Evening Star Newspaper, May 10, 1933, Page 27

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

l} Sports lNews‘ }l @hg ann WELLS 15 LATEST EX-GRIFF KAYOED 1 Goes Way of Fischer, Brown and Hadley—Boken Again Hero of Delayed Win. BY JOHN B. KELLER. | T. LOUIS, May 10.—There is | nothing sentimental about | S the “new deal” Nationals once they swing into action. | Former Washington pitchers !ac-: ing their old club in its current, Western tour have learned this. | No less than four have been mal- | treated by the Cronin crew out | this way, two to be charged with defeat and two to be forced out of action in games finally won by the Nationals. | Carl Fischer could not finish what | he started at Detroit. Neither could | Lloyd Brown here. Irving Hadley | failed to save the game for the Browns and yesterdsy Ed Wells, lefthander, | opened fire in the second game of the ! et here only to fade out and let an- | other hurler suffer defeat. Wells, who saw service with the *Tigers before he donned a Washing- ton uniform and after he shed it was with the Yankees, did better than the other ex-National heavers had done against their old cronies. He carried the fight into the eighth inning be- fore finding his former club too much for him. In Detroit, Fischer had lasted but four rounds. That was as far as Brown went here Monday and in that game | Hadley took his trimming in his ltxr.h; session on the hill. | Friendship ceases when the ‘“new | dealers” get down to work. 'T looked as though Wells might get away with his game yesterday, even | though he was being well peppered | by the Nationals for their pitchers| had been slammed smartly on two occasions and the Browns held a four- run advantage at the end of the sixth inning. But the Cronin crew began whit- tling away that St. Louis lead in the | seventh, pared it to one run in the eighth, then stepped out in the ninth to hit Jack Knott, right hand rookie brought up from Milwaukee, and Wal- lace Hebert, left hand veteran, for two tallies and a 7 to 5 win. Again it was Bob Boken, substitute second baseman, who provided the Na- tionals with the decisive punch. He| went to the plate with the score tied, two on and one out, and whacked & long single to center that shoved over | the counting block Cronin and Schulte. This Boken is a determined person at the plate in a pinch. He looks over the pitching carefully, picks one | to his liking and lets fly. He is| plenty good in the fleld, too. Maybe Buddy Myer will have a lot of time to como back from that blow on the | head he took in Detroit last week. | T’ great for the Nationals to have | Boken around with many of their | pitchers uncertain these days. Edi Linke, the chubby Chicagoan, started yesterday for the second time, but, as in his initial effort, when he faced the Red Sox, he became too wild for his own good. This time he lost control much earlier than in Boston, blowing in the fifth frame. Before Bob Burke, who was rushed to Linke's relief, could get his bearings the Browns registered four runs. i They had made one off Linke in the first round with two hits and two retirements. Ed then went well until the fifth. He opened that by passing the first two batters, then he let a bunt slip by him and the bases were full. A single followed to send over a tally, so Burke took the mound. Another run crossed as a force-play occurred and two more were recorded | when Campbell drubbed the left-hand- er for a double. After that the Nationals got good pitching. Burke was in a tough spot in the sixth, when two walks and his wild chucks crowded the bases with Browns after one was out. But Bpb struck out Garms and West popped out. Jack Russell, too, had a rough time in the seventh, which he hurled after Burke had given way to a pinch batter. The first batter facing Russell singled. the next doubled, the third was retired on a grounder, with the runners being unable to progress. The fourth walked to load the bases, but Melillo fouled out and it was not difficult to dispose of | Levey. Russell, too, gave way to an emer- gency batter, so Al Crowder went in to finish and get credit for the victory.| Off him the Browns got one hit, to raise | their total for the game to nine and one pass, LL told, the Nationals gleaned 16 safeties off the three St. slabmen. Singles by Schulte and Boken figured in a second-session marker. Then there was no more scor- ing by the Cronin crew until the sev- enth. Sewell singled and so did Har- ris. hitting for Burke. Sewell crossed as Bluege ripped into a double play. A pass to Cronin and singles by Schulte and Kuhel were successive at the outset of the eighth. They produced a score and brought Knott to Wells' rescue. Boken fouled out, but Sewell's hit scored Schulte. Rice batted for Russell and jammed the cushions with s walk. This fine chance to grab the game went by, though, as Bluege fouled out and Manush rolled to the short- stop. Different in the ninth. Goslin sin- gled, Cronin doubled, Schulte singled, the score was tied and Knott was re- placed by Hebert. Kuhel’s roller to the second baseman didn’t help, but Bo- ken's big single did. Griffs’ Records . 2b, -] B 3b.Hr.Rbi.Pet. 000 2 RS e romBummE Seaunoaonanti - coom =3 ™ SHmmsss. 05055005002 sk mIr RSO ©00c0050050HHmmD: cosoo00sss0mn: ooss08000suESs0keSu- CLUB BATTING. 11 10 105 .263 Q a Q Q = st Cormummaa Posusnwce OOt Do @ Louis | rail BOKEN AGAIN WASHINGTON. AB. R. H. Bluege, 5 Manush, If.". Gosli [ 0 in. o e wossP 0 0 Sosmommims 0 csscssiosuimes ooz minsmmmm— Somsosok: *Harris tRice . “Totals o *Batted for Burke in seventh. 1Batted for Russell in eighth, AB. Ferrell. ‘c. Melillo] | Leve Well Knott, Heber Totall Washing Lo Runs us Burns (2). Garms, West, Campbe! Kuhel. “Sewell. Schuite. ken (). base hits—Garms, Camp- bell. Manush. Burns. Cronin. _Stolen bases— Bluege, Burns. _ Sacrifice—Linke. _Doubl play—Levey 1o Melillo to Burns. Left on bases—Washincton. 11: St. Louis. 11. base_on balls—Off Li B off Rustell. 1i gf 6 ot Knott, 1. k oul—By Linke. 1: by Burke. 3 by Wells, 2. Hits—Ofl Linke. 5 in 4 innings (none out in Afth): off Burke, 1 in 2 innings; off Russell. ? in 1 inning: off Crowder. 1 in 2 {nnings: off Wells. 11 in 7 innings (none out in eighth): off Knott. 4 in 1 inning (none out in ninth): off Hebert. 1 in 1 inning. Winning pitcher— Crowder. Losing pitcher—Knott. - Umbires —Messrs. Summers, McGowan and Ormsby. Time of game—2 hours and 7 minutes. RED SOX PAY WELL FORST. LOUIS PAIR Brown and Ferrell Believed to Have Cost $50,000, in Addition to Shea. By the Associated Press. OSTON, May f0.—The quarter- million bankroll that Tom Yaw- key brought into base ball about two months ago prob- ably was $50,000 short today, but the Boston Red Sox had two new players who promise to boost the perennial tail- enders a few notches in the American League standing. Going to Cleve- and yesterday, os tensibly to attend & special league meeting, during which he was elected a director, Yawyek and Eddie Collins, his gen- eral manager, made surprise trade with Phil Ball, owner of the St. Louis Browns, for } Lloyd Brown, & high - grade left. handed pitcher, and Rick Ferrell, ace of the Brown’s catching department. These stars cost the Red Sox an un- nounced sum, reported to be $50,000, and the services of Mervin Shea, & smart_enough catcher, but & weak hit- ter. The cash was the big inducement to Ball, who is sald to have lost con- siderable money this season, while his team played to small crowds. The purchase of Brown gives Man- ager Marty McManus a sixth starting pitcher and a crack southpaw to team up with Bob Weiland. St. Louis ob- tained Brown from the Washington Senators, for whom he won 15 out of 27 starts last season. Ferrell, brother of Wesley, the Cleveland pitcher, has been with the Browns for the past four seasons. He is regarded as one of the best catchers in the American League, having batted for .315 last season and .300 in 1931. Late reports from Cleveland had Yawkey and Collins dickering with the Cleveland Indians for Willis Hudlin a right-handed pitcher, and Outfielder Joe Vosmik, said to be suffering from weak eyes, while casting envious glances at Lyn Larry, the New York Yankees shortstop. Lioyd Brown. Varied Sports College Base Ball. Maryland, 4; Washington and Lee, 0. william and Mary, 2; Boston Col- lege, 1. ‘Hampden-Sydney. 7; Richmond, 5. V. P. ., 11; Virginia, 5. Minnesota, 8; St. Olaf, 2. Colgate, 12; Lafayette, 1. 1Indiana, 10; Purdue, 1 (seven innings, n). Rhode Island State, 6; Arnold, 1 (eight innings). Marshall, 4; Ohio U,, 2 (10 innings). Scholastic Base Ball. Tech, 4; Bethesda-Chevy Chase High, 1. Roosevelt, 5: Mount Rainier High, 3 (seven innings). Scholastic Track. Washington-Lee High, 50; ville High, 40. Scholastic Goif. Gonzaga, 3';; Takoma-Silver Spring High, 213. Hyatts- College Track. Chicago, 68; Northwestern, 67. Minor Leagues International League. Montreal, 8; Jersey City, 4. Other games postponed, rain. American Association. Toledo, 3; Kansas City, 2. Other games postponed, rain. Southern Association. Chattanooga, 7; Atlanta, 5. Birmingham, 3; Memphis, 2. Little Rock, 6; New Orleans, 6 (13 innings, called on account of darkness). Nashville, 6; Knoxville, 3 (called end of eighth). : ; Pacific Coast League. Hollywood, 11; Portland, 2. Los Angeles, 4; Oakland, 1. Seattle, 5; Missions, 4 (10 innings). Texas League. Dallas, 10; Fort Wort, 8. Galveston, 6; Ho 0. Beaumont, 5; Oklahoma City, 2. Tulsa, 3; San m/:wnm, 1. Dixi¢ League. Shreveport, ‘Waco, 3. Jackson, 4; Longview, 2. Baton Rouge, 8; Henderson, 3. Tyler, 11; Eldorado, 10. New York-Pennsylvania League. Aumwwomfl.nh.‘, @* E BY MYERS ILL LUCK 2 Rookie Is Big Reason Griffs le | only Eastern club in the Ameri- | 3 | even break in the current West- * WITH SUNDAY MORNING EDITION ng Staf. WASHINGTQON, D. C., WEDNESDAY, MAY 10, 1933. Nationals Bad Medicine to Former Mates : Marathon Managers Get Early Start * BOKEN, CLUB PROFIT Only Eastern Club to Get Edge in West. BY HUGH S. FULLERTON, JR. Associated Press Sports Writer. BIT of tough luck for Buddy Myer, regular Washington second baseman, has turned out to be rare good fortune for youthful Bob Boken, and the Senators have profited thereby to the extent of being the | can League to get better than an | ern invasion. | | Considered just a promising player | whose major league career was some- where in the future, Boken got his big chance last Saturday when Myer was |hit on the head by one of Whitlow | Wyatt's pitches and was forced out of action. Since then the rookie has played | four full games, made nine hits, driven | nine runs, and provided the winning wallop in two games. With the Kansas City Blues of the American Association last year he was only a .280 hitter, but he drove in 113 runs with 180 hits. In addition, his second major league | hit drove in the winning run in the Senators' 12-inning duel with the Ath- letics May 30. Monday Bob crashed a home run in the 12th inning to give Washington a 10-8 victory over St. Louis and yester- day he walloped a single that climaxed & ninth inning rally against the same glu': ;nd won again for the Senators, . NLY one other game was played yesterday and that saw the disast- trous downfall of the Pittsburgh Pi- rates, National League leaders, before the curving of Fred Frankhouse and the slugging of his Boston teammates. | Frankhouse gave the Bucs only three | hits while the Braves pounded Waite Hoyt, Hal Smith and Leon Chagnon for 15 blows and -0 triumph. Hoyt's defeat was his first of the season after two smart victories. The | Pirates also were charged with their |first error in six games when Tony Piet fumbled Prankhouse's grounder in the fourth inning. ‘Wet grounds and cold weather forced the postponement of all other major league games. {DICKEY HAS TUMMY ACHE | | Appendicitis Ruled Out, Yankee Catcher May Work Today. CHICAGO, May 10 (#).—Bill Dickey, head man of the New York Yankee catching staff, today was itted to lie abed until noon—to aid in recovery from an attack of acute indigestion. For a while yesterday it appeared that he had appendicitis, but in ex- amination showed his blood count to be normal. Later, however, Dr. Eugene Taylor decided that indigestion was the ail- ment and said the catcher might work today if necessary. NEAR THE PINNACLE. £ - — Bq! A WeAK Y fitree, QHY 7 (s Ay ST 7 e, SIRTN REPLACING MYER, SAl ONE AS BRIGRTLY AS GRIFF SAID HE WOULD.. -« < SCHY WAR. Cl ALL OTHER A.L. GAMES —By TOM DOERER LTe's e ———— g ———— RAW YESTERDAY, GAVE THE NATS A BREAK ... SEWELL DRAGGED A HEBAVY BAT INTO THE FIGHT TO SURPRISE THE ENEMY By a Staff Correspondent of The Star. { to be finished by left-hand pitchers, so | |cerned. That's what Manager Cronin | says. Walter Stewart is to face his old | pals tomorrow in the set finale. Today | Earl Whitehill was to hurl. Bump Had- | Browns tomorrow, Killefer. E | Luke Sewell likes Sportsman’s Pll’k‘ here for hitting. He went wild at bat again yesterday, collecting four singles in five trips to the plate. That made | niné> hits for Luke in the two games | here. He made but 10 in the 20 games | he had played before reaching St. Louis. Schulte is doing right well at bat in | this town, too. He has clubbed for .636 | 1}:1 the two engagements, getting seven | its. By the way, Bluege now has hit safely in his last 10 games. That is the long- est _consecutive game-hitting streak for a National this season. And as lead- oft batter, Ossie has done well. At the | top of the list in eight games he has | stepped to the plate 43 times and reached first base 23. Over this stretch of games he has batted at a .371 clip. Nine successive games now have been won from the Browns by the Nationals. The Washington club licked the St. Louis outfit in each of the last seven | games in which they clashed. | Three wins in a row, with the other first division clubs doing much idling, have put the Nationals in complete pos- session of second place. They are just half a game back of the league-leading | Yankees, too. | Burke got the only Washington error yesterday when, with a double-play chance at hand in the sixth inning, he AMERICAN YESTERDAY'S RESULTS. | Washington, 7: 8t. Louis, 5. New York-Chicago, cold. | Philadelphia-Detroit, wet grounds. Boston-Cleveland, wet grounds. Major League Statistics 'WEDNESDAY, MAY 10, 1933. Whitehill, Stewart to Oppose Browns in Final Two Battles; Sewell Makes Four More Hits et Queen to seil Next Week,| ) picked up Wells’ shot and pulled Cronin ST. LOUIS, May 10.—This serles is away from second base with a wild| throw. far as the Washington club is con- | Goslin is finding it difficult to gauge the rebound of the ball from the wall bordering the short right field here. This accounts for many of the two- baggers the Browns are getting. Garms liked Linke's pitching and got ley may attempt a comeback for the ' half of the six hits the Washington |four tournaments—a small w\lmnment' according to Bill | rookie yielded. but Burke struck out the | Prior to the Wimbledon, then the Wim- | St. Louis outflelder and Crowder found him easy. Clark Griffith wired Secretary Eynon here late yesterday that Myer will not rejoin the Nationals in Chicago Friday. Griffith. who was in Cleveland attend- ing the Spring meeting of the American League, informed the sccretary he was taking the injured player back to Wash- | ington with him. Chisox Sprinter Rivals Chapman By the Associated Press. HICAGO, May 10.—A match foot race between Ben Chap- man of the New York Yankees and Evar Swanson, Chicago White Sox outfielder, is in the way of being smoked up. Chapman, the Alabama flyer, has won neat profits for his teammates, notably Babe Ruth, in trimming other American League speedsters at 100 yards. Swanson, a high-geared runner himself, ran the century in 9.7 sec- onds while competing for Lombard College and might be the boy to out- _ foot the fleet Chapman. In a base- circling contest against Stanley Hack, fastest of the Chicago Cubs, during the training season, Swanson won easily. v NATIONAL YESTERDAY'S RESULTS. Boston, 7:_Pittsburgh, 0. Bt is-New York, ' rain. Chicago-Brooklyn. cold. Cincinnati-Philadelphia, two, wet grounds. HIAHEHEER H H 3 NI0X AN 2 2 B 3 H N_York..I—1 1] 1| 11 11 4] 6l..114] 71667 Piktaburghi—] | 41 11 21 61 i1 11141 61737 Wash'ton. | &/—I OI..| 21 4| 2| 214( 81.636 N_York._.|..I—I 0l 2 3| 2 1] 4012] 7].632 Cleveland.[ 2| 1i—I 3| 4l..1-.| 3113] 81.619 St Touls.| 11 11—/ 4| 2[ 1i—I 2111101524 Chicago .1 O1..[ #/—I 2/ 1| 1 4112 91671 Chicago .| 21 11 3/—I..I 1| 3I..10/111.476 Detroit .1 1/ 1/ 0/ -I..1 510/11].476 Brooklyn .| 01 0/ 1I..I—I..| 3 4| 8101444 0/ 31 0l =T 31 11 71111380 | Cin'nati .| 0 11 21 8l..1—| 2I..| 8101444 O 21 .1 1/..1 2i—I 1| 6/131.316 Boston 11 41—I 11 1] 1i—| 210113435 101 31 11 2/ 0] 1—I 71161,304 Phils.__..1 11 01 0l 2.1 3i—I 6/13.316 71 81 81 911ALABIT0—i—I Tost .1 61 71101111010A31TBI—I—I GAMES TOMORROW. Wash. at 8t. Louls, N. lY at cm:’m:‘ 2 Clivsins, GAMES TODAY. Wash. at 8t. Louis. 2 t Chicago. veland. GAMES TODAY. Pittsburgh ston. Pittsburgh st N. Y. Sinetnr 8 *bRRa"™ Cineinnat GAMES TOMORROW. |HELEN WILL DEFEND Brennan, Yankees, 3-0. £ | WIMBLEDON CROWN| Will Play in Only Four Tourneys This Year. | By the Associated Press. | SAN FRANCISCO, May 10.—Mrs.!| Helen Wills Moody, woman's tennis | champion, is to leave next week | for England, where she will defend her | English singles tennis title at Wimble- | don this year. | " “Mrs. Moody plens to compete in only | bledon, then the Wightman Cup against | the British and finally the national | tournament at Forest Hills. Later in| the Fall, she said, she might accept an invitation to take part in an exhibi- tion in Mexico City. Helen Jacobs of Berkeley already is| in England, preparing for the Wim- bledon classic. | In announcing her decision to tal part in the English tournament, Mrs. Moody said she made up her mind only yesterday. She said she probably would travel from New York to Eng- land alone. Her husband, Frederick Moody, jr., will accompany her to New York, she said, and probably will join her in England. League Leaders | By the Associated Press. (Including Yesterday's Games.) American League. Batting—Schulte, _Senators, Chapman, Yankees, .379. ® Runs—Gehrig, Yankees, 24; Bishop, Athletics, 19. Runs batted in—Gehrig, Yankees, and Foxr. Athletics, 21. Hits—West, Browns and Schulte, Senators, 35. Doubles—Averill, Indians, 9; Stone, Tigers, 8. Triples—Combs, Yankees, 4; Manush, Senators; Lazzeri, Yankees, and Ci- hocki, Athletics, 3. Home runs—Gehrig, Yankees, 7; Ruth and Lazzeri, Yankees, 5. Stolen bases—Chapman and Lazzeri, Yankees, and Walker, Tigers, 3. Pitching—Hildebrand, Indians, 4-0; 407; | gray pilot of the Nationals, your Uncle Fred Makes Griff Look Good Schulte Continues Cannonading Right in Old Home Town— Earnshaw to Red Sox Next? HE stoical, dependable Mr. Fred Schulte and his heavy willow | stand .out, today as a monument to the swapping ability of the Clark Griffith. 1 Mr. Schulte’s war club, along Wwith the wagon tongues of a_few other | Griffmen, has xept the les bob- bob-bobbin’ at the head of the Ameri- can League scramble when the numeri- cally strong hurling staff teetered and tottered. [ But it was pot long ago when the bleacher canaries yoaelea plaints of sour nctes when Sammy West and Schulte were compared. “Schulte is a good man,” they wept, “but he never wil be able to cavort that center gaiden with the agility of Sammy. And chances are he will not hit as well.” Then Mr. West, who was traded to Browns for the young man with t: decided Teutonic name, started off with a circus fiare, banging out hits galore. Yet here we are in early May and the young man who once wore & uniform 1s clicking 100 per cent. And in a territory, his home sector, where your Nationals were once no pumpkins at_all. Uncle Clark made no mistake when he picked out Fred. UT Bill Killefer undoubtedly has rung up an error in letting Lloyd Biown and Rick Ferrell out to the Boston Red Scx for Catcher Shea and a bundle of shin plasters. Yet there probably was not much else for the Brownie pilot to do, figur- ing the cost of things in general and the St. Louis club’s anemic bank roll. ‘There will be a flurry of trading call for the final pruning of the squads to get down to the player limit is sounded. Some teams will need players, some . And in each instance both sides will claim & victory in the swapping. ’I'H!s morning George Earnshaw, Connie Mack’s powerful right-hand hurling ace, was missing. A few | days ago George was sent back to Shibe Park trom Detroit “to get in shape,” National League. Batting—Hartnett, Cubs, .384; erick, Dodgers, .370. Runs—Martin, dinals, 18; Lind- strom, Pirates; Berger, Braves and F. Herman, Cubs, 14. Runs_batted in—Hartnett, Cubs, 20; Klein, Phillies, 16. Hits—Hartnett, Cubs, and Traynor, Pirates, 28. Doubles—Klein, Phillies, 10; F. Her- man, Cubs, 8. Triples—Vaughan and P. Waner, Pi- rates, 3. Fred- ett, Cubs, 5. Stolen bne:—blvll, Giants, 5; Flow- ers, Dodgers, 4. Pitching—Carleton, Cardinals, 4-0; Meine, Pirates, 3-0. P R S FRANCONIA TEAM PLANNED. FRANCONIA, Va., May 10.—A meet- ing to form an all-Franconia base ball team will be held tomorrow night at 8 o'clock in the school here. J. B. Par- nell and George K. Lyles will be In interview that the Yanks would be so far out in front in the race in July that there would be no contest. ting it well since George opined in a pre-season too, that while with t.he| ‘Remember, | Athletics, Eddie Collins, now part owner of the Sox, was George's pal and ad- viser. Things are happening in.the peaceful | pastime. PAGE C—1 EVENING STAR RACE OFFICIALS NAMED A. A. U. Leader Sees Title Contest Here June 17 as Great Show. l tional A. A. U. champion- ship will be held on Satur- day, June 17, more than a month hence, but arrangements for that colorful show today virtually were complete. “This,” said Jerry Looney, chairman of the District A. A. U. Distance Run- ning Committee, following a meeting of A. A. U. leaders last night, “is to be one of the greatest marathons ever heid anywhere anytime!” But he was late with that. The same prediction a week ago fell from the lips of the grand mogul of marathon affairs of the country, Harold Anson Bumuce of New York, chairman of the National A. A. U. Long-Distance Committee. 8 an official at several national con- tests in recent weeks, Bruce sound- ed out scores of harriers on their prospects of competing in The Star marathon and, according to him, the leather-lunged lads are looking more eagerly to the race here than to any other national championship in many years. « Bruce is quoted as saying: “Marathon running is having its greatest boom of modern times and I look for a brilliant year to reach its climax in the race at ‘Washington. The long-distance rune ners are getting faster and faster. “When Juan Zabala cracked the world record to win the Olympic mara- thon, few of us thought we had an American who could come aear equaling his time. At that time we didn't have, but now, less than a year afterward, one of the Yankees not only equals Zabala's lormance, but outclasses it. “In winning the Boston marathon last month, Leslie Pawson was up against stiffer conditions than was Za- bala at Los Angeles. The Argentine ran over a practically level course and in weather that seemed perfect for him —it was a bit too cold, some of the others complained. But Pawson gal- loped up and down many a hill and ;}‘ln;h‘e way in the teeth of a biting BY R. D. THOMAS. HE second annual Washing- Star Marathon for the Na=- ET, in spite of his world record time of 2 hours 31 minutes and 135 seconds for the 26 miles 385 yards, Pawson's victory was nog easily earned. Only toward the very end was he safe from the gritty Canadian who finished second, Komonen. Some say had Ko- monen planned his race differently he might have won. He figured Willie Kyronen the man to beat and ran ac- cordingly Paul De Bruyn, in The Eve- ing Star marathon last August, thought Billy Agee the lad to whip and stuck with the Baltimorean for many blistering miles. At the end of 15 Agee pulled up lame, but he had set a pace which ruined De Bruyn. The German had nothing left for a finish- ing sprint. A man of great deter- mination, De Bruyn is coming back to vindicate himself. ‘William E. Russell, president of the District of Columbia A. A. U, today made public the list of officials for the race. The line-up varies little from that which managed the 1932 contest in such manner as to win back the National A. A. U. championship for the National Capital. ‘The officials: Referee—Winfree E. Johnson. Chief judge—William E. Russell. Judges—J. Kip Edwards, Richard New! Elmer Hardell Chief timer—James Springman. ‘Timers—D. C. Crain, Edward Becket! Alfred Conradi Ki (Cont: don't HAVE to look below the surface! @ You know what's there . .. when you wear Florsheims. Forty years experience of fine- ‘That distarbance had been alibled away by the “Philadelphia scribes. But base ball men thought differently. Whmmmuflmnfln Now the tion is that George. mnn:nwmmmnu :awn t, which consists of that s bidding for the best? shoemaking gives you every reason fo expect only the BEST. 38,,,,,, styles Men’s Shops 14th at G 7th at K *3212 14th

Other pages from this issue: