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APRIL DAY GALS BLOW UP IN EIGHTH AND “INDIANS WIN OPENER, 5 10 3 : Babin —S INothing Is Wrong With Hfootball, Says Evans Eh TN j. Daly, Famous West Point Coach, Does Talking on Subject BY BILLY EVANS HAT is the matter with football? Princeton, Harvard and Yale are all ex- cited about that question. The three university dailies seem to think the game is going to the bow-wows. From our point of view the entire discus- sion is without rhyme or reason. As a mat- ter of fact entirely uncalled for. There isn’t a thing wrong with football. It is a great game. The modern article is fast and snappy, replete with action. The the air much of the time. It is easy to follow the enthusiasts like it. with from 50,000 to 80,000 in attendance, eent spectacles. No matter how many you have is always a thrill. must be all right, a pretty good game, or the the gridiron sport wouldn't patronize it as they do. any sport so progresses that 80,000 people are interested to stand or sit at a football game thru of drizzling rain, the case, it must thwhile sport. 8 ¢ Oe nothing,” he replied, fy big enterprise, and fOOt-| it the greatest game of them ail us preached such propertiom®, Evins ARE a evils are bound to creep tote | GEITY FEW on of the game) Pe trouble is that a few people Playing as well a8 USING | insist on pointing out the evils of football rather than extolling its many virtues. “A Wt of there college presidents, tndividuals err, and the who know little or nothing about these Individuals reflect on) the game, would make better head. Football and baseball) way if they remained in the proper ly have passed thru suck | sphere. “There is more wrong with the , the game is far areater | colleges as an institution than foot- individual, The recovery / ball as a «port. overnight after the| “Let some pf these fellows who sandal, proved the pub-/are criticizing football pay a littic sf faith in the game, even it | more attention to the cinch elective proved false to it#| courses, and otber faults in the edu and the colleges tter men. “A majority of college students man. Few greater players | have too much time. Give the boys ir represented the Crimson} more to do, keep them busier, More peeritiren His career as a/evil comes from snap courses than deen equally successful. | football. I speak from experience.” Football is O. K. It doesn't re quire any major operation as some pe i. Meng the question, I recently put to COMEBACK”? PWay there were no better shortstops than Owen Bush. season of 1921 wae a tongh one for the diminutive infielder. ‘ to walve him ont of the league. Claimed by Washington, SE trouble hitting his stride. of times during the season after he had struck eut or badly he would complain about his vision, that Bush bad the right dope. Recently he consulted an eye in Indlanapolix, who advised an operation. ding to the specialist the tear duct had become clogged, was not Property, and was seriously hindering Bush's vision & success, but he subsequently contracted a cold optic. The operation was performed just prior He i stilt under a doctors’ care. He is confident, was the training trip. Bush did not go aduth with the team. Tegardiess of his late start he will play a much limproved Milan's Intention to we Bush as an understudy to *+ S *% * * 4 COACH HAS BRAND IDEA FOR FOOTBALL CH ZUPPKE of the University of Illinois football team is an Original cuss. Tiinois mentor has added Dr. Coleman R. Griffith, an associate in psychology at the university, to the faculty advisory board Wars athletic teams at the University of Iilinols have worn dark z It & with the dress of the athietes Zuppke desires to @x- Sason when Illinois met Ohio State in the fi the eleven had not won a game, tn fact had not scored a touch- Against a Western conference eleven. the Illinois team trotted on the field the spectators first gasped, ms of the usual biue jersey and regulation headgear of biack or Three” Are Making a Mountain Out of an Ant) Passing in Review BY LEO H. LASSEN The baseball adage that no team can.win ball games without airtight defense around second base was amply proved in the opening game at San Francisco yesterday when Bert Ellison, who is trying to fill Jimmy Cav- eney’s wonder shoes, kicked three chances yesterday, paving the way for Seattle’s big rally in the eighth. Caveney was the man who kept San Francisco in the pennant hunt all last season and the Seals are going to have a real time replacing him, Ellison is a good ball player, and may make a go of it, but he seems too big and heavy on his feet to make a shortstop. Ellison cracked out two hits in the first game, but it didnt’ avail his team anything simply because he handed the Indians more on his defensive misplays than he did his own team by his hitting. The other outstanding feature of that opening je was the great batting of Charley See. This outfielder is going to be a real sensation in the Coast loop this year or we miss our guess. He rapped a triple and a single yesterday, He’s fast and has a wonderful arm besides being a darn good hitter. With a smart coach like Dots Miller, See should learn how to field and how to run the bases. Nothing will keep him out of the big show if he improves in these departments, Sacramento was hard hit in the opener with Oakland as Marty McGaffigan, one of the best second sackers in the minors, broke the bones in one of his hands and will be out of the game for a month or more. This breaks up the Solon infield and McGaffigan’s great base-running will also be missed. If the Sacs hold up under this handicap they will deserve a world game of the} of credit. ‘Chicago Cubs Don’t Line Up as Very Classy Team UTCHINSON, Kan, April 9.—|tell on Alexander. His The Chicago Cubs seem destinea | strong as it once was, for a second division berth. | The big fellow is certain to have Manager Bill Killifer doesn’t reem/a better year than last, but the to have strengthened the club| Cubs need more than one pitcher enough to make it very troublesome.| yrartin, ‘The Cubs were a poor seventh last | and lost 16 in 1922. year and will have to step some to|to better advantage. better that position in 19: ‘The rest of the Chicago pitching | Tt looks like as if it would be ajstoff is a big problem that un fight to bitter death between the quertionably has Manager Killifer Cuba and Phillies to see who will) much worried escape the cellar position. Stats was the sensation of Not enough good ‘pitching is th ific Coast league last season, one big thing that will keep the! If he can maintain his minor league Cubs In the second division. Killifer gait he will add much strength to really has only two veterans, Alex: | the Cub’s outfield. ander and martin | None of the recruits taken on the Alexander was far below form tast | training trip have shown enough to feason. In 1921. Of course, that is a better | Will start the season with much the | average than his club had in the same lineup a in 1921, standing, but far below the Alex} Manager Kiltifer looks to have a Ander standard. tough time ahead. Any position he At one time Alexander could win/ finishes above seventh will be a regardiens of the club that he pitched| very creditable performance on his on. However, age is beginning to! part. Phillies Will Have to Hustle to Shake Cellar HILADELPHIA, April §—Phila-jwas when with the Giants. He is Gelphia fans have an exciting|@*tting old in a baseball sense, has siowed up considerably, but still re bape cert ap ag tin pet tains the old fight that endeared Connie Mack, laat for seven years | nim to McGraw. ys Scio bape to nenmietascennad the} Regardiess of his play, Metcher ii] be a much more valuable man The Ph ipbia National League |i the Phillies than anyone who club, which finished in the cellar | cavorted around short last year. | Position in that organization ast | very presence should make the Phil season, is also fighting to lose that | ies a better club. place The rest of the infield will Connie Mack's team has consider | made up of Leslie at first, Parkin able color because Mack t always | son at second and Rapp at third. experimenting, showing the fans n the outfield will be Williams, new faces. He in constantly Iker, Lebourveau and King. Thi« arm isn't as the other veteran, won 11 He should show trying. | W: There certainly n't much to en-' is a speedy quartet and pretty good |thuse over about the Philadelphia | hitters. | Nationals for the coming season. If| Lee dows [the team finishes better than last it| pitching staff, Other veterans re will probably be a great shock to| garded ax regulars are Jimmy Ring, jall concerned. | Wilbur Hubbell and George Smith is the star of the He won only 15 and lost 13|caare Killifer to enthuse. The club | | Hane His} be} ‘Sports at | University | Open Soon Baseball, Track and Crew Men Are Being Driven| in Final Practice Stunts’ BY HAROLD. MARQUIS PRIL will gee all of Washington's | Varsity spring sports well into | their season and the coaches are} now driving their men continually | in tho final windup of the prelim-| inary season, April 21 im the date) of the California crew race, April 20) and 21 Oregon will meet Washington | here for the first baseball series, and | April 29 15 colleges of the Pacific | Northwest will participate in the) annual relay carnival, | Washington looking over the «pring season with a pes-| simistic eye and forecast little suc cons for the Purple and Gold ath- letes between now and June, Bad | weather and lack of availatie mate. | rial are the two causes contributing | principally to the poor showing of jthe Washington teams, The crew has improved its time over the course during the past week until the former lake record was finally lowered one second, Leader declares this a freak showing on the part of bis men and does not put too much stock in their ability to repeat | the performance. The conditions of | the weather on the lake have much to do with the showing made by the lf jenen. | cREW COURSE | NOT DECIDED j Postponement of the selection of | ithe crew uree until Coach Ben Wallis and his California men arrive | next week is contemplated by the! Washington mentor « coaches are |definitely fixed for |The California April’ 21 or 2 team will have 10/ days’ workdut on Lake Washington. | | Coach Edmundson will put his new jtrack men thru their paces April iby in the annual novice meet. Varsity tryouts for the relay carnival will | probably be held that date or during | jthe next week. Washington's track | team is strong in some departments, but shows comparatively weak rep. esentation in others. The distance jmen and weight men are worrying Edmundson the mont, while the leprinters and jumpers are showing | relatively more rength. | The Purple and Gold half-mile re lay team and mile relay teatn will keg @ good chance of outclassing Any other competitors in the car- nival this season, Hurley, Anderson, Wilson and Coleman will make a| fast quartet for the 220 relay i for the special 100-yard dash. With Hathaway, Pratt, Dougias and Wit in the 440, Edmundson will! have a quartet of 440 men who} cleaned up most of the points in the! conference last season. The lon of Gus crippled the weight department of the Washington team. Bryan and/ Suomela are the best men who have | | been meen on the field to date, and} either will approach any of the Coast reco: with their present marks } Taylor and Moienest are apparently | the only available distance men for jthe longer runs. Davis is missed by | |the coach in the two-mile nx well as | the mile, In the Jump and hurdles, | \Hurley, Anderson, Frankland, Cole man and Callison will be the prin-| cipal contenders. Failure to bit is the chief charge }iaid against the Washington ball team by Coach Matthews, but the |men showed their improvement in thie line during the « last week. | ‘The dozen veterans who make up| | most of Matty’s list are high-clans | ball players, but have never been a/ onsiatently slugging outfit. In the} Pope severely | high | his Al Gould Is Said to Be Hitting His Real Mound Stride Reports from Balt Lake say that 1 Gould ix hitting the stride that made him one of the leading pitchers in the Coast league two seasons ago. Irae little pitcher, when right, is one ef the most effective men in the |loop, and if he goes good he should do a lot to solve Duffy Lewis’ pitch- ing problem, players are eligibie. All teams having 1 men ander contract must incinde the names of the players that are te be released. The Falcon A. ©. has chosen the name | of the Fiying Ragies for their nickname ‘The revised schedule for Sundsy's will be jo Wriday’s Mar. Players not fail te look for this schedule, as the schedule published earty in the week has beea somewhat revised. ialled score of the Mt Taker Avani Cub game has tinaily ved at The Blar The The are Rm EF Mt. Raker Cigar Co.... Be Asahi Cubs Hatteriea: Mati O'Leary and Kohler. ‘These reports, in the future, must be ned in or brought to The Bitar be- vee 0 98 ja and Shimamura; nes without fall, so they can be pub- ficned tne following day Ifenry Kono, the Japanese boy who sted on Frankiin’s Wehetball tam ip league, aying @@ outfield | position for the Asahi Cabs. Terry Steen, pitching for the Zero- lene Cubs, ranked as one of the best dash men in prep track circle when he attended roadway = couple of years age. Arthur Tutler, crack Went Seattle school piteher, is on the We Wheeler registration list, If the Lie’ park boys get in the finals they will have the services of two fine pitchers es Charley Hardin is quite an efficient hurler himeeif, Butler won't play with the West & Wheeler boys until the prep season is over Wilfred and Wilfred Johnaten have been signed by the Panthers, Feplacing Lee Wilbarn and Bill Bie- ‘The complete list of changes will be published for all” teams In Cleveland Worrying Over Tris Speaker’s Injured Knee May Keep Him Out of Game; Tribe Needs Him »E VELA? April 6.—¢ land finished » nd to New York! lant year after a vitter struggle to he very end. Can Cleveland make a better showing in the oming cam paign? That ques tion is of inter- ext to followers of baseball the D, ve | country over. | On paper Cleveland has a better ball club than in 1921. Paper ball clubs, however, do not always come thru. Games are won on the ball fied ‘The acquisition of Stuffy McInnis! Cleveland | |whould greatly help the | ball club, McInnis in one of the best flelders in the game, He made only one error last year, proof of his fielding ability, Joe Sewell and Bill Wambsganns should profit greatly by the pres jence of MeInnfs in the Cleveland |infield. Neither will have une jeare and take pains in making | throws to first, | All that is necessary will be to get the ball in the vicinity of first jbase and Meinnis will do the rest | In addition MeInnis is a good hit- |ter, who delivers his best work at the bat in pinches. The Cleveland infield with Me. Innis at first base is 25 per cent stronger The pitching, which was erratic the greater part of last season, cer- tainly should be improved. VETS SHOULD DELIVER Jim Bagby and Walter Mails are certain to be more of a help to Speaker ever last year, | Jim must get the breaks. went the other way last season d got away to a bad start, early lost his confidence, and floun ed about thruout the entire sea- son. He can't possibly be a bigger | disappointment than he was in 1921. | Smith will be minsed to a certain jextent. While a hard hitter Smith was anything but consistent. Cleveland, like every other club, must get pitching to be anywhere In summing up the club's chances most of the experts dwell on that feature At this stage of the race, how- ever, the chances for the Cleveland club to be a dangerous contender hinge around Tris Speaker. | Will Speaker be able to be in the game day after day the coming season? but couldn't win. Speaker injared his knee durme pring training. The knee is not mending as rapidly as it was hopme He ts favoring the leg to a con siderable extent. Injured knees have played havoc with many star players. If Speak- er's injury is merely of a slight na- ture he should in no way suffer. However, if the injury is serious, Speaker is going to be handicapped by It a great deal this summer. It may keep him out of many a ball me. Speaker is the dynamo of the Cleveland club. It is next to tm- possible to determine his great value to the club, He is needed in the lineup ev day. Speaker is the punch of the team. The physical condition of Tris Speaker means more to the Cleve- lund ball club than the pitching Bagby had as much stuff} They all} Bob Geary Beaten by Playmates Indians Hop on Fast One | and Send Geary to Show- ers; Stumpf Hits Homer PACIFIC COAST 1 BAGUE Beattie nd 1.900 ono 000 000 na Portiand Lon Angel |Han Franc ct nt } IG4x FRA? | hits b jerror and 009 CISCO, April 6.—Four the Indians, and an ne free passage to firnt |base donated by the Seals, all bunched in the eighth frame, decided the opening tilt of the Coast league, jbaseball season here yesterday, Se jattle winning, & to 3. | Bob Geary commanded the slab for |the San Franciscans, with Harry Gardner serving up the benders for the Northerners. Airtight baseball featured the first five innings, In the sixth the Seals compiled the first counter, Charley See belted the pel- let for three sacks, and scored on Dilduff's double. The Indians got the run back in j the seventh when Stumpf hit a home run ‘The eighth inning saw Seattle win ; the ball game and Bob Geary give way to Davis. Geary left the mound | with the runways populated, and be- }fore Davis retired the side, the vis- tors had counted four times, and the issue was no longer in doubt. Rallies in the eighth and ninth fave the Seals two additional runs, but the Indian lead was too heav: and the efforts merely made the score more reepectabie. SUMMARY AB. R ° Beattie Lane, | Cueto, Murph Hidred, Kehulte, Stumpf, e# H. PO. Ou aureene? eeencosoe”™ 33 =! mavccanae? Mitchell, p .. | coer m eur woae *Ratted for Davis Score by innings Seattle ...... Hits San Hite mmary: Tnni by Davis % Texponsibie fo! Davis 2. Struck out—By Gardner 4, by Geary 1, Bases on balls—Oft Geary 3, off Mitchell 2. Stolen base—Murphy. OAKLAND BEATS SACRAMENTO SACRAMENTO, Taking advantage of four errors, a walk and a wild pitch, the Oakland club came thru with three hits in the fourth inning of the opening game of the Coast league race with Sacramento, scoring six runs and putting the battle on ice. ‘The sco Oakland ... R. H. oe 7 6 4 Sacramento -5 11 & Batteries—Arlett and Kohler; Fit- tery, Gibson and Stanage. E. RAIN HALTS THE OTHERS ‘Vernon at Salt Lake and Portland at Los Angeles, postponed; rain. Ray Graxules, who pitched for the Pirates last year, ts on the Lovie’ French Dry Cleaners’ ndidate for the , and if he won't play with the Cleaners until aft f thietes fr t < w con-| True, the club should be stronger! Of the recruit pitchers, Pinto and | field they show lots of class, but at! The Star tomorrow, " the prep season is over. will be the ane Could have seen t a mile away. Evidently that was what | doesn't mean anything particular. seem certain to stick ling thie searon hax been poor. The PY fing Hise bg | we te for a Musabacy ¢4 the sceedl wallet tha'ends fon in Wanted. Iino» the game, upmet the dope, and kept Ohlo| Arthur Fletcher, former — ntar Most of the catching will be dono | long season last year, which inctuded | PO arcs innines with the beiureme of Ernest H. Worth. age from winning another Big Ten championship. | Mhortatop of the New York Giants, by Henline, with Peters and With./ 4 trip to Japan, ts held as one rea-|1. team inet y meet ve!» dh cee valent made a spectacular forward pass in that game that decided/is back. Fletcher retired from base-| row anwisting son for the stale showing of the men in tne | Nearly 2,500 tone of grapes were s8225) 28837 i 2 be in Their Lea a the foothall star in picking a man for a pass will be greatly | of the by the rainbowlike drees of teammates. 7 | ry the * 4% e @) @ 5 fe MEMPHIS, Tenn., April 5.—Continuing to play careless, crazy ball, iB? TON, April5.—The Boston Redjin a ¢ game every now and yo BARRIS, formerty of ¢ | the New York Yanks lost to Brooklyn, 6 to 4, here yesterday Sox, now more familiarly known | ther 3 adorned the of the Zuppke believes the bright yellow color that and jersey was largely respotwible for the succes fall Zuppke is going even further, ‘This fall the headgears and Pill be @ biending of ofange, canary yellow and white Me change ix ordered by the simple physiological fact that Hem the corner of the it has been proved that only in look eye, certain Cleveland Indians, who ls doing a come With the Boston Red Sox, enjoys a joke even it ot cre @ at one time threatened to end Joe's career. A o Ment in the ¥ greatly improved his physical conditior Boston Red Sox, > tre Hot this year, they can hit. There speed on club, In Om thie feature, the lack Harr always for the rest of the tearm. Joe gets on, 4 he ie bares are | y it the way the Red Sox put it. “No wonder they call us slow.” Deenty, in Teturning to the hotel after one of the exhibition games, | lad the lead, not Moving teams #2 real star, Always o as he always h foot kept Harris from being rated and a great hitter, Joe's “dogs, tad feet, kept him from achieving greater the hts on iple of have com. been te sed Sprit much of speed, the has on most of the time, the right.” ced a k sign to the right | Red he way know a swerved off about to the the yelled Harris, folks down as thi Louis Fox op. has been low ‘ause the Ballard Ballard bh short to t Cobe ented tot. to ota tside baseball CREDIT - GLADLY OTyiisH [CLOTHES FOR MEN & WOMEN EASY PAYMENTS sree nN restting 6 AVE 2091 sien it is at his} referred to| Joe figured this was his! | HUTCHINSON jum, at Vernon lust night he k the player he | ball « year ago, never would return, but he's by Fletcher is far fro a ‘The Phil look very ordinary The club will certainly have to hus tle to keep out of last place SPORT SUMMARY | | PRINC N. J.—Rob Tult, captain of the Pri | could finish both Jack Dempsey and Strang ing to Frank Sullivan, swimming coach ton water polo Lewis in the water ram, accord | STATE COLLEGE, Pa.—The Oxford-Cambridgo England defeated Penn State, 6 to 0 la cromme toam from AMERICUS, Ga—Ty Cobb, manager of the Detroit Tigers, will be it of the game several days. He twisted his ankle sliding in a game in which his team beat Rochester, 10 to 5, NEW YORK.—Willie Hoppe, former billiard champion business end of the game with a string of billiard parlors | be | yer CITY.—Louis J. M |chairman of the New Jersey © H. Doherty, resigned. will enter the ano, Jersey City lawyer, was appointed boxing commission, succeeding Robert CHICAGO.—dudge Landis, back home after a tour of southern train- ing camps, sees a big year for baseball, Tenn.—Red showed the old-time sox down the Giants Waber 6 to | KNOXVILLE, stuff and the | White Kan.—The Cubs were due here today games with Hutchinson, Wichita and Kansa: for a series of City on their way home. NEWARK, N ica, stopped Joe Luis Firpo, heavyweight champion of South Amer. eCann, Jersey heavyweight, in the fifth round, BOSTON California welter, won a 10-round decision trom Nate Seigel Dave Shade, Mass.—Capt. Bob Roper won the decision from F fourth round when McNaney claimed a foul and w ul Me uld not HOLYOK} Nuney in the continue ny Dundee won a decision by a shade after a 10- ymy Goodrich, Buffalo, TOKONTO —Je round bout with J) CHICAGO.-Ever Hammer knocked out Maxey Gr five rounds LOS ANGELI Georgie Marks cleanly outpointed Young Farrell, ban and they are expected to show | brace before the weason 0 a big and an Boston Dead ‘Sox Are Not Dead Sox in the city of eul- | a as the }ture, loom up like anything but pennant possibility, Like ® number of other major) | managers the big problem that con- fronts Hughie Duffy ie pitching | Owner Frazee has a habit of sell ing off good pitchers faster than his | managers can develop them If Frazee had retained Sam Jones and Joe Bush, instead of handing hem over to the New York Yankees the Boeton club would have made | tots of trouble during the coming campaign | ‘There isn't a consistent performer on the Red staff of pitchers unless it is Southpaw Herbie Pen | nock, who is the dean of the staff. | Rip Collins and Bill Piercy, se-| cured m New York in the trade ltor Bush Jones, ability | but are erratic, Plerey is unde |suspension by Judge Landis for barnstorming and will not be avall until Ma 20. « o has always pitcher, plus a fairly good urve. Bad control, however, has deprived him of much of his value bis team, This spring he is | mastering the slow ball imer Myers is an inand.outer | Last year he suffered from illness | which greatly affected his work. He | Jean hardly be classed as a fir | tring man. | Allan Bt the spit ball piteh.| | an uncertainty. His health ts | | fair and in addition be © reported | when right, but is seldom that way | The veteran Jack Quinn, partion Sand year in baseball, will turn Sox | and have been a fast wae! er, ts his |elub that stands out The rest of state, Thormahlen and Ferguson. ‘ ° The Red Sox, or Dead Sox. prefer it proved they one thing In Georg rill Pratt the Karr, are Just as you have can do hit Burns, Joe Harris, Der. Dugan, Mike Menos ky and John Collins the Red Sox boast of six hard hitters, Eddie Foster; who will play third, is one of the best place hitters in the league. Muddy Rue! is a great catch er and a dangerous batsman. There isn't a player on the Boston True, the club ean hit, but it must get some pitch jing or the other clubs are going to make a lot of runs. Owner Frazee says his club will be one, two, three; Manager Duffy claims the Sox will be fighting the leaders all the way; Jimmy Burne, assistant manager, insists the | Sox are a first division aggregation On paper, however, the 1 Sox nd division Boston team ‘Tho Three Brothers Dye Works Another Star Soccer longue ary is doing good work in Th baseball league, He's Dick whe Cowe! the Cigar Co. jh n BRR'R I knocked ‘em cold with my studies this month Pa--How's that? Son—1 got zero, Son used in the Canadian wine industry in 192 Here’s sump’n'll open your eyes— the good in Boldt's bakery goods! You'll smack your lips when you taste it. looks like a sure enough Cash Register Bargains = new easy money a check payments. refunded, adding machines, writers about half price, We buy ext cash price: Whale Bone (Rubber) me of Teeth ..$8 ++ St Crowns ... Bridgework, per ‘tooth. ++. $4 Amalgam Filling -. $1 All work guaranteed for 15 years, Examination and advice free. Call aud See les of, ed Plate and Bridge Work. the Test of Time Most of our present patronage is ended by our early eustom- ers, whose work is still giving good satisfaction, Ask our customers, who hav ted our work. When coming to our office, be sure you are in the right place, Bring this ad with you. Cut-Rate OFIIO ses National Cash Registers, slightly used, good t about half regular price. Cash or Satisfaction guaranteed or Also new and second-hand also chock protectors and sell and exchange and pay high- for second-hand cash registers And adding machines it. 100% good ax ne oss You style more suitable, you @ good trade 919 Second Ave., Cor, Madison Hiding and repairing of 8 and maintain the best on the Coast for that purpose best mechanics. A full including all ters, it. We make require other in which case we give for old one. J. A. SUNDWALL & ©O. Se Cal, April 5° roster: He ts also |: field high school Kes good there he om