Evening Star Newspaper, June 3, 1925, Page 28

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SPORTS. : ¥ . THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 3, 1925. SPORTS. Pitchers Have Trouble Going the Route : Thrills Provided in A. A. U. Boxing Bouts CHAMPIONS’ HURLERS LAST IN BUT 24 OF 43 STARTS Mogridge Latest to Give Is Charged With 8-5 Defeat by Yanks While Mackmen Are Defeating the Red Sox. BY JOHN B. KELLER. EW YORK, June 3—It is well staff numerically strong, for r N encounter, that the Yanks cventually for a pitcher assigned to the hill at the outset of hostilities in the 43 games played so far this scason by the champions The champs have something on the enemy has had but 16 of its hurlers last through engagements, but that is not so surprising when one considers that the Nationals have won more than two dozen games. Mogridge's withdrawal yesterday toed the slab at the beginning of t southpa 1 his guns, having completed five of th Tohnson, who has pitched through 6 o the former National Leaguer closely. Other moundsmen who have been | used to open fire against the enemy | this year are Stan Coveleskie and: Tez Zachary. Covey has started eight f times and gone the route on three occasions. Zach has had the starting assignment nine times. He tolied the full nine innings against the Yankees here on April 15 and against the Indians at Cleveland on May 17. The sorrel-thatched southpaw has had a particularly troublesome career since his first test of the vear. Zach has had to get out of three of the games he started before moing four frames. In the others that he failed to complete he faded suddenly toward the end of the route. Three Pitchers Often Used. Most of the National pitchers, when they have faltered, have done so vather early in the pastiming, and reserve corps often has not functioned so well. In exactly half of the 24 games which Manager Stanley Harris has made mound changes, three or more flingers have been called upon | Frequently the reserve men, after | & few rounds of effective work, have | suffercd the fate that befell Allen | Russell vesterday. -Succeeding Mo- | gridge, who was well hammered in | the second session after a falr start, | Russell got along in good style for five innings. The only damage he| sustained in that time was a homer by Bob Meusel, his thirteenth of the | vear, that put the Yanks ahead temporarily. It was No 14 that proved th- unlucky one of the day for the Nationals. Sir Robert slammed it in} the eighth when Russell was on his Iast legs and Yanks were perched on second and third bases. The wobbl. relief hurler had just let in the tvin tally and Meusel's second round- tripper of the afternoon knocked the Nationals galley west so far as the second game of the series was con- cerned. Ferguson Stops the Griffs. The world champs, though, had a Z00d_opportunity to bag the affair be fore Russell went blooie. They mauled Urban Shocker so much that he left the scene with two on the sacks and cne out after they had batted their way to a 4-to-3 lead in the fifth round In came Alec Ferguson. and he was “bad medicine” for the Nationals jusi as he was during the latter part of last scason when he was with the Red Sox. Alec stopped the Harrismen cold in the ffth, and though nicked for & marker later, was none too liberal The Nationals were the first to break the ice. With Goslin and Joe Harris gone in the second inning, Bluege singled smartly to left field and counted when Peck slashed a two-bagger to right. After Mogridge had disposed of Meusel, however, in the second half of the round, the Yankees countered with three runs. Four successive singles started the merry-go-round. Lou Gehrig and How- ard Shanks, inserted in the New York lineup no later than yesterday, bingled, and so did Benny Bengough. scoring Gehrig. Shocker swatted to left, tallying Shanks and sending Bengough to third. Shocker advance: but Bengough could not, as Wannin ger rolled to Judge. Dugan, though, pushed the catcher home with a single to Goslin's territory. in Nationals Knot the Count. The Nationals set about tying the acore after two were out in the third, Buck Harrls' single and Joe Judge's poke into the right field bleachers doing the work. But in the Yankeps' half Meusel took a page from Judge's hook and sent the New Yorkers ahead again. Then Huggins' crew was held at bay for a time while the world champions went to the front. After two were out in the fourth, Peck socked to right for three bases, hut was nipped at the plate when he attempted to make the hit a homer. In the fifth, though, Shocker got “hig'n.” Ruel started the round with a single and Russell sacrificed. Rice's single put Muddy across the plate and Boss Bucky's single sent Sam to third. Out came Shocker and in went Fergu son. All Alec did was whiff Judge and Goslin to leave the iwo Nationals stranded. ! But Ferguson was found for a run in round six that Joe Harris opened with a single, Bluege sacrificed and Peck single Moon to the platé. Pinch-hitter Bobby a the Yanks on their winning w: the eighth. Batting for Wanninger, he began the frame with a single to left. Ernie Johnson, sent in to run for Veach, moved up as Dugan sacrificed. Ruseel], fading fast, walked Combs. Ruth picked this place to make his first double of the year. It was a blow to right that counted Ernie Johnson and put Combs at third. Witt ran for Ruth and he did not linger long on second base, for Meusel lifted the ball to deep left-center for a circuit of the sacks. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. Milwaukee, 8: Minneapolis, 6 Toledo, 5: Indianapolis. 0 Lousville. Columbtis, 0. St. Paul-Kansas Fits: rain INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE. Baltimore, 13: Jersey City. 3. Rochester, 8: Buffalo, 4 Reading. 8: Providence. 4 Syracuse, 10: Toronto VIRGINIA LEAGU Rocky Mount, 1-1: Richmond i0: Wilson. 9. Norfolk. 7. WHEN YOU WANT TO STEP OUT— YOU SHOULD STEP INTO ONE_OF OUR TAILORED-TO-ORDER SUITS. JACK BERNSTEIN The Master Tailor slabman of the world champions been able to go the full route. The retirement of George Mogridge after the second inning of yesterday's , Walter Ruether, has the best record of the lot for sticking to | the left-center seats. Such a hit would | | have landed high in the outfleld open MACKMEN HAVE EASY TIME WITH RED SOX By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, June 3.—The Boston Red Sox were unable to catch up with Eddie Rommel’s slow ball as the Athletics treated the offerings of three Hub pitchers to 19 hits for a 15-to-2 victory. It was Rommell’s ninth win of the season. The Detroit Tygers turned again on the White Sox and rode home in a slugging bee, 16 to 15, on the circuit drive of Manager Cobb in the ninth. The St. Louis Browns' nosed Cleve- land out of fourth place with a 6-run rally in the eighth. The Brooklyn Dodgers Way, Although Russell that the Nationals have a pitching not so often this year has a starting won, 8 to 5, was the twenty-fourth | pragigent, Wilbert Robinson, by tak: ing a 12-inning battle from the Giants, 6 to 5, in the form of a presentation from Pitcher Art Nehf of the New York club. The little southpaw forced over the winning run by issuing a pass to Hargraves, pinch hitter. The St. Louis Cards, with the reins tightly held by their new manager, Rogers Hornsby, piled up a third straight victors over the Red, with Sherdel pitching first-class ball. Joe Genewich halted the slugging of the Phillies while his mates helping themselves liberally to hits off the curves of three Quaker pitch- ers, and the Braves topped a one- sided game, 12 to 5 their opponents in this respect, for was the fifth in cight times he has ilts this year. The lately acquired ¢ eight games he began, but Walter f the 10 arguments he started, presses RUSSELL BLOWS UP WASHING B. Rice, cf . Harris, Judge, 1b. Goulin, 1 d. Harris, vl Bluege, 3b. Pecklnpaugh, s Ruel, ¢ oxridge, p *Lelbol Ruswell, p. FRuether 'ON. Al BIG LEAGUE STATISTICS AMERICAN LEAGUE. Philadelphia Washington . Chicago St. Louin . Cloveland Detroit New York . Boston . GAMES TODAY. Washington at N. Y. Phila. Kt. Lo SaO=mmmooi=0P 0000u=muwn YESTERDAY'S RESULTS. New York. 8; Washington, 5. Philadelphia, 13; Boston. St. Louls, 8: Clevelund. Detroit, 16: Chicago. 1 Y SuiBE—0rE=0013 sl ce308092890000™ ol 200003000000 Totdls . .. 31 s 16 *Batted for Mogridge in third. #Batted for Kussell In ninth. $Batted for “Annlnlgev in eighth. #Ran for Ruth in eighth. ! Washington 0120110005 New York 03100004 x—8| Two-base _hits—Peckinpaugh, Gehri Ruth. Three-buse hit—Peckinputch. Ha: runs-—Judge, Meusel Sacrifices—Rus Bluege, Dugan (2). Lefi on buses— 11; Washington,” 6. First base | pRumsell, 3. Struck out—ny NATIONAL LEAGUE. New York Brooklyn Pittsburgh Philadelphia Cinelnnati Boston Chicago St. Loals GAMES TODAY. Cincinnati at St. L. Boston at Phila. & Boston at Cincinnati. Phila. at Pittsburgh. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS. sell. New York. on balls—O0f 4 nings. by Ditched ball Mogridge (Ruth). ~Winning _piteher—Fer- zuson. Losing pitcher—Rusaell. Umpires— Mesars. Hildebrand, Connolly and Evans. | Time of game—?2 hours. Nationals Hope to Take Both (12 innings). EW YORK. June 3.—Again three games behind the league-leading Of Tilts Remaining in Gotham Athletics, who won in Boston yesterday while the Yankees were N getting in some rough work here. The Nationals were hoping to sweep the remaining games of the New York series to keep right at the heels of the flying Mackmen. Manager Stanley Harris expected to start another of his southpaws on the slab in the third encounter of the set but whether it would be Dutch Ruether, Jez Zachary or Vean Gregg was not known. Both Ruether and Zachary pitched | last Saturday, and each has had rest | enough to be available today. But Harris is anxious to start Gregg in | a'game now that the warm weather is here, and the veteran may get his big chance today. For tomorrow's game Stan Coveleskie is on the Nationals' pitching book i HOW GRIFFS ARE BATTING Pipp and Ward, having slumped | badly at bat, Manager Huggins sent | Gehrig to first base and Shanks to | second base vesterday. Gehrig got three blows and Shanks hit the first time up. 329253 Meusel's homer into the right-field bleachers was a much longer hit than Judge's into the same stands, but it had nothing like the length of the one | that Bob slammed in the eighth. Then | the ball sailed between Goslin and Rice | to the foot of the barrier in front of | ©-2030~030=0~ RnoucA290090 P EEEEEL T stand in Washington. Mogridge seemed due for trouble in the first frame, with Combs on second, Ruth on first and Meusel favored with a threeand-one count, but with a quick throw, George trapped Combs off the middle bag. | | When Peck was turning third after | hitting over Ruth's head in the fourth inning Combs had sent the ball toward Shanks. Howard’s relay to Bengough made an easy out of Rajah at the plate Ruth got his first hit of the vear in the fourth frame. It was a single to right. He had been hit by Mogridge and fanned by Russell in previous trips to the plate. The Babe grounded to Russell in the sixth and in the eighth drove in a tally with his initial two-bagger of the season, a slam over Joe Harris' head TEAMS PLAY 10-10 GAME. Registers and Veterans' Bureau teams of the Colored Departmental League fought seven innings to a 10-to-10 deadlock. perfection. Disc —then and only SOUTH ATLANTIC LEAGUE. Spartanburg, 10: Greenville, 5. acon. 6: Augusta. Asheville, 13: Knox: e. 2. Charlotte. 19: Columbia. 8. SOUTHERN ASSOCIATION. Atlanta, 8: Chattanooga. 7. Birminghamn, 8: Little Rock, Others not scheduled. PIEDMONT LEAGUE. You'll appr the difference —trying to get the last few miles out of your old tires. They are al- ways the most expen- sive and troublesome. We will allow you credit for them on India Tires —~Then you can really enjoy motoring. Easy Credit Terms Potomac Tire Co. 28th & M Sts. N.W. 814 F St. N.W. celebrated | the sixty-second birthday of their new were | TS Nature’s secret, not aman-madeblend,that gives Webster Cigars their mild and mellow what Nature’s process is Afor making fine tobacco will you know where Websters get their smooth satisfying quality. eciate 7 i OLLEGE stars are expected to C for Central High Stadium Sat Nearly a score of University of Richmond University will be repre- sented by Lester Tharpe, star miler and 88¢ man. V. M. I. and George- town also will be represented. The Hatchetite team contains a number of sterling performers who are sure to make good showings in the champlonship events. Shipley and Willett are ranked with the best of the distance runners of this section, and Dick Zeigler's ability in the dashes s well known. John Loehler, former Lehigh man, and Aaronson, [PHILLIES ARE SUED | TO RECOVER STOCK PHILADELPHIA, June 3 P | Equity proceedings were heard yes- terday in the Court of Common Pleas on a case instituted by Col. Thomas | . Murphy of this city to recover 632 shares of stock of the Philadelphia National Leasue base ball club. De- cision was withheld by Judge Bart- lett It was learned through President | Willlam F. Baker's testimony that his salary had been incredsed from $10,000 | to $25.000 a year during his tenure. | Counsel for iol. Murphy sought to how that aker could use Col. Mur- phy's stock to elect friendly directors who would approve his increased salary. President Baker's counsel con- tended the shares had been sur- rendered to him in 1923 as a gift. This Col. Murphy denied, saying the stock had been placed in the presi- dent’s hends as part of the 3,430 shares of which he is trustee in order that it might be profitably sold. At the time of the transaction the club was not paying dividends, al though early this year the directors declared a 4 per cent dividend vn last | year's receipts. | \DAIRY TEAM RUSHES | Chestnut Farms possession of the lead in the Com mercial Base Ball League when the Lansburgh & Bro. nin= was defeated 9 to 2. Williams.-Webb tossers were nosed out by the C. & P. Telephone . team, 9 to 8 Annex No. 1 of the Treasury loop also pulled out in front of its com- petitors by turning in an 18-to12 victory over Annex No. 2. General Accountants of the Govern | ment circuit continued their winning | streak with a 10-to-4 triumph over the forces of the District Building, while | Treasury handed the Printing Office |an 11-to-7 setback in the Departmental group. Shipping Board made its wins six in a row when State, War and Navy was trimmed, 12 to 7, in a Potomac Park game. West Washington Baptists of the Sunday School Base Ball League, registered a 16-to-2 triumph over the | Douglas team. again assumed : . | MAYS TO BE OPERATED ON. CINCINNATI, Ohio, June 3 (#).— | Carl Mays. Cincinnati National League pitcher, who has been unable to work in a single game this year, is here to undergo an operation for the removal of his tonsils. Mavs has been kept out of the game by an ever-recurrent soreness of his right arm which made pitching impossible. GIANTS GET FARRELL. NEW YORK. June 3 (#).—Eddie Farrell, shortshop of the University of Pennsylvania nine, will join the New York Giants June 23. = Farrell will make the third Pennsylvania | player on the squad of the New York club, Walter Huntzinger and George Sullivan having preceded him in | signing. over then COLLEGE STARS ARE DUE - TO SHINE IN MEET HERE furnish much of the competition in the South Atlantic track and field championship meet scheduled urday afternoon. Maryland athletes are entered for the various events, while George Washington's full squad will be on hand and a contingent of 14 will represent Washington and Lee. star at Tech High and Johns Hopkins, will_carry George Washington colors in the field events. In addition to those from the col- legiate institutions, entries have been received from the Baltimore Athletic Club, Aloysius Club, sponsor of the meet; United States Marine Corps, Washington Canoe Club, 5th Regi. ment Athletic Association of Balti- more, Cross Country Club of Balti- more, Devitt Prep, Eastern High School, Baltimore Y. M. C. A. and Alexandria High. NINES REACH FINAL IN FAIRFAX COUNTY| FORESTVILLE, Va., June 3.—For estville High School's base ball team, with a record of eight wins in nine starts, is being whipped into shape for the final game of the season with Herndon High for the championship of Fairfax County. The two teams will meet don Friday at 1:30 o'clock. Oakton High is the only team to triumph over the Forestville tossers this season. However, in two other encounters with the Oakton nine For- estville got the decision. Two vic tories were registered over the Jeffer- son School, McLean High was de- feated on two occasions and Ballevs Cross Roads High and Forestville Odd Fellaws teams were handed setbacks Forestville has a pair of good bat- terfes in Jenkins and Dailey Brockman and Niswander. ADJUTANTS SEEK GAMES at Hern- WITH UNLIMITED TEAMS | Adjutant General base ballers of the Potomac Park League are after outside games with strong unlimited teams of the District. The Adjutants have the use of the north diamond of the Ellipse for Sat y and wish to book an opponent. sition also is sought for tomor. row afternoon For gam at Main 2 9 and 3. call Manager Hitchens 0, branch 1 between CHISOX FARM MANGUM. CHICAGO, June 3 (®).—Leo Man zum, right-hand pitcher of the Chicago White Sox, has been released under ption to the Reading, Pa., Interna ional League Club. Mangum, with his battery mate, Grabowski, was pur chased from Minneapolis. FIRPO TERMS ASKED. SAN FRANCISCO, June 3.—The Italian newspaper La Voce Del Po- polo has cabled a request to Luis An- gel fight with the winner of the Renault- | g}od(rey fight to be held here Satur- ay BURKE SIGNS FOR, BOUT. MOBILE, June 3.—Martin Burke, light heavyweight, has signed an agreement to meet Tommy Lough lin at Dexter Park Stadium, Brooklyn, Y., on June 11. The match is scheduled for 15 rounds. SHANO COLLINS BECOMES| PITTSFIELD CLUB PILOT BOSTON, June 3 (#).—John (Shano) Collins, veteran outfielder and pinch hitter of the Chicago White Sox and the Boston Red Sox. has been given his unconditional release so that he may assume the management of the Pittsfield Club of the Eastern League. Collins was for vears a star on the Chicago team, playing with them in 1917, when they won the world cham pionship. He came to the Red Sox before the opening of the 1921 season. “The Inquiring Reporter Everywhere. .. from the Lips of the Wise, he learns the "WHYS" of Muradss Leadership W. C. Fields, co-star with Will Rogers, inthe current edition of Ziegfeld’s “Fol- lies,” says: “Murads are great—the finest Turkish blend I've ever tried! They’re most satisfying. I smoke them all the time.” ¥ wmwener CIGAYS WASHINGTON, D. C. For zestful tang, for soothing cool- ness, for enticing fragrance, Turkish tobacco has no equal . . . And only the choicest of Turkish leaf goes into MURAD cigarettes. MURAD THE TURKISH CIGARETTE and | Firpo to name his terms for a | | | | | | | records, both in_hits |last year home run total. BATTERS HAVE EDGE ON MAJOR TWIRLERS By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, June 3.-The first hot spell of the year, when the base ball pitchers are supposed to get in top form, finds the batters winning on all fronts, according to comparisons of this vear's slugging figures with those of the same date last year. Out in the bleachers where the base ball jury sits the home-run barrage is almost double the intensity of last year, even without the presence of the home-run king, Babe Ruth, in the early season. Home run totals up to the last of May show the National League hav- ing 170 and the American League 1 more, 171. Last year the totals were 107 and 92: Ruth on the first of June having 13. The humbler stickers are annoying the hurlers with almost the same increase of Intensity. The total of National League base hits up to the last of May for this season reached | 2,850, compared with 2,733 last year. The American Leaguers have made a | greater gain, 2,512 this year, compared with 2,521 last year. { All the American League clubs were | galners over last season’s slugging | nd home runs, | but some of the National League clubs! were not so well off. Chicago, Louis and Cincinnati National League clubs had fewer total | hits and Brooklyn ha only half the The New sluggers, total - four-base | r. | | York, Boston and Chicago however, raised the hits far above last ye The St. Louis Americans with 35| homers and the New York Giants with | 29 are now leading their leagues. The | St. Louis Browns also lead with total | hits, 413; but the Phillies lead in the National League with 409. l FREER JUNIORS LOOK i TO WINNING SEASON Freer Juniors, who play Takoma on diamond No. 4 Saturday at 9:30 o'clock, believe they have the mak- | ings of a championship team With high school stars coming into | their ranks the Freers hope to clean | up in the junior seres from now Yineling. former Central play holding the first-sack job, and Me. ire of Gonzaga is leading the out-| elders both in gardening and bat. | ting. John Curtain and “Shorty" | Wimsatt, both of whom have turned | in creditable performances in past sea sons, head the hurling material. Other members of the are Mike Curtain O'Gorman O'Brien. aggreeation | “Sparky” O'Brien, Dean, Chumbies and John | Harrie E. Craver at Sandy Spring, Md., is booking games for the un-| defeated Olney nine. The Olney toss: | ers are an unlimited combination and | ave the use of a diamond | Eastern Athletic Association and | Herald Harbor teams are meeting to- | day at the Eastern diamond, Fifteenth | |and C streets northeast. | Yankee tossers scored a i tory over the Iroquois nine. vie Southern Juniors, champions of the midget class last year, defeated the St. Mary’s Junfors, 13 o 1. Luxor Insects want Saturday games | with other teams in their class. Call| North 6128-W. | GERBER OF BROWNS HURT;, MUELLER LOST TO CARDS| CLEVELAND, June 3 (®).—Wal. | ter Gerber, St. Louis Browns' shortstop, will be out of the game a | month, and possibly longer, as a re. sult of an injury suffered when to a base during Sun- game with Cleveland. An X-ray examination showed he fractured a bone in his right foot. Bob Lamotte will play shortstop. ST. LOUIS, June 3 (). —Heinie Mueller, hard-hitting outflelder of the Cardinals, who was hurt in Sunday's game, will be lost to his club for some time. An X-ray photograph revealed a I'rll‘lllrc of the fibula of the right 5. © 1935, | win for the glory and hoior it would bring to | Heinie | and the Army camps in the o | of the evening when he sent Thon | first |& | second round SIX TITLES ARE AT STAKE AT WAR COLLEGE TONIGHT Lamar Stops Levinsky in Exhibition and Schus Wins Bantam Crown in Opening Event of the South Atlantic Section Tourney. OUTH ATLANTIC amateur boxing championships will be decided six classes tonight, when survivors of the first round of the Was! ington Barracks tournament enter the ring at the War Coll the semi-final and final bouts of the tourney For the first time in the history of the ring game the National Capita was host last night to the South Atlantic hletes competing tion bouts for the various titles of the Amateur Athletic Unio division. Upward of 2000 fight fans were on hand on, and everybody leit the Army post perfect joyable evening’s entertainment. Of course, ter than others, but every single lad was n, ge st night to cheer the boys y satisfied with a most en- f s were bet st to it he 1 some of there t resented, Official Washington was well ref sented—the Army, and Marine | Corps—in addition rooters from | the various localities in the South At- | lantic division Staged as an “exhibition.” fhe bout | between Henrvy Lamar, Washington | schoolboy, and holder of the national | light-heavyweight amateur title, and | Sol Levinsky, United States Marine | Corps, turned out to be a slam-bang | affair. The scrappers used $-ounce| gloves, but even so, Lamar had the | leatherneck out on his feet in the | second round and Col. Ericson stop-| 3 ped the fight. Lamar was too fas and clever, and in addition possessed | 3 the old kick, which really counts | Robert Col. Ericson, Army War College, [ ' # Miller of Washington and| Charlie Short of Baltimore alternated at the job of refereeing and ging the bouts Schuss Wins Bantam Title. mpionship in the bantam- | was decided last night, | unattached, of Balti technical knockout | ame of a scheduled three-round go with Walter Frizzell | of_the District Athletic Club. Washington’s amateurs showed well against boxers from FEATHERWEIGHT (LASS. R. E. Barry, W McLaughlin, = Com technical knocke Teddy M ton. D. C. Fieid Navy to L B ner. Camp round Thom Mead: three rounds Clarence S Washington Jack more. getting in the second f LIGHT-HEAVYWEIGHT Martin W. Gallagher. W up more ening | bouts of the fournament, in which 32 novices took part. Ted Mulligan wearing the colors of the Palace Ath letic Club scored the first knockout SPECIAL Dist BOUT A. C. of Was V.S M Moore, a featherweight from La Field, crashing to the canv round, and Robert youngster still in his teens, registered the most popular victory on the card by outpointing Henry McLaug! snappy soldier lad from the fantry, in less than two rounds Clarence Spagnola of the i1th Bomb. ing Squadron registered the only other knockout. Jack Joves of the District Athletic Club, taking the count in the third round Summaries FLYWEIGHT CLASS. George J. Nathauson. Baltimore. Josa Lombrado. U- S. Navy: techn: out. two rounds. Roland = Jodoin. Baltimore _ winner Sparks. unattached. of Washingts technical knockout in first ro BANTAMWEIGHT CLASS. John Andrew Schuss. unattached. of Balti more, won over Walter Frizzell. District A. | of Washington: technical knockout i | BLUES DEFEAT WHITES IN CLOSE POLO GAME a polo match 6 to 4 Capt. Ma each cont winner. | scored wi ibuted while fc Quackme Whites Maj wic the cal Knock- | FRIDAY 30 P PARK BASEBALL AMERICAN LEAGUE WASHINGTON . 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