Word: hartz
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Theodore F. Bullen, of Melrose, Mass.; Louis Hartz, of Omaha, Nebr.; William C. W. Haynes, of Charlotte, N. C.; George V. Kaplan, of Roxbury, Mass.; Norman J. Richards, of Lexington, Mass.; James O. Seamans, of Salem, Mass.; and Albert L. Waldron Jr., of Cleveland...
...fast Millers, led by Billy Arnold, 1930 winner, 1931 leader until his Miller-Hartz crashed and burnt, led for the first laps. Arnold crashed again at 150 mi. after setting five new records. At 200 mi. only one of the standard cars, high rated for stamina, was among the first ten. In the last half they came up, finished third (Studebaker), fifth (Hupmobile) and sixth (Studebaker). But already down Indianapolis' 2½ mile-long brick oval, in the dust, heat, bedlam and gasoline fumes, a businesslike little car, fat in the middle, had buzzed busily past the finish line...
...yard free style swim--Won by E. P. Parker; second, Kimball (A); third, Hartz (A). Time...
...Billy Arnold, Chicago speed driver: the 200-mi. classic at Altoona in a Hartz-Miller Special, beating Deacon Litz in a Duesenberg after a wild duel full of skids, blowouts, breaks on the turns...