— Base Ball, Wrestling l "Part 5—4 Pages he ‘WASHINGTON, D. C, SPORTS SECTION Sunday Star SUNDAY MORNING, JULY 30, 1933. Nats Win 11-5, Go 3-Up on Yanks : French Beat Weakened English Doubles Team 20,000 WATCH CROWDER BLANK NEW YORKS UNTIL - RUTH HOMERS IN EIGHTH General Gives Up Only Six Hits—Allen, Wild, Slammed for Victory—Two Other Hurlers Pummeled. BY JOHN B. KELLER. D ETERMINED to make other American League clubs in general and the Yankees in particular realize what serious designs they have on the pennant,-the Nationals packed their best into yesterday’s ball game to give the 20,000 cash customers fi Griffith Stadium plenty to cheer about. And also to give the Yanks the ninth beating in their dozen meetings with them this season. The Capital clubmen rifled a dozen hits for the sharpest attack in their last nine games. was of high order. ston over the Yanks in the half-completed four-game set. Their hurling, cared for by Al Crowder, The 11-to-5 victory was their second in succes- It in- creased to three full games the Nationals’ league-leading margin over their arch-rivals. But for the irrepressible Babe Ruth it might well have been a shutout for the blusterin% two were out in the eight! band from the Bronx. inning did the Clan McCarthy find the Not until after plate. Then the Bambino lunged at a pitch to send the ball sailing over the garden wall. Two were on the runway to ride home on Ruth’s big blow that ran to 305 the total of consecutive league games the Yankees have gone through without being blanked. The scoring that re- sulted from the big fellow’s twenty-fifth circuit clout so heartened the Yanks they picked up two more tallies in the ninth. ‘They had been well walloped, though, before these late rallies were staged. Before these last two innings, the kees had been well-nigh helpless before Crowder. They opened against thHe General briskly enough, cracking IMm for a brace of singles in the first iining. From then until the eighth, though, he yielded nothing more than gg_e walk. Two other Yanks managed get on the runway over this stretch, but both were put there by errors |Kuhel 1 charged to Joe Cronin. _After getting the first two up in the eighth out of the way, Crowder faltered to issue a pass and be nicked for a hit. en came Ruth’s big bust. shutout chance swept aside and his lead so_commanding, the General did not | o1l overly hard in the ninth, so there ‘Was more swatting by the New Yorkers. In all, they combed Crowder for no more than six safeties and three bases on balls, which lines up as a pretty plece of pitching against such a pack of hurler hecklers. Give Allen Third Beating. OHNNY ALLEN, the sharp-tempered chucker from the Carolina hills and leader of the moundsmen of his league, was the main victim of the flashy Washington offensive. He was reached for nine hits, among them three doubles and a triple, and was even wilder than the four passes he allowed _inmhis less than seven innings on the hill. In handing Johnny his third defeat of the season the Nationals had five Tuns to their credit after three rounds of rapping his wares. Two of passes had been converted into tallies. Becoming wilder as the game progressed, Allen finally clogged the bases with cne out in the seventh, then turned the pitching business over to Danny Mac- Fayden. The bespectacled Danny was promptly thumped to clear the runway, then the Nationals turned on Charley Devens, who came up to the Yanks from Boston’s Back Bay section by way of Harvard, in the eighth for an- other lot of free scoring as a parting gesture., E Thumping Day for Kuhel. JOE KUHEL was the most irritating thorn in the collective sides of the ¢ <Yankee slabmen. He rammed a triple, a double and a single to drive 4cross four runs and tote one over. But Buddy Myer with a brace of two-bag- ers did plenty to harass the enemy urlers. And after his first trip to the plate, they couldn't keep Fred Schulte off the bases. He collected & single and three walks, which enabled him to register at the counting block three times and tie Myer for scoring Ronors. : Washington did not wait long to find the plate. A pass to Myer that opened the home side’s first batting turn led to a tally. Following the walk, Goslin umped a single to left, sending Buddy third. The score got over as Cronin was thrown out. © Kuhel's two-bagger shot down the feft-iicld line at the outset of the second inning was wasted by the Na- ;)ionnls, but they gave Allen a four- it thumping and accumulated four funs in the third. * Myer began the attack by lining a double to right center, and he scamp- ered home as Goslin larruped a single to the right of Gehrig. After Manush 3nd Cronin were disposed of, Schulte walked and rode home with the Goose én Kuhel's triple. Bluege's double skidded by the sluggish Joe Sewell shoved across the fourth marker of the found. Tuck Away Game in Seventh. NFIELD singles by Cronin and Schulte did the Nationals no good in the fifth, but they got to Allen #gain in the seventh to fill the bases and before MacFayden could get them Qut three runs went over. As it turned Qut, this settled the game. - Goslin walked, only to be forced out, but Cronin singled and a pass to Schulte had all corners crowded with Cronin- fnen. It was here that MacFayden took éver the Yankee pitching to be smacked by Kuhel for a single that chased in two scores and moved Schulte to third. | Gostin."rt” | Manush, 1" With the | ¢ (Continued on Second Page.) Outgeneraled tRufing . WIN OVER BENGALS COSTLY TO INDIANS Brown’s 1-0 Victory Offset by Serious Spiking of ‘4 ,Knickerbocker. By the Associated Press. LEVELAND, July 29.— Clint Brown not only blanked the Detroit Tigers with seven hits today but scampered home with the winning run on a single by Johnny Oulliber as the Cleveland. Indians marked up their fifth straight victory today, 1 to 0. Carl Fischer was the losing pitcher. ‘The victory placed Cleveland in a virtual tie with the third-place Phila- delphia Athletics, who lost to Boston, but it was a costly one. Shortstop Bill Knickerbocker of the Tribe was badly spiked by First Baseman Harry Davis of the Tigers in his haste to start a double play and will be out of the game at least two weeks, breaking up the Indians’ best winning combination of the season. 3 Detroit. AB. Davis.1b.. 4 Totals. .30 Score by innings: Detroit 000000086 0—0 V000010 x—1 | . _Error—Owen. Run ba | in—Oulliber. Two-base hfl—OIlul.n Sitien | base—Porter. Double plays—Hale, erbocker and Boss: Gehringer and Da: Run—Brown, Totals . g *Betted for MacFayden in eighth inning. tBatted for Devens in ninth inning. Myer. 2b Cronin, 'ss Schulte, cf uhel, Bluege, 3b . L. Seweli, ¢ Crowder, p Totals . New York Washington F] PPN 5; Washington, 8. 4; off Devens. 2 All MacFayden. ing: vens, 2 in 1 inning. pitcher— Allen. ' Umpires—Messrs. Geisel, Summers and Moriarity, Time of game—: hours and 10 minutes. vis. Left on bases—Detroit. 6; Cleveland, 7. Bases on ball er, Btruck’ out —By Brown, 1; by Fischer. Umpires— Messrs. Dineen. Hildebrand and Kolls. Time of game—1 hour and 41 minutes. CELTICS SEEK REVENGE : Play Front Royals at Baggett's , Field, Alexandria, Today. ALEXANDRIA, Va, July 29.—St. 1|Mary’s Celtics will engage the Front | Royal All-Stars on Baggett's Field here . | tomorrow afternoon at 3 o'clock in one - | of the big games of the season for both | nines. Early in the campaign the Front ff | Royal bunch handed the Alexandrians a 14-1 lacing and the latter will be out i | to_even scores. Doc Dreifus or Lefty Scrivener will pitch for the Celts, with Larry Boerner hurling for Front Royal. Whitehill, Gomez Are Slated % For Southpaw % As k. 4 BY JOHN B. KELLER. ¥ OOKS like a left-hander will score I ; @ win this afternoon in Griffith Stadium when Nationals and Yankees hook up in the third number of their knock - down - and - drag-out sketch. Manager Cronin has nomi- nated Earl Whitehill as the home side’s hurler in the pastiming. Manager Mc- Carthy is expected to turn to Vernon Gomez for the New York end of the mound work. ‘Whitehill has opened fire against the Yanks three times this season. Gomez has started against the Nationals as many. But the Earl of Cedar Rapids has an edge on the Castilian curver in the tussling. Earl has licked the Yanks once and been licked by them once. Vernon :‘i: bowed to the Nationals three es. ‘Will Harridge will have another look at his league’s prize ball clubs in action today, then hustle back to the presi- denting business in Chicago. The Na- tionals wouldn't mind if the league prexy hung around them all the time. Will brings them luck, they say. He has watched them score their last five wins. In fact, he hasn't seen the Nationals in a losing game this season, Homer Babe’s First Here. ABE RUTH has hit three home Tuns off Washington pitchers this season, but yesterday’s was his first in Griffith Stadium. He doesn’t swat many four-basers in the Nationals’ park. It's quite a carry to the top of | insids the right-fleld fence, even for such a mighty hitter as the Bambino, Allen was plenty wild as he walked Myer after latter had fouled off two for strikes in the first inning. The fourth ball was a high and handsome chuck that salled merrily over the catcher: But_Allen probably kept an error from Chaj later in the round when he backe ugllor a flashy grab of a throw that d _soared by the third baseman. The heave was meant” to cut down. Myer, going from first to third on Goslin’s hit to left. Had Johnny not checked it, Myer very likely would have scored. got an error in the second Frounder glance off his pands and o grounder glance of an over his head. But two were out and right afterward Kuhel snared Allen’s hot one and beat the fieet pitcher to first. Slab Quarrel Griffs, Yanks Tilt Today Combs Gets One, Then Misses. N the third Combs ran back for & sparkling catch of Cronin's well meant drive, but he couldn't quite get to Kuhel’s slam later in the in- ning. It brushed by the center fielder’s outstretched hand to become a triple, sending in two tallies. Just as he was about to throw, after picking up Chapman’s smash in the fourth, Cronin let the ball fall from his hand and was charged with error No. 2. It was a strictly Schulte inning, the fifth. Gus the Dutchman got under lofts from Dickey and Crosetti nicely, then snagged Allen’s liner. In the Nationals’ fifth turn at bat, Cronin and Schulte nicked Allen for infleld hits. Only a flashy one-hand stop by Crosetti kept Cronin’s drive from rolling far into left field. Crowder made Gehrig look foolish in the sixth, pushing up a slow one that Lou let pass for a third strike. It was only the third pitch to the Yank, too, for Gehrig had fouled off one after taking a strike, _ _ Luke Meant Well, Anywa; i\ UKE SEWELL put plenty drive at the beginning of the home sixth, rifling the ball to- 1‘“&, - left. But Crosetti leaped to drag own. for MacFayden in the eighth and be- feebly going after a slow one low and e. In the Nationals’ eighth, Schulte did a tall bit of running to get home from first base, when Dickey overthrew first trying for a double-play. that Gehrig_appeared in no hurry Te- trieve the ball, Fred put on extra and made the plate easily. It was no day for Yankee pinch- batters. Ruffing tried to do something with Devens’ bat in the ninth and, like ‘Walker in the preceding round, fanned. BEATS SWIMMING ' MARK PORTLAND, July 29 (#).—Jack Me- dica o fthe Washington Athletic Club bettered a national outdoor swimming record here today when he did the 1,000 yards in 11:37 2-5, in the Pacific | Northwest 1933 championships. Medica who holds the national out- door records in the 440 and 880 yard events, cut 47 3-5 seconds from the time of Buster Crabbe of Hollywood, ‘who held the previous record of 12:25. Allen So Wild Umps Can’t Spot “Beaner” High, Inside Pitches Make Several of Griffs Duck—Schacht Craves Shoes. HEN is a pitch a “bean ball’? The Nationals were asking one another this in their club house - yesterday after the game, but there . was no satisfactory reply. . Several insisted that Johnny : Allen, the New York hurler, had + deliberately thrown at them during {the fray in violation of the rule - against use of the “beaner.” They - claimed the umpires were lax in . not at least warning the pitcher . against employing such chucks. . 'The rule specifies that the um- pire should caution a hurler to fore- throwing at a batter at the first gnc of l‘."be-n btlh;md lltmth; warning is ignored um| empowered to banish the o{mlu the game, But Allen was so wild all the way, the umpire really had ! ; % E E 13 i 2§ g ¥ ez | g 2 i ; *E E) y. into his | Eh " Young Dixie Walker went up to bat | &eew came & strikeout victim. He swung out | $3 RED SOX GIVE GROVE SECOND LOSS IN ROW| Bob Johnson’s Homer Is Only Score Off Pipgras—A's Outfielders Idle. By the Associated Press. OSTON, July 29.—The Boston Red Sox handed Bob “Lefty” Grove his second straight defeat today downing the Philadelphia Athletics, to 1. Eight of the Sox’s 13 hits were made off Grove in the six innings he toiled under a blazing sun. He was re- moved for a pinch hitter at this point, and Cain, who took up the burden, al- lowed five hits and four runs in the two last sessions. The A’s only scoring blow off Pipgras ‘was made in the second by Rob John- son. His mighty four-base clout cleared the left center field fence. ‘The Athletics’ outfielders established some kind of a record when they failed to accept a single fielding chance dur- ing the game. in 8 > | ssomnmnscsson? Boston. Werbe PN B 2umsslaond JasE i 21 o253 Totals 331327 9 *Batted for Grove In seventh inning. tBasted for Cain in ninth inning. : Philadelphia .010000000—i Boston ....... 00112004 x—8 Runs batted in—Rob Johnson. Roy Joh son (3), Jolley (2), Ferrell, Seeds. Pivg Runs—Rob Johnson, Werber, Cooke Roy Johnson (2). ifmn. Jolley, Pipgra: Two-base hits—McNair, Werber, Roy John. son. Ferrell. Jolley. Seeds. Three-base hit— Jolley. Home run—Bob Johnson. _Stolen ases — Cooke _ (2). Walters' () Ferrell, - Doubl R & n;.é-—fio iladelphia, Pirst | balls—Oft _Gro T . 6 1n 2 in- Umpires— nd McGowan. Time of e ‘minutes. Ormsby _ai game—1 hour and 58 HEYDLER SIGNS UMPIRE Jack Powell Joins National Loop After Long Coast Stretch. NEW YORK, July 29 UP.—John A. R , Announ y the :&flukmfllo{mmluwhh of umj 3 Powell has had long service in the Pacific Coast e. He also umpired in the International and at one time had a trial in the National League. WEETAMOE KEEPS TROPHY g Trims Vanitle Second Day in Bow |Foac in Newport Yacht Races. NEWPORT, R. I, July - ‘Weetamore retained possession of the Constellation , offered by Arthur Curtis James, by defeating Vanitie for the second time today in two days & 29-mile course. Weetamoe, owned of Boston a STILL GOAT-GETTING: —By TOM DOERER FOR SEVEM AND TWO-THIRD INNINGS CROWDER RAN THE GoAT SCORELESS - PLENTY HORSE SHOES . For CRONIN ON ~us ERRORS CROPPERS - o OF ‘em,Now (¢ Back Stage in Sports Cronin’s Smile a Mask—Joe Sharp Observer, With Keen Memory—Engel Praises Campbell. BY TOM DOERER. R. JOE CRONIN, the sparky kid pilot of the Grand Nationals, is a perfectly balanced young man. At times he gives the impression that he is bubbling over with un- controlled enthusiasm. At other moments he is a very tight-lipped sophisticate. And he never forgets: Dick Vidmer, a New York writer, met Cronin but once. That was a year ago in New York in a hurried introduction. Yes- terday Dick strolled into the club house and Joe shouted his name, shook hands and recalled how they met. Cronin permits details to sink in when he is gesticulating, painting pic- tures of pennants, and apparently only interested in his dreams. You must know Mr. Cronin to- Bef the next diamond season pops Into being, it is the impression among insiders, this popular Cronin grin which even is captivating the enemy players, will have been uncov- ered. e 22) 29 s BuonBrormS %! PSRN 3454 o _ssco 20805 ERERE on Lon o 2 RN SR T s - OH200000ERDOONIRHRS SN Ro= s, .'55222'2!325'&’ £3 S2BaRREYS = cuprnonnatolBuBili 02 & ©O0COOOHCNOUNDBNENIDI L onsommraiBol H g £ ¥ | PR '§' I o 1 63 4 ] & &2 G AB. R H 95 3,438 547 1,027 1 S B3 5" i g & & BB 83 Q Fonontnund -] m rara casumtst wumaamet 5 : 2 oiggse] s ;8388 »Easkasty ~2u5gaRs > »22% & o) eRom: While players are smiling with, and at Mr. Cronin, the young man has been doing very little smiling back in the recesses of his cranium. The Cro- nin smile is a mask for the deeper things, like pennants, as, the boys say, will be disclosed later. Mr. Cronin is ever on guard against the interviewer. He is as cagey as Mr. Will Harridge, the league’s prery. But he goes 'Brother Bill one better by giving the questioner the impression that he is telling all, including how Aunt Kate got the earache. Interviewed the other day by Deniel Daniels, a New York writer, Cronin gave the impressi greatly feared the Yank power plant. “I would be a sucker to predict a pen- nant for the Griffs at this time with the great Yank power plant to beat.” Mr. Cronin must have been cause to a Washington scribe he the Senators certainly did not fear the Yanks and pointed to the 9 victories out of 12 games to prove the truth. Mr. Cronin is the wisest young man in base ball. And he has signed for the 1934 season. You can bet on that. Cronins do not come along in base ball every other rainy season. EITHER do Babe Ruths. The|H Bam is beyond doubt the great- est money player the game has ever seen, or will ever see. Give him the occasion, make the setting a cost- ly one, and Babe will deliver on time. He is the customers’ man. At the dream -game in Chi he delivered to an| expectant trade. And yesterday he re- peated when a Yank shutoutless rec- ord, on the books since August 15, 1931, ‘was at stake. OE ENGEL, Griff’s ivory tracker and major domo of the Chatta- nooga ball club of the Southern Association—a Washington subdivision —says there isn’t a likely-looking base ball pitcher in the International League. Joe has just returned from & jaunt through that circuit. He says Johnny Campbell, the new Nat hurler, though % | & much-beaten pitcher, is the best he 3 | saw on his trip. on that the Nationals | Shea.c SCTHULTE PLANED DowAL AT THE ONUMENT WHEN BAM CAME To BAT... HORNSBY IS WINNER IN BOW AS BROWN Debut at St. Louis Success, Late Rally Defeating White Sox, 3-2. By the Assoolated Press. | £~VHICAGO, July 29—Rogers Horns- by’s debut as an American manager was a success today as St. Louis Browns came from behind | to defeat the Chicago White Sox, 3 to 2, in the first game of their series. ‘The Sox led, 2 to 1, going into the eighth, when, with the aid of errors by Luke Appling and Al Simmons, two unearned runs gave the Brownies vic- 3 _ T Suusmmmob Snoormumsssn ooumwaHRSS0 cuunsmoosmE® ° cooohucmRD: ® Totals 34 82713 *Batted for Grube in eighth inning. {Batied for Miller in ninth \nnine. y innings: Score St. Louis 0001000203 0011 0—2 o Chicago ... 0000 Runs_—Reynolds. Campbell, Gullic. Swan bie ‘plays—Burns fo m‘fm_fitmu-"fl? (S e g ot Ry Bases on balls—Off Gray. 5: 6ff SE T2 By Miler 4 it OF Gray. s innings: off Hadley 0 in % inning. R Gratan and Owens. fi. o eame 2 hours and 19 minutes. 5 ‘WESTFIELD, N. J., July 29 (#).—J. Gilbert Hall of Orange defeat>d Ralph McElvenney of New York, 6—3, 6—4, today in the semi-finals of the North Jersey tennis championship and will play Donald Hawley of West Orange tomorrow for the title. Hawley reached the final by defeat- ing the No. 2 seeded Frank Bowden of New York, 0—6, 6—4, 6—4. Hall is seeded No. 1. LEE SUBSTITUTES T0 FRESHEN PERRY Borotra Bitterly Criticized for Passing Up Singles. Champs’ Hope Fades. BY MELVIN WHITELEATHER, Associated Press Staff Writer. UTEUIL, France, July 29.— The French veterans, Jac- ques Brugnon and Jean Borotra, pulled the doubles out of the Davis Cup fire today with a straight-set victory over H. G. N. Lee and George Patrick Hughes, but England remained confident of gaining the deciding victory in the singles tomorrow. In order to have the British singles ace as fit and rested as possible, Pred- erick J. Perry was replaced by Lee in the doubles. England, relying upon her individual guns, was content to let today's play take the expected course and the result, decided by scores of 6—3, 8—6, 6—2 in faver of the Frenchmen, was fore gone almcst from the outset.. The British pair threatened only in the second set. Perry, who delivered the vital thrust yesterday by conquering Henri Cochet in a five-set battle, and then fainted in the club house, was feeling fit again today, but well satisfied to rest. The 24-year-old English No. 1 star is picked to settle the issue tomorrow against Andre Merlin, French newcomer to Davis Cup competition. Merlin was easily beaten by Henry W, (Bunny) Austin, Friday. Austin Even Bet. \RANCE would have to sweep both singles matches tomorrow to keep the cup. There still is some hope the miracle of a double victory can be achieved, but the experts feel England has the better chance to score another sweep. Austin’s sensational ‘ennis against America as well as France indicates he will have at least an even chance of over throwing Cochet. Merlin worked out for some time this afternoon, between the showers that delayed the doubles match. The French youngster ignored a bystander who asked jokingly if there was any chance he would fall ill overnight referring thereby to the possibility of submitting Borotra for Merlin if the latter was physically unable to con- tinue play. Only illness or injury can change the singles line-up. Borotra was not sufficiently steady today, however, to warrant much hope that he could repeat his heroic come- back of 1932, even if he had the chance in the singles. The “bcunding Basque” was erratic .and it was Brugnon's hard-hitting steadiness that clinched the first French triumph. Nevertheless French comment showed some bitter- ness over Borotra’s previous decision not to play in the singles. Cochet Likely to Visit U. 8. ENSITIVE of this, the Basque told the Associated Press after the match that he and Brugnon put on pressure to end the match quickly, explaining that he no longer felt him- self able to play first-rate tennis over the five-set route. Cochet is understood to have been engaged to represent a wine company in the United States and expects to play in the American national singles championship at Forest Hills, this Sep- tember. despite an avowal last Fall that he would never return. Henri re- fused to discuss reports he woud turn professional later and possibly join Big Bill Tilden in an exhibition tour. Cochet was critical last September of the arrangements at Forest Hills that compelled him to play off the fifth set of his semi-final match ‘with Wilmer Allison on Saturday morning and then face Ellsworth Vines in the final round that afternoon Vines beat the French- man in straight sets. Minor Leagues Internationa:. Baltimore, 14; Montreal, 8. Albany, 2; Buffalo. 1. Newark, 5; Rochester, 4. ‘Toronto, 6; Jersey City, 5. American Association. Columbus, 4; Toledo, 3. Kansas City, 22; St. Paul, 1. Milwaukee, 14; Minneapolis, 6. (Called end of eighth by agreement.) Louisville, 5; Indianapolis, 0. Southern Association. Birmingham, 2; Chattanooga, 0. Nashville, 7; New Orleans, 2. Memphis, 6; Knoxville, 5. Atlanta at Little Rock, wet grounds. Pacific Coast. San Francisco, 3; Oakland, 1. Los Angeles. 6; Sacramento, 1. ‘Texas. Dallas, 6; Fort Worth, 4. New York-Pennsylvania. glk-n.m. 161 Scranton, 0 . 8t. Joseph, 6; Joplin, 5. Springheld, 207 Topeka, 10, SATURDAY, JULY 29, 1933. AMERICAN 'YESTERDAY'S RESULTS. w-u;.fzu;nl.-n, m'; Yorx. 8. STANDING OF THE CLUBS. Wahi—I 91 91101 71 8l 8110/611331.6491. NATIONAL YESTERDAY'S RESULTS. klyn. 12-14; Philadelphis ire Gheimaars B4 T_01121101571361.8131 . N_Y.| 8I— 01101 9| 9168I361.617| 11 81 71 6] Pifta.| 5-—1 7/ 81 71 8 9110154/431.6571 Clev.| 41 5I—I_4¢' 9110/ 9| 8]49/50/.495/114% LI_5I_3110i—! 7| 7| 5110/47|481.495/14% Oni.1 71 9l—] 5I111 8| 81 5I531441.546 6 8t. LT 81 41 8i—I 51 9] 01050145.526] & Det.| 6] 41S| 6|—I 61 8I11146/511.474116% Bost.| 7| 71 5/10—I Gl 4] 847/401.4901117% Bost.| 4| 51 5| 7| 8i—| 9| 5!43/51].458118 26117 1 Chi.i 61 51 71 8| 5| 21—I10/43152|.453118%; 24117% St.L.| 5| 5| 5| 4| 6| 8] 4/—I37/631.370/27 Lost.133136/50148(51151152 1! m ,:rl'. GAMES TOMORROW. FeiBss, s o, 8t. Louis Detroit at Cin..| 41 61 1 41 6] 4 8/—41|A7| 418118" Lost. 561434 ABHOBAIBIET—I—i ‘ifi GAMES TOMORROW.