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A Browns’ Invasion Is Relief to Griffs : Bealing TIRE OF BEATINS B YANKS, TIGERS Newsom Takes Tough-Luck Lacing After Hadley Wilts in Heat. BY FRANCIS E. STAN. HOVED back in seventh place and fed up on battling the Yanks #nd Tigers in consec- utive series, Bucky Harris' Jinx-pursued Nationals today found a ray of hope in their darkest hour. Said ray is furnished by a hitherto unkind schedule, which calls for the American League’s doormats, the Browns, to open a five-game invasion tomorrow at Griffith Stadium. The| series, incidentally, will be inaugurated by a double-header. The Browns’ visit is regarded joy- ously by the Griffmen, who today were to bid farewell to Mickey Coch- rane's rising Bengals. The Browns have been instrumental, to a great extent, in keeping the Nationals in the league this season. Seven of Washington’s thirty-one | victories have been scored over the | Hornsby troupe, which in turn has been able to whip the Griffs only once. Heat Wilts Portly Pitchers. TNJEXT to & fervent prayer that the | St. Louises will stay as sweet as | they are, the Nationals are hoping, for the sake of a couple of their more rotund pitchers, for a break in the heat wave. Beaten yesterday by a T- t0-6 count by the Detroits, and barely able to eke out a 12-to-11 win Wed- | nesday, the Griffs are laying the blame on the weather. Earl Whitehill, who drops several | more pounds than the average hurler | per game in sweltering heat, weakened | 50 badly in the Bengal opener that he barely was able to last eight innings behind a 12-run attack. | And yesterday Bump Hadley, whose obvious return to form is one of the | biggest boosts to the Griffs’ stock in | some weeks, paid the penalty for his | generous physique just when it ap- peared he would hang up a second straight slab triumph in handy fash- fon. Bump weakened after twirling five- | hit ball for seven innings and all he | gained for his efforts was the exer- cise. Buck Newsom was charged with the defeat, & splotch as unjust as bus zone parking signs. Travis’ Elbow Not Chipped. |8 'AT THAT the Griffs ccnsidered}F themselves fairly fortunate m-; day as noses were counted in the locker room. Wild pitches by School- boy Rowe narrowly escaped eliminat- ing a pair of badly needed tossers yes- | terday in Cecil Travis and Joe Kuhel. | M: Travis, seemingly out for the major Jeague record for getting hit by i pitched balls, stopped one of Rowe’s swiftest with the socket of his right elbow and was forced to retire from the game. At first it appeared more serious, than the usual run of bruised elbows, and it was feared the socket bone had | been chipped. The youngster was taken to a hospital after the game for | g X-ray pictures, but these showed the | hurt to be only a bad bruise. There| was hope that Travis would be able to play today. Leg Muscles Knot After Blow. UHEL'S injury was regarded as less | serious, though none the less | painful. The first sacker was hit on his right leg, above the knee, and he continued to play without any ap- parent harmful effects until a couple of innings later, when he doubled to open the ninth. Then the leg museles knotted and Kuhel barely was able to run to second base. Red Kress replaced him on the sacks and on first base, and if Kuhel 1s unable to play today, the red-headed handy man was to fill his post. Kress, now listed as a pitcher, handled four chances in fine fashion yesterday. It was a tough ball game to lose yesterday. In one big inning, the sixth, the Griffs socked Rowe for half a dozen runs and held a 6-to-4 lead going into the eighth. But Hadley. who had been pitching brilliantly after the second inning, wilted from the heat and was replaced by Leon Pettit with nobody out, a runner on first base, and three balls on Goose Goslin. Newsom Great in Defeat. 'HEN and there the Tigers bounced ™ back into the ball game. Pettit completed the pass to Goslin, also ‘walked Rogell and then pitched a single to Gerald Walker, tying the acore. That was all Harris wanted to see of Pettit, so into the game, for the third straight day, went Buck Newsom. And never was the big workhorse of the staff better. Buck retired Owen, Rowe and Fox in order and goose- egged the Tigers again in the ninth. But Newsom got a couple of tough breaks in the tenth. The usually de- pendable Buddy Myer made an error to give Rogell a life and then Walker sacrificed. Newsom, faster with each appearance since he has been back in the game, then got rid of Owen, but Elon Hogsett, who relieved Rowe in the Washington eighth, dumped a lucky, broken-bat single over Alan Strange’s head to knock across the winning run. C’est le guerre, only Newsom said 4t in another language. —_— 0. K’S LOUIS-RISKO BOUT. LANSING, July 12 (#)—The State Boxing Commisison has given Floyd Fitzsimmons, Benton Harbor, Mich., promoter, the go-ahead in his plans to match Joe Louis, Detroit Negro heavyweight title contender, with Johnny Risko of Cleveland. WILL OPPOSE GRAYS. Due to a mix-up in the schedule, Isherwood A. C. will meet the Chevy Chase Grays Sunday on the latter'’s diamond instead of the Branchville A. C, as was originally scheduled. e BOOKING UNLIMITEDS. Bureau of Labor Statistics is book- fng games with unlimited teams at etropolitan 7217 before 3:30. Hayes Will Make Debut Tomorrow MMILLARD HAYES, pitcher re- cently acquired from Chat- tanooga in exchange for Bobby Burke, will start the first game of a double-header for the Griffs tomorrow against the St. Louis Browns, it was announced today by Manager Bucky Harris. Hayes was obtained in a des- perate effort to bolster the crum- pled Griff slab staff. MAX NEEDS GOOD HANDS, SAYS JO Louis Avers His Are 0. K., Baer’s Better Had Be if He Fights Him. By the Associated Press. ETROIT, July 12.—Young Joe Louis took a long, careful look at his hands today, and then modestly ventured to give Max Baer a tip that the former world heavyweight champion should make certain his fists are ready for his next fight—or quit the fight game. The “Brown Bomber” hasn't much to worry about regarding his hands or any other part of his 202 pounds of anatomy. Louis goes every morn- ing for a long horseback ride, and in three days, he says, he can get back at the weight at which-he exploded Primo Carnera out of the heavyweight picture. Joe Is Sympathetic. BUT Joe sympathizes, nevertheless, with Baer's hand problem. He said today he was glad to read that Max was “tickled pink” that surgeons said his hands were not seriously hurt in his battle with James J. Braddock. “But only Baer knows if his hands are O. K.” the sensational young Negro fighter said. “If Max isn't cer- tain his hands are O. K. and feel right, he should stay out of the ring. If we meet this Fall, and I'd like to fight Max by that time, he wants to be certain they're O. K., because mine are.” Griffs’ Records BATTING. . R. H_2b.3b Hr Rbi.Pe LI E ! et S » 2SES 33340 i Roansa: SO0 00INNII NI B 1 1 3 o - 3 SIS Bt e o o £ D COOHASIOIHDEES: R PRSTREPT N LY TR fe A " o RN [OOSR <82 o e LSRG ©OOD000 MMM wsom Shibs S PITCHING. Linke_ Russell _ ress___ Somwmmmng L ETORerS ) Hommszmsesl g Major Leaders By the Associated Press, American League. Batting—Johnson, Athletics, Gehringer, Tigers, .348. Runs—Gehringer, Tigers, 70; Green- berg, Tigers, 68. Runs batted in—Greenberg, Tigers, 100; Johnson, Athletics, 68. Hits — Gehringer, Tigers, Greenberg, Tigers, 104. Doubles—Greenberg, ‘Tigers, 26; Werber, Red Sox, and Cramer, Ath- letics, 22. Triples—Stone, Senators, 12; Cronin, Red Sox, 11. Home runs—Greenberg, Tigers, 25; Johnson, Athletics, and Bonura, White Sox, 17. Stolen bases—Werber, Red Sox, 14; Almada, Red Sox, 13. Pitching—Tamulis, Yankees, Lyons, White Sox, 9-3. National League. Batting—Vaughan, Pirates, Medwick, Cardinals, .361. Runs—Ott, Giants, 64; Martin, Cardinals, and Moore, Giants, 62. . Runs batted in—Ott, Giants, 71; J. Collins, Cardinals, 70. Hits—Medwick, Cardinals, Terry, Giants, 105. Doubles — Medwick and Martin, Cardinals, 23. ‘Triples—Suhr, Pirates, 9; Goodman, Reds, 8. Home runs—Ott, Giants, 19; J. Col- lins, Cardinals; Camilli, Phillies, and Berger, Braves, 17. Stolen bases—Martin, Cardinals, 11; Bordagaray, Dodgers; Moore, Card- inals, and Hack, Cubs, 7. Pitching—Schumacher, Giants, 13-2; Parmelee, Giants, 10-2. .352; 112; 0= .391; 109; s The Toening Staf Sporfls WASHINGTON, D. C, FRIDAY, JULY 12, 193! It Was a Fair Exchange in This Mix-Up Joe Rivers (on right), who scored a technical kayo in the 5 seventh round, and Mike Belloise each got in a blow at the same time in the sixth session in their bout last night in the American Legion show. Belloise, shaky at the time, gave indication of what was impending. THE SPORTLIGHT Milburn, 54, Still Is Among Greatest Polo Players, After 25 Years in Game. BY GRANTLAND RIC 0ld Omar on Dizzy Dean. Here is the veil through which I cannot see, Here is the door to which I have no key. Here is a_bird no one can figure out, No even Dizzy—so why you—or me? When you and I get badly out of line, We know the answer—where the word is wine; He does not drink—but thinks it unhelped, Which makes him either cuckoo or divine, Today he has a Dr. Jekyll touch. Tomorrow he is Mr. Hyde in dutch; He has no slant on what his next mood is, But if he wins it doesn’t matter much. N THE act of turning out a few kind words about the veteran l ‘Walter Hagen, it occurs to us that ‘we have overlooked an even greater veteran when it comes to the age-old battle against time and youth. His name is Devereux Milburn. At -the age of 54, he still is one of the greatest polo players on any field— still a star against any type of opposi- tion thrown his way. ‘Where Hagen has been playing high- class tournament golf for 23 years, Dev Milburn has been playing cham- pionship polo for 35 years, and only a few days ago he again was one of the top entries among such polo notables as Winston Guest, Tommy Hitchcock and Cecil Smith. Dev Milburn was one of the main actors who helped to bring the big cup back from England meore than 25 years ago. , ‘Two or three years back they carried him from the fleld at Aiken with enough broken bones in his body to last two foot ball teams an entire season. ‘They had to wire him up to keep him together. But when healing time came around he was back on & polo pony with a mallet in his hand, looking for more action. Last Summer he picked up a broken colar bone. He has taken the batter- ing of 35 years and yet this season he looks better than he has looked in a long time. And you might write it down that polo isn’t any powder-puff contribu- tion to competitive sport. ‘N ANOTHER polo line-up at Mead- owbrook we ran across the names of S. Carey and A. Smith on the same four. S. Carey happens to be Seward Carey, aged 74, and A. Smith is Archie Smith, his 17-year-old two-goal grand- son. When some one can play good polo at 74 there is no particular rea- son to start bothering about the rav- ages of time until you've passed 90. Or maybe 94. John D. Rockefeller gave up golf at 95, but this may be only a brief recess. But, after all, when grandfather and grandson can play a hard game of polo together, with an age difference of 56 years, we can see no particular reason why any such word as “middle age” should appear in a dictionary— wrote. competitor. & bad lie. if it does. WELL-KNOWN sportsman, who happens to be a major general in the United States Army, has just re- ceived a letter from Dr. William Twed- dell, Lawson Little’s opponent in the final round of the recent British ama- | teur. He has sent us the letter, which happens to reflect great credit on both men. “This was the greatest round of golf | T ever played,” the veteran Tweddell | “But it proved to me that, in |addition to being a fine shot-maker, | Lawson Little also was an amazing | There were several occa- sions when he had me 3 down or 4 down. Yet it so happened down the stretch that I overcame this lead. Ev- ery golfer knows what it means when you have had a good lead wiped out, especially when the holes are slipping away. But in place of slipping or breaking up, Little settled down to his best golf, winning the match with one of the finest shots I've ever seen from This is the true and the | Gosli complete test of a great competitor.” | wp; VWHEN it comes to the big punch in | 53 base ball—mesning the home- run zone beyond the park—the Amer- jcan League has had something to spare over the National for some years. The A. L. can point to Babe Ruth, | MY Lou Gehrig, Jimmy Foxx and Hank Greenberg—to mention only a few. the N. L. can show Hack Wilson, Chuck Klein, Mel Ott, Wally Berger, Rip Collins and other long-range finders, are far above the average—but who still haven't the consistent ing distance of those mentioned above. Against this quartet, Two of these, Ruth. and Foxx, broke up two of the all- star games. Ruth, Foxx and Gehrig all are over the 200-pound Greenberg is & big, around 6 feet 3 or 4. Ruth now is through and Lou Gehrig has drawn a slow start. But Greenberg. Foxx and Gehrig, on a season’s count, still rate around the top as danger sig- nals. Their 10-year tctals hardly will be equaled by any rivals. And it's the longer road that counts. (Copyright. 1035, by the North ewspaner Alliance, Inc.) who carry- class, while rangy fellow American | N —Star Staff Photo. Louis Disobeys Pilot for $2.71 Dm‘ROIT. July 12 (P).—Joe Louls, sensational young Negro heavyweight, is richer by $2.71— earned in a very peaceful manner. Joe went to an amateur boxing show accompanied by his manager, John Roxborough, who is being sued for divorce. A deputy sheriff stepped forward and handed Joe a summons to appear in court July 25 to testify regarding Roxbor- ough's share of his earnings. With the summons was $2.71 in witness fees. Joe took the summons and the $2.71. “Don’t take it,” yelled Roxborough, grasping the situation. “Throw it on the ground.” “No suh,” objected the “Brown Bomber,” “that's the law—and also, this is my $2.71." YACHT YANKEE SEVENTH Last as Candida. British Boat, Takes French Contest. LE HAVRE, France, July 12 (P).— The Boston sloop Yankee finished seventh and last in the first of three 22-mile races over a four-cornered course for the Count of Paris Silver Cup. The race was won by the British yacht Candida in 2 hours 11 minutes 27 seconds. Yankee's time was 2:21:42, King George's Britannia finished sixth. Official Score couurrecH R o Eh O HookomteHmel ° ae cocomecccoc WASHINGTON. Kuhel, - cumponcnl A Sorre Totals _. *Batted for Newsom in tenth. 120 100 020 1—7 000 600 000 0—6 in—Gehringer. Rogell, y (2), G. Walker (2). Hogsett. 0 " Three-base hits —Goslin, ell, . Home runs— Gehringer Goslin. Stolen base—Fox. Sac- rifices—Powell, Gehringer, G. Walker. Double r Rogell to Greenbers. © - T R e Euley BT of Pettit 1; off Hogsett, 3: of 'y. 5 of ettit, 3i Off Newsom, 1. Struck out—By Rowe, 4 by Hadley, 5. Hi ‘Rowe, 13 1n 7% innings: off Hogsett. 1 in 23 innings: off’ Hadle i e som (Fox). ochrane. Win- ning pitcher—Hogsett. Losing pitcher— lewsom. Umpires—Messrs. Summers, Mc- Gowan and Marberry. Time—2:46. Goslin Hits in .280s, but He Proves Terror to Griffs Averages 436 in 62 Times at Bat Against His Former Club—Tigers Ashamed of Mere Singles Here. its greatest thrills back in the 20s. Now he’s providing his one-time club with more heartaches than any single player in the league. One of the only two veterans of the 1924 world champions still plying his wares in the o the Goose merely is batting in .280s for the Tigers these ‘That is his figure for the But against the Nationals Goose’s mark is second to In 13 games against the this year the Goose has stepped the plate 62 times, scored 16 made 27 hits and batted across 15 tallies for an average of .436. Nine of his hits, including a triple and a homer yesterday, have been who merely raps a single walks to the dugout with his head hanging in shame. ' In thg two games played here prior to today’s the Detroits have made 325 hits. Of these 15 were for extra bases. They've cracked out 10 doubles (all in Wednesday’s game), 3 home runs and 2 triples. The Nationals made 26 hits, but only 6 were for extra bases. Pity poor Bucky Harris. Jack Russell, it is feared, will not be able to grasp a ball for 10 more days, at least, and Henry Coppola also will be out for that length of time while recovering from a ton=- silectomy. Thus Harris is left with five pitchers, Whitehill, Hadley, New- som, Linke and Pettit. Bucky's noble experiment of trying to make & hurler of Red Kress still is very ers will be Whitehill and Newsom, who will be working his fourth least, in todsy’s finale with the Detroits. Hank Greenberg of Detroit, lead- ing home-run hitter of the Amer- ican League, never expects even to approach closely Babe Ruth’s rec- ord of 60 homers in one season .« « “If I hit 40 I'll be satisfied,” avers Hank . . . Bump Hadley on the elbow yesterday in the seventh inning it was the seventh time this season the young in- fielder had been hit . . . Wilshere hit him twice and Rowe, Hatter, mm ey, Grove and Weiland once in 27 consecutive games, the fleet Tiger outfielder fouled out, walked, fanned twice, rolled out once and was hit by a pitched ball. Dee Miles, youthful gardener from Chattanooga, will be placed in the Washington line-up again tomorrow . . . to stay for a spell, too . . . Harris wants a real line on him and anxiously is awaiting the arrival of Pitcher Millard Hayes from the Lookouts . . . ‘whose time of arrival is very vague « + « Washington has only five ablebodied pitchers, but Chatta- noogs has only four. F.E. 8. fielloise 5. JOF “BIG NUMBER” AFTER UPSET WIN Stops New York Ring Star in Seven Rounds—Legion Loses on Good Show. BY JOHN B. KELLER. ROSPERITY may linger around the corner for the American Legion of the District in the boxing business, but California Joe Rivers overhauled it last night. The West Coast whirlwind put him- self in line for a lucrative ring en- gagement hereabout when he scored a stunning upset with a technical knockout over Mike Belloise, high- ranking New York feather, in the fea- ture bout of the veteran organization’s initial fight venture of the segson. With rival promoters overlooking no lkely drawing card as they strug- gle to keep out of the red with their two-shows-a-week program, Rivers, again high in the esteem of the local cash customers after his startling success, looks a good number to both parties and he is in a position to make them pay plenty for his services. Rivers, never a boxer but ever & puncher, was so free with his blows last night that Belloise went away after seven rounds of gruelling pun- ishment in the bout that had been scheduled to go 10. Almost continu- ally on top of the New Yorker and pounding him soundly about the body at close quarters, Rivers had his op- ponent staggering after the fifth. Belloise “Out” Seven Minutes. AN UNDERDOG before the fight, the West Coast lad, with his weight of 1307, giving him an advantage of 412 pounds over the highly-touted New York boxer, put the finishing touch to the encounter with a right to the heart just before the seventh round closing bell. Belloise wabbled as he walked to his corner, and when the bell for the eighth sounded he was unable to get to his feet. ‘The feather, who not long ago had given Baby Arizmendi a great fight and has to his credit wins over a dazed for a minute. Then with his Belloise fainted. He had been bleed- ing from a gash over his left eye, a | wound inflicted by Rivers in the first round. After he fainted blood frothed from his mouth. Beloise was lifted from his seat and placed prone on the canvas. There | he lay for seven minutes before he | revived sufficiently to leave the ring. And then he had to be assisted by both his handlers. The big number from New York was a badly beaten boxer. Rivers’ Win Decisive. 'HERE was nothing fluky about Rivers’ victory. He took six of the seven rounds the bout lasted ac- cording to the scorecards of Referee Denny Hughes, one of the two judges and The Star. The fourth round was recorded as even on these tallies, but one judge gave this round to Belloise by a shade. Belloise showed little of the boxing ability that had won fame for him in New York’s Golden Gloves ranks and in his professional career. Occasion- ally he managed to outmaneuver Riv- ers, but most of the time the New York boy was trying desperately to cover himself. When Belloise pro- tected his head, however, Rivers bore in with battering body punches and when the New Yorker dropped his guard his head was rocked. | The New Yorker's manager at-| tempted to alibi his charge’s defeat | with the explanation that Belloise had been made ill by the heat earlier in the day, but the District Boxing Com- mission’s physician gave Belloise a clean bill of health an hour before the fight began. Belloise Underestimated Foe. IT ‘WAS not the heat, but Belloise’s distain of Rivers prior to the fight that was responsible to a great extent for the New Yorker’s poor showing. One of the loser’s seconds let the cat | out of the bag. “Mike didn’'t think this guy Rivers had anything and didn’t prepare for the fight,” the sec- | ond admitted. “Rivers was just an- other cheese guy to him.” Belloise was not long in learning what a mis- take he had made. There was nothing flashy in support of the main go, although a straight knockout ended one of the prelimi- naries and a technical knockout closed another. In a scheduled six-rounder between two colored fighters, Meyer Rowan, a New York near-welter with a solar plexus punch, knocked out Frankie Dillon of Baltimore after 35 seconds of the third round. In the second round of the semi-final Andy Kelley, Richmond welter, ran against the head of Frank Cicero of Baltimore and got a deep gash over his left eye. Referee Hughes then stopped the fight. Kirkwood Burke, former District Golden Gloves heavyweight champion, decisioned Buster Buckley of Alexan- dria in a four-rounder, and in another bout of similar duration between col- ored scrappers Kid Huey of Alexan- dria was unanimously declared victor over Bobhy Hayes of the Capital. Legion Will Try Again. S AN initial venture this season for an organization that failed to promote fights successfully last year, it was a good show the American Legion put on. Although the prelim- inaries were perhaps below the stand- ard here, those engaged in them pro- vided the fans with action and all at hand seemed satisfied with what had been offered. , the American Legion’s first effort at a come-back in the bok- ing business might well be termed a success. Financially, however, it was anything but that. The show attracted 839 to the arena at Sixth street and Florida avenue northeast, but only 664 paid in $603.80 to look on. As the principals of the main go received $300 each, it is easily seen that the Legion was left holding the well-known bag. But Howard Living- ston, former District licensed referee, who is managing for the veterans' organization, believes the deficit will be more than made up in the next show. The American Legion, according to number of highly-rated battlers, sat | g; seconds working over him frantically | P Sports Program For D. C. Fans ‘TODAY. Base Ball. Detroit at Washington, Griffith Stadium, 3:15. TOMORROW. Tennis, Washington vs. Army Leech Cup team, Columbia Country Club, 2. Canoeing. Middle States Regatta, Washington Canoe Club, 1:30. Horse Show. Second Summer event, Riding and 1unt Club, Rock Creek Park, Beach ¢rive and East-West highway, 1. Leagfie Statistics FRIDAY, JULY 12, 1935, American RESULTS YESTERDAY. Chicago. 10. 7—6: St. Louis, 3—0. STANDING OF THE CLUBS. ~osworup S 3i0% Aep o19a PUsIeis) il (% |eiudrapeniad 1BUIUSEAM *93wIu9019d »|2| uo: 4 46 L 126303134 36/41/4: GAMES TODAY. GAMES TOMORROW. Det. at Wash. (3:15).8t. L. at Wash. (3). Cleve. at New York. Chi. at New York. St. Louis at Phila. Detroit at_Phila Chicago at Boston. Cleve. at Boston. Naticnal RESULTS YESTERDAY. New York, 4; Pittsburgh, 2. Cincinnati _5: Brooklyn. 4 8t. Louls. 5: Philadelphia, 4. Chicago, 5: Boston. 3. STANDING OF THE CLUBS. “aiox mon| ot 13 0D Gamasial usyodig =|_nvuurout ‘93mu2219d Boosts Rivers’ Stock >-— TURF DEBUTANTES RACE FOR $35,000 Fillies Classic Tomorrow at Arlington Park Is Wide-Open Race. By the Associated P'YQM. HICAGO, July 12.—They are going to throw a $36,000 party for debutantes at Are lington Park tomorrow. The event is the seventh running of the Lassie Stakes, richest purse for juvenile fillies of the turf world. A field of 15, the best in America, is expected to go to the post, giving the event a gross value of $36,120. The race may be regarded as a wide-open affair, due to the absence of an outstanding 2-year-old filly, but Alfred Gwynne Vanderbilt of New York has entered a pair in Parade Girl and Balcony that likely will rule favorite because of the excellent repu- tation they brought from New York. Mrs. Ethel V. Mars of Oak Park, I, owner of the Milky Way Stable, also has entered a pair due for strong support. They are Torolee and For- ever Yours. Each raced to impressive victories at Arlington Wednesday. None of the candidates will carry full weight of 122 pounds and most of them will be started under 117 | pounds. The winner will join the select circle that already includes such famous misses as Top Flight, Risque, Cature, Hilena, Mata Hari and Motto. Stars Yesterday By the Associated Press Virgil Davis, Cardinals—His pinch double in ninth drove in runs that beat Phillies. Lefty Grove, Red Sox, and Zeke Bonura, White Sox—Grove pitched five-hit ball and scored winning run | in opener, Bonura drove in five tallies in second game with two homers. Augie Galan, Cubs—Led attack or | Braves with homer and two singles Johnny Allen. Yankees—Limited In- dians to six hits, fanned nine anc knocked in first two runs. Billy Sullivan, Reds—His eighth- ; | inning double brought in winning run: RROW. St. Louis. * uis. t scheduled. New York Brookiyn at Boston at Chica | against Dodgers. Eric McNair and Jimmie Foxx | Athletics—McNair hit homer anc | five singles, Foxx two homers and two doubles in double-header against Browns. 7k FLORSHEIM Florsheim prices are never reduced except during our semi-annual Sales! That's why most men know they’re really getting some- thing extra and are coming in during this event. Hadn’t you better come in too? It isn’t often you can get bargain prices like these on Florsheims. SALE OF SOCKS Pine lisle or silk socks, white or pastels; clocks, stripes, dots, all-over . designs. Stock up! Save! Regularly 35¢ pair, s PAIRS 89¢ 199 Men’s Shops 14th & G 7th & K *Open nights *3212 14th Livingston, will try 8gain next Week. | o s S o/ T S SRR, [\ . . P \