Evening Star Newspaper, August 17, 1937, Page 12

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he Foening Stad Sporls WASHINGTON, A12 = D. C, TUESDAY, AUGUST 17, 1937. —1 Speed, Class Mark Junior Tennis : Revived Griffs Face Acid Test GAIN SEMLFINALS | INTWO DIVSIONS Girls Provide Keen Action, | Four of Nine Matches Going Three Sets. BY BILL DISMER, JR. OUR boys, seven girls and eight- teen juniors were left in the running for District champion- ships of their respective classes as tournaments sponsored for them by the District Tennis Association swung into the second day's play at the Army-Navy Club this morning. Advancing faster than any other group yesterday, Freddie McNair and Harold Titus and Tom Wadden and Maurice Cowan became semi-final opponents in the boys' competition, while girls were expected to reach their semi-finals by noon today: Harriette Williams was the only girl to reach the semi-finals yesterday, her opponent in that round to be the| winner- of today's Margaret Duffy- | Hazel (Jimmy) Bishop match. Semi- | final opponents in the other bracket were to be the supervisors of the Charlotte Decker-Dorothy Barclay and Molly Thompson-Margo Mink matches. Juniors, because of their large field, were & round behind their youthful | colleagues, but they were expected to reach their quarter-finals by nightfall. They were the only class in which the seeded group was not intact, Miguel Nunez—the seventh seeded en- napped as District Girls’, Boys’ and Junior Championship Court Events Got Under Way A group of fair competitors watching activities on the Army and Navy Country Club courts as action was inaugurated yesterday. They are, left to right, Mary Gray, Margaret Gray, Ruth Johnsen, Dorothy Barclay, Margaret Duffy, Harriet Gordon, Katherine Gardiner and Helen Espey. Marvin Carlock, holder of junior titles in Utah and Colorado, and co-holder of Western junior doubles and lowa and Arizona doubles crowns. He is seeded No. 2. Some of the junior contestants who formed an interested gallery while the gals were battling it out on the courts at the opening of the week-long tourney yesterday. Pictured standing, from left to right. are Byron Mathews, Harry Durst, John Durst, Charles Mehl, Billy Turner, David Johnsen, Doyle Royal, Benton Groves, Tom Wadden. Kneeling, Chandler Bros- trant and No. 8 on the local Junior Davis Cup ladder—being eliminated by Jim Hardey in the first round. Provides Real Show. 'HE combination of all three groups | on one set of courts was provid- ing a real show, it being the first time within the memory of the oldest net fans that juniors, boys and girls played gide by side in quest for District cham- pionships. Verily, Army-Navy's nine courts look like & Garden of Youth with dozens of youngsters between the ages of 12 and 18 overrunning them throughout the day. sard, Warren Simpson and Eddie Richardson. BOAT SPEED OVER T MPH. 15 SEEN Cooper Makes Prediction as | He Goes to Detroit to Because of the exceptionally keen | competition among the juniors, the gpotlight centered on their nine matches today, from which quarter-! finalists were to emerge. David John- gen, the seeded No. 1 entrant, already was in the quarters, however, by virtue of victories over Harry Durst and Ham Bonham yesterday. with the loss of only four games. His next opponent will be either Ken Dalby or Jack Hoyt, who meet in one of today's third-round affairs. In the lower half of the same bracket, Hardey—who conquered Nunez | 6—3, 1—6, 6—3—meets Bernie Blan- kin, while Doyle Royal awaits the winner of the Dewitt Armstrong-Paul Ford match. Ford is a Miami bOVJ who was here for the Middle Atlantics | but he did not appear for his first' match yesterday. | Carlock Not Yet Tested. ARVIN CARLOCK, this year's| junior champion of two Western | Btates and co-holder of the Western junior doubles title, heads the oppo- | site bracket. Receiving a first-round default yesterdav, not enough was seen of Carlock in his 6—2, 6—0 de- feat of Rolf Quevado to determine whether he will be a threat to the local standbys. Apparently he will remain untested until he meets Harry March in the quarter-finals, as even- | tuality barring upsets of the most surprising nature to either. March's | 6—1, 6—1 rout of Charley Meh! yes- | terday revealed he is about ready to regain the place he held in Junior | circles last vear when he was rated the second best player in the city. In the lower half of that bracket, Billy Turner was to meet Bob Rich- ardson today with Leonard Sokol awaiting the outcome of the second- round match between Everett Harris and Charles Parks, the latter an-| other Miami boy. In contrast to their male col-| leagues, most of whom advanced in straight sets, 4 of the 9 girls to be | eliminated, surrendered only after | forcing their conquerors the limit or1 three sets. Ruth Johnsen, David's| sister, gave Dorothy Barclay a battle | before succumbing, 6—3, 2—6, 6—4; Katherine Gardiner carried Margo Pink to 6—1, 5—7, 6—1 before losing. Mary Gray also put up a game fight before bowing to Harriette Williams, ! VIRGINIA AVENUE AHEAD | Virginia Avenue playground athletes, scoring 11642 points, swamped all com- petitors yesterday in the public recrea- tlon sectional track meet staged on | their fleld. Garfield with 43 and Buchanan with 33!, placed second and third, nspeccively SUNDAY GAME NEEDED. ‘Washington Grove nine wants a Sunday game on their own diamond. Cali McCathran at Gaithersburg 182-R. . SOUTH ATLANTIC. Jacksonville, 2: Columbus. 0. Seek More Laurels. By the Associated Fress. ED BANK, N. J, August 17.— Jack Cooper, the 57-year-old grandfather, major National honors at the day Sweepstakes todav with the prediction that| eventually he would raise the speed | standard for 225-cubic-inch hydro- | planes to better than 75 miles an| { hour. Planning to race his record-break- ing Tops, 2d, in the Edinburn Trophy race on the Detroit River over the Labor day week end, Cooper headed his automobile and boat-trailer west- ward with prizes carried off the 225 and sweepstakes features and a new mile record for time trials. The Kansas City, Mo., trucking operator was clocked at a speed of | |Five With Perfect Marks in 73.171 miles an hour in a dash yes- terday over the North Shrewsbur: racing course to better his own pre ous standard of 70.593. A renewed attempt with a bigger propeller failed | but the diminutive | to pay dividends Cooper who has been racing only five vears predicted he would “do better than 75 before I'm lhmuzh 2 Son, Daughter Experts. PER has a son, Thom, and a daughter, Nellle, who are well | known in Midwestern outboard circles, but he still is able to show them a | | trick or two when it comes to speed. During the five years that 225's have been on the market, the racing speed has been nearly doubled. The first record for the class made in 1932 at Havre De Grace, Md., by Mrs. Paul Burnham of Wilmington, Del., was only 37 miles an hour. ‘Twelve records were written in the record books of the American Power Boat Association during the three-day regatta which was graced with clear skies, & warm sun and “fast” water. | Pive marks fell Saturday, three Sun- | day and four yesterday as the fourth annual regatta came to a close. Griffs’ Records BATTING. . 2b.3b.Hr Rbl.Pct. 135D BRI P PR A~ vy 4 ©DOHOHS IS D HIHDII D W DD EEPEES EECEEE 5 ¢ 3 Harnkeod = P TP L Weaver De Shong W Parrell Chase Jacobs Appleton ‘ohen - omson9R! F=rOT PTON T FERRERZE who carried off | three- | Regatta, | headed for Detroit and new laurels | | Friday, War Gives Cambria Slab Ace Comellas, 20-Game Victor for Salisbury, Forced From Cuban University by Rebellion. By the Associated Press. ASTY as revolutions are, Joe Cambria can thank his lucky stars for the Cuban rebellion that drove George Comellas into base ball and the Eastern Shore League. Joe practically was in stitches with elation last night when he heard the No. 1 mound star of his Salisbury Indians had won his twentieth straight league victory Comellas’ 20 consecutive wins this season are better by one than the 19 straight old Rube Marquard won for the New York Giants in 1912 to set a major league record. If he wins his next, Comellas will tie Carl of 21. This is Comellas’ first season in the Shore league. He went into base ball in 1934 when a revolution closed the university he was at- tending ,in his native Havana, Cuba. The Indians’ star catcher, Fermine Guerra, also is a native of Havana His closest rival for consecutive wins in the league is Cambria's No. 2 pride and joy, Joe Kohlman of Atlantic City, N. J. who has won 19 straight his first start of the season—while Comellas is undefeated. Hubbell's two-season string M | game series He has lost one— HOOTING CLASSIC SEEMS WIDE-OPEN Grand American—Others Near That Record. By the Associateq Press. ANDALIA, Ohio, August 17.— The competition is going to be tough for the hundreds of entrants in the Grand Ameri- ican Trapshoot Tournament, starting an examination of this year's scores showed today. Five persons this year have rung up scores of 200 straight and 17 had marks of 197 out of 200 or better in 42 shoots reported to the Amateur | Trapshooting Association office here. Rating favorite positions in next week's shooting because of their per- fect scores ase Joe Hiestand of Hills- boro, Ohio, who grabbed many of the Grand American titles last year; J. E. Milne of Hamilton, Ontario, Canada; R. Heming of Reading, Pa.; C. O. Free of Indianapolis and G. C. Lindsey of Marcellus, N. Y. J E. KELLY of St. Paul just missed * by one target entering the select list. Observers declared that the shoot- ing this year was the best since 1933, when six crashed 200 straight to win State championships and 12 others missed only one clay in 200. ‘The perfect shooters dropped to four in 1934. Waldo Seavey of Lovell, Me., was the only one to turn the trick in 1935, and last year none was able to enter the select fleld, the 199 of Flmer Torge of Wales Center, N. Y. topping the list. Just One Target Away. TRAP SCORES RUN HIGH. High scores featured the Washington Gun Club's trap meet, with W. F. Burrows, H. M. Bingham and J. C. Marcey shooting 72 out of 75 and A. Cuscaden and J. W. Crawford getting 97 and 96, respectively, out of 100. All were firing on 16-yard targets. NEW YORK-PENN. _lr{llfllhl\ 3—R: HAlbl;‘lY g* q S Bingnan e 3% ;?m Barre. 3—10. Sports Program For Local Fans TODAY. Base Ball. Washington at New York 12:30. Union Printers' tourney, Griffith Stadium, 11. @), Golf. Union Printers' tourney, Indian 8pring, 10. Tennis. District Association juniors’ tour- ney. boys and girls, Army-Navy Country Club, 10-3. TOMORROW. Base Ball. ‘Washington at New York, 2. Union Printers’ tourney, Griffith Stadium, 11. Golf. Union Printers’ tourney, Indian Spring, 10. Tennis. District Association juniors’ tour- ney, boys and girls, Army-Navy Country Club, 10-3. THURSDAY. Base Ball. Washington at New York, 3. Union Printers’ tourney, Griffith Stadium, 11. Wrestling. Ernie Dusek vs. Abe Coleman, feature match, Griffith Stadium, 8:30. Golf. Union Printers’ tourney, Indian Spring, 10. Tennis. District Association juniors’ tour- ney, boys and girls, Army-Navy Country Club, 10-3. FRIDAY. Base Ball. Washington at Boston, 2. Union Printers’ tourney, Griffith Stadium, 11. ‘Tennis. District Association juniors’ tour- ney, boys and girls, Army-Navy Country Club, 10-3. SATURDAY. Base Ball. Washington at Boston, 2 Tennis. District Association juniors’ tour- ney, boys and girls, Army-Navy Country Club, 10-3. Women's District League tour- ney, Reservoir courts, 2. Federal employes’' tourney, Poto= mac Park, 2. Move to Oust Jacobus, P. G. A. Head, Seen Failure Dobson, Maryland Coach, in Movieland—South Carolina Goes for Brothers in Foot Ball. BY EDDIE BRIETZ, Associated Press Sports Writer. EW YORK, August 17.— Men who know their golf say the Chicago move to oust George Jacobus as president of the P. G. A. will be caught off first . . . Spied in the comparative cool of the doorway of an empty Broadway store: Jim- my Bronson, the educated fight manager, munching an ice cream eone . . . Who was the Chicago wisecracker who called Max Schme- ling the “heavy-wait champion”? . . . British sports writers, here for Farr and Louis, were & gloomy lot after seeing the Bomber mas- sacre his sparring mates the other day. Red Dawson, Tulane coach, says A T. V. A. (New Deal favorite) means only ‘“Tennessee varsity aggrega- tion” in his book . . . Some of the papers say Sep Palin didn't really push Greyhound after Peter Man- ning's mile record the other day . . . Frank Dobson, University of Maryland coach, is looking over Los Angeles and Hollywood . ¢ . Can any of you racing old-timers recall if the Wingfield Stable en- tered three horses in a race at Laurel, Md,, 10 or 12 years ago and all of them fell? . . . One of our clients wants to write a feature if it's s0 . . . Tennessee, Alabama and Louisiana State will battle it out for the Southeastern Confer- ence crown this year. South Carolins will have five sets of brothers on its varsity and fresh- h man squads this year . . . (where _ were all the other scouts?) . . . Looks as if the only possible way to beat the Yankees is hold 'em to 8ix runs . . . If Bobby Riggs, the California sensation, isn't on the Davis Cup team next year you can sue us . . . A report is buzzing around the Giants will try for Buddy Hassett during the off sea- son . . . For a guy who is about to be pitched ‘out on his ear, Jimmy Johnston of Madison Square Gar- den is the most cheerful bloke we know of. Joe Louis is defending his heavy- weight title sooner than any other champion did . . . What about Lou Gehrig going sll the way to third on a pop fiy to ths outfield A that big boy can circle those sacks faster than a lot of you think . .. Captain of Duke's 1937 foot ball team has a fighting name, all right —Woodrow Pershing Lipscomb . . . National League umpires are & versatile lot . . . Charley Moran coaches foot ball in the off season, Bill Stewart is a hockey referee and Ernie Quigley officiates at basket ball games . . . Dolly Stark coached basket- ball at Dartmouth . . . Bernle Bierman, the Minnesota wizard, is considering four offers to coach grid teams in as many parts of the country—but will turn ‘em all down . . . The boys will be pass- ing up a good bet if they don't vote old Charley Root of the Cubs the most valuable player in the Nationa]l Leagus this year. ) PIRATES AND REDS HURDLES FOR CUBS Faltering League Leaders May Be Pressed to Stave Off Giants. BY BILL BONI, Associated Press Sports Writer. | ANAGER CHARLEY GRIMM. | leading his stumbling but still first-place Cubs into Pitts- burgh today to open a three- ith the Pirates, believes that on September 4 the Bruins will have as good a margin in the National | League race as they now command— | four games. September 4 is the day the Cubs return to Wrigley Field, with 17 road games behind them and a balance of 21 at home and 10 away ahead. Grimm might, off the records, put a shorter time limit on his fore- cast—until the end of this series with the Pirates and the subsequent one | with the Reds, in fact. Giants Are Pushing 'Em. T'S the Giants, of course, who, in second place and bolstered by the heavy-hitting comeback of Hank Leiber and the spark-plugging of Demon Dick Bartell, are making a race of it. But it's the Pirates, 9 games off the pace in fourth spot, and the Reds, 20 games down in the shadows of the second division, who have been able to cage the Chicago Bear most consistently. Their latest Cub-caging feats came in the just-ended engagements at | Chicago, where the Pirates won two out of three and the Reds three out | of four. Between them, they forced | Grimm to toss 20 pitchers into the | seven games. Only one, Clay Bryant, managed to go the route, pitching a five-hitter that beat the Buccaneers. The Pirates, sneaking back out of a midseason slump and breathing hard on the necks of the third-place Car- dinals, are the only club to hold an edge on the Cubs over the season, having won 8 of 14 games. The Reds are the only club to hold the Grimm (Grim, if you prefer) crew even, at | six-all. Cripples Are Returning. E gradual resuscitation of the more recent cripples, including Bill Lee, serves to encourage Grimm. The fact that three tussles with the Pirates are to be followed by four in three days, including a night game and a Sunday double-header, with the Reds, hardly is an alluring prospect. The Cubs carried into action today with & three-game losing streak, the Pirates 'a three-game winning streak. Elsewhere along the big league wheel, the Giants visited the Bees, the Dodgers were at home to the Phils, the Cards were at Cincinnati, the American League-leading Yanks met the Senators, boasting an eight-game string, in & double-header; the Red Sox were at Philadelphia, the Tigers at Chicago and the Indians at St. Louis. HORSE SHOW DATES SET Annual Marlboro, Md., Event to Be Held September 24, 25. ‘The annual Marlboro, Md., horse show will be held on September 24 and 25, according to an announce- ment made today by Roland Dawson, manager of the event. Prize lists will be published soon for the meeting, which is recognised by the American Horse Show Associ- ation. Secretary and treasurer of the meet is Miss Rhoda Bolling Christ- mes. TO DISCUSS HORSE SHOW. Columbus Horse Show Committee will meet tonight at 8 o'clock in Rosen- steel Hall at Forest Glen to discuss plans for their forthcoming affair, to be held at the Meadowbrook grounds September 12. Spec'al Dispatch to The Star. N Ivy Paul Andrews a clear sky, | "POPPING OF F ianais Lucky Guy. EW YORK, August 17.—The luckiest man in base ball today is a hefty guy with a moon-shaped face like Arch McDonald's and his name is A couple days ago Ivy belonged to the sixth-plaee Cleveland Indians and was at once obscure, Unsafe and unhappy Indians were not pitching him and most of the other teams in the league | did not like his style in the box and he was on the ragged edge. the Yankees claimed him on waivers for $7,500. Base ball people, by and large, are thinking this might well be a tip-off on The the Yanks, who are rated in some books as one of the great ball clubs of all | time. Dissenters begin their argument can they be so great? for any other club. | Wicker is just another thrower. temptuous “phooey” follows. Andrews pitched one good game this year. become the only pitcher of the season to do the trick. | bought him on the strength of that performance, have | noid him in singular esteem up here.< One of the more prominent base ball | writers hints that the Yankees were | forced to append some other deal in order to get Andrews on waivers. The Washington club was re- Ported to have twice blocked the | sale of Andrews by claiming him, but when Manager Bucky | Harris was asked of this, he | snorted: “Most emphatically we did not claim him. I hope he pitches against us in this Yankee series.” | May Lengthen His Career. BALL players are a notoriously envi- ous breed of folk. Few of them, fnr instance, saw any romantic twist | when the Yanks reached out last | vear, after Myril Hoag's injury, and brought old Bob Seeds up from the! Xmernalmnal League The Yanks | were “in” last year at the time, just i"‘ they appear the winners this year. As a major leaguer, Seeds was long | since washed up, but McCarthy wanted an experienced handy man around the happy precincts of Yankee Sta- | dium and chose Seeds, who arrived | just in time to be given a slice of the | world series melon. Andrews had not been actu- ally confronted with a return to the bushes, but he may have sensed it was not far off. He had been with the Red Sox of B. Y. (before Yawkey), the Browns and the Indians and his life as a big leaguer had not been very happy since he first came up with New York and was shipped away in trade shortly thereafter. That was in 1931. Now he not only is in the money but several years to his major league career may be added as a result. A pitcher does not have to be very good to win in a Yankee uniform. Not with Di Maggio, Gehrig, Dickey and com- pany scoring an average of 6.61 runs per game for the season. McColl Episode Brought Tug. PROBABLY the biggest heart tug along ,these lines in recent years came in 1933 when the Nationals were winning the pennant. Shortly before the series Joe Cronin dipped into Chattanooga for old Alec McColl. Look at their pitching. Pat Malone was waived out on this score with a question: ‘“How Bump Hadley never could win of the National League. Kemp Frank Makosky is lucky to be in the bnz, | leagues and now Andrews is dropped into a starting role.” Sometimes a con- | He shut out the Yankees to Maybe Joe McCarthy Anyway, they seem to Alec had been a fine minor league pitcher for 20 years or s0. He had a good head, a fair screw ball and l puzzling curve, but big league scouts | overlooked him when he was in his | | started. Does that three-game sweep 20s and when he reached 30 they did no* want him. When he finally came up. Alec was 38 vears old, or said he was anyway. Uncle Clark Griffith never believed him and once said he thought he him- | self was no older than Alec, who was bald and had a face that looked like & road map. Nearly all of his teammates suspected that he had been & drummer boy in the Civil War. But Alec could pitch pretty well and Cronin let him start a game toward the close of the 1933 season. And the old boy not only beat the White Sox that day but shut them out, and some- | how you always had an idea that Mc- | | Coll thought he was going to start a game in the series. Had One Glorious Fling. RONIN, though, had no idea of using him at all, but things went | so poorly toward the close of that| series with the Giants that he waved | Alec to the box and McColl was the | best pitcher in that particular game, which was too far gone to save. ‘That was the year of the big choke- | up. Critics thought the Nats choked and said so, and later some of the | players themselves admitted that all | was not normal within the ranks. But Alec did not choke up. Alec and Goslin, Whitehill and Jack Russell . . . they were all right. When Alec choked up was a couple years later in Spring training. That | was the year Bucky Harris took a seventh-place ball camp and decided that he could not rebuild with old men like McColl. That was when Alec came close to | blubbering a little, but it was base ball, and things such as this happen. He had one fling, after all, that he wouldn't have received if Washington wasn't winning a pennant and needed a flunkey to pitch some of the league games that didn't mean anything ... except to the flunkey. Homer Standings By the Associated Press. The leaders—Di Maggio. 34; Foxx. Red Sox. 31 kees. 0R: Medwick Greenberd. Tigers Yankees, Gehrig. Yan- Cardinals. 3 26; Trosky. igue totals—American, 576; Na- . 477. Total. 1,053. AMERICAN. RESULTS YESTERDAY. No games scheduled. STANDING OF THE CLUBS. League Statistics AUGUST 17, 1937. NATIONAL. RESULTS YESTERDAY. No games acheduled. E o Eil S WO —-rxi0x man --usmasiig wiudRpeld wer ‘e3w1u90s9g |- ===~ puruag wuep --" uay q S| CALL CYPRIAN GRIDMEN. All members of the 8t. Cyprian foot ball team are requested to attend the season’s first meeting on Wednesday at 8 pm, LORTON BROWNS AHEAD. Lorton Browns defeated the Cardinal /|| --- A‘E‘gl ~~psuupuy lol2 " Then, out of | | over, | A's and “pions? | for long enough, | division money, club to training | ha | Linke, at any rate 1r Staff Photos. 'EATE IN NEW YORK 10 PROVE CALIBER Outcome of Yanks Series to Settle Genuineness of New-Found Class. BY FRANCIS E. STAN, 8taff Correspon The St EW YORK, August base ball world w know, when this four-game Wa ington { whether it mirages or looking at s crete goings on. Squiring an eij streak, the Nationals coll with the Yankees, starting tod a double-header. Is really that good? Or did the merely take advantage of the hapless the skidding, demoralized Red Sox? And the Yankees They return home today after gayly invading Phi adelphia and gloomily leaving after suffering humili n such as they have not known since the season of the A's over the Yanks slump on the part of the wo: Will there really be a injected into this American League campaign, after all? ‘The next three afternoons ought throw some light on herald a Harris Harassed by Slab Wo 'THE Nats are not intereste much the Yankees' Their st in pennart talk long ago. What the Grffs v do is perpetuate that winn of theirs. If they can there from und i no matter how f it may seem now, still wo hoes and buy the Wint Bucky Harris is not too well fixe for pitching up here and the char are that Bucky will run into difficy ties all along the line from now o Too many double-headers are p up and Harris has too few hur unless you count fellows like Cohen, Chase and Jacobs. Pete Appleton and Jimmv De Shong were to get the calls today, but to- morrow Harris probably will have to hand the ball to Ed Linke, signal to the bullpen workers to start warm- ing up, and kneel down and say a long, fervent prayer. lead is cut time to get out Wes May Not Face Newsom, HIS is & system which has been working of late, although nobods seems to know whether it has been Bucky's praying. or the pitching, that has been responsible. It has not beer Eddie has wor four straight games, but he needec a lot of help The Red Sox “front office” is likel to get a shock next Sunday, too. Or is it in order to look that far ahead? Anyway, Harris plans to use Wes Per- rell in the finale here on Thursday (See STAN, Page A-13.) ) Major Leaders By the Associated Press. - American Learue. atting—Travis, —Senator: Gehringer, Tigers 373 i ns—Di Maggio = Yankees 108 Rolfe. Yankees. and Greenbers, Tigers. "Rins batted In-—Greenbe: 120: Di Maggio. Yankees, 11° Hits—Di Ma Vankees, Tigers Doubles—Bonura ~ White Sox, Senat. Vosmik, Browns. 3. Triples — Sione, Kreevich, White Sox. 13 Home ' runs—Di Magglo, 84 Foxx. Red Sox. 31 Stolen ' bases—Chapi 27; Walker. Tigers. Pitching—Murphy, Poffenberger. Tigers Hatlonet Lengss. Batting—Medwick. = Cardinals, .400; P. Waner, Pirates 383 b uns—Medwick, " Cardinals, 89; Galan. Cubs. &6 | Runis batted in—Meduwick, Cardinals, emaree. Cubs R0 ick, Cardinals, Tigers. 153; 30; s, and Yankees, Red Sox. oYankees. 12-2; 187: P. Cardinals, 44; Reds. Piraces riples — Goodman. Vaughan and Handiev, —Galan, Cubs. 16: Bor- dagaray, Cardinals and Lavazetto and Hassett” Dodgers. Pnchl]flx,—!-‘rne 14-4; Bees. Cubs,_11-. Root, BKI[_6|_3|_ Phil 7| 4/ 1] 8| G. 40143[47/48/55(58 = GANEsToMORROW, Wash. at N. Y. 2:00. GAMES TODAY WlAh at N. Y. (2). Detroit at Chicago. oston at Phila. ) . ‘it eveland st 8t. L. “GAMES TODAY New York at Boston. Lou Phll. at IPMUJII Only same uh.duhd A Official Service | Delco——Remy—Klnxon\i MILLER DUDLEY | 4 ST.NW. NORTH 1583 2(‘

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