Evening Star Newspaper, June 5, 1935, Page 14

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. | TICKETS for [ €cANZONER e P FIGHT A1 WAS HINGTON, D. C, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 5, 1935. Nats Pressing Too Hard, Harris Thinks : Bahram, Favorite, SIRWINEfiHE[P ‘ Money Master Inaugurates Bankers’ League PLAYERS O RELAK “Breaks” All Against Club, He Avers, After Eighth Straight Is Lost. BY FRANCIS E. STAN. | HE mailed fist with which Bucky Harris lately has been han- | dling the reins of the Nationals today was junked, to all ap- pearances, and in place was a Kid | glove. i The forceful pilot of the skidding Washington ball club, whose lectures, | warnings and entreaties vainly have sought to snap the Capital entry out | of its losing streak that today had ex- | tended to eight games, now is con- | vinced that it will be the law of aver- ages on “breaks” that ultimately will | mark a turning point. | ‘We simply must relax now.” as- serts Harris. he team is fighting itself into a state of mind that won't help us get out of our slump. We've got to await our turn for the ‘breaks’ | we haven't been getting for more than | two weeks. | “A ball club cannot generate any more sheer determination than the | ‘Washington team now has without | tightening up to a dangerous extent. | At present the team is playing in the toughest run of luck I've seen in years. “The boys are fighting the ball: fight- ing themselves. If they continue pressing, and this goes for me, too, we'll all be in the bughouse.” Losses Get Under Their Skins. JCKY isn't the type to complain. reaks” are a part of base ball, ase ball is a part of Buck representing Washington's financial the beginning of the circuit’s championship campaign. also was at the West Potomac Park diamond to see his team hand National Savings & 17-to-11 defeat Bruce Baird, vice president of National Savings & Trust Co. and president of the base ball circuit; F. Gloyd Awalt, deputy United States controller of the currency, and H. Prescott Gatley, president of National | Savings & Trust—left to right in the picture—lined up for the ceremonial inaugural yesterday | Deputy Controller Awalt put plenty into his pitch that marked | George Vass, vice president of Riggs National Bank, institutions < i, Hon. of the loop | -—Star Staff Photo. But Harris has a right to wonder what he or his team committed to de- serve the luck—all bad—which has befallen his outfit. Solid drives are landing in fielders’ gloves. Puny pokes from rival bats | are falling safe. And all the Nationals have been getting within the last fort- night have been dirty looks from Lady Luck. The morale of the team, in | #pite of the battle Harris has been waging, has suffered. Lips hard, eyes down, the Nationals have been pulling on their dimaond togs and taking beatings, some of which they hav deserved. It is beginning to get under their skins, The ill fortune in which the Griff- men have been plaving was evident &gain yesterday. Bump Hadley pitched well enough in the opener of a three- game series with the Red Sox to win nine out of 10 games. Yet for one of his best performances of the sea- son all Hadley had to show for the day was a licking. Carl Reynolds, half-ducking a close pitch, stuck out his bat and sent a ! single spinning into right field in the fifth inning with Joe Cronin on first base. It was a mean drive, low and bounc- ing, and to the left of Jack Stone, who was playing toward center for Reynolds. The ball trickled through Stone’s legs, and there was the ball game. Cronin scored and Reynolds reached third. from where he also counted a moment later with what proved to be the winning run of a 3-to-2 tussle. | Among June west. OAKMONT, Pa, 5.—Some flew east and some flew Now they're here at the cuckoo's nest. Official membership in the cuckoo’s nest belongs to any one who attempts to pick the winner in the open golf championship of the United States that opens over Oakmont’s 7,000 yards of trial and tribulation Thursday morning. On a roulette wheel you are asked including zero and double zero. There are 160 starters here, approx- imately, the survivors of more than 1,100 crusading, so the job of boiling this list down to one lone club swinger can be easily appreciated. Locating a needle in a hay- stack is a set-up in comparison, when you figure not only the form of this field, but the dev- astating episodes that can happen to any starter. Here is the grouping that happens to appeal to your somewhat bewil- dered correspondent: Breaks Overdue, Says Bucky. F HE chose, the Nationals’ boss might have traced last Sunday’ 8-t0-7 defeat in Philadelphia to cir- cumstances very similar. And he probably could trace, very logically and fairly, a good many more such “breaks” of the last couple of weeks. But in the face of bitter disappoint- ment and ill luck, the man whose dreams of duplicating his glorious managerial feats of 1924 and 1925 seemingly are crumbling refuses to concede anything ‘We're not through, and we're not out of this race by any means,” as- serts Harris, “We're not getting the breaks now, but we will get them. The team is due some, 'way overdue. And when it starts clicking, watch out for us. It isn't too late.” 1f it proved nothing else, the opener of the Red Sox' set showed Harris that Hadley, despite his defeat, is just about at his peak. It took everything | ‘Wes Ferrell had to keep pace with the chunky National right-hander. In one of the best games of the local stand each gave up nine hits, and they might have been battling yet but for Stone's miscue, which broke & 1-all tie and gave the Sox a 3-to-1 lead, which Bolton's triple and an in- field out whittled down in the ninth. First Group. Gene Sarazen, Henry Picard, Olin Dutra and Craig Wood. Second Group. Harry Cooper, Horton Ky Laffoon, Ghezzi and ney Brews, Smith, Denny Shute, Byron Nelson, Victor Harold McSpadden. Veterans' Group. Tommy Armour, Willie MacFar- lane, MacDonald Smith, Walter Ha- gen, Al Espinosa, Johnny Farrell, Bobby Cruickshank, Billy Burke and Leo Diegel Amateur Group. Johnny Goodman, Charlie Yates, Harry Givan, Zell Eaton and Rodney Bliss. Locating the Winner. THEN you begin to poke around in the human debris for the name of the possible winner there are sev- eral details to be considered. In looking over the yardage of the Oakmont course you find no fewer Nine Naiioh?tl Pinch Hitters Bat for .100 in 30 Times Up; Sox Thieving Laid to Hadley HE only department in which his | was to blame for the Red Sox running Nationals really need bolster- | Wild on the bases in the ninth. “Hadley’s been around long enough ing, ch‘rdmg fo P“‘s‘dfm | to know better than to give runners Clark Griffith, is the curving|jike Almada and Werber leads like he corps, but unless Bucky Harris' pinch- | 4ig » declares Griff. Bolton didn't hitting staff begins to connect the |have a chance to get 'em (Al Washington ball club prexy may short- | stole 4 (Almada ly instigate search for a part-time | stole second). hitter | B di | ump, according to Uncle Clark, When Fred Schulte stepped to the | will be placed on the schooling list plate in place of Bump Hadley and |yntil he hold the runners on the bases. grounded out in the ninth inning of | only to pick one out of 38 numbers, Paul Runyan, Johnny Revolta, Sid-I second and third and Werber | THE SPORTLIGHT U. S. Open Winner Likely to Come From arazen, Picard, Wood and Dutra. BY GRANTLAND RICE than seven holes which range from 475 to 620 yards in length. Of the four short holes the eighth is 258 yards and the sixteenth 235 yards. | So obviously length is an im- portant factor on at least nine holes. But control is an im- | portant factor on all 18 holes. Length and control from the tee | are especially important, as a trapped tee shot here leaves one looking into | | the face of a sad-looking 6. You can't hook—you can't slice—and you can’t be too short. There still is another factor. This concerns the speed and baffling quali- | ties of Oakmont's keen greens. ! one who has left his putting touch at home might as well have stayed there. These Oakmont greens carry the finest grass texture I ever have seen, | but in places they are as slippery as a vat full of eels. They are true—but they de- mand putting nerves and a put- ting stroke under perfect con- trol. | | So this means mastery with almost |every club in the bag—mastery plus | power on most of the holes. It means straightness from the tee above all | else, for these deeply ridged bunkers are padded cells so far as any re- !co\'enes are concerned. A Talk With Tommy Armour. MMY ARMOUR, the sage of Me- dinah, won his first and only United States open at Oakmont eight years ago. “Oakmont was the toughest course then I had ever played,” he said, “and it is even tougher today. In that last championship I recall playing the second finest round of golf I ever had known, and yet I finished with a 78. | “You know the real par at | Oakmont, as figured by normal | standards, would be 76—not 73. | “There are three par 4 holes here more than 460 yards in length, and |one par 3 more than 250. There isn’t a breathing spot on the course— not a hole where you can rest a few seconds and get your breath. Your drives must be long and well placed— your second shots accurate—your putting touch almost perfect. “And above all you must use your head and keep your heart. No one | easily discouraged even has an outside chance. I never saw a course that tion through every hole. Few people realize how this wears you down through 72 holes. First a tough tee | shot—demanding thought and care— | then maybe a recovery—then a hard approach —then still more worry |around the greens. That's what | finally wears most of them down.” The Leading Invader. OR the first time in many years \ an invader has thrown his shad- |ow across the United States open. His name is Sidney Brews, South African champion, who has been one | of the most consistent golfers of many years. Winner of the South African open, runner-up to Cotton in the last British open, winner of the French and | Holland opens, runner-up in the Met | open, winner of the Philadelphia P. | G. A.—always up there knocking at Any | demanded more constant concentra- | yesterday's tilt with Joe Cronin's Red | Sox, it marked the thirty-ninth time this campaign that a pinch-hitter was employed by Harris. And out of 30 official trips to the plate—9 bases on balls have been drawn by the Wash- ington pinch-batsmen—only 3 hits have been realized. Of the 9 Nationals to be used in part-time batting roles only Ossie Bluege can boast a respectable average | and Ossie has only tried twice. On one of his two chances the veteran infielder was successful. The re- mainder—well, here are the figures: ‘ AB. H. BB. Pct. 500 I Bluege . 200 | Sington Bill Werber was the recipient of one | the front door—with a good swing and of the biggest basket of flowers ever | lugged in the ball park yesterday | when the Early Bird Club, a local | business organization, honored the | Berwyn, Md., boy. Werber is a8 mem- ber of the Early Birds. Wes Ferrell may not have his fast ball of yore but the tall right-hander certainly is a “spot” pitcher. His rainbow deliveries had the Nationals | popping up all over the field. Seven | pop flies were caught by infielders and seven more by outfielders. OHNNY WELCH, the curve-ball pitcher who held the Nationals to i a stout heart. Brews has the forearm of a wrestler. He has played Oak- mont well. “It’s a great course,” the South African says, “and in no sense unfair. I like it. I've found you can’t afford to wan- der off the line from the tee. That's the main test here— straight and far, if possible— but straight first of all.” ‘When the British Ryder Cup team played here last in 1927 only one in- vader, as I recall, finished the first round. This was Ted Ray. The others soon skidded from the scene, includ- ing Abe Mitchell, George Duncan DIZZY 16 N L TO BEATEN CARDS |Arrogant Hurler, Medwick in Near-Brawl—Dykes Is Hurt as Chisox Lose. | BY ANDY CLARKE, ‘. Associated Press Sports Writer. HE upward path of the Brothers | Dean has turned to a rocky | | road. The cocky pair have | | found that big-league ball | players have little consideration for | their reputations and possibly never | | have read their scrapbooks. | Last year they hung up imposing | records “topped with brilliant world series accomplishments, but this year things have been different. Dizzy has won six and lost five games; Daffy | has won five and lost four. | Players also are beginning to resent | their attitudes. Yesterday Dizzy was | 1soundly walloped by the Pirates, and the Cards, striving to overhaul the Glants, were defeated 9-5. In the | fifth inning, after they had returned to the bench, Joe Medwick criticized Dizzy's constant use of a slow ball | which, he averred, was ducksoup to a good batter. IDZ2Y. nettled by this affrontery | | to his pitching genius, told Med- | wick what he thought of him and | the two assumed warlike poses. They were advancing on each other when other players stepped between them. Daffy was one of the first to rush to his brother’s side Perhaps Dafly was thinking of the game with the Phillies on May 21, when he was accused of throwing a “bean ball” at Lou Chiozza. When Coach Hans Lobert of the Phillies made the accusation, Daffy cocked his right and made ready for battle. | Dizzy ran to his side and had to be escorted from the field | | Later Dafly hit Al Todd with a | pitched ball, and that player dropped hit bat and headed for the box. Again Dizzy rushed to his brother’s aid. Players from both sides swarmed onto the field. It looked like a free-for-all until police intervened. | | Cy Blanton pitched for the Pirates | in defeating Dean and the Cardinals yesterday, and the victory brought the | Pirates within half a game of St. Louis. | JN THE only other National League | | 1 game Gabby Hartnett led the Cubs | | to a 10-2 victory over Cincinnati by | | hitting a homer, a triple and a single, | driving in six runs and scoring two others. | | Si Johnson, on the mound for the | Reds, abdicated after Hartnett clouted | his triple with two on in the sixth. In the American League the Browns took the White Sox into camp 11-1. The White Sox lost more than the ball game, for Jimmy Dykes, ener-| getic little manager, sprained an ankle. | Dykes, who was playing second base | in place of the injured Hayes, was hurt when he collided with Jack Burns, who was stealing second. The defeat dropped the fading White Sox back into third position behind the Cleveland Indians. American YESTERDAY'S RESULTS. Boston. 3; Washington, 2. 8t. Louis, 11: Chicago, 1. Other games postponed, rain. STANDING OF THE CLUBS. DEAN HITS AT CLUB 1S CONCRABBER !Diz Levels Charge Following Official Score BOSTON. Almada, cf | Werber." 3b | Johnson, " 1f | Cronin Reynolds. wismmmoni Totals . WA Myer. Threat of Huge Fine if He Pops Off Again. TP By the Associated Press. *Batted for Hadley in ninth. By Hadley. 3. Umpires Summers and Quinn. Time—1:57. By the Associated Press. ONDON, June 5—Sir Malcolm Campbell, British sportsman, will attempt to better his own world automobile speed record at Salt Lake City in July, ke an- nounced today. Speaking before an advertising club luncheon gathering, Campbell said he would leave for Utan in July for a new record attempt that montu. He lifted the record to 276.816 miles per hour at Daytona Beach March 7. “It’s impossible ¢o rely in the future on the beach if you wish to do any- thing in the region of 300 miles an hour,” the sportsman said. “You must have 100 per ceat perfect conditions for high speed. We row are carry- ing out further lests for our attempt in July.” D. C. NETMEN MAY FACE Special Dispatch to The Star. BALTIMORE, Md., June 5—Gilbert Hunt and Barney Welsh, ranking Dis- trict of Columbia tennis players, were to meet on the courts for the first | time today providing both players come through their third-round | matches. Both were favorites 1o win their early matches in the Maryland State championships on the Balti- more Country Club courts. ITTSBURGH, June 5—It may | have been a “closed incident” | 2% 000 012 000 Washington . 000 100 001 Dean'’s squabble with Manager | o Runs batted | Prank Frisch and his St. Louls Cardi- | Finnion. Hadley, Threebace nit - Botton. nal teammates was a wide-open affair. Stolen bases—Almada (). Werber. Sacri- Myer o Kubel Melillo_ to Cronin t verbal whip-lashing from the manager after yesterday's game with the Pitts- burgh Pirates, Dean was a blustering “Can you imagine anybody telling you he's going to fine you $10.0002” | Dean asked. “Yeah, it wasn't $5,000, “You know what I think? They're trying to get me in bad so they can SA[‘I’ I-AK my contract calls for. Thats what they're trying to do.” i Turmoil Prevails. R DISSENSION, disorder and & near Picks July to Attempt to fight broke out on the Cardinal Irritated at the pounding he was tak- | ing, Dean charged his teammates with uitting” and was himself accused of Speed Record. The angry words were climaxed with Dizzy and Left Fielder Joe Med- wick “squaring off” in full view of the before any blows were struck Here's the way Dean tells it: “When I got back to the bench after pire Rigler. Medwick says to me, ‘lay off Rigler and bear down in there. I looked at Medwick and said, ‘whatta on your Hungarian beezer.’ “Then Medwick grabs a bat. I was ready for him, when the other players bawls me out about bearing down and says he'll fine me $10,000. I told him to go ahead and fine me. Frisch gave me another bawling out. 1 waited until he was all through. Then I told him something. what you want, but if you can thank anybody for the job you have as man- ager you can thank me, and you know last night, but today Dizzy Boston . Almada, Melil- fice—Hadley. Double piays—Bluege to Far from contrite, after receiving a | peacock. | but 10, that he threatened to fine me. Yeah, 10 grand. take away a big chunk of the money bench in the fifth inning of the game. | Break His Own World ‘laying down.” cash customers. They were separated the fourth inning I was velling at Um- you mean, bear down, I'll punch you rushed in. Then Frisch gets on me, “After the game in the clubhouse “I said, ‘listen, Frank, you can sav it " Frisch Stands Firm. REGARDLESS of whom he has to thank for his job, Frisch showed his authority in no uncertain terms in a statement he issued after the club- house talk. Asserting he will fine the pitcher $5,000 and suspend him if the “dis- play of temper” is repeated, he said Dean “made slurring remarks about the team, describing it as a lousy ball | _ Tom Mangan, veteran Columbia club. Naturally the fellows who have Country Club netman. and Don Gar- been hustling their heads off resented Der. experienced public parks player, this and they challenegd him.” advanced to the second round by vic- tories yesterday. All favorites came | through the early matches without trouble. Major Leaders | | i By the Associated Press. | (Including yesterday’s games.) American League. Batting—Johnson _ Athletics. Foxx, Athletics, .362 Runs—Johnson, Athletics, 38; Bo- nura, 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, 8-0;, Tamulis, Yankees, Nalional. Batting—Vaughan, Martin, Cardinals, .380. Runs—Vaughan, Pirates, 41; Martin, Cardinals, 37. Runs batted in—Medwick, dinals, 39: Vaughan, Pirates, Hits—Vaughan, Pirates, ‘Waner, Pirates, 64. Doubles—Medwick. Martin, Cardinals, 13. Triples—Goodman, Waner, Pirates, € Home runs—O:t, Giants. 9: John Moore, Phillies; Vaughan, Pirates, and Joe Moore, Giants, 8. Stolen bases—Myers, Reds Bordagaray, Dodgers, 6. Pitching—Parmelee, Giants, 6-1; Castleman, Gianis, and Walker, Car- dinals, 5-1. In addition to white dress styles, we stock complete assortments of active golf and tennis shoes. Also sandals for beach. locker room or street wear. Wm. Hahn & Co. 4105 | White Sox, | 5-0. Pirates, .399; Car- 36. 65; L. Cardinals, 16; Reds, and L. and WILL REWARD ATHLETES Woodward School to Give Letters to 34 Tonight. Athletic awards will be presented to 24 athletes at the annual sports presentation program at Woodward School tonight in the school audi- torium. The following will receive letters: ep their Looks T | victims themselves can say. ins English Derby JUST THREE 1934 AGA KHAN'S HORSE £ STIK AGES SHINE 2 LENGTHS AHEAD 17 of 20 “Take Nose Dive,” Robin Goodfellow, 50-1, Is Only Vosmik, Foxx and Second—King and Queen Vaughan Staying Up. in Vast Throng. ! By the Associated Press. PSOM DOWNS, England, June 5.—Bahram, the favorite for the Aga Khan's stable, today won the 156th running of the Derby. Robin Goodfellow was second and Field Tri One of the recent BY PAUL MICKELSON, Associated Press Sports Writer. HICAGO, June 5—If it keeps up, 1935 will be known in major league base ball as the massacre year of big-shot | batting averages. How come and why, ai third in the field of 16. favorites in years, Bahram went to the e choice at 5 to 4 as the King 1f million of their strongest not even the rong The gen- eral slump of the batting stars is one |of the game's greatest mysteries. | A check-up today showed that out | of the 20 batting leaders of the 1934 season, 10 in each of the major cuits, only 7 were ing above the 300 mark as the season entered the eighth week of play. So great was the general decline in their batting aver- ages that, as a group, they were bat- ting 1,009 points less than they were conclusion of last year's cam- post and Queen and a ha ¢ the race. Robin Good- o lengths subjects vie h to the rear. Robin Goodfellow of Sir Abe {ran in th scratched his o Sound, ear] carried the s while Plymouth The latter t 7 to 1. The Aga urth, while his hed far back. horse, he day at the paign 3 ORD DERBY'S Fairhaven was the “ fifth across the line, followed by uest from C. W. Gordon Mrs. Corlette Clorney'’s were shy 44.6 points per man | National League the decline | aged 563 ' Trio Betters Figures, NLY three of last year's leade day had batting average cess of last year's marks. T Joe Vosmik of Clevelan ting .348 today, as compared w final mark of .341 last year; Jimmie Foxx of the Athletics, a .334 bat last year and a .362 batter tod: Arkie Vaughan of Pittsburgh, v | batting .399 today, or 66 points I than his 1934 mark Lou Gehrig of the Yankees won the American League plonship last year average of .363 erage stood at National League last year at .362, Al Simmons of tt | another noted 262 with a third place team as compared with a i of .344 with a last-place c And so it went dow the batting greats, with of the Cincinnati Reds the sufferer of them all. Pool batted for the Reds year. Tod average was .1 The avera Pinky Higgins of the Athletic off from .330 to .211. Some Other Comparisons. THER comparisons, showing final 1934 average and the ent marks, respectively: Heinie Manush, Washington to .288: Hank Greenberg, Detroit to .284; Hal Trosky, Cleveland. to .236; Kiki Cuy 338 to .264; Rip Cardinals, 333 to Brooklyn, .332 Giants, .331 Philadelphia Na Mel Ott, Gian second Derby potentate, his —having_previously nd Guineas at Freddy Fox, the son of v upheld the confi- he public, which at one time odds-on choice the race, however, Prior to the mance had been nham Plate at . when he Good- was up latter won 4 renewal. LITTLES TO JOIN SON Leave to Watch Lawson Play for British Open Title. 0, June § (P Lawson Litt to England Little, jr, f cham- open tour e British amateur go lay in the British strain any s pro cables, t FLORSHEIM GENUINE BUCKSKIN SHOES Gexuvine Warte Buoxskin's an expensive leather . . . and only the top grades will take the punishment that Summer Shoes receive. That’s why well-dressed men choose WEDNESDAY, JUNE 5, Major League Standings. 1935. National YESTERDAY'S RESULTS. Pittsburgh. 9: St. Louis, b, Chicago 10: Cincinnati. 3 Other games postponed, rain and threat- ening weather STANDING OF THE CLUBS. *98vuadIIg **puiuaq HEEEE 310175 N £ UoN| Teeeeerason Sauren woyuIusy, * *PuLIAID - -osvorun *-x10% maN| erudiapey, **rpurgeq **XI0X MoN| S0 13 sawup) usnasnid - w001 1 ‘aamiuaond All S umnwr / . Long Summer Sox in cool patterns and .100 .000 000 .000 000 | four hits and no runs in his first start | against 'em but who was blasted from | the box after 13 safeties in seven in- nings in a later start, will pitch for the | Red Sox in the series finale tomorrow. .000 | Joe Cronin, anxious to shoot south- 000 | paws at the Griffs, originally intended — — — —— | to use Fritz Ostermueller but the lefty, 30 3 9 .100 |who has been idle for two weeks with — a fractured cheek bone, is not quite THREE stolen bases in one inning ' ready. don't sound flettering to the Bucky Harris hasn't decided on his catcher, but take Clark Griffith’s word | selection for the final joust with the for it, Bump Hadley, not \Clif Bollon, | Beantowners. ]f F. E. 8. omMpWwOSTN Kress Schulte .. and Fred Robson. But Sid Brews is| N¥I—[ 5[ 21 3l 41 61 6] Clel 211 31 4| 2/ 31 2 71231161.690 2% cool weaves. & distinct threat. = Chil 3] 1/—| 6l 3| 3| 2| 412211615791 3 Pitl 21 41—/ distinct threat = If you want another Detl_3| 2| 2/—/| 3| 4| 3| 4/21118].538] 4% White or light Chil 11 4! Sutticanlookitn HEREY ERRed S hefal Bosl_41 31 31 1i—| 4| 4] 2121119165251 & Pennsylvania entry, who looks as loose Walirsciisis—ial colors. as ashes, with a fine swing all along Shil 1ansibala— 395/10 PhI[ 11 3 1] 21 3I the line of march—a long, stralght | gy 51 5 o 21127 2801148 Bos| C1010 31 ¢ hitter who can play his irons. L..115/16/16/1819123123/271— 1 20 11 11 11 3/ 0l g L..110117/19/17/19/22/25 ] 35¢ to $1.00 The first group named will be hard to stop—Sarazen, Picard, Dutra, Craig Wood. (Copyright. 1935. by the North American Newspaper . Inc.). GAMFS TODAY. GAMES TOMORROW . (3:15). Boston at Wash. Bttt Ny 1 Bl at MY, Chicago at St. L. Chicazo af St. L. Cleve, at mmn‘ Cleve. at Det. 1 GAMFS TOMORROW N. Y. at Phila Cincin. at_Chil St. L. at Pitts. GAMES TODAY N.Y. at Phil. (2). Riciyn at Bos (2 Cincin. at Chicggo. Bt. L. at Pittal Florsheim Shoes . . . they know they’ll look as well on Labor Day as when they first were new. Try a pair . . . you'll see why Florsheim Quality is £ MOSTSTVLES the soundest shoc cconomy. Men’s Shops 14th at G 7th and K 3212 14th

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