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Green Bay Press-Gazette from Green Bay, Wisconsin • Page 13

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Bay Press -Gazette SPORTS AND MARKETS WANT ADS ADAMS 4400 EVERYBODY READS IT" GREEN BAY, TUESDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 24, 1935 Green Hubbard, Michalske Will DANGEROUS NEW YORK BACK HeUHDBE Coach Green Bay's Line BAER, LOUIS READY FOR MILLION DOLLAR SHOW Do You Huge Prices Are Being Obtained for Tickets NFAF! PENNANT FIGHTERS ARE ALL SET 77lMy ,777 777 7- 77 7 77 7 Elvin (Kink) Richards (above), 196rPound running back from Simpson college, is the ace man behind the line for the New York Giants. He'll be seen in action against the Packers here Sunday. 1ST TRAVELS ON SATURDAY ytUA OPINIONS ALL DIFFER ON MERITS OF HEAVYWEIGHT BOXERS NEW YORK (U.R) Tonight, In a gaunt, gallows-like structure pitched hard over second base of Yankee stadium, the Bronx, white man, Max Baer, and brown man, Joe Louis, will fight i with their fists for half a million 7 dollars and the savage entertain ment of 100.000 people. No event of the past five years or more has so deeply stirred "this city ns the meeting of Baer, the man who rose from the blood of a slaughter house to the more re fined blood of a prize ring, and Louis, the onetime automobile mechanic. Stirred not only this city, but the entire nation, and to day hundreds and thousands of spectators were being emptied in to New York by land, sea and air.

Toss Concrete Fists Tonight, when the bell rings and the two 200-poundors spread their legs and start tossing concrete fists at each other, 100,000 people will be jammed in the great stadium to watch it with their own eyes, and scattered about this country and Europe millions more will listen to the radio and read newspapers for the details. Many of the spectators gathered at the ringside tonight will be clutching ticket stubs which cost them better than $200, the price asked by scalpers as the demand surged past the supply. In th space of an hour yesterday I heard an offer of $1.500 $750 a pair for four fourth row tickets, and one of $150 for a mezzanine seat, far from the battle pit. The second offer was refused: the first was settled by a compromise four on the seventeenth row for $1,000. Not since Dcmpsey and Tunney sqmred off in Soldier field, Chicago, nearly a decade ago, has there been such wholesale betting on a fight.

Reliable commissioners say that millions of dollars will be riding on the two men, with Louis being the more heavily backed. Anybody's Guess Good Your guess as to the winner Is i as good as anyoooy s. inoi even Dempsey and Tunney created such a wide divergence of opinion amontf the experts as have the clowning Californian and the stolid Negro. Just what is it that makes prize-fighting such a complex art? On the surface, la boxc seems such a simple business, with a fighter having but two arms and two legs with which to ply his trade. Tennis, golf, or nolo.

sav. are much more involved businesses, but whereas experts can watch a tennis player or a golfer or a poloist for five minutes and tell whether he's good or not. they seem to find it impossible to call the turn on a fighter. In the bedlam that was Promoter Mike Jacobs office yesterday, I heard 50 different opinions on Baer and Louis bv as many different experts. Men who have lived and breathed boxing for years simplv couldn't agree on the merits of the two men.

Jack Dempscv, who knows boxing, thinks Baer will annihilate the Negro. Joe Jacobs, who has managed champions and near champions since the turn of the century, is betting his shirt that Louis will butcher Baer. On one side of the room a keen critic of boxing would tell you that Louis has a punk right hand punch; cross the room and Barney Ross, welter chamoion, would tell you that the Negro's right hand punch is the fastest, sweetest thing he ever saw cn a heavyweight. I'm picking Baer. RAHR TEAM PRACTICES AT HIRAM FISK PARK The Rahr football team will practice tonight at Hiram Fisk park at 5:30.

All players are requested to be on hand to learn new plays. Rahr can use another fullback, halfback and end. Fourteen of the sophomore candidates for the Kansas State college football team, champion of the Big Six, captained high school teams. HOW THEY STAND hi NATIONAL LEAGUE Chicago St. Louis 93 New York 87 Pittsburgh 85 Cincinnati Bronklvn 64 Philadelphia 64 Boston 36 m.

Pet. 52 .651 55 .828 58 .600 65 .567 84 .444 81 .435 85 .410 111 .215 McMILLEN TO TACKLE MURPHY AT MILWAUKEE MILWAUKEE Jim Mc-Millen, former football star at the University of Illinois, tonight will furnish competition for Pat Murphy in the headliner of the Bahn Frei wrestling show. It will be McMillen's last appearance in the middlewest. Aft er tonight's bout he will leave for New York to begin a campaign he hopes will lead to a championship match for Dan O'Mahoney. In tonight's semi-windup Gentleman Jack Smith of Chicago meets Frank Bronowicz, Polish heavyweight.

Ole Olson, Mil waukee Swede, and Pete Mehrun-ger, Chicago Cardinals football player, will clash in a preliminary and in the opener Ernst Rumberg, Dallas, will meet Johnny Hepner, Milwaukee. All Teams Busy In Pin Circuit On Wednesday. The Major Bowling league swings into its second set of games at the Columbus Community club tomorrow night, when six good matches are scheduled. Low scores prevailed throughout the opening round last Wednesday, and the marks were blamed on the new pins. Tomorrow, however, the averages are expected to soar as the veteran pinmen get lines on the alleys.

The schedule: alleys 1 and 2, Sinclair vs. Becher; alleys 3 and 4, J. C. Bastcn vs. Hochgrcve; alleys 5 and 6, Press-Gazette vs.

Bosse; alleys 7 and 8, Hotel Carrigan vs. Old Imperial; alleys 9 and 10, Al-goma Wheeler vs. C. C. C.

Alleys; alleys 11 and 12, Olson vs. Schlitz. HEBELS TURN BACK MENCHALVILLE, 5-4 Winners Take Crown In Northeastern League. DENMARK, Wis. Hebels won the Northeastern Wisconsin Baseball league championship here Sunday by Menchal-ville, 5 to 4, in a 10-inning battle.

It was the third and deciding contest of a three-game series. Hebels won the title during the first half of the season, while Menchalville was the second half winner. Gaffney bested Hagenow on the mound, allowing seven scattered hits, and contributing hits at important times. The game was played before a record crowd. THE BOX SCORE HEBELS AB Collard, 2b R.

Miller, lb 5 C. Miller, ss 5 Felt, 3b. 5 Gaffney, 5 Rasmussen, r.f. Drewiske, 3 Wanle, l.f 4 Porter, c.f 4 Totals 41 5 MENCHALVILLE AB Pileer, is 0 Schipper. l.f ...3 2 ravanaugh, c.f 5 1 4 0 Rindl.

lb. 5 1 Menrhal, 2b. 5 0 Stidl. 4 0 Kohlmier, r.f 4 Hagenow, 2 0 Totals 37 4 3 Score By Innings Hebels IU 000 101 3 5 100 000 010 2 1 Menchalville MAJOR LEAGUE BOMS Mi Brown Bomber of Detroit Will Battle Slugger From California. BULLETIN NEW YORK (UJ.) Max Baer will carry a weight advantage of 114 pounds when he faces Joe Louis in tonight's prize fight at Yankee stadium.

The Californian weighed ZlOVt pounds and the Detroit bomber was caught at 199 when they were examined this afternoon. NEW YORK UP) The roar of the mightiest crowd that has been lured to the ringside by the fight ballyhoo in eight years signalizes the return of pugilistic prosperity tonight in the vast open spaces of the Yankee stadium. Built a dozen years ago to exploit the hitting power of Baba Ruth, about the time that Jack Dempsey was pounding Luis Angel Firpo into senselessness, the stadium furnishes the setting now for a fistic fantasy unknown since Tex Rickard died, and unsuspected until a 21-year-old Negro took the country by storm with his knockout punch. It's one of the most amazing things that has ever happened in sports, no matter wht the outcome this evening as Joe Louis, the chocolate soldier with the devastating fists, meets the comeback challenge of the wild-swinging, emotionally-furious Max Baer, former world heavyweight champion. Win or lose against the most formidable antagonist he has faced, Louis is the main magnet for the greatest crowd that ever gathered for a non-championship match.

Featured by Debate It's a million-dollar show, surrounded by such furious- debate and such extraordinary demand for tickets at any price that the great Rickard, if he had lived through the depression years of boxing, would have looked on in wonderment and remarked characteristically, "I've never seed nothin' like it." The legend of Rickard's luck, it seemed, has carried on under the skillful hand of Tex's one-time associate and now his successor in gifted fight promotion Michael Strauss Jacobs. The box-office reports forecast a probable sellout or the nearest thing to it in fight history. The weather man forecast "fair and warmer tonight," with nothing for Jacobs to worry about except the ultimate job of matching the winner with James J. Braddock for the world heavyweight championship in 1936. A capacity crowd tonight in the "house that Ruth built" means 4 close to 95,000 spectators and ar' aggregate "gate" of $1,184,830, more than twice as much money as any prize fight has drawn in five years and a mark surpassed only slightly by the memorable Firpo-Dempseybattle of 1923.

Measured by present-day financial standards, it is much more startling than the fact that the last Dcmpsey-Tunnev duel attracted nearly $3,000,000 in gate receipts at Chicago in 1927. $200 Per Ticket Judging from the prices speculators have been asking and getting for choice ringside locations, the actual money paid to witness he bout will be far excess of the box-office figures. Pasteboards of the $25 class and there are no less than 23,107 have been CONTINUED ON PAGE 14. COLCMN 3 IS RED DEI FOE East Drilling for Conference Opener Friday. Green Bay East will open its 1935 Fox River Valley conference season against Sheboygan at City stadium Friday night, and indica tions are that the Red Devils will be in good condition for the engagement.

East came through the West Milwaukee and Milwaukee Boys' Tech games in good shape, and now will settle down for a rigorous schedule of seven consecutive conference games, ending with the East-West fracas Nov. 11. Starts First String Sheboygan, beaten 24 to 7 by Appleton last Saturday, is not expected to cut much of a figure in the conference race, but Coach L. E. Means regards the Chairs as dangerous opponents and will start his first string Friday night.

The East coach already is warning his boys against overconfi-dence, following two excellent showings the Red Devils made against pre-season opposition. Sheboygan will bring five let-termen to Green Bay, including Howie Miller, fullback; Bob Mc-Cormick, quarterback; Pete Nov-sheck, tackle or center; Ed Diener, halfback and a triple threat player, and Claire Kilton, end, brother CONTINUED ON PAGE 14, COLUMN 4 Veteran Forwards Handle Of fense and Defense; Packers Release McDonald, Kramer and Becker. Cal Hubbard and August (Mike) Michalske are assistant coaches of the Green Bay Packers. The announcement was made today by Coach E. L.

Lambeau as the team resumed practice in anticipation the game against the New York Giants here next Sunday. Hubbard will coach the Packer line on offense, and Michalske will be in charge of the defensive line unrlr nrnviHinff the Packers with Michalske two of the most experienced heads in professional football, and re lieving Coach Lambeau of considerable responsibility. At the same time Lambeau announced the release of Sol Kramer, blocking back; Dustin McDonald, guard: and Warren Becker, halfback. Of the three only Kramer was under con tract It was the un ders a i ng when Hubbard and Michalske signed their contracts that the two would be used to coach the line. Both reported late Hubbard however, and they have been busy learning their own assignments up to the present time.

Henceforth they will work directly with the Packer linemen in an effort to build the strongest forward wall in profes sional football. Kramer is the South Dakota State backfield man who joined the Packers at the start of the season. McDonald came from In diana several weeks ago and Becker is a Green Bay East high and Stevens Point State Teachers college graduate. RICHARDS DANGEROUS Kink Richards and Ed Danow ski are the New York backfield aces the Packers must watch the closest, when the Green Bay team and the Giants meet at City stadium next Sunday. Richards in particular' Is a dangerous, shifty back.

He got loose for a touchdown gallop against the Packers in Milwaukee last fall, and bears watching every minute while he is in the game. Danowski, the great Ford- ham back, is a brilliant forward passer and a bad man behind the line. Richards weighs 196 pounds, and Danowski hits the scales for 198. These are not the only stellar backs on the New York roster. Stuart Clancy is a hard running individual who weighs 190 pounds and starred at Holy Cross, while a new man attracting much attention is Tony Sarausky, 198-pound Fordham back who worked under Jimmy Crowley at the metropolitan school.

Aids Signal Callers John Mackorell, 179-pound quarterback, helps with the signal calling, and Leland Shaffer is a 200-pound back who performed at Kansas State at the same time as George Maddox, Packer tackle. The New York backfield carries unusual weight. Two other back-field men are Mac Krause, 201-pounder from Gonzaga, and Les Corzine, Davis-Elkins 210-pound star. Three real veterans of the professional circuit will be back again to perform against the Packers. They are Ken Strong, the all-American 205-pounder from N.

Bo Molenda, ex Packer and Michigan great, whose weight now is 215; and Dale Burnett. 188-pound back who starred at Emporia Teachers 'way back when. Burnett al ways plays a great game against the Packers, as does Molenda. New York is well fortified at the wing positions. Ends who may be counted upon for service against the Packers, their weights and colleges, are the following: Ray Flaherty, 190, Gonzaga; Tod Goodwin, 184, West Virginia; Red Badgro, 195, U.

S. Ike Frank-ian, 207, St. Mary's; and Walter Singer, 198, Syracuse. Tackles Are Bir Huge, powerful tackles help make the Giants' reputation as having one of the most effective lines in the National league. The tackles are Len Grant, 225 pounds, N.

Y. Jess Quatse, 229, Pitt; Bill Morgan, 235, Oregon; Tex Ir vin, 230, Davis-Elkins; and Bill Owen, brother of the coach, who weiehs 225 pounds, hails from Oklahoma A. and is playing his ninth season of pro football. The world champions are well fortified at the guard positions, with the following men: Bob Bellinger, 220, Gonzaga; Tom Jones, 224, Bucknell; and Bernie Kaplan, Western Maryland. Several of the tackles also can be used at guard.

The centers are John Dell Iso-la, the great Fordham 198-pound-er, and Mel Hein, a 225-pound giant from Washington State who was a professional ail-American in 1934. Strong and Badgro all placed on the honor team. The sterility of the art of sculpture during the last half of the 11th rtntury and the first half of the 19th is said to be a phenom enon almost without parallel to the history of art. 1 Remember ONE YEAR AGO TODAY Sept. 24, 1934 West high hopes to stage its game with Manitowoc under lights here Friday night.

President C. O. Baetz awarded the Green Sox a 1 to 0 victory over the Madison Blues in the first of the series to decide the State lea gue baseball championship yester day after a length argument over Sundays John Rowe pitched shutout Packers and Giants will meet in Milwau kee Sunday. FIVE YEARS AGO TODAY Sept. 24, 1930 East will meet Wausau there tomorrow while West plays Kaukauna Millin and Raphy Wolfe are on the sidelines with injuries on West's team.

Clubs set the pace as the major pin loop got under way last W. Van Beek had a 653 H. A Niemayer and Ben Maier will meet today in a semi-final match or the oneiaa president cup tournament. TEN YEARS AGO TODAY Sept. 24, 1925 Injuries to Captain Radick and to Brunette are impairing West high's football chances.

Packers will be seek' ing their eleventh straight victory when they meet the Chicago Bears here this week. Wer ley, Malevich and Schumacher will perform in the backfield for St. Norbert college against SteV' ens Point here this week-end. 15 YEARS AGO TODAY Sept. 24, 1920 Wagner, Mari nette football great, has arrived in town to play with the Packers.

the Packers meet the Chicago Boosters here this Coach Carey will take his St. Norbert gridders to Milwaukee to meet the School of Engineering this week-end. 25 YEARS AGO TODAY Sept. 24, 1910 Pert Larsen, pitcher for the Green Bay team in 1909, is in town visiting friends. he twirled at Grand Rapids, last season.

STAGE Close Competition Features Tourney at Oneida. Close matches featured the first day of play in the Brown county womens open golf tournament at the Oneida Golf jind Riding club yesterday. First round matches will be completed by this evening, and the second round of competi tion will close in all four flights by Thursday night. Mrs. C.

B. Rich, medalist, Mrs. Joseph Dcuster, Mrs. N. S.

Woodward and Mrs. Grafton Houston have reached the semi-finals of the championship flight. Mrs. Rich eliminated Mrs. H.

B. Gage estc-rday by default, Mrs. Deus- ter won, two up, from Mrs. Ben Maier, and Mrs. Houston defeated Mrs.

Robert Brebner, one up. Mrs. Woodward, three down after the first nine, rallied to defeat Mrs. A. D.

Faas one up. Wins on 19th In the second flight, Mrs. M. L. Wilson, Mrs.

J. Robb and Mrs. L. A. Straubel have advanced to the semi-final round.

Mrs. Wilson won from Mrs. Vincent Hen- drie by default, and Mrs. Straubel won from Mrs. A.

V. Classen, two and one. Mrs. Robb defeated Mrs. Fred Cobb on the 19th hole, The match between Mrs.

La Verne Dilweg and Mrs. Arthur J. Mc-Carey remained to be played today. Mrs. Neil Branson and Miss CONTINUED ON PAGE 14, COLUMN 7 PACIFIC SOUTHWEST NET TITLE TAKEN BY BUDGE LOS ANGELES (-Youthful Donald Budge held the Pacific Southwest tennis title today but a strange chain of circumstances deprived the red-haired Davis cup star of proving to the fullest extent that he had a right to the honor.

Although the youth apparently was well on the way to victory yesterday, tournament officials permitted his oppenent, Roderick Menzel of Czecfto-Slovakia, to default the match in favor of his and Miss Carolin Babcock's chances in the relatively unimportant mixed doubles semi-final play. Budge was leading 1-6, 11-9, 6-4, when the announcement was made. STARS JIM WEAVER and PEP YOrXG, Pirate Wravrr shut out Cardinal with four hits; Young drove in srvrn runt with two double and ingle. I.EFTY GOMEZ, Yankees Held Senators to live hits and fanned six. JOHN MOORE, Phillies, and RALPH BOYLE, Dodgers Moore's homer with one in tenth won first Rime, Bovle led winning attack in second with three hits.

CARL Hl'BBELL. Giants, and RANDY MOORE, Braves Hubbell limited Braves to six hits in opener: Moore hit homer and twa sia tic MATCHES lics In afterpiece. Weaver Hurls Pirates to Victory Over Cards. NEW YORK-PV-When Charley Grimm, manager of the Cubs, traded big Jim Weaver to Pittsburgh last winter, he probably didn't realize that the over-sized right hander would pitch Chicago into the a i al league pennant. Weaver i that stunt yesterday when he blanked' the hallenging Cardinals with four hits, and his Pirate mates pounded out a 12 to 0 victory over Young the 1934 world champions.

That came as near as possible to tossing the pennant right into the Cubs' laps, for the only way St. Louis can win the flag outright is to trim Chicago five games straight in their final series, which starts tomorrow. The Cardinal defeat, while the Cubs enjoyed the first of two days of idleness after their 18-game winning streak, put the Cards 2la games behind Chicago. If they beat the Pirates today, the Cardinals can gain a tie for the flag by beating the Cubs four out of five. If they lose to Pittsburgh, it will eliminate the possibility of a tie and require five straight or nothing.

While Weaver was subduing the Cards in brilliant fashion, the Buccaneers, led by Floyd (Pep) Young, rattled a quintet of Cardinal flingers for 16 hits. Ed Heusser gave up three runs in the first inning when Young doubled with the bases loaded. He got around to Young again in the third, and Pep drove in the first two of five Pirate runs with a single. Tony Kaufmann, Jim Winford, Bill Walker and Phil Collins had their turns before the game was over, the Bucs getting their last four tallies off Walker in the sev enth and eighth with Young driving in another pair. Lose Outside 'Chance The third place Giants lost their outside chance of tying Chicago but retained the possibility that they might beat out St.

Louis for second place. The Terrymen split a twin bill with the Braves, winning the opener 3 to 2 as Carl Hubbell edged out Ed Brandt in a mound duel, but taking a 9 to 7 setback when Frank Gabler and Roy Parmalee proved ineffective. Brooklyn held sixth place safe from the Phillies by pounding Jim Bivin and Orville Jorgens for an eight-run seventh inning to win the second half of a doublcheader 8 to 4. Johnny Moore's tenth-inning homer gave the Phils the opener 4 to 2. The only American league game saw the Yankees extend their winning streak to five straight with a 5 to 1 victory over the Senators.

While Lefty Gomez pitched seven-hit ball, the Yanks pounded Earl Whitehill for five straight blows, the 'first three doubles, and scored four runs i the fourth to sew up the game. SCORE BY INNINGS NATIONAL LEAGUE (First Game) Boston MO 011 000 2 2 New York 300 0OO OOx 1 i 0 Batteries: Brandt and Spohrer; Hubbell and Mancuso. (Second Game) Boston 012 003 012 9 12 2 New York 201 011 002 7 11 3 Batteries: Frnakhnuse, R. Smith and Spohrer; Gabler, Parmelee and My-att. (First Game) Biooklvn 000 002 000 0 2 9 2 Philadelphia 000 000 101 2 4 9 0 Batteries: Leonard and J.

Taylor; Mulcahy, Prim and Todd. (Second Game) Brooklyn 000 0OA RIO 8 11 2 Philadelphia 002 020 000 4 11 3 Batteries: Benre, Zarhary and 1. Taylor; Bivin, Jorgens, Prim, Mulchay and Holden. Pittsburgh 305 OOO 22012 16 1 St. Louis 000 000 000 0 4 1 Batteries: Weaver and Grure: Hrn-ser, Kaufman, Winford, Walker, P.

Collins and Delancey. AMERICAN LEAGUE New York 000 400 010 5 10 0 Washington 001 00 OOO 1 2 Batteries: Gomez and Glenn; White-hill, Russell and Bolton. Twenty-two Michigan State col lege footballers were ealled into service prior to formal opening of autumnal seasoning to serve as teams and for Coach Charley Bachman's lecture and annual rules interpretation meeting. ADERS is rz. the fieaUucfffSprtt, Wildcats Are Badly Crippled for Oshkosh Game.

With his squad in the worst shape of the season, Coach Ivan Cahoon today attempted to get a couple of West high football elevens in condition to meet the strong Oshkosh high school team, contender for the Fox River Valley conference title, at Oshkosh Saturday afternoon. The Wildcat injuries are considerably more real than imaginary. Bert Conley, 205-pound tackle, fractured his leg above the knee in the West-Fond du Lac game and is out for the season. Charlie Peasley, first string fullback, has been ordered to bed for a week with water on the knee and Bob Vander Leest, second string full, also has a knee injury. Jorns Is Injured Melvin Jorns, halfback who does most of the teams' passing, has a bad ankle, and Chester Farr, transfer end from Wabeno, is down with illness, along with Louis Grimmer, center.

All in all, Cahoon faces a tough task in whipping together a team strong enough to give the powerful and heavy Oshkosh team a battle. Oshkosh steam rollered the strongest Marinette team of CONTINUED ON PAGE 14, COLUMN 2 same time, and the amateur golf meeting at Cleveland was all match play If anybody asks you, Jack Dempsey owns seven and a half per cent of Max Baer No matter how fine the hotel, Chief Little Wolf, the grappler, wraps himself in a blanket and sleeps on the floor just an old Navajo custom Radio broadcast over a Chicago station last night described the Packers' touchdown play against the Bears the announcer said: "Don Hutson has lifted Beattie Feathers' crown as being the fastest man in the National league." By JOHN WALTER (Press-Gazette Sports Editor) llE'RE TELLING YOU decision by clubs of the Na- tional Football league to increase the player limit from 22 to 24 players will prove a boon to coaches of the circuit it always has been a tough problem for coaches to cut their squads to 22 men after the third game this season, with almost half the pro teams operating under new pilots, the leaders will have a better chance to see their men perform in league competition and an injury or two will not deplete the reserve strength enough to cripple the squads. The coaches this season are about evenly divided between those who have come from the playing ranks and those who entered the pro game from the realm of college coaching Lud Wray, Philadelphia Eagles tutor, can be claimed by both sides, since he put in his apprenticeship with Frank-' ford and Buffalo before turning to college coaching at Pennsylvania. The appointment of Milo Creighton as playing coach of the Chicago Cardinals enabled the coaches from the ranks to maintain an equal balance, as Joe Bach of Notre Dame turned from coching at Duquesne to piloting the Pittsburgh Pirates. Among the other coaches from college ranks are Potsy Clark of Detroit, who formerly worked at Kansas and Butler; Eddie Casey, ex-Harvard, now with Boston; and Paul Schiss-ler of Brooklyn, one time of Oregon State.

Curly Lambeau of Green Bay, Steve Owen of the championship New York Giants, and George Halas of the Chicago Bears all came directly to their coaching positions from the playing ranks. 1932 Buick Sedan Standard In pink of condition inspect this car for yourself. This car can be seen on our used car lot Main Street, Where Banners Fly. Money Back Guarantee. Used Car Pet.

53 .634 59 .593 70 .524 74 .500 74 .490 82 .446 84 .421 87 J92 $47S AMERICAN LEAGUE Detroit 92 New York 86 Clereland 77 Boston 74 Chicago 71 Washington 66 St. Louis 61 Philadelphia 56 YESTERDAY RESULTS American League New York 5, Washington I. (Only fame scheduled.) National League New York 3-7. (Boston 1-9. Philadelphia 4-4.

Brooklyn 2-8. (First game 10 innings.) Pittsburgh 12, St. Louis t. (Only games scheduled.) TOMORROW'S SCHEDULE American League St. Louis at Chicago.

Drtrott at Cleveland. Philadelphia at Boston. National League Chicago at St. Louts. Jt'ew York at Brooklyn.

(Only fames scheduled.) Taking a cue from their overseas cousins, the U. S. tennis and golf associations adopted British methods for their big tournaments the national singles tennis meet at Forest Hills was put on in Wimbledon style, with men and women playing at the JrV.T al IW1 Motor Co. LEADING BATTERS Player, Club AB BA Vaughan, 13 495 log 141 JM Medwick, Cards 148 CIA 128 218 Vosmik, Indians 148 598 8 209 Hartnett, Cobs 114 404 7 140 .317 Lombardl, Redi 118 327 14 112 .343 HOME RUNS Greenberj. Tiger J8 Fota, Athletiri 34 Berger, Braves 33 Ott, Giants 30 Getuif, Yankees 38 ,1 4 HOUR SCRVTCC Phone Atfci.

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