Evening Star Newspaper, August 31, 1935, Page 10

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

A—10 Nats Again Try Redmond Behind Bat : Bucs Up e Pilot Interested in Rook Re- ceiver—Club Is to Be Reorganized. BY FRANCIS E. STAN. ACK REDMOND, a lantern- jawed young catcher who has spent nearly a full season with the Nacionals in the shadows of the bull pen, suddenly is due to step into the spotlight now as their plans for 1936 go forward. As far as Capital fandom is con- cerned, Redmond may occupy only fleeting rays of the spotlight, for, un- doubtedly, the rookie receiver's test will be overshadowed by the keen and natural interest already attached to Cecil Travis' forthcoming shift to the outfield, young Buddy Lewis’ trial on third base and Dick Lanahan’s test in the box. But if the fans’ chief interest is elsewhere, that of President Clark Grifith and Manager Bucky Hatris 1s not likely to be centered more keenly anywhere than behind the bat during the remainder of this season. The catching problem for 1936 is secondary in importance to none other and, as a matter of fact, it may provide more headaches than any other enigma if Redmond fails to pan out. Big League Catchers Scarce. S!‘.NT home from Detroit three weeks | ago with a pair of “dead” fingers, Redmond was to join the Griffs today as they were to open a two-game series here against the Boston Red Sox. And the young and rugged Arizonan, who never really got a chance to show his wares behind the plate this season, finally will hear opportunity’s knock. | If he listens hard enough he also may | hear a fervent prayer coming from the direction of the ball club’s front office. Winter trades, of which there will be an abundance involving the Griff- men, may take care of the outfield problem, the infield situation, or the pitching enigma, but it is extremely doubtful if the trade winds will carry as far as the Washington catching department for one reason. That is the shortage of big-league backstops. Few, if any, American League clubs are so well supplied with catchers that they will put this species of ball player on the block this Winter unless they get, in return, at least a receiver as good. The Nationals, for instance, have only one recognized big league catcher and he is Clif Bolton, who, while no genius behind the plate, is almost certain to remain with the club | and do the bulk of next year’s back- stopping. s Holbrook Fails to Excite. IT ever, of the Griffith A. C., but the reserve posts, and that is where Redmond fits | into the picture. As a part-time catcher last season, and heir to the day-in, day-out job this session, Bolton has shown a distressing susceptibility to injury. During these last two years he has suffered, among other injuries, two broken fingers. Naturally, if digit fractures are going to be an annual disaster, then the problem of finding an adequate re- placement is a serious one. Unfortunately all around, Redmond | was stricken with his singular ailment | Just a couple of days before Bolton's finger was broken during the recent Western swing. Thus the way was paved for Sam Holbrock, third mem- ber of the local receiving corps, to make his bid, and while Sam has done well enough, his performances have not excited Harris particularly. Holbrook’s chief handicap, perhaps, is inexperience. It isn’t known yet whether he’ll hit big-league pitching, but it is doubted. As a thrower Sam has much room for improvement. During one stretch in the final swing of the West eight bases were stolen in nine games by rival clubs while Sammy was behind the bat. Jack Could Lessen Burden. JDUE to Bolton's injury, Harris now has a pretty good line on Hol- brook, but, as for Redmond, little is known of his prowess or potentialities. Becausé he, like Bolton, is a left- handed batter, Jack never received much of a chance behind the plate, but Harris announced today that from now until the end of the season Redmond would see action whenever & right-handed pitcher faced the Grifts. If Redmond can fill the bill in a fashion that stamps him as a capable understudy to Bolton next year, he can go far toward removing some of the burden now on the shoulders of Grifith and Harris. Outside of the necessity of tearing apart and re- building the pitching staff, finding a satisfactory shortstop and gathering ‘what may be an entirely new array of outfielders, Griff and Bucky will have nothing to worry about., One guess being as good as another, this corresponde:.t is willing to gamble that rarely, if ever, will a Washington club be so torn asunder as the current NET ACE NOT T0O WED. ARBONNE, France, August 31 (P). ISN'T the No. 1 catching job, how- | that is worrying the bosses | Mose: | to better his own record. The Foening Star Sporls WASHINGTON, D. CEARIG NOW BIDS FORBATIINGLEA Yankee Advances to Third Place—Vaughan Holds to Top in Old Loop. By the Associated Press. EW YORK, August 31.—Lou Gehrig's bid for the American League batting crown and Arky Vaughan's effort to make the .400 grade in the averages by the close of the season furnished the twin races during the past week. ‘The New Yorker, who has risen from | a place among the also-rans to within striking distance of the lead in the past two weeks, continued his spurt up to third place and wound up qnly 10 points behind the leader, Joe Vosmik of Cleveland, after yesterday’s game. Gehrig slammed out 15 hits in 29 times at bat during the week, adding 13 points to his average for a 22-point climb in two weeks. Vosmik hit nine times in 21 attempts to bring his mark | up 3 points to .352. Hank Greenberg | of Detroit just maintained his .343 average, 1 point ahead of Gehrig. Vaughan Clouts, But Loses. VAUGHAN, whose mark is so high it takes a lot of hitting to in- crease it, belted out 11 blows in 29 times up, but lost 1 point, going to .398. His nearest rival, Joe Medwick of St. Louis, trailed by just 30 points. The 10 leading regulars in each major league follow: American League. G. Vosmik, Cleveland 121 Grunber# Detroit Gehrig_New York Myer, Washington Sebiiker. beirat 123 500 inger, rol 24 s. Phila. 85 344 Pet, 353 bt 5 o) Johnson, Fhila. _ Foxx. Philadelphi 398 Vaughan, Pitts.__ ‘aughan, = Medwick. St. Louis Haruett, Chicaso 9 323 'WASHINGTON LIONS WIN Outride Anacostia Club in Don- key Base Ball Game. Nearly 3,000 watched at Griffith Stadium last night as Lions played with donkeys ac in. This time the Washington Lions’ Club scored a 2-0 victory over the Lions from Anacostia. Proceeds of the game went to charity. How comical donkey base ball is becoming is realized from last night's events, which saw the Washington Base Ball Club’s professional funster, Nick Altrock, leaving his role of umpire before the game was over. For one of t-e few times in his life, Nick found himself out-funnied. BOSOX OBTAIN DEAL Outfielder Now Batting Above .300 for Knoxville. KNOXVILLE, Tenn., August 31 (#)—Lindsey Deal, 72, fielder with Knoxville, will become the Major Leaders By the Associated Press. American League. Leading batters—Vosmik, Indians, -352; Greenberg, Tigers, .343. & Vosmix, Indians, 39. Triples—Vosmik, Indians, 17; Stone, Senators, 14. Home runs—Greenberg, Tigers, 34; Poxx Athletics, 27. Stolen bases—Werber, Red Sox, 25; features of the major league batting | H no-hit shutout of the series, will take i £°.d surrendering only three hits. 46 , | Ings. | Didn’t Talk “Job,’ Harris Declares PIKING rumors that he and President Clark Griffith had conferred on his prospects of mansging the Nationals again next season, Bucky Harris today declared his initial meeting with the Washington club owner in four weeks did not include discus- sion of a new contract. “We merely talked over the situa- tion of the team,” said Harris, referring to a conference yesterday between himself and Griffith. Griffith, maintaining a policy of long standing, declared that he would not be ready to discuss managerial prospects for 1936 until after the current season wWas over. F.E. 8. AGGIES REACH FINAL IN SOFT BALL PLAY Will Meet Sport Center Tuesday for City Title and Crack at National Honors. P~~T CENTER and the Depart- ment of Agriculture tens will play for the soft ball championship of the | T itrict on Tue-iay afternoon, the right of the latter to compete being | assured yesterday when the Aggies | walloped the Ceramists, 11 to 2, in| the semi-final game of the title series. A trip to Chicago will be the reward of T-es<ty's victor, which automati- cally will be qualified to play there | for the national championship. Tues- day’s game will be played at 5 o'clock on Mc. ument diamond No. 10. Pitchers probably will steal the 'lhov in the all-important game, with two of the best soft ball | hurlers in the city ready to go. Freddy Hill. who pitched the onl the mound for Sport Center, while ! his opponent will be, of course, the Aggie star, Abe . nfield. Rosen- | field continued his winning ways yes- | terday in the semi-final game with the Ceramists, striking out 11 men e — BRADDOCK TO TRAVEL Manager Plans to Take Heavy Champ Abroad Next Month. DALZAS, Tex, August 31 (#).— James J. Braddock has finished his | exhibition tour of the South and will | return to New York. Manager Joe Gould said he and the heavyweight champlon likely would | depart from New York late in Sep- | | tember for a tour of Ireland nnd‘ | England. HICAGO, August 31.—This is turning into a fast age when you have foot ball sideline gossip in August. But here it it. Two of the main visitors here are | Elmer Layden of Notre Dame and Bob Izuwho(llm Each has a killing hurdle in the way. The same is Oho State. Layden’s Notre Dame tackles the Buckeye Typhoon November 2. Illi- nois wades in November 16. Layden looks on this battle with dark forebod- “We'll have the backfield,” he says, “but I can't figure a line now to meet that Ohio State power house. C., Sir Malcolm Campbell’s giant speedster is unloaded at Wendover, Utah, near the Benneville salt flats, where the famous FROM THE Sinister O’Brien Stalks Tennis Stars, Menacing Amateur Body’s Pure Dollars. BY JOHN P YOU believe what the amateur authorities tell you the most sinister figure in tennis today is Mr. William O'Brien. Mr. O'Brien does not look a sinister figure. He is round and chubby and genial. He never wears a plug hat or a black mustache. To the best of my knowl- edge, he never has foreclosed a mort- gage. Foreclosing mortgages is an ugly habit, like biting your nails. No villain is complete without it. But Mr. O'Brien’s villainy is a lit- tle different from the ordinary stuff. | It consists of going around with a check book and waving it under the sensitive nostrils of the better amateur temnis players. Mr. O'Brien also packs a six-shooter fountain pen, a glib sales talk and a deck of blank contracts. He ap- proaches his victim and says: “Take a contract, pal. Any con- tract.” The victim studies the pack and selects one. ‘The Hyponotic Siren Song. “NOW." says the unscrupulous pro- moter, “while I am tracking cer- tain mystic numbers on the item you have selected (of your own free will) I want you to study these two gayly- bound pamphlets entitled, ‘Do Yo ‘Want to Be a Sucker All Your Life?’ | and ‘Revelations of the Slave Trade in Amateur Tennis’ Afterward you will sign the document and we will drop over to my office for a Mickey Finn—I beg your pardon, for & friendly glass of beer.” Six days lster the gullible country boy with the terrific forehand drive wakes up to find himselt playing sordid cash tennis with a group of paid thugs named Vines, Tilden, Lott, Stoefen, etc. At least, that’s the procedure as reported by the amateur officials. I myself have never seen Mr. O'Brien in the act of corrupting an amateur. It must be a pretty sight. I expect that he closes in on the victim at a gliding pace and fixes him with a fairly glittering eye. Mr. O'Brien’s eye never glittered in my presence, but I know he is a man of depraved no- tions because he has repeatedly de- clared that a tennis player is better off working for salary than for hand- outs. This statement strikes right at the heart of our wholesome ama- teur system. I mention Mr. O'Brien at this time because we are in the middle of the open season on amateurs. Every morning these days Mr. | THE SPORTLIGHT Layden Sees Ohio State as Unbeatable; Zuppke, as Always, Feels He Has Chance. Y GRANTLAND EI some unexpected turn er play that may break up any game. Emfoflmdelentamthe Chicago firing line already are dis- cussing the early meeting of Prince- ton and P:;mqlvmh after & break some years’ standing. This game October 5 at Princeton, is tabbed as a sure sellout. And it toughest game the isn't given much to spare. Pennsylvania plays Yale a week British driver will strive —Copyright, A. P. Wirephoto. PRESS BOX LARDNER. O'Brien gets out of bed early, cleans and loads his fountain pen and stalks the turf for simon-pure athletes who have strayed from the sheltering wing of their amateur boss. He is on the trail of a couple of plump numbers right now. In fair- ness to him, I will quote his own version of the hunting of Fred Perry and Francis Xavier Shields, Special Technique for Perry. va is tough because you have | to listen to him as well as ralk to him. Mr. O'Brien overcomes this hazard by stuffing his ears with a special preparation of cotton which vibrates to just one word—"Yes.” Everything else bounces off. “Fred, ol' pal” says Mr. O'Brien, “I am beginning to have a sneaking hunch that the reason you won'’t turn | Barnes, Tilden and Richards. They ! can all beat you. If you don’t think | 80, here is my proposition. I'll give you $50,000 for sigring and a bonus of $10,800 if you win & majority of | exhibition matches from any one vru‘ I name. Hahzabaht it?” Mr. O’Brien knows right away that | Perry is not saying “yes”; because he can’t hear anything He knows also that Perry is answering at great length and with some show of spirit, the gist of what Perry says is this: “I want no part of you, Mr. O’Brien. I don’t want to see you or hear you mentioned. You are an evil influence. ‘Turning pro is the farthest thing from my mind. Make it $100,000 and Il do it.” ‘Well, that's higher than Mr. O'Brien wants to go, so he turns to Shields. “I'd like to be a movie star,” he says, “and if the producers feel the same way about it, I will be. It all S pro is because you are scared of Vines, | fug, Sianctt Shields is wavering as we go to press. | August 31 SATURDAY, AUGUST 31, 1935. et Flag Chasers’ Apple Carts ROUT CARDS LIKE Triple Tie Marks Moline Tournament—Jarrell and Wilson Lagging. Special Dispatch to The Star. OLINE, Ill, August 31.—Ray- mond L. Frye of Orkney Springs, Va, horseshoe champion of the Washing- ton metropolitan area, and Clayton C. Henson, runner-up to Frye In The Washington Evening Star tournament, were tied with one cther man for the lead in the Moline Dis- patch invitation tournament at the end of the first day's play, each with & clean slate of six wins. Temple Jarrell of Hyattsville, was far down in the list of 24 stars with two wins and four losses and Roy ‘Wilson of Washington was a peg. be- low Jarrell, having won only one game in six. Frye pitched 81 per cent ringers in one game and Henson had one of 80. ‘Youngster Ties Champ. THE Dispatch tournament is being run in conjunction with the world championship event, in which Ted Allen of Alhambra, Calif., the defend- ing champion, and 16-year-old Charles (Casey) Jones of Waukesha, Wis., | swept through their six opening match | play assignments to share the lead. C. C. Davis of Kansas City, former champion, who set a new record qualifying total of 266, landed in a temporary tie With Joe Bennett of Moline for third place with five vic- tories and one defeat. Davis fell before the pitching of Jimmy Risk, Mont- | pelier, Ind., star, for his lone defeat, | while Davis accounted for Bennett's | only setback of the day. The leaders: Ted Allen. Charies Jor Alhambra. Calif.__ nes. esha, Wi oot sansrnoozad . Milwaukee_ W. O Msxwell, Hicksville, Ohl i s e S ) NEARDLDS RACE FOR LARGE PURSE . Field of 17 in $40,000 Hopeful at Spa. ARATOGA SPRINGS, N. Y, (A)—With the major share of $40,000 and & strong cleim to the 2-year-old | championship awaiting the winner | depends on whether they give me an- other contract. If not, I might sign with yow. Let me see that gold brick again. You say your mine is over- | flowing with stuff like this. It doesn't seem hardly possible.” | That's how the sinister O'Brien works. If Shields fails in Hollywood, Lhe probably will be trapped by the pros and forced to accept hard cash | instead of sandwiches. No wonder the | amateur officials are anxious to stamp out this vicious influence. won’t have a pure dollar left to call their own. yrieht. 1935, by the North (oY webaper Alliance. Tne NINE STAKES CARDED )Amenur Constitution Handicap, at $7,500, to Be Feature of Opening on October 2. By the Assoctated Press. 'HE Fall meeting at Suffolk Downs, which will open October 2, prom- ises to be a gala session. The man- agemént has programmed nine stakes, with a total value of $59,000. On the opening day the $7,500 Constitution Handicap, & test of 6 furlongs for all ages, will headline the card. Boojum's stake and track record of 1:17 appeared safe today when the ranking juveniles met in the thirty- first running of the Hopeful Stakes at Saratoga. The C. V. Whitney speedster, one of the fastest horses ever to come to the races, turned in his record-smashing effort in winning the 1929 running from his equally famous stablemate, ‘Whichone. A new topsoil has been placed over the course this year, with the result the times have been much slower . TAKES TROTTING STAKE. SYRACUSE, N. Y., August 31 (). —Ed Lasater, owned by W, N. Rey- nolds of Winston Salem, N. C, and driven t - Ben White, won the Syra- cuse Hotel Consolation Purse, 2-year- old trot, feature of the closing day’s Grand Circuit racing program at the New York State Fair here. Sopwith to Try i If they don't do it quickly, they | FOR SUFFOLK DOWNS| ranking juveniles of the country bat- {tled it out in the thirty-first run- | ning of the hopeful as Saratoga’s most successful meeting in many | years closed today. | Seventeen fleet turf youngsters, in- | cluding all of the outstanding con- tenders for the division's crown with the exception of Grend Slam, were named overnight for the rich stake. After winning the Arlington Fu- turity and coming East especially for the event, Grand Slam was forced to withdraw due to a bruised foot suffered in a workout a few days ago. Race is Wide Open. MRB. ETHEL V. MARS, Chicago sportswomen racing under the nom de course of the Miky Way Ihrms. nominated the probable fa- | Sangreal. After winning four races and being left at the post in his other start in the West, the Pighter came East to thrash many of the same horses he meets today in the Grand Union Hotel Stakes a week ago. In Sangreal he has a running mate which turned in a brilliant vic- tory this week. The race was a wide-open betting affair, however, with E. D. Shaffer's Coldstream and C. V. Whitney's Red Rain, the pair which ran a dead heat in the Saratoga special, strongly favored along with Bold Venture, J. E. Widener's Brevity and Ogden Phipps’ White Cockade. As co-features the Spa Racing As- sociation offered the renewal of the $5,000 Saratoga Cup, a test of 13 miles with seven entries, and $2,500 gteeplechase handicap, for which eight high-class jumpers were named. vorites in naming the Fighter and | Yankee Capsizes In English Race TERP FOOT BALL WILL LOOK SAME Coming of Dobson Not to Bring Material Change in Any Phase. HERE will be no material change, in attack or defense, in the style of foot ball played by the University of Mary- land despite the coming of Frank M. Dobson, for 21 years head mentor at | the University of Richmond, as field | coach for the Terps. i ‘This developed at a session yester- | day at College Park of the board of | strategy, composed of Head Coach | Jack Faber, Dobson, Roy Mackert, line coach, and Al Heagy, freshman | tutor. Both the single and double wing- | | back, along with the short-kick for-| mation, will be used on attack, while | the defense will be patterned from the best ideas of the Maryland and Dob- son methods. | Dobson had been strictly a single | wingback follower, while both the single and double wingback have been used at Maryland over a long stretch. Maryland also has used the short kick to some extent. { Likes His New Job. [ DOBSON. in a unique position as | field coach after so many years as head mentor, and Faber did not find it at all difficult to “get together,” and, after holding sessions again to- day and tomorrow, fell they will be | start with the reporting of the squad | for practice at College Park Monday. | In fact, Dobson said he was glad, | after so many years of bearing the | burden, to be in his new position. He | | revealed during the conversation yes- | terday that he had coached 100 teams during his regime as mentor, having handled four a year most of the time, | foot ball, basket ball, track and base |at the end of the 6!2 furlongs, the | ball. “Maryland has the toughest sched- | ule of any team in the country for the | type of material from which Old Line | foot ball teams are built,” Dobson averred. GASTONIA NINE WINS LEGION TITLE SERIES| Overcomes Sacramento, Western Champion, Easily in Three Straight Games. By the Associated Press. GABNNIA, N. C,, August 31.—Gas- tonia’s Junior Legion base ball team made it three straight over Sac- ramento, Calif, 12 to 8, to capture the “little world series” and the na- tional championship. The Western champions, hopelessly outclassed by their Eastern rivals since the start of the series, staged a sen- sational five-run rally to tie the score in the eighth, but to no avail. The North Carolinians immediately put on the steam in their half of the same inning, putting over four runs and bringing the South Atlantic sec- tion its first Junior Legion title. SERIES IS UP TO INTS Must Declare Champ to Get Post- Season Set, Says Hickey. CHICAGO, August 31 (#).—Thomas J. Hickey, president of the American Association, said there would be no Stars Yesterday By the Assoclated Press. Paul Waner, Pirates—Clouted two triples and two singles in victory over Cardinals, scoring two runs and bat- ting in four. Sam West, Browns—Drove in two runs against Tigers and cut off tying “little world series” with the Inter- national unless the latter agreed to call its play-off winner the loop champlon. Hickey said association objections were based on the International League practice of staging & post- season play-off between the first four finishers and sending the survivor to meet the association pennant winner. “We played their play-off winner the last two seasons and on neither occasion was their representative the pennant,” SATURDAY, AUGUST 31, 1935, American RESULTS YESTERDAY. Naticnal RESULTS YESTERDAY. Pittsburgh, 9: St. Louls. 3. lroony‘F‘-a-:.?uL Fain, i . g h i ilill H ?I 7112 8112(12111114176/461.623] v 1111—1 81111111 9112/18(751471.615] 1 i | | H H i 110170162157 8113111164581.525(15 7163 508117 Ohil 5/10/—[1213( 913115/771501.606| 1% Pit]10] 7| 6/—| 8]14]12/16/73(55/.570| 6 B | 8112(56168].452131 _ Phll 5| 0( 0] 4| 8|—I z Oin. 6| 681 7| 7110110/ 854/721.420124 | &/ 31 31 21 67 O |891.270143 Esssosssromoie GAMES TODAY. mm. (vt THEY DI GANT Pirates Now Threaten to Annoy Cubs—Tigers Are Raked by Browns. BY HUGH S. FULLERTON, JR., Associated Press Sports Writer. T HARDLY seems probable that the Pittsburgh Pirates will win or even threaten the National League pennant in their belated rush, but their effort to get into the thick of the struggle already has made things hot for two of the three contenders and the third is next in line. In the course of rolling up a nine- game winning streak and placing themselves onl$ six games behind the lead, the Buccaneers have knocked off the Giants three times in a row and | the league-leading Cardinals twice. | Today they come up against the third- | place Cubs in another short series | that may cause a disturbance in the | standings. When they trimmed New York, the | Pirates put the Giants 2% games be- hind St. Louis. Then they made up for that against the Cards, reducing their lead to a single game with a 9-t0-3 trouncing yesterday. The Cubs, who ventured into Pittsburgh with a record of 12 victories in 18 games with the Buccos, are only a game and a half behind the Cards. Bucs Win, But Lose L. Waner, FOLUOWING up Thursday’s rout of Dizzy Dean, the Pirates opened fire on Wild William Hallahan in the first inning, when Lloyd Waner scored a run, but injured a leg sliding home and put himself out of action for a week or more. They routed the St. Louis southpaw with three runs in the third, after the Cards had tied it up, and finished with a four-run outburst against Phil Collins in the eighth. Paul Waner took the leading role in the two big rallies, belting a triple each time with men on the sacks and scoring on Arky Vaughan's hits. Vaughan established a Pirate record when he clouted his nineteenth home run of the year in the seventh, sur- passing the high marks of Glenn Wright and George Grantham. Mean- while Red Lucas held the league lead- ers to seven blows, one of them Joe Medwick’s nineteenth circuit drive. Browns Surprise Tigers. A COUPLE of surprising rallies by the last-place St. Louis Browns cost the Detroit Tigers, American League leaders, all the ground they Fighter and Sangreal Head | sbie to get going effectively from the {had gained the day before, but the 8-to-7 defeat left the Tigers still nine games in the van. Only two other major league games were scheduled as the clubs traveled toward their week end engagements, but rain stopped both the Giant- Dodger encounter and the Red Sox- Athleticy meeting. Minor Leagues International. Toronto, 1-0; Buffalo, 0-3. American Association. Minneapolis, 11-7; St. Paul, 9-6. Columbus, 3; Toledo, 2. Indianapolis, 5; Louisville, 3. Couthern Association. Chattanooga, 16; Little Rock, 0. Nashville, 1; Memphis, 0. Pacific Coast. Seattle, 15; Missions, 5. Portland, 3; Hollywood, 2. Texas. Dallas, 7; Fort Worth, 0. Beaumont, 5; Tulsa, 0. Oklahoma City, 2; San Antonio, 0. Galveston, 5; Houston, 0. Three-Eye. Fort Wayne, 7; Bloomington, 3. Decatur, 3-6; Peoria, 0-3. Springfleld, 4-12; Terre Haute, 3-1. ‘Western. Des Moines, 2-0; Sioux City, 1-1. Cedar Rapids, 5; Davenport, 3. New York-Pennsylvania, Wilkes-Barre, 2; Elmira, 2. TODAY BASEB. 3ASPM. Washington vs. Boston AMERICAN LEAGUE PARK Tickets at Park, 9 A.M. ‘WINDING UP” r—"‘" OF GLEN ECHO CRYS- TAL POOL AT 11:30 P. M. EVERY NITE UN- TIL LABOR DAY NITE, WHEN THE POOL AND PARK CLOSES FOR THE| SFASON SWIM&DIVE UNTIL THEN FROM 9:30 A. M. : i

Other pages from this issue: