New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 2, 1927, Page 9

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Speaking of Sports Chances are very slim that Louis ~(Kid) Kaplan will be able to get Sid Terris of New York into the ring in & match until after the De- laney-McTigue fight which has been postponed until August 11. Tex Rickard wants to stage the battle but cannot find any place to put it. Terris will either have to meet Kaplan to settle the question of which one will fight Mandell for the crown, or else lose a great deal of the prestige he now enjoys in his home town. Bllly Gibson plans soon to go be- fore the New York boxing commis- sion with his challenge to both Ter- ris and Mandell and show cause why his battler should be considered in the light of a logical contender. Gibson believes that he has the next lightweight champlon of the world and Kaplan's work against Bruce Flowers who, many thought would be a real stumbling block for the Meriden battler, seems to bear out the truth of this confidence. Billy Wallace, the fighter who knocked out Kaplan in Cincinnati last winter, will probably be given opportunity to regret the fact that he didn’t accept the offer to meet Kaplan in Madison Square Garden when it was given to him. Wal- lace's showing since that fight seems to bear out the belief that his punch sending Kaplan to sleep, was a lucky one. The Corbin Red Sox will leave the corner of Main and Church streets tomorrow morning at 11:30 o'clock bound for Taftville where the team will meet the J. B. Martin club. The New Britain Blues are sched- uled to meet Forestville in a double header on Monday. The morning game will be played in Forestville at 10 o'clock and the afternoon contest will be staged at 3 o'clock at Wil- low Brook park in this city. Clene Tunney plans to view motion pictures of himself fighting Jack Dempsey. Gene believes that Demp- sey will beat Sharkey and be his next opponent for the heavyweight " championship. He stated that ‘he wanted to see the pictures of the >“flght in which he won the heavy trown in order to refresh his mem- ory of the campaign of battle he waged in the bout. | Dempsey is in deadly earnest about coming back, according to . all newspaper accourts of his train- ing grind. He has now added Dave Shade, the California battler, to his . staff at his Saratoga camp. Shade’s - job will be to coach Dempsey and explain to him just what is wrong with his weaving style. Leo Flynn wants Dempseyv to re- gain his form of weaving which it is thought gave him so much suc- cess in his climb to the heavyweight throne. Dempsey can't seem to find out what i3 wrong and he wants to have someone tell him. Although Jack Sharkey hails from Boston, reports state that a large number of fight followers in the Hub City are going to place their money on Jack Dempsey when the pair meets in New York this raonth. Dempsey has shown that he is in earnest in his work to regain his fighting form and if he beats Shar- key, it is 10 to 1 that he will have a large crowd of followers backing him to beat Tunney. Tex Rickard stands in the way of having the displeasure of the New York Boxing commission down on his ears because of his activity in getting data on other cities in which he can hold a heavyweight cham- pionship fight. The commission gave him permis- sion to charge $27.50 tops for the Dempsey-Sharkey fight. This is the highest price ever charged for a bout that was not for a heavyweight title and was a concession by mem- bers of the commission because it was expected that the champlonship fight would be held in New York. Rickard has intimated that he would take the bout to Chicago and members of the New York commis- sion promise dire things if he takes the bout away from New York. Evi- dently the dukes have Lcen told a thing or two after they allowed the Tunney-Dempsey bout to get away from New York because they are out to force, if possible, Rickard to hold the next championship fight in New York. As was predicted, the Delaney- McTigue fight has been out over un- til August. There is little or no in- terest in the battle for the light heavyweight championship. Some tiere are who say the fans don't care to sce the fight because De- laney knocked out McTigue in their last meecting while others state that there is Wb interest because of the dilatory training followed by De- laney. The Bridgeporter has fallen away down from the pedestal of popular- ity he occupied a year ago and it was through his defeat ut the hands of Jim Maloney not so iong ago, in t measure, that he ias lost his er attracting customers through the gates. READ HERALD CL. FOR BEST RE A Special Demonstration Duponts Duco No. 7 Polish will be held next Saturday afternoon. July 2nd. Al intercsted are cordially invited at our yard. THE O'NEIL TIRE & BATTERY COMPANY 39 Washington St. New Britain, Conn. ~ ARMOUR STYLIST OF FRST RA Open Goll Champion's Game Rualyzed by Experts By JIMMY POWERS New York, July 3—Tom Armour, the gent who will perambulate around the country this coming year wearing the title of the United States open golf champlion, is a stylist of the first rank. He is a notable exponent of what is known as the hip shift as con- trasted with a more rounded pivot. As a long iron player he has no superior. He has an original grip, a style of grasping the club with both hatds well on top of the shaft for his fron shots. This en- ables him to put a sharp snap or punch in the stroke ylelding great distance on the shot without the danger of sacrificing anything in the way of direction due to exag- gerated body effort. ‘Where do I get that stuff? From none other than Walter Hagen, the old maestro of the mashie, and wee Bobbie Cruickshank, the canny Scot—two wise noodles better cap- able of diagnosing a man's game than the next one. Hagen and Cruickshank were talking to thls writer en route to the eastern open. A great oppor- tunity, thought we, to get the form plot of the néw champion. The “Haig” of late has been grudging in his free speeches to the press since he hooked up at so many centimes a word but under the kindly influence of the genlal thistle, Bobby, he warmed up and the two-| were soon chatting away like vet- eran campaigners “going over” ths Armour game. “Armour has powerfully strong arms and wrists despite the handi~ cap of shrapnel wound the two agreed. “He has that original grip which combines to put an ungodly effective ‘snap’ in his shots. “And on the putting green," spoke up Bobby, “his methods are sound and his touch excellent, when he 1is anywhere near his form. He stands with his heels no more than four or five inches apart | and putts with the ball about mid- way between his two feet. He bends well over at the waist but there §s no drooping or ungainly bending | of the knee such as mark the putt- ing postures of some.” Hagen quoted Cooper as an ex- ample to bring out the differences in type. “Harry, now. is a real free-swinger. On a full shot he slings the club back to where the head is hardly more than a foot from the ground at times. As is the case with practically all who wield such a full wallop, he gets distance in plenty but when his timing fs even the least bit off the heat he is likely to be visiting the rough and other fairway: This ought to splke a few dis- | gruntled mutterings about Armour | and his getting a lucky break H’l Oakmont. Many claimed the best entrants had *gone sour” at the opportune time for Armour to plug through. Here are two veterans introduc- ing the evidence that the Armour game is as sound as Man o'War and that “stylist of the first rank” is a bouquet for nobody's garbage can either. SOROLS V5. KENSINGTON —_— Local Baseball Team to Clash With Paper Goods Town Team at St. Mary's Ficld Monday. The Sokol A. C. baseball team and the All-Kensington club will play at | St. Mary's fleld Monday afternoon. For the past two wecks, both clubs have been prevented from playing ! because of rainy weather. The locals were forced to cancel engagements | with Stafford Springs and Simsbury. | In Monday's game, Manager On- | drick’s team will do its best to score a victory over Kensington as that will place the Sokols in the position of being one of the leading nines in the city. The Sokols will line up probably as follows: Haines c, Jagalowski or | Durham p, Kulas 1b, Gussman 2b, Gernsky us, Pracko 3b, Jervis 1If, | Tronsky cf, and Simski rf. I PLAY KENSINGTON TABS Pirates to Clash with Neighboring Rivals in Western League Games Tomorrow Afternoon. The New Britain Pirates baseball team will clash with the Kensington { Tabs at Willow Brook park tomor- row afternoon at 3 o'clock. These two outfits are bitter rivals in the Western Connecticut league and a fierce battle Is expected when the two meet. A pltchers’ battle is expected to- morrow when *“Huggie” Carlson takes the mound for the Plrates and "Slim"” Politis draws the assignment fo- the South end team. Both of these twirlers have been going at a fast speed this season and each team will have plenty of trouble getting base hits tomorrow. Jim Havlick, veteran of many a battle on the diamond will hold the indicator and a large crowd is ex- | pected out to watch the game. CE P — Race es in New York state will be supplied with a horse ambulance if the recommendations of stewards of the jockey club are carried out. The move for the wchicle was agitated when a jumper was destroyed in an accident several days ago and left in full view of the public while an afternoon’s program was run off. READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS FOR BEST RESULTS Special Notice Have your service before day, for Barber Shops will Monday, July 4th, Mon- close | { have mercy on our souls. |collection of wise words and smart THE REFEREE ‘Where is “Ping"” now?—D. B. N. l‘l{b is with San Francisco in the cific Coast league. How many times has Yale beaten Harvard in varsity’ crew races?— Bodie playing N. M. Yale has won 32 of 59 races staged up to this year. ‘Who is president of the National Association of Professional Baseball leagues?>—V. H. R. ’ M. H. Bexton, 414 Best bullding, Rock Island, IIL Who won and from whom fin the national girls' tennis champlonship in 1926?—C. B. Y. 2 Miss Louise McFarland of Pasa- dens won from Miss Clara Zinke of Cincinnati. What players in the American league have been voted the most valuable player for the season?— 886G George Sisler in 1922, Babe Ruth in 1923, Walter Johnson in 1924, Roger Peckinpaugh in 1925 and George Burns in 1926 . Where was Rube Marquard born and when?—A. G. F. He was born in Cleveland, O, in April 22, 1889. How much did Hagen beat Mitchell last year in England for the unofficial golt champlonship of the world?>—W. T. D. Two and one. He was four down at the end of $6 holes. Hook, Line and Sinker This week's column is going to be short, oh so short! If you can im- agine a panting flivver standing at the curb plled high with camping equipment which includes every- thing from collapsible telescopes to road maps, and we ourselves seated here in a natty pair ot riding boots that we have borrowed and with which we hope to impress the Adirondacks, Canada and the Royal Northwest Mounted Police; stubbing | our fingers furiously over the type- writer keys, you will easily see that | it's too much to expect to have us go | on at great length and detail while the great woods of the nerth are calling us. Yes indeed, we leave on our vaca- tion today and may the weather man We can't | imagine anything more dismal than two weeks of chilly rain dripping oft the pine trees over our head and we have been scanning the weather re- ports and almanacs for the past month trylng to find one that wouldn't predict rain for the whole | time we will be gone. Just when | we found an almanac that sald we were going to have a long dry spell from July 3 to 18, inclusive, we found that the almanac was of the vintage of 1911 and didn’t count. But we fear we bore you with our own personal anxieties (cries of **No No—Go on”) we bring the topic around to fishing and, as this is the second day of July, we'll bring it to | bass fishing. Yesterday found many | New Britainites out on the lakes and ponds in this vicinity. The exodus was nowhere near as large or as noticeable as the campaign opening of the trout season on April first but there were a considerable number of bronze-back enthusiasts hunting ! night crawlers on the evening of | June 30, We ourselves (back to us agaln) are not sufficiently enthused about bass fishing to forego the everlasting purchasing of blankets and towels and soap and spinners to enjoy the first day on the pond. To us, bass | fishing i3 always allied to minnow seining and every time we go min- now seining we always fall in the brook and get all wet and dis- gusted with bass fishing. But we've promised ourselves that we'll go a lot this summer, just to get en- thused about the sport. You'll remember that we told vou about a quarry hole down near East Haddam that contained big perch that wouldn't bite nohow? Well, two local nimrods decided that we were all wrong about their not bit- ing and took a trip down there last Sunday just to show us up. They came back substantiating our re- perts with amazing fluentness. One of them caught a pickerel and lost a dollar and a half spoon so the odds are still on the fish. No spectal reason for their nonchalance in re- gards to nice juicy worms dangled before their noses can he found— they just don’t | We said this week's column would be short. Try to bear up un- | der the disappointment as well as| you can and try to do without this cracks for a couple of weeks while we enjoy ourselves in Canada. We'll be thinking of vou at every drink of that cooling spring water that they have up there. See you July LEGALIZED BETTINGS Turf Fans Looking Forward to Big ‘Winnings in Chicago as New law Goes Into Effect. Chicago, July 2 (P — Turf fans are looking forward today to many $3.98 winning ticket on the horse races at Lincoln fields where racing beings today under the first legal- ized pari-mutuel betting. The Lager law, effective yester- day, provides that the mutuel oper- ators shall take 6 1-2 per cent of the total amount wagered, and the purse then shall be split to the exact penny. Under the certificate system in vogue here until the ma- chines were legalized, the operators figured the “breaks” in even fig- ures. The odd cents will figure only fn the $2 bets as the wagers in multi- ples of $5 will come out even, The Lincoln fields course, the most pretentious of the five operat- ing around Chicago. under control LEAGUE STANDING AMERICAN LEAGUE Games Yesterday New York 7, Boston 4. ‘Washington 2, Philadelphia 1. St. Louis 14, Chicago 12. Detroit 10, Cleveland 5. Philadelphia Cleveland St. Louis .. Boston ... Games Today Boston at New York. Philadelphia at Washington. Defroit at Cleveland. Chicago at St. Louis. Games Tomorrow New York at Washington. Cleveland at Detroit. Chicago at 8t. Louis. (Other clubsynot scheduled). NATIONAL LEAGUE Games Yesterday Boston 7-1, New York 6-4. Pittsburgh 5, Cincinnati 1. Chicago 6, St. Louls 2. Philadelphia 7, Brooklyn The Standing w. Pittsburgh ... St. Louls . Chicago New York Brooklyn . Philadelphia Boston ... Cincinnati 40 39 Games Today New York at Boston. 8t. Louis at Chicago. Cincinnati at Pittsburgh Brooklyn at Philadelphia Games Tomorrow Boston at New York. St. Louis at Chicago. Pittsburgh at Cincinnatt Philadelphia at Brooklyn EASTERN LEAGUE Games Yesterday Pittsfleld 7, Waterbury 3 Springfield 11, Providence 10, Albany 4, Bridgeport 2. Hartford 8, New Haven §. The Standing w. Alsany ... Pittsfield .. Springfield . Bridgeport New Haven Waterbury .. Hartford .. Providence Games Today Waterbury at Pittsfield. Providence at Springfield. Bridgeport at Albany. New Haven at Hartford. Games Tomorrow Springfield at Waterbury. Pittsfield at Providence. Albany at New Haven. Hartford at Bridgeport. INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Games Yesterday Rochester 4-5, Toronto 2-1. Syracuse 3, Buffalo 0. Reading 3, Jersey Clty 1. (Other teams not scheduled). The Standing W, T. 50 43 42 Syracuse .......0 Buffalo . Baltimore ... Toronto ...... 41 Newark ...... 42 Rochester .. 38 Jersey City 32 Reading . S Games Today Jersey City at Reading. Rochester at Baltimore. Syracuse at Rochester. Buffalo at Toronto. GRID, DIAMOND STAR Ernie Nevers, pitcher with the St. Louis Browns, is one of the few col- legians now playing baseball who made a national reputation while in college as a foothall player. Nevers, while at Stanford, was All-America fullback. OUR BOARDING "1 WAVE ANGTHER OE , Mw:n’ew MONOPLANE, »+THE WINGS 22 = H LEAGUE LEADERS WINTHEIR GAMES First Lutherans and §. Matts Take Postponed Gontests League Standing g . P.C. First Lutheran St. Matthew's. . Stan. Memorial First Baptist... Swedish Beth. Trinity M. E. South Cong. E. B. C. . Center Con... Kens'ton Cong. The First Lutherans and St. Matthew's German Lutherans re- mained half a game apart in their race for the Inter-Church baseball league title by scoring victories at Willow Brook park last evening in play-ofts of postponed games. St. Matts vs, Baptists ‘The St. Matts took the measure of the Baptists by 7-2 but had a more difficult time in doing it than | the score indicates. In the first in- ning Keiffer sent his team ahead when he was safe on Neumann's error, stole second and third and went home on a passed ball. The St. Matts tled things in the second and made a three-run rally in the third, some dumb inflelding by the Baptists contributing as much as did the St. Matt bats. The Baptists picked up a run in their half but that was the end of their scoring. Keiffer started with a hit in the sixth but Billy Prelsser made a great one-handed scooping catch of Bas- sette’'s attempted bunt and doubled the Baptist pitcher off first. Wally .760 .500 429 <429 375 .333 133 <000 P N N ol i Linn's double featured the flnal St. ! Matt attack, and then Preisser turn- ied back his foes after men had | reached second and third with one |down. He struck out Carroll and | got Dennison on a fly to Suess. | Wally Linn led the victors' attack with three hits, while Carl Linn re- turned to the game and got a dou- ble and single. Anderson's sensa- tlonal flelding was a feature and cut oft several St. Matt runs; the Bap- tist left fielder covered a great deal of ground and made several seem- ingly impossible catches. In chas- ing a foul ball Keiffer hurdled the crovd and knocked two people down, but none of them were hurt. Dennison got a foul tip off the nose and had to hold up the game until he stopped the flow of blood. The lineups and score by Innings: St. Matthew's German Lutheran: | W. Preisser p. C. Linn 2b, Fink ¢, W. Linn cf, W. Surko If. E. Klopp 1b, Neumann ss, E. Surko 3b, O. [ Suess rf. First Baptist: Dennison ¢, Keiffer p. H. Bertini ss, Westerman rf, Bas- | sett 1b,N, Bertini 2b, May 3b, An- derson 1f, Roy cf, Carroll, r! | st. Matts ....01 3001 | First Baptist 1 0100 0 Swedes vs. Swedes The two Swedish teams had a real i fight before the victory went to the Lutherans instead of the Bethany aggregation, the league leaders com- ling from the rear to win by the same score as the St. Matts did, Bill Fresen pltched his eighth victory of the season, getting good support and having nice control. Dave Swanson was handicapped by bad errors behind him at eritical moments. The Betha 2177 3 0—2 6 v team scored in the - {second and fourth innings, leading o 1by 2-0. | Then the Lutherans started |a bunting attack, and Nyborg, Bengtson, Johnson, Foberg and Ahl- | gren were all across the plate be- | fore the Bethany infield could set- Itle down again after blowing up. | The five men scored before an out was made. The Lutherans added {two more when Ericson and Fresen | were chased across the plate in the last inning. Nelson of the winners and Olson of the losing team made three hits |apicce, while Dahlman got a pair of safe bingles. The league leaders have now completed their first round of play, being the only team favored enough by schedule and weather to {he able to do so. The lineups and |score by innings: Swedish Bethany: Dahlman e, D. HOUSE » = WILL BE MADE OF TLY-PAPER!=w’) 70 ~wt WE WILL FLY INTO A HERD OF, SEA-GULLS, ot THEIR FEET WILL . oTicK.-To “THE FLY-PAPER, AND -THEY =2 WILL FLAP-THEIR WiNGS' FRAKTICALLY 1<), <~ THAT WILL BE OUR MOTIVE POWER -0 MAKE A FLIGHT TO TE QAQnWErH ISLANDS, (f : lcsic- é\\\ AND BACK To P 1l ) of Colonel Matt J. Winn of Church- {1 Downs and assoclates, will con- duct a 37 day meeting with a short program in prospect next fall. The Lager law restricts tracks to 50 days of racing a year, _ RID OF LAND! 4 5 ——— T, s L 7 0 / & fled with his condition at thisstag= | RETFoR WOR 7. ; e w EGAD, HowW o GET! NUISANCE LWrtHon T VIOLENCE? Hu-pm Swanson p, D. Johnson 1b, Carlson 2b, G. Hierpe ss, Lagerlof 3b, Olson 1t, Strom cf, E. Johnson rf. First Lutheran: Nelson 3b, Nyborg ¢, Bengtson 2b, E. Johnson ¢f, Fo- berg 2b, Ahlgren rf, Ericson 1f, Holst 1b, Fresen p. Swed. Beth 0101000—2 86 First Luth.. 0 0 05 0 2 x—7 10 1 Games Next Friday No games will be played Monda. but the schedule will be resumed on Friday with the final games of the first round.» Kensington will meet the Center church in a tail-enders’ battle on Diamond No. 1, the Bible Class and South church will play on Diamond No. 2 and the Stanley Memorial team and St. Matts will play an important game on the “'grass dlamon SEEKS TO REGAIN WEAVING STYLE Dave Shade to Act as Coach at Dempsey’s Saratoga Gamp ‘White Sulphur Springs, Saratoga Lake, N. July 3 P—Jack Demp- sey belleves the way back to the heavyweight throne leads througl | the midriffs of the two men who bar the path—Jack Sharkey and Gene Tunney. In the back of the former cham- | plon’s mind today lies a picture of | the rushing, weaving, two handed | puncher who crashed his way to the world crown mainly through terrific body blows. To bring that picture to reality, Dempsey has carefully planned every day's work- out up to the time he must climb through the ropes and face Shar- key, first of these obstacles, in the Yankee stadium July 21. | The first move in the program | brought Dave Shade to Dempsey’'s bungalow on the shores of Saratoga lake yesterday. The California wel- terweight, one of the cleverest of weaving fighters, will act more as a coach than as a sparring partner in alding Jack to work back into his former fighting style. “I need Shade to show me what is wrong with the way I weave,” the former champlon said today. “You know how it is when one of | your golf shots is off that you can't tell what has happened. You watch someone else do it right and bingo —it's back again.”" Dempsey had his final rest yes- | terday before swinging into the last three weeks of intensive train- ing. Early in the morning he was fon the road for an hour and a half, later rowing for an hour on the lake. Boxing was taboo, how.i ever, and during the hot, lazy aft- ernoon Jack loafed on the veranda of Tom Luther's hotel and gos- |siped with the newspapermen. The rest was welcomed not only | |by Dempsey, who is perfectly satis- | of the training grind, but to thni sparring partners who have taken quite a buffeting in the first four boxing sessions. Carl Carper, Chi- cago negro heavyweight, is nursing a set of bruised lips, and Eddy McMullin, a willing middleweight from New York, is finding diffi- culty breathing through a sore and ted nose. The damage in both " was inflicted by Dempsey’'s left hook, winging in ahead of a bit more power than Jack thought he was using. TENNIS CHAMPIONSHIP National Intercollegiate Title Rests Between Players in West and Southwest. Haverford, Pa.. July 2 (UP)—The natlonal intercollegiate lawn tennis singles championship lay teday be- tween the west and the southwest. Ben Gorchakoft of Occidental, and Wilmer Allison of the Universi Texas, entered the final round yes- terday and will meet today on the courts of the Merion Cricket club. Gorchakoft eliminated John F. Whitbeck, Harvard captain, vester- day in two and one half hours of By Ahern DOV HME AT Rur R \$ oFF His WHEEL AGAIN, AND BACK I MY HOUSE!! w~ WELL, IN-TEN MINUTES R HE'LL BE GoING FoR, A BUGGY _ RIDE® Z =, (A I “THis e L &t - \ < . | MR sTUPE, WHo ~ 'WROTE GREV'S = GoING o anxious tennis during which the easterner once had only to shoot a placement to the backhand corner to win set and match. The shot failed and Gorchakof® won, 6-2, 4-6, 2-6, 7-5, 7-6. John Van Ryn, Princeton, lost to Allison 8-6, 6-4, 6-4. GEHRIG PASSES RUTH Goes Ahead of King of Swat With His 26th Home Run Hit Into the Right Fleld Stands Yesterday. New York, July 2 (UP)—George Herman Ruth awoke today with his crown wobbling. Lou Gehrig of the Yankees hit a ball into the right fleld bleachers yesterday the first time he faced Pitcher McFayden of Boston. It was home run No. 26 for Gehrig and the Babe has only 25. Simmons of Philadelphia is third in home run hitting in the American league with 10. Wilson of Chicago leads the National league with 15. Suits, Topcoats, COR. MAIN [i7=d OPP. WEST RELIABLE | OPE -TAKE A FLIGHT= ©1887 BY NEA SERVICL, IvC. 3 WITH YOU 23 YEARS Hart Schaffner & Marx Clothes Nettleton Shoes Globe Clothing House and WEST New Britain THE LARGEST STOCK Ready for a Cleanup Come All and We Will Make YOU HAPPY Look For Our Name COHEN 187 ARCH ST. NEW BRITAIN, CONN. WASHINGTON TEAM INSECOND PLACE (Continued fiom preceding page) « Felix, if ... Barrett, 3b Butler, ss Deberry, ¢ + 19 1 1 0 0 0 3 Vance, p .. o o o1 o lumune wlonooe Totals 3 PHILADELPHIA H. P.O. [) -» Spalding, 1t Sand, s . Willlams, rf . Wrightstone, 1b Thompson, 2b .. Friverg, 3b Scott, p . PP smunuuon T T B - L Totals 3 x—Two out when winning run scored. Brooklyn 010 201 011—8 Philadelp! 10 021 013—7 Two base hits—Fellx, Leach. Three hase hits—Felix, Friberg. Home runs— Leach, RBarrett, Partridge, Umpires— Reardon, O'Day and Moran. Time—3:05, Don’t Forget Our 42nd Semi-Annual CLOTHING ~and SHOE " SALE Is Now On Trousers and ° Shoes Reduced. 7y L MAIN STS. o Fireworks THE STATE PEARL ST. =9 ¥ Telephone 3119 DAILY TILL 10 P. M.

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