Evening Star Newspaper, June 23, 1933, Page 31

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WITH SUNDAY .MORNING: EDITION Foenin o Star. . li Features and Classified WASHINGTON, D. C. FRIDAY, JUNE 23, 1933. PAGE C—1 <> 1 - Griffs, Who Have Battled Way to Tie for Lead, Are “Just Beginning to Fight” CRONIN IS SURE CLUB | SOON WILL SET PACE | AND A FAST ONE, TOO Finally Overhaul;Yanks in Spite| of Injury Handicaps With 11-4 Win Over Chisox. BY JOHN B. KELLER. HICAGO, June 23.—All even with the Yankees, who had held full possession of first place in the American League standings from the fourth day of the championship cam- paign until yesterday, the Na- tionals are only beginning to make the great fight for the pen- nant they are capable of making, according to Joe Cronin, their boy manager. He is quietly confident it won't be long before his club will be set- ting the pace—and a fast pace at that—in the tussling for the title. “We did not let the Yankees get very far ahead, while we were handicapped by injuries to regulars,” Cronin points out. “And with Myer, Schulte and Bluege out at different times, we were handi- capped considerably. “We closed the gap between the Yan- kees and ourselves with Weaver, a | pitcher we had banked on greatly, out | of service with a sore arm and Goslin, just hitting his stride, forced to idle | every once in a while because of a cgar]ey-hnmd leg,” the young pilot adds. “It seems to me we are just begin- | ning to play our game. When Weaver | gets on the job again—and I believe | he will soon—and Goslin gets back to | right field regularly, the Nationals should surprise the base ball world even more than they have with their great | spurt of the past three weeks. “At full strength, this Washington club can challenge anything the league has to send against it,” Cronin declares. And adds, “We ought to go through ‘with it, too.” AKING yesterday's tilt, 11 to 4,/ the Nationals not only made it | two straight over the White Sox, i but they also gct back at Walter Miller for the-beating he handed them in ‘Washington. In his first start of the season the| ‘White Sox left-hander on May 21 lim- ited the Cronin crew to txo singles and three passes and struck out five to score a shutout. Here yesterday, however, he was a_trimmed twirler before the gam: was five innings old. The Nationals got to Miller for six hits and as many this time. These mixed with three White Sox misplays were good for seven runs be- fore the southpaw was relieved by Joe Heving, with one retired in the first half. Heving went through the sixth session, while Red Faber hurled the seventh and eighth. All the Nationals did to these two | third base after picking up Myer’s bunt. game to an even dozen and their pass total to just one less. That flurry got them four more runs, which relieved the tension consider- ably, for getting runners around was nothing like as easy as getting them on—the Nationals had 18 stranded— and the White Sox had been sniping dangerously all afternoon. The home side collected 10 hits and 4 passes off the General. He also hit a batter. When pinchbatter Earl Webb opened the eighth with a single it was too much for Manager Cronin’s nerves. So Jack Russell was hustled to the hill to finish. Jack did that nobly. N the first frame the White Sox I virtually handed the Nationals three runs. A wild throw by Appling put Manush on the runway, then Cronin walked. Harris singled Manush across and the sacks were crowded when Schulte drew a pass. Kress' fumble of Kuhel's grounder let in a second score and the third went over as Bluege drilled into a force play. Successive singles by Kuhel, Bluege and Sewell accounted for a third-round marker, and in the fifth the Capital club got three more tallies. Sewell walked and the bases were loaded when Dykes booted Crowder’'s sacrificial tap and Miller was too late with a heave to 'S PORT LANT BY ALAN GOULD=—— NY and all Eastern suspicion | A to the contrary, the Univer- | sity of Callfornia at Los Angeles is not trying to “steal” the muffled thunder of the classic Poughkeepsie regatta by | seizing this year’s golden oppor- | tunity to put on a national inter- collegiate crew race on the Olym- pic course at Long Beach, with Cornell, Harvard and Yale meet- ing the new triumvirate of coast rowing. If the Eastern powers, of their own free will and accord, decided not to conduct the Poughkeepsie Regatta, why,. in effect, pin the blame or cast suspicious eyes at West Coast rowing | interest and enterprise, asks Ben Per- | son, director of athletic news at U. C. | L. A “We readily understand how the East, with an admirable pride in the Hudson classic,” he writes, “can misinterpret our motives. In fact, there was a thought that something of thé sort might con- ceivably happen, but no one be- lieved that any one would do so.. The fact that they have makes people here feel like ambulance chasers. “The circumstances may be damn- ing—but such evidence often leads to unjust conclusions. It is unfortunate | that people have drawn up a verdict | because of two happenings which co- | | incidence, and nothing else, brought up about the same time and in just this peculiar sequence. Seven Years Ago. "THE facts are these: “Maj. Goodsell, U. C. L. A.| Cronin singled two across and brought Heving to Miller’s relief. Harris whacked a single off the new hurler to send Myer home. Gregory was flinging when the Na- tionals came up for their last turn and they quickly boosted their total by four runs. Manush got his hit at last, then bunted singles by Cronin and Harris Jjammed, the stations. Schulte and Kuhel walked to force | across two scores and fielders’ choices | let Harris and Schulte dent the count- ing block. i | NTIL the Nationals’ ninth-inning | flare-up, the Chisox had Kkept | themselves in the ball game. They got & run in the first frame from two- baggers by Hayes and Simmons and | they picked up another in the sixth | when Crowder began to fade. Appling | got an infield hit and Kress walked. | Dykes singled Appling home, but Harris held the runners to their bases as he made a good running catch of Grube's drive, while Sullivan, pinch batting, | fouled out and Hayes lined to Myer. Crowder was more soundly socked in the seventh and the home side tallied | twice. Manush got Haas’ hoist after a | hard run, but Swanson drew a free ticket and Simmons was pinked by one of the General's pitches. Appling hit for a base, registering Swanson at_the | plate. Crowder managed to get a third strike by Kress. He couldn’t fool Dykes, though. and the latter’s single put Sim- mons over. Webb went up to bat for Faber in the ‘was get three more hits and two passes. They faced a wild Paul Gregory in the | ninth to raise their hit total for the ' eighth and his pinch single ousted | Crowder and let Russell brecze through to the finish. Manush Needs Sixth Time Up To Run Streak to 25 Games; Cronin Has Perfect Day at Bat HICAGO, June 23.—Making it 25 games in & row With hits was not easy for Heinie Manush yesterday as the Nationals; scored over the White Sox. Not until | the ninth inning did the big Dutchman | get the safety needed to lengthen the | #tring. | He had missed in five previous trials, | twice when the bases were crowded with | tzammates and cnce with two on the| Tunway. Leading off in the ninth, how- | ever, he laced the leather to center for a base. Heinie came up again to finish | the inning by lofting to the center | flelder. | Before he got his single, Manush had | been at bat six times without a hit—he | . By a Staff Correspondent of The Star. | missed in his last turn in Wednesday's | post. engagement here—for the first time since the latter part of May. He failed to drive the ball to safety the last three times he was up when the Nationals played the Browns in Washington on May 26, and got nothing from his first three efforts in the next game, that with the Athletics on May 28. OE CRONIN batted in fancy figures | J again yesterday, getting from six e two walks and The boy man- ager bunted fcr the last single and as he crossed first base he turned an ankle Jo> continued play, but had a sore fcot last night. The hurt was not expected to keep him out of action today, however. With the White Sox starting a south- paw slabman the left-hand-swinging Goslin left on the bench to rest his charley-h: Harris played right field for the 1 the ninth, then Rice > job. to thre: hits, two off crthadex 1 Scmebody mu 4 there > reminded the a thing in base the They put down six in yest s to. as many as they had made in thelr six games immediately before Kuhel did some tall leaping to pull down a liner from Haas' bat in the acr got | error for this, but it let the Nationals | when Umpire Ormsby called the Sheriff first. Hayes, on second through a dou- ble, had to scramble madly back to that base to prevent a two-way erasure. RESS not only messed up Kuhel's grounder for an error in the opening inning, but he also chucked wildly when he had a chance to get Schulte, who had overrun sec- ond on the play. Red no second | get one more run than they should | have had. = Sewell was the victim of an odd acci- dent in the fourth frame. A foul tip | off Simmons’ bat penetrated the catch- ing mask sufficiently to deal Luke a severe blow between the eyes. He dropped to the ground to take a few minutes’ time out before resuming his . The ball was so firmly lodged in the mask that Sewell had to get another face protector. ARRIS needed the second chance to get Hayes in the fifth session. Dave dropped Jack’s foul hoist | for an error, but came right back to make a sparkling grab of a liner hot off the 'Bama boy's bat. Young Billy Sullivan went up to bat for Heving in the sixth when the White Sox had iwo on only to be snuffed by Sewell's fine catch of a foul at the grandstand barrier. Hayes kicked himself out of the game | in the ninth. He covered first to take a throw from Dykes, who had picked up Harris' bunt, and squawked plenty safe. That gave Rhyne a chance to finish for the Chisox at second base. crew coach, thought of a Western race of the type we intend to have when he first came to this coun- try seven years ago. University ath- letic officials began the serious business of putting those plans into some sort of reality wheh U. C. L. A. first considered adding crew to its athletic program last year. | “Stephen W. Cunningham, U. C. L. A. graduate manager, talked the matter over with Wil- liam J. Bingham, Harvard’s di- rector of athletics, when the lat- ter was here jor the Olympic Games last Summer. “We hope that our true intentions can be brought cut, namely, a desire to stimulate interest in crew and pro- | vide an event to supplement the na- | | tional rowing program. No one wants | the event to overshadow or replace any | other. The West, with only three in- stitutions rowing, wants more rowing. | No Commercial Venture. | 5 HE only way to provide it is to I bring Eastern crews here as guests. Fortunately - such a | thing has been made possible and will | continue to be made possible, whether | or not it ‘makes money.’ The local re- gatta was not conceived as a commer- cial venture, either by the university | or the lE‘ch.sm's of the race. “The primary motive was to | tional rowing program. “May I ask you to help us head off these mistaken impressions which seem | to have taken a pretty firm root in the | East?” ot It may be considered as good as_done, here and mow, with a salute to U. C. L. A. and a wel- come to its splendid contribution to rowing this year, especially at a time when the sport seemed hampered by a lack of fortitude and vision in the East. 18 PLAYERS CHOSEN FOR N. L. STAR TEAM Every Club Is Represented, With Cards and Giants Leading With Four Each. 1 By the Associated Press. | HICAGO, June 23.—President John | Heydler and his all-star manager, John McGraw, have picked their National League players for that big one-game argument with the best in the American League, July 6. Eighteen stars of the senior circuit have been chosen to play in the game, | and every team in the league is repre- sented, St. Louis and New York leading | the field with four each. The final National League selections: Catchers—Leo Hartnett, Chicago; Jimmy Wilson, St. Louis. | Infielders—Bill Terry, New _York; Frankie Frisch, St. Louis; Dick Bartell,4 | Philadelphia; Harold Traynor, Pitts- | burgh; Elwood English, Chicago; Tony | Cuccinello, Brcoklyn. Outfielders—Charles Klein, Philadel- | phia;: Paul Waner, Pittsburgh; Pepper | Martin, St Louis; Chick Hafey, Cincin- | nati; Frank O'Doul, New York; Wally Berger, Boston. i | Pitchers—Lonnie Warneke, Chicago; | Carl Hubbell, New York; Bill Hallahan, | | 8t Louls, and Harold Schumacher, New | York. CLAIMS CLIMBING MARK LAKE PLACID, N. Y., June 23 (®)— A new entrant in the marathon moun- tain climbing competition in the Ad- irondacks, James A. Foote, 22-year-old Port Henry youth, claims a new record by climbing 28 peaks in one day. Tired but otherwise in “fine condi- tion” Foote ended his jaunt shortly before sunset after 16 hours and 25 minutes of climbing. His total ascent was 16,300 feet. Selections of fans, gathered by the | Chicago Tribune and newspapers asso- lclated in the promotion of the game, | were followed closely in picking the | National League team except that Pitcher Red Lucas, third in the poll, | was left out Final selections of the American | League all-star team are expected with- |in'a few days | WANT SATURDAY GAME. | | |, Kensington Juniors want a game at | | home for_Saturday atternoon. Call Davidson, Kensington 365, at 7 p.mn. Harvard Crew of ’83 Rows After 50 Years “Hip. Hij B Associated Pres: AMBRIDGE, Mass., June 23 —Harvard's crew of '83 rowed again on the Charles C River today, and if the stroke was a shade slower than 50 years ago when the Crimson cars- men showed Yale the way home sbsence of a Bluc-cared shell may have accounted for it. Not a man_ under 70, all now Pprominent in business and profes- sional life, the eight carsmen ar- Tived at the Weld Boat Club briskly. and morning garb, worn at more formal Harvard commence- ment exercises, were quickly ex- changed for rowing togs, including scull caps, suitably marked with Crimson numerals, '83. A word frcm Dr. Charles Page Perin, captain, as to the course, and away they went to the “hip-hip-hip- hip” of Coxswain S. P. Sangar and a cheer from the club house landing Few of the crew had rowed since the fortieth reunion 10 years ago, but none had forgotten how to put on an oar. They sprinted up the river and they sprinted down. Undergraduates, in single shells, | fell astem. G, R pulled And Away They Go for a Snappy Spin on Charles River. Other members of the crew, from bow to stern positions, were W. H. Page of New York, Horace Binnej of Boston, Joseph Lee, heai of a large cutlery com- pany; Russell Codman of Boston, Sumner Coolidge of Middleboro, Capt. Perin, H B. Jacobs of Balti- more and Coxswain Sangar. The veteran Crimson oarsmen astonished Harvard by rowing on their twenty-fifth reunion They astounded Harvard by rowing on their fortieth. So no one was much surprised today when they set their | sixtieth reunion as their next row- | ing date, . stroke oar. Club Stages First Dual Event Tomorrow. interesting a track event as the recent District Park with the Washington Track and Field Club making its dual- In the membership of the two clubs are five South Atlantic champions and than in the D. C. championships. Beginning at 2:30 o'clock the follow- land: 100, 220, 440, 880, mile, 5 miles, 120 high hurdles, 220 low hurdles, pole | A. A. U. championships meet debut against the Stonewall half a dozen District titleholders. The ing events wil be run off in_Byrd vault, high jump, shotput, broad jump, | Washington Track and Field HAT promises to be as will be held tomorrow at College Democratic Club of Baltimore. competition will be of a higher order Stadium of the University of Mary- discus and javelin. OMPOSED in the main of former C collegians, the Washington Track and Field Club has grown rapidly since it was organized a few weeks ago by Dorsey J. Griffith, track coach at Catholic University. A number of dual meets are being arranged and the club will be strongly represented in a num- ber of special events, such, for example, as the annual 10-mile run sponsored by the Municipal Playground Dej ment and Takoma Park Citizens’ ciation Independence day. ‘The Independence day gallop is be- coming increasingly important, so much so that an effort may be made in another year to have it for the | National A. A. U. championship. Not | 2 few of those who participated in The | Star's recent marathon will compete | this time. Mel Porter, runner-up in the 26-mile classic, is one of these. He hopes to bring down a team frcm | the Irish-American Athletic Club of | Newark. Minor Results International. Baltimore, BRIDGE = BSTER (M SORRY, JOHNINY, GUT (11 AFRAID You'LL HANE To GIVE UP YOUR BALL GAME THIS AETERNOON . MRS, BROWN JUST PHONED THAT SHE WILL NOT B€ ABLE To PLAY So You WiLL HAVE To STAY AND MAKE A FOURTE 5 RS RIS GRERAN ,-,"«';:,';,;. BB AR THE PRODIGY WHO LEARNED BRIDGE AT THE AGE OF FOURTEEN el i b ey © 1933 nyTmsTue. mC Siiass /\// NI e D) e ° GRIFFS BAT WAY UP EHLE YANKS SLDE fScore Tenth Win in 11 Games as New York Loses to Browns, 5 to 4. Associated Press Sports Writer. T encountered on the road can League lead. were dropping a 5-4 decision to the St. this season the Yanks had been de- coincided with Manager Joe Cronin's | in 10 defeats in 16 games, Cronin was Heinie Manush, another big gun in ed pitching trouble again as the error to score the winning run in the Athletics, who hammered out eight runs 9-17, victory over the Detroit Tigers. Reds, 4 to 0, behind the five-hit pitching Phillies behind. . B victory, 9-0 s e American Association. Milwaukee, 4; St. Paul, 3. Indianapolis, 10; Louisville, 4. Minneapolis, 1, Kansas City, 0. Southern Association. Atlanta, 3; Birmingham, 2. Nashville, 10; Chattanooga, 9. Knoxville, 2; New Orleans, 1. Memphis, 4; Little Rock, 1. Pacific Coast. Los Angeles, 5; Hollywood, 2. San Francisco, 4; Missions, 3. Seattle, 6; Portland, 0. Sacramento, 15; Oakland, 9. Western. 8t. Joseph, 4;. Springfield, 3. Jeplin, 14; Topeka, 4. Des Moines, 4; Muskogee, 3. Hutchinson, 13; Omaha, 10. Texas League. Dallas, 10; Fort Worth, 7. Tulsa, 9; Beaumont, 1. San Antonio, 5: Oklahoma City, 2. Houston at Galveston, rain. New York-Pennsylvania. Harrisburg, 5-1; Elmira, 4-4. Reading. 4-4; Scranton, 3-3. Wilkes-Barre, 4-6; Williamsport, 2-1. Binghamton, 4-3; York, 2-0. OYLAKE, battlefield of the cur- | rent British amateur golf | championship, gave sport one | of its greatest characters—one | of its greatest competitors. i The name is John Ball—John Ball | of Hoylake. For the first time in more | than 40 years a Hoylake champicnship misses the presence of this great vet- | eran. ! John Ball won the British amateur | eight times. He also won the British | open. He won his first championship | in 1888 and 24 years later, n 1912, he | won his last. Twenty-fcur years be- | tween championships. | John Ball used the old-fashioned | two-handed grip of golf, but the game | has known few straighter hitters. He owns a small hotel right off Hoy- | |lake. Here he has his garden, In cne championship he had reached the final round and the start was scheduled for 10 am. At 9:50 he was working in | his garden, having forgotten about the | match. Friends hurried him to the first tee. He met Abe Mitchell in the British amateur just before Abe turned pro. Mitchell sank a good putt on the elev- enth green to become 3 up—3 up and 7 to play. Mitchell expected to see him crack from this thrust. “How do we stand, Abe?” John Ball asked. “Are you up—or am I up?” Ball didn't know or care. It was Mitchell who cracked after this. John Ball used nothing like a nib- lick or a mashie niblick. He recovered from deep bunkers with a mashie or a midiron. He won a small bet from Jerry Travers by getting closer to the cup from a bunker with a midiron than Jerry could get with his niblick. It was a deep bunker just off the freen Some one him a niblick once just before stai the final round of the championship at 36 holes. He for- got about it until the 36th hole, where | the match was all square. He used it for the first time there and lost the | hole. And title, and it never bothered | him a bit. i A game of golf to John Ball was just a game of golf—and no championship | could make it anything else. The Law of the Game. F the old law of the game works out, | Carnera, broke, will have a psycho- | logical edge on Sharkey, who is| well fixed. “You can't afford to lose when you're . })ur:;eg.”mbteex;pse{ Innce said. “When . st started out I was kn Hogme runsl—;l(]eln, Phillies, 13; Ber- more than once and there O;Ef'g ?m ger, Braves, 12. when I wanted to sta; A Prsh;l‘enc bfld.iesTMnll;tlr‘;).s C(a}\;dh:uls, 9; |1 had to eat—I h.ldy :(;I ;};%eflq:l'pfiz;j isch, Cardinals; Davis, Giants, and |to sleep in- Full!s,hPhxllles. 8. up_an win.'so F bk Pitching—Hallahan, Cardinals, 9-2: | Carnera’s rcentage of Carleton, Cardinals, and Cantwell, purse will be ‘:l’e;!ll], "llgd that str}:llill g:’!(':‘ Braves, 9-3. { will be pretty well carved up. Major Leaders By the Assoclated Press. (Including yesterday's games.) American League. | Batting—Simmons, White Sox, .367; | Chapman, Yankees, .365. | Runs—Gehrig, Yankees, 60; Foxx,| Athletics, 52, 3 Runs batted in—Gehrig, Yankees, 61; Simmons, White Sox, 57. Hits—Manush, Senators, 95; Sim- | mons, White Sox, 92. Doubles—Cronin, Senators, 22; Sewell, Senators, 20. Triples—Combs, Yankees, 10; Man- ush, Senators, 7. Home runs— Gehrig, Yankees, 17; Ruth, Yankees, and Foxx, Athletics, 15. Stolen bases — Walker, Tigers, 14; Chapman, Yankees, 10. Pitching—Hildebrand, Indians, Crow- | d(e)r.4 Senators, and Marberry, Tigers, | 10-4, Nationa] League. Batting—Klein, Phillies, .361; Martin, | Cardinals, .349. i Runs—Martin, 53; Bar- tell, Phillies, 43, | Runs batted in—Klein, Phillies, 56; | Bottomley, Reds, 44 | Hits—Fullis, Phillies, 94; Klein, Phil- | lies, 92. i Doubles—Klein, Phillies, 21; Med- wick, Cardinals, 19. Triples—Martin, Cardinals, 8; P. Waner and Suhr, Pirates, Cardinals, | | Major League Statistics FRIDAY, JUNE 23, 1933. AMERICAN YESTERDAY'S RESULTS. Washington, 11; Chicago, 4. St. Louis, 5; New York. 4 Philadelphia, 11: Cleveiand, 6. 9; Detroit, 7 (10 innings). HEEIR 5 NATIONAL YESTERDAY'S RESULTS. Cincinnati, 0. Pittsburgh, 0. [T PTAiapeTIud -a3wju9013g] qanasIiidl | widipvTId asviuads0dl *“puiuaq Saup! GAMES TOMORROW. Wash at Chicago. . N. York at 8t. Lot GAMES TODAY. Wash. at Chicago. N York at St. L. (2) GAMES TODAY. GAMES TOMORROW. | St. Louis at Phila. St L. at Phila (3) Cincin, at New York..Cincin. at New Yo Tk a ul Phila. at Cleveland. ton At Detzoit. Phila. at Cleveland, k. | Pitts. at Pitts. at Brooklyn (2), ‘Boston 'at Detzait, fako &% Bostons Brooklyn. At Boston, THE SPORTLIGHT BY GRANTLAND RICE, He has seen the better part of $300,- 000 fade into the fog of chance. Every punch he has thrown for three years has been thrown in vain, financially. This next fight may mean obscurity and poverty, or fame and wealth. For as a champion he can make | enough for a match with Max Baer alone to have all the lira an Italian squire might need for a long time. Street’s Prediction. PLAYED base ball against Gabby Street at Kuptsville, Ala., not so long after Gen. Forrest disbanded his_cavalry. Gabby was full of pep then, and he is full of pep now. He believes the Cardinals are going to outstep the Giants, Cubs and Pirates for two cardi- nal reasons—the two main base ball fundamentals, pitching and the punch, “We should get a better average of pitching and hitting for the rest of the season than any other team,” he says. “Our fielding defense is good enough also, but good pitching, day in and day out, plus run-making ability on attack, tells the story. “Base ball is half attack and half defense, We have both departments ready for the big Summer drive—for the hot route that leads from July Fourth to the stretch. We also have our share of youth, and that won't hurt either through the heat of July and August.” Meanwhile, the all-certain triumph of the Yankees has hit a snag. For one thing, the Vernon Gomez of 1933 is not the Vernon Gomez of 1932. And this applies to several others. But ] | the Yankees' potential power s still there, and the squad should snap out of it before long. In any event there will be no run- away—no 1932 stampede. . About Relaxation. * N observer from the sidelines wants important in golf than in other sports. One answer is that relaxation, or re- laxed effort, comes more naturally to other sports than it comes to golf. Motion is the enemy of tension. You | have this in tennis, foot ball, base ball, hockey, etc. You don’t have it in golf. There always is a tendency toward tension motion ends. This is what happens when one comes up to play a golf shot: With motion concluded, the tighten- ing process arrives in a hurry unless it is carefully watched. It arrives in the form of a tighter grip, a muscular tightening of legs and arms and back. This all tends to prevent freedom of movement, ease of effort. It leads to a hurried back swing—to hitting too quickly, even before the back swing is finished—to lurching motions and to head lifting. Most of the faults in golf are the result of tension. This is clearly shown when the average player swings at a dandelion bloom in place of a golf ball. (Copyright. 1933, by North American News- paper Alliance, Inc.) SEraEt e B TIGER CREW TO SAIL. PRINCETON, N. J, June 23.— sail on the Olympic of the White. Star Line tonight ‘to race in the Thames Challenge Cup of the Royal Henley Regatta, to be held in England July 5-8. This Sale of 3.35 keeps growing in merited popularity i All-W hite Wing Tippers Among the many “hot” favorites in thissale. Get ‘em tomorrow at $3.35 only ...... Dor’t delay! Men’s Shops 14th at G 7th & K Nights to know why relaxation is more | 55 when one comes to a standstill and | Fres Princeton’s varsity 150-pound crew will | Dins: *3212 14th BY HUGH S. FULLERTON, JR., HE might behind their own bats plus the difficulties the New York Yankees have finally have pulled the Washing- ton Senators into a tie with the world ch: ions for the Ameri- Continuing their terrific clouting, the Senators defeated the Chicago White Sox yesterday, 11-4, while the Yankees Louis Browns, and moved into a first place deadlock at 37 victories and 23 defeats. It marked only the third time prived of sole possession of the lead. The Senators’ victory was their tenth in 11 games in a winning spurt that has | batting rampage and with the Yankees troublesome tour. On June 8, when the Yanks began the trip which has resulted batting only .303. Yesterday he again set the pace for his team with four singles and lifted his average to .343. ‘Washington’s rush, carried his streak of consecutive hitting through 25 games. 'HE Yankees, meanwhile, encounter- last-place Browns hammered Walter Brown and then bunched a of hits off Danny MacPayden with a costly e pale icago’s defeat droj the hose into fifth place, a p’g;‘: behind the in the fifth inning and defeated the third-place Cleveland Indians, 11-6. The Boston Red Sox scored a 10-inning, ‘The pressure on thé New York Gianits, National League leaders, was eased a trifle when they shut out the Cincinnati of o“Ces!}‘1 Hubbell, while the smote the St. Louls- Cardinals, 9 to 3, to leave the Cards a game and a half Ray Benge pitched the Brooklyn Dodgers into fifth place in the elder circuit, holding the Pittsburgh Pirates to four hits to | SOCKS FOR THE SOX | WASHINGTON. Myer. = Orm o DL D1 Sotmmas B o e 50 § P O PR ormissossM m so50mmmorE o0 o980 eving, *Sulliva Faber. TWebb Gregory, Totals .. *Batted for Heving in sixth. tBatted for Faber in eighth. Washington.. 3 0 1 0 3 0 0 0 4—11 Chicago...... 1 0000120 0—4 Runs batted in—Cronin (2), Harris (2), Schulte. Kuhel (2), Bluege (2), Sewell, Sim- mons. Appling., Dykes (2). Two-base hits —Sewell. Hayes. Simmons. Sacrifices—Myer, Harrls (2), Crowder (2). Russell Double plays—Mever to Cronin o uhel. Left Chicago, 10. P. a in 4% innings; off Russel off Heving. 2 in 13 in- 1 in 2 mnlnr: off Greg- Hit by pitched ball— by Crowder (Simmons). Losing pitchet r. Owens. “Hahn Specials” For men don’t ordinarily expect end-o’-season prices on shoes like these—at very beginning of Sum- mer! 20 smart sports and 15 dress styles—included. | Punched Through for Coolness! Air-conditioned shoe —white, black trim; beige, tan trim—an- other “Ha Cha” lt$3.35 i only ...... l

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