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Fordham Nominated as Logical Selection for Rose Bowl Contest - - -*■ - . . ._ .___ ;3 Win if Two Teams Were to Meet Again. BY JOHN LARDNER. NEW YORK, Nov. 10.—Here is a vote for Fordham for the Rose Bowl (and a private plea to St. Mary’s and New York University not to muss up my can didate and make us both look fool ish before the season ends). Only three of the country’s unde feated football teams have a valid claim to Rose Bowl recognition—Ala bama, Fordham and Pittsburgh. Duke and Nebraska are strong in their own neighborhoods, but both of them play Pittsburgh before the year is over, and if either one can lick the Pan thers I will gladly withdraw my nomi nee and root with the winners, be they Cornhuskers or Dukes. But I don't think Pittsburgh will be beaten. Nor will Fordham. And I think if those two behemoths met •gain tomorrow Fordham would win. Before we go any further, let's eliminate a few stragglers. It's very easy to eliminate stragglers on paper, and a lot of fun, too, if you keep out of gunshot range. The boys we will eliminate first are Yale and Dart mouth. Neither of them belongs in the same league with Fordham or Pitt. I'm inclined to believe that, if you rolled the best of the Yale and Dartmouth squads into one the re sulting ball club would be a pushover for Mr. Crowley or Dr. Sutherland. “Feelers” to Dartmouth, Yale. 'T'HE Coast people, according to ru mor, sent "feelers’ ’to Dartmouth and Yale a week or so ago. I don’t know why they did. unless they felt an impulse to mingle with the Ivy league. There doesn't seem to be any other reason. Yale and Dart mouth rank below Holy Crass, Temple and Villanova in the matter of East ern football merit, to say nothing of Pittsburgh and Fordham. , But I guess there is a certain amount of snobbishness to this Rose Bowl racket at that. It may hurt Ford ham's chances. That’s one of the reasons why your correspondent is leaping prematurely to Fordham's de fense, without being invited, either. There isn't much to choose among the football teams of Alabama, Ford ham and Pittsburgh beyond a private conviction that Fordham, as currently constituted, could beat both the others. The Rams still possess the famous iron defense which stopped Pittsburgh cold three years running—over and above which they have a new-blooming set of backs who are far above their level of the Pittsburgh game. In fact, it's as good a set of backs as you’ll find in the country—Woit- j koski, Locke, Holovak, Kazlo. Granski. Principe, Fortunato, Krywicki. All rnght, so you can't pronounce them.< You needed a pan-Slavic dictionary to I wade through the Notre Dame teams a few years ago, but that never shut the doors of bon-ton football society to: Mr. Rockne. N Change Seen as Needed. ALABAMA’S record in the Tourna ment of Roses and Poison Ivy is clean—three victories and one tie. Pitt has won once and last twice. I would not. be surprised if the West erners harbor thoughts of revenge on Alabama for the shellackings of the past decade. That’s natural. But some one else should have a chance to go out there and play once in a while, before the thing becomes an Alabama annual or a Pittsburgh perennial. The Rose Bowl doesn’t affect the | national football championship of the i country to any important extent. Neither does the Sugar Bowl, or the Cotton Bowl, or the Orange Bowl. All of them are real estate or booster prop ositions, and it’s quite possible that any strong team in the country—one of the Southwestern Conference teams, for instance—could beat the Rose Bowl winner a week after the Rose Bowl « game. Still the public is terrifically bowl conscious, and that makes the matter important, whether it deserves to be or not. So I think they should ask a solid and worthy football team out there for next New Year day. And I think Fordham fills the ticket (and I hope Mr. Sleepy James Crowley doesn't find out that I have been hexing his club with talk like this, or he will •hoot on sight). (Copyrlsht, 1037. by the North American Newspaper Alliance. Inc.) Fights Last Night By the Associated Press. JERSEY CITY. ~ Slugger White. 137. Chicago, outpointed Joe Boscerino. 135 •eranton. Ps. (6). • kp® ANGELES. Ritchie Fontaine. J22 >•. Montana, outpointed Umlo Gen, Japan (10). iK?Aoir,'A^' Nov* Scotia.—Tommy Bland. ISO, Toronto, outpointed Werther Arcelll. 144. Boston (10). NEW YORK.—Arturo Godoy. IWO'i. Chile, technically knocked out Eddie Mider. IRA. New York (ft). NEW YORK.—Eddie Cool. 130. Phila delphia. and Johnny Bellus. 135'«. New Haven. Conn., drew IR). •7 (IflBUViaWU fICM. ^ Milwaukee. wi*„ Nov. 10.— Bargain hunters In the base ball ivory market, from all indications today, are pre pared to do a large amount of early Christmas shopping when they as semble in Milwaukee December 1 for the three-day minor league meeting. The meeting is primarily for the "little, fellows,” but as usual the big brothers in the major leagues may be expected to steal the show. In terest will center on three new major league managers — Oscar Vitt of Cleveland, Bill McKechnie of Cincin * natl and Charles Dillon Stengel of the Boston Bees—to see what moves they will make to patch sagging line ups. If Charles (Gabby) Street is here as manager of the St. Louis Browns, as not a few suspect he will be, that will make it a foursome. Several trades are rumored to be in , the making. These rumors have fast balling Van Lingle Mungo of Brook lyn ticketed for the Chioago Cubs, Pitcher Jack Wilson of the Boston Red Sox headed for the New York Yankee fold and Zeke Bonura going te Washington and Joey Kuhel to the By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, Nov. 10.—Joe Med wick, the pay-off guy of the St. Louis Cardinals Gashouse Gang, has the National League’s most valuable player award for 1937 to add to his record string of batting “firsts.” “Muscles” did all he could to earn the prize. He won the batting cham pionship, led in hits, runs batted 'in and doubles and tied with the Giants' Mel Ott for the home run title. Even so he barely nosed out Gabby Hartnett, the spirited Chicago catcher, who drew 68 votes to Joe's 70. Eight members of the Baseball Writers’ Association made the selec tion. They gave Gabby more first place nominations than Medwick, but Muscles more than made up that deficit with votes for second and third place to grab the award and the Sport ing News Trophy. During the past season. Medwick compiled a batting average of .374; he hit safely 237 times, batted in 154 runs and hit 57 doubles and 31 home runs, Carl Hubbell, the shrewd, smooth left-hander of the New York Giants, who won the award last year, was third with 52 points. Two newcomers to the headlines, the Boston Bees' venerable rookie pitchers, Jim Turner and Lou Fette. wound up fourth and fifth. They edged out such well known players as Dick Bartell and Mel Ott of the Giants' and Paul Waner of Pittsburgh. In the balloting among the eight writers—one from each of the seven cities and one borough in the league— a first-place vote counted 10 points, second, 9, and so on for 10 selections. Medwick drew two first-place nomina tions: Hartnett, three. Each was selected twice on a second place ballot, but Medwick got four third-place nominations, while Hart nett's votes were strung out, one each for third, fourth and sixth. COLORED RING MEET WILL START FRIDAY First Golden Gloves Meet Lures Crack Amateur Boxers of D. C. and Vicinity. J^NTRIES for the first annual Gold en Gloves colored boxing tourna ment, starting at Turner's Arena Fri day night, will close at 7 o'clock to night. The Twelfth Street Y. M. C. A. will accept entries up to that time. Colored mittmen within a 15-mile radius of Washington are eligible for the competition, winners of which will be sent to the all-America tournament at Boston next month. Many of the finest amateurs dev A oped locally within the past two years already have filed for the meet. Final weighing-in, examinations and pair ings will be held between 6 and 8 o’clock tomorrow’ night at the Twelfth Street “Y.” .. •.. HAVE ODD GRID SIGNAL. MILWAUKEE, Wis. OP).—Five Mar quette players—forjner football stars at Milwaukee North Division High School—use an eerie whistle as their clan call. When Fullback Harry Ley senaar wants to flip a pass to End Bill Staffleld, he puckers his lips, toots and passes. ▼ Meeting of Minors Promises Active Baseball Ivory Market Chicago White Sox in a swap of first basemen. Not a few newly appointed minor league managers will be looking for talent. Their number includes John ny Neun, who succeeded Vltt at New ark; E. W. (Dutch) Zwilling, late of Kansas City and now of Oakland in the Pacific Coast League; Bill Meyer, who left Oakland for Zwilling’s job, and Paul Richards, former New York Giant catcher, now bossing the At lanta Crackers. In addition to the player swaps which will be engineered largely 'in corners of hotel lobbies behind screens of cigar smoke, the minor leaguers will have several problems for open discussion. One concerns extension of the ma jor-minor agreement, which expires February 4, 1938. Some tentative al terations have been drafted unofficial ly for submission in Milwaukee, but what they contain has not been cleared up. The minor leaguers may be expected to say something, about wanting more clear titles to promising young play ers who come their way, unattached to any major league clubs. Repercus sions of the Bob FelleT and Tom Henrich cases may be heard. SAD CASE—BUT HOPELESS. —By JIM BERRYMAN. - “Most Valuable Player” A ward Added to Medwick’s Laurels Won’t Predict ’Nooga Finish, But Promises to Lead “Fighting” Club. By the Associated Press. Chicago. Nov. io—The fans who follow the Chattanooga club of the Southern Associa tion will see a hustling, fight ing ball team next season, If the Lookouts catch the spirit of their new manager, 27-year-old Walter Millies. Millies, son of a minister in sub urban Cicero, who recently was made pilot of the Lookouts, will be one of the youngest playing managers in the game, and he aims to be a fighting manager—not quarrelsome, but bat tling to win ball games. "I am not saying where Chatta nooga will finish next year," Millies for the last two season with Wash ington said, "but I think it will be among the first three. Wherever we land, we will have a hustling, fight ing team." . Starts in Church League. jy^ILLIES, who started his baseball career 12 years' ago with a church league team in Cicero, moves into a minor league manager's job with a team he once served as a catcher. He was with Chattanooga in 1935. the property of the Brooklyn Dodgers. He became the property of Washington and did a share of the Nationals' catching in 1936 and 1937. Although he is young enough to have expected a longer career in the major leagues. Millies is eager to get at his new job in the minors. In tensely ambitious, he hopes the Look out job will lead him back to major company, possibly as a manager. R. Ferrell Sees Griffs Improved By the Associated Press. JACKSON, Tenn., Nov. 10.—Rick ** Ferrell paused from the business of attending his hounds in the Na tional Fox Hunters’ Association field trials today to predict the Washington Senators would be “greatly” improved next year. “The left-handed pitching beat us this season,” the slim young catcher observed. "The Senators will present a more balanced bat ting attack next year, and you’ll see a vastly improved team.” By this, Ferrell said, he meant that there would be a number of player changes in the roster of the Capital City American League club during the winter. Ferrell expect* to remain, "unless they use me in a trade.” Sports Program For Local Fans TODAY. Boxing. Golden Glove Tourney, Turner'* Arena, 8. TOMORROW. Football. Washington Redskins vs. Cincin nati Models, Charleston, W. Va. Wrestling. Chief Thunderbird vs. Cliff Olsen, feature match, Turner's Arena, 8:30. ' FRIDAY. Football. Catholic University vs. Miami, Miami, Fla. Central vs. Wilson, Central Sta dium (public high title game). 3:15. Baltimore Friends vs. Friends. Thirty-ninth street and Wisconsin avenue, 3. St. Alban’s vs.# Landon, St. Al ban's field, 3:15. Anacostia High vs. Georgetown Prep, Garrett Park, Md., 3:30. Western vs. Washington-Lee High, Ballston, Va., 3:30. George Washington High vs. ' Hopewell High, Hopewell, Va. Miner Teachers vs. North Caro lina State Normal, Fayetteville, N. C. SATURDAY. Football. George Washington vs. North Da kota State, Griffith Stadium, 2. Maryland vs. Penn State, State College, Pa. Georgetown vs. New York Uni versity, New York. ' American University vs. Johns Hopkins, Baltimore, Md. Wilson Teachers vs. Millersville Teachers, Central Stadium, 2. Gallaudet vs. Shepherd, Kendall Greeh, 2. St. John's vs. Gonzaga, Catholic University Stadium, 2. Maryland Frosh vs. Washington Lee Frosh, College Park, 1:30. Howard University vs. Tuskegee Institute, Howard Stadium, 2. HE’S NO-HIT SPOILER. CINCINNATI f/P).—Sammy Bohne, former Cincinnati infielder, twice in his carper spoiled perfect games for National League pitchers. Ortce his single in the sixth was the only hit made off the delivery of Pittsburgh’s Ernest Osborne. On another occa sion he hit safely in the ninth, with two out, to spoil a no-hitter for Dazzy Vance of Brooklyn. | BILLWERBER Philadelphia Athletics Insursnre Counselor Phone National 0978 HOW OLD ARE YOU? Was talking to a man today, age 47, and he was terribly worried about his eld age. "What will I 4t> when I get old? I haven't saved o cent." In his case, now, at his salary, it's just too late; but others are more fortunate. They can start to tave earlier. Expected to Provide More Action Than Seniors at Show Tonight. INTRIGUED by the caliber of the card, 2,000 spectators tonight are expected to Jam Turner’s Arena as Golden Glove competition nar rows to the quarter-final round, with nine senior and as many novice bouts comprising the amateur fistic show. Due to the lengthy program, start ing time has been moved up to 8 o’clock, with swinging slated to wind up about midnight, and, despite the appearance of many favorites In the senior division, novices figure to steal the spotlight. Flashy Novice Bouts. ^ICK LAT8IOS, easily the stand out of the tournament thus far, will risk his knockout reputation against Jimmy Sciacca of the Police Boys’ Club in a lightweight novice scrap, while another 135-pound-bout novice attraction lists Harry Schweir of Terminal Y. M. C. A. stacking up against Nick Maclni of Police Boys’ Club No. 4. Heavyweights will see action in two bouts, with Jim Brady, Georgetown University student and New York C. C. C. champion, meeting Tom Peddon of A. B. L W. Terminal and Buck Thornton of Terminal Y. M. C. A. fac ing Don Stetson of the District Na tional Guard outfit, defending team champion. Other Senior* in Show. QREIGHTON ALLEN. Bob Mathias, Gene ('Spud i Murphy, John Rod gers, Bob Brodigan and Harry Don are other senior favorites who will appear. General admission Is 40 cents, with ringside chairs available for 85 cents. Children will be admitted for 10 cents. Following are the pairings: Senior (Tan*. 12B pounds—Bob Brodiaan (N E. Bovs’ Hiihi vs. Pat Jones (Bales A C ) Harry f""" 'Termlna' "Y”> v»- Jo* Denman (National Guards). IK.S pounds- -Marion Pulone (A B A- W. Terminali vs Frankie Well (Merrick Clubi. (47 pounds—Eil Becker 'Guards! vs. Gene (floudi Murphy lOusntim Marines!. Bobby Mathias (Guards! vs. Frank Burke (unattached i. 1 BO pounds—Creighton Alien <N E. Bovs’ Club! vs. Eugene Jang (Y M C A ' John Rogers 'Guards* vs. John White (Terminal "Y"). Heavyweights—Jimmy Brady (George town University* vs. Tom Feddom (A. B. A; W. Terminal). Don Stetson 'Guards! vg Buck Thornton (Terminal Y. M. C. A.). Novice Class. 12B pounds—Jack Wadsworth (W B C.) vs. Robert Taylor 'Colmar Manor American Legion). Bob Hagadorn 'Merrick Club* vs Marion Campbell iN. E B C. >. 135 pounds—Nick Latsios (A B. A- W.t vs. Jimmy Selacca 'Police Clubi. Harry Schweir (Terminal "Y”> vs. Nick Maclnl 'No. 4 Policei. William Boley iN. E B. C.) vs. Julius Stommel! 'Young’s A. c >. 147 pounds—Freddy Allen (unattached) vs. Jack King (Terminal ’’Y"). Bernie Jackson (Merrick Club) vs. Lewis 8tes (No. 5 Police' Johnny Bsccn (unattached) vs Fred Meetree (Terminal ”Y"(, John Piclllo (unattached) vs. Clifton Fones iMerrlck Club). —-- ■■ . # NEVER ON LOSING TEAM. Leonard B. (Stub) Allison, head coach at California, never played on a losing football team In college. He went to Carleton (Northfleld, Minn.) where he played football four years on undefeated teams and captained foot ball, basket ball and baseball squads. Grand Championship Assured For Mrs. Whitney’s Favorite Five Vets and Like Number of Recruits on Squad. 22 Games Listed. Coach burton shipley will rely on the services of 10 talented courtmen, 4 of whom are veterans, to carry the University of Maryland banner through a tough 22-game basket ball schedule during the coming season. Hostilities begin December 16 for the Terps when they engage the Uni versity of Richmond five and foltow up with Michigan in two pre Christmas holiday tilts. Waverly Wheeler, Eddie Johnson, George Knepley, Milton Mulitz and Coleman Headley comprise the veteran contingent that will form the nucleus df the Old Line squad. In addition, Pershing Mondorff. Adam Bengoechea, Charlie Norton, Charlie i Hamer and Francis Beamer, all grad uates of last season's frosh quint, figure prominently In Shipley s ambi tion. His greatest problem, however, will be to fill the guard position left vacant by Charlie Keller and "Knocky" Thomas, both of whom generally were considered the best pair of guards In j the Sftuthem Conference last year. Wheeler and Mondorff are with the i varsity foot ball squad and Beamer ! will not be available for some time yet on account qf a broken finger received on the gridiron. December 1H, Richmond U.i 17. Mich igan. January 5. Randolph-Mscon: 7 Wash ington and Lee, at Lexington. S. V. M I. at Lexington: 13. Georgetown at Wash irtaton. 15. Duke; 2S North Carolina's! Chapel Hill; 39, Duke at Durham, 31. Virginia Tech. v/Cbf,ua7 w,KSy» Annapolis; 3. New York U.: 5 Washington and Lee; in, wil ,Mir>; <». V M. I: 13. Catho fcnC : Baltimore u.: is Washington College, is. Virginia a- Charlo^esvllle 19 Dickinson; 21. Johns Hopkins; 23. St Jonr * March 3t 4 and 5. Southern Conference : tourney. ! Mat Matches Bt the Associated Press. „ NEW YORK —Danno O'Mahonev. -25 Ireland, pinned Steve Passas. 185. Greece. 26:45 WORCESTER. Mass.—Yvon Robert. 225. Montreal, threw Mark Hoesley. '..On. Columbus. Ohio, two straight falls. DAYTON. Ohio—Billy Weidner ITS. San Francisco defeated the Great Mephisto 175. Meriden. Conn., two of three falls. HARRISBURG Pa.—Chief Thunder bird. 215. British Columbia, threw Rudy Dusek. 218 Omaha. Nebr.. 17:10. LINCOLN Nebr.—John Pesek. 200, Ravenna. Nebr.. recognized by National ' Wrestling Association as American heavyweight champion, defeated Steve Savage. 215. Chicago, straight falls. SAN FRANCISCO. — Cy Williams. 225. Tallahassee. Fla defeated Gino Vasannone. 215. Italy, two of three falls. INDIANAPOLIS.—Paul Harper. 226. Houston. Tex. defeated Shiniki Shi kuma. 205. Japan, two of three falls. i PHILCO SALES AND SERVICE L.$.JULLIEN.I/zc I44S P St.N.W. N0.8076 By ROBERT B. PHILLIPS, Jr., Staff Correspondent of Tha Star. Madison square garden, N. Y„ Nov. 10.—After so many years of trying, It was evident here last night that old Grey Knight, a veteran of many a campaign at the National Horse Show and every other outstanding hunter show in America, would at last tuck'under his brow band the tri color ribbon signifying the grand championship of the greatest indoor meet held on this side of the water. Winner of three classes in a day, the Knight, which always has been Mrs. John Hay Whitney’s favorite horse in the elaborate show string she maintains, seemed to have dispelled all doubts about the possibility that Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Untermeyer’s Hex amater might walk away with the grand prix, for each time that the good son of Royal Minstrel won a ribbon on the seventh day of the horse show. Hexameter was placed back of him. This somewhat reversed the situation created within the last few days, when Hexameter was Judged the winner of two good hunter classes and the Whit ney string followed. The Knight's final lick was struck in the ladies' hunter class, where Mrs. Whitney, who invariably rides this one. ujur. nun around in splendid lasmon and seemed to have everything In hand until one of the judges, dressed in top hat, white tie and tails, decided lt would be necessary to ride a couple of the horses in order to convince, him self of their relative worth. This un usual performance, which caused a breathless pause in the enthusiasm of the Virginia and Washington hunting crowd cheering for the Knight, never theless ended with the great old grey on top of the heap, and a handsome whoop went up from the stands as Mrs. Whitney received the William F. Wharton Memorial Challenge Trophy. And by the way, the entry list in this class was almost a duplicate of the thoroughbred hunter event on Mon day night, when not a Whitney horae had a look in at the nbbons. Netherlands Team Victor. ^^FTER a series of previous perform ances that would scarcely have done credit to a small-town riding school, the Netherlands army team emerged last night with the victory in the international individual mili tary affair of the evening. Lt. Col. G. M. de Kruyff, captain of the Neth erlands squad, lifted his country’s col ors out of the morass of mistakes, in which they have made a clean first round, to tie with Lt. Ives van Stry donck of the Belgian Army, who had the leg up on Ramona. In the jump off Godard made eight faults, Ramona 12. and for the first time since the internationalists started their tussle for honors, the Dutch national anthem was heard in paean of victory. Third place also went to the Bel gians, whose Ibrahim seemed to be returning to form as he went around the course last night to the cheers of a packed house, numbering about 13. I 000 Mih customers. Ironicslly enough, the United States Army’s Dakota, which went into the jump-off for fourth place, was able to clip off the raised course without a fault, after having dropped out of lt in the first test with two mistakes. The May Top Stable, owned by Mrs. Edgar Mayer of Port Chester, N. Y., continued its winning ways in the last afternoon event yesterday and the first of the evening. The latter was the more important triumph, as Bartend er, handled by Morton W. Smith, a horseman with eccentric but successful ideas about the way a jumper should be ridden, cleaned up the 30 per cent money awarded to the finalist victor in the touch-and-out sweepstake. In the afternoon a big strong horse which never seems to tire of jumping, had won a second in the triple-bar class, which was captured by^the Oriole Sta ble's Cuchulian, following numerous jump-offs. Second^lace in the six-day sweep stakes went to Goldenbrew, owned by Mr. and Mrs. William J. Kennedy of Southboro, Mass. Summaries: Triple bar lumping clasa—First. Cuchu lain. Oriole Stable second. Bartender. May Top Stable third. Sprig Leaf Audwii: Stable; fourth. Clipped Wings. Fort Myer horse show team. Touch-and-out sweepstake finals—First, Bartender May Top Stable; second. Golden Brew. Audwill stable International individual milltarv Jump ing—First Godard, ridden by Lt. Col O. M. De Kruvff, Netherlands Arm? team; second. Ramona, ridden by Lt. Ives Van fltrydonek. Belgian Army team; third. Ibrahim, ridden by Lt Pa ;1 Mondror. ; Belgian Arm? tegm fourth. Dakota ridden i by Lt. Franklin Wing, Jr.. United State* Army team Clasa f*7—Lady’s open hunter—The William F Wharton Memorial Challenge Trophy donated by Mrs. Gerrard Hallock 'id and Mr. Richard T. Wharton—First Mrs. John Hay Whitney's ar g. Grey Knifht. second- Cle'and Stables bik.m. i Margo*; third. Mr and Mr*. Alvin Unter mever a hr r Hexameter; fourth. Mr*. I^wia A. Park * ch.g. Holystone. WOMEN TO RIDE IN RACE Special Event la Arranged for Pimlico Tomorrow. BALTIMORE, Nov. 10 W.-Some | “hunter* which haven’t raced for two I years” will go to the post at Pimlico ; tomorrow morning—and their riders will be women. It's all a special flat race—a dis tance not yet announced but probably 6 furlongs—for women only. A dozen riders already are entered. “Jockeys" expected to compete in j elude Mrs. John Bosley, Maryland’s only woman horse trainer; Sarah Bos ley, her debutante daughter: Mrs. Jock Whitney, Ida Kerr, Philadelphia: Ellen Merritt, Maryland stunt steeplechaser: Mrs. Jane Bassett and Betty West, 1 both of Long Island; Mrs. George Sa portas and Mrs. B. Howell Griswold. 3d, members of the hunting set; Maud K. Stevenson and Bruener Hunneman, Chestnut Hill. Alfred Gwynne Vanderbilt will en tertain the “jockey*” at lunch after the race. Sports Mirror By the Associated Press. Today a year ago—Northwestern ranked first in fourth week of Associated Press football ratings, followed by Minnesota. Fordham, Alabama and Pittsburgh. Three years ago—Abe Mickal, 20-year-old Louisiana State back field star, made “State Senator” by Huey Long at Baton Rouge mass meeting of student voters. STEPAHEADAND BE MOYEY AHEAD! ENJOY STYLE LEADER STYLING • • • PACE SETTING PERFORMANCE • • • AND THE GREATEST ROLL CALL OF FEATURES EVER ANNOUNCED UNPOPULAR PRICED CARS! Oldsmobile’s Automatic Safety Transmission opens a whole new world of flashing, flowing action . . . makes driving simpler and safer! Optional at extra cost on all 1938 models. FSHT J:,., l... . ...f.d:■ (above) Olds mobile’s dash ing new Style Leader Six is the buy of i J lifetime 1 I (right) Olds- I mobile’s dy- P namic new 1 Bight, with its ’ year - ahead styling, offers fine-car trans portation at its lowest cost t The great new Oldamobiles for 1938 *et Amer ica’* pace in value! ... 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