Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 August 1941 — Page 6

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SPORTS

By®Eddie Ash

} i

itorial in this week's issue, Sporting News

points out t at the abolition

of baseball in Japan by a

decree of the war lords leaves the American hemisphere again the o ly haven of the diamond game—in fact almost the final refuge of sports in general. England, “of| course, has been carrying on in the field of athletic competition, despite adverse Circumstances, and the British Empire has. continued its games, where they do rot interfere with the war

effort.

Baseball was in a fair way of becoming a ational sport in Japan,

. Just-as it 1s in| the United States. | the game and immense stadia were ‘« . . If past years games between

3 watched .and ‘played | puilt accomodate the crowds. . i and Japanese teams:

were staged both in_this country and in| Nippon, creating a spirit

international friendship.

.

brother Se brother and father

vened to end [the comradeship o Ameri

stifle the one|sport in which both

sjanding. So popular

had permeated the language—to| such a

powers that be, now whipping up decreed they 1 ponese words

That shoy

neighborliness and good will that was expected to cement forever

t+

However, the spirit of Mars, which at times has even pitted *

against son, not only has inter-= Le and Japanese, but to

could meet in common’ der-

had the game grown in [Japan that even its terms

“in fact, that the ani Krrericats sentiment, have

1d gvoke a Sugary in the Pyramids of Egypt, where * British deser troops are /TiowW playing baseball, under the direction

a fam when last year.

Maybe international historians will fi nd a clue to the reagon for the rise of the dictators in the fact that, coincidentally with

in fronmead of Canadian troops

their

assumption of complete powers, sports | 'sank to their lowest point,

competitive kind, like

baseball, that teaches initiative,

teamwork, sportsmanship and fair play. | [i

F Zupphe Tackles 29th Grid Season

“Once in) a long time sophomore elixir of life that they Hck out in body.”

football teams are so full of the

all | directions, surprising every-. \

This paervdlion by Bob Zuppke ‘some years dgo is recalled

hopefully by followers of University of Illinois fortunes, for" it is. apparent that he will have to depend more upon

sophomores than

a coach likes.

Zuppke, predicting a better backfield but conceding that the line is a question, sounds no

defeatist note. as

~ 29th season as co

e makes ready to start his

ach of the Illiri. ... He believes

his boys will be speedier and better tacklers than

last season and

vill play interesting . football

that will give the fans a kick. Recent losses | of Joe Turek, guard, Bill

Kolens, sub tackle,

and Jim Easterbrook, subd

‘halfback, along with the probability that Paul

Milosevich is slate the. number of returning lettermen to 14. Only a baker's

Bob Zuppke

the 34 nanes of Sophomores on the

for military service, reduce

dozen of reserves “from _ last

fl

season are listed but lively competition for positions is A by roster. {

Indianapblis Boss on Michigan Squad

TWO DIANAPOLIS products

of University of Michigan football pl

tice on Sept. 10. . , . John Allerdice the 1940 Jans ranks, will recei Fritz Crisler looks the boys over for Tom uzma, from Tom Harmo noes 52 invited to report w The! squad will number 65, includi sophomores. . Heading the list n won seven of its eight reserve awards Mist fall. /Hom games are with Michigan sota and Ohio State; games away ar Er at New York. |

Baseball At

’ _ _AMERICAN ASSOCIATION

Ie |

Columbus Louisville | ity

60 64 66 80 83 92

Brookly St. Loui Cincinnati . Pittsburgh . New Yo . & seis Chicas 0 a ;

J.eassscssace

; posi hetphia AMERICAN LEAGUE ~

yon

Philzde pia” Lou Washing

GAMES TODAY | AMERICAN ASSOCIATION

Solumbus at INDIANAPOLIS 0.) “Toledo at Louisville (night). Milwaukee at St. Paul.

Kansas City at Minneapolis, ol ~ i | NATIONAL LEAGUE lyn at New York (two). Brogiin at Cincinnai 4

Pittsburgh a

Daly games pl cg

AMERICAN LEAGUE :

Philadelphia at Boston. . t at Cleveland. York at Washington. hare at St. Louis.

sil Taking

8t ens, SS eetal lla, rf ] e

orHourowol

] Bla kburn, cf soso Galatzer, 1b ..ceveee Be cesasens

| cocomocomol .

82 31 onNNWHS 010 28 : :

3 sl 000M il 2 Bl nounoncod

Runs batted cQuillen, Christman, Estalella 3. Stortl, .Home run—Estalella. olen b: ses—Stevens, a Sei ces uble ' p

4 Chicaze

4%

cocoocceccol

a members of the large squad yers invited eport for prac~ and Walter Fro 10fer, up from 'e uniforms whéfi Head Coach he first time this year. ’s. hometown of Gary, Ind, is

ith the Wolverine gridders. «oe

g lettermen, 1940 reserves and ire 15 lettermen from the 1£40 ames and nine others who won

State, Iowa, Pittsburgh, Minnewiti:“Northwestern, Illinois and

Glance

RESULTS YESTERDAY

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION (Eleven Innings) lu 100 001 000 00— 2 6 1 Louisville 100 001 000 01— 3 10 © Barrett and Heath; Scheetz and Glenn. * (Ten Innings) Milwaukee .. Minneapolis Koslo and Todd; Kelley and Rensa.

Kansas City and St. Paul not scheduled:

- NATIONAL LEAGUE

Brossiyn 000 050 000— 5 10 2 ew York 000 020 110— 4 10 1

Wyatt and Owen; Schumacher, Wittig, Adams and Danning.

ora

Only game scheduled.

AMERICAN LEAGUE 000 020 000— 2 9 1 co 212 000 00x— 5 8 Q Ross, jijaynes and Tresh, Dickey; Auker and Swift.

St. Louis

Only game scheduled.

'41 Is Birthday For Basketball

SPRINGFIELD, Mass., Aug. 30 (NEA). — Basketball's Golden Jubilee will be observed this winter through a campaign sponsored | by the Naismith Memorial Committee, headed by Mayor Roger L. Putnam .of Springfield, where the late Dr. James A. Naismith ariginated the game\in<1891. The committee plans'to erect a Temple of Basketball here, hous-

| ing a Hall of Fame, museum and

model court. Proceeds of games throughout the western hemisphere will go to the fund.

Pitoher— Ss

| sacker;

J habit of getting hits and no runs.

.| the Toledo mound. ] "Ha y days are here for the Columbus\ Red Birds, the league

‘lead reduced to 4%

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Those All-Sure Yanks Make Series Pla?

Reds End Pact; Tribe’s Plans Are Wrecked

Hens Sweep Series

"The Cincinnati Reds today tossed a wrench into the Indianapolis

baseball club's 1942 plans by purchasing the contracts of players Bennie Zientara, clever second Ray Starr, the -20-game winning pitcher; “Al Lakeman, ‘young catcher who has been showing swift improvement as a res ceiver, and Ben Wade, rookie hurl< er who bears the earmarks of future greatness. The players were purchased in accordance with the térms of the working agreement between the Reds and Indians and (this wholesale raid on the Tribe's\ ranks terinates the agreement t has been in effect three years. The feeling was mutual about t nmiinating the agreement, accordg to Tribe Manager Wade Killefer. Under ‘the terms, the Reds held the right to ‘buy any or all members of the Indians for the reported sum of $6000 each. Whereupon the Reds settled for four after recalling three players sent here on cption, Outfielder Kermit Lewis, Pitcher Bob Logan and First Sacker Edward Shokes. These players—four purchased and three recalled—will not report to the Reds until the spring of 1942.

Reds Switch Affiliations

Last Saturday. the Cincinnati club sitned a working agreement with /the Syracuse Internationals for 1942 and that will be the Reds’ new Class AA affiliate. Leo T. Miller, former head of the Indians who severed his local connections during the summer, recently wa¥ appointed vice president and general manager of the Syracuse club dor 1942, The Indians probably will operate as an independent club next ‘year and from the looks of things now they will start from scratch. At any rate, it looks like the Redskins will have to do some tall hustling in the hot stove league this winter to obtain replacements. Players recalled and purchased are unlikely to see regular service with the Reds next year. Instead, it is believed they will be distributed between the Syracuse and Birmingham clubs. Syracuse is depending upon Cincinnati to bolster its team and the Reds are obligated = to + the Birmingham Southern Association club because they own it lock, stock and barrel.

Ten Hits, No Runs

The Indians took another one.on the chin last night_as the Toledo Mud Hens blanked them, 6 to 0, to sweep the three-game series. The Tribesters were up to their old

They collected 10 safeties—one more than Toledo—but® the Mud Hen double plays cut ’em down and on other - occasions the hit in the clutch wasn’t there. _Roberto Estalella, the Hens’ Cuban outfielder, belted a three-run homer in the sixth stanza. The drive cleared the left field wall at the 165-mark. Estalella also got two singles. Tribe pitcher Ben Wade was wild and dished out seven walks and hit one batsman. Four of the free tickets issued by Wade developed into runs. The Toledo hit total was nin€. The Hoosiers made two errorsy the Mud Hens none. Vernon Stephens, Toledo short= stop, played headsup ball and accepted 11 chances, and eight assists, The Indians couldn't ‘get one past him. Ralph Winegarner worked the route on

Happy Days for Birds

leaders ‘who suffered four straight defeats in Louisville and saw their games. The reason the Birds. are happy is the fact they expeet to protect their pennant margin by feasting’ on the Indians. The Birds invade Perry Stadium tonight for ,4 single tilt at 8:30 and a ‘double-headéer tomorrow afternoon, first | game at 1:30. Lefty Bob Logan is slated to face the American Association pacemakers under the lights tonight. The teams have met 16 times this season and the Birds have emerged the winner in 13 games. The Perry Stadium program Monday, Labor Day, calls for a twilight-moonlight = double-header, first game at 5:30, second at ‘8:30, both for the price of one admission. The Indians’ home season will end on Tuesday, Ray Starr Appreciation Night. Pre-game ceremonies will start at 8:15 and the game at 8:30. (E. A).

$40,000 Soccer Ace Tours With. Cubans

HAVANA, Aug. 30 (NEA).—Juan Tunas, a Cuban soccer star ior whom Central and South American clubs have bid as high as $40,000, will play with the Puentes Grandes team in a tour of the United States. Tunas, a center forward, has scored 37 goals in the Cuban Na-

Even Our Starr Goes;

Howard Pollet

Limping Cards Confident Pollet a White Will Help Them Oulstagas: the Dodgers

By. HARRY GRAYSON Times Special Writer

NEW YORK. Aug. 30—The injury-riddled Cardinals are back west confident that they will outstagger the Dodgers in the run down the stretch. They bank on the young southpaws, Ernie White and Howard Pollet, to put them across.

“White and Pollet give us the mental advantage fhe left-hander

“has on the left-hand batter,” says

Lon Warneke. “And National League power bats from the left side of the

~ plate. Fourteen of the first 15

" Ernie White

NEW YORK, Aug. 30 (UP)

16 years. ? a

Barna Still On Rampage

Times Special CHICAGO, Aug. 30.—Babe Barna is still the slugingest guy in the American Association. The Miller mauler upped his

'|average this, week as of Thursday’s

points to .354. watters joined him in . Ollie;Bejma of St. Paul

games, three Two new the select

ninth and 10th places with averages of .314

llowing Barna, irr order were Otto Denning, Minneapolis, .336; Glenn McQuillen, Toledo, .335; John Pesky, Louisville, .329; Bob Repass, Colum‘bus, .322; Gil Epglish, St. Paul, .319; Bert. Haas, olumbus, .318 and Wayne Blackburn of Ingigiapotie with .316.. Johnny Grodzicki,. of Columbus, won two more games and still leads the pitchers with = 17 victories against seven setbacks. Oscar Judd of the Colonels is second with 12 against four. The leading Red Birds are still the best hitting club with a team average of .290.°

three putouts Field Is Chasing.

Little Ben Hogan

HERSHEY, Pa., Aug. 30 (U. P.). —The field in the $5000 Hershey Open golf tournament set out in pursuit of little Benny Hogan of Texas in the third round today.

him, Hogan's midway total as he started out today was 136, 10 under par. His nearest rival was slim Lloyd Mangrum of Monterey, Cal, who had a 68 yesterday for a half-way| total of 138. Five strokes back came the veteran Denny Shute, Terl Johnson, and Sam Snead, bracketed with 141 each. : With the qualifying mark set at 157 for the first 36 holes, 65 professionals and nine amateurs qualified for the last two rounds of play today and tomorrow. The amateurs were led :by last year’s national champion, Dick Chapman.

The Ellis Family Captures Honors

The Ellis family walked off with honors in the Meridian Hills Country Club women’s golf championship tournament which was concluded yesterday. Miss Dorothy Ellis, city champion, won the club title for two rounds while Mrs. Donald H. Ellis, her sister-in-law, became the champion of the first nine. Mrs. Ralph L. Flood, chairman, managed = the tournament and awarded prizes at a luncheon. Mrs, Horace A. Storer was elected chairman *for next year with Mrs, Wil-

tional League.

They're Running for Fighting Forces

liam H. Walker as assistant.

i

Kar

Competitors in sled race on stubble. fight it out neck and novi during Auckland athlete festival for pi dp aid of She New Zuiinud Fighitag From Fonds | | :

With twe sub-par rounds behinds

Ted Villiams With His 407 Continues as Top Slugger

—Ted Williams, slugging Red Sox outfielder, continues to breeze along atop the American League batting list, but ke is having & hard fight to keep his average above the golden 400 mark, which no major leaguer has achieved for a full season ‘in

williams is hitting .407, ‘according to figures released today, including Thursday's games. This is far above his nearest rival, Cecil avis of Washington, who has .364, but it is seven points below Williams’ figure of last week. In the National League, Johnny Hopp, Cardinal outfielder, leads for the third straight week. He has a four-point margin over -Nick Etten of the Phillies.

Krist Sets Pace Howard Krist, rookie righthander of the Cardinals, continues to pace National circuit pitchers with | a perfect record of nine straight victories. Meanwhile, in the American League, Lefty Gomez, Yankee veteran, took over the lead. His comeback campaign has netted 12 straight victories against four

defeats. i Leads in other departments folow: Runs—(A) DiMaggio, 113; (N) Hack, Cubs, 93. "Hits—(A) Travis, Senators, 179; (N) Hack, Cubs, 154. Doubles —(A) DiMaggio, Yankees, and Judnich, Browns, 38; (N) Reiser, Dodgers, 36. Triples—¢A) Travis, Senators, 16; (N) Fletcher, Pirates, 10. Home Runs—(A) Keller, Yankees, (N) Camilli, Dodgers, 27. Runs Batted In—(A) DiMaggio, Saikees, 112; (N) Mize, Cardinals,

Yankees,

32;

Stolen Bases—(A) Case, Sen 21; (N) Frey, Reds, 15. The 10 leading batsmen in each league follow:

AMERICAN Williams, Bos. .

0 a SSTHSVANRQ

Xu han, Pitts Chicago Slaughter St.L. Brown, St.L 431 64 134 5 five "leading pitchers in league, , (seven or more decisions):

AMERICAN

1 bk bd Pk pk fk od 4 ek -

Ww. 12 14

Gomez, New York. . Ruff

Heving, y Cleveland hyse Boston

i Gefs The Trophy

George Franck, Speedy Minnesota halfback, was picked by sports writers as the most valuable player among the college All-Stars who bowed to the professional champion Chicago Bears Thursday night, it was announced today. Franck was a oi both on offense and defense, He returned a kickoff 43 yards and scored a touchdown on a pass from Tom

|Harmon of Michigan. A shoulder

injury forced him from the. lineup in the second half. A trophy will be given to him at the 1942 All-Star game, °

Denson Injured, Mitt Show Off

Johnny Denson, local heavyweight- who was scheduled to take on Lee Oma, of Detroit, in the

Sports Arena next Thursday night,

§ |has been injured in training and

will be unable to meet the Detroiter, forcing Matchermaker Lloyd Carter

show. Denson sustained an injured. right hand during his slugfest with Neville (Tiger) Beech, of Memphis, last week and further agravated the injury while training yesterday at his camp headquarters. near

Noisiesvills, Ind. : »

CHICAGO, Aug. 30 (U. P).—

headline bout of a boxing card at|milli

of the Hercules A. c. to cancel the

hitters bat left-handed.” Warneke has been pitching for. 14 years, and he still can’t understand why a left-hand hitter is more allergic to a southpaw that a right-hand batter is to a righthander. / ” ” 8 “THE RIGHT-HAND pitcher can make the ball do just as many funny things and sling it just as swift,” ‘explains Warneke, “and the left-hander also has to get the ball over the plate in the strike zone. “Still a lot of left-hand batters can’t get a healthy foul off a southpaw. “I have come to the conclusion that this is largely mental. “Why, I'll show you left-hand-ers pitching straight as. a string in batting practice and left-hand hitters unable to do a thing with them.” Warneke suspects Carl Hubbell at his peak would win 30 games in the elder circuit as its batting orders are set up at the moment. The same would go for. Johnny Vander Meer if Cincinnati's double no-hit hero could fasten ‘a headlock on control and throw it for a fall. Pollet appears to be the finest left-hander to come out of the Texas League since Wild Bill Hallahan and Hubbell. # 8 = POLLET, a product: of: the American Legion ranks of ‘ New Orleans, is only 20, but has the poise of Old Hub kimself. Catcher Gus Mancuso traces the youngster’s polish to the teachings’ of Eddie Dyer, who manages the Houston club with which Pollet made an incomparable record . . . 20 victories last’ season and this, a no-hitter and an earned-run mark of 1.18. Dyer once was quite a pitcher himself. “White is the faster because he is so - exceptionally fast,” elucidates Mancuso, “but Pollet throws a live ball. He has the greater variety of stuff ... a fine change of pace. “Pollet has stood up remarkably well under pressure. - Remember that every hitter he looks at is a total stranger to him. He’s got to throw what we tell him to-throw and let it go at that. He'll be better the second time around and can’t miss improving. Maybe he’ll

find out something about hitters |

we ‘have overlooked all these years.”

» 3 ” PLAYERS tell you~ Whizzer ‘White would be even more formidable if he developed a better curve and other stuff to go with his ‘hard one. Billy Southworth had better keep his tow-headed Iron Man out of the bullpen, too. He looked tired in being shelled by the Giants at the Polo Grounds the other evening, when he started with only two days’ rest. *.

J Meridian to

Craig Wood . . , a golfer at 13.

Iit's another case. of teacher starred with pupil when Craig Wood: and Vic Ghezzi stage a

"demonstration at the Meridian

Hills Country Club tomorrow. Wood, -the: open champion,

.started to play the game when he

was 13. But in his adolescent yea. thought an engineering Sas r would yield a more plentirder, than slapping the white a and temporarily gave up the game. But after a brief spell at Clarkson Tech he again dragged: out’ his clubs and made beating par

~and hammering eagles and birdies

his career. Then along came the Ghezzi

r

SATURDAY, AUG. 30,

il

Colonels Are On the March

By UNITED PRESS The Columbus Red Birds departed Louisville today, shorn of four games of their American Association lead. Louisville beat the Birds, 3 to 2, in 11 innings last night and made a clean sweep of the series. It may be the most expensive series the Birds have played, because the sea'son is getting short and the second place Colonels have been, for the last three days, the hottest club in the cleague. Columbus was 4! games ahead today. Catcher Joe Glenn singled in the winning run for Louisville last night, the score having been tied since the sixth. Owen Scheitz® went the route for the.Colonels, allowing six hits. Louisville nicked Columbus’ Red Barrett for 10. Minneapolis edged out Milwaukee, 1 to 0, in 10 innings and went into a third place tie with Kansas City. Harry Kelley, who pitched six-hit ball for the Millers, also hit a single that scored the winning run.

Miss Brough / Keeps Crown

PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 30 (U. P)). —Louise Brough, Beverly Hills, Cal,

|remained as national junior girls’

tennis champion today and shared with a. fellow-Californian the doubles’ title. Sturdy 18-year-old Miss Brough practically cannon-balled her way to victory in the finals yesterday when she defeated Doris Hart, Miami, southérn women’s champion. For 45 minutes, hammered fore-hand shots across

the court to have 16-year- -old Miss Hart at her mercy almost from the beginning of the I match. In the doublés” contest, however, Miss Brough and her teammate, Gertrude Moran, “sanat Monica, had tough going - before eliminating Miss Hart and Nellie Sheer, Miami Beach. Forced into seven match points, the California girls went three sets

before they were able ta turn in a 7-5, 4-6, 9-7 victory,

Put on Show

- Vie Ghezzi . . . Craig's pupil.

guy éand-Wood showed him the ropes that led him this year. to the P. G. A. championship. . What Wood taught Ghezzi and what Ghe2zzi has learned since, the pair will demonstrate with all the clubs in their bags in front of the Meridian clubhouse at 2 p. m. tomMOITOW. Their feature act over, Wood will team with Wayne Timberman and Ghezzi with Bill Heinlein for ‘a best ball match: It looks like one of golfing’s greatest shows of the season along the local fairways and the Meridian club officials have made arJngemenis to handle a big galery

Miss Brough’

‘|Champlins or the Buford, Bona Allens in the Semignalg | to-

But After AIL It Looks Like Too, Big a Job for Hustling White Sox to Overtake "Em

Mr. Barrow Sets the Prices for Seats; Dodgers = Ease a Little Closer to That Bunting

\ “

By GEORGE KIRKSEY United Press Staff Correspondent

NEW YORK, Aug. 30.—Maybe the Dodgers and the Cardinals can’t make up their minds, but the Yankees can. Defying all baseball's traditional jinkes and hoodoos Cousin Ed Barrow, president of the:New York Yankees, announced today that the club would start taking World Series reservations Tuesday, Sept. 2. ~The Yanks haven’t clinched the pennant yet but Barrow isn’t afraid. Do you blame him with a 17!4-game lead and only 24 games left on the schedule?

Nevertheless, some of baseball's conservative oldtimers shook their hands and muttered, “I don’t like it, this counting your chickens before they hatch. Maybe it won't hurt the Yanks in the pennant race but Tt: might put the whammy on em in the World Series. It’s not the thing to do. »” : But the actual clinching of the

picked up another half game yesterday without donning a uniform or swinging a bat. The Browns did it for them by knocking off the White Sox, 5-2.

It Looks Certain

The sécond-place White Sox Lees 25 games left to play and if they should’ win them all the Yanks would have to win enly eight out

Yanks lost all of their remaining 24 games (even Barrow. couldnt bring on such calamity as that) the White Sox would have to capture 19 out of their remaining 25 games to nose out New York. The earliest date the Yanks ever clinched the pennant was Sept. 9, 1936. They were 18 games ahead at the time. It seems almost tainty that the Yanks will beat ti date this year. : ] As usual the World Series tickets will be sold in blocks of three (first, second and sixth games at Yankee Stadium) for $16.50. Three box seats will sell for $19.80. There a@ approximately 38,000 ' reserved seats and slightly under 5000 box seats in the Yankee Stadium. The rest of the seats, approximately 28,000, will go on sale the day of each game at $3.30 each.

Bums Move Closer

The Dodgers moved a little closer to making. it .an all-New = York World Series py squeezing through to a 5-4 triumph over the Giants. A five-run rally .in the fifth which knocked Hal Schumacher off the mound won the game, but the Giants made it too ciose for cojn fort. The Giants came within ¢ run of tying it up and left a p of runners on base in each the sé enth and eighth and then Did Bartell threw a real scare into th Dodgers in the ninth with his lon drive to left which Joe Medwic leaped high to pull down. Wyatt] although tapped for 10 hits, stag gered. through to his 18th victory.

Eldon Auker hu up his 13tF thriumph in psig the Browng to an easy triumph over the White Sox. He gave up nine ‘hits but Bin. Chicago in all but the fif

|New Englanders

In Semi-F nals

WICHITA, Kas., Aug. 30 (U. P). —The ‘Worcester, Mass, Nortons moved into the semifinals of the National Semi-Pro: Baseball Tournament last night with a 7-6 victory over e Hawthorne, Cal, Northrop Bombers.

score three runs and nose out the Fort Riley, Kas. Cavalry replace-~ ment entry, 5-4. The defeats Hawthorne and Fort Riley. The Boomers meet the Waco, Tex., Dons_ienight while the More tons meet either the Enid, Okla. Ga,

mMOTTOW.

C. Y. O. Net Card for tomorrow at 2:15 is Assumption vs. Cathedral, Riverside; St. Cath-

St. Joan of Arc vs. Willard,

Shamre¢

"PLAY GOLF’

Championship Course

Indianapolis Motor Speedway Corporation Green Fees—Saturdays, Sundays and Holidays, $1.00. Week days 75¢c. Bargain days Mondays and Thursdays.

Two play for the price of ps

Speedway Golf Course

Tel. BE. 3570

Tough for Camilli

NEW YORK, Aug. 30.—Dolph Cahas rapped 195 homers Eines entering the National Léague ' in

'1933, but only five have been made in the spacious Braves’ Field. The|Brooklyn first baseman’s 24th homer |

of the season was his first in Boston.

Open Till 10:30 P. M.

Daily and All Day Sunday

: gest Stock Auto Supplies the State at Deep-Cut Prices

BL DELAWARE

UE POINT 25s:

7

hampaon 1 AE TUL:

Listgnat 5:45 P.M >= rig

dl

Station wis 131

0 on your

of 24 to win the pennant. Or if the ,

~ The Nortons came from behind

erine vs. St. John, Garfield, and

flag can’t be far off. The Yanks

eliminated both if

The boys’ C. Y. O. tennis schedule :