Evening Star Newspaper, September 22, 1935, Page 27

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Tigers Clinch Flag as Cubs Gain With 17th Siraigh + + + See Big Fight : Nationals Break Fven With Athletics 100,000 Expected to WARNEKE SAVES | DAY FOR BRUINS . DETROIT SHACKS BROWINS FORPAIR Bridges and Auker Stingy as Games Are Taken by 6102 2t 0. By the Associated Press. ETROIT, September 21.—The | Detroit Tigers, behind bril- | liant pitching by two of their | four mound aces, mathemati- cally riveted a second consecutive American League pennant to their | home flagpole today by sweeping a| double-header with the St. Louis Browns, 6-2 and 2-0. Even should Detroit lose all its re- | maining seven games, the second place | New York Yankees, who beat Boston today, could not catch them by | sweeping their eight remaiinng games. If that happened, Detroit would have 92 won and 59 lost; New York, 91 won and 59 lost. Auker Clinches It. ELDEN AUKER, the tall Kansan, ! went the honor of clinching the flag for the Bengals. The “submarine ball” artist shut out the Browns in the second game, allowing only six hits. Pete Fox scored both Detroit runs, crossing the plate in the third and again in the fifth on singles by | Walker and Gehringer. In the opener Detroit won behind Tommy Bridges, who struck out + + + Goes in With Two Bucs On, None Out, and Retires Side in 4-3 Tilt. BY PAUL MICKELSON, Associated Press Sports Writer, HICAGO, September 21.—For ten thrill-packed minutes the sensational Chicago Cubs’ winning streak hung by a thread today but the Pride of the Ozarks, Lonnie Warneke, came to the Tescue to weave it into the seven- teenth straight victory by stopping the Pittsburgh Pirates and giving the men of Grimm a 4 to 3 conquest. Stopped dead in their tracks for eight innings under the spell of Roy Henshaw's southpaw slants, which had limited them to one run and only four scattered hits, the Pirates staged a ninth inning uprising that chased the diminutive Cub Lefty and forced Warneke to give one of the most brilliant relief exhibitions in base ball to halt their drive. Renowned as “little Poison™ to Pi- rate hitters because of his complete mastery over them in six out of seven games this season, Henshaw seemed a certain winner until the near fatal ninth. | Situation Gets Serious. | ONE of the 38,624 spectators stirred much when Woody Jensen opened eight and allowed only seven safe| with a hit that Billy Herman couldn’t blows to win his twenty-first game ot | quite handle, but the explosion was the season. A crowd of 31,000 saw | quick and almost disastrous. Dan Manager Mickey Cochrane’s club Hafey singled over second and Liloyd WASHINGTON, SPORTS SECTION Che Sunday Sty DG + + + the gonfalon. clinch the bunting, but outside of a | Waner dropped another high single | BY the Associated Press. few thrown hats and a louder cheer- | down the first base line, scoring Jen- | ing there was no demonstration. | Detroit annexed its second straight | title mainly through the pitching of | sponded by hitting deep to Herman, | sen and sending Hafey to third. Arky Vaughan, hitless all day, then re- T. LOUIS, September 21.—The Cincinnati Reds delivered a | smashing blow to the St. Louis Cardinals’ pennant hopes today, This Run Tacked 1935 Pennant on Tiger Flagpole SUNDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 22, 1935, t Wh + + + 1L0UIS BAER GATE MAY SET RECORD Promoters See $1,200,000 Receipts, Topping Mark | for New York. BY ALLAN GOULD, Associated Press Sports Editor ’ EW YORK, September 21.— Max Baer, the (:urly-haued‘, playboy who insists he has turned curly wolf again, and Joe Louis, the 21-year-old Negro who has blasted the fight business out of | the financial doldrums, will revive the | golden era of pugilism next Tuesday | night under circumstances that may | prove as spectacular as anything the sports ‘world has known in nearly a ile Cards Lose LOSE OPENER, 14: GET REVENGE, 54 y * Lanahan’s Wildness Fatal in First—Estallella’s Home Run Helps Win. BY FRANCIS E. STAN. ACED by a couple of alumni from the Grifith Institute doghouse, the Nationals grab- bed & virtuat strangle-hoid on the American League's sixth-place purse of $00 per man yesterday in their Florida avenue haven by share ing in a double-header with ine Athletics. In the opener the A's, alias Coanie Mack’s Barnyard Boys, graciously ec- | cepted Rookie Dick Lanahan’s free decade. | quent gifts to win, 4 to 1, but the It is the most important heavy- | washingtons came back to take the weight mixed match since Jess Willard, | nightcap, 5 to 4. The split increased the “white hope,” beat Jack Johnson | the Griffs' lead over the seventh-place in Havana for the world championship | Browns, twice victims of the Tigers, 20 years ago. It has captured the i, three and one-half games. fancy of the fight-following public, at| Tphe dog-house delegation was home and abroad, as no heavyweight | headed by Senor Roberto Estallell bout has done since the retirement of | g g Pete Fox scampering home with tally in fifth inning of second game against Browns at Detroit yesterday for double win that clinched ~—Copyright A. P. Wirephoto. Gene Tunney in 1928. It features the acid test for Louis, foremost two- fisted drawing card since Jack Demp- sey, and marks the first real “natural” heavyweight boxing has had during a protracted period of mediocrity. The meteoric rise of Louis, the “Brown Bomber” who has taken the Reds Deal Blow to St. Louis To Put Team 3!/, Games Back| 14-hit attack on Tony Freitas and | Paul Derringer with four singles. Frisch Hits Martin Across. THE Red Birds got their first run on Pepper Martin’s double and Bridges, Auker, Lynwood (Schoolboy) | landing safe at first and scoring Hafey | defeating the Red Birds, 9 to 7, as the | prisch's single in the first inning and Rowe and the veteran Alvin Crowder. ‘These four pitchers won 73 of the 92 games which Detroit has in the win column. Bridges has a mark of 21/ won and 9 lost; Auker, 18 and 6; Rowe, 18 and 12, and Crowder, 16 | and 9. Crowd Is Jubilant. I‘r WAS a happy crowd of Tigers who | left the field after the second game. Cochrane was elated, personal- ly satisfied he had proved his club a well-balanced aggregation which was | net just lucky to win the pennant | | when Phil Cavarretta failed to get | Chicago Cubs continued their I00g | two more in back to first. It was the fourth suc- cessive hit and two runs were in and fu.uz nobody out. The score was 4 0 3. It was then that Warneke came to the rescue as the tense crowd, joyous as the Cubs had beited the revenge- bent Guy Bush for 4 runs and 8 hits in seven innings, groaned. But Warneke had just what it took. Floyd Young, first batter to face the tall Arkansan, topped a vicious swing. The ball rolled weakly to last season. } Detroit, in last place in April and | floundering badly, began its drive for the league lead in June and in July | caught and then passed the Yankees. Under Cochrane’s handling the pitching improved, and one of meg main reasons Cochrane had success | with his hurlers was that he was able | to work them regularly, in turn. After passing New York, Detroit made a runaway of the race, and for sev- eral weeks it was mainly a question of how soon Detroit would make its second flag matematically certain. o > st L. Lary.ss... Burns. ib. Solters.1f C'eman.rf 5 -1 1 EIEETS e Eeee Sk h b 0 0 0 1 Fo 1 3 (U 912190008 e Owen.3b Bridges.p. s D1 GO co oo mml EELELEEN 0 [ 0 34 724 9 Totals.32 10 *Batted for Cain In seventh tBatted for Van Atta in ninth 00 010 000—2 201 001 11x—6 ary. Burns, Gehringer. Green- 5. Rogell. Bridges. Error—Carey. Runs batted_in—Coleman. Greenberg. Fox. Sol ters. Gehringer. Owen. Two-base hits— | Burns. Coleman. West. Goslin. Thiee-base_hits—Greenberg. Geh- | Sacrifice—Bridges. Double play— | Lary to Burns, Left on bases—St 4 12, Bases 7 off V: o 10 van Atta. y innings: off p an Atta in 2 {nnings. Wild pitch— Passed ball— Losing pitcher—Cain. Umpires "_“‘Moriuly. Kolls and Marberry. (SECOND GAME.) . AB. L 0 ap o > B [OETSI - PP TSIRPNOPeN Sossusson PORSRRU Ut | commmmmisnan | s2omwno00om? Totals .30 6 2. Totals *Batted for Andrews in eighth. - 000 000 000—0 Z 001 010 00x—2 R Runs batted in—Wal- ker. Gehringer. 0-base hits—Rogall. Fox. Stolen base—Fox. Double plays— Greenberg to Rogell to Greenberg: Auker {0 Rosell to Greenbers: Hemsley 1o Carey. ui 3 15 uns—Fox (21, Left on base: S, Bases on balls—Off Auker, 1: drews. 1: offt Van Atta. 1. ck By Auker_ 4: by "Andrews. 3: by Atts 1. Hit Andrews. 7 in 7_in- nings: off Van Atta. 0 in 1 inning. Wild itch-—Auker. ~Losing pitcher—Andrews. mpires—Kolls, Marberry and Moriarty. Time—1:28. 5 Satn d Q a0 1950 12 RD s 0 4 & & suse-smsmemsooonEZiontaf g ™) o0 10803 S o Donn 8! Cor o oo 22000 a1 [roteggeny B D555 oD S s NS DS DB BN SRR SN SN . I ont319¢800 i S ona 9 D8 S Gu et 1 B s s B 0! - M — 2 % sou = Do o1 S s T S OEMS IS O SA D O EEE Tt 4 o 1o [STErN- Sooasam SI o Z Sln i @SS e= ezsa s BEmaRBOE 22 BT 8 a 2 » = R3Zw o =5 S om L5 ooouEsuTon 2 ocoa3ZuRsn: H oo wmoaSEaBne £ ..ansmue Savoms! DB Riol 13-30m PIFTS Hey g =] H ES £, »3° w a perfect throw to force third for the first out. Rt Lavagetto Finally Checked. ARRY LAVAGETTO was next, and the respects were dark as it was Lavagetto who had cracked out three of the four hits off the tiny Henshaw in eight innings. But the law of average and a sweeping curve forced him to roll to Bill Jurges, who threw to Herman to force Young at second, It was a dead set-up for a double play, but Herman pulled Cavarretta off the bag with a high throw and Lavagetto was safe, prolonging the Suspense. Gus Suhr walked, filling the bases and Red Lucas, “big poison” for years to Cub pitchers, batted for Catcher Tom Padden. As the crowd stood in a frenzy of excitement, Warneke worked the count on Lucas to 3 and 2 and then forced him to tap weakly to Herman, who made an easy put-out at first, ending the rally and a masterful rescue that netted Warneke a tumultous ovation. The Cubs, who now have rolled over the four Eastern clubs in four-game series and turned back the Pirates, were held to two scattered hits by Bush, the man they traded down the river last Winter, for four innings, but they found the range on the “Mississippi mudcat” in the fifth, Get Them in Pairs. ENSHAW opened the inning by Teaching first on Lavagetto’s error. on his ground smash, but was forced at second by Galan. Herman sent Galan to third with a single to right and Augie dashed home as Fred Lindstrom singled to right. Gabby Hartnett was hit on the left elbow with a wicked fast ball as the crowd booed, but the crowd for- got that as Herman scored on a flelder's choice as Demaree forced Gabby. A single by Henshaw and X homer into the right-neld G&:d: scored the other pair of Cub markers, Ralph Birkofer replaced Bush in the eighth and set the Cubs down in order. Lavagetto’s third hit gave the Pirates their first run in the eighth, !:;?ng on Padden’s single. s. Jie, A2 .0 A, G, ap 5 Hafey rf. o LW . 0. A, 1 33 3 o | coosmowmommmn! HOND0D0U EN Totals_32 827 11 or “Batted for Padden Kiz'g'fgu‘.n" .A'AT;... Pittsburgh 2 Chicnie™™ 336 822 62— T uns—Jensen. H Lavagetto, Galan (2). Herman, ’ P o i Lindstrom, De: " Padden, : off ing. Hit by pitel —By Buih (Hartnett) Winning pizhere. Henshaw. Losing ~pitcher—Bush. Um- pires—Messrs, Reardon, Kiem and Barr. Time—2:06, Minor Leagues International. (Play-off). Montreal, 6; Syracuse, 4. Pacific Coast. Oakland, 11; Portland, §. San Prancisco, 13; Seattle, 1. Missions, 5; Hollywood, 3. Los Angeles, 5; Sacramento, 3. | Warneke and he whirled around with | winning streak. | The Reds seem destined to- take| | over the role of last year's Brooklyn | Dodgers, who blasted the New York | Giants out of a title after being easy | prey all season. Cincinnati, erstwhile St. Louis “cous- ins” were all but that as they out- fought the Cardinals to win, climax- ing their assault with a three-run ‘nlly in the ninth, Gives Cubs Big Edge. THE defeat put the second-place | lone and futile the third on another double by Martin, Rothrock’s single | and another single by the manager. They were scoreless then until the | eighth when they drove Freitas out of the box. Frisch and Joe Medwick | singled. Collins forced Medwick and Davis doubled, scoring a run and end- ing Preitas’ tour on the mound. Der- ringer was greeted by Durocher with a double, driving in two runs. * Goodman'’s error on Medwick's sin- ’ gle let Manager Frisch score with the | ninth-inning tally. | A, H. Cardinals 3'; games behind the‘gm'mu AB.H.O leading Cubs. el | Manager Frank Frisch started Paul | | Dean, but “Daffy” was off form and | ylelded 11 hits and six runs before | he was taken out for a pinch-hitter in the seventh inning. Ed Heusser was pounded for the three winning Cin- cinnati runs. | The Cardinals did not go down to | defeat easily. In the eighth inning, | they staged a three-run rally to tie | the count at six-all. A ninth-inning drive fell short after one run had| crossed the plate. ‘Two home runs by Herman and one | the Cincinnati victory, although Riggs’ triple with two on in the ninth was the decisive blow. Manager Erank PFrisch had a field day at bat, leading the Cardinals’ Homer Standing By the Associated Press. Home runs yesterday: Herman, | Reds, 2;: Lombardi, Reds, 1; Berger, | Cubs, 1; Jackson, Giants, 1; Bartlett, | Giants, 1; Cucinello, Giants, 1; Myatt, | Giants, 1; Frey, Dodgers, 1; Todd, Phillies, 1; Allen, Phillies, 1; Trosky, | Indians, 1; Higgins, Athletics, 1;| Estallella, Senators, 1. ‘The leaders: Greenberg( Tigers, 36; Foxx, Athletics, 34; Berger, Braves,| 33; Ott, Giants, 30; Gehrig, Yan- kees, 30. League totals: American, National, 635. Total, 1,276, 641; HE longest winning streak compiled by a Washington pitcher this season will go on the block today when the| Nationals, in one of their final three local appearances of the year, oppose the Athletics in & double-header. The twin bill, second of the cam- paign on a Sunday, will start at 1:30 o'clock and will mark the last ap- pearance of the A's at Griffith Sta- dium. Eddie Linke, shooting for his sev- enth successive mound triumph, will hurl one of the tilts for the Griffs, Manager Bucky Harris has announced. Linke has not dropped & decision since & 5-to-4 defeat by Wes Ferrell in Boston on August 11. Buck Newsom will start the other game. Newsom has a record of three consecutive wins. The pitching for the Barnyard Boys, alias the Macks, will be done by Herman Pink and a youngster named Veach. Even Connie Mack | doesn’t know Veach's first name, so new is he to the Philly fold. Here's a tip straight from a source almost unimpeachable. When an- other season rolls around Jimmy Foxx, Pinky Higgins and Doc Cramer will be wearing Boston Red Sox uniforms. ‘The dope is that in exchange for Bill Werber, an outfielder and a wad of cash big enough to choke & Mis- souri mule, Tom (Moneybags) Yawkey will acquire the Athletic trio this ‘Winter, Connie Mack, it is rumored, will talk about taking $200,000 in cash for Foxx but Jimmy himself doesn't look to be a 200 “grand” investment. It was quite a shock to see the former Maryland farm bag yesterday. Ine by Lombardi were the big factors in | 8t. Louis Braves, 1; Tyler, Braves, 1; Galan, |9} Good'n.rf Herman it Bott'ey.ib Riggs.3b_ Lom'rdi.c ers.s: Kam'| Fre Der 0 0 Prisch o 1 0! 0 CRDATE LR &l PO iKing_ - §White'd 1 ‘Totals 39 1427 9 Totals 40 14 *Batted for P. Dean in seventh. tRan for on in_seventh. iRan for Davis in eighth. fBatted for Heusser in ninth, Cincinnati 010 020 303—9 102 000 031—7 Bottomley' (). Riges, L Martin_(2), Rothrock, Frisch’ (2), lins, Errors—Delancey. iman. | Martin. ~Runs_batted in—Pri Lombardi (2), Rothrock, Da ). Herman (4). Myers Maitin Davis, Durocher, Herman, Bot- tomley. Three-base hits—Goodman, Riggs Home runs—Lombardi. Herman (2). Stolen rifices—Riggs. Herman. s, Kampouris and, Bot- s . al Heusser. 1. by Derringer. 2 : . Hits—Off Preitas, 11 in 7's : ‘off Derringer, 3 in 1% innings: 7 innings: off Kauf- mann. 0 in 1 inning: off Heusser. 3 in 1 inning. Passed balls—Lombardi. W oitcher—Derringer. Losing eusser. Umpires—M, and Pinelli. Time—2:11 MANHATTAN IN WALKOVER. NEW YORK, September 21 (#).— Manhattan College showed too much foot ball man power for a hard-fight- ing, heavy Niagara University eleven here today, overcoming the stubborn Tesistance of the up-Staters to open its 1935 foot ball season with a 25-to-6 victory before a crowd of 10,000 at Ebbetts Field. JIMMY FOXX. stead of those big brown arms at- tracting the attention, it was a big “bay window” that stood out. Poxx, incidentally, dropped to third place in the race for the American League batting championship yester- day and our own Buddy Myer re- placed him as Joe Vosmik’s chief con- tender. Foxx went hitless in nine official trips to the plate in yester- day’s double-header while Myer, play- ing in only one game, made two safeties in four trips. Vosmik, who got one hit in two tries agalnst Chicago, now lesds the (FIRST GAME) PHILADELPHIA. AB. R. H O. A E 0 1 o 0 0 0 0 Ot Marcum. P Totals - WASHINGTON. AB. s ®© Stone 'rf Powell. cf iton. ¢ Mihslic ss” *Batted for Philadelphia vashington - 200 000 002—4 001 000 000—1 nson. plays—Mihalic Myer to Kuhel Left on bases— Philadelphia_ 13: on balis Marcu: Struck out—By Marcus by La 3 Hits—Off Lanshan, # in _8's inning: off Russell. 0 in 2; inning. Hit by By Lenahan (Cramer). Passed Conroy, Losing_pitcher—Lanshan_ Um. pires—Messrs, Quinn. Geisel and Dineen. Time—2 (SECOND GAME.) PHILADELPHIA. AB. Newsome. 2b Cramer, cf SoommHR=S O en. ¢ Richards. ¢ Doyle. p - Lieber. p *Marcum | et p csscomssorue P Soorouo~cAR oomorroUuSTON P cI oy ) oosssesoasss ! " Totals ____. *Batted for Doyle in fourth. WASHINGTON. AB. H. Travis. I Estallella. 3b Powall. cf _ Kress. ss _ Holbrook. ¢ Coppola, N ) cusEEIRS Totals Philadelphia 200 000 011—4 Washington 2 001 00x—bB Runs batted in—Higgins, Travis. Hol- ook (2). Estallella (2) Richards. Fin- y Two-base hits—Snyder. Cramer, Three-base hits—Miles, Travis. run—Estallella. Stolen ' bases— iegins, Kress. Double play—Newsome to Fo Left on bases—Philadelphia, 10; Bases on ball: T Doyle, 3. Struck by Cop- 3 innings; itches— ton, 7. s yle. ber. 4 in 6 innings. Wiid pitel Doyle (2). itcher—Doyle. Um- pires—Messrs. Geisel. Dineen and Quina. Time—! Linke and Newsom to Risk Winning Streaks As Griffs Play Athletics in Double-Header batting procession with .349. Myer has .342 while Foxx, losing six points yesterday, dropped to .340. When Myer beat out a hit to sec- ond base in yesterday’s opener, in- cidentally, it was his 200th safety of the season. Only two other American Leaguers, Vosmik and Flit Cramer of the A’s, have made 200 or more hits. Roberto Estallella won himself a suit of clothes when he blasted his home run in the nightcap . . . and just the day before he went downtown and bought himself some duds . . . El Senor’s still having a tough time finding a decent bat . . . he broke out yesterday with a new black one with fancy white tape and despite the homer he socked with the bludgeon his mates claim the stick will last only about two more innings. Buck Newsom became a pappy yesterday . . . an 8-pound girl was born to Mrs. Newsom down in Harts- ville, 8. C. ... Rog Cramer managed to salvage the ball which Estallella hit into the bleachers for his first major league homer but when he tried to present it to the Cuban as & souvenir after the inning, Roberto spurned it . . . not knowing what Cramer was trying to do. It's hard to believe Cecil Travis is & novice in the outfjeld . . . the ex- third sacker hasn't made a mistake yet and yesterday he came up with some catches creditable to a seasoned gardener . . . a little hitting by Buddy Lewis might have won yesterday's opener but before censuring the kid it might be noted that nobody exeept Myer and Mihalic did any hitting to speak of ..., Buddy just happened to come to bat when hits meant some- thing. r.E S pitcher all— | Base Ball Won’t fight world by storm within a year's | who has spent most of the time on the bench since his sorry showing of |a week ago. Yesterday Roberto | emerged with a fancy black bat and | swatted one of the longest home runs jof all time in Grifith Stadium to | help bring about the triumph in the dusk. Coppola Stars in “Comeback.” Skip Yom Kippur By the Associated Press. DE’I‘ROIT, September 21.—Kene- saw M. Landis, high commis- sioner of base ball, said today there will be no change in the world se- ries schedule to avaid the possi- bility of playing on October 7 be- cause it is Yom Kippur, the He- brew day of atonement. The base ball commissioner made this declaration when he learned that Esther Duchin of Detroit had started a movement to petition Landis to declare October 7 an open date in the event a sixth game is played in the world series. Miss Duchin said that many Jews would not attend a game on that date and that Hank Green- berg, Detroit's slugging first base- man and an orthodox Jew, might be embarrassed if required to play time, is the chief reason why a million- dollar “gate” is assured for the first time in eight vears. An all-time rec- {ord for a non-championship match | also is likely. Expect Crowd of 100,000. CAPACITY “house,” according to | Mike Jacobs, the promoter, will | mean an attendance of nearly 100,000, including standees, and gate receipts | of nearly $1,200,000, including the | taxes. These figures would surpass all records for the boxing business in New York. | the big town to pass the million- | dollar mark were the celebrated Firpo- | Dempsey battle of 1923, which drew the top attendance of 82,000 and re- ceipts of $1,188,000, and the Sharkey- Dempsey duel of 1927, which at- tracted 75,000 cash customers and $1,083,000, a non-title record. Staggering as these figures seem, The only other fights in | then. under current circumstances and after QENOR ESTALLELLA'S homer, which started from his bat like a pop fly but which refused to land until the left-field bleachers were | reached, was responsible for two of | the Griffs’ five runs. Another pair of tallies was contributed by Sam Hol- | brook, the somewhat soured-upon | catcher, who inserted two singles at opportune moments, permitting young Henry Coppola to bounce back into | Manager Bucky Harris' program for | 1936 by protecting an early lead 1ight | down to the finish. | Coppola, making his first slab start | since the Nationals regarded them- selves as pennant contenders, was not as swift before coming down with | his sore arm last June, but he exe | hibited an improved curve, which | checked the A’s when the chips were | on the table. ‘The opener, in which young Lana- han sustained his second straight {major league defeat, did nothing exe | | MICKEY SEES BIG TITLE Declares in Radio Talk Tigers Will Be World Champs. DETROIT, September 21 (P—A crowd police estimated at 100,000 roared approval today as Manager Mickey Cochrane predicted, through | loudspeakers in downtown Detroit, that his Detroit Tigers “will be the next world champions Cochrane spoke briefly at the un- furling of a mammoth victory ban- ner on a department store. With him was Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis, high commissioner of base- ball, here for a banquet honoring Frank J. Navin and Walter O Briggs, co-owners of the Detroit club. Traffic was blocked in most of the downtown section by the huge throng. KOENECKE IS BURIED. ADAMS, Wis., September 21 (#).— ‘The body of Leonard Keonecke, out- | fielder on the Brooklyn Dodgers’ base i ball team, who was killed in a fight aboard an airplane near Toronto sev- | eral days ago, was buried in Repose | Cemetery at Friendship, near here, today. - CLARY STARS FOR S. C. COLUMBIA, S. C., September 21 (®).—Wilburn Clary, slashing half- back, scored three of five touchdowns today to lead South Carolina to a 33 to 0 victory over Erskine College. Major Leaders SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1935, American. RESULTS YESTERDAY. Philadelphia, 4—4: Washington, 1—8, Deirol St. Louls, 2—40. Tiuapenual 1o AU LY B3 5 (-uoisuyse, e 07 18| PP “pujusq = s ? i H H H 99wusdIIg L — 9215216301 k) Cle[ 67 8-—13/11/15/121131_ 76169 Bal 9 8 91 E Ch 8/ 91 9/ 0/ —[12(1112[ 71731493131} W T0[ 71 7110/10/—I11' 9| 64I81.4411384 BL|_4,10] 5121 8|10—(11]_60/841.41732 Ph[ 5/ 6/10] 610/ 8[11—| 56/85.307|343 L_157/59/69 72173181 8485 —i— | GAMES TODAY. GAMES TOMORROW. L (2), 1:30. N. Y. at W.. 3:15. ton. clubs not St. L. at De! eduled. Chicago at Cleve. National. RESULTS YESTERDAY. Pittsburgh, 3. i, 9; 8t. Louis, 7. Brookiyn. 2—13, Bos! T-10% MIN --utnasia) “-nuurouy ---usrong aavIuRIeg i Chi—| 5114/14/14117/13]1 SL12/—| 8I10112(16/15/18/91]_541.628| 34 NY[ 87141 —/14'14[12/10/13 85| 57.509| 8 Pit| 7110 8/ —I13111[16/2084]_64.568/1% Cn| 8| 8 8] 7—I1113/12!67| i§!.4504‘28' Bl 571 6/11111/—| 9114/63] 81438132 PhI_ 0/ 7110 6] O/ BI—/13/61] 841.421133 Bu| 3/ 41 21 2(10] 6/ 8/—I35/108/.344 1_152/54/57164/82/81/841108/—1— | —_— . GAMES TODAY. GAMES TOMORROW. Cincin. at 8t. Louls. Brooklyn at Phila. Bl i AL a period of years in which even a|cept substantiate the belief that Riche heavyweight championship fight has|ard will be a handy fellow to have dipped so low as to draw less than|around next year. He was wild as 10,000 cash patrons and cost the | blazes and lacked his fast ball, but promoters money, they do not tell | even so it was a ball game down to the whole story. Along Broadway | the last inning. today fight fans from all over the world are bidding fancy prices for tickets with a frenzy that has not lN THE first frame Dick walked four been manifest since the palmy days|d patters and gave up a hit, but a of Tex Rickard. They are paying as| double-play featuring Rookie Buddy | high as $175 each for $25 ringside | Myer and an old vet named Johnny tickets. What's more they are not even | Mihalic kept the A's from scoring squawking. All told, perhaps $10,- | more than two runs. 000000 will be spent in connection | jop,nv Marcum went out to proe e tect his lead and did a great job of it, The box-office advance sale is far | though Johnny never was safe until and away the greatest since the two ‘ the last inning, when his mates gave Dempsey-Tunney duels in Philadel- | him two more runs to clinch the ver= phia and Chicago. It so far surpasses | dict. In the third inning, for instance, expectations that Jacobs, who “sjmhsllc punched a grounder through | Rickard's right-hand man in the old | Pinky Higgins’ legs to gain first base. | days, rushed eleventh-hour arrange- | Then Lanahan, attempting to sacri- ments to re-scale portions of the | fice, accidentally bunted a looping See LOUIS-BAER, Page 8.) Errors Give Griffs Lone Score. A Sensational SALE! Blue Chrome Double-Edge RAZOR BLADES of finest Surgical Steel @ For all double-edge razors. Don't let the low price mislead you—these are NOT CHEAP blades. They are fine quality blue chrome blades of finest surgical steel. A heavier blade—a bet- ter blade! We guarantee them! @ TESTED AND RE-TESTED! Yes, we ourselves have tried them—and we are convinced that these store’s sponsorship. @ They've been sharpened in filtered oil and put through 16 grinding and honing processes to prevent edges from tearing and scratching. z Individually wrapped and packed in a box at has a compartment .for used blades. @ They give clean, smooth, comfortable shaves. Sold Exclusively at This Store RALEIGH HABERDASHER Weingten s Fostst Mo's W Sta-1310 7 w1822 »

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