Evening Star Newspaper, June 29, 1936, Page 12

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A—12 WASHINGTON, D. C, MONDAY, JUNE 29, 1936. ——— Dauntless Nats Eye Second Hole : “Money” Players in Dream Game ATBOSOX SHEELS, ALTHOUGH FIFTH Harrismen See Chance to Gain in Mack Set After | Fine Western Tour. ! BY FRANCIS E. STAN, ISITING their own baliwick | long enough today to catch | home-cooked me: American League battleground from fifth place and, despite the drop, found the outlook promising. The Washington club’s occupancy | of a second division berth can be made to be very temporary, the way Detroit, Cleveland and the Griffs are | running these days. The penalty for | splitting a double-header with the White Sox yesterday in Chicago, for nstance, was dropping from third to fifth in the standing. This gives a good idea of how close is the battle. The intriguing part of it all, from & Washington viewpoint, is what this week holds. The Nationals, from fifth place, are not merely eyeing the third | hole Boston's stumbling Red Sox are onlr two and one-half games ahead of the Griffs. who are just half 8 game behind the Tigers and In- dians. Starting tomorrow, Washington will do its playing for the next four days in Philadelphia, while the Red Sox | ere in New York, tne Tigers are in| Chicago and the Indians are in St.| Louis. Western Trip Is Success. N PAPER the Nationals would | seem to have an edge for the week | over all rivals. So far this season the Athletics have rolled over and played | dead at the sight of a Washington | uniform and, consequently, the Griffs have won seven out of eight games. The Red Sox, unless lh»\ Dvlll |th- gelves together, are due over in New York. ClP\PlAnd mav have its troubles when it again hits the road and the Tigers, without Greenberg and Cochrane, still are un-% known quantities despite their rwm spurt. The Nationals will not wind up the gecond long road trip of the season until they play the four games in Philadelphia, but. finishing the West- ern portion of the jaunt with eight victories and five defeats, they seem {airly certain of showing a good record for the entire tour To accomplish the feat of winning of 13 games in the West the Griffs swept three-game series with the Tizers and Browns and broke even in four games with Chicago. The three-game set in Cleveland was a wasghout, Washington dropping every- thing. Bluege Stars at Bat. THE diamond deities ruled unjustly erday in the Windy City, but 1t all evened up in the matter of result. In the opener the Nationals got from Buck Newsom a game pitched almost unpardonably poor and won. In the nightcap Joe Cascarella hurled a four- | hit game and Jost Newsom's teammates, Ossie Bluege n particular, wouldn't let Buck lose the opener. The Sox neld a 4-0 lead | | it up in the eighth, only to see give the Sox another lead, this time m 9 6. in the last of the inning The Griffs again tied it up with a| three-run rally in the ninth and called con Monte Weaver to give them a fight- | ing chance. Monte did better than | that. He d.d a swell job of pinch-| pitching in the Chicago ninth and, | after Buddy Lewis' double, Joe Kuhel's gingle and Johnny Stone’s seventh homer of the season produced three runs in the tenth, Weaver set down the Box in order. The 12-9 decision was Weaver's sec- ond victory of the season. Cascarella gave quite an exhibition | in the nightcap. Joe pitched two of | the best games of the Western swing, | but lost both. Mel Harder took one of | the tilts from him and yesterday Sugar | Cain held the Nationals to six hits gave up no walks and had a little bet- ter luck than Cascarella to win, 4 to 1. BEN CHAPMAN gave Cascarella a 1-0 lead in the first inning when | he led off with a home run, but the | Box tled it up in their half of the in- ning on an error by Red Kress, a walk to Rosenthal and a wild throw by Wal- ter Millies. At that, the run scored | while a double play was being made. | Joe got another tough break in the | third inning. Cain walked and Rad- cliffe doubled him to third, but Rosen- thai hit a pop fly that fell between Lewis, Kress and Stone for a double and both Cain and Radcliffe scored. The next three men went out in order | and the only other time the Sox made any real gesture was in the seventh, when Rosenthal pumped a home-rua | into the right field stands. BERWANGER T0 COACH CHICAGO, June 29 () .—Jay Ber- wanger, University of Chicago’s ace backfield man last Fall, will return to the Midway school this Fall as as- | sistant freshman foot ball coach, lt‘ is announced by Nelson Metcalf, di-| Tector of athletics. Cascarella Has Tough Luck. | limited League, a game and a half | Juniors. Sports Program For Local Fans TODAY. Boxing. Harry Dublinsky vs. Frankie Blair, 10 rounds, feature bout, Griffith Stadium, 8:30. Tennis. District of Columbia Tournament, men’s singles and doubles, Colum- bia Country Club, late afternoon. TOMORROW. Base Ball. ‘Washington at Philadelphia, 3:15. Tennis. ct of Columbia Tournament, men’s singles and doubles, Colum- bia Country Club. late afternoon. WEDNESDAY. Base Ball. Wazhington at Philadelphia, 3:15. Boxing. Leroy Haynes Tom Williams, 10 rounds, feature bout, all-colored card, Griffith Stadium, 8:30. Tennis. District of Columbia Tournament, men’s singles and. doubles, Colum- bia Country Clui, late afternoon. THURSDAY. Rase Ball. Washington at Philadelphia, 3:15. FRIDAY. Base Ball. Washington at Philadelphia, 3:15. SATURDAY. Base Ball. New York vs. Washington. Grif- fith Stadium, two games, 1:30. N Running. Playground Department—Tako- ma Park Citizens' Association an- | nual 10-mile race for District A. A. U. championship. Stars 1 p.m.. on Mount Vernon Boulevard below railway bridge: msh in front of Ta- koma Park swimming pool. KEYSER PICKS UP PUNCH AT PLATE Long a Weak Hitter, Valet | | rocketing INDRIVETO FRONT Some Ground. 7ELL.. the boys from Chicago “ days after signing up the cha] League heap, after a drive that wound up with the pennant a year who said the gas house gang from the Cardinals were knocked out of Brooklyn Dodgers. half of the Cubs yesterday, 3-0 and bricks, batted him all the lot, and Spurt Follows Acquisition of Hurler Davis—Yanks Yield BY SID FEDER, Associated Press Sports Writer, have gone and done it. One meonth and four starting pitcher they needed, Cubs are back on top of the Na- | came close to paralleling the sky- spurt with which they ago. The laugh they handed the experts St. Louis was the only outfit in the race drew a lot of echoes today, for first place by the one outfit you'd never expect to turn the trick—the While Larry French and Bill Lee were shutting out the Giants on be- 6-0, Casey Stengel's daffiness boys landed on Dizzy Dean like a ton of turned in a 5-1 victory that slid the Cards right out of the lead. Cub Hurlers Sturdy. D, although Manager Charley Grimm has often said that it's the pilot pacing to do the worrying, just fretting can begin is hard to see. It seems to have ended when the Cubs took over Curt Davis from the Phillies, for since his arrival in late May, bol- stering the pitching staff, the Cubs have gone to town at a better than 750 pace, winning 23 of 31 ball games; have pulled themselves up from sixth | to the lead, and have clubbed out an average of 10 hits a game. Twenty- two times in those 31 games, the start- ing pitcher has gone the route. And that about tells the story of this grand | drive of the Cubs. Their double win over the Giants yesterday shot the New Yorkers out of |a third-place deadlock with the Pi- rates, for the Bucs, with Cy Blanton turning in a four-hit trick, belted the Bees in the opener of a twin bill, 11 to 2, and held onto third position, despite Catcher Beats Brewers With Timely Swat. ANKY Clff Keyser, who hasn't batted his weight strolled over to Iowa Avenue | Playground in diapers many vears ago. but who has managed to rank as toss a ball as far as parently has found his at last, and for the Blue Flame Valets | that is cheerful news. CIiff, a former Central High School | star, can sock the Indian on a nickel | in the left eve with his scorching pegs to second and probably could com- pare favorably with many minor | league catchers in so far as handling | their third-place deadlock, the former peting institutions. a pitcher is concerned, but to date his puny stickwork has anchored his | ship of stardom Three Hits for Keyser. 'HE ignominy of swinging :e\enth] in the batting order finally has | worked under Cliff's skin. however. | Yesterday the gangling lad alapped | a neat single to left field in the eighth | inning, his third hit of the day. to| score Eddie Fitzpatrick from second base, thus persenting the Valets with a 5-4 victory over the Heurich! Brewers. Keyser, who batted in two runs and scored twice himself, sent the Valets into a third-place tie with Union Printers in the National City Un-‘ behind the league-leading Shady Grove Barbecue nine, which swamped Plaza Wine and Liquor diamonders, 13-3. Walt Merchant and Bill Laryick, Tech High School aces, the J. C. Flood Plumbers trounced the Clarendon Juniors, 7-3, to retain first place in | Chi the National City Junior League. Pemborke Stars on Hill. WADE PEMBROKE, Eastern High School mound star, silenced the bats of the Hecht Co. batsmen, | yielding only two scratch singles, as his Palais Royal mates smashed out a 6-0 win in the Department Store League. Condor, winner of the first-half pennant in the Atlantic and Pacific| | League, dropped its first game as the | second-half drive opened, as Bokar | outlasted them, 17-13. Collins, with five hits in as many trips to the tee, was the hero of the fracas. Results: National City Unlimited. ,Biye Flame Valets. 5: Heurich Brew- "Saitier Furniture. &: Dixie Pisy, T Shady ~ Grov 13; Plaza Wine Liquor. 3 Old Manhattan Beer. 12; ers. Junior 0. U. A. M. 19: D. C. Plumb- ers and National Cits Junior. ict Grocers. 2. National Novelts. 4 ge's Radio, 6: West End Laundry. 1 Pep Boss. 6: Simpson’s Pharmacy. 5 J C. Fiood Plumbers. 7: Clarendon Deal Men's Shop..8: Police No. 5: 8. Atigntic and Pacifle. 17;_Condor 5. Encore. 4 Natlonal cits Midset, New Bokar Raiah since he | The Reds, Philadelphia, were only a game back | | of the Giants, in fifth place, when the : nd Paced by home runs off the bats of | Chicago a 6-to-4 trimming in the nightcap. idle because of rain in ! day’s warring was over, one of the District’s crack | sandlot catchers ever since. he could | zecond base, ap- | batting eve | Yanks Slightly Checked. N THE American League, the New Yorkers' home-run battering was more or less stilled for a day and the | lowly St. Louis Brown split a double- | header by doing some long-range clouting of their own to win the open- er 6 to 3, after which “murderers’ row™ took the nightcap, 7 to 4. The Tigers and Indians kept on in | shelling the Athletics, 10 to 4, for KhPH’ fourth straight victory. while the Tribe | was turning the trick again on the | apparently “tarnishing” gold-plated Boston Red Sox, 11 to 3, despite Jim- my Foxx's 22d homer. The Nationals sank out of the hitherto three-way third place tie by getting no better than a split with the White Sox. Records i:or Week In Major Leagues ‘STANDINGS in each major league for the week. showing games won and lost. runs, hits, errors, opponents’ runs and home runs, follow: AMERICAN LEAGUE w. H Detrojt Pigtsburgh oston Philadelphia Brooklyn renmemmataoRs nncacaaiom oEmaanms the parade who has | where his | L4 Here’s a Whele Bevy of Swimming and Dlvmg Queens The baker’s half dozen of fair aquatic stars, including cham= ions, new and old, pictured here at Manhattan Beach, where he women’s national A. A, U. championships have just been held are, from left to right: Toni Redfern, Janice Lifson, Elea and Mary Hoerger. Mav is Freeman, Elizabeth Kompa, nor Holm Jarrett, Erna Kompa - Wvdv Wnr7d l’hnln OUTBOARD ACES TRY | FOR WORLD MARKS | Time Trials on Tap Today for | Intercollegiate Winners in Richmond Regatta. Ey the Associated Press, ICHMOND, Va., June 29.—The roar | of outboard motors sounded on the new James River course again to- day. Winners of top places in the seventh annual national intercollegiate | championships Saturday and Sunday | remained for time trial assaults on world records. Heading the list was Paul Sawyer, | of Yale, who won the individual title by a wide margain. Al Deemer, Duke speedster, was gecond, and | Crawford Ferguson of Dartmouth was third. The five-man Dartmouth team had {little trouble capturing the intercol- | legiate team championship against the one-man entries of the other com- Yale was second | ir., and Duke third. | A crowd of 3.000 lining the river saw Crawford Ferguson of Dartmouth | hurled through the air along with his | | boat early in the first class B heat. | {In the same event Jack Scarbrough | of Austin, Tex, also racing for Dar mouth, rounded a turn too sharply and | overturned. They were unhurt. League Statistics | MONDAY. JUNE 29, 1936. American | RESULTS '[‘TEID‘T | Wasnston, 121 Louis. - Clevelana’ 17 Troit 10! Priadeiphis 180 Safola| v = siudapuid Det( | Crel Wnl 3 Chil Phil | StLI | L_13213013 61321.5201 01, 7136/321.5281 915 Dv-.b'm-s‘ gpJatoms Bovs' Olub. 18: Regont Pastry op, 7 Department Store. Palais Roval The Hecht Co., 0. Polle: Boys' Club. No. 11 Precinct. 18; No. 4 Precinct. 0. Independent Eremuer Csb i S Soute “rheater Midgers 11 Cleaners. 3 Bureau of Investigation, 3; Annapolis 0 2; Oabin A ¢ MouR! Rainier Auto Sales, 2; n. Eastport. 6. 8. Kann's Sons Co Ballston A, C.. 15: 8t anu:rlncs 13 F‘:fd!!rlrk Hustlers. Metropolitan Po- lics, Costello Post. 0: Goode Cleaners, Marsiand A. C.. 11-14; Lionel Muiten's A C. ge. B: Bethesda Pire- Jnos A. . 0. 5-10. wuhmnon Ga Ross Jewel- | me; g;mum Helehls, =3: ] AS-0 amona Ca Bz g Sliver. Spring Giants TEEuehtn Btreet usin e 5\.§§inmn Red Sox, 12; Leonard- to & P!vwnnh A. €, 11-13; Southern A. C.. J Wemm Highlanders, 16; White Ha- o Culpeper. 5: OId Milwaukee Be = Folu‘;m-c" Food Products, ewelers, Jesse Theater Peewees, 25: Taft, 24 Mulhall Eagles, 13-23: Duke & Otey. S hntider Wizard Grocers. 6. Locksmiths. 9. Nation-Wide Griffs’ l.{ecords i Btone Chap'n Erest [ > =] e} o o iag) RPNt 3 o I OWSkIT ] @ 0902000000~ IMSBB=naT R =2 st . ey A .l S s i3 T T TNe ot SRR 1313010 31 3 :Maao@c-lvfinhm: SOUNADI ! Ho e 13194 Q cocurmownas! R SRR Do S 1t G 5313 3 g O A S B RS BN 13-pi i 1o o D PN DI 300 Poocoscormon Q OOoROORMOMLNaG () 3 0! P R O <) a w3 BRo-m WA i, LBBARIS ©353mm o Bmms (o ORI DR e - [ IEE TN e L Myer Rates Griffs Second Only to Yanks Buddy, Ailment Diagnosed as Gall Bladder Trouble, Plans to Join Club This Week. By the Associated Press. ROM the sidelines, where ill- ness has had him tethered for three weeks, Capt. Buddy Myer of Washington has analyzed the American League op- position and today concluded the Senators are the No. 2 team of the “We've got a fine club now.” he said as he recuperated in his apart- ment here. “And there’s no reason why we can't finish high up. I'm going to join the club this week and lead the chase on the Yankees and Red Sox.” Many believe that had Myer been able to play the brand of ball he delivered last segson—when he won the league champion- -3. Fort Belvoir. 8: Warrenton. 4. ship—the Senators now would be second to the Yanks. “I know we're better thaa the Indians and Tigers and I think we can beat out Boston,” the veteran inflelder explained. “The Yankees are pretty tough and may have too much of a lead for us to overcome. “When you figure that several of our usual 300-plus batter: aren't hitting, you can see that we've done well. And that’s the tip-off that we're going places as soon as fel- lows like Travis and Bolton start banging the ball,” he said. Now that his ailment finally has been diagnosed as gall bladder trouble, Myer's worries that it might have been eomething more serious have gons u:d he feels GAMES TODAY. Cleveland at 8t L. Detroit at Chicago Others not scheduled. Clp GAMES TOMORROW. bz Phila_ 3:15. New Vork. land at St L roit at Chicago. National RESULTS YESTERDAY. 0, 3-6; New York. 0- B\‘Dflk yn 5 E! ‘l.cms 1 Pittsbur; 1-4; Bost 2-6, Cfllc“’lnlfi Phll!fl‘lfl)fll ‘rain Chica | IIqunuy:) " POPPI HICAGO. June 22 —Effecting what w garded in plan as the fool-proof svstem of se- lecting the all-star teams for | the fourth annual “dream game" next week, base ball bigwigs sit back to- day and listen for reactions to the choices. At press time American League fans and plavers were sound- ing like the Democrats in Philly, when the Al Smith banners were | waved. They retired once to have the ram do all Next they the managers do selecting Wi thoosmg 16 players for each of the |teams and managerss electing five each. And even in this system flaws have been found. Two million fans voted, ac- cording to the tabulations. The population of New York is in excess of 7.000,000. The fact that six Yanks “made” the squad, then, hardly is surprising. Chirago, which is not exactly a set- tlement any longer, managed to bal- lot Luke Appling and Rip Radcliff on the team. Philadelphia contrived to et the honor for Frank Higgins. These . along with Schoolboy the centers of discussion—Radcliff, who has been hitting but who couldn't |stop a ground ball with a fish net: Hl:gint who has been ou!plaxed by seven other third basémen in the league, etc. "OU York City, Chicago or Philadel- phia for having favorites and sticking by 'em. It's the tough luck of fel- Official Scores First WASHINGTON Chapman. ef the picking it What Is Gam«s Theory. Game. AB. SomoHmmy Orwmam— D B Srmian @ @l $ Totals CHICAGO. Radcliff Rosenthal. cf. ORIy 3] HRNORTBE 3| DonmunmhoRg RPN IR MIIAY N | HbUhIND I SOOHINNDDOP | mizDRIDOHHOP Washington ~ 000 002 133 Chicago ~ 040 001 130 Runs batted ln—Hne (2). Bonura. Ap- pling_(2),. Lewis. Kuhel (2), Chapman, Kennedy_ Bluege (4)_ Millies. Grube Travis. Stone (2). Two-base hits—Rad- clifr. Kunel, Bluu! Lewls, Three base it—Lewis. Radclif Travis, Kuhel: . Double plays—Appling and Bonura: Appling. Piet and Bonura. Left on bases— Washington, ®: Chicage; 14. Bases on —Off Newsom. 9: off Kennedy. 5; off 51371301. aa_\ 41 51— 31 51161351301.538 6 131 631381 449/12 2121 31 31 2| 7i—I 31221451.328/20 5131 11 51 31 41 4 —1221461.3541207; L _|24125120130130/38 45 461 ——| T Wenvero s NaiTurk nu' 3. *Tnnings_Wud pitcher— puch-r—sm Um- e1se] inning Dm',h — Newsom T Losin, Mesers. Time. s pires ‘Hubbard and Di- neen. GAMI! TODAY ‘GAMES TOMORROW. Chicago at Cinci S nt shedited. - Bittburan. w York at Boston. Bhia: ot Broschn: he’ll be able to join the club in Philadelphia next week. Buddy has spent more than half the season in sick bay and has made little defense of his batting crown. He realizes only a miracle could enable him to retain the bat- ting championship after allowing a banger likke Lou Gehrig—and others—to get o far out in front. But he’s not thinking of that. He's thinking of getting back into the game to drive in winning runs for ‘Washington. “I hope that when I return I'll soon pick up where I left off last year and will be of some real value to the clyb,” he said. “We're going to hot on the Yankees' beals befof® long.” Second Game. WASHINGTON AB. Cascarell: CHill Appleton, Totals _ *Batted for Carcarell B D] o300 =] 23339203001 [EETTEITERE | ] scoanumnonsng a| 2350u800010> 1l ssomsrosocol XY o in el 21 wowewoaont ((eovamsiianns ®»| Hoo@HOooSP ol secocosash 3 w0 ° wl corososurm 3 S 00 000—1 00 10x—4 att man, Kreevich, a1 TBo-base hits —Kress. R Rad- . Stone. He L llcrlflce—A llnl b!e play—Kress to Bluege to ? on hnu—wumn(ton 5 Bases_on balls—Off Cascarélla, 4 § 85+ roooo00mun - 3 2 !!mtk NG OFF Uhn cannot blame fans of New| 200308050-M 1| 533250m00M lows like Buddy Lewis, Jimmy De Shong and other deserving young men like them to play in a smaller town. Washington's population is ap- proximately ome-fourteenth that of New York City. | Announcement of the fans' | voting for this year's claseic re- | news, with adde fuel on the flames, the question of what is the theory behind picking the teams. i s the idea to choose players who! have proved themselves by their work in the past, but who may not be play- ing up to par at the time of the game? | Is it to pick men because they seem- ingly are best fitted for a single game of this kind? Or is it to choose players who have | shown, in their work from Apnl up until all-star game time, that they | stand out in their respective posi- tions? Chapman Is Good Bet. 'HE 16 American League pla chosen by the epr taf balloting that must have embraced votes with each idea behind them. Based on their play during 1936, Messers. Radchiff and Joe Di Maggio deserve their places in the outfield. Based on what he has done in the past, as well as his fitness for a great performance in one big game, Ben Chapman rates to be chosen. But if Chapman iz going to be se- lected because people know he's a good money player and tested under fire, | how about old Goose Goslin? The fans turned the Goose down, but next | to Bill Dickey he has batted across more runs than anybody in the Amer- ican League. And if Radcliff and D1 Maggio are to be chosen, why not go whole hog on 1936's “average’ ball players and round out the outfield with Jack Bell of the Browns, whose .345 stick mark ranks him 1-2-3 among the outfielders in Mr. Harridge's league? Fans Stick to Rowe. 'HERE isn't any discussion over-half of the American League infield. Gehrig is a natural. Gehringer’s choice practically and deservedly wasy unanimous. But when you run into | Appling, the vote has been found to |swing to & guy who has been playing |a great game this season, although outranked .as a “money” player, by, say, Joe Cronin. And on third base you find, in Frank Higgins, a player who is hitting only .274 as against the .310 of Bill Werber and the .306 of Buddy Lewis, It isn't anything to get excited about, I suppose. Both sides are be- ing given a break. But, for the sake of consistency, I don't see why there isn't an undesstanding on the subject of voting. Or maybe the five players each manager has named will take care of the deserving left-overs. Bolton’s Injury Has Nats Uneasy Cul‘ BOLTON, regular catcher of the Nationals, today was to undergo X-ray pictures to de- termine the extent of a thumb in- jury sustained last Saturday in Chicago when his club and White Sox split a double-header. Bolton took his eye off a pitch by Earl Whitehill and the ball struck the thumb of his right hand. He finished the game, but gave way to Walter Millies in the night- cap. Yesterday Millies caught both games when Bolton reported with his thumb so badly swollen he ° was unable to move it. Bolton, who was out of the game three times last season with jammed, or broken fingers, was fortunate encugh until now to es- cape injury. He believes that his prasent injury merely is & jammed finger”> 'The Natlonals, vrith a bow nfm& ability, hope %o, too. 'Beats Rockville, 5-3, GAITHERSBURG CLUB | RETAINS LOOP LEAD in County Diamond Circuit—Takoma Gains Second Rung. (GAITHERSBURG A. C. unleashed a powerful batting attack and de- feated the Rockville A. A. by 5 and 3 | to hold on to its place at the top of the Montgomery County Unlimited Base Ball League vesterday In another loop tilt the Takoma | | Tigers dislodged Colesville Cardinals from second place and took command of that position by handing Frank Valdenar's club a 5-to-2 trimming Gaithersburg belted three Rockville twirlers for 15 hits while Lanier was holding the losers to seven scattered | blows and fanning five. Willis Ben- ner aided the winners with a double and three singles, while Fitzgerald clouted a homer for the same club. DeMott banged out a triple, double and single as the Washington Garage nine downed the Bethesda Fire De- partment by 8 1o 1 Fighth Street Business Men's Asso- | ciation fell before the Silver Spring | | Giants, 17 to 12, ANGLE FOR OPPONENTS. Fort Belvoir diamonders, who have won 9 of their last 10 games, want games with fast Write Lieut. Joseph L. Johnson. as: ant recreation officer, Fort Belvoir, T T Mid- At Zanesville. 10. Char TERMS STEPPED DOWN SO YOU CAN STEP UP TO THE V-8 CLASS 1936 FORD V-8 DEMONSTRATORS Used by Company Officials Only At Substantial Now you can get a practically brand- new 1936 Ford V-8 at a drastic re- . and on the easiest terms offered—only $5 WEEKLY! Get your car for the 4th at Nolan's! duction . . ever Keep Rollin’ With NOLAN unlimited nines. | ALLSTAR SQUADS GET GOSLIN, DAVIS Rival Managers Add Other Dependable Vets to Lot Named by Fans. By the Associated Press. EW YORK, June 29 Grimm of the Chica York Yankees, age the N 1 Leagues’ all-star teams in their an inter-league battle at B: 1 July today announced their selections of players to complete their squads. Acording to the method of selectior adopted this year, the fans picked 16 players for each team by their votes in newspaper polls while the manager were allowed to name five additional players to round out 21-man squads, Granm selected two of his own plav- | ers, Curt Davis, the pitcher expe acquired from the Phillies, anc | fielder Augie Galan: two Cardina | Jim (Ripper) Collins, who probahl will start at first base since the fan: choice, Bill Terry. has withdrawn the squad because of his a | and Shortstop Leo (Lippy) D and Lew Riggs, young Cincinnati sacker, McCarthy Names Dependable \IP"ARIHY choices were Pit Tommy Bridges of the De Tizers and Mecl Harder of the Cle land Indians: Rick Ferrell, Bosto ! dependable backstop who mar dn m of the catching since Mickey Cochran= of the Tigers, orizinally nominated a. | catcher as well as manager. was force out by illness: Leon (Goose) Goslin | veteran Tiger outfielder and worid series hero, and Frank Crossetti, | Yankee shortstop, In addition to the five chosen by each manager, the named coaches and trainers for &quads. Grimm selected Bill Kechnie of the Bees and Jimmy W n of the Phillies as his aides and named Andy Lotshaw. Cubs’ trainer, to per- | form his duties for the all stars for | the fourth successiv McCarth | picked his own right-hand man. Art Fletcher. and Del Baker of the Tig: as coaches and Earle J. (Doc) Pai of the Yanks as trainer. e vear. | Six American Hurlers, l HE additions to the squad give the American Leaguers four r handed pitchers and two southpaws and among the hitters eight who swing from the right side of the plate and seven left-handers The National League £quad includes only five flingers, Jerome Dizzy Dean of the Cardinals, Lon Warneke and Davis of the Cubs and Van Mungo of the Dodgers, all right-hand single southpaw, Carl Hubbell of | Giants. The right-handers outnumber the portside swingers by an 8-5 margir among the National League infielder: and outfielders, but Galan and Co even things up a bit. Both are ewi hitters. PEEWEES SEEK ACTION Theater Peewees want in their class a y Le 5885. JUNIORS WANT GAMES ‘The Clarendon Juniors want base | ball games with crack junior or un- limited teams. Call Clarendon 1615 between 7 and 8 pm Reductions! 1132 CONNECTICUT AVE. Open Evenings and Sunday Me-

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