Evening Star Newspaper, June 4, 1935, Page 10

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The Foening Stad Fporis A—10 WASHINGTON, D. C., TUESDAY, JUNE 4, 1935. Unwanted, Ruth Admits He Is “Through”: “Fire” Nats’ Need, Griff Convinced BABE'S FADEOUT HELD COMPLETE Ignored by Majors, He Now Would Buy From Braves His “Last” Unifornl. BY EDWARD J. NEIL. Associated Press Sports Wri'er. EW YORK, June 4—A seeth- ing mountain of & man was George Herman Ruth today, but all the arguments in the world, all the hot words, bitter recrim- inations that have passed between him and the Boston Braves couldn't hide this epochal line for base ball's history Babe Ruth is all done His final turbulent exchange with Emil Fuchs. president of the Braves, and Bill McKechnie. manager of the club. served todayv only to emphasize the completeness of the passing of the man who for 21 straight years has been making maior league history The Babe admits hes through as a ball player, and it's hardly likely a zingle club in either major league would chance the grief that followed Ruth to Boston, even though he did bring swollen gate receipts along with it. Spurned by Majors. N ASSOCIATED PRESS poll of the big league owners indicates that none have anything but an academic interest in him and his future The Babe nursed his wounds in his apartment. made plans for an ex- tended vacation, and for all the golf he's wanted to play in the Summer time all these years. He went out with the final blast of McKechnie. whom he had taken great pains to defend, ringing in his ears. Since the Babe announced Sunday he was through, during the hot words that whipped back and forth be- tween Ruth and Fuchs, McKechnie kept his peace McKechnie, in a formal statement, #aid yesterday T must state publicly that in justice to the action of Judge Fuchs with ref- erence to Babe Ruth, on Friday and Saturday of last week I pointed out to Judge Fuchs that the main trouble with the ball club was thet it was not able to function properly with Babe Ruth playing the outfield Charged With Wrecking Braves. 'I FRANKLY stated that certain actions of Ruth, while with the | ball club. which I would absolutely forbid with any other member of the club, were responsible for the lack of discipline, and that unless Judge Fuchs could convince Babe Ruth to retire, I was unable to get any real discipline or proper spirit as manifested by the club prior to the acquisition of Ruth from the Yankees this Spring.” That set the Babe roaring afresh. “There’s no basis for that at all.” he thouted. “How could he say a thing like that? Anyway, I'm all washed | up with the outfit and I'm not going to €arry on any more arguments.” When the Babe got home yvesterday, in anything but the triumph that used to greet him, newspaper men awaited him as of old. “I'm glad you're here.” he said. “I'm going to tell you abcut this thing right from the bottom. Then I'm not going to discuss it again. It's bad for base ball. | Helped Fuchs, Says Babe. "TH’E main thing in a nutshell is this. Judge Fuchs got all he eould out of me. He wanted to get rid of me, because he could no longer pay my salary—$25,000 for three years. But he didn't know how he| could go about it. Instead of coming to me and asking me to retire, which I would have done. he starts passing #tories around, trying to force me tn| quit. “I had my first jam with Fuchs.” Ruth . “when I refused to go to a clothing store in Boston and sign 500 tickets the storekeeper agreed to buy for a game if I appeared. We had a hot argument and he called it off. I guess that's what being vice president meant. | “Before we started West on the last trip, I told Fuchs and McKechnie T was through, but they talked about the advance sales cut there, pleaded with me to stay. Fuchs said, ‘if you | quit now I might just as wel' toss in the sponge too. I said, ‘O. K Jjudge, Il go', Knows He Is Through. "“,'E HAD big crowds. I hit three homers in Pittsburgh. It was like old times. I felt great. We got to Cincinnati and the diamond was hard. I hurt my knee. Then in| Philadelphia, Chiozza, their second baseman, hit one to me and before I got it he was crossing the plate. When I saw that I knew I was done. & Play in Japan May Hav. Finished Ruth—Hurt | | Other Stars. BY FRANCIS E. STAN HE BABE, of course, was fin- ished last September when he waved good-by from the Wash- ington dugout and stepped out of the American League. But, giving the Bambino the benefit of the doubt (he was the last to realize he was through), we wonder if Ruth might not have left what little base ball! he still had in his system in Japan. It isn't Ruth's exodus from base ball that alone sponsors the thought. | Strangely, his passing from the Braves is not even the chief reason. Far younger stars than Ruth who barn- stormed the Orient last Winter in- stead of sticking to their hunting and fishing are furnishing food for thought concerning Winter exhibition ball. Lefty Gomez was among the | party of American Leaguers who toured Japan with Ruth | last Wintcr. So was Lou Geh- rig. Earl Whitehill was on the trip. Al Thomas did net ge to Japan, but Tommy barnstormed through Canada. { So what? | Well, look at them today. Recall of “Ambassadors” Likely. (GOMEZ, the best southpaw pitcher in the American League, already | has lost more games today than he' dropped durine the entire 1934 season, He is far behind a .500 percentage to date. Gebrig, leading batter of the junior circuit in 1934, is punching the ball | a la Jack Russell. He is far under a -300 batting mark. SPORTS cgp SLAP AT YANKEES STRIKES MACKMEN Labeled “Hitless Wonders,” | Gothamites Pound Ball to End A’s Streak. BY ANDY CLARKE, Associated Press Sports Writer. HE wags who dubbed the Yan- kees the “hitless wonders” played a mean trick on the Athletics. Rankled by sech a label, the Amer- ican League leaders yesterday vented | their wrath on the boys of Connie Mack, hung up their third straight win and snapped the Athletics’ win-| ning streak at four games. They hammered out nine hits for 18 bases | to chalk up a 7-4 victory, although | the Athletics collected 11 safe blows, including two homers. \ George Blaeholder, who started in the box for Philadelphia, was treated | so0 unkindly that he took refuge in the showers in the sixth inning. Dickey's | home run sent Blaeholder off with his fourth straight defeat since he| went to the Athletics from the Browns. | Start Clouting Early. 'HAT the Yanks went into the game | with dire intentions was evi-| Genced in the first inning when, with two aboard, Lazzeri smacked one to the outer reaches for three bases. In| the second Crosetti whaled a double to account for another tally. The| Yanks got three more in a sixth-in-| ning uprising capped by Dickey's cir- cuit blow, and Ben Chapman hit & Whitehill, best National hurler for triple to send Combs home with the the past -ouple of seasons, is barely | final run in the seventh, with Mahaf- above a .500 percentage. with five gy in the box. wins as against four losses. In 10 jimmy Deshong. who had languished starts he has been able to finish only | o the bench all season, was called three times. into service for the first time. He Thomas. of course. is gone from fared well until the ninth inning. | the Nationals. Al has stopped off | when he passed Foxx to load the in the National League. And NOW | pases with one out. Murphy, who re- Ruth lolls in his New York apartment, | jjeved him. forced Pinky Higgins to out of a job. | hit into a double play. ending the Only Jimmy Foxx. of the prominent ' game ~ The victory increased the Yan- members of the barnstorming cast yees lead to two-and-a-half games. last year, is performing up to par. So what? Nothing, enly next Fall, don’t be surprised if some of the major league club own- ers quietly but firmly say nix to their hirelings playing the part ©of ambassadors to Japan next Winter. Here and There. F CLARK GRIFFITH does bring up an outfielder from Chattanooga soon, he probably will be Dee Miles— not Clyde Marion . . . Miles is hit- ting 356, as against .247 for Mdarion, | who, Griff says, is the best fielding youngster he has seen in yvears . . Dave Harris, the ex-National funny | man, is batting only .293 for At-| lanta in the Southern Association, ac- | cording to latest figures. Bucky Harris has been calling | pre-game meetings . . and | gett'ng snappier every day, ac- | cerding to the boys . . for which you can't blame him, | and the players don’t. ! Fred Sington, who started in left field against the A's in Philadelphia, didn't go to bed the night before the game . that was the night baby bov . . and Fred sat up all Tribe Wins in Fourteenth. IN THE only other game in the Amer- ican League, the Cleveland Indians | waited until the fourteenth innig to unleash an attack that netted seven runs and an_11-4 victory over the downtrodden Browns. In a nip-and-tuck battle, in which the Indians went into a one-run lead in the eleventh only to have the Browns tie it again, Cleveland finally shelled Jack Knott, the fourth Brownie pitcher, off the mound and continued the attack against Bob Weiland. As a final shot, Bruce Campbell hit a homer with the bases loaded In the only National League game, the St. Louis Cardinals, striving to overhaul the speeding Giants, dropped one to the Chicago Cubs, 6-2. It was the Cards’ first defeat in seven games and set them four full games behind their New York brethren. Charlie Root pitched heady ball to hold his club in the first division. | | Sports Mirror | Mrs. Smgwn‘ presented him with a By the Associated Press, ‘Tocday a year ago—United States night, caught an early train, and Olympic Committee deferred accept- hopped into a uniform. stopping only to buy a couple of boxes of stogies. Most of the local writing boys are going to pick Frankie Klick over Canzoneri next Monday . . in spite of Klick's so-so showing in the gymnasium . . . but Klick, according to Manager Ray Carlin, never looks good in the gym. Major Leader§ By the Associated Press. (Including yesterday’s games.) American League. Batting—Johnson Athletics. Foxx, Athletics, .362. Runs—Johnson, Athletics, 38: Bon- ura, White Sox, 32. Runs batted in—Greenberg, Tigers, | 44; Johnson, Athletics, 39. Hits—Johnson, Athletics, 64. Gehr- inger, Tigers, 58. Doubles—Vosmik, Indians, 13- Wer- ber, Red Sox, 12 Triples—Cronin, Red Sox, 6: Vos- mik, Indians, and Stone, Senators, 5. Home runs—Johnson, Athletics, 12; Greenberg, Tigers, 11. Stolen bases—Aimada, Red Sox, 10; Werber, Red Sox, 8. Pitching—Whitehead, White Sox, 8-0; Tamulis, Yankees, 5-0. National. Batting—Vaughan, Pirates, .403; Martin, Cardinals, .391. Runs—Vaughan, Pirates, 39; Mar- tin, Cardinals, 36 | 410; “McKechnie and I got along like | & couple of kids. He phoned me Bunday night and he was almost crying. ‘Don’t believe anything you gec in the papers supposed to be from me. he said. ‘It's a lie’ “He asked me when I was leaving. He came down to see me off. He Waner, Pirates, 6 said he was sorry I was going, that | Home runs—Ott, Giants, 9: John he wished me all the luck in the Moore, Phillies; Vaughan, Pirates, and world. What a guy he turned out Joe Mogqre, Giants, 8. to be” | _Stolen bases—Myers. Reds There's only one thing the Babe Bordagary, Dodgers. 6. would like now from the Braves. Pitching—Parmelee, Giants. 6-1; “I'd like to buy my uniform.” he Castleman, Gianis, and Walker, Car- said. “I guess that’s the last one.” dinals, 5-1. T\’lile Mark Threat Arrives Runs batted in—Medwick, dinals, 37; Vaughan, Pirates, 36. Hits—Vaughan, Pirates, o©5; Waner, Pirates, 64. Doubles—Medwick, Cardinals, Martin, Cardinals, 13. Triples—Goodman, Reds, Car- L. 16; and L. and Lovelock, Who Broké Record Two Years Ago, in Star Field for “Race of Century.” Gene Venzke in Princeton’s special invitation meet, June 15. Lovelock beat Bonthron at Princeton two years ago to set a world record of 4:07.6. Cunning- ham lowered that mark to 4:06.7 in trouncing Bonthron by 40 yards in Princeton's first invitation meet last Summer. Harry Neilsen of Denmark, world record holder for 3.000 meters and entered in the two-mile race at Princeton, is gn here Thursday. B the Associated Press EW YORK, June 4.—Jack today bent on settling the issue of who is the world's The New Zealander. graduate of Oxford, who is completing his versity. will compete in the “mile of a century” against Glenn C. Lovelock was due in town best competitive miler. medical training in London Uni- Cunningham, Bill Bontron and | Indianapolis Victor in Midwest | Chie: ance of invitation to 1936 games, pend- ing visit of President Brundige to Germany, as result of controversy of Jewish issue. Three years ago—John Joseph Me- Graw resigned after 30 years as man- ager of New York Giants and ‘*urned | reins over to Bill Terry Five years ago—Grcver Cleveland | Alexander released unconditionslly by Phillies after failure to make come- | back. Babe Ruth hit homer No. 18. PETILLO RACES SUNDAY Event at Chicago. CHICAGO, June 4 ().—Kelly Petillo, winner of the Indianapolis Speedway 500 - mile race Memorial | day, will return to action in the Mid- west races here Sunday. Petillo has entered the car in which he set a new record for the Indian- apolis classic. League Statistics TUESDAY, JUNE 4, 1935, American YESTERDAY'S RESUITS, 4. and. 11: St. Louis. 4 (11 innings). | Others not scheduled. STANDING OF THE CLUBS. ala @ g T g RN *“NI0X MIN sauwg) ammuaied *purgIq 61 31_3)_21_41221151.5961_215 41_21731 21 7123/161.5901 2% "2 2i—1 31 41_31_4I211181.538| 415 1i—|_31_41_2I201191.5131 515 4174171224361 81, =14 4 St 21 L..!15115/16/18/19!: GAMFS TODAY GAMES TOMNPROW Weh. (3:15). Boston at Wesh. t N.'Y. Phila. a t 8t. L. “Detroit. National YESTERDAY'R RESULTS. Chic: Cleve e BT usnasiid 0% MaN| 1 51 2151 3/_4124161.600/ 4 ' 11 41 5I_6I_4124/191.558| 5% 111" 411911715281 |_5|1_41201191.5131 7% C41161211.432110% | Rice was showered over the Babe by members of a wedding party as he left his hotel in Boston to motor to New York. With him is his mother- in-law, Mrs. Charles Merrit The portrait snows the Bambino as he was questioned by Gotham Ruth, Still Eager to Seeks Solace on Golf Links BY GRANTLAND RICE. EW YORK, June 4—“Get out your golf clubs, kid. I'm ready for you now.” No one could mistake the big voice & THINKS WINNING TALENT ON HAND Doesn’t Even Feel Pitching Staff Inadequate—Denies Trade Is Brewing. BY FRANCIS E. STAN. HE Nationals, sans outside help, will win or else—! In many more words that only thinly veiled his irritation, | President Clark Griffith was intima- | ting an ultimatum to this effect today as the groggy Griffs opened a three- game series with the Red Sox. “It isn't a sixth-place ball club.’ insisted Griffith, “and it hasn't any business losing seven games in & row. I honestly think the team. as it now stands. is potentially a winning one We shouldn’t need new pitchers mor new catchers to win “The Washington club should win even with Buck Newsom out. And if it doesn't start soon I certainly should consider tearing it apart.” Griff doesn't agree with many critics that his hurling staff is inadequate | nor that his catching staff is com- posed of a trio of minor leaguers. His statement was partially in answer | For more than an hour vesterday he was closeted with son-in-law Joo | Cronin, pilot of the Red Sox, but Griff newspaper men about the breach with the Boston Braves that led to his unconditional release and the mob scene is ocular evidence the former home-run king still is an idol to his neighborhood kids and friends, the demonstration being staged on his arrival home yesterday. A. P. Photos. :Sl;o—cked, Disilllisiorted, Manage Club; | that in shape T could do some good. here and there. I know I can build | up and handle a big league ball club. | I get along with the fellows and they get along with me. And that's one | trade I know inside out. If I didn't| think I could make good I'd never take | | world ahead—on his way to more than | at 412 Not if anybody will slip me the that suddenly boomed over the phone. the chance. It's one of those dreams The old Bambino was back in the I've had for a long time. e New York apartment he left with so| “I think I proved on the last trip many dreams—with such pride and | to Japan that I can handle a manag: ing job. It's the one big thing I want. | hope—only & few weeks ago. | T don't want to get out of base ball. As we got together to talk things and I don't want any minor league | over there came again the flash of o barnstorming jobs. It isn't 5o much | Martin ran away with an entirs world | ahout. the young fellow I traveled north with | 3 matter of money. I can get along | in 1919, 16 years ago, who was !hen‘um way still. It's something a fellow | on his way to more headlines than | wants to do more than anything else | kings or conquering generals ever that I am after now.- i know. | “Base ball made me,” the Babe con- A big, rough swaggering, !riendly‘tlnued. “and no one can ever know | young roustabout in 1919, with the the love I have for that game. Quit it | 700 home runs—back home again a tired, bewildered oldtimer of 41, nurs- ing wounded pride, a bad knee and the disillusionment that always fol- lows fame, no matter what the brand may be. “Just what are your plans?” I asked. Still Eager to Manage. I STILL would like to manage & big Ieague club if I had the chance,” the Babe said. “T'd still like to play base ball on the days when I was ready to do my stuff. But I haven't anything in sixht.wmlbdox;'t :xl\lo‘; whether anything reak. know now is that I am tired and need & rest. “What happened to you in this Boston mix-up?” I asked. “I'm no squawker,” the Babe said. “but I started this new season with & heavy cold and & bad leg. I was so keen to make good that I played when I should have been in bed or on the | bench. And the team was going no- where. So Judge Fuchs decided he had made a bad deal and wanted to lip me out. He made it as tough for me as a fellow could. He made it so unpleasant that I couldnt stand it any longer. was only & minor part of the whole trouble. It was a case of getting me out and making it 50 tough that I had Low Now, Bul—. “YES, I'm low now,” the Babe con- tinued, “mentally and physicpll My leg I&l&fll bad, but I still P This last crash or clash | chance to keep going. Maybe they will and maybe they won't. I don't | know. I feel pretty tough now, so I | need s little rest. How about that | golf game?” ! Great Shock to Ruth. | JFEW have ridden the headlines for | | 21 years. No other athlete has | ! ever approached the world-wide ac- | | claim and fame of Ruth. So few can | | appreciate the shock that suddenly | comes when all dreams and all illu- | sions suddenly blow up—when one suddenly feels tired and old and out | | of date, bewildered and a trifle dazed, i wondering what it is all about. That is the Babe of June, 1935. The proper readjustment will come, when, as Keats says, ‘Time, that ancient nurse, rocks me to patience.” Those who rise highest fall the farthest, but with the right stuff they come back. And the Babe has the right stuff, given time to find his way out and up again. He has too much | on the ball to spend any length of | time among the discards. “It'Il all work out, Babe” I sug-| | gested. “So don't worry about it.” “Sure it will,” he said. “But while | I'm waiting now about that golf | game? I need some rest—even in the | bunkers or the woods.” | (Copyright. 1935. by the North American Newspaper Alliance. Inc.) SEEK SATURDAY SET-TO. Jack Pry Nats are seeking & base ball game for Saturday. Call Wis- consin THE SPORTLIGHT Martin Again Putting Pepper in Card Miracle Needed to Get Braddock Title. BY GRANTLAND RICE The Pepper Returns. | HIS new base ball seasor. has| been replete with so many | features that many must be | overlooked. It is for this reason that we direct your attention o one John Leonard | Pepper Martin, the wild horse of the | Osage. i A few years back the same Pepper series against the Athletics ing the complete show. After this, accidents and injuries and one_thing ind another set him | back and the hLeadlines knew him | no more. | Last season he batted only .288. But 1935 is a different story. The dashing Pepper came to the first of June with a batting mark of .380, only a few notches back of Arky | Vaughan of the Pirates, with a bid | in_hand for the batting leadership. It is pretty generally accepted that the Cardinals will be the team that Bill Terry’'s Giants must beat, and 50 far the terror of the temple, who now lives in Oklahoma City, is one of the main factors in the Cerdinal threat. A short while pack I happened to mention Johnny Martin's name to Frank Frisch and Dizzy Dean. Both had the same opinion to offer—"the best hustler and the hardest worker on any ball club in any league.” ‘This black-haired, blue-eyed Dutch- Irishman, with the forearms of a dock worker, isn't easy to interview. His three main pastimes are base ball, hunting and fishing, and beyond that he isn't deeply interested. At the age of 31 he is one of the great ball players of his day and time, as he reaches into his system and brings out 100 per cent of what he has to give. Higher and Farther. Wl'l'H Keith Brown pole vaulting 14 feet 5% inches and Jesse Owens broad-jumping beyond 26 feet 8 inches, you get the general idea there is no fixed limit, within reason, that won't be met. ‘The big goal for the vaulters and steal- | and these two marks may be reached before the present generation passes on into middle athletic age. Just what the ultimate limit is no one knows. I've talked re- denied a trade or sale was brewine He also denied he felt a minor league pitcher must be picked up to aid his wobbling curving corps. Entire Team Has Lost Fight. “()F COURSE. we are not going to overlook any bets in the minors or anywhere else.” Griffith declared “We will grab any player whom we think will help us. But I don't think it is just one man. whether he be a pitcher. catcher, outfielder or infielder that is needed. The team just seems to have lost its fight temporarily. “I didn’t tear it down after last season. 1 believed the club eould come back and forget the terrible licking it took. But it didn't, it seems Walter Stewart never seemed 1o get over it. Monte Weaver didn't. either Bob Burke seems to be ailing from the same thing. Of our 1934 pitchers only Earl Whitehill seems to be fighting. ~ “The pitchers did take a beating last vear.” Griff admitted. “They worked their heads off, but the team was so crippled and weak behind them that they didn't get the runs This season the club behind them 1= stronger, much stronger. But now the pitchers are not delivering and their failures are affecting the entire team. Present Club to Get Chance. BOUGHT Newsom because I thought he would add two things to this team—added pitching strength of course, and then fire and fight. He , supplied both and then we had the | tough luck to lose him just at the time when the stage was set for a | spurt. The team hasn't won & game since he got hurt “What really is needed is a fire under the club. Whitehill and Hadley are good pitchers. So are Ed Linke and Jack Russell. They ought to win games, plenty of 'em. until Newsom gets back. We have plenty of hitting power. | “There is no great demand for new | talent right now, but if the team | doesn’t start delivering the goods soon T'll be bringing plenty of new play- ers and turning loose some of the old. But in the meantime the bunch Harris has now is going to get a chance.” | The three-game set with the Red Sox, beginning today, and the, trio of tilts with the Athletics, who will fol- low and close the home campaign until July 5, may provide the tip- off as to whether Griffith will lasso fresh talent preparatory to the sec- ond swing around the circuit. | Cohen, Miles, Minor Leaders. | [N SPITE of his statement Griff was scanning minor league averages yesterday. Sid Cohen of Chattanooga is leading the Southern Association | pitchers with 8 wins and 2 losses |and Dee Miles, 22-year-old Lookout outfielder, is busting the ball at a .356 clip. He has socked 67 hits. | probably more than any other player in the country, and has batted across 39 runs. Griff says neither will be brought here in the near future, but if the | mile and a 9-second 100-vard dash, a cently with several veteran track Sox and Athletics hang it on the Na- coaches and they won't even | tionals don’t be too sure Cohen, Miles, guess, : and possibly others, won't be sporting Some day there will be a 4-minute Washington unies soon. The Nationals were to regain the 7-foot high jump. When? It probably | services of Clif Bolton for the Red will be too late for most of us to care Sox series and this will be no handi- | cap in the battle to break their losing —_— streak. CIiff is easily the best hitter The Long Shot. among the receivers and the most ex- INJOW that I have observed the train- | perjenced behind the bat, in spite of ing actions and the general 100ks Redmond's pepper. of Jim Braddock and Max Baer, the | And the Griffs will need all strength. query pops up as to how they look | With Lefty Grove apparently onee along comparative lines, again resembling the old Grove, the The answer is simple enough— | Sox loom as plenty tough. Wes Per- | punching power, reach and general | shot. Jumpers is 13 feet with the pole and a ne,t for the unassisted human legs, A Braddock must ride another miracle before he takes over the title. He rode one miracle when he got up from the floor against Corn Griffin to scramble his way into the chal- lenger's seat less than a year later. He must ride the bucking mount of another miracle to win from Baer. ‘The Livermore larruper has all the | advantage in youth, size, strength, durability. He isn’ ny gamer than | Braddock, but he can punch harder | with both hands and take a harder | punch without going down. | Braddock’s physical change in the | last year, with the right food under his belt, has been remarkable. He looks better today than I have ever seen him look before, but you can stretch your imagination to the break- ing point and still not see him win- | ning from Baer. On Braddock's side he has every- thing to gain and little to lose and he will shoot all the works on a long But this doesn't lessen the odds against him, which should be heavier than any heavy- weight challenger has ever faced. Braddock has put on a big job in coming this far up, but there is al- ways a limit. If he can hurdle this last barrier | it will be the most remarkable heavy- | weight achievement in the history of the ring. I 10nnyfll¥. li;.:z.' the Noj llianes, | rell was to open today against Hadley and tomorrow Fritz Ostermueller, broken cheek healed. or Grove, will get the second call, according to Cronin. ROAMERS WANT FOES. Roamers, an unlimited nine, 1s seeking a game for Sunday. Manager King is booking at National 7030 between 4 and 5 p.m. BRAKE RELINED 4 Wheels Complete Plymouth Essex Chrysler « De Soto Dodge po.DR, Other Cars Proportionately Low s 75 th American | e.)

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