!PARTTWO 10 PARTS Port. Part. 1-, ews, Edlto".l. 6-\Vmnen'" Feat ure•. ltt-aJ Est ate. I' K!'ihlolUi. ~-Sllorthu:. Markt·h. 7-Uru,lIIa Movie•. Musle. §!PORT§ AUTOS Autos. s-:-:ucit'ty. 3-l\IetrotJulltan. H,.sul'tl'J HUrl'l'rul'el. ]\~JRlI(lET§ 4-ComiNi. 9-0rllllhlf' \Vrt'kly WORLD'S NEWS?'AI'ER I).-Wallt Ads lO-Ph·ture xeettou.

JUL Y :24. 1938. A • **

BY BULL LEA E 0 DOEANH v Cravat D o CTDRY; T ird Ahead f Stageha d FIR

BY HOWARD BARRY. (Pictures on page 2, Sports.) I Six R n Blast Routs Nedayr, running in the colors of a famous stable, made a traditionally great race out of the Classic stakes Gumbert. yesterday at Arlington Park. Going 01 n oac es unheralded into this $35,000 event, Willis Sharpe Kilmer's courageous brown colt matched his speed against BY IRVING VAUGHAN. ens Toda T the finest 3 year nlds in training and (Picture on Page 3, Sports.) he came through with a mighty The champion New York Giants stretch run that brought the 30,000 I were made to pay yesterday for some spectators to their feet in mingled of the indignities they've heaped on BY ARCH WARD. jubilation and dismay. the Cubs in the past and a 43,233 (Pictures and poll on page 5.) He beat Warren Wright's Bull Lea crowd chuckled as the title holders The greatest popularity contest to the finish line by a length. Three were crumpled in a double-header. snort has known ends at midnight lengths farther back came Townsend In the first game the Chicagoans, tonight. That hour marks the end of B. Martin's Cravat, and in fourth fortified by a six run second , the national poll conducted by THE place galloped the highly regarded wrecked their old foes, 7 to 4. Then CHICAGOTRIBUNE and 150 associated Stagehand, Maxwell Howard's star they did it again, 3 to 1, in a struggle newspapers to determine a starting performer which had been made the featuring another comeback by the lineup for the College All-Americans 7 to 5 favorite. I illustrious Dizzy Dean and some fist against the Washington Redskins in throwing by Bill Jurges and peppery Pattenea Is Rewa-rded. Chicago's fifth annual All-Star foot- Dick Bartell. For months, Trainer W. A. Craw' ball game in Soldiers' field Aug. 31. Dean, always the superb showman, ford had been nursing Nedayr along, The vote this morning totals overlooked nothing in the effort to hoping that he would recover from :3,580,996. Final standings will not be furnish amusement as well as achieve a sick spell that him in the available until Wednesday. When all results. His performance, which he spring. He went into yesterday's returns have been counted the figure accomplished on five hits and no dis- race with little more than a few is almost certain to exceed 5,000,000. tress for his carefully groomed $185.· good workouts in the east to recorn- Governors have rested from their 000 arm, was started and finished mend him to the betters and as a executive duties to cast ballots for with pleasing ease. He walked only result he rewarded his followers their candidates. In one case-Mis- one and the gift resulted in the only handsomely. His mutuel tickets were sissippi-the entire state legislature run registered in his sixth start and worth $31.60 to win, $12 to place, and his fifth victory as a Cub. He made forwarded votes to this department $7.40 to show. Augie Galan slides in under Catcher in the sixth for sectional headliners. Heads of only eigh ty-eigh t pitches. The track, drenched during a heavy inning of the first game of the Cubs-Giants double-header in Wrigley great industries in Detroit, Cincin- "I'was a Fine Brawl. storm Friday, dried rapidly through field yesterday. He came in on Collins' fly to score the seventh Cub As baseball fights go, the Jurges- nati, Toledo, and Chicago have wired an afternoon of sunshine, and by the run in a 7 to 4 victory. Umpire Bill Stewart, manager of the world's Bartell imbroglio was above the aver- 1heir ballots or made personal calls time the horses went to the post for champion Blackhawks, is calling the play, and Bill Lee, Cub , is age. The two were involved in a play in behalf of their favorites. The votes the Classic it was what is technically at second base in the fourth inning have come from New England, Cali- known as slow. Nedayr, known to •• kicking" Augie home. when the Cubs scored their winning fornia, Washington, Louisiana, Texas, have ability as a mudder, ran the mile runs off Hal Schumacher. Jurges Florida, Maryland, and intermediate and a quarter in 2:061-5. thought Bartell was unnecessarily points. Every section of the country Most of the betting conjecture reo rude in tagging him. Bartell thought has responded. volved around the question of it was just the opposite. So they No Monopoly on Talent. whether the Howard entry of Stage- mauled each other on the ground and The amazing interest in the All- hand and The Chief should become then, after getting on their feet, took Star game is attributable to the the favorite because of its demonstrat- to free-for-all slugging. Eventually popularity of intercollegiate football. ed speed or whether Hal Price Head- S E IRE 64 every member of both teams arrived Jt has been demonstrated convinc- ley's Menow should be accorded that and the fun stopped. The belligerents ingly in the last decade that no honor because of his mud running were thrown out of the game. section of the nation has a monopoly ability. Meanwhile, not only Nedayr, The incident Which decided the on gridiron talent. For that reason but also Bull Lea was overlooked. FOR4 HOT EAD first game and put Bill Lee as well all parts of the country are anxious Pays $9.80 to Place. as the other Cubs on easy street oc- and determined to have representa- Bull Lea, whose main claim to con- curred in the second innIng. The tion in the game that presents the sideration was based on two victories Cubs, assembling twice as much finest players in the land. over Menow at Keeneland in the I Hie GO P 1 power as they showed in all the other Sports editors who were skeptical spring, went to the post at such gen- , unloaded six hits and a pass of the success of the venture in the erous odds that he paid $9.80 to place on two enemy . Harry Gum- heginning are stunned at results. and $6 to show. Cravat, which had BY CHARLES BARTLETT. Many have found their personnel in- bert stayed until four of the hits performed creditably in the Preak- (Pictures on page 3, Sports.) adequate to handle the rush ot votes. and the pass had been accounted for ness and in the Belmont Stakes, paid A placid young man who was reared' Maurice Shevlin, sports editor of the with none out. Then Dick Coffman, $4.40 to show. in the hills of Virginia became sligh t- St. Louis Globe-Democrat, spoke for the noted rescuer, was summoned The Classic, a $30,000 added event, ly irritated yesterday afternoon. His ~ majority of the newspaper execu- and he yielded the two more hits. grossed $35,025 with eight starters. name is Samuel Jackson Snead. One tives when he remarked last night One of these was damaging. It was Of this, $27,500 went to the winner. week ago ycsterday he took quite a a triple with which Lee drove in as the player poll neared the finish Second place was worth $4,000, third line, ••This thing has got me dizzy," licking from a Iitt.le man named Paul two runs, later scoring himself. $2,000 and fourth $1,000. Following Runyan in the finals of the national The player poll ends tonight, but Lee Gets Smashed. the race, Thomas E. Wilson, vice proressionat show. the nation's voting spree is only half president of the Post and Paddock Without that early six run splurge :finished. The same newspapers and club, presented the trophy to Trainer Yesterdav Master Snead made a cat Lee might not have achieved his 0' nine ta'i1s out of every club he radio stations which have conducted Crawford, who represented Owner twelfth victory of the season. The the balloting for athletes will today Kilmer. The trophy, a replica of the swung in dealing the No.1 course at Giants pummeled him for thirteen open a poll that will decide a staf Coronation cup won by Mrs. John Olympia Fields in the first official hits, treatment the General hadn;t re- of coaches to handle the squad. Hertz's Reigh Count in England in round of the Chicago open tourna- ceived since he started his winning Every fan in the nation is invited 1929, became the permanent posses- ment one of the major floggings of ways with a 1 to 0 decision over the to send in his preference for coaches. sion of Mr. Kilmer. the season. His chastisement consist- champs back in mid-May, Lee, hav- You are permitted to name three in ed of ten pars and eight birdies, all of ing been reached for seven hits in Given a Brilliant Ride. them lashing the course for a the first four innings, had to sum- the order you wish. First place will Jocky Wayne Wright, who arrived count three points, second two, and 64, eight under par. His punishment mon all his skill to keep out of by plane from his home in Rexburg, third one. The total number of of Olympia'S No.1 lot was one of the trouble. Idaho, only a short time before the points at the conclusion of the poll most merciless in major competition. race, was given credit for a brilliant two weeks from today will decide the It smashed to bits the course record ride in bringing Nedayr home in GAME staf. The coach with the greatest of 67 established by Walter Hagen in "-- __ -F_IR-s-T =.==J front. He rated the colt cleverly in number will be III charge and the the western open of 1927. It also Lee's start in the first game wasn't the early stages, made his move at .... ::., ,', ".~.' ...~:.. ' .~..;.:. ~. next four in the order of finish will duplicated the 64 with which Ralph exactly auspicious. The Giants spiked just the right time and was in full be his assistants. Any coach who Guldahl won the western open title him with a couple of doubles, but command at the finish. Rip Collins, Cub first baseman, is tagged out by Third Baseman advance from second on Lee's bunt. The umpire is Dolly Stark. vas actively engaged last season is in 1936. I only one run scored. Bartell led off With a minimum of prancing and eligible except the four head coaches of the Giants in the fourth inning when trapped trying to {TRIBUNE Photos.I with one to right and Kampouris sidestepping, the field of eight fastidi- "Should Have Been 60," at- of previous squads. They are Noble tempted to sacrifice, but his bunt re- ous thoroughbreds moved into post- Snead, the 25 year old who was ~------Kizer of Purdue, who handled the sulted 1;, the retirement of Bartell at tion in the starting gate. Up went hidden in those Virginia hills until 1934 team; Frank Thomas of Ala- third. Leslie flied to Galan, then the barrier and away they sped, with he first broke forth on the horizon bama, who was head coach in 193~; Ott doubled to right, scoring Kam- Jocky Nick Wall Whipping Menow into of tournament play a year ago last Five Yachts yDung Feller Bernie Bierman of Minnesota, the pouris. the lead along the rail. Irving Ander- winter, was highly irked about his 1936 leader, and Charles Dorais of De- The second inning storm that blew son brought Bull Lea right out with 64. troit, who led the All-Star's to a 6 to Gumbert into the discard began with him and the two raced head and head "Gee, it should have been a cinch o victory over the Green Bay Packers Lead in Race AdmIts Fast O'Dea singling to center and going past the stands with The Chief in 60," he said. last summer. to third on Galan's single to right. close attendance. And possibly the young man who A grounder by Reynolds took a hop Dorais Polls Heaviest Vote. Around the clubhouse turn they gal- Dorais last year collected 1,241,658 came so fast he ran second in his to Mackinac BallI Gone over Leslie for a double, O'Dea scor- loped, with the three leaders main- first national open and likewise in first place votes. This was the ing the tying run. Gumbert courted taining their same positions, Fairflax his second P. G. A., might have been I Boston, Mass., July 23.-(AJ)-Bob more trouble by walking Demaree, [Continued on page 5, column 6.] running fourth and Nedayr fifth. Jocky right. It was obvious to the trained (Picture on Page 3, Sports.) Feller admitted today his fast bail, filling the bases. Collins slashed a Wrtght, seeing that his mount was eyes among those of the 6,000 spec- [Clrieaao 'l'ribulle Press Service.] , which made him the boy wonder of single into right, sending Galan and outrun in the early stages, steadied tators who came out to Olympia Aboard Coast Guard Cutter Esca., baseball, is gone. Reynolds home. This was where him and made no effort to catch the Fields that he certainly could have naba, July 23.-Four single masted The Cleveland pitcher, knocked out Gumbert surrendered. pacesetters. Blind Eagle was running had at least a 61, after seeing him yachts and one yawl rigged yacht to- I sixth at this stage, Cravat seventh of the box here the fifth time in four Lee Belts One. Over the miss putts of less than eight feet on night were leading the fleet of forty. weeks, added he doesn't know what's Coffman got his share of misery and Stagehand last. the first three holes. , I the matter. pitching to Lee, who hoisted a fly to Nedayr' Begins Drive. The only man in the field to pur- sev:en boats. that left Bel.mont har.bor, ••Somewhere between last season right center. Ripple, While on the Counter! Down the back stretch they swept, sue Snead even closely was Ky Laf- Chicago, this afternoon 111the thir-ty- and this I've lost my fast ball," the run, got his glove around the ball, the gay colors of the riders making foon, the Northmoor pro who for the first race to Mackinac Island. I Starting tomorrow you troubled 19 year old Iowan said. but h, dropped out of his grip for a a brilliant fast moving picture in last five years has been one of the They are the Gloriant, the Warrior, ••I mean I stilI throw a good fast triple, Demaree and Collins scoring . can buy your tickets for the bright sunshine against the back keenest of medal play sharpshooters. the Princess, and the Tar Baby in one, occasionally, but I can't pump it Jurges rolled out and, on Herman's All-Star football game be- ground of green and gold fields. And Ky tossed out a 68, which seemed the racing division, and the Rubaiyat, in, pitch after pitch, like I did last fly to Ripple, Lee scored the sixth still Menow was hanging stubbornly tween the College All- year. Worse than that, I can't snap run. Americans and the Wash- to the lead while Bull Lea fought [Continued on next page, column 8] Il~S~ year's winner, in the cruising di------VISIOn. off that fast curve any more without The Giants got nothing on two ington Redskins, pro cham- him stride for stride. But now Jocky making it practically a wild pitch." hits in the second but they produced Wright was beginning to maneuver The fleet's progress has been none pions, over the co u n t e r. Wildness a Problem. Nedayr toward the front. He passed 1 too rapid. A northeast wind of ten [Continued on page 6, column 5.] The teams clash in the an- the rapidly quitting Fairflax, but at mile strength that sent the yachts on Feller's biggest problem has been his wildness, most of his exits fellow- nual game sponsored by the three-quarters the pacesetting their way this afternoon had dimin- ing a parade of batters around the Chicago Tribune Charities, Menow was still more than seven ished tonight to a virtual calm, and major Leagues J Inc., in Soldiers' field the lengths away. NewJ bases on passes. He said he hasn't the leading boats were only twenty- altered his delivery to any great de- . night of Aug. 31. You'll On the lower bend Irving Ander- son's red sleeved arm rose and fell eight miles from the starting point. gree, but he expressed some concern w. L. 1'ct. W. L. Pet. Pittsburah .51 ;;0 .(;30 Brouklyn .. 39 45 .464 want to see this battle, so- Some of the yawls, Including the when he told of a click in his arm as he whipped Bull Lea past the New York .. ,1)13.3 .t.iU:J/uo:o;ton 36 4:! .4(j·~ I~ROl\1THE that has stayed with him since his faltering Menow to take the lead. And Bagheera and the Manitou, were CHICAGO. 411 37 .565 St. Louis :>747 .4·~0 Just walk into the Trib- elbow was injured last season. then came Nedayr, Moving with a charting a course that paralleled the I Cinelnnatl .. 16 37 .Gill 1'hil" •.. , .. :!4 56 .300 une Public Service office, 1 tremendous rush, he passed The "When I first started to pitch in I~ARM Wisconsin shore. ! YESl'l£l(I).\Y'S RESULTS. South Dearborn street, be- Chief. As they hit the turn into the the , batters invar- Chicugu ...... •• ,- 3; New Yock .4- 1 tween 9 a. m. and 9 p. m., stretch he made up ground at every iably pulled away from the plate as Bruckljn ...•••.... 4; St. Luuls 3 HENRY SCHULTE, they swung at my fast one. Now Cincinuati. •.•..•.. 10; Philudelphia •••••• U or the lobby of T rib un e stride. He caught Menow at the head happened to the ban- I What they're stepping into it," he said. Boston...... 4; l'ittsburJ:h .•••••••. ., Tower, between 9 a. m. and of the stretch, but Bull Lea still was tam-raised family of Bob two lengths away. NEBRASKA TRACK I Upset by Infield's Advicc. G.UII<;S'IUDAY. 6 p. m. and get your tickets. Whitcs-e-the incident of the Wright's Whip rose and fell. Ned- dogs that killed nearly 150 ••It think they used to regard me New Yurk ut Chltu. I'h lfu. at Chlt'in. t'!]. COACH, RETIRES I Boston at Pitt. L:.lI.llo.ton at St. L. {~]. .. Mail orders also are be- ayr responded. Bull Lea was game, turkeys - notes about t he simply as a freak kid and weren't go- but that difficult track, sticky after newest flowers in the fields Lincoln, Neb., July 23.-(lP)-Henry ing taken by All-Star game ing to take any chances of having AMERICAN LEAGUE. the storm, was beginning to tell on -these are subjects of Bob F. Schulte, veteran track coach at the their heads knocked off. Now they w. L. I'd. W. L. Pet. ticket man age r, Tribune Becker's article about activ- his stamina. A sixteenth from home University of Nebraska and member seem to regard me as just another NewYork..49 :!Il.ti36 curcaoo .. :13 38 .465 ities at the Tribune's Du Tower, Chicago. Make Nedayr caught him. Jocky Wright of the coaching staf for the American pitcher." Clcveluud 411 ~lJ .(i:!:J lldroit a8 4(; .15~ continued to drive hard and Nedayr Page county farm. The team in the 1928 Olympics, retired to- Bob admitted he has been upset Boston J7 31.ti03 l'hil,,'l>lIil..l :!IJ 46.387 check or money order pay- article appears in the want drew clear. On he went to cross the day because of poor health. He will when infielders come in and talk to Wa.h'toll .' -15H .5:'::; 1;1. t.ouls ... ~1 51 .308 able to Chicago Tribune it d section of today's Sun- finish a full length in the lead. be succeeded by Ed Weir, freshman him during one of his wild streaks. Y.J;;:S'I'l!;KlIAX':SKI<;SULTS. Charities, Inc. The prices: day Tribune. Meanwhile, Cravat and Stagehand fnolball coach. Schulte was head foot- Gabby Hartnett (left), new Cubs' manager, and Dizzy Dean come ••They always tell me to get it over I AU games postponed; rain. had moved tip while the front run- h~11 coach fo r several ) ears a L N r- out of the dugout to tak excellent care of battery duties in the second I he plato, What do they think I'm GA}lJ';STOIJAY. $3.30, $2.20, $1.10 ners wore Quilting. hut they were braska. but most of his career was trylnz to do-throw it up in the press, Chgo, at N. Y. L:l]. Cleve~,nd at Bos. {2]. game. Dean held the Giants to five hits, unable to get to the leaders, devoted to track. box?" Detroit at Phila. (:.I]. St. L. llt Wash. (:.l],