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@he ?,Enming Stue Fporls WA NGTON, D. (., SATURDAY, AUGUST 7, 1937. * elief Hurlers No Help to Nats WEAK ROUND SUBS MAKE HARRIS WAIL Pilot Longs for Another Marberry as Tigers Rap Rescuers Smartly. BY FRANCIS E. STAN. R. STANLEY HARRIS, the erstwhile bov manager,” pondered back to those “boy- hoad” dave as he whipped A towe]l across n< shoulders and sadly reviewed his Nats' third straight 'walloping 1 wish.” mou “that I had a quy berry on this club, Just one guy 'who had a fast ball and who wasn't afraid to rare back and let it go ver the heart of the plate” Harris was thin g of the 10-to-3 asting handed the N by the igers, who are in town for a four- game series. including & double- [header today He ted Monte Weaver, but when the Nats reduced 3-0 deficit to 3-2 in the sixth jhe lifted Monte for a pinch-hitter Rnd handed the game over to Messrs. | vyd Cohen and Ed Linke, the bull- n twins And they promptlv handed it over o the Tigers With fiendish glee he menr nf Mickev Cochrane scored even) runs in the last three innings nd that, of course, was the ball ame. i rnfully sighed Bucky like Fred Mar- st Rescuers Give Him i [RUCKY'S reliet pitchers have given him the iitters all season. “It's etting so T don't know how to make move.” confessed Harris. “1 think 'm doing the right thing when I itt Weaver He seemed 10 be tired ut and there were two men on base feith the 3 to 2. If we get hit there, we're either even or head and. gosh knows, Monte doesn't gure to give us the hit And ever we don't get a hit ve have a right expect those ellows to finish the game respectfully But. as it is, Detroit goes wild against hem and we're licked Mr. Harris' bull-pen othing new of course, re getting him down ix times so far this year have re- ief pitchers been able to show ories and two of these were won by arris’ siarters, Jimmy De Shong nd Weaver, doubling as rescuers. Fach won a game as a relief worker nd Pete Appleton won three, The ther was credited 1o Linke. The Nats went through one stretch . May 20 to July 27 without one f the many relief pitchers getting redit for a verdict No wonder Harris cannot help but ark back to Marberry. Jitters, H score to troubles but they now. Only are vie- Some May Belong Elsewhere. | HERE is talk af forthcoming changes in the slab personnel nd they well might begin with he bull-pen staff. Harris has an ea that a couple bovs belong in & pague somewhat less highly rated an the American and if he had nybody coming up Bucky probably ould not hestitate to do something bout it As it s his hands are led at the moment Weaver was nicked for a 3-0 by fhe Tigers in the first four innings ut in the fifth the Nais began to . Jake Wade, the young and flightly ft-hander of the Detroits. Muver's | ngle and Millies' triple coined & n with no out in the fifth, but ade then quieted the uprising. In e sixth Simmons’ triple and Stone’s ngle eut the count to 3-2 before n out was registersd. Then Muyer alked and with two down Harris | nt Wes Ferrell to hit for Weaver. | struck out and Cohen was | ructed to do the pitching Travis Still Going Strong. YD was no success, The Tigers got two runs off him before a fingle hitter was retired and in came inke, who threw a single to Green- rg. SCOring twn more runs. This was the ball game. The Nats ho had been convinced they could hase Wade in a close game. folded | Imost completely while Linke re- | alned no puzzle to the Tigers | Individually, the thriving firm of nddy Lewis and Cecil Travis again one. The youngsters collected four k' Washington's nine hits between | em, Travis getting two on his | st two times at bat to keep his| ney average up. He now is batting 9 and. of course, still leading | e league. 1t was to be Wes Ferrell and Ken ase today against Tommy Bridges | ndeither Roxie Lawson or George | fiman. Tomorraow—East Lynne, SIGN TALL SLAB PAIR PITTSBURGH. August 7 (#).—Two foot-4-inch pitchers from the ineaville. Florida State League, team ere added to the Pittsburgh Pirates’ bster today. ‘They were Elbert Padgett. 20, a @ht-hander. and Andy Sierra, 22, a puthpaw, who will train with the huccaneers next fipnnx Official Score w DEIROIT. or o Gehringer Greenberg. Laabs, cf Owen. b, York ah ib WASHINGTON. Almada, cf Lewis Travis Simmons Stone. rf Kuhel, 1b. Mver. 2b Millies. ¢ Weaver. n TW Perreil Cohen. p Linke. p. ss I iBa a6 ed for Weaver in sixth 011 100 41210 000 011 00— 3 Gehringer 14) Greenbe ) Fox Millies. WASHINGTON Runs batted Millies, Stone & Two-base Simmonc. Sim Virginia Ringer Title to Frye | It Looks Easy, but Just Try It on Your Favorite Springboard Sometime H[NS[]N IS VICTIM ~ OF FLASH PITCHER Walker. | Rogell, | _Double plavs— | Lewis to Myer 1o Detrot1 Wash- F'\({*« on balls—Off Wade 2 Strikeouts —By Wade, 9 Linke Hirs. —Of @< off Cohen. 3 in no innings " Lo:ng Mecsre Time. offt Weaver, by Weaver veaver. 7 in 1 off Tt Weave Kolle and Attendance — 5000 BUSINESS IS BRISK AT SPATURF NART ard | Yearling Sales Run Well| Ahead of '36—Mrs. Mars a Lively Bidder. By the Associated Press ARATOGA SPRINGS, N Rust 7- Where Mrs. Ethel Mars of Chicago. almost unaided created a boom in young horses at Saratoga's annual yearling auctions last Summer, every one seems to be lending a hand this vear After the first week of the sales both the top figures and the averages are running well ahead of last year. On Thursday a pair of vearlings brought £26.000 and $25.000. respectively, while last night 46 head offered by Arthur B. Nancock's Claiborne (Ky.) and Ellershie (Va.) studs averaged just $5.000 each. v the Mrs. Mars Is Outbid. MRS MARS sought 10 b of the get of Sir Gallahad famous sire. but was outbid on two oc- casions bv Chirago rivals. John Hertz went above her bid for the $£25.000 colt Thursday and last night Warren Wright, owner of the Calumet Farm in Kentucky, bid $18,000 to take a highly-touted gray son of Sir Gallahad 3d-Winsome Way offered by Han- cock and Mrs. R. A. Van Clief. Another $18.000 purchase. a bay colt | by the same sire out of Mirabelle, sister to Man o' War, pont, jr's, fast-bidding Dodge Sloane Mrs, Mars, however, contributed her share to the total of $230.000 paid for the Hancock lot. She bought & chest- nut son of Sickie for $10.500: a bay son of Sir Gallahad, 3d-Chickadee for $10.200. and a filly by Stimulus-Fe=— for $8.000 the sales to $47.000 for seven yearlings went to William Du- Foxcatcher Farm after a session against Mrs League Statistics A| GUs 1933 AMERICAN, RESULTS YESTERDAY, Detroit. 10: Washingion, 3. Boston. 5. Chicazo. 2 New York 7: Cleveland. 8. Only eames scheduled STANDING OF THE CLURS sgw eI 98mudg “=° putue wmeo 610111110/ AIL0 4113111 T1/11(12/57 411582110 10751115413 2 K AMES TODAY Det. at Wn. (2).1:30.Detroit at Wash . 3. L. at Phila. (2). St. Louis at Phila. Chicago at Boston. Chicago at Boston Cleve. at New York. Cleve. at New York. NATIONAL. LTS YESTERDAY. New York. 6 Pittsburgh. 8i. Louis, 10: Philadelphi Chicago. 12-f: Boston. 6. Concinnati 3 Brooklvn. _STANDING OF THE RE | | =oaworao| N --'XI0X M3 Z| wiudppenud GAMES TOMORROW. Boston at_Chicago. N. Y. at Pittsburgh. Brookiyn at Cin Phila. at SY Louis. Boston st Chicago New York at Pitts. Brklvn. at_Cinein Phila. a8t Louis GAMES TOMORROW. | connected safely each time. This brought her total for . Au- | .. TRAVIS SO0WEEK | TLISLEADATBAT Nat Gains 12 Points. Soars to .388—Medwick Drops Point to .402. By the Associated Press. EW YORK. August 7—Nine of the 20 batters comprising the “Big Ten” in each major league hit 400 or better this week. but it still was Cecil Travis in the American and Ducky Medwick in the National pacing the field This was solely because Travis had one of his bigger weeks, and boosted his league leading average to .388, | while Medwick, although dropping one | point | of the National | stop, | week ended with i | to 402, was still the big gun League campaign young Washington short- traveled at & 500 clip for the vesterday's games, getting 14 hits in 28 chances, and raising his average 12 points. Lou Gehrig. the Yankee walloper, hit for 407 for the week, but still lost ground. Travis, Hartneit Threatens Leader. \/]EDWI(‘K hit, for the seven- day span. getting 11-for-28, but this was a slump for the Cardinal clouter. For the first time in weeks, his league lead was endangered, as big Gabby Hartnett, the National League's top catcher, clubbed out nine hits in 19 chances to make his second- place season average .392. Two other hitters, in addition to Travis, were in the .500 class or higher for the week. Arky Vaughan, Pitts- burgh’s injured shortstop, returned to action twice as a pinch-hitter and Six Hit in .400 Class. ‘(‘EHRIG_ Joe Di Maggio of the Yanks, and Charley Gehringer of the Tigers in the American League, and Hartnett, Johnny Mize of the Cardinals and Ernie Lombardi of the Reds in the National, all hit .400 or better during the week. Standing of the first ten in each league: AMERICAN LEAGUE. F]D\PY (;buh AB. R H Pct h Rl 40 & Senvis. New vork Di Maggio, New York Gehringer. Detroit Greenberg, Detroit Bell. St Seilirk Walker Radcliff. Chicago Vosmik. St. Louix NATIONAL Medwick. St. Louis Hartnett. Chicago P. Waner_ Pitts Mize. 8t. Louix Herman. Chicagn 81 Vaughan, Pitisburgh 7% Jurges. Chicago o Whitney. Phila Todd, Pittsburgh 9] Lombardi. Cineinnati 69 207 TRt 349 2 3 | the first ports Mirror | By ihe Associated Press | Todav a vear ago—Archie Wil- liams took Olympic 400-meters to give Unted States sweep of flat races from 100 to 800 meters. Three years ago—Dizzy Dean won No. 20 for Cardinals and Carl Hubbell's sixteenth victorv gave Giants lead of four games in Na- tional League race. Five vyears ago--Juan Carlos Zabala won Olympic marathon at Los Angeles in record time of 2:3126 as first three finishers cracked old record. PRO GRIDIRON LOOP TO OPEN ON SEPT 1 41-Game Schedule of American League Ends on December 24. | Three ‘36 Clubs Back. By the Associnted Press. TEW YORK, August 7.—The Amer- ican Professional Foot Ball League. | a seven-club ecirenit which includes only three teams which competed last vear, will open its 1937 season at Pitta- burgh September 10 and close at Los Angeles December 24, it was an-| nounced today The schedule includes 41 games. | calling in general for each team to piay the others at home and on the road. Pittsburgh and Jersey City. however, are scheduled for only five home games each. The addition of Los Angeles m:rkl’ time s Far Western team has competed against Eastern pro| clubs on a regularly scheduled basis. | The American Legion Club from Los | Angeles will make & tour of the East ern sector, opening at Pittsburgh Sep. tember 10 and ending at Cincinnati October 24. Each Bastern team will play at Los Angeles. Jersey City mak- | ing the first visit November 7. | In addition to Los Angeles, Jersey City and Cincinnati are new to the league, while Rochester was a mem- | ber only part of last season. Cleve- | land withdrew to join the the National | League, while the Brooklyn team, op- | erated as a road club last season, has | been disbanded. The New York Yankees, Boston and Pittsburgh are | the holdover members. GRIDDERS DEFY HEAI’ PITTSBURGH, August 7 (P)—Al- though the temperature may climb into the 90's, the Pittsburgh Pirates of the National Professional Foot Ball | League will open training tomorrow. First drills under Johnpy Blood, the % | new coach, are scheduled for Monday. | The Pirates start the season September 240 S nnmn the Philadelphia Eagles. Watch Wlsconsm on Grid, Big Ten Coaches Warn Terry Eyes Stripp as Likely Third-Sacker—W orld's Fair Job for Johnston Looms. BY EDDIE BRIETZ. Assoeiated Press Bports Writer. EW YORK. August 7.—No American League batter hit for the cycle (single, double, triple and home run) in 1936. . . . Three have done it this year—Gerald Walker, Joe [Dimaggio and Lou Gehrig [fust 0 make it look good, Di Mag- gio eontributed a second homer. Big Ten coaches expect Harry Btuhldreher's Wisconsin eleven to toss & few bombshells this season. . . . Well, the yachting races are lover and how is your starboard tack? . . . Mike Jacobs’ wife gave fhim merry “L” for taking over the (Garden . Said he has been work- § too hard. anyway. . Mike a2 afraid to go home after sign- ing the lease, New York base ball writers with the Giants wire back Bill Terry has given up on Memphis Lou Chiozza and is eveing Joe Stripp of the Dodgers as his 1938 third- sacker. . Don't go to pitying Jimmy Johnston for losing out at the Garden. . . . The guy is likely to wind up as director of sports for the forthcoming world's fair—the job slated to go to the late Jack Curley. . So far the Yankees have belted 126 home runs, of which 76 were contributed by Messrs. Di Maggio, Gehrig and Dickey. . . . What are you going to do with a team like that? . . The Cardiff Western Mail, leading newspaper of Wales. has shipped a large Welsh flag to Tommy Farr and it will fly from his corner when he goes against Joe Louis. Attention, Lake Sebago. N. Y.: The Fordham foot ball squad will train there again this year. . . . Cardinal Prince, the fastest racer in America, is as black as his famous trotting stablemate, Grey- hound, is light. . . . But there is a lot of difference in the hosses. . . . Greyhound is a perfect gentleman, but Cardinal Prince is a bad actor . . They won't let you within 3 feet of his stall, he's that ornery. Both horses are owned by E. J. Baker of St. Charles, Ill.. who had an ambition to own the fastest trotter and pacer in America and achieved it. Madison Square Garden won't seem the same after October 1, when Jimmy Johnston stops presiding at high tea every day at ¢ pm. Ask Blondy Ryan of the Gisnts about some screwy baserunning he did in a recent game at Min- neapolis. . . . He tried for second on A Texas leaguer, found the ball there ahead of him, ran around the bag and finally ducked back to first. . . . The fine President Will Harridge plastered on Bill Dickey, of the Yanks, was Bill's firat since he socked Carl Reynolds in the kisser down at Washington & few years back. Anything can happen at Minnesota. . . . Victory Aloysius Spadaccini, last year's fullback, will blossom out as a quarterback this year. . . . Note to O. B. B, Little Rock: We like Schnapps, but write your own ticket. [ YANKEES PLAYING CAT-MOUSE GAME Let Other Fellow Lead 'Til Victory Is in Sight, Then Nail Him. BY SID FEDER. ! Axsociaied Press Sporis Writer. | T READS like a script for a two- | reel thriller. A Griffith or Belasco couldn't do better than the dramatic methods the New York Yankees are using to win their ball | games these davs Those Bronx bombers are strutting their stuff as though the whole thing were stage-managed. Inning after Inning, they play nice with the other fellow. Then, just when it looks as though the hero will get the girl and | those Yankee villains will wind up on the short end, they proceed to give you heart failure with a third-act Prank Merriwell finish to pull the decision out of the fire, usually to the accom- paniment of a homer or two. For nearly a week now, they've | been following this melodramatic | schedule. | Take vesterday, for instance. For | eight, innings, young Bob Peller tied the swat squad in knots, allowing six hits and fanning an even dozen. With | only three putouts to go and a three- | run lead on his side, it looked like | money in the bank. | Red Rolfe Starts It. THEN in the ninth, Red Rolfe, who | bad fanned three times before, ‘ tripled to send one run across, and Lou Gehrig, also victim of three pre- | | vious strikeouts, socked a homer and the game was tied up. Hal Troeky hit his second homer in the tenth to put the Tribe out in front again. But, with Johnny Heving replacing Feller and with two out and two on and the count three-and-two on Joe Di Maggio. the deadpan dynamiter gave the “third | act” its smash climax with a double to left that broke up the ball game, for a 7-6 Yank victory. That was yesterday. The day be- | fore, against the White Sox, Gehrig's | homer featured a comeback in the | eighth inning to pull a victory out | of certain defeat. And the day before | that, Bill Dickey hit a homer with | the bases loaded to bring the Yanks | from behind, and Gehrig blasted one | to break a tie and win the game. And the day before that, behind 3-1 in the eighth, the Yanks turned the trick again when Dickey hammered & homer with the bases loaded in the eighth. One thing 18 certain—you can't | beat that kind of base ball. As a result, murderers’ row is sporting a six-game winning streak and a nine- | game lead in the pennant race. Hubbell Winning Again. ‘HE Cube are applying different technique in the National League, but they're getting much the same results 50 far. Yesterday they snapped out of a short-lived hitting slump like & shot out of a cannon, and belted over the Boston Bees, 12-6 and 6-2. with a 30-hit barrage in a doubleheader. This twin win gave them a b5y game lead, although the second- piace Giants, who slowly are reviving, topped the Pirates, 6-3, with Carl Hubbell coming out of his losing doldrums. The Boston Red Sox, hottest outfit in the bigtime, made it 11 games without a defeat by walloping the White Sox, 7-3, on Pinky Higgins' two homers. The Tigers whipped the Senators, 10-3. The Athletics and Browns were idle. The Phillies kicked away a seven- run lead and lost, 10-7, to the Cardinals. Peaches Davis’ four-hit pitching gave the Reds s 3.1 win | the over the Dodgers in a night game. » George Williamson, life guard at the Airport pool, @ mem- ber of the 1928 United States Olympics team and who formerly held diving titles in Ohio, Kentucky and Indiana. illustrates hou properly to erecute a back somersault with half twist - Mm e :rnp by Ehrood Bm er, Smr Smfl "POP " Stan. The Disease HE use of Rudy could tell about such things than words that Detroit of finding A first-string catcher. o0 mechanical by the Tiger bosses soning. Clif Bolton than Clark Griffith benched him. York either will ecatch or the Detroit stroke of luck, is likely to spend sea of the bush leagues looking for a suc- cessor to Cochrane The late Frank Navin spent years trving to get a high-class catcher to succeed Johnny Bas- sler. Finally. unable to develop one. he hought Mickey Cochrane from the A's. ‘That was in 1834 and you know the rest. Mickey was just what the Tigers needed. They won a pennant two pennants .. . a world series | Cochrane rose to vice president of the Tigers. as well as manager, but always he was the rcatcher . . . the sparkplug and brains of the club. York Now Leading Candidate, THEN, suddenly, a fast ball thrown by Bump Hadley slipped out of the shadows and fractured Cochrane’s skull so that the X-ray resembled a road map. Everybody knew he was finished as a player In a split-second all of Navin's ef- forts through the years to land a catcher were voided. York currently seems to be No. 1 cardidate for Mike's old the Job. ‘Rudv is a big. bronze-skinned Chero- shoulders. this mas- popped | kee “with wide, powerful | He can drive a long ball sive Indian who yesterday | nis fifteenth home run of the season | into those distant Grifith Stadium bleachers like a golfer chipping onto a green. Rudy is a big counterpart of Cecil Travis in that he was & major leaguer without & position. He came up to Tigers in 1934 as a caicher, but Cochrane was at his peak at the time and they tried to make a third baseman out of him Falls Short On Third. only thing wrong with this picture was that a work bench and sole leather were not was a shoemaker if ever there was one. Then they tried him at first bese, and thence motioned him to the outfield. At none of these positions was he perticularly adept, but he could dent those fences. and this ability is capable of covering a multitude of sins. But he could mnot replace Greenberg at first, Owen at third or break into the out- field, so he was shipped back to the minors. ‘With Milwaukee last year he played first base and wound up with the most valuable player award in the American Association. Last Spring he was taken South with the Tigers and placed on third base. He started the season at the beg, but last. © He man. Sewell Trade Hard to Forget. NUW he is behind the plate again | and the Detroit, firm's bosses anx- | lously are awaiting the outcoms of | this latest experiment. placed | along the third base, because Rudy Col it was apparent to American | or League observers that he could noLs el simply is not a third base- Is Catching. York behind the plate by the Detroit Tigers is taken to mean definitelv and once and for all that Mickey worn the iron mask for the last time that he was through as a plaver Fighters and ball plaver to know when it's time to quit. or to sense when they But the moving of Infielder York behind the plate is just another club The veleran Ray The promising George Tebbetis has been benched for weak hitting and there is talk of shipping him away has been tried and benched Cochrane has Mike had anrmounced, of course, bt base ball folk figured you never they never seem e wash indie faced w Hayworth i now for sea- in much quicker f And now the question is, ean York catch? has a remarkable g the by-wavs firm, unless it 'n after season comb. Washingfon is far from the only ;rl”h to find a great scarc:ty of catch- Some with good mechanical abil- | ers | ity. like Rick Ferrell and Bill Dickey is | and Rollie Hemsley, come up to the | majors from time to time. but most base ball strategists maintain there were only two really smart and tal- ented receivers in the American League when the season started One was Cochrane, who now is gone. The other is Luke Sewell. Clark Griffith finds it more difficult to live down his trading of Sewell any trade he has made in a decade or more. Grief followed that move . . . long years of it. A long parade of men who wore masks foilowed. There were Bolton and Hogan and Millies and half & dozen lesser lights. but in the end Griffith found it feasible to trade one of his more successful pitchers and one of his best outfielders in order to get Ferrell. And Rick hasn't hit since he pulled on a Washington uni- form. SCOTT TO FIGHT AMBERS. Cowboy Howard Scott. local light- weight, will meet Lou Ambers. world | 135-pound champion. in a 10-round Conn manager, Gabe Menendez. STANFORD EX-(VJOAC}{V DIES. APPLEGATE. Calif., August 7 (#) — James F. Lanagan. coach at Stanford University from 1903 to 1909, m«: here last mzm (,rlffs Records BATTING AB.R. H 281 41 100 15 344 117 21 126 23 2b.3b Hy Rbl.Pet € aRK 10 4 5 o —a335E Sousumr e BNt Jam CHEEES {s} 5532 5= 3D MINDd— g °° > L] - CHIN B T Tt - ety @ ,,.,.,u: S oo | Richmond. Deadpan | nicipal Playground courts at McMi ‘Deadpan’ Puts 71 Per Cent of His Shoes on Peg to Win by 4 to 1. EADPAN RAY FRYE nf Ork- ney Springs and Richmond once again the hoss shoe champion of Virginia In a thoroughly conv the musecular, chunky expressionless phiz knocked defending titleholder, Clayton of last night s manner with the off the Henson the Mu- lan the Virginia sec- twirler ngton on Park in the final of | tion of The Evening Star champion- ships The largest g Doy Frye regain a As slow Model-T ery tn attend an Old in recent years saw fitle he won last in 1935, getting under way as t vver he up from ropped the ope ing game, 50-39, then turned on more constant pressure than Henson ever had encountered scintillating ment o grab the 50-35, 50-27, 50-19, drove career 50-20, Keeps Stakes Hot | JFOR the five games Frve zhnt 71 ! cent | for | nings. | Bever L | per cent ringers against Henson After the in which he shot onls Deadpan held an sven and pace of 74 For ronsistent, was the finect porform- nine-year history of the &0 per A skirmish per cent blister: brilliancy ance in tourna Frye now o becomes favorite win the The Star competition—-the Metrn- politan Washington. for which top flighters of the Virginia. Marvland and Disirict tournaments will tr next Thursdav and Friday even Deadpan won the Metropolitan 1935, and in that conquest his final vietim was Henson Singularly, the scoring was much the same. with Hen- son winning the first game and Prve the next four Gets 12 in Row. "THERE were no exceptionally long ringer streaks last night Prve's best was 12 straig. and Henson's ! The latter has chucked as manv as 33 in A row in regular competition In a consolation match Elmer Swartz defeated Waller Cranford 5035, 50--36. and will meet the winner of the Dondson-Wolf match the right to carry on into the metropolitan Washington's pitchers will shoot out next Monday and Tuesday eve- Followinz are the pairinge Woodfield (205-58) va. G, (144~ H. Ronning rown (161-38 B. Heleker (185-47) vs. Elvin Shank (166-45) Harry & prohibitie main title o the n Bill (181-43) v Rdgar B Woodfield (154-33) vs John | Gourvenac (183-34) than | l non-title bout August 16 at Hartford, | . it has been announced by his | | | | 58. head foot ball | Mel Johnzon Jacobe (131-34) Tom Coll (136-31) Francis Battiste Pope (142-32 Douglas Newcombe Harry Saunders (188-30 (189-48) ve Samuel -30) vs A Envder 16R-44) vs P, (164-40 WIN 13 IN ROW The Junior Senator Peewee over the Lombardi A. C made it 13 straight R-F i yesterd Major Leaders 10, Yankess Greenberg. T Magein. Yankees, 108 Hits—Di Maggio, Yankees, and Be Rrowns. 1716 Doubles—Bonura Vosmik. Browns. 5 Triples —Kreevich Dr_Maggio Yankees Home runs—Di 1 Foxx, Red Sox Stolen bases—Chapman, T Walker, Tigers. 14 Piiching *Murphy Ruffing. Yankees, 14- NallsaaliToarue Medwick ~ Cardinalx, Cubs. 392 Runs -Medwick, Galan. Cubs Runs batted in— Medwick. Cardinaic 104, Demaree. Cubs. &> Hits—Medwick Waner_ Pirates Doubles — Medwick Martin._ Phillies. 2 Triples —Vaughan rates 10 Home wick Cardinals, Stolen bases——Galan, Cubs getio. Dodgers. 11 Pitching tre. ton. Cubs. 9-3 BASE BA 1:30 P.M Washington vs. Detroit AMERICAN LEAGUE PARK Tomorrow—Deireit—3:00 P.M White Rox White &x. | Yanker Maggio Red S0 o Yankees, Bat Hartner ng 40 Cardinals, & P Cardinals, 42 and Handier 22 5 P ins-— Ot Giants, Med Lava Bres Carie TODAY BY BUYING A 10 SWIM CARD =71 M mutm “fffl ([m CARM MAY B[ USED BY ANY MEMBER OF THEFAMIL ADMISSION PRICE INCLUDES METAL LOCKER AND FREE CHECKING OF VALUABLES AND IS THE SAME ON WEEK DAYS, SUNDAYS AND MOLIDAYS | YMING 1S HEALTHFUL