Evening Star Newspaper, January 30, 1942, Page 43

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SPORTS. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. c, FRIDAY, JANUARY 30, 1942. SPORTS. Maryland, Catholic to Swing for Kayoes in Boxing Virginia, Miami Tomorrow Quick Endings Needed? For Triumphs, Hosts" Ring Coaches Feel Kysczewski-Cameron Go And Jones-Barnett Tilt Spice Two Programs By LEWIS F. ATCHISON. Maryland and Catholic University pillow-pushers will swing from the heels and shoot for knockouts to- morrow night when they square off with Virginia and Miami, respec- tively, in the feature collegiate at- tractions of a lean sports week end. “The best fight is the shortest in my book,” Bobby Goldstein, Mary- land mentor said today. “The soon- er you get rid of ’em the less chance they have of tagging you with a lucky punch and the less chance the referee has of making a mistake on his scorecard. We'll take our time tomorrow, watch for an opening and let 'em have it.” At Catholic U., Coach Eddie La- Fond echoed similar sentiments, al- though not sure which side will do most of the knocking out in his match. “T suppose we'll be the underdogs and that suits me fine. We would like to catch them off guard and cocky, but I'm afraid Billy Regan (Miami coach) is too smart for that. Pairings for Ring Meets Tomorrow AT COLLEGE PARK. Varsity (9:30). Maryl John Cicela Judson Lincoln Tom Janes Hotsy Alperstel Virginia. Freshman (4:30), Maryland. Charley Knight Basil Kambouris Thomas Snider Hugo_Di Mechele__. Bill Gruber . Angel Corres Howard White (Heavy) Walter Nechey BROOKLAND (8:30 P.M.) Catholic U, Virginta Maupin Massie Jim Kisling Cary Peters or Joe Littleton Don_Douglas George Marx Alan_Arbutin Bob_ Bott Tom Davies Miam!. J Charley Riehl - Jack Larkin or Starr Horton (Heavy) Sneeze Kysczewski Red Cameron heavyweight bout, exhibition, *Second will replace 175-pound bout. All of our matches have been close | and Regan will take no chances, but if we get a clean crack at ‘em we may surprise them anyway.” Many Odd Angles to Match. This Maryland-Virginia argument embraces more angles than a squad of free-lance poblicity men couid dream up in a month, beginning with Goldstein’s ring career. Bobby graduated from Virginia and at- tained the ring’s highest collegiate honors at Charlottesville under the able direction of the late Johnny Lerowe, but now has an all-consum- ing passion to humble alma mater and show the folks he can coach as well as he could fight. Herb Gunther, Maryland’s light- heavyweight and Southern Confer- ence champion, winds up a family quarrel started last winter when he boxed and lost to Ken Rathbun. Tomorrow he meets Ken's kid brother Norman, and a peculiar twist to the story is that all three hail from Baltimore Poly, where Herb and Ken were teammates on the school’s last boxing team. Not to be overlooked is the duel between Maryland’s sensational southpaw lichtweight, Tommy Jones, and Virginia's equally sensational and undefeated Willie Barnett. Jones has three consecutive kayoes to his credit and Barnett, twice South Atlantic high school cham- pion, is undefeated since matricu- lating at Virginia. They met last year as freshmen, Barnett winning the nod. Jones, not satisfied with the decision, hopes to square accounts and if he does it may be the gentle push that swings the pendulum of victory Maryland's way. Big Bout Looms at C. U. Probably the outstanding individ- ual argument of the evening, how- ever, is listed at Brookland with Sneeze Kysczewski, the Cardinals’ banging _ behometh, taking on Miami'’s Eddie Cameron. Kysczewski carries more guns than his rival, but 11l be a question of getting in & broadside against the clever Miamian, who hurts when he hits, too. fire away at close quarters in an effort to flatten Cameron in the first round. Failing in this he may find himself in the hottest water of his career. This match with Miami signals the beginning of a rough road for the Cardinal mittmen. Next week they face Maryland and the week after Columbus. Both would like nothing more than to blank La Fond's crew. This match will be the crucible to bring out the true temper of |nual meeting of the typos’ | i - S ypos' Inter-|lost such dependables as Don Pettit, Catholic University's fighting mettle | national Baseball League meeting | Tom Doonis, Willie Boteler and | Sneeze will go out with in-| structions to move into him and | D. C. Printers Would Demand \Baseball Tourney Be Held dinal team. Dropping Close Ones Is Specialty With Episcopal Five Coach Bus Male of Episcopal High's basket ball team wouldn't be a bit surprised to wake up some morning and find his blond hair had turned white. That might hap- pen if the Maroons lose many more | close games as they did in going down before Staunton Military Academy, 35-36, yesterday, espe- cially when a close one such as that follows on the heels of a similar 1- point loss to St. Paul's. | Episcopal had a slim margin most of the way, leading at the half, | 17-14, but a streak of hot scoring | by Staunton's Jack Muse and Ted Tanner near the end put the visitors Lm front. Muse and Episcopal’s Tom | | share individual scoring honors. Staunton. G.P.Pts. Episcopal. mith,{ 20 4 Bumnett, f White, 00 Tucker.{ | Preld.c Tanner.c Muse.s n. 0 9 (] 2 ] | a: Hawkins,g__ Totals__ 1 3 6 1 5 8 03 1 'Angel Keeps Prestige 'With Rassling Win Over E. Dusek | Maurice Thillet, alias the “Angel,” | | can twang his celestial harp content in the knowledge that he’s still the No. 1 man on the blue network of the wrestling game. Thillet, who resents the red net- work “angel’s” intrusion on his happy hunting grounds, tossed Ernie Dusek last night at Turner’s Arena before a packed house to keep his | rating as the No. 1 office attraction of the circuit. He flopped on Ernie after 3¢ minutes of work, finishing him with a body press. In other matches Emil Dusek won Hamill each earned 12 points mGrid Game Going Games between college teams and Totals___ 16335 | DISCUSSING A TOUGH JOB—Coach Eddie La Fond and two of his Catholic U. boxers are cooking up some poison for the Miami scrappers who'll invade Brookland tomorrow night. Sitting is James Lynagh, 135-pounder, and standing is Charlie Riehl, who battles in the 155-pound class. Both are newcomers to the Car- —Star Staff Photo. Coach Sets Quint Shining Example By the Associated Press. DALLAS, Tex., Jan. 30.—For- rest (Whitey) Baccus, coach of a Southern Methodist basket ball team without a win in six sterts, is trying to set his charges an example. The Mustang mentor turned up in an A. A. U. League basket ball game early this week and scored 17 points as his team won 77 to 44 Last night Baccus tallied 29 points as his bit in en 84-t0-27 win victory. George Washington High of close, with the rivals carrying 6:30 pm. G. W’s standing is six and four. Confefence and tonight's clash will go a long way toward deciding the Northern Virginia leadership. Fair- fax High also figures in the sectional conference, but both of tonight's principals have topped the Rebels. The visiting Generals will depend upon proven performers, with Bob Phillips, Courtney Owens and Jim McNally as the most consistent scorers, Others in the starting lineup probably will be big Buck Newsome and Maynard Tiahart. G. W. will be strengthened by the return of Johnny Shelton, last year’s captain, who has been working af-1| ter school until this week, but this is balanced by the loss of Marty Foltz, star forward, who received a leg injury in yesterday's game in which Western topped the Presi- dents, 23-17. An x-ray today will reveal if the leg is broken. Trailing at the half, 8-12, G. W. staged a rally that tied the count at 16-16 in the third period, but Western, led by Swanson Moore, drove ahead with « last-period spurt. Moore took scoring honors with eight points while Paul O'Brien was best for G. W. with five. 2@ 1o0cmsmet S-oo Scosmosoy Blackburn.g Higgins, Shelton, Totals ol wls Totals_.. ® 523 Lindstrom Will Manage Farm Club for Giants By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, Jan. 30.—Bill Terry, general manager of the New York Glants' farm system, announced to- day that Freddie Lindstrom, his| roommate of many playing days in| years past, would manage the| Giants’ Western Association ferm team at Fort Smith, Ark., during the 1942 season. Lindstrom was manager of the Knoxville, Tenn., Smokies in the Southern Association last year. | College-Service Tilis Seen Needed fo Keep service posts will be the most im- | portant factor in helping football | survive the hazardous days of 1942 land with every prospect of staying 'St. John's 'Iron Men’ Pile Up Lead Early To Nip Eastern Two victories in 18 hours has St. John's “iron man” basket ball team | once again ahead of the .500 mark just ahead in the opinion of three there for the rest of the season. former college coaches, all now | As in their victory over Gonzagn‘ majors in the United States Marines on Wednesday night, the Johnnies | stationed at Quantico. Maj. Bernie |used only six men yesterday to| G. W. and W.-L. Court Teams Promise Heated Struggle Carry Similar Records Inte Tilt Tonight; Presidents Tough Victims of Western Alexandria and Washington-Lee of Ballston renew a heated athletic rivalry tonight at Alexandria in the first.of their two basket ball dates. The tilt figures to be nearly identical records in the game, scheduled for 8 o'clock. A lightweight contest is slated at Both play in the Virginia Class Al The Generals have won seven and dropped five games and ACERES S R GRTRD CAVALIER LEADER—Kenneth Rathbun, captain of the Virginia boxing team, which will fight Maryland at College Park tomorrow. He’s a versatile athlete, having also won his letter in track and football. Rathbun, a 165-pounder, will have Jack Gilmore, Terp junior and former Tech High athlete, as his opponent. It should be a real scrap. Crown Ready to Defend Title |Boxers, Tossers Hit 'In Burtner Pin Tournament Arlington Star to Head Big Field at Hall; Chesapeake Beach Event Honors Shaffer Arthur Crown, member of Arlington Bowling Center’s pennant- | contending District League team, will be the defending champion | when the fifth annual Hap Burtner Handicap is staged Sunday at Convention Hall. With an approximate handicap of 70 pins based | on his average in the all-star circuit, he rated a good chance of repeating. Named for one of the city’s leading bowlers of years ago who now presides over the hall’s big span of drives, the 10-game tourna- ment, one of the standout attrac-4- tions on the local bowling calendar since its creation here in 1938, again promises to lure a record-breaking fleld of Washington and out-of- town contestants. O. Mowbray of Richmond was the runnerup in last year's field of 120. Bob Miciotto, King Pin star, was third; Norman Schroth of the Elks, fourth, and Frank Mischou, fifth. Wootton Young, president of the Convention Hall Co., will sweeten the kitty with his usual $100 dona- tion. Top prize will be $200 and the entrance fee, $6.50. Bowlers will be allowed a two- third handicap with 128 scratch. A squad will start firing at 2 pm. with a second shift scheduled for 4:30. ° All tomorrow afternoon and night roads from here to Chesapeake Beach promise to be filled with bowlers on their way to and from the first Dutch Shaffer tournament which gets underway at 1 p.m. at the Calvert Bowling Center, summer- Bierman, whose nose out Eastern, 35-33. Again it/ ime qyuckpin rendezvous of numer- mighty Minnesota juggernaut has was the same story of piling UP| ;s washingtonians. | dominated the national scene for | enough early lead to withstand a the last two years, pointed out that late rush. The Johnnies led all the year is bound to be lower because at the half, and 27-21, hitting into of the drain of man-power into the the final eight minutes. armed forces. “But I believe it be a good football year, regardless,” he added. Maj. Pat Hanley, former Boston U. mentor, expressed the opinion | that colleges should welcome games | enough to head the Ramblers, who with post teams and that any school | Were in high gear and threatening hesitant to do so “will be missing the boat.” Maj. Ray Hanson, formerly of Western Illinois State Teachers Col- lege, said colleges will almost have to play military teams to survive. Another major, Dick Hanley, Pat’s |brother and formerly coach at | trio next week in their “refresher” < courses in military tactics. | from Pat Fraley when the latter withdrew after suffering a hand | injury; Gino Garibaldi won over | Cowboy Luttrell by disqualification, | and Ace Freeman and Maurice La | Chappelle took the two-man team match from Herbie Freeman and | Stanley Pinto. Prep’s Juniors Victors Georgetown Prep's junior basket ball team topped Gonzaga juniors, 35-20, yesterday at Garrett Park. | Scott, Coyle and Bourg each tallied | 8 points for the winners. | Any suggestion of canceling the‘ Union Printers' national baseball tournament scheduled for Boston | | next summer will be opposed vig- | orously by Washington at the an- entrain yesterday afternoon for the | Motor City where delegates of 12 cities will confer and map plans. The conference will be held at the Book-Cadillac Hotel. Pointing-out that Washington has | Northwestern University, will join the | Kied;s The Johnnies tallied only one point in the third quarter as Eastern | earned eight to begin its closing | drive, but they got 8 more in the final period, which proved just | to tie the game. Paddy McCarthy | of St. John's was high with 11 points, one better than Eastern’s George Piggott. = . St.J 'S, P Wi, Rusnens GG D.Essex.{ Piggott.{ EYN | momonmnanon ol ssmorrosos wouonwas » Totals Totals Finnegan Gets Army Task FORT BENNING, Ga., Jan. 30 (/). | ate work, has been orered to report | to ovs —Lt. Col. Charles C. Finnegan, former athletic director and head football coach of the North Dakota State Aggles at Fargo, N. Dak. has been named morale officer at Fort Benning. B Plutocratic Golf Writer They say a reporter never gets rich, but Al Sharp, golf writer for the Atlanta Constitution, has just nfimttt,ed having two automobile tires, Merrick Cagers Score Merrick B. C. cagers topped for the Hurricane usually has a | at Detroit over the week end,| Earl Soper, Holbrook said all teams | Geor; g 3 s | getown Boys’ Club, 28-24, yes- strong, well-balanced team that will | Charley Holbrook, District delegm,lundoumedly will be hard hit, but|terday with Hanrahan leading the not take a decision if it can win by a knockout. “divil take the hindmost.” New Post Offered Cassell. Staff Cassell, American U. coach, has been offered a Midwestern coaching berth at a much more at- tractive salary than the Eagles can afford to pay. He's considering it. Vince Campanella, tabbed for national track fame by Dorsey Grifith after a brilliant freshman year at Catholic U, is employed in the Navy Yard. Matt Zunic, George Washington's great courtman, may be the second Colonial in the last five years to win all-American honors. He'll get the glad eye of New York critics, whose say-so carries weight, next week when G. W. visits the Garden for a game with St. John's. Bob Faris was the last downtown athlete so hon- ored. Newton Cox, bespectacled former Maryland ring star and Southern Conference 155-pound champion, is visiting College Park before report- ing for duty with the Army next week. Newt's been working on the railroad as a civil engineer—at 20 degrees below—along Lake Ontario. He's due to get a commission in the Engineering Corps. It promises to be a | | said today. | that he will urge that the tourna- | way with 11 points. Karas and Col- Holbrook, accompanied by Harry ment be staged as planned if pos- | lins shared honors for the losers knockdown, drag-out affair and the Hofberg and Fred Waple, was to ! sible. ! with 8 points each. Shaffer has sponsored many men'’s and women's bowling teams in the | the quality of college football this Wway, 16-6, in the first quarter, 26-13, 1.ct ceveral vears. A $100 prize will go to the winper of his tournament, a seven-game affair. First to greet the Capital's sharp- ! shooters will be George Honey, man- ager of the seaside pin plant, who despite his unorthodox, off-the- right-foot delivery rose to be one of the Capital's leading bowlers. Assistant manager of Northeast Temple and Queen Pin during the last few years, Honey at one time was the city's record-holder with a game of 199. Lending a hand to promote the sale of tickets for the fraternal championships to be staged at Con- vention Hall February 8 the pro- ceeds of which will go to the Chil- dren’s Hospital blood bank, star bowlers of the Brookland Merchants and Rhode Island Avenue Business Men's League will shoot it out to- night at King Pin in the first block | of an inter-league series. With 469, Harry Dawson, rolling with the Pincus Grill last night in | the Mount Rainier League, posted | the highest set ever rolled over the |Mount Rainier lanes. Assistant | manager of the drives, Dawson fired games of 140, 147 and 182. Mickey Johnson also shone with 183 and 402 as White Horse Inn trimmed | Maryland Electric, 2-1, despite the | latter’s top scores of 690 and 1,817. Deegan of Hoya Six To Be Honored at Game Tomorrow Bill Deegan, adonis of George- town's hockey squad, will be hon- ored tomorrow night at Riverside Stadium immediately before the Hoyas skate out to battle Drexel Institute in quest of their sixth con- secutive triumph. Deegan, former sports editor of the ‘Hoya, student publication, and cur- rently handling sports publicity at the Hilltop while taking post-gradu- to Quantico, Va., next Monday for the officers training course in the Marine corps. University officials will present the | crack winger with a plaque in recog- nition of his talents as a hockey player and as a token of his fellow will give him a handsome gold wrist watch. = Drexel is carrying a 500 average for two matches, bowing to St. Jo- seph's after walloping La Salle. Phillies Get Two Farms PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 30 (A— The Phillies have signed working agreements with Rome, N. Y., of the Canadian-American League, and Trenton, N. J., of the Interstate League, President Gerry Nugent has announced. By HUGH FULLERTON, Jr,, - Wide World Sports Writer. - NEW YORK, Jan. 30.—Future book notes: Sports scribes are speculating on the possibility that the major leagues will go back to the old schedule system of fewer intersectional tours and longer series now that railroad fares are going up. Most traveling secretaries think they can get accommodations without much trouble, but higher costs are something else. Chances are the subject will be considered at next week's meetings. Wonder what kind of a ration card New Orleans will get for its Sugar Bowl? Sideline coaching —During & pro basket ball tournament game at Rochester last week Manager Les Harrison of the Rochester Seagrams kept calling to Capt. Jerry Bush: “Take a time out, J » After several shouts, Jerry did, and went to the bench to ask what Harrison wanted. “I needed a chance to catch my breath,” Les explained. Shear nonsense—Most discussed subject in recent sport columns has been Buddy Baer's damage suit over his auto accident before the Louis fight. Some scribes think either the fight or the suit must be phony and both ought to be investigated. Others, like Walter Stewart of the Memphis Commercial Appeal, suggest it was & bumper in a 6-ounce glove that hurt Buddy, and Bob Stedler of the Buffalo Evening News sug- gests: “Charity covers a multitude of sins even unto the boxing game.” Sportpourri—Minor league iplayers may get more dough this year even though the big higher than before and that a lot of kids will be paid as much as league rules allow to offset the appeal of high-pay defense jobs. Lou Diamond, the honest brake- man, has been wearing an iron hat around Jacobs Beach this week just to make sure Jimmy Johnston won't have anything on him when Lou’s Gus Lesnevich and Jimmy’s Bob Pastor tangle tonight. Californians aren’t very hopeful about bigtime rac- ing this year, but most of the county fair tracks will operate. So will the minor coast tracks— Longacres and Vancouver. Don- ald Gelb, who had 35 pro fights around Chicago” while working his way through art school has a one-man exhibit in New York this week. Today's guest star—Springer Gibson, Chattanooga (Tenn.) “It’s not true Rail Fare Hike May Send Majors Back to Longer Series Basket £oach Orders Time Out to Catch His Breath; County Fair Tracks Operate on Coast his batting average on his good will tour.” On schedule—There seems to be a bigtime opening for the man who drew up the schedule for Pennsylvania’s Mountain Inter- scholastic Basket Ball League. The final night of the first half found St. Ann's and East Mauch Chunk tied for first, Nuremberg and Rock Glen tied for third, Weatherly and White Haven for fifth and Fairview Township and Ringtwon for seventh. And those were just the pairings made last spring for the concluding games. —_— students’ esteem. Stadium officials | 'St. Albans Gets Back In Scoring Stride, Routs Rockville After having a four-game winning | streak broken earlier this week, St. | Albans School cagers whooped back | into their high scoring stride vester- | day by swamping Rockville High basket ball team, 43-16. | The Saints held Rockville scoreless in one period and permitted only | one point in two others. Earl Elliott, St. Albans' leading point maker, earned 16 points to lift his average 12 points per game. | St.Al Eliio Key | Lee.t | Fuller. Price.f Bondy. | Doyle.g Trlmhleg | Crawford.g | Cromelin.g. | sorzamm oo As West Va. Sate Lips at Finish A late drive after its half-time| | lead had been overcome gave West | virginia State Teachers College of Bluefield a 51-45 basket ball victory over Howard U. at Howard last night. With Buddy Hill leading the at- tack, Howard overcame the Big Blue’s 25-18 lead at intermission to tie the count at 41-41 in the last half before the visitors staged another spurt to win in the closing minutes. Wyirginia. G.F, Well 8 Pts. Ho owa: Brent. k] OHowRBDY ¢ cEoDumno? rd, %3 i o Bowles.g Jefferson.x_ Simms.g carmmusQ | ooosomsem [ PR Totals _ 21 951 Totals . 18 745 Score at half. 25-18. W. Va. Referee—Mr. Westmoreland. Mr. Marti, 67 BOWLING ALLEYS " NO WAIT FOR ALLEYS Daily 10-12—2:30-5:00—8:30-11 Uharponine—ientaio—Lossons Chevy Chase Ice Palace Howard Quint Beaten 4461 CONN. AVL M. 8100 Road as Columbus Teams Resume Ringmen at Lock Haven, Fjve at Potomac State For Tilts Tomorrow | 1Idle a week because of examina- tions, Columbus University’s court and clouting squads hit the road | tomorrow to resume winter opera- | tions. | Coach Jocko Miller leads the ringmen to Lock Haven, Pa. for a duel with the Teachers College of that town that tied Catholic University last week, while Ben Kail shepherds the dribblers to Key- ser, W. Va,, for a tilt with Potomac State Teachers. The Explorers knocked off Poto- | mac by a 55-41 margin earlier in | the year and should have no trouble, but the boxing team may find the going harder. | Columbus’ pillow pushers were |held to a draw by Indiana (Pa.) | State Teachers in their debut last ’week, when Charley Cox, unable | to_ make the trip, forfeited the | 165-pound bout. But Jack Golumb, | Lou Taub, Bernie Jackson and Roy Crombie, all of whom won, were | impressive, and Miller looks"for im- provement in future engagements. | | Yanks Admit Service Men NEW YORK, Jan. 30 (# —The New York Yankees have announced that they would admit service men in uriform free to all their games next season. CHARG FIE &N Y, Aves FURNISHINGS WEYENBERG Connectficut Women Boost Big Field in U. S. Pin Event Nutmeg State’s Largest Delegation Competes At Hall Tomorrow The biggest group of Connecticut bowlers ever to enter the Women's United States Open is assured for tomorrow’s record-smashing 11th annual event at Convention Hall, Arville Eversole, executive secretary of the National Duckpin Bowling Congress, announced today. Heading the list of leading New England rollers will be Helen Currie of Hartford, No. 14 ranking woman duckpinner of the country who, after finishing second in the Chesa- peake stakes in Baltimore, won the Morgan Singles recently in her home town. Accompanying her from the insurance city will be Frieda Griggs, Ann Schmitter, Jane Mackie and Mae Williams, secretary of the Greater Hartford Bowling As- sociation, one of duckpin's largest organizations. Jo Marsh and her entire Devon (Conn.) quint, which includes Alice Dolugo, Ann Henetz, Kay Whitman and Christine Kirk, Flo Reynolds of Milford and Mamie Macdonnell of Thomaston also have sent in their entries. From Newfleld, .Conn., will come Rose Martinelli, Irene Krasnak, Jo Rebstock, while from Glenbrook Frances La Barr Baskell and Alice Pakanos will swell the big North- ern entry. Carrying New Haven's standard will be Rhea Aranavitz, last season’s State champion, and Madge Hearn Marinan. The former top entry from Cone necticut was six. Trapshots May Receive Lessons Free at Club Instruction and practice in hitting flying objects will be available at the regular weekly meeting of the Washington Gun Club tomorrow afternoon at the club grounds, Thir- ty-fourth street and Benning road | The session will start about 2 o'clock, no admission is charged and instruction is free. Trophies will be at stake in 25 and 50 target events. Schoolboy Fives Risk Streaks in Tilt at Charlotte Hall Special Dispatch to The Star. CHARLOTTE HALL, Md,, Jan. 30. —Two of the longest winning streaks in Southern high or prep school | basket ball will be matched tonight when Charlotte Hall sometimes known as Frank Cady A, C., puts its | string of 12 games against the 18 | owned by Colonial Beach High. | The Cadets, led by Cady, a ‘Wash- | ington boy, have rung up 448 points | during their victory streak, with Cady alone responsible for 158 in | the 10 games in which he has played. Aiding Cady is Al Ruh, a pint-sized guard from Lexington, Ky., who has a 117 total, and together they are rated by Maj. W. A. Stephens, Cadet coach, as the best scoring combina- tion he ever has seen. Special purchase of higher-priced garments plus a number from our own high grade stocks now marked for clearance, You'll find all fabrics and patterns represented . . . and you'll find values hard to duplicate for months_to come. All sizes and colors, ON FIELDS BUDGET PLAN Pay weekly, semi-monYh- ly or monthly. No extra charge to use owr budget plan. ELDS CLOTHIERS Trans-Lux Blig. SHOES AUAM HATS

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