Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 July 1939 — Page 6

Umpires Are Kept Busy as Fistic

By GEORGE KIRKSEY United Press Staff Correspondent EW YORK, July 3.—The haseball wars raged at white heat today. The barking has turned into biting and the boys are playing cut-and-slash baseball of the old school. In capsule form: Leo Durocher and Zeze Bonura slug it ou. . . . Umpire chases Jimmy Dykes, Eric McNair and Ted Lyons. . . . President Harridge fines Hank Greenberg $50 for punching Joe Kuhel. . . . Two Yankees and two Red Sox go to hospital with cuts and injuries. From Friday through Sunday 11 major league ball players were chased by the umpires. Popularity boys like Johnny Vander Meer and Ted Lyons were given the gate because of their arguments with umPires. Umpire Ziggy Sears waved Vander Meer out of a game Friday at Chicago for protesting about strikes. Luke Appling, White Sox shortstop, was chased the same day. Greenberg and Kuhel engaged in a fist fight because Hank claimed Joe spiked him at first base and Greenberg was chased.

T= hostilities broke® out in earnest yesterday. Hal Schumacher threw a pitch close to Leo Durocher’s head in the Giants-Dodgers twin bill before 51,435 at the Polo Grounds. Then Durocher hit into a double play. Running the play out, Durocher stepped on Bonura’s ankle at first. Bonura threw. the ball at L.eo. They exchanged bioWws. After the battle Bonura called it a ‘cheap stunt.” claimed Bonura’s foot was on the middle of the bag. Bill Terry called Durocher “a liar.”

Durocher.

along with McNair and Dykes.

In Big Time on Roaring Grand

An Indianapolis-owned horse racing on the Grand Circuit this summer is Leo C. McNamara’s Ath-

fone Flaxey Guy. Harry Short is handling the reins.

By Eddie Ash

HARNESS HORSE RACE LEXICON A ‘HEEL’ IS JUST A ‘SWIPF

HILE every sport has its own language, hardly anyone will deny that harness horse men could talk almost all day without the average lay man being able

to follow the drift of the conversation. To be “afraid of the cars” indicates that the driver is a bit chicken hearted while driving, especially on the turns. . . . To “file her off a bit” doesn’t mean you're going to take her to the manicure, not even the blacksmith. . . . It explains in horse language that the trainer is about to train the oat-eater a fast mile, really “set into

her” in other words. = ” = 4 = 5

F you hear a horseman describe a race he might well say “they all went away tight.” . . . Who said the drivers had been drinking? ... No one. ... The term means the horses started off like a house afire. When a horse “jumps it off” he was taken too far and lost his stride, or “threw in the towel.” If you hear a groom ask another, “What hoss you rubbin?” he is inquiring the name of the horse the man is taking care of. . « « A “heel” is not a bad character, he's just the man who helps the groom (swipe) on race day. “He couldn't beat a fat man that day” is the lowly description given a horse that disappoints his followers when much was expected of him.

Indiana Pants Are Hopples

GROOM can stop working for a trainer in three ways. . . . He is fired, quits or “he got through down there.” . . . Which implies that he was the last man hired and when the first horse in the

Schmeling Is Easy W inner

Heuser Folds Up in First Round of Fight.

(U. P).—Max Schmeling, off to a good comeback start with a oneround knockout over Adolf Heuser, weighed his chances of regaining the world heavyweight title today. Schmeling, who was a first-round

against Champion Joe Louis, annexed the European heavyweight title when his first lightning-iike right to the chin dropped Heuser for the full count before the fight was a minute old last night. The 70.000 spectators paid 300,000 marks ($120,000), .

STUTTGART, Germany, July 3

kayo victim himself in his last fight |

In Detroit Eddie Romme! called Eric McNair of the White Sox, a former teammate on the Athletics, out on strikes. his bat in the air. Manager Jimmy Dykes, who roomed with Rommel nine years, charged off the bench to get at his ex-roomie but was stopped by Umpire Cal Hubbard, the ex-tackle who scales 250 pounds. Lyons, a Sunday school boy, got into the argument and was banished

McNair threw

.

\ HE previous day Greenberg and Kuhel had their argument and ‘ Dykes was fuming over at the remarks pouring off the Tigers’ bench about the White Sox “only talking tough.” Casey Stengel, Bees’ pilot, and Merrill May, Phils’ third baseman, staged and imbroglio of their own and were chased by the umps. Even though hopelessly out of the race, the Red Sox went after the Yanks hammer and tongs. Jim Tabor spiked Buddy Rosar on Saturday. Yesterday Catcher Gene Desautels was shaken up and cut on the lip. Second Baseman Bobby Doerr was struck on the elbow by a pitched ball. Outfielder Tommy Henrich crashed into the wall going after a fly and split open his scalp. He had to have four stitches taken in the wound.

They are playing baseball for keeps this year as they did in the days of Herzog, Cobb, Evers and Chief Myers. . Both pennant races remained status quo yesterday. The Reds split

a double-header with the Cubs and the Yankees divided with the Red Sox.

Times Sports

Warfare Rages in Major

Xe, A ‘

4

INCINNATT slugged out an 11-3 victory over the Cubs in the Sabe bath opener before 42,004 and then tossed away the second game, 9-8, on base on balls, the Reds’ big weakness. Lefty Grove beat Lefty Gomez in the opener, 7-3, but the Yanks came back to murder the Red Sox, 9-3, in the nightcap. Tommy Bridges hung up his 11th triumph as he let the White Sox down with

four hits for a 5-1 victory., Cleveland and St. Louis split a twin bill, the Browns taking the first, 4-3, and the Vittmen grabbing the after piece, 8-2. Washington slugged its way into sixth place by downing

PAGE 6

MONDAY, JULY 8, 1939

Hoosier Golfer Finally Finds Cup for Ace

BLOOMINGTON, Ind, July 3 (U. P.).—Ken Welty, youthful golf professional at the Bloomington Country Club, who has already fulfilled his self-imposed task of making a hole-in-one, today skipped his daily stint of shooting 100 golf balls toward the cup of a 135-yard hole in an attempt to make an ace. Four days ago Welty decided to shoot 100 balls daily and see how long it would take him to make the ace. He figurec that he would shoot 6000 times and then quit, for the odds were 5913 against him. He shot 200 waixs yesierday, the extra 100 to permit him to rest today. On his 380th shot the ball landed 12 feet roman the cup, bounced once and dropped in. He's going to continue shooting the 100 balis daily, however, he said,

‘ [just to see how many more aces he

can score.

Don’t Overlook Your Public Links Entry

The deadline on entries for the Indianapolis District qualifying round of the National Public Links Championship is 5 p. m. Wednesday, John L. Niblack district supervisor, said today. Entries addressed to him must be postmarked before that time. He said absolutely no entries will be received at the tee. Among those already entered are J. Clark Espie, Pleasant Run; Walter Chapman, Coffin; Clayton Nichols, South Grove; Don Cooprider and Tom Simmons, Kokomo. Other entries are expected from Terre Haute.

Tribe at Bat

[Hunt, of McCormie Baker, ¢ 1 hn, if

Richardson, Tang, It . Newman, Sorensen Latshaw, Easterwood,

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Baseball at a

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AMERICAN ASSOCIATION

Kansas City Minneapolis

St. Paul Columbus Toledo

+ [Cincinnati Chicago .....

(Second Game) 000 301 000—4 6 © Wort A 310 000 02x—6 10 1 yatt, I. Hutchinson and th, Phelps; Schmuacher, Melton Hy

(First Game)

hy 021 000 000— erringer and Lombardi; Fre » J. Russell and Hartnett, CRN Ros (Second Game)

004— 8 12 1

cole... 008 100 011 — 9 8

Braves’ Catcher

Fast-Going Colonels on T ribe Slate

One Tilt Tonight, Twin Bill Tomorrow; Chapman Sent » To Dixie Loop. The American Association pennant darkhorses, the Louisville Colonels, move into Perry Stadium tonight to open a three-game series with the crestfallen Indians: ho were bowled over twice by last-place !!

‘yor | Richardson, ss At YL

005 011 040—11 17 2} 8 8 9 innings! Wils

Toledo yesterday. The double aefeat knocked the Redskins out of third place which they took over from Louisville Saturday night. Red Barrett, who defeated Columbus Thursday, is to be sent out against the Derbytown pastimers in the ladies’ night attraction. The teams will play an afternoon twin | bill tomorrow and action is set to | start at 1:30. : Had the Tribesmen won both tilts yesterday they would have retained | is third position nine games behind| B® the league leading Kansas City Blues. As developments turned out, however, they are trailing the Colo- | ga Continued on Page Seven)

The Indians —

(First Game)

Roland Crim is expected to catch for the Irvington Braves baseball team when it meets the Irvington Panthers in the Y. M. C. A. Irvington Boys’ League at 9:30 a. m. Wednesday at Ellenberger Park. More than 200 Irvington boys are participating in baseball and softball leagues being conducted under Y. M. C, A. supervision this season.

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Totals 40 1 2 Balas batted for Lisenbee in 8th *Logan starting pitcher, 030 210 402 100 000 120Runs batted in_—_Hunt, Mueller 4. Flippen 2, Secory 2, McCoy, Fleming, Easterwood, Lang fwo-base hits — Galatzer, Grace, Parsons. Three-base hits—Fleming, Newman. ome runs—Mueller, Secory. Sacrifices—Taylor, Mueller, Flippen. Double play—Sorensen to Newman to Latshaw. Left on bases—Toledo 5, Indianapolis 11. Base on balls—Off Logan 3, Hutchinson 1, n 2, Hutch-

' MN SoS SSSSOSSHI

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Soup and Tea.

NEW YORK, July 3

Lisenbee, 1 in 1 inning: off S ‘ inning. Wild pitch—Sharp. Losing » —Logan. Umpires—Conlan and Stewart.

Time—1:56, soup and tea.

On Ex-Champ

Dempsey Orders Steak, Gets

U. P)— Jack Dempsey, safely past the crisis in his four-day battle with peritonitis, was demanding steak and potatoes today and getting warm

the Athletics twice, 4-3 and 13-2.

All the battling between the Dodgers and the Giants provided nothing more than a standoff. Luke Hamlin tamed the Giants in the opener, 3-2, but the Giants rapped out a 6-4 victory in the second. Pittsburgh knocked the Cardinals into fourth place by taking a twin

bill, 8-5 and 6-3.

Homers by Eddie Miller (two on) and Al Lopez

(bases loaded) enabled the Bees to trim the Phillies twice, 9-7 and 4-3.

McLemore’s Sympathy Goes to Old Gabby as

All-Star Game Nears |

Cub Leader Inherits Job of

Directing Nationals Against

Americans at Yankee Stadium Where His Team Was Crushed in World Series.

By HENRY McLEMORE United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, July 3.—Poor old Gabby. He is much too nice a guy for anyone to wish such a job upon him, He just inherited it, sort of,

and it’s not a very handsome legacy.

»’

Deliberately, I have run the gamut of emotions to find out just

which one I should feel for Gabby. how I run them, the needle always stops on “sympathy.”

reason for these alligator tears. They are being shed for the jovial fat man whose job it is to lead the National League's so-called AllStars against the American Leaguers up at Yankee Stadium next week. And what is even more pathetic, the Nationals expect Gabby to win for them, Of course it is Gabby’s own fault for letting his Cubs win the pennant last year. He probably forgot that the winning manager automatically was sentenced to pilot the All-Stars. I never thought he would have the courage to come back into Yankee Stadium after what the Yanks did to the Cubs in the World Series, but I don’t suppose they call him Leo the “lion hearted” without some good reason. Gabby going back to the Stadium is just like Galento asking Louis for another helping.

Americans Add Mound Power

Usually, you have to concede pitching ability to the National League outfit, but the Americans have added that little item to the power in their bats for this year’s game. The Nationals have won only two of the six previous AllStar games and both of them were pitching vitories. Diz Dean, Carl Hubbell, Curt Davis and Lon Warneke gave up only seven hits to

: |win in 1036, and Johnny Vander ‘ |Meer, Bill Lee and Mace Brown al-

Jowed the same number to beat the Americans last year, So, we'll talk about Gabby’s pitching first, and then stack it up alongside Joe McCarthy's flingers. Walters, Vander Meer, Derringer, Fette, Lee, Curt Davis, Wyatt and Warneke. The first three play for Cincinnati, and only one is likely to be used. It probably will be Walters because Derringer is not expected to risk coming within the bounds of this state while that law judgment is hanging over his head, and Vander Meer has lost six games against winning four. Wyatt probably will do one of the three-inning stretches because of his seven won and none lost record. But who will Gabby select as his third man? Certainly not Lee, who is pitching .500 ball, and he can't send Fette in there with a sore arm. This leaves Davis and Warneke, both of them became intimately acquainted with various big league shower baths through the month of June. Warneke got another dousing yesterday from the Pirates. Davis has won his last two starts, but he has lost eight games compared to his nine wins, and that sort of pitching is what American Leaguers fatten up on.

Forward and backward, no matter That's the

5 Americans Survive Play

Bobby Riggs, Helen Jacobs Win Net Honors.

WIMBLEDON, England, July 8 (U. P.).—Five Americans survived the day's play in the All-England tennis championships today, and two men and three women will carry the United States’ hopes into the closing phases of the tournament. Bobby Riggs, Chicago, won his

way into the semifinals by defeating Ghaus Mohammed, India, 6-2, 6-2, 6-2. The other American in the semi-finals of the men’s singles is Elwood Cooke, Portland, Ore., who won a surprise victory over Bunny Austin, chief hope of Great Britain, 6-3, 6-0, 6-1. Only one American, Gene Smith, Berkeley, Cal, went down to defeat today. He lost to Franjo Puncee, Yugoslavia, 6-0, 6-2, 6-2. Cooke meets Henner Henkel of Germany in his next match and Riggs plays Puncec. Miss Helen Jacobs, Berkeley, Calg Mrs, Sarah Palfrey Fabyan, Brooke line, Mass, and Miss Alice Marble, San Francisco, all went into the quarterfinals of the women’s singles, Miss Jacobs’ next opponent is Miss Kay Stammers of Great Britain; Mrs. Fabyan plays Mme Rene Mae thieu, France, and Miss Marble

meets Miss Jadwiga Jedrzejowska, Poland.

Dirt Track Drivers To Vie at South Bend

SOUTH BEND, July 3.—Jimmy Wilburn and Everett Saylor, two well-known dirt track drivers, are among the latest entrants in toe morrow’s seven-event speed pro= gram here at Playland Park. Others expected to compete are Elbert Booker, Tex Peterson, Baye liss Leverett, Steve Truchan, Mike Salay, Charles Szekendy, Slim Rue therford, Herb Manges, Buck White mer, Howdy Howard and “Wild Man” Wierer. Time trials are scheduled to begin at noon with

Po

stable went lame or was sold, seniority ruled, so the junior groom “got Grissom, L. Moore, Vander Meer, Thomp- USuconn Game) The former heavyweight cham- the first event at 2:30 p. m.

through.” “Sittin’ on the dozen eggs all the way round” doesn’t mean the driver was a hen. . . . It's just ancther way of saying he was afraid of the cars, or, further, that he was pretty nervous and on pins and needles during the whole mile. “Doesn't like the corners too well” explains the same idea. “Indiana pants” are hopples put on pacers to make them stick to their gait—they originated in the Hoosier State.

F course a “front runner” is one that likes to race in front (on O top), and when “they look him in the eye” and get up abreast of him the front runner throws up the sponge. “In the hole” is the favored or “garden spot” in at the rail behind the leader who is breaking the wind. . . . It's a good position to be in. but if a third horse sneaks along too fast the. garden spot horse is apt to be “pinned” or “boxed” in and can't get out.

When Easy Victory Is Turned

UCH remote terms as “oil in the can,” “lockin’ for places to go,” “just grassin’ her,” and “he was Hawkins’ horse today,” are employed to inform that the horse in question was the victor, and a very easy one, too. If an oat-muncher went “a long mile,” he was “out on the limb” and raced nearer the outside rail. . . . “Bull rings,” “punkin fairs,” and “the bushes,” are all applied to small-fry half-mile tracks.

5 ” » 2 ” » HE “persuader” is the whip, a “bike” “fire wagon,” or “wagon™ is the sulky, or the vehicle in which the driver sits behind the

horse. To “connect” or “win a main” is to win an important race. . . . To “get one leg in” is to win a heat. . . . A horse that is not much good is “a counterfeit,” “a mane and tail horse” or a “nickel, no ‘count hoss.”’ One that is well thought of is known as “good stock” and when they speak of a driver having a good horse they say “He has some-

Jersey City Adds

Marathon Swimmer Drifts to New Mark

Pittsburgh . 30 BOSON... .t viii 28 >hiladelphia

' AMERICAN LEAGUE

Detroit Chicago Washin Philadelphia St. Louis

GAMES TODAY AMERICAN ASSOCIATION

Louisville at Indianapolis, night. Minneapolis at St. Paul. Only games scheduled.

NATIONAL LEAGUE St. Louis at Chicago. Only game scheduled. AMERICAN LEAGUE

Cleveland at Detroit. Chicago at St. Louis, Only games scheduled.

YESTERDAY'S RESULTS AMERICAN ASSOCIATION (First Game) Columbus

000 000 000—0 Louisville 041 010 20x—8

Hader, Macon and Ticachek; W and Lewis.

(Second Game)

Columbus Louisville

Lanier, Hader, Shaffer, Flowers and Lewis, (First Game) 0 00 000 205— ¥ 010 2 002 31x—18

Just; Herring and Silvestri.

(Second Game)

oo

100 0-8 100 0—1

k (First Game)

Junkets and Just; Frasier, Taylor and

8 4 10 © agner

Macon and Bremer;

11 1 mo

Kimball, Marrow, Winegarner and Smith, b

15 © Te

son, Livengood

Ww . 3 Dean Iiocd. afters and Hershberger;

Passeaun and Mancuso,

(First Game)

BOSIOM .....00 vuln 041 010 003— 9 Philadelphia : 400 000 = v i

.B.| _ Fette, Errickson, Shoffner an oper; ? Multa, Fees, utcher, Higbe a Maney M

(Second Game) Boston Philadelphia Lanning, Frankhouse and Lopez; Johnson, Beck and Davis, Milltes, © = oo

AMERICAN LEAGUR (First Game)

100 101 000—3 6 1 000 201 3ix—7 8 3 Gomez and Dickey; Grove and Desautels, Peacock. | (Second Game) 024 002 100—9 17 1 010 000 092—3 7 Hadley and Dickey; Auker, \ | Rich and Peacock. ¥} BREF: Wade, Baghy:

0 (First Game) hiladelphia 000— 0 Washington 001 " 3 Beckman and Hayes; Master - ton and Ferrell. Seri Maier; Ave (Second Game) hiladelphia 000 000 020— 2 11 1 ashington 600 023 20x—18 i 0 C. Dean, Joyce and Brucker; Krakauskas and Giuliani, (First Game) St. Louis Cleveland Mills and Spindel; Allen and Pytlak. (Second Game) St. Louis 001 001 000— 2 3 Cleveland .......... 201 012 20x— 8 1 Kennedy, Trotter and Glenn; Harde and Hemsley. 000 000— 1

Lyons, Dobernic, C. Brown and Tresh, Schiveter; Bridges and York.

0 French, p

jon bases—

vIn oO Stewart and Conlan. Time—1:4

0 0 0 0! 0 0 0 0 9 | 0 |

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Lang. 3b Galatzer, cf Latshaw, 1b unt, If Newman, 2b Baker, ¢

Wilson, p Logan

L. Johnson, p . ." Balas, Lisenbee, p Sorensen, ss

Totals L. Johnston, starting pitcher. Logan batted for Wilson in sixth. (Seven Innings; agreement) Toledo 031 600 0—10 maianapons ........ivv0v0nn 010 123 0— 7 Runs batted in—Secory, Phillips 2, Richardson 2, Dwver, Taylor, McCoy, Fleming 3, Newman 3, Galatzer 2. Two-base nits— Secory, Dwyer, Baker, Newman, Galatzer. Three-bass hit—Richardson. Home runs— Secory, Phillips. Sacrifice—Dwyer. play—Mueller to McCoy to Taylor. Toledo, 6; Indianapolis, 8. Base on balls—Off Phillips 5, L. Johnson 1, Mclaughlin 1, French 1. Struck out—By L. Johnson 1, Phillips 2, Balas 1, Wilson 2, French 1. Hits—Of1 L. Johnson, 5 in 2 innings (and to one man in 3d); Balas, 7 in 1Y3 innings; DLisenbee, 1_in 23 inning; witson, 2 in 2 innings; Phillips, 5 in » innings; McLaughlin, 4 in 24 inning: French, none in 1 inning; F. Johnson, 1 in 1!3 innings. Winning pitcher —Phillips; losing pitcher hnson. g apIreS

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|

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pion, who has been sparring with the - often fatal peritonitis since Thursday night when his ruptured appendix was removed, has before him about 10 days of convalescence in Polyclinic Hospital, which should give him plenty of time to read some of those 10,000 letters, telegrams and cablegrams he has received. Jack was well enough today to re-

‘ceive a few visitors, and Mrs. Demp-

sey indicated she would bring their two small daughters, Joan and Barbara, to see their daddy this afternoon.

Guernsey Repeats in College Net Tourney

MERION, Pa, July 38 (U. P). —Frank Guernsey of Rice Institute held his second straight national intercollegiate tenis championship today. Guernsey, 12th ranking player in the nation, retained the title with an easy straight sets victory over Chester Murphy of the University of Chicago. The score: 6-1, 6-0, 6-1. Douglas Imhoff and Robert Peacock, University of California tandem, captured the doubles crown by conquering Murphy, Big Ten champion, and his twin brother, Bill, 4-6, 8-6, 6-4, 6-4.

TERRY, Mont, July 3 (U. P).— Clarence Giles, 45-year-old auctioneer, passed the 200th-mile of a projected 288-mile swim down the YelJowstone River today. Giles has been in the water since

noon Friday. He already has beaten the 147-mile American swimming mark set last year by Charles Zim-

my of Boston. Giles got a black eye when he

struck a log while dozing.

a cae E! MEN'S SOtor-PA % 3 50 SUIT Others at $5.00 up

FAIRBANK'S "{Hik"G."

21% E. Wash. St.—Opposite Courthoase

TIRE SALE

450x21 .... $4.95 | 550x17 .. $6.95 475x19 .... 495 | 600x168 .... 745

525x17 .... 595 | 6.25x18 .... 8.95 525x18 .... 595 7650x168 .... 895

& MADISON

To League Lead

By United Press

The Jersey City Giants added a half game to their International League lead by sweeping both ends of a Sunday double-header from the Syracuse Chiefs.

Two pitchers went the route for the Giants, Wittig holding the Chiefs to eight hits to win the opener, 7-3, and Joiner doling out six blows to take the nightcap, 9-4. The runnerup Rochester Red Wings won, 4-2, from the Toronto Maple Ieafs behind Gornick's seven-hit hurling. But the third place Newark Bears crept a halfgame closer as they won a doubleheader from Baltimore, 9-5 and 8-1. Montreal and Buffalo split a pair.

INDIANS vs.

8:I15P

man, Hubbell, Melton and

BASEBALL TONIGHT

LADIES’ NIGHT

010 022 003—8 0 ue 000 09-3 4 1 Breuer and Riddle; Butland, Hogsett and

Lacy. (Second Game) 050 320 0—10 8 2 011 01 1—11 1% I

echota, P. Page, Makoskv and MeCuljou! ; Ulrich, Smythe, Rash and Grace,

Kansas City Minneapolis

NATIONAL LEAGUE (First Game)

Pittsburgh 200 101 13 © St. Louis 000 030 12 2

Klinger, Bauers and R. Mueller; Weiland, Sunkel, Shoun and Padgett,

(Second Game) Pittsburgh 020 004 000—8 8 © St. Louis 100 000 101—8 8 © Tobin ale Berres; Warneke, R. Bowman, Shoun and Owen.

(First Game) 02 10 © 066 000 09-3 0 © nd _Phelph, Hayworth; Lohranning.

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Just contrast that array with Mec-

Carthy’s moundsmen. He has eight men who have won 64 games against 18 defeats. Suppose he calls on Ruffing (11-2), Bridges (11-1), and Feller (12-3). There are three boys who have won 34 games out of 40. And here are the boys he will have on deck in case of trouble: Grove (8-2). Gomez (6-3), Lyons (8-2), Newsom (8-5) and Murphy, the

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Yankees’ great relief hurler who saves plenty for the boys who start and can’t finish it. Why Remind Him of It?

It might be more than Gabby could stand if I should go further in comparing the two outfits, but he should remember those Yankee

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