Evening Star Newspaper, August 18, 1937, Page 13

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SPORTb>. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON D._C, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 18, 193% SPOKRTS, A—13 West Covets Tennis, Golf Titles : U. S. Wightman Team Crippled BUDGE GIVES EDGE | IARBLE, JAC0BS. | FOR NET HONORS BOTH HAVE HURTS second players—eand winners, #f they are at top form. Mrs. Sarah Palfrey Fabyan probably will be chosen for the third singles post, and she is expected also 1o pair with Miss Marble for one doubles match, with Mrs. Marjoric Van Ryn and Carolin Babcock ecompeting in the remaining doubles, Pro Foot Ball Is Stealing a March on Weather Man and Base Ball * Links Fight More Open, but | Campbell and Goodman | Are Standouts. BY GRANTLAND RICE. EW YORK, August 18.—"West- ward.” observed one of the Bards, “the star of empire takes its way.” Or words to | that effect. In the next few days, the Par West has its dream of clean- ing up both the golf and tennis| championships, which will be held some 3,500 miles apart—Portland, | Oreg,, and Forest Hills Don Budge, the California Cyclone, is naturally picked as the tennis entry, with Baron Von Cramm on his flying heels, : It's different in golf. Two of the outstanding selections here are Scotty Campbell, the Seattle Sniper, and Johnny Goodman, the Omaha Kid. Here are two of the world's greatest amateur stars. But the competition both must face is full of fire and poison, with a selected crop from al- most. every State that salutes the Stars and Stripes. | Portland will be full of trouble from Monday's start to Saturday’s finish as fate. and skill whittle the field from 200 to 1 lone survivor, who | may be any one of 20 leaders. Campbell and Goodman are among those who stand out. But not the way Don Budge throws his lean Babcock Also Ailing—Draw for Clash With Britons to Be Made Today. By the Associated Press. EW YORK, August 18.—The British Wightman Cup team, emboldened by recent prac- tice showings and the fragility of its United States opponents, will foregather with the Misses Marble, Jacobs et al, late this afternoon for selection of the teams and draw for the matches Friday and Saturday. Two singles matches and a dou- bles match open the play Friday, and if things continue as they have in the last two days the United States will be hard pressed to put a team on the court, let alone win Alice Marble, the No. player of the Nation, pulled & shoul- der muscle in the Eastern turf court | doubles final at Rye Sunday, and Helen Jacobs, counted on to share most of the singles burden with the blond Alice, has a bone bruise on her left knee. Make Draw Today. AROLIN BABCOCK, who prob- ably will play on one of the dou- bles teams, has a chronic sacro-iliac | ailment that is troubling her con- stantly. The draw will provide for the No. 1 singles | | District Britons in Fine Trim. | GREAT BRITAIN'S condition eon- trasts atrongly with that of the | ailling Americans. Kay Stammers’ control and speed in a practice brush | yesterday evoked enthusiastic cheers, and when she teamed with Freda James in the doubles one observer re- marked that it was one of the strong- est teams to appear in the matches in years. At this stage of preparetion condi- tions are ripe for an ‘“upset” The British, with Miss James and Ruth Hardwick seconding Miss Stammers in the singles and Joan Ingram and Evelyn Dearman assisting in the dou- bles, are in excellent shape. And they are hungry for the cup they haven't won since 1930. e 'NEAR CHAMPS PLAY | IN RINGER TOURNEY Pop Woodfield Invitation Event Is Follow-Up of Evening Star Championships. INOW we have the Woodfield tnvi- tation tournament for horseshoe pitchers. Harry Woodfield, secretary Horseshoe Pitchers’ Associa- of the 1 and No. 2 singles players on each | team meeting similarly selected play- ers on the opposing team. No crystal ball is needed to pick Miss Marble | and Miss Jacobs as America's first and | tion, with a view to encouraging voungsters and newcomers to the game, has hit on a plan that ought to prove a popular follow-up of The shadow across the court. Los Angeles Bulldogs get strenuous quickly in prepping for a tough campaign. Here Orv Mathews, Jormer Southern California gridder, takes a dive over the line for a practice touchdown. —Copyright, A. P. Wirephgto. Ray Clemons is taken for a ride as he is tackled simultaneously by Dan Barnhart dnd Russell Lewis. —Wide World Photo. Good Enough to Win. How many at Portland are good enough to win—if they get the| breaks that rule a big part of the game? | You can mention, in addition to | Goodman and Campbell, Fred Haas of | Louisiana, Charley Yates of Georgia, Frank Strafaci and Ray Billows of New York, Tommy Tailer of Long Island, Johnny Fischer of Ohio, Ross Somerville of Canada, Harry Givan of Seattle, Ernie Pieper of California, | Reynolds Smith of Texas, Chuck Kocsis of Michigan. | This is only a partial list, but it gives you some scant idea of | the territory one has to cover while | peering into the crystal ball | The biz slaughter will take place on Wednesday, when the field will be chopped from 64 qualifiers to 16 remnants, lucky enough or good enough to plow their way through two 18-hole matches, the test that 4 known as “the quick or the dead.” What Can Happen. If you have ever blown a 2-foot putt or have done some jousting in the sand, you'll know what can hap- pen in golf. I happened to run across some astounding figures this respect recently. These fig concern the national golf Ii Bouthampton, one of the great links of the world Here. on Long 'Island, we have a difficult par 73. Yet at various times one golfer or another, taking the best selected score, has toured around this windy, heavily trapped layout in | Just 39 strokes—which is 34 under | par. For example, many years ago, John | Montgomery Ward, one of base ball's | greatest stars, opened a tournament with & 2—2—3—3 against a par of | [¢—4—4—3, just five under par for| our holes | Johnny Ward's first 2 came on the | p12-vard first hole. Here is the way | © happened—by holes and names and pcores— 1—John Ward, 2 2—John Ward, 2 | 3. the famous Alps, a tough 4— Baxter, 2—the result of holing | e @l brassie shot. Eb Byers lost ! the Alps that day with a 3 | 4, the Redan—John Jackson, 1| (John Jackson being president of the U. 8. G. A) 5. 490 yards, O'Brien, 2. holed out. 6—Charles Blair MacDonald and H. B. (Pink) Miller, 1. 7, an eagle 3—By several entries. 8, a killing 4—Joe Thaw, 2. Another | brassie shot turned into & putt. 9, 560 yards—Oswald Kirby, one of the stars of the East, 3. Par out is 37. But here we have a tot. of 18| strokes, taking the best selected score for each hole—a matter of 19 under par. . On the way home such golfers as Paul Moore, Harvey Shaffer, Ted Coy. Stuart Wing, Cyril Tolley and others | have made the last nine in 21 strokes. This includes three 1s, nine 2s and Bix 3s. It shows what can happen when the ball hapens to roll the right way. It has a roulette wheel whipped to a froth when it comes to the law of chance. par Another 5—Forgan J. brassie shot The Big Gamble. THE big gamble in golf is over the ¥ 18-hole route. The psychology here 18 all against the better golfer. This was the route that Bob Jones always hated. For example, in his match against Johnny Goodman at Pebble Beach in 1929, Goodman holed three tough putts and Bob missed three from shorter ranges. So Good- man was 3-up after the third hole. Yét, at that time, in & 36-hole match, Bob Jones could have beaten any man in.that field by a margin of 8 and 7T— or, worse. It wouldn't have been a | contest at 36 holes. | In the same way, George Von Elm, one of the best of all the amateurs, wecond then only to Jones, lost four consécutive 18-hole matches to golf- ers certainly well below his level. The 18-hole match often brings the rabbit up to the level of the tiger. It isn't the fairer test—but it is more interesting. The gamble is much greater. Class will rule after the 18-hole scrambles are over—but the pick of the fleld can fall before the longer hike is on. TULSA BOYS NET ACES Hopper and Patterson Impress in Muny Tourney Advance. PITTSBURGH, August .18 (P).— ‘Two Tulsa, Okla., boys, 19 and 17 years old and just out of high school, were in. A& fair way today to make a name for themselves in the national public parks tennis tournament. Blond, curly-haired M. C. Hopper (the initials are all the given name he has) and his close friend, Bob Pat- terson, scrambled past the second roultd of singles play and easily took first-round doubles match yes- | teams will clash at Soldier Field Sep- | a pretty fair argument. The collegians | PROS, STARS HOLD PRE-GRID BATILE Rules, Officials and Status ! of Sauer as Packer Will Be Determined. By the Assoclated Pres HICAGO. August 18.—The col- lege All-Star board of strategy | and Coach Lambeau of the Green Bay Packers, whose | tember 1, will get together tonight for a three-horned argument. | First, they will thresh out questions | of rules, there being differences be- | tween the college and professional codes. Then they will settle the ques- tion of whether George Henry Sauer, the Packers’ 1936 fullback, who'will not | be with the pro club this season be- cause of a college coaching connection, | should play in the fourth annual con- | test, and will wind up by naming offi- | cials for the battle. Sauer’s Case Big Question. "JHE rules discussion is not expected to take much time, but the Sauer eligibility question may develop into claim the former Nebraska star should not be permitted to play. since he will not be a member of the Packer squad | this season | Lambeau contends the collegians will be meeting the team that won the Na- tional Profesional League title last! Fall, making Sauer eligible. The professionals will nominate a | referee and head linesman, while the | collegians will name the umpire and ' field judge. Each side must ratify the other’s nominations. | All-Stars Are Hurt. l{EAD COACH GUS DORAIS of the college squad planned the first formal scrimmage session for to- day, provided cooler weather showed up. | A sudden drop in temperature yes- | terday made possible an informal scrimmage, during which two minor casualties were listed. Julie Alfonse, Minnesota halfback, and Lloyd Card- well of Nebraska suffered loosened teeth, the former colliding with Eddie Jankowski of Wisconsin and Cardwell bumping into Bud Wilkinson, another (Continued From Twelfth Page.) the fifth hole in the batting order, only eight runs. Power All at Top. AL SIMMONS, who has been out with a bad ankle, had not been hitting, and his substitute, Fred Sing- ton, just does not belong. Buddy Myer’s batting has been nothing to rave about, nor has Rick Ferrell's. The Nats' power too long has been concentrated at the top of the order— Almada, Lewis and Travis. How they won eight games in a row is & mystery in view of this fact. In the process of tossing away yesterday's nightcap to Bump Hadley and Johnny Murphy, the Nats left 12 runners stranded on the bases. They should have chased Hadley in any one of six innings before Bump finally got himself out in the ninth by walking the first two batters. They couldn’t do it and to go into the horrible details is just too, too sad. At any rate, Mr. Griffith's boys seemed to be suffering from a case of what the trade calls “throat trouble.” In the ninth Hadley walked Lewis and Travis, and Murphy rushed into the game to pitch a double to Stone. This scored Lewis and put runners on second and third but, with the tying runs in position, came a most awful let down. Kuhel popped to Gehrig. Myer flied to Di Maggio in short center. And Sington did the same thing. Soft music, professor. The Griffs never were in the first game . . . After the second inning. Pete Appleton fanned the first four hitters, but that explosion you heard in Washington at 12:45 (Eastern standard time) was Appleton blowing up. The Yanks got seven runs in the second and third rounds and it was all over. The Nats, with three apologetic ex- ceptions, couldn't hit Lefty Gomes with squash rackets. SERGER TR COASTAL PLAINS, Greenville, 8; New Bern. 0. Goldsboro. 3: Williamston, 8. %]d;g 12: Kinston, 8 Arboro. 3: Bnow PACIFIC HUL 1 COAST. : Missiol Diego. 8: Bac: Praneisco. 7. 'D 5 INGLES champions of the three District tournaments for jun- iors, boys and girls being ataged concurrently at the Army-Navy Club will be crowned between the hours of 11 and 5 o'clock tomorrow. Although only one set of contenders, Freddie McNair of Annapolis and Tom Wadden, who will meet for the boys’ title at 11, has been decided, the four finalists for the two other cham- pionships were to be determined to- day. The girls' final tomorrow will be played at 1 o'clock, with the junior title match starting at 3. Main interest today was centered upon two matches in the lower bracket of the junior tourney. Marvin Car- ock, seeded second behind David Johnsen on the strength of his junior | championships of two States and his runner-up status in three others, was to get his first local test from Ha March. Carlock has lost only three games in his first two matches against little-known opponents, but there were several who though March would ‘“take him” today. Whoever wins faces a stiff assign- ment several hours later, for the sur- vivor was to be called upon to meet Billy Turner, who is playing some of the best tennis in junior ranks at present, in the semi-finals round. Johnsen and Royal Meet. AVID JOHNSEN and Doyle Royal already are in the semi- final round of their bracket and were io clash for the right to play for the championship. Johnsen squad in the competition, was the favorite to repeat over Royal, whom he has beaten on previous occasions this year. Girl players also were to produce their share of interest, with Charlotte Decker, the seeded No. 1 entrant, facing Margo Mink and Hazel (Jimmy) Bishopp meeting Harriette Williams. Miss Decker has played her way to the semis in straight sets, while Miss Mink has been forced to come from behind in each of her last two matches. Her 3—6, 7—5, 7—5 conquest of Molly Thompson, new junior cham- pion of the playgrounds, however, won her new supporters yesterday. Miss Bishopp, runner-up for the senior playground title, surprised the committee—but not her followers— when she routed Margaret Duffy, the second seeded player, by 6—1, 6—1 scores yesterday. Miss Willlams had earned the right to play her the day before when she held Shirley Combs even in two sets before the latter de- faulted. Travel Rocky Path. 'HE McNair-Wadden match for the boys’ championship tomorrow will be & replay of the same opponents who /5 Disme the ranking | member of the local Junior Davis Cup | | battled for the Maryland State boys' title a few weeks ago. At that time, McNair—a §- foot dynamo with astonishing drive — whipped Wadden, who stands head and shoulders above him. Both had more than the usual| | amount of trouble reaching the finals | yesterday when Harold (Snooks) Titus forced McNair to deuce scores before | losing, 8—6, 6—4, and Maurice Cowan | took the first set from Wadden before | the latter triumphed, 4—6, 63, 64 Seedings ran true to form through- | out the boys' play, McNair being | ranked No. 1, Wadden No, 2, Cowan | No. 3 and Titus No. 4. Nearly Perfect Turnout. } AD the committee insisted upon definite knowledge that Charles Parks and Paul Ford of Miami, Fla..| who were here for the Middle Atlantics, | would return for the junior tourna- ment—instead of relying on the “I think they're coming” by the one who entered their names, it would have had‘ & perfect record as far as defaults go. Not one of the remalning Juniors, boys or girls, failed to appear for his match—praise- worthy, indeed, for the young- sters. The non-appearance of Parks and | Ford would not have been so bad had | they not been seeded three and four. Their resultant defaults weakened the entire draw, although it did not wreck the tournament as the Middle Atlantic was depleted when 15 out-of-town en- trants didn't show up Three of the junior survivors—John- sen, March and Turner—are ranked in | that order on the J. D. C. ladder. Jack Hoyt, both the eighth ranking and eighth seeded entrant, was elim- | inated vesterday by Johnsen after a | long fight, 11—9, 6—1. Royal, who| plays Johnsen today. supersedes Mike | Nunez by one on the ladder, yet was | unseeded, while Nunez was seeded seventh. District Players Lose. ASHINGTON players have taken lickings in out-of-town events | for the last few days. Ralph (Buddy) Adair was beaten by Baltimore's veteran, Ed Greipenkerl, in | the Scranton City championships on | Monday, but only after he had carried the Oriole to 9—7 and 10—8. Barney Welsh and Gil Hunt got theirs at Newport yesterday from two | of the country's best, Welsh succumb- ing to Davis Cup Frank Parker, 6—3, | 6—0, and Hunt to Johnny Van Ryn, | 6—3, 6—2. And Allie Ritzenberg, the Capital's public parks champion, fell in the na- tional municipal tourney at Pittsburgh before M. C. Hopper of Tulsa, Okla. 6—4, 6—3, but became affected by the | heat after he had a 4—2 lead in the | third and lost the last three, 8—§, 6—4, 6—0. Semi-Pro Scores Yesterday's results in national semi-pro tournament Baltimore, Md.. 5: Levden, Colo.. 3 Moun”v Pleasant, Tex., 5; Concord, Mas: . 2 Enid. Okla Charleston. Ark.. 0. Wichita. 4. Duncan. Okla.. 2. Waverly. Towa. 6: Elgin. TIL., 5 Buford. Ga.. 17: Port Crook. Nebr.. 8. Gomez “Game as He Is Good” Griffs and Yanks Pay Tribute to Pitcher Who, Weighted With Grief, Hurled Shutout. By & Staff Correspondent of The Star. EW YORK, August 18—"As game as he is good” was the way the Nats and Yankees had established Vernon (Lefty) Gomes today. As Gomez was dressing to pitch the first game of yesterday’s double- header against the Griffs he re- ceived word that his mother, Mrs. Elizabeth Ann Gomez, 67, had died of a paralytic stroke in Rodeo, Calif. Tears trickling down his face, Gomez sat in stunned silence that was broken only when Manager Joe McCarthy said: “Lefty, you don’t have to pitch today. If you want to fly to Cali- fornia, that's okay, too.” “No,” said Gomes. *“I just came back from seeing my mother and she asked me not to come back no matter what ed. And ss far s pitching, I'd rather do that than #it around thinking about #.” Red-eyed and drawn, Gomez walked out and pitched one of the finest games of his great career. He broke the Yank's first serious losing streak of the season and snapped Washington's eight-game winning streak with a three-hit shutout, 8 to 0. Gomez walked back to the dress- ing room after the game and with a leaden heart sat on a stool and wept. He plans to take a few days off and go to his home in Con- necticut. HARRISON RADIATORS W\ . SALES & SERVICE (BEEL BROTHER Now DEcatar + Ritzenberg had won the first two sets | = Draws Weak Foe in Third Round at Newport—Four Invaders Advance, By the Assoclated Press. EWPORT. R. I, August 18— The luck of the Newport Ca- sino tennis draw was all in| Champion Don Budge's favor | today, as it pitted him against a Flor- | ida youngster, Frank Guernsey, jr., of | Orlando, who appeared to be the least threatening of the 15 players who ac- | companied America's Davis Cup ace into the fourth round | Budge, playing his first singles matches since he dominated the United States team’s successful challenge three weeks | ago, was much below his usual form | vesterday when he launched his cam- paign for a second leg on the historic Casino Trophy by defeating two New | Yorkers, Henry Daniels and Herbert | L. Bowman Despite Budge's slump, he was not expected to be hard pressed by young Guernsey. Four foreigners gained the round of 16, Jiro Yamagisht and Pumituru Na- kano of Japan, Charles E. Hare, the British Davis Cupper, and Yvon Petra of France. Yamagishi Meets Van Ryn. ‘AMAGISHI, champion of his na-| tion, probably will be hard pressed in today'’s match against John Van| | Ryn of Austin, Tex.. but Nakano is fa- | vored to account for Owen Anderson, | despite the brilliant form that Los An- | geles youngster has displayed here. | Hare's third-round triumph over| Robert J. Keleher of New York moved him into the same bracket with Gene | Mako, the United States Davis Cup doubles plaver and national co-cham- | pion with Budge. Petra meets John | McDiarmid of Princeton, N. J. In the other fourth-round matches this morning Bryan (Bitsy) Grant, the Atlanta mite, will meet Joe Hunt of Los Angeles; Frankie Parker of Mil- waukee, Who saw Davis Cup singles service against the British, will match strokes with Wayne Sabin, another Los Angeles star, and Bobby Riggs, the 19-year-old California sensation of the Eastern turf season and last year's Casino winner, will be called upon to eliminate his townsman, George Toley, to qualify for a quarter-finals berth. Sports Mirror By the Associated Press. Today a year ago—Joe Louis scored three-round K. O over Jack Sharkey after flooring ex-champion four fimes. Three vears ago—Albert (Scotty) Campbell skot 68 on last round to de- feat C. Ross S8omerville. 1 up. and win second Canadian amateur golf title Five vears ago-—Fred Perry upset David M. Jones in Newport Casiono tennis. 500,000 GALLONS OF SCIENTIFICALLY TREATED WATER FOR YOUR DAY OR NITE FROLIC (9:30 A.M. to 11:30 P.M. IN THE MAGNIFICENT GLENECHO CRYSTAL POOL (SAND BEACH ADJOINING) ACCOMMODATIONS for 3,500 ADULTS 40c CHILD 15¢ INCLUDES ADM. & LOCKER REDUCED RATES ADULT $2.50 10 SWIM TICKET AND FOR CHILD 10 SWIM $1.00 TICKET THESE TICKETS MAY BE USED BY THE FAMILY FOR ONE OR MORE Newark Shoots at Old Mark 2415 Games Ahead May Beat Louisville’s Edge of 284 in 1902—Bucs’ 27Y Tops Majors. By the Assoclated Press. HERE are many who doubt their claim to greatness, vet the Newark Bears may shatter the records of su- before the season s perteams of the current over. The greatest margin an Inter- national League pennant-winning team ever held was the 20 games the great Baltimore Orioles of 1921 had over Rochester. That was the third year of Jack Dunn's famous team, which won =zeven straight pennants, through 1919 to 1925 The largest margin made in “big-time” base ball was rung up by the St. Paul Saints of the Amer- ican Association in 1920. The Saints beat a good Louisville eclub by 281, games. The Pittsburgh Pi- rates won the National League pen- nant with a 27!, game lead in 1902. Yet, though the skeptics say they past, International are just a good team in an un- usually weak league, the Bears of today are riding 24!, zames in front of the Montreal Rovals and still have 20 games to g0 in which to crack St. Paul's mark, Stars Yesterday By the Associ gle drove in deciding run and his fine ninth-inning catch saved 4-2 victory over Cubs Johnnv Moore and Claude Paccen Gomer Yankees—Fori shutout T Melt Pitched five- hit ball “and n run to defeat Bees. 4-1 Stan Bordagarav. four hits i in four Reds in nig Cards Collected five times at bat and drove as St. Louis conauered zame | metropolitan | by “Pop" himself | concentrating on the W. Star's annual championships. Each year “Pop” will invite eight of those, except champions, who make the best showings in The Star tour- nament to shoot it out for a sort of consolation title, This time he has selected Hoot Danzberger of Virginia, young south- PAW Who eliminated Harry Saunders, Washington champion, and Lee Flesh- man, Maryland title winner, from the district plav-offs, then bowed to Ray Frye in the final: Frank | Felton, Virginia: Joe Walsh and Lem | Sales, Maryland, and Francis Battiste, Charles Heleker, Mel Johnson and Bill Woodfield, Washington. fore zetting a date and place for the tournament Woodfield will eom- municate with the plavers. Pirst prize will be a cake, and second a pie, eookad Mrs. Joe Merryman will bake the cake. A medal or trophy also likely will be awarded the winner In the meantime, the pitchers are N. Mahaffev | Sweepstakes, named for the Mavor of Brentwood, to be plaved at Brentwood tomorrow and Priday nights. Next | will come the Joe Merryman Sweep- stakes to be held at Brentwood Bep- | tember 2 Buy Your New Car Now “Bargain days” are herel Today's low prices save you recl money on a new car. Today’s high trade-in values put more cash in your pocket. Come in...drive a 1937 Hudson or Terraplane . . . let us show you the figures. WORLD’S LOWEST PRICES FOR SUCH SIZE AND POWER ADMISSIONS UNTIL THE 10 SWIMS ARE USED Try and match, at or near their prices, the size and roominess Hudson and Terraplane give you.\’ouwon‘!findlnotherpop\_l- lar car with 55 inches of front seat comfort for three! You can’t equal, for anywhere near the money, this combination of long wheelbase, over-all length and ssable room. These are the lowest priced cars in the world with so much power! World’s greatest stock carperformance,officiallyproved Avutomatic gear shifting is h ...combined with gasoline econ= omy that will amaze you. In a Hudson or Terraplane with Selective Automatic Shift Transmission, you find by fer the lowest prices for the new way to drive. And these are the only cars at any price with s90 brsle ing systems operating from the same brake pedal. Come in and drive ... NOW! Let us show you how mwch you ean save. ere to stay . . 1 soon will be o “No. 1" feature of many leading cars. You can have it now in' a Hudson or Terraplane wi ith proved Selective Automatic Shift Transmission. Get the added ease, convenience and safety of this latest driving feature in your new ¢ar now— and the added value when you come to trade it in. No. 1 CARS of the Low and Moderate Price Fields HUDSON & TERRAPLANE SALES CORP. (Wholesale), 1707 14th §t. N.W., Washington, D. C. Schultze 1496 H 8. N.E. Potomae Motor Sales 1706 New Hampshire Ave. N.W. NAti 3077 Rice Motor Co. 1423 Irving 8t. N.W. COlumbia 10324 New York Ave. Motor Co. N York Ave. N.W. M troporlian ied Kalorama Rd. COlum| Edward W. Rockville, Md. Hinson Motor Co. ottage cflw Fleming Motor Corp. & Champlain St. N.W. bia 1020 Columbia Motor Sales, Inc. 1622 14th St N Motor Co. Lincoln 6265 Oper: District 2785 W. DEcatur 1734 Cashell, Inc. 305 Cedar St. M. Rockville 213 Falls Chureh. Va. Tyson’s Cross vons i A City, Md. 1074 " Washington Motor Sales Co., Inc. ated by Call Carl, Ine. 623-25 H 8t Century Motor Co., Inec. 2022 14th St. N.W. Ridgeway Motor Service Geargia 97, N.W. POL. 2409 Fakoms Park ne Falls Church 17 Garage Roads Yg61.1.0

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