Evening Star Newspaper, June 9, 1935, Page 30

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B—10 BAME WEAKENED BY LOSS OF BABE 53 Suffers Like Boxing With Dempsey Out or Golf as Jones Departs.. BY EDWARD J. NEIL, Associated Press Sports Writer. YORK, June 8.—Babe Ruth today is just another fat old man playing golf—left-hand- edly at that—and while the parting was tough and bitter, totally lacking the triumph of the Ruth tra- dition, base ball is weakened as box- ing was when Dempsey and Tunney left it, tennis when “Little Bill” John- ston had to quit, polo at Tommy Hitchcock’s temporary passing, and golf when Bobby Jones stepped out from the front of the parade. ‘There are base ball men today, not 80 old themselves, who saw Ruth come to the major leagues from the Baltimore Orioles in 1914, a big, gangling, turkey-necked kid of 20, with a round head that balanced on the top of his long neck like the can- nonball on the stick of a vaudeville Juggler. He was only a couple of years out of the Christian Brothers' Orphanage in Baltimore, then, a robust, lusty youth, whose whisper was a roar; his face a wide, grinning miscellany of features headed by a stubby nose that turned up almost from one hig right- angled ear to the other. His mouth was so large it looked like the en- trance to the mammoth caves when he let out a bellow, which was fre- quent, His chief delight then was keeping it full of food, for there had been plenty of hunger in his back- ground. Discovered by Dunn, H! WAS the “Babe” from the mo- southpaw pitcher. meni he hit Fenway Park, a dreamed he wouid become one of the | No one then ever @reatestest outfielders—certainly the | greatest slugger in the history of base ball. He had also been a left-handed | catcher. His great arm gained its| first control from heaving over-ripe | o, fruit at drivers on the Baltimore wharves. 4 Jack Dunn, owner of the Baltimore Orioles that gave John McGraw his| BOE greatest fame as a player, spotted Ruth and sold him to the Red Sox.| AUk They sent him to Providence for a | while in 1914, the year the World War started, then brought him back. He never left the big leagues again until | Emil Puchs, president of the Braves| in the same city of Boston, handed him his unconditional release. The Babe's magical career was all tied in with the darkest financial his- SPORTS Dizzy No Worry To Boss Rickey By the Associated Press. WARE, Ohio, June 8.— m-ybnnmdnhlflatmn- in with the management the 5 Mary leyan, of which he is a trustee. “In spite of all his talking, we like Dizzy and he likes us. We ‘won't sell him for any amount of money. We expect to go ahead with our team as it is in our fight to retain the league championship.” . WHITE SOX AGAIN WIN OVER TIGERS Make It 8 Out of 10 Games. Homers Bring All Runs, With Score 3 to 2. By the Associated Press. HICAGO, June 8.—The White Sox, tail-enders last year, con- tinued their annoyance of the Detroit Tigers, last year's champions, today by edging out the Tigers, 3 to 2, for their eighth vic- tory in 10 meetings between the two teams. All runs were the result of homers, two being hit by each side. Marvin Owen started the four- ‘vagger parade for the Tigers in the s2cond, and the Sox came back with all their three runs on Luke Sewell's first. homer and Rip Radcliff’s sixth off Elden Auker in their half of the ning. Pitcher Vernon Kennedy singled be- tween the two Sox homers to help himself to his first 1935 victory in four starts. Hank Greenberg clouted his | season’s twelfth Homer in the eighth. Kennedy allowed five hits. while ouched for nine. > (] = ° > Sonwerg SRR | 553ums5m02- | 355me03 | o22a3az022 > @ [P -1 d ) L d Totals.32 52413 *Batted for Auker in seventh. 010 000 010—2 | 030 000 00x—3 tory of the two Boston clubs. When | > Harry Prazee started auctioning off the Red Sox stars, he sent him to the New York Yankees at the end of the; 1919 season. Col. Jake Ruppert had to pay $125.000 in cash for the bud- | ding home run hero. World's Greatest Tummy Ache. AP'I‘ER the Babe reached his zenith with the Yankees, smashing home run records urtil he set a final standard of 60 in 1927 and hit as high as 393 in 1923, the Yanks let him go when he had outlived his use- fulness. He went back to Boston this Spring to help lift the National League club, the Braves, out of the financial depths, for.his gate appeal still was great. There is Boston, where he once. left and Gel GRANT HAS WEAI.TH OF TENNIS FOEMEN Big Field Will Try to Prevent His Winning Third Straight Dixie Championship. isel. Til By the Associated Press. in triumph for the Yankees, he came | NASHVXLL! Tenn., June 3 —Bryan to the end of the road, a caricature of a once great athlete, tired, bitter, disillusioned, mired in a name-calling duel with Puchs. There are times and places in the Babes' career that will live in the " minds of the men who went with him | Mond longer than the facts and figures he | set in the record books. His idea of luxury when he arrived | in Boston was to eat in the “hot dog™ ‘wagons across from Fenway Fleld, and | he ate gustily and often. In his great | years as a player he thought nothing | of tossing off during a game a dozen frankfurters on rolls, washed down by | half that number of bottles of soda .pop, and as a result he developed a stomaeh ache in 1925 that rumbled so loudly it was heard ’'round the world. He was taken groaning from a railroad train at Asheville, N, C., and for days the base ball world scarcely breathed until the great- man’s digestive appa- again, ratus was in shape H! POUGHT bitterly with his man- ager, Miller Huggins, but in the end he apologized just as humbly. He tore the silk pajamas off Col. Ruppert in a train coming back from a world series triumph in St. Louis, and he made the Colonel like it. Over the years he made thousands of kids happy collectively, and dozens individually. He hit home runs for hospital-ridden youngsters, and he gneaked away from a world series cel- ebration in Chicago to sit beside the cot of a boy who may have lived because he did. At Christmas he was a willing Santa Claus anywhere, any time. He never was too busy to visit orphanpges he knew so well. That was probably the only thing he never did to excess, because he couldn't help it. He talked himself out of managing the Yankees eventually by demanding a showdown with Rup- pert a year ago, by declaiming loudly that he'd be a big league manager or else. He broke all kinds of training rules, made his own. There was little could be done with him. At Peak in ’32 World Series. TH‘ROUGH it all he was an amasing opportunist, & rollicking, roaring Great Friend of Youngsters. major league games, he must have hit 800 home runs for them. He probably M. (Bitsy) Grant of Atlanta, the little firebrand of the tennis courts. faces a strong fleld in defense of his singles title in the golden jubilee tournament of the Southern Lawn Tennis Association starting here The diminutive racket wielder, ranked first in Dixie and tenth na- tionally, is favored to win his thitd | straight crown and the seventh cham- pionship in the span since he stroked his way to victory in 1927 at the age of 16. Grant, national clay courts cham- pion and noted for his giant-killing in competition with players who outrank and played more aggressively. races to the net oftener than he did in the past and his volleying has im- proved noticeably. Outstanding singles campaigners, City, J. Gilbert Hall of New Jersey, John McDiarmid of Chicago, Martin Buxby of Austin, Tex.; Hal Surface tanooga, Malon Courts of Atlanta and many others are expected to make the tournament one of lively com- petition, ‘The Chinese Davis cup team, com- posed of Capt. Lewis Carson, Sin-Kie Kno and Guy Ching, which lost re- cently in zone play ‘to the United States team of which Grant was s member, is entered. 25-KILOMETER RACE IS WON BY PAWSON | & Winner of 1933 Boston Marathon Conquers Kelly, 1935 Victor, in Pawtucket Event. By the Associated Press, PAWTUCm R. I, June 8.—Leslie Pawson of Pawtucket, winner of the 1933 Boston marathon, today de- feated Johnny Kelley of Arl} Mass., this year’s victor in that fa- mous endurance test, by 55 seconds in the Donahue Memorial 25-kilometer Tace. This pair of stars raced shoulder to Pawson forged into the lead. Kelley ‘Auker and School Boy Rowe were | him, has exhibited rare form all year | He | including Berkeley Bell of New York |4 of Kansas City, Lefty Bryan of Chat- | § shoulder until the last mile, when |¥’ THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. Ruth’s Base Ball Ending Is Not Commensurate With His Magical Career; GOMEZ I BEATE AFTER YANKS WIN Bows to Ostermuller, 2-4, Following an Easy 12-6 Rout of Red Sox. By the Associated Press. OSTON, June 8.—The Yankees outpointed Vernon Gomez, s left-handed duel Red Sox got an even bresk f ‘The Sox seemed just as the nightcap as they were opener, although Manager retired to the bench in this game rest his bruised heel and Max played short. Ostermueller limited the ers to six hits and made three of Bos- ton’s seven blows off his southpaw rival. He was pitching his first game since he was hit on the face by Hank Greenberg’s batted ball May 25. Gomez, who suffered his seventh de- feat of the season, was wild through- out, issued eight passes and gave the Sox two runs when he uncorked & wild pitch in the fifth. Gehrig Gets Bad Jolt. LOU GEHRIG, playing his 1550th consecutive big league game today, nearly had his record broken when he collided with Carl Reynolds in the first inning of the opener when he dived for a wild peg by Bill Dickey. He injured his right shoulder in the plunge and rested five minutes before returning to action to take an im- portant part in the Yankee slugging. He finally gave up his place to Jack Saltzgaver in the seventh, but played all through, the second contest. The Yanks settled the opener when they belted Wes Ferrell out to score five Tuns on five hits and an error by Rick Ferrell. seventh homer of the season & double by Ben Chapman. New York finished the job in the seventh, manufacturing another five- up four hits and a walk without re- | tiring a batsman, Wild Pitch Is Fatal ,Goms wild pitch was the decid- | ing factor in the second contest. 'Wllh the score tied at 1-1, the Sox | loaded the bases on a pass to Babe :D-hlmn Ostermueller’s single, a sac- | rifice and an intentional walk to Bill | Werber. . Dahigren was forced at the | plate on Mel Almada’s grounder, but | with two out, Gomesz heaved a wild one and failed to cover the plate when Catcher Arndt Jorgens chased the ball back to the screen and hesitated there. As a result, Werber followed | Ostermueller across the plate with what proved to be the deciding run. -] > e ] e 8l omonommoisnnisl | et sSmnaakial " 2303~ su~r~uad Walb' tMiller. | m222monmmumumma) | 335595~13masuwm-a Ed E H B . *Batted for nunme ln .mh. tBatted for Wal ninth. . rmn n"n 500—12 200 000— 6 | l—-co Cfllm!fl (), ! erie (2), Selkirk. Cro- ays—Crosetti to Lazzer! to lone to_Crosetti to Saltzzavi bases—New_York. 4; Boston. Bases 6: ofl Bro own. 1; off W, rell, 1: Ibers. th Struck oul Malone. in 2 innings: off Malone. % 1 off ‘W, Perrell. 5 in ]‘4 Innlnn stte. 4 in 4% innings: off V. ¢'in, seventh): ‘off 3 innings. Winning uluhn . Losing_ plicher—W. Ferrel Umpires—Messrs. Owens and uorllrty ime—2:46, (SECOND GAME.) > .-ue:auh-uo:—u‘. PO womssmwssl RO O eas:-—e-—-—»—-u::::fl | ssnsnusan~ssa10 | omosmesmmomama® Totals 35 67413 Totas, 26 72710 *Ran for Jorlem in seventh, tBatted for Rolfe in seventh, $Batted f.l’ Gomez in ninth. 000 101 000—2 100 020 10x—4 Bishop. WEI&Y ‘batted in—QGehri lonou . uns—Chapman_ (2), onemu-ner R zzeri. Alm: ot es—Gomes, s—Crosetti to Gelirlg; R. Ferrell to Meliillo; Kellllo to Dthl'ull Left on 5. Bases o 8: ofl Ol'.erln\uller 5. Struck —B‘! Ggmez. 4; by Ostermueler. 4. —Gom arity and Owens. ‘flm'-— _— N. E. B. C. SWIMMERS WIN Close Victory in Medley Relay Beat Y. M. C. A. Juniors. Northeast Boys' Club swimmers de- feated the Y. M. C. A. Juniors, Dis- trict A. A. U. junior champions, in & duel meet at the Jewish Community Center pool last night, 34 to 32. The meet went to the Northeast boys when the medley team splashed home ahead by & foot. RELAY—Won by * Y e !lfl- wn: second. %finnor. Myers, lflennh 1. A% Illlll—!lr!& lollrv \ Werver, Bishop Taszer) to e ‘balls—o £l 0s0ommmmrsssnona® Gehrig clouied his | behind | rTun inning at the expense of Rookie | Harold (Hy) Vandenberg, who gave | HARDER WINS OWN GAME FOR INDIANS Drives Across Tally ‘l';nt Beats Browns, 3-2—5,000 on Hand, Despite Cold Weather. By the Associated Press, Cm. June 8.—The Cleve- land Indians scored a 3-to-2 vic- tory today over the St. Louis Browns before a crowd of approximately 5,000 persons. Tribe officials said the attendance was “normal.” in view of the chilly weather, and despite the of the Walter Johnson-Willle Kamm- | yesterday. Knickerbocker, Tribe shortstop, tal- \Hed in the initial inning on a single in the third inning when Vosmik forced Knickerbocker, Bejma to after doubling in left field. Harder's single accounted for the tally. Bejma doubled past third in the * | sixth and scored on a single by West. o PR L 2| 22920m0mratrr | o2200uammisnmis0 Y 4 SummisSumm asoso009e 2410 'I tud for Cain in sixth. ted for Walkup in seventh. . 000 002 101 100 Wx-—a 'ut. annnu.k;r - 8t ln Cleveland nunn—lel —Caf re Messrs. D7 Dinneer and Rolls. Time—2:03. = |SPORTS TO FEATURE EXCURSION OF CLUB x: Tug-of-War as Main Event of Card June 23. T!I! first annual outing and field day Club will be held at the new Marshall | ¥ Park on June 23. Featuring the day will be a tug-of-war between. the Italian World War Veterans and mem- bers of the club, the winners to receive a trophy to be presented by Am- bassador Augusto Rossi of Italy. L'Araldo, local Italian newspaper, ‘will present trophies to the winners of the first three places in the 1,500-meter race. A soccer game and other races also are included in the program. ‘The committee in charge of arrange- ments includes Comdr. Alfred A. Picchione, E. Torino, Mario Riccladelli, Mario Palmieri, Peter Pinocl, Mario Avon, Luigi Croce, Antony Di Valen- out tine, John Lazsari and Luigi Galli. Mack Set “Rubber” Tilt Russell’s Goal Nats Make Circuit Swing After Game Today—Remorenko Signed, Sent to Albany. Nationals and Athletics conclude their series today at Grifith Stadium in s single game that will mark Washington's final c iE 8" § iis i i | i it i £ i s §57 1 hostility of local fandom as a result| Glenn Myatt controversy on the road | ;n trip from which the Indians returned |2 © by Trosky. Knickerbocker had doubled. | Mel Harder, Cleveland hurler, scored | Condor Strange. Campbell brought In the i Tribe's third marker in the fourth | ‘ashington " vs. ) | North Washingion: Italo-American A. C. Will Stage|! of the Italo-American Athletic mm Lieut. Charles H. Reed of the War Department polo four is smacking the ball for the second of the five markers he counted against the JUNE 9, 1935—PART ONE Marshall-Middleburg outfit in West four-goal handicap the invaders won, 10 to 9. SPORTS. L Potomac Park yesterday. Given a —=Star Staff Photo. Diamond Dust ONCI again & heavy schedule faces sandlot nines as they swing into action for Sunday frays and visiting Shriners will no doubt see some first- class amateur games during their stay in the Capital. Praternal Order of Eagles want an out-of-town game for next Sunday. Colesville, Rockville and other lead- mng unlimited nines are challenged. Write John Travers at 119 Summers | drive, Alexandria, Va., or phone Alex- andria 510 between 6:30 and 7 p.m. With James Lovett hurling air-tight ball. the Aces Midgets defeated the Warwick A. C, 1-0, at Fairlawn. League standings are as follows: United States Government. evad w. 4 sttt esomma Maryland Ceunty. ‘Washin CW'III St st Moto; l‘ Coal é‘; Printer: L RE JL o mosiammalt = W. 0 W, apital Transit | sbury A Povis Yo Oream Pollowing are league schedul today: f PEETIELE ' Maryland County. Silver Spring Giants vs. Cabin Wheaton: Mount Rainie inler A. C.. a gto! John. at t vs. White Haven, at John. sames at 3 pm. National City Junior. o Mty umnm%" 15, Montgomery A. Pharmacy. r.rll'm. Kuth's n'-gfnm . Nation Wide. Gro- All games at 1 o'clock. Natienal City Midget. ND‘IH Hm Co. vs. Versis_ Products, Monument: Peiworth Eagles vs. Tokoma M No: 1 Momument: vh inston Boys™’ Club_vs. Jack Pr T hl'onh No. 1 irlawn: Trojans vs. O nnell Grill, No. 11 Monument. All sames at 1 o'clock. National City Unlimited—Section A. Motors vs. Pig 'n’ Whistle. : ture 3 yr- 3. “Giton” Brinters” Fare” Bark: for Meca " Al sames ‘st 3 o'clock =" National City Unlimited—Seetion B. Ctpital, Transit ve D. G. 8. No. Monument: s«..gI 3 rwicks. U Ca b BETES Bf ek Sl e Police Boys’ Club, Michigan Park vs. Colmar Manor, No. 3 Monument, 1 o'clock; New Deal vs. Modern Cleaners. No. 4 Monument, 1 o'clock; No. 11 vs. Duke and Otey Motors, No. 3 Monument, 3 o'clock; Joe Kuhels vs. No. 5, No. 4 Monu- | ment, 3 o'clock. LOSES THREE GRID ACES. Santa Clara lost three of its bright- est 1934 gridiron stars by graduation: Halfback Frank Sobrero, Guard Louis Spadefore and End Jim Arnerich. ipches. He is left-handed all the way and during three days of practice sessions with the Griffs this week he impressed with his power drives. One day he poled eight drives gver the right-field fence. As a freshman playing on the ‘West Chester College nine last he socked for s mark of .385 in 11 games. Grer RIFF certainly 15 not getting much of 3 break from the weather man this season . yes- i 5 4 Y am>=l‘ wowisma ol Wi Ciowns | D! i %o "R | Rin piicher—Hoyt ; | Elmer, Baldwin Are Among Noted BUCS DEFEAT REDS IN CLOUTING AFFRAY | |Suhr's Two Triples Are Telling | Factor in 14-8 Tilt—Bush and Hoyt Do Hurling. By the Associated Press. ITTSBURGH, June 8.—Gus Suhr's triple with the bases full in the seventh inning was the crowning blow | {in a hitting carnival between Pitts- | burgh and Cincinnati today and it paved the way for a 14-to-8 vicuxy, for the Pirates over the Reds. Southpaw Hollingsworth of the Reds | | was removed in the first inning n(ter‘ | giving three walks and being touched | for a triple. Brennan and Schott suc- | ceeded him. Bush and Hoyt worked | for the Pirates. Suhr made three triples altogether, during the day but the last one did | not count, as it was made in the | o30muaIasE0 [U— 2003 amO EYTTETNIETEEeS, 'v-. Totals. 38 14 24 11 *Batted for Prey in eighth. Score by innings: Cincinnati ., Pittsburgh . « 000 301 040— 8 R Sullivan (2 1 Kampouris, L. Waner_(3). | P. Waner (1\ Vaughan (4). Young. Sunr. Grace. Hovt Bush. = Errors__Kampouris. n. Schott. Runs batted in—You hits—Suhr. . blHlmnbell Sacrifice—Youns. Dou- s—S8uhr to Vaughan. Kampouris to Bullivan, i Let{ on_ b Pittsburgh, balls O Hollingsworth. off Brennan, 2. off Y. Strikeouts—By Swift. 1: by —Off Hollingsworth." 0 'in | Brennan. 6 in 5 innin of, Schott, i Dan. - Jmpires__Messry. and Reardon. Tim 29 CHAMPION ARCHERS IN SHRINE TOURNEY | Shots Competing Today at Potomac Park. T!'l Shrine archery tournament to- day on the polo fleld in West Poto- | 2 | mac Park is expécted to be the largest | bow-and-arrow event ever held in Washington. Some of the outstanding entrants in the event include Dr. R. P. Elmer of Philadelphia, who was national champion for 11 years, and Dr. J. C. Baldwin of Baltimore, who is champion | of the Old Dominion Archery Asso- perfect end of six golds with six arrows and is a member of a small but select body of archers known as the Six Golds Club. men’s classes. The tournament, which is expected to draw the largest gallery ever to witness a local archery con- test, will get under way at 10 am. base ball team, dressed in their undies, were present at the game to be presented with the titular trophy by President Griffith be- tween games . . . and they sat to- gether in a lower right-field kox, in the paurln( rain, throughout the . all other box seats, ‘were completely nude. HARLIE BERRY, the A's catch- er, lived up to his reputation 400 002 44x—14 | ciation. Dr. Baldwin recently made a L Medals will be awarded to the three % highest scorers in both ladies’ and DODGERS WIN ON HOMER | Taylor's Clout Beats Phillies in | Five-Inning Game, 3-2. PHILADELPHIA, June 8 (#).— Danny Taylor's home run with one on in the fourth gave the Brooklyn | Dodgers a 3-2 victory over the Phillies | today as rain cut the game to five | innings and forced postponement of | the second game of what was to have been a double-header. TWIN POLO TEAM: BEATS WAR, 109 Marshall-Middleburg, Witfi 4-Goal Handicap, Has Big Fifth Period, PURTING to the fore in the fifth chukker with a trio of goals, the Marshall-Middleburg (Va.y polo team, with the aid of a four-goal handicap, eked out a 10-9 victory over the War Department Whites yesterday on the West Potomac Park field in the first of a series of three games arranged for the benefit of the visiting Shriners. Lieut. C. H. Reed, riding at No. 1 post for the Army, tried valiantly to overcome a 9-6 lead at the end of the fifth session, and with the aid of Maj. C. C. Swing, who tallied with a bril- liant shot from midfield, the War De- partment pulled up to within one goal of a deadlock, but a goal by Kenny Jenkins, Marshall-Middleburg, earlier in the period saved the day for the Virginians. Spotting the Old Dominion quartet four goals, the Whites, with Lieut. Reed and Maj. A. V. Arnold leadiag the attack, pulled up to a 6-6 tie at the end of the half. Take a Three-Goal Lead. FOL!.DWTNG 8 scoreless fourth chukker, Gould Shaw and How- ard Pair collaborated to send Mar- shall-Middleburg into a 9-6 lead at the end of the fifth period. Jenkins followed through on a futile foul shot early in the sixth session to provide the winning margin. A slight drizzle which turned into a downpour in the fourth chukker made sloppy footing for the ponies. John Rawlings, Virginia player, was slightly hurt when thrown from his mount in the sixth chukker, but re- sumed play after a moment’s rest. Br'klyn. AB. H 0. A Phfll | Boyle.r! | Btripp.i Erevss. Eectier n. B'cher.2l Taylor. Lopez.c. Mungo, Tullll -0 1 ool 1 Mo're.r{ amilli.1b s | 23mme | Maj. Joe Swing was smacked on the )| elbow by an alien mallet earlier in | the fray. About 500 fans braved the elements. Line-up and summary: Pos. Marshall-Middleburs, 1 Goula Snaw. |.‘x . 010 20—3 | 4 | Phrtadiohia 11l 010 01—2 (Called. rain), | Runs—Leslie. Bucher_ Taylor. Allen. | o Runs batted in— . Two- . Home run—Taylor. play—Haslin to Ca- 1. Left on bases—Brooklyn. 3: delphia_ 5. Bases on balls—Off Mungo. 2 off E. Moore. 1. Strikeouts—By E. Moore. | 2 oy Moneo 4. Umbives—Messrs. Kiem: Magerkurth and Barr. Time—L:06. 'REVAMPING PROVES BRACER FOR CARDS | Annex Two Games From Cubs by One Run Each, Second Clash in Eleven Innings. By the Associated Press. ST, LOUIS, June 8.—Manager Frankie Prisch’'s revamped line-up broke the Cardinals’ three-game losing | streak by taking both ends of a double-header from the Chicago Cubs today before a ladies’ day crowd - | of 20,000, The world champions nosed out the PIRST GAME. =] | Leagu Cubs, 5 to 4, in the first game, and | | won the second, 6 to 5, in 11 innings. | Score by chukkers— Marshall-Middleburg ... War Dept. es . “incluces four-soal handic erthlll < Hlddhburl = !ht' rair war Scoring. Ravlines. White Arnotd (=) Mas: HAS THREE NEW PILOTS Bi-County Industrial Loop Now Ready to Start Play. MARTINSBURG, W. Va., June 8.— Three changes in managers have been announced by the Bi-County Industrial e. At Martinsburg Charles Hill and Paul Shriver have succeeded Caldwell Bradshaw as managers, at Berkeley Paul Ridings has succeeded Charles Nicodemus and at Bakerton Charles Gageby has taken over the reins from John Fraley. The league now is ready for action. —_— YACHT RACE REVIVED American, Nova Scotian Craft to Enter Portland-Halifax Event. Special Dispatch to The Star. HALIFAX, Nova Scotia, June 8.— Eight American and eight Nova Sco- tian yachts have entered the Port- | land-Halifax ‘ocean yacht race, sched- wing (2). Somenes Sommmiamomell Sosmm O Do : et | smumissanmenn | PR UR Io::....:. Totals. 38 1034°11 Totals.33 10 27 11 *None out in ninth when winning run | scored Batted for Warneke in eighth inning. iRan for Delancey in eighth inning. ve 000 020 020—4 000 202 001—5 Runs—Klein. C: neke. Martin. Medwicl ing Efois Frisch: Delancey. Warneke. 5 Garleton. Runs batted in-—J. Collins. De- lance; arnekefi Herma an. = Cuyler. Double play—J. Collins (un- {t_on bases—Chicago. 10: Pirst base on balls—_War- T a0, 10 in 8 innines: off P. Bollins. inning. Wiid tehes, —Warneke Wll‘mlnl nneher—F 1lin: er- Umptr pitcher—Carleton B Rleler and Pinen "Rime—2115 "E 5 > oormsMochl | i 3 Smcam ronommcrcnty o YD o 23853 omomuomoRa® e O S 323530 mmwnd as oo v B e o aoia ousbikananl | Totals. 43 *Totals.38 10 33 13 “None out when winning run scored. {Batted for Lee in 8fth Inning, r Kowalik in seventh jnning. !Buuo 16F Jirees tn'eienth nin Batted for Casey in eighth lnnlnl vev 000 100 220 00—5 302 000 600 01—6 .——o lu rges T e iing baited in—J wick (2). Cu: Two-base hits—Dav: Stephenson. Herman. Cavarretta. runs—Medwick, J. Collins. _Stole: Hack. Sacrifice—Davis. Double Ifll D— P‘rugx tl;l Oelben w J Call(n.l. Whltehe‘d Budanehy 2§, Clune 5 1€ Lee. 2: ofl Walker, k_oul Lee.’ xonuk “1; by Casey. by Walker ' 2: by it Lee. 4 innings; off Kowallk. 1 in'2 in- : Casey. 1 in 1 inning: off . 3 in 3 innings (none out in elev- in 7 innings (none Dean_ 2 in TEon o s oflF Telephone Number Information (ALL OR DIAL TEmple 11 > Sembmossesa® . BASEBALL uled to start July 12, according to | an announcement by W. R. MacAskill, vice commodore of the royal Nova | Scotia yacht squadron. The race, originally run in 1879, | is being revived this year after a lapse | of 13 years. Many additional entries are expected before July 12. Minor Leagues International, Rochester, 8-1; Syracuse, 3-2. American Association. Columbus, 1; Indianapolis, 0. Milwaukee, 4. Minneapolis, 3. Kansas City, 8 St. Paul, 4. Southern Association. Atlanta, 7; Birmingham, 3. Nashville, 14; Little Rock, 2. X Knoxville, 14-3; New Orleans, 5-11. Pacifie Coast. San Francisco, 6; Oakland, 3. Hollywood, 6; Portland, 1. Sacramento, 8; Los Angeles, 7. Piedmont. Portsmouth, 5-6; Asheville, 0-9. Charlotte, 7; Norfolk, 5. Wilmington, 14; Richmond, 6. Western. Keokuk, 10; Des Moines, 5. Texas, Galveston, 7; Tulsa, 3. College Base Ball. Yale, 6: Princeton, 0. Ohio Wesleyan, 6; Wooster, 1. TODAY 3:00P.M. Washington vs. Philadelphia’ AMERICAN LEAGUE PARK . Tickets at Park, 9 A.M. ("30 10 '32) Other Cars Proportionately Low

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