker and Austin Rice, Lieut. Jim Ferrin and Stan McCaskey vs. Bob Bradley and Harry Goldsmith, Joe Baker and Fred Doyle vs. Wilmer and Harry Moorhead. jr. and drastic reductions GRS ARTECDIED TA314 F 8L NW. D ?F ive D. C. Golfers Questioned By U.S.G. A. BY W. R. McCALLUM. AVE HERMAN, public links commissioner for the District of Columbia, today sent back to the United States Golf As- sociation the questioned arvlications of five 'ocal public links players with & declaration that after inquiry he can find no reason for investigating their status as amateur golfers. Four of the players under investi- gation, all of whom were entered in the recent sectional qualifying rounds for the national tourney, work for 8. G. Leoffler, operator of several public courses here. These are Harry Saunders, Tom Doerer, jr.; George Graham and S. G. Leoffler, jr. The other is John Ruane, & sport goods store employe. ‘The whole affair seems more or less & joke when you consider that not one of the four is a golfer good | enough to cause any fuss in the sec- | ond flight of any representative golf ! tourney. Saunders is the only one of the five who plays golf which could be called good and Harry is no star. Doerer is a fair journeyman golfer who breaks 80 once in a while, and the others probably couldn’t qualify in the third flight of a good club invitation tournament. SPORTS Get Clean Slate anything that put them in the pro class, or even in the questionable class, I8 Claude Rippy, topliner of the | public linksmen here, a pro because he happens to sell a golf shirt? Or | because his name has been men- tloned in connection with the Beaver Dam professional berth? Rippy has not made application for the Beaver Dam post, nor has he | gone after it in any way. Nor is he likely to be offered the job, ac- | cording to & man close to Beaver | Dam affairs. But Wwhatever Rippy does, if he turns pro after the na- | tional public links championship, it will have no effect on his trip to San Francisco. “You can't blame a fellow for wanting to improve his condition,” says Loeffler. PLAYS ONCE, MOVES AHEAD FOUR ROUNDS. Cooke, Netman, Gets in Only One Set in Play for Eastern Clay Court Title. The U. S. G. A. didn't call the| boys professionals, but they inferred | that their connection with a golf enterprise might be bad for their ! amateur status. If this is so, what| about John Dawson of Chicago and Russ Hollebaugh, here in Washing- | ton, who has the same connection here that Dawson has in Chicago? And is every employe of a club, from ! waiters down, or any guy who hap- pens to sell shoes in a sport goods store, classed as a pro? The whole thing savors of wind- mill tilting, and Herman, after talk- ing with Leoffler, sent the entries back to the U. S. G. A. with the information that he couldn't dig up, 20 YEARS AGO | B\' VIRTUE of their 5-0 defeat of the St. Louis Browns yester- day, the Nats jumped from the cellar to sixth place in the Amer- ican League flag race. Sa far as is known, not a single member of Griffith’'s squad has been drawn for the first increment of the National Army. Walter Johnson's failure to win brings many queries from Griff | fans. | JEW YORK, July 22 (#).—Elwood Cooke of Portland, Oreg., is just one match away from the quarter- final round of the Eastern clay courts | championships at Jackson Heights, yet “the Pacific Northwest's ranking tennis pleyer has seen action in only one set. | Seeded seventh when he entered the | tournament late, Cooke received a first round bye. Defaults Monday and Tuesday put him into the round. Not until yesterday when he met Melvin Lapham of New York did he see action. And he didn't get much exercise, for after Lapham had lost | the first set, 10—8, he defaulted to Cooke because of blistered feet, | Two seeded players advanced to the quarter-finals yesterday. Th Julius Heldman of Los Ange : and Don McNeill of Oklahoma City. No. 8. Heldman shaded Chauncey D. | Steele, jr., of New York, 4—6, 7—S5, 6—3, and McNeill trounced Ramsay Potts of Memphis, Tenn., 6—4, 6—2 MILKMEN AHEAD. Making two m did runs, the walloped People’s day in a National Capi game. Benson, dairymar man, led the attack with four hits while Pitcher Boyce was holding the losers to six. by than Farms g 16- they Donald-How would you divide 25¢ amon Sp ) ] o \*.. ersons ? i {Bu > o Y 1 Keeping cool should prove no “problem” to you. When you feel tired, thirsty and “let-down” . . . treat yourself to an icy-cold bot- tle of sparkling DR. PEPPER place sells DR. PEPPER thes . Every e days. It's the soft drink hit of the Na- tion’s Capital. Think of it when you go driving tonight. You can treat a whole car-full for a quarter ...and what a treat. N else tastes quite so good. Dr..Pcppcr Bottling Co., \Xesfi. B. Williams, Pre othing GOOD FOR LIFE! | bowl fourth | ¥ aDrPEPPER ot INTENNIS STRIFE - Longwood Event, The Longwood Bow! tennis only one of its two former winners the Massachusetts titlist and 1933 from Chicago, Wiljiam and Chestery Oakland, Calif, and Paul Guibord Washington Youth Reachés By the Associated Press tournament entered its quar-s and none of its three Murphys victor, was bowing to Norber were being driven out of the tourney of Melrose, who was rated seventh in HUNT PROGRESSES Quarter-Final Round of ROOKLINE, Mass, July 22 — B ter-final stage today, with While third-seeded Dick Murphy, Burgess of Chicago, the Murphy by second-seeded Bob Harman the draw. b Gilbert Hunt Sticks. ’I‘OPARANKI.\'G Wilmer A Austin, Tex, who can ret eighth bowl Longwood has | 45 years with another vict Howard Stephens of St straight sets to move again non Marcum of St. Pete in the round of eight. The ‘an(‘r: Hunt of Washing fred Jarvis of Tenafly Brookline interna ranking player in the womar sion, had to come from be s. Tokuko Nakano of To Japanese champion, to lead into the singles pla of Santa Mo derson of Stamfo Ryn of Austi r M. Johnson, Norma Taubt Knowles of Phiadelpaia Bonnie Miller Bank of Wheela Helen Pe. Mrs. Je 3 Mrs. Ma Bosto and Mrs Los Angeles RACES TODAY DELAWARE PARK STANTON, DEL. EIGHT RACES DAILY cyh. COPYRIGHT 1937 DR. PEPPER GO, Wash., D. C., GEorgia 01 5‘3