Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 December 1938 — Page 14
ie
Ei
- the national scholastic Dec. 31. : | A six-event track meet trots out another procession of luminaries. . ... Don Lash, Fred Wolcott, Chuck Fenske, Joe McCluskey, Howard Borck, Blaine Rideout, and other champions. : hx | Allen Tolmich, Wayne Rideout, Charley Beetham, iid Deckard, and more widely known track names are to appear. . . . They compete in 120-yard high hurdles, a
440-yard dash, one and two-mile runs, a two-mile. steeple-
ih
Ad * E :
. SPORTS : CONVENTION IN SOUTH 8 = # :
SUGAR BOWL HAS EVERYTHING
Bs Eddic Ash
| - FT HE Sugar Bowl carnival is a ‘national sports conven-
tion... one of the few productions anywhere bringing ; the stars of so many different sports together. ‘Outstand- : ing figures of football, horse racing, track and field, basketball, yachting, rowing and collegiate boxing participate
in the week-long schedule.
The meeting of fabulous Texas Christian ‘and Car‘negie Tech is to many the more attractive of the four
“ major football offerings.
Tulane Stadium has been sold but for weeks. . . . The eyes of more than 40,000 will be on a little Davy O’Brien as he attempts to demonstrate that even the Eastern champion cannot curb his fancy passing.
a a2 =» a #2 8 =» \NTEW BRITAIN, Conn.; High and Dupont Manual of Louisville are to meet in a grid game advertised for crown ‘at nearby Baton Rouge,
chase, and a sprint medley relay.
8 2 8 8.88
: Do BUDGE has turned professional and Bobby. Riggs will not be
ee
# present this winter, but the Sugar Bowl tennis tournament has headline names. . . . Gene Mako, Bitsy Grant, Wayne Sabin, Elwood Cooke, and Jack Tidball, all Davis Cup hopefuls for 1938. | Mako will play with Tidball, his new doubles partner, for the first time : | Basketball brings together Purdue and Arkansas, last season's Southwest Conference titleholder. College squads . . . Clemson and Loyola of New Orleans . lide in Sugar Bowl boxing for first time. Bi: 82 2 8 8 5 mae FOUR-OARED shell race between Rollins College of Winter Park, Fla, and the Orleans Rowing Club is the first rowing event
. . col-
held in New Orleans in more than a quarter of a century in which
a Louisiana outfit has had outside competition. A yacht race features a Race of Champions, confined to the high point scorers of. eight gulf coast clubs. . . . It is sailed in the ore design fish class sloops that are universal throughout the gulf ‘coast country. | There is horse racing at the Fair Grounds. | 8 # a 2 8 2 HE Sugar .Bowl festival only starts a New Orleans program of L national interest. The second Crescent City Open golf tourna-
n 2 oh be eld, Feb. 15-19, with last year’s $5000 in prize money ubled.
The Southern Yacht Club, second oldest in the United States, acts as host to the annual spring championship series of the International Star Class Yacht Racing Association on Lake Pontchartrain, March 25-April 1.
The event is being held in this country for the
frp time. Heretofore it has been shuttled between Nassau and Bermuda. | New Orleans is a lively place . . . in more ways than one.
# ‘rn
Ld a o
; GFojEons of the Sugar Bow! grid game say they could have dis- : | posed of 100,000 tickets if that many had been available. . . .
Theres gold in the bowls when the right teams are matched. . . . Orange Bowl managers are erecting extra seats at Miami. . . .
~ Nother sellout, probably. \
| Big afternoon of entertainment for ithe radio football fans on Jan. 2... “oe Orange Bowl, Eastern time; Sugar Bowl. Central; Rose Bowl, Pacific. | = . The Cotton Bowl game, Texas Tech vs. St. Mary's Is not getting much play hereabouts. : %
: | 8. 2 8 =» Do may become the ‘training camp of several pro grid teams : next year. . . . The New York Giants, champions. have indicated
_ they will work out up where hay fever ends for the battle with the
College All-Stars in Soldiers’ be the sixth renewal. Mickey Cochrane told friends recently that he wouldn't take another. baseball job. . ... He's doing great in business in Detroit. . . .
Field, Chicago, in August... . It will
ankis Frisch said he isn't worried whether he lands a job. . . '» He's well heeled and coaching berths offered did not appeal to him
| » . +i. Prefers to remain at home and
rest. . . . He can use it after a
long stretch with the Gas House Gang.
— And in This Corner
96 IN JUNIOR TENNIS MEET
NEW YORK, Dec. 260. P.).—Joey Fishback, the defending cham- . pion from New York, headed a record field of 96 which hegan play today * in| the annual national junior indoor tennis championships. .The boys’ tournament starts tomorrow. Fishback opens defense of his title in a first-round match against Burton Hellman of New York.
BUDGE MAY CLEAN UP $100,000
| NEW YORK, Dec. 26 (U. P.).—The Don Budge-Ellsworth Vines tour which opens Jan. 3 in Madison Square Garden will break all crowd and
‘gate records for professional tennis,
Promoter Jack Harris predicted to-
_ day. The match will be Budge’s first as a professional. Harris predicted that the swing would gross close to $300,000, topping
the Vines-Fred Perry tour by nearly Budge will prebably earn more than
$60,000. Early returns indicate that $100,000.
- RANGERS SNAP BRUINS’ STREAK
: NEW YORK, Dec. 26 (U. P.).—The New York Rangers were up within striking distance of the National Hockey League lead today as the Boston Bruins nursed their first defeat on home ice which shattered ie winning streak at seven straight. The Rangers beat the Bruins, leaders of the league, 1-0, last night
at Boston and climbed to within two points of first place.
* ended the Bruins’ triumphant string
The defeat and prevented Rookie Goalie Frank
Brimisek from chalking up a modern consecutive scoreless run.
L American Leaguers Set Six Records for Fielding
eg hy
Es
: h : streak during the 1938 season, final
| ¥ official averages showed today. [Two major league records
3 oe
F wa YORR, Dec. 26 (U. P).—| The league records tied were:
e American League, famed for its| tting, went on a red hot fielding
and four American League marks were itter. into the record books. Four ajor and three league records were ualed. . The Detroit Tigers led the team
. fielding with an average of .976 to
‘top that -department. for the fifth consecutive time. All the individual leaders. were. dethroned. : The major league marks broken E were league affairs. The eight
clubs turned in 32,235 putouts to better the “fewest putouts” mark of 32,206 set by the National League and 13,851 assists also bettered the old record of 14,167 for fewest asists set by the senior loop. 1. Five double plays one game by Joe fankees. , 2. Eizhteen putouts for a catcher one game by Frankie Pytlak of eveland. 3. Most errors at third base in one me, jour by Frank Higgins of Bos-
t second base rdon of the
in. : - 14. Fewest assists, one, “at third
+‘ pase in a single game by Higgins.
The new league records were: 1. Most double plays - at shortstop for a season, 120, by Frankie osetlii of the Yankees. 2. Most double plays at first base, 157, by Lou Gehrig, Yankees. : 3. Most double plays by the league for a season, 1282.
1. Most chances in one game by a catcher, 18, by Pytlak. 2. Fewest games played in a season, 149, by Chicago. 3. Most double headers in succession, six, by White Sox. Zeke Bonura, now of the New York Giants in the National League and traded by Chicago to Washington at the start of the 1938 sea-
son on the ground that he couldn't field. topped the first sackers with an average of .993, displacing Jimmy Foxx of Boston who was on top a year ago. Rudy © York, Detroit, switched from first base to catcher, topped the backstops with .990 as Bill Dickey of the Yankees, last year’s leader, dropped to third. St. Louis produced two individual leaders—Harland Clift, with 962 at third base and Red Kress at short, with .965. Buddy Myer of Washington fielded .982 to top the second basemen, beating out Charley Gehringer of Detroit, 1937 winner, Pete Fox of Detroit with .994 was the most efficient fielding outfielder. Mike Kreevich of Chicago, tops in 1937, dropped .to ninth. Nineteen pitchers fielded a perfect 1000 in 13 or more games but Spurgeon Chandler of the Yanke took the title because he handled the most chances, 68. Ted Lyons, Chicago veteran who had topped the flingers a year ago, made an error on June 18 and
4. Fitwest chances in 154 | 7. 2h Ale
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games, {ghich had
broke his string of flawless ball
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{maker of Vancouver, Wash., on the
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PAGE («=
_ Indianapolis
MONDAY,
7
DmcEEER 188
TEAMS POLISH FOR
Bust Wes
BEGINNER — AN a FRACAS OUT HM FRIGHT IN Li
Guldahl Tops Golfing Aces
Was Only Champion to Retain Major Title in 1938.
Fourth of a series of sports reviews featuring the more dramatic high spots of eventful 1938.
By ART KRENZ NEA Service Sports Writer NEW YORK, Dec. 26-—Ralph Guldahl , . greatest finisher in golf . . . winnah and still champeen! Only player to successfully defend a major title in 1938 . . . repeater in two . .. first repeater in the National Open since Robert Tyre Jones’ grand slam of ’30 . . . fourth in the long history of the event. > Trailing Dick Metz by four strokes at the start of the final round, Guldahl, the tall Texas Norwegian, picked up 10 to win by six. = When Tony Manero practically broke Harry Cooper's heart by lowering the United States Open record—which the British-born professional had just broken at Baltusrol in 1936—he dropped the total to 282 and they traced it to the shortness of the course . . . said the figure would stand for years... perhaps forever. < But Guldahl came back in 1937 with a 281 at Oakland Hills, a true championship test. In Sand 13 Times And as though prevailing again at Denver's Cherry Hills this year were not enough, the long-legged chap five days later in St. Louis
that made him first to cop the Western Open three years in a row. The: seventh and youngest Turnesa accounted for the National
Amateur over treacherous Oakmont. Willie Turnesz got into the
Pittsburgh sand cunes 13 times. That is not unusual, but a suecessful recovery on every occasion is very much out of the ordinary. Pat Abbott, little player and former Public Links ruler, fell, 8-7. j : Another collegian, Charley Yates, became the fifth American to bag the British Amateur. The United States ‘Walker Cup team bowed to the British on the other side for the first time, 7-4. Snead Leads in Earnings Although Samuel Jackson Snead is the year’s leading money winner with $19,414.49, the Virginian failed to grab a United States title. Paul Runyun, the little man with the big spoon, dealt Snead a severe shellacking in the P. CG. A. But the erstwhile hillbilly took the Canadian Open and the richest tournament of the year ... the 108-hole Westches= ter Open. Al Leach, former caddy and local WPA worker, repelled Louis Cyr, a railroad employee and sound shot-
‘36th hole of the National Public
Park. The Intercollegiate went to John Burke, a Georgetown sophomore. Reginald Whitcombe, veteran professional of the famous English family, came down-in front in .the British Open with a mediocre 295. Voted Athlete of Year Patricia Jane Berg turned the tables on Mrs. Estelle Lawson Page, who repelled her the season béfore, in winning the 42d women’s championship, 6 and 5, over the course of the Westmoreland Country Club of Wilmette, Ill. : : It was Patty's 10th tournament triumph of the year and the first timé that the champion and runnerup of the previous campaign met in the final. The University of Minnesota coed wes repulsed inthe 1936 final by Mrs. Glenna Collet Vare. : . Miss Berg also accounted for the Women’s Western Derby, a medal play - event, in which she halted the reign of Marion Miley in winning with a score that was 12 under women’s par. For these and other bright feats, Little Miss Business of the Fairways was voted the woman athlete of the year. i : American women won the Curtis Cup team match from the British at Manchester, Mass., in September. Mrs. Helen Holni, a former winner, displaced Jessie Anderson as the British women’s ruler.
AS AN EARLY OFFERING —
Hollywood bil |
“THE BG. WAS His ELEVENTH
CAUGHT UR WITH JACK. HAVANA \N (OG
ig NIGHT AT CONEY SLAND IN WHEN JereRies ie
SWAMONS FoR THETITLE 3 AGHTING § BATTLE ;
Jess WRLARD HAD GONE B® THE TISNE WARS BO TIMES BEEORE NE JOHNSON
“
BE =rsioss A FLOck oF i 100 NOVA HAS HAD 2.6 FIGHTS AS A PROFESSIONAL — INCLUDING WINNING
THE TOURTH LEG ON TOMMY TARR
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WANA NA —
TUE
ns
|to resume practice today after holi-
Howar Trojans t
More thar
BOWL
Trojans Seek
~~ Injured Odds ‘6 to 5 and Take Your Tussle With Texas Chri
Game Is Reported a Sellout.
rn rites
final training sessions. : Three of the teams already we Here’s how the games shape up: Rose Bowl—Duke vs. Southern ifornia. at Pasadena—Both planned
al-
J You'Re A nice 0, AN) LIKE YOU ~ SO TAKE MY ADVICE An’ SuLuvas
LEAVE “RAT
AME NUMBER. OF FIGHTS JAMES J.CORBETT HAD HAD BEFORE ME FANCY D. NNED QLD JOHN L. OUT OF THE TITLE (N (S92 AT New ORIBWS
‘day week-ends. Duke arrived in
Vd A
| beaten, untied and wunscored upon. H. hn
By United Press
Football teams of the six schools which. play in major bowl games next Monday will buckle down to 0 work today or tomorrow Jn
Jones has been telling his . t Duke came West un-
that, he added, the Blu
| Devils were unscouted. ;
TILTS
em ——
Offense to Penetrate Duke's Line;
ols Favorites
Choice’ for Carnegie Tech tian’s Horned Frogs as
e close , to the scene of action; two were en route and a sixth was Jott
at home.
=
‘Pasadena Saturday and, with sight
seeing and mild Christmas celebrations completed, was ready to begin
hard work. Southern California will pick up where it left off last week in trying to ‘devise an offense that
will score on the hitherto unbeaten and unscored upon Blue Devils. Sugar Bowl—Carnegie Tech -vs. Texas Christian at New Orleans— Carnegie Tech, . after spending Christmas in. New Orleans, will resume practice at its nearby bay St. Louis, Miss., training base. T.C. U. will swing back into action at .its home field at Ft. Worth. From New Orleans came word that the bettors have set the odds at “6 to 5 take
So
Jot tous, wingers, wm THE BIG TIME IN HIS 430 PRO FIGHT AGAINST CARNERA
Three Matches
L] On Armory Bill What has the earmarks of being one of the best action producing matches of the local indoor season is all set for the Armory Wrestling card tomorrow night. Everett Marshall, National Wrestling Association heavyweight. champ, is to tackle the aggressive George (Cry Baby) Zaharias. It is for two falls out of three and tops an all-star supporting program. Joe Cox fell before Zaharias here two weeks ago and John (Wild Bull) Granovich was a victim last Tuesday. The powerful Granovich lost to Everett several weeks ago,
| but was beaten by George in faster
time than by Marshall. . The Cry Baby is a tricky performer and probably will be at his best against Everett. The latter scales 224 and Zaharias weighs 245. Zaharias returns to Indianapolis as a bridegroom. He married Mildred (Babe) Didrikson, famous. girl athlete, last Friday in St. Louis. Dorve (Iron Man) Roche, 222, De-
catur, Ill, meets Billy Bartush, 234, |}
Chicago, in the semiwindup, ‘with Ray Eckert, 216, St. Louis, opposing Bob Bruns, 220, Chicago, in the
Hilltoppers Meet Broncos Saturday
Times Special . MILWAUKEE, Dec. 26.—Members of the Marquette University basketball squad will cut short their Christmas stay with the homefolks as they return today to begin preparations for a heavy week-end of cage entertainment in the local gymnasium. : ; The Hilltoppers will go into intersectional competition in a game with Santa Clara University here on New Years Eve and then hardly will have time to catch their respective breaths before facing Bufler University here on Monday night, Jan, 2. Both games will be played in the Marquette gymnasium. Saturday night's game with the Santa Clara Broncos will mark the first appearance of a Pacific Coast team in Milwaukee since Marquette took the measure of the Stanford University | Indians, 39 to 26, early in the 1934-35 season. The Westerners are making an extensive holiday tour of the Middlewest. ft A recent 31-28 victory over the University of California indicated that Santa Clara is strong again this winter. Coach George Barsi’s quintet is headed by Big Ed Nelson,
6 foot 5% inch senior center who |S!
weighs 229 pounds. There are nine lettermen on the squad.
Martins Scores 12 Points in Upset
- NEW YORK, Dec. 26 (NEA)— New York University had nobody to match Bobby Martins, who scored 12 points and set up Panzer plays that
roduced that many more in his
The 14-club rule ofcess baggage.
simply’ relieved |P PIV TEUSVES | cquad's easy. victory . . . one of thel]
Boomerang
By HENRY
safety men, Grenny Lansdell and get up a full head of steam. :
the whole distance. Paul Schissler, former Oregon State coach, is one of the critics who believe Tipton’s awesome Kicking will prove a boomerang. Be it California or New York, the sharpsters who operate the football pool cards are the same. The pool cards on the Ros Bowl game being circulated out here demand that if you pick Southern Cal you must spot Duke six points; that you can’t select T. C. U. unless you spot Carnegie Tech seven points; and that if you name Tennessee you must spot Oklahoma eight points. . Texas Tech and St. Mary's are the only bowl contenders rated even. Speaking of St. Mary's, where Slip Madigan is coach, the football filberts out here say that Madigan is on the field so much during St. Mary's games that he should be awarded a sweater at the end of the season.
No Short Bets
Santa Anita Will not follow the lead of Churchill Downs and handle $1 bets. Charley Strub, Santa Anita General manager, says that only pets which can be recorded through the totalisator will be handled at his track, and the totalisator is geared for $2 handles,” South American horses, who threaten to dominate the big stakes this winter, have a hard time becoming acclimated . . . when they leave South America in August, winter is just ending and their coats are very thin. : When they get here winter is just starting, and they nearly freeze to death while nature is providing them with a protective covering. The Southern California Sportsman’s Association has lined up a great card for its “sports fiesta.” . . . Between Dec. 30 and Jan. 15 the public will be offered an all-star East-West prep football game; the Santa Anita opening; the Rose Bowl game; the $5000 Los Angeles Open golf tournament; a lightweight title fight between Henry Armstrong and Baby Arizmendi; a heavyweight wrestling bout with Jim Londos in the leading role, and the football game between the New York Giants ang 8 | hand-picked team of profes-
Gordon Gore, an Oklahoma boy who played college football in deep obscurity, is rated by ‘Coast critics as one of the greatest running backs they ever saw. He is a halfback with the Los Angeles Bulldogs and wi gallop against the New York ian :
Find Own Places
Tn
overcoaching runs
. . United Press Staff Correspondent LOS ANGELES, Dec. 26.—Some of the fdotball wiser it all figured out that the mighty kicking of Eric Tipton is going to cost the Duke Blue Devils the Rose Bowl game on Jan 2. Tipton’s punts are so tremendous, they reason, that the ball beats his ends down the field by 15 or 20 yards and will give the U. 8. C.
able varsity array.
Tipton’s Long Kicks May on Invaders
M’LEMORE
critics have
Mickey Anderson, time enough to
Anderson is one of the fastest men in football today, and Lansdell is only a step behind. Once under way they are likely to carry the ball
Sines in Stride ~ As Kautskys Win
Times Special r HAMMOND, Dec. 26—The Indianapolis Kautsky All-American professional basketball team had too much speed for the Hammond
Ciesars here yesterday afternoon and won, 44 to 33. The victory placed the All-Ameri-cans and the Sheboygen Redskins in a deadlock for the lead of the Western division of the National Pro League. ; The Ciesars held a 16-to-13 margin at halftime but three twopointers by Jim Birr, ex-Indiana University star, pushed the Kautskys into the lead at the outset of the second half. Johnny Sines and Johnny Wooden, both former Purdue aces, connected for two pointers that sent the Capital City five far out in front. Sines tallied 15 points in the game and Wooden 13.
Louis Boudreau, former Illinois|hammer. player, led Hammond with 11 points REET and McGowan iallied hine. Don’t Go Near Water, Hammond Sor PH Kautsky 8 SY pr \ goers 3 0 J xumeto 3 83 Order to Swimmers guomic. f § dgriii-3 3 Hl eecaperenca oe | ack e.g 3 3 O/Bairdg... 3 0 5 PHILADELPHIA, Dec. 24 (NEA). soralt 3 0 1liwiliamsf.. 0 8 2|_John Logan has his:own way of | Campiong. 0 0 0 — — —|condiiioning Temple . University's Totals ..13 ® 7| Totals ...19 6 14/SWwimming' team. The Owl coach
Like Father, Like Son at Marquette
Times Special MILWAUKEE, Dec. 26.—A “Hey! Junior!” shout from Coach Bill Chandler of the Marquette University basketball squad would hastily assemble a full and formidMarquette ~agemen who carry the first names of their fathers include Cocapts. Erwin Graf and David Quabius, Ralph Amsden; Glenn Adams, George Collentine and George Sutfer.
® . a Finally Failed NEW HAVEN, Dec. 26.—Until defeated by Princeton this fall, Yale had never lost a football game to an opponent scouted by Greasy Neale, Ducky Pond’s assistant.
TORONTO, Dec. 26.—Conniell =< 0 Smythe, Toronto manager, saysij
Georgia Tech in Fray With Bears
BERKELEY, Cal., Dec. 26 (U. P.). University of California and Georgia Tech continued their intersectional football rivalry before.a holiday crowd on a dry, fast field here today, | California, victor in nine of its 10 regular season games, was a 5-to-2 favorite to avenge a 13-7 1936 defeat handed the Golden Bears by the Georgians, whose 1938 record was three wins, three losses and three ties. The Bears were in sound physical condition for the game, while Coach Bill Alexander of the Southerners
Gibson, his breakaway left half, because of a shoulder injury. ; A crowd of 20,000 or more was 3Xpected. The day was clear and brisk.
Indiana Athlete Taking Records
GLASGOW, Dec. 26 (NEA) .—Hank Schneiderman, former Indiana University athlete, is making a collection of track championships before he returns to the United States. Schneiderman, attending medical
school, holds the discus, javelin and shot-put records of the University of Glasgow. Last summer at the universities championships in London, he took first in the discus and shot, second in the javelin, and sixth in the
won’t let the boys in the water for
tice, believing conditioning exercises which loosen muscles and
beneficial than letting the mermen gin swimming. :
ELINED Men's |EPAIRED | ww." EFITTED | Women's
LEON
235 MASS, AVE.
was uncertain whether to use Billy:
the first month of preseason prac- ||
develop torso and body are more;
jump right into the pool and be-|
TAILORING CO. || |
your choice” and that the game was a sellout. Orange Bowl—Tennessee, vs. Oklahoma at Miami—Both teams en route to Miami with Tennessee scheduled to arrive [today with a squad of 41 and Oklahoma due tomorrow. Tennessee has been: bothered by an epidemic of colds and
Knoxville, Tenn., in the hopes that the warm sun would bake out the
|trouble. Gamblers made Tennessee
la long 5-to-14 favorite.
~|Duke to Hold
Secret Practice |
PASADENA, Cal, Det. 26 (U. P). The Duke University Blue Devils today took the last semipublic work-. out before their Jan. 2 football game. lin the Rose Bowl with University of .
Southern California. Coach Wallace Wade said that he was permitting newspapermen and photographers to witness : today’s workout at Brookside Park but for the rest of the week not even the newsmen who accompanied his team West will be allowed to see the Blue Devils practice. : “Wade arranged for a corps of uniformed police officers to patrol outside a high hedge that surrounds the field and to prevent anyone from seeing the team drill. A few miles away, at Bovard Field on the Trojan campus, Coach Howard Jones and the U.S. C. team are back at work after a Christmas breathing spell. = The squad disbanded so that players could spend the holiday at home.
Announce Plans for Meeting of Coaches
Times Special - MADISON, Wis,, Dec. Association of Intercolegiate Football and the public will"be the prin cipal topic discussed at a joint session of the National Collegiate Athletic Association land the Nae tional Football Coaches’ Associa= tion, Dec. 29, it was announced to= day by Harry Stuhldreher. The Wis= consin director of athletics and foot ball coach is president of the coaches’ organization. : The topic will be: discussed by Prof. W. B. Owen, Stanford Uni= versity, president of the N. C. A. A, ‘for his organization, Branch Rick= y, representing the. public. and Stuhldreher for the coaches. This ill be the only joint session of vhe two groups and will be held at the Hotel Sherman, Chicago. |
BARTHEL The Tailor
ALTERATION SPECIALIST
Suits $25 Up 16 Years Same Location West Ohio Street
PAID
Tela: 4:
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SRN MR
Men's and Women’s
~~ OUTFITTERS TO _ MEN, WOMEN and CHILDREN
Sign sat A on over the family. % JULIAN GOLDMAN e UNION STORE e 118-22 N. Pennsylvania St.
au fam eset
for FINER LINENS) oo. at Lower Prices if
es | I*) 4
a A
left a day earlier than planned from =
%
26.—The.
