Evening Star Newspaper, June 22, 1933, Page 43

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Sports News [ 4 WITH SUNDAY MORNING EDITION @he Foen ny Star. WASHINGTON, meén Savage in 9-Game Hitting Streak : RAM AND RAMBLE D. G, 'Cronin, on a Batting Rampage, P[]U[:Y B"; WINNER Runs Total of Manush Continues His Streak‘ Average 15 Hits @ Game in oy st corresponder: o The star. Taking 9 of 11—Cut 5 From Yank Lead. BY JOHN B. KELLER. Nationals condescend to sacrifice, | When he singled the first time up. He | but mostly it is ram and ramble | with them. And this style of play |his last 31 times at bat which may be | has in two weeks brought nine | wins in 11 starts and whittled five | games off the lead of the New | | powering the enemy with hitting is their system and to a man they are confident it soon will put them ahead of the league-leading Yankees they now trail by a game. | Every once in a while do the HICAGO, June 22—Joe Cronin “specials” two-base hits these days. He has added dcubles to his batting book with such speed recently that he now leads the Nationals at slapping this vle of safety. Cracking three off in HICAGO, June 22.—It's the | White Sox pitching yesterday, the boy | old Army game with the |manager raised his total for the season Nationals nowadays. Over- | to 22. Cronin has caught the batting fever in a big way since his club cameé West and in the last three games has been wild with the flail. It the three games Joe went to bat 14 times for 11 hits. Five were two-baggers and one a home run. Manush keeps gcing. He made it 24 games in a row with hits yesterday got two more hits later and now has driven the ball to safety 23 times in 2 season mark. OOSE GOSLIN returned to the line-up in the opener of the series here, although his charley- York outfit that again had threat- | horse leg still has him limping a trifle. ened to make a walk-over of the | He cracked two doubles, drove over American League race. Through this 11-game stretch the ‘Washington club has slammed 160 hits and scored 97 runs. An average of more | | two runs and scored one. ‘Then after drilling into a force play in the sixth inning, he turned the right field job | over to Sam Rice. The Goose wanted to go through the game, but with the Nationals so far than 15 hits per game and nearly 9 ahead of the Chisox. Manager Cronin runs per game. In only one game did the Nationals fail to clout in dou- ble figures, and then they got nine | safeties. Six times twe figures have | been necessary to dendte their score. | Statistics are not available, but if |y except Rice, who had but one turn | NAVY CLAINS HIGH the Nationals' hitting and scoring over this stretch is not a record for a nine- game string in the junior major circuit this season, it is not far from being one. JDAGGING yesterday's brush with ! the White Sox, 9 to 0, was an easy task for the Nationals. Their bats were swi freely again, and s0 was Earl Whitehill's left arm. That made the game little more than a romp for the Capital Club. Eighteen hits were collected by Grif- fith's hired hands off the pitching done by Paul Gregory and Chad Kimsey. ‘They took a liking to Gregory right off the reel and ded him so se- verely he was the hill a beaten hurler before the second session endec Seven hits for five runs were gleaned off the Chisox starter. Then Kimsey was well wall In checkin his third successive win, Whitel ded only nine safe- ties’ scattered through seven innings. He hit one batter and another got on when Joe Kuhe] made @ wild throw cking up a grounder in the . The White Sox attack was not functioning at all. So s 'was Whitehill that only | three ‘base. of the home side got past first | . Two of this trio managed to reach third, but only after two were out. | ! SINGLE by Manush and doubles by Goslin, Cronin and Kuhel got the Nationals three scores in the opening round. Two more were re- | corded in the second with Sewell’s single, Whitehill's _sacrifice, | oped. el Myer's | single and theft and Manush’s one-base | blow. It was Heinie's second safety tha!k pushed Gregory from the pitching | peal Manush's walk and Goslin's second two-bagger off Kimsey in the fourth accounted for a tally, and two more were chalked up in the fifth. Schulte hit for a base and the first baseman’s error put Kuhel on the runway. Bluege’s single put Schulte over and Kuhe] crossed as Sewell drilled into a two-way erasure. In the ninth inning the Nationals dented the counting block for the ninth time. baser, and after Schulte went out a single by Kuhel sent the pilot plateward. " MATHEWS’ BIRD VICTOR Defeats Field of 129 Pigeons in Race From Cleveland, Tenn. A bird from the Mathews’ loft de- feated a fleld of 129 pigeons in the National Capital Concourse Associa- tion’s second race of the championship meries from Cleveland, Tenn, a distance of 500 miles, airline distance Speed flown in yards per minute of the first return to each loft follows: um. | decided to give the ailing player a rest. | | There was a chance that Goslin would | not play today should the White Sox start a southpaw slabman. Everybody in the Washington line- | Doubles to 22; | at bat, hit safely in yesterday's batfest. Their powerful punch has made the Nationals the sensation of the league these days. ITH three hits in five times up Kuhel had his best batting day | in weeks. One of his hits was | due to his great speed in getting down |t first base after bounding the ball to Kress. Joe hit the sack right with | Kimsey, who had crossed to take the | throw " from the initial post guardian. | | The tie, of course, got the runner the | decision. | While Whitehill was spiking the big |guns of the White Sox, Haas, & .290 batter, stepped out to bag hitting laurels for his club in the game. He | collected three singles in four trips to | the plate. and only a fine running catch by Schulte in the far reaches of center prevented Mule having & perfect day. | Charley Berry, first-string catcher | with the White Sox, will be out of action for the next two weeks as a | result of a broken finger sustained in the Tuesday tussle with the Yankees. The digit was cracked when Charley caught a foul tip. | HE Century of Progress Exposition ! I ot a great play by the Nationals ?n.st night. They spent much time viewing the wonderful exhibits {of the motor industry, but more tak- ing in “the streets of Paris” on the Midway. . Moe Berg, base balls re-| nowned linguist, was interpreter for the flock in the French quarter. Only 5000 paid to see yesterday's| engagement in the South Side ball| plant. Not only was there a threat| | of rain, but the fans had also used | most of their base ball budget for the week when they jammed the park at the double-header between Yanks and | White Sox last Sunday. RATING AT ROWING |0ne of Three Crews in East With One Defeat, Losing Only to Princeton. NNAPOLIS, Jure 22.—At the close of the Eastern college rowing season, marked by Har- vard’s defeat of Yale, the Naval ‘Acndzmy is one of the three in this Cronin smote his third two- | section which was defeated by but one college, and is inclined to feel that it has a slight edge over the two others for first place in the sectional college row- ing. Syracuse was undefeated, but its limited schedule, two races against Cor- | nell, is not regarded as being a con- tender for honors. | ‘The Navy varsity lost its first race to | Princeton by less than a quarter of a length. It then defeated Massachusetts Tech, Columbia, Cornell, Pennsylvania and Harvard, the latter two in the Adams’ Cup race. RINCETON defeated the Navy, | Pennsylvania, Columbia and Cor- nell, losing to Yale, and Yale, which lost to Harvard, defeated Princeton, | Pennsylvania and Columbia. Harvard | was defeated by both the Navy and | | | | Pennsylvania. The claim to the leading place in | Eastern college rowing for the Naval | Academy rests on its defeat of five op- ponents. one more than lost to Prince- ton. While Princeton defeated the | Navy, it lost to Yale, which, in turn, | | was defeated by Harvard, & crew which | | was defeated by the Navy. | | Navy is looking forward with rea- | sonable confidence to the Poughkeepsie regatta, which will be resumed next | season. It will have five of the varsity | regulars and some good men from the junior varsity and plebe crews will be available. Indications point to a heav- |ier and more experienced crew than |Inst season. Minor Leagues Southern Association. Knoxville, 7; New Orleans, 5. Chattanooga, 13; Nashville, 4. IMMY McLARNIN, the world’s new welterweight chm:npion,I S PORT S LANT is greatly disturbed, notes| Paul Zimmerman, one of our | eagled-eyed coast scouts. It isn't the question of a guarantee if and when he makes the first defense of the fistic crown and he doesn't seem | | to be pariicularly worried as to who his | ! opponent might be. The 25-year-old Irish youth from Vancouver, B. C., | is troubled over | his_game of golf. “I “always have difficulty with my shots after T've trained for a fight,” bemoaned the genial Jimmy. “It's my wrists. When you fight you have to keep your wrists rigid | or a bone is apt to snap and then you cnn‘lgkloos!n ;htm up like you shou Jimmy MeLarnin. /5 Sour golf shots.” Jimmy also believes the natural let- down after the prolonged period of mental strain has something to do with ;1“1; golf game going to pieces around Forgets Fighting. OLF is a serious business with McLamnin. ' On the course he is | noncommittal about fighting. He'd just as soon not mix pleasure with his vocation, although his natural courtesy prompts him to tolerate talk of boxing and fights. He'd much rather enter a dis- cussion of what makes for hooks on the fairways than hooks in the ring, and admits both bother him no end. Right now, while promoters the | country over are discussing title matches for him, McLamnin is very busy on the golf courses of Southern California, trying to get down to his usual scores in the low eighties and high seventies. “Let ‘Pop’ worry about the matches,” grinned Jimmy the other day when he | was caught in the act of “dissipation” | to the extent of ice cream and a glass | | of milk before a tour of the links. “It's great to forget about | training and diet and all that | sort of thing,” he confided, as he | dipped deep into the ice cream. “You can eat anything you want.” | Jimmy apparently didnt want the cookies that came with the frozen | in the deal that sent O'Doul and Clark | to the Giants. Jimmy Jordan, a raw | recruit, is a fixture at shortstop. Young | quired two new outiielders. DODGER CLUB NEW IF NOT A WINNER Carey Gives Fans Change at Least in Effort to Get Start Upward. BY JOHN B. FOSTER. EW YORK, June 22.—Times | certainly have changed at | Ebbets Field, where the| Brooklyn Dodgers are now | engaged in valiant efforts to turn | back the base ball warriors from | the West. . “ If it were not for the presence | of the pudgy Hack Wilson in the | outfield, visiting Western beams$ would have difficulty in identify- | ing this as the Brooklyn club of former days. | Without a great deal of hullabaloo, Manager Max Carey is gradually trans- forming the Dodgers into a team of younger and more active blood. That is the policy behind all the club’s re- cent trades and purchases of plavers. It having become quite apparent that the Dodgers are not going places this season, the management has decided to weed out the veterans and rebuild with younger material for another year. INCE Carey took over leadership of the Brooklynites he has cut loose most of the players who were on the active list when he took command. Prominent among these were Dazzy Vance, Rube Bressler, Babe Herman, Gordon Slade, Mickey Finn, Jack Quinn, Adolfo Luque, Wally Gilbert, Del Bissonette, Lefty O'Doul and Wil- liam Watson Clark. Joe Judge, veteran first baseman, has been benched in favor of the speedy Sam Leslie, who came to the Dodgers | | | | | | Outen, a green catcher, has been doing Ltm share of the backstopping of e. In his latest moves, Carey has ac- One_of | them, Joe Hutcheson, is due to join | the Dodgers today. He comes from the | Memphis club of the Southern Asso- ciation and the advance notices say that he can hit. The other outfielder, Len Koenecke, will remain with the | Buffalo club of the International | League until September. HIS is the same Koenecke for | whom the Giants paid the In- | dianapolis club $75,000 in the | Fall of 1931. Playing with the Giants | last year he didn’t make the grade, for | his batting average dropped off around | 100 poirnts. Last Spring the Giants | sent him to Buffalo on option and it is this option which has now been transferred to the Dodgers as a part of the O'Doul-Clark-Leslie deal. Brooklyn fans sour rapidlv when they don't see a winner at Ebbets Field. ‘There will be no winner there this sea- son, but there will at least be an as- sortment of new faces—with more to come in 7934, PITCHER TOPS BATTERS Kibler Has 5-Game Average of .643 in National Capital Loop. Sam Kibler, pitcher for the Acacia Life Insurance Co., was the leading bat- ter during the first half series in the National Capital Base Ball League. Kibler’s mark for five games was .643. Playing in two more games, R. H. Caldwell of C. & P. Telephone Co. was second with .542. Homer Standing By the Associated Press. Home Runs Yesterday. Gehrig, Yankees, 1; Lazzeri, Yankees, 1; Shea, Browns, ; Whitney, Braves, 1. The Leaders. Gehrig, Yankees, 17; Foxx, Athletics, 15; Ruth, Yankees, 15; Klein, Phillies, 13; Berger, Braves, 12; Lazzeri, Yankees, 12; Hartnett, Cubs, 10. League Totals. American . National . 267 191 Total .... THURSDAY, ; Alexander, Red Sox, | | | JUNE 99 == 1933. THERE WITH HAVE A WORLD SERIES AT TUE wORLdsz:tb y THE SOX. HE SURELY .09 HAS pUEPeS OF THE S\ = HIS BIG BAT HAS MADE A SERIOUS CONTENDER CHICAEO WRITE §0X e ALl Rights Reserved by The Associated Press Stars Yesterday By the Assoclated Press. Earl Combs, Yankees—Doubled in thirteenth to drive in runs that beat Browns, 5-3. Pritz Knothe, Phillies—Clouted two doubles and two singles for perfect day against £ Wesley Ferrell, Indians—Limited Ath- letics to six hits to win 11-1. Rogers Hornsby, Cardina!s—Hit pinch double to knock in winning runs against Dodgers. Joe Cronin, Senators—Raked Chicago pitching for three doubles and single. Pinkey Whitney, Braves—Drove in five runs in double victory over Pirates. Dale Alexander, Red Sox—Hit homer, double and two singles in twin bill | against Tigers. Fred Fitzsimmons, Giants—Limited Cubs to three hits and no walks for 3-1 victory. A S MARTINSBURG RACE TRACK IS PLANNED Mile Course Due to Be Ready in Time for Use Next Fall, Fol- lowing Bowie Meet. Special Dispatch to The Star. ARTINSBURG, W. Va, June 22. M —Formation of the Martins- burg Jockey Club in Maryland and plans for construction this Sum- mer of a mile track here have been formally announced through Dr. H. G. Tonkin, former mayor here, and other interested persons. Work on_the track will be started as soon as the field is completed. The exact site has not been selected from the three under consideration, all of | them immediately adjoining the city. The plant will include paddock and grandstand. The track will be scheduled for a 15 to 20 day meet following the Bowie meet, the announcement said. This city was selected after examination of Government weather reports, which in- dicated its adaptability. The project will be sold through sale of stock, the announcement said. The racing_end will be in the hands of | J. P. Boyle of Baltimore and Thomas K. Lynch of New York. H. Riggins, who had a hand in the remodeling of | the Widener Hialeah Park in Florida, will draw the plans, and Dick Pending of Bowie will supervise the track con- struction. Offices of the company will be in Baltimore. (When asked how he was keeping THE SPORTLIGHT BY GRANTLAND RI THE AN! SWER. his Glants up in the race after being picked for the second division, Manager Bill Terry remarked, “We are merely playing our game all the way through.”) With no loud calls of hero from the thromng, | With no one framing miracles to tout him, | But rather as a oloke who slogs along And makes the most of what he has about him, Head up and hustling till the job is through, And something worthy of Nor claiming inspiration or invention, Playing his game—uwell—this is something, too, politest mention. Each has his game, enough to ring the bell, | Only to smear it with cockeyed abuses; | Once in a while we sprint to beat all hell, And then drop back to mutter our excuses; But, taking glory with the daily gaff, Nor calling on great genius for the fray, What line could make a keener epitaph— | ! “He plaved his game—and played it all the way” | Winning a Title. | OW many mistakes can a golfer make and still win an open championship? How many visits can he pay to the rough and the sand traps and still lead scoreboard at all big title tournaments, and whose ancestor battled with Robert Bruce for the glory of the thistle against the power of the rose, sends an | Johnny Goodman's four rounds &t North Shore. This chart depicts the landing place of the 287 strokes the Omaha youth needed to block off Guldahl by the mar- gin of one lone putt. | It shows that over the 72 holes Good- man hit the rough 21 times and that | wood or iron found traps and pits 14 | times. | Here you have a total of 35 me- | chanical errors in 72 holes which had | to be nursed and cured in order to match the 72-hole course par of 288. How could a golfer make up for 35 mechanica] slips? In several ways: 1. Reaching the par 5 holes in two shots—which Goodman did more than once. | 2. Playing fine recoveries from grass | or sand. | u::!' By high-class chipping up to the 4. By excellent putting. The chart shows that Johnny Good- man used only 117 putts for the four rounds where two putts to a green the big pack fighting for every stroke? | William Wallace, who dominates the | | interesting stroke-by-stroke chart of | | holes. When you consider the burning | head, the nerve strain, the rolls and slopes of green, the importance of each | stroke, this is something to consider. | It Can Be Done. | ET Goodman's list of mistakes Some time ago, Holworthy Hall, one of the best of all golf fiction writers, fol- i lowed Walter Hagen on a certain round in the North and South open at Pine- hurst. He kept an official score of Hagen's march, noting each time he left the fairway or the green for rough or bunkers. In this round Hagen's mechanical errors totaled exactly 21—and yet, much | to Holworthy Hall's deep astonishment, | Hagen finished with a 71. ‘There is, of course, a vast difference between thumping a ball into playable rough and tapping one into a pond or | was not a heavy count. | print in heavy sand. But undoubtedly it is the inability of |the average golfer to conquer thick grass and rutted sand that causes most of_his anguish. ‘The star also gets into trouble. But he can get out. When the average | player slips into trouble a few times he |is a blighted being, with his quivering |nerves tied into true-lovers’ knots, to | say nothing of a flock of 7s and 8s on | the card. ‘The duffer's main error in trouble is tightening up, losing all confidence and then merely hacking away. It is in trouble that he needs a lighter grip and |lake, or locating some elephantine heel | Se: PAGE D-—1 N. L. Trades Help All Involved k4 ('D0UL UNGOVERS PUNCH FOR GIANTS ‘Whitney and Others “Shine in New Uniforms—Tribe Continues Streak. BY HUGH S. FULLERTON, JR, Associated Press Sports Writer, HE last-minute trades by i which several National League clubs endeavored to | gain strength for the mid- !season struggles appear, at first ‘.glnnce, to have panned out ex- ceedingly well. | Notable among them was the | switch which sent Lefty O'Doul | to the New York Giants and Sam | Leslie to the Brooklyn Dodgers, | but the Boston-Philadelphia deal, |involving Pinkey Whitney, Hal | Lee, Wes Schulmerich and Fritz Knothe also seems to have been beneficial to both teams. O'Doul, who wasn’t hitting at alt with the Dodgers, again made himself an important figure with the bat yes= terday when, for the second time since the June 15 trade, he paced the New Yorkers to a victory that helped them hold the lead in the elder circuit. Lefty made two hits as the Giants downed the Chicago Cubs 3-1 in a brilliant mound duel between Fred Fitzsimmons and Pat Malone, and one was a home run that put New York ahead to stay. ESLIE'S clouting already has won a couple of games for the Dodgers, but he couldn’t do much yesterday at the St. Louis Cardinals, after giving: away five runs in the first inning, came back to win 7-5 and remain a half z&g}eh l:uhlndmthel Giants. - ney, e leading figure trade between the Braves and the Phil- lies, got a new job at second base yes< terday when the veteran Rabbit Ma- ranville was benched and Dick Gysel- man was put in at third. He not only filled the bill header from the Pittsburgh 6-5 and 5-3. The Phils' new acquisitions, Schul- merich and Knothe, batted in six of the ten counters Philadelphia scored in the sixth and seventh innings to beat Chllcln&lli 10-8. = n the American League, Washing« ton’s so-far unsuccessful pursuit of the New York Yankees again furnished the day's high spot as both teams won and remained a game apart. HE Senatorg had little trouble downing the Chicago White Sox; 9-0, as they uncorked an 18-hit assault, including four blows by Man- ager Joe Cronin, while Earl Whitehill kept nine hits well scattered. The Yanks, however, had to go 13 innings to beat the last-place St. Louis Browns, 5-3, despite Lou Gehrig's seventeenth home run of the season and Tony Laz- zeri’s twelfth. The Cleveland Indians continued their stgeak with more flashy pitching as Weg. Ferrell limited ' the Philadelphia Athletics to six safeties while his mates pounded George Earn- shaw for an 11-1 triumph: ‘The Boston Red Sox split a double- header, the Sox winning the slugfest, 10-9, with the aid of a five-run rally in the sixth, and the Tigers com- ing back to get a 5-3 victory behind Fred Marberry’s good flinging. Griffs’ Records o (A Nz, bl bR Srma ooy g = TOIPDTEE PR W=t} oD (PP ETINN c CLUB BATTING. G. _AB. R H. 2b 3b Hr Rbl 60 2,212 358 674 43 33 32 346 . PITCHING. Russell. often an easier swing—wrist action to | Vi 1 for the site, | would have meant 144 putts. His aver- Jme HCIly WAz isalecied Vfony Che L E = develop club-head speed. Here, more | aside from its physical facilities, also| age was a shade over 29 putts to the McAfee'. Whit'hill e 07048:" J. C." Krahling Do report; E. J. Krahiing. n Atlanta, 12; Birmingham, 2. | Little Rock, 10; Memphis, 3. S report. AB. FULL SPEED AHEAD I | R H O Tt G 10120001 5 GG0000000 . Manush, Go: Bl 1T Washingto: Chicago 2 Runs batted in £2), Cronin, Kuhel “HE yer. ' Sacrific lays—Bleuge to Kuhel; onin to Myer to Kuhel: Hayes to ‘Appling to Kress: Appiing to Hayes to Kress 't on bases—Washington, . Chicago. & rst base on balls—Off Kimsey, 2. HIt: ory, 7 in 1% innings: itnings. (8wanson). - Messrs Time of gami off K: egory. Umpir ens and Ormsby. and 39 minutes. wan, cGo e—1 hour Fascist Spirit Stimulates Italy’s Sports Mussolini’s Demand For Discipline, Determination Bring Teamwork That Was Lacking. OME (#).—The Fascist will to win is credited here for Italy's good showing against a crack English association ! foot ball team. The score stood one to one after ' & heart-breaking battle, in which ' meither the dogged Britons nor the break the . briliant Italians could impesse. to | |l | International. Buffalo, 3-0; Toronto, 1-1 Newark, 4; Jersey City, 3. Baltimore, 16; Albany, 3. Others not scheduled. American Association. Milwaukee, 7-8; Minneapolis, 5-2. St. Paul, 10; Kansas City, 9 Louisville, 3; Columbus, 1. Toledo, 3; Indianapolis, 2. Pacific Coast. Los Angeles, 7; Hollywood, 3. San Francisco, 6: Missions, 5. Portland, 8; Seattle, 6 Oakland, 13; Sacramento, 6. Western. Joplin. 6; Topeka, 4 St. Joseph, 17; Springfield, 13. Omaha. 6; Hutchinson, 2. Des Motnes, 6; Muskogee, 5 Texas. San Antonio, 12-0; Oklahoma City, i 5-3 Beaumont, 7-6; Tulsa, 2-4. Houston, 10: Fort Worth, 5. Dallas, 8; lveston, 5. New York-Pennsylvania. Harrisburg, 2; Binghamton, 1. Fistiana’s Gain. N the course he is an ideal part- ner, sympathizing with others | over unfortunate lles and {ll| directed shots and apologizing for his own mistakes. And always, somewhere near- by, silhouetted against the hori- 30n at the edge of the fairway, is the limping figure of Charles (Pop) Foster, McLarnin's man- ager. Pop is there to “look after my boy Jimmy.” Rather an asset to the ranks of Pistiana’s titleholders—Old Pop Foster with his high-pitched voice, and quiet, | unassuming Jimmy McLarnin. TO PILOT WINSTON-SALEM | Bourg, Who Led Durham to Pen-| nant, Made Poole's Successor. | WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. () —Art Bourg, who piloted Durham to | a pennant in 1925 and managed the Twins in 1926, has been signed again as manager of the Winston-Salem club of the Piedmont League. He succeeds Jim Poole, who has managed the club Williamsport, Scranton, innings). ¥ York, 6; Elmira, 4. Others not scheduled. 5 (s ‘The Italian press hailed the final result as a “moral victory.” “Not particularly a moral victory over the British team,” the sports critics added, “but just another proof that Il Duce'’s stimulation of athletic discipline, courage and determina- tion, has shown its advantages over the old, lethargic, luke-warm spirit o‘t;mmln( &” to particulai lown s, many of the Italian sports writers empha- under adverse financial conditions since the openmglol the season. Bourg will play first base. Poole has not indicated where he will go. June 22| League Races THURSDAY, JUNE 22, 1933, AMERICAN YESTERDAY'S RESULTS. Washington, 9: Chicago. New York, 5: St. Louls Cleveland. 11; Philadelphia, Boston, 10-3; Det 0 1,13 innings). “anwjusd1ag| GAMES TODA Wash_at Chicago N. York at St. Louls. Phila. at Cleveland. Phila. at Cleveland. Boston at Detroit. Boston at Detroit. NATIONAL YESTERDAY'S RESULTS. 3; Chicago. 1 GAMES Wash. at Chicago. York at 8t. L. (2), sized what they believed to be & greater ability of Itallan players to co-operate for the sake of the team. “This,” said an anonymous critic in a leading Rome daily, “shows that 11 Duce’s hand is on the reins. 5501 4 08 67, GAMES TODAY. GAMES TOMORROW. 8t. Louis st Phila. St. Louis at Phila brilliant individual work. Now they’ lum? to harness these into effective feam work," New York. Cincin. at New York. Pitts. ‘at Brooklyn, Chicago at Boston. 62| Athletics, 51 because it is within easy motoring reach of track followers in Northern Virginia, Western Maryland and Eastern Penn- sylvania, as well as Washington, the statement said. The project was made -possible through recently enacted legislation legalizing horse racing in West Virginia. Major Leaders By the Associated Press. (Including yesterday's games.) American League. Batting—Chapman, Yankees, .367; Foxx, — | Simmons, White Sox, .364. Runs—Gehrig, Yankees, 59; Runs batted Hits—Manush, Senators, 94; Sim- mons, White Sox, 90. Doubles—Cronin, Senators, 22; Burns, Browns, and Sewell, Senators, 19. Triples—Combs, Yankees, 10; Ma- nush, Senators, 7. Home runs — Gehrig, Yankees, 17; Ruth, Yankees, and Foxx, Athletics, 15. Stolen bases—Walker, Tigers, 14; Chapman, Yankees, 10. Pitching—Allen, Yankees, 5-1; Hilde- brand, Indians, 10-3. National League. Batting—Klein, Phillies, .357; Martin, Cardinals, .356. Runs—Martin, Cardinals, 53; Bartell, Phillies, 43. Runs batted in—Klein, Phillies, 55; Bottgmley, Reds, 44. Hits—Fullis, Phillies, 92; Klein, Phil- lies, 90. Doubles—Klein, Phillies, 21; P. Waner, Pirates, and Medwick, Cardinals, 1 8. Triples—Martin, Cardinals, 8; P. Waner, and Suhr, Pirates, 7. Home runs—Klein, Phillies, 13; Ber- ger, Braves, 12. Stolen bases—Martin, Cardinals, 9; Frisch, Cardinals; Davis, Giants, and Fullis, Phillies, Pitc] | in—Cehrig, Yankees, ®_ | 61; Simmons, White Sox, 56. | round. 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