A~12___WASHINGTON, D. C„ MONDAY, APRIL 21, 1941.__ Major Campaigns Still Muddled After Heavy Firing on All Fronts --A A- DOPING THE DERBY IS DANGEROUS -By JIM BERRYMAN or Scorned Giants, Working Capital Win, Lose Draw r HM-M-m... PLENTy^~> (N TH' SPORTS HEWS ‘BOUT *• FRANCIS E. STAN. By TH DERBY..LESSEE WHAT i fr-Poa-cKs cap\ /T—VET HARRy jJT'.f CHESAPEAKE S [ Red Sox Cross TH‘ WISE GUYS HAVE J HINDQUARTERS SEEMEC! To ) art To Aid Fox of Floridn Avenue T'DISH OUT.... \ EXPERT LIKES Bees, Say Melancholy r haveeVERytH|M6 H£ V THAT i>/spose " s--- Years ago we took a pledge never to shed tears for a ^NEEDED WHEAJ HE WAS major league WCHALLEa,GED dltib owner until one was found standing in a breadline. Even the owners By..J of seem All losing teams to do all right. They come to work in 12-cylinder 'Experts' New Owners automobiles and carry cigars in their vest pockets. And if they ever get hard-pressed for cash they sell a ballplayer and that’s all there is to it. are 167 Hits, 114 Scores SL/rne We breaking that pledge for a moment. You sort of have to be j BeamsS Quinn, Stengel Others •orry for Uncle Clark Griffith. He still has a 12-cylinder car and plenty In 7 /-Bur rmishedJ Sunday Games ONLY 2^ AHEAD to Better ©f cigars, but the old boy is sick at heart. You see, he thought he was jL Planning BEANS YZ going to spring a this year. Prove big surprise Sport Dizzy COULD BE THE ZY $350,000 Purchase All during he said little about his new Washington BET-SHOULD Bv BILL BONI, aYK tAam. He didn't pick the Nats to win the pennant, nor did he comment PAY P2ETT/ Vx By BILL KING, when the experts chose them lor seventh place. Sitting in his lower box Associated Press Sports Writer. Associated Press Sports Writer. yesterday he told why. ”1 was a-going to have a laugh on the baseball This, marking the start of the sec- BOSTON, April 21.—For the sec- writers," he confessed, morbidly. “I knew that I had a good team. It's j ond week of the major league base- ond time in his half century of base- But we can’t win a ball, Bob Quinn is heading a syndi- 6tiy good. ball game.” ball season, should by rights bring cate-owned club that he hopes wall for a pause reflection, check-back be a pennant winner for his beloved on the estimates and how Were Believed Real pre-season Boston. Starting Strength they are holding up under the early That esteemed veteran, popularly firing. known as “Honest Bob'’ last The old gentleman is panic-stricken. He said the only other time he BUT D/SPOSEAND >-■«: night In the light of yesterday’s devel- -7<. proudly announced that a dozen felt this way was early in the season of 1924. “We came from spring f CUR/QUS CO/A/ TOO, TOOK opments, however, this corner defies loyal friends had joined forces with training that year with a team which I thought could win the pennant,” A BEAUTIFUL J any one to come up with a reason- SHELLACKING him for the purchase of the 73 per he said. “We got off to a terrible start. Going West for the first time we AT IT able, logical analysis. For those JAMAICA.-’COURSE £ cent controlling interests in the Bos- were in sixth place. I began to wonder if I hadn't made an awful mistake COULPA who insist on it, however, here is BEEN A GAG ton Club held for krid I got panicky." the situation: OPDS... the five C. F. 1 sggrt past years by Adams, * Six after Sid Hudson was called to home to receive an ^TfelBUILP plate In the National League the New -KYET.tt) U CANTO wealthy Boston sportsman. Among award for the most valuable of thct same them were the club s being Washington player 1940, : York Giants, who were not supposed fCount out 0(/b\ , the Sid Hudson was walking to the showers yesterday. For the second straight to make the first division, are in BOOTS.. LEMME \ manager, and Francis Ouimet. j ^ time tne had driven him out of the box. Deep in melan- | first place, having lost their first SEE— HIS Time AT former National Open and amateur j a Boston broker. ehQlia, Griffith watched Pinch-Hitter Buddy Myer bat for Hudson. ; game in six starts to Brooklyn yes- KEENE LAND FORTH' \8gg2 golf champion, now and Adams refused we was terday. 10-9. The , 6-FURLONG WAS < Both»Quinn , “Down South all thought pitching our long suit,” he mur- favored to for the ‘ to divulge the financial terms of the mured unhappily. “Now look what's happened. Leonard has lost twice. repeat pennant, I12 '/<-■. WOT BAD, are next to last and attained that, deal that will be consummated as Hudson has been batted out twice. Masterson and Sundra have been and- y eminence only by winning their last soon as a few minor legal and finan- knocked out. We had to 17 hits behind Chase to win our get only game." two games, including a 7-3 job on cial details have been settled, prob- the yesterday. ably within a day or so. It is under- J sood, however, that the In the , barring Quinn group As the on agreed to give $250,000 cash and a Usual, Travesty Came Sunday the presence of the scorned Boston $100,000 note for control. Once a spring the'Nats play so badly that a majority of the customers Red Sox in first place with a record Get Fresh Working Capital. •wear off them. It alw'ays on a sunny Sunday, when the of five wins and no losses, things happens bright, The owners of the club's remain- Hands are at least half full. That's what After are not quite so strange. happened yesterday. HELLO SARCiEX ing 27 per cent holdings, former Hudson left, Arnold Anderson, Danny MacFayden and Jim Dean blas- Home Plate Takes Beating. Y THIS IS FINNEGAN! I Massachusetts Gov. Frank G. Alien, rSEMD phemed the pitching box which used. / OH-OH TH* CUCKOO ( ex-Representative Joseph F. O'Con- * Now to delve into the dark ad- Griffith let down his hair in his misery. He felt, and still feels, that in t IT CART OUT To 1 nell of Boston and Leopold M. ventures which befell supposedly WAS TIPPED ME 4TM Masterson and Hudson he has the best of OFF To AN' / Goulston, the club's vice president, Leonard. Chase. quartet pitchers teams yester- SLUE GOOSEBERRy. -YEAH... will retain their re- of any club in the American League. "I was a-hoping these fellers, anck day. DEUGHT.. t GUESS / interests, Quinn l vealed. Steve Sundra, would get us by until May 15. Then I figured I'd be able In the National League there were TH'UNUSUAL heat \ VW50T The other members of the Quinn to pick up two or three relief pitchers and we'd be all set," he confessed. four games. These produced 62 'IM—HE'S ^££-yOHV) / syndicate are Joseph F. Conway, All of us not that Mr. Griffith has a ball runs, 100 hits, 16 errors and 27 i I GOT IT! IT'S *~ BAD may agree potentially good OFFjy Richard Hevessy. Joseph Maney, club. For one the Nats lack that hitter and lack re- pitchers. There were three games thing, long they INTH'BAQ/WOW ■ Daniel Marr. Louis Perini. Frank in the American These serves, not to mention again the relief pitchers that Uncle Clark hoped League. MOMEY/H McCourt, all of Boston; Guidi Rugo turned up 52 runs, 67 hits, 12 errors to bag. But for the purposes of this piece, we ll skip that. The point is TH'BAHKy of Milton. Dr. William Wrang of and 15 pitchers. that Griffith sincerely thought he had the makings of a surprise team. Middletowm, Conn.; J. W Powdrell In both there was of Conn., and Max We have a hunch that he actually believed Washington would be in the leagues only Danielson, Mayer one able to go nine innings of Brooklyn, an intimate friend of pennant fight. This is based chiefly on how miserable the old boy feels SH H-Hf He was the Yankees’ , 5/ {H Manager Stengel. right now. XHERE IT IS. who gave the Philadelphia Athletics 1 In addition to providing the means 10 hits. Red was backed by three HITLER ACROSS for the purchase of Adams' stock, homers, two by and one TH BALKANS', the group also will supply fresh Here's What Old Grift He Had Thought with the bases full by Joe Di Maggio; ITS A C/HCH J working capital, Quinn exulted. six It originally was intended to write a blurb about the Kentucky straight hits and eight runs in Organization Due Today. the fifth, and a six- ninth. The D£rby today, it was a mistake to talk to the Old Fox. We have been "It looks a splendid setup and I score was 19-5. •pilling salty tears ever since and it is too late to stop now. am delighted to be associated with The Here is what Griffith thought he had on April 12. when the Nats’ best pitching, however, was such substantial men who have such •pecial train rolled into Union Station: a two-man, six- job by Mel Har- a keen love for baseball,” Quinn der and Joe who heaved said. "All but two of them are New 1. An incredibly fast, defensively adequate outfield in Case, Cramer Heving, the Indians to a 4-2 verdict over Englanders and I am that and Chapman, all pf whom could get on base by any number of ways. happy the Tigers. the club is under home ownership 2. A crack four-man staff—Leonard, Hudson, Chase and of a starting assignment last week pitching It was too cold in Chicago for the for the second time since it became Masterson—and a valuable fifth man in Sundra. White Sox and St. Louis Browns Last Game Looms at Boston, was to make his debut a charter member of the National •' Reserve Hurlers Offset 3. A good, steady in Rick Ferrell and a promising youngster to mix. Inept with the Nats today, with the Red League back in 1876.” M For Lewis and his A1 Evans. * Quinn group to Home Runs Plentiful. Travis, Sox slated to send Jack Wilson to planned 4. An infield that wouldn't be the best in the world, but one wherein get organized today and he said it Third Baseman Buddy Lewis All Power Nats Can Muster; the mound. may be would be In the senior circuit. Dodgers and Cecil Travis could be taken for granted that he Unusual power produced. and may Harris’ choice here tomorrow in the Giants drew a record ! would continue as and 5. A team just about ready to believe in itself. The Nats, having Polo Grounds appear in Washington uniforms president final home for the Nats until as crowd of 56,314. There were five sea- No Relief Is in game Stengel manager and that any mopped up in the Grapefruit League, needed only a few early champion- for the last time locally this Early Sight homers, two by Mel and nine 10. • victories to the flame which can mean from 10 to Ott, son tomorrow at Griffith Stadi- May I See BEES. Page A-15.> ship ignite anywhere was of a pitchers. um, when the Nats tangle with By BURTON HAWKINS. Sid, though, something 30 extra wins a season. The wizard to what followed. Phils got two homers, but one the Red Sox in the final engage- The Nats are beginning to ap- compared in the in the tenth by Babe ment a Anderson escaped damage Dahlgren paid of three-game series. preciate the Allies’ evacuation off for the Boston Bees in a 7-5 seventh, despite loading the bases Cake Didn't Candles Didn't Washington then will hit the tactics The baseball Rise, Light victory; Linus and Washington on walks, but when he walked the Frey Harry Craft road for 15 games and won't re- have thick and last since that of 12. hit for the team is wondering when it will be first two men to face him in the Things happened morning April circuit in the Reds’ con- turn here until May 10, the the able to author a respectable retreat. eighth Harris frantically waved The unofficial calendar of events follows: quest of Pirates, and the Chicago tentative date for Lewis' induc- Cubs needed three to beat As the situation now stands the MacFa.vden to the mound. Four runs v l. Bloodworth was hit in the head by a wild Baltimore the St. tion into the Army. Travis, too, Jimmy Louis Nats can fire their big guns, in clattered across the plate before Cardinals, 11-10, though it be in the Army by that time, pitcher. may the form of starting pitchers, and Danny succeeded in retiring the was an outfield fly that drove in the barring alterations in current 1-A 2. Lewis was in class 1-A and will ! sprint for shelter if those gentle- side. Buddy definitely placed probably deciding rim in the tenth . classifications. men aren't be inducted into the Army by May 10. effective. That, it developed, was disastrous, relief Washington pitching against for Doc Cramer pumped a home S. Cecil Travis got the same rating and faces the same fate. (Travis Boston hasn't been exactly bril- run to the center-field corner in hit .322 last year; Lewis hit .317.) Official liant. It has been, in fact, Score Minor Leagues very the Nats’ eighth at a moment when 4. Leonard, hard-luck pitcher of 1940, pitched twice and in 18 innings . bad, and has cost the Nats at least the bases were crammed. That re- 5' 1 <5 i *, W. Pet. W L. Pet. two and a third. Nats two runs for him. r«SK?w_*frt- 4 2 0 5 0 0 L. games possibly duced Boston’s edge to 11-8 and She got S,1neTi> Baltimore 3 2 .600 Newark 2 2 .500 4 2 2 4 0 0 With a rare collection of S“l U. Buffalo 3 2 .600 Montreal_ 2 2 .500 inept stirred a faint glimmer of hope ! 5. Evans, touted rookie catcher, has been exposed as greener 3 2 o R 2 o highly Cronin, ss Jersey city 2 2 .500 Toronto 2 3 .400 _ 4 114 10 specimens, Manager the which Dean Rochester 2 2 500 Syracuse 2 3 .400 among customers, WITH YOUR SUMMER than anticipated and freshly demoted in rank and importance. Newsome, as- 1 o 0 n o o is of a mind to stick with his start- j Buffalo. 3-6; Baltimore, 2-7. a erased. Doerr, 2b_ 6 13 10 0 rapidly Dean and Anderson— Tabor. 3b_" Syracuse. 8-0: Toronto. 7-2 (first 11 In- ing pitcher come what may. 6. The relief pitchers—Carrasquel, MacFayden, 513221 6 Travis Peacock, e- 4 1 1 1 o o nings. second. innings). Stars, Despite Injury. been called and found Ryba, Newark. 11: Rochester. 1. Danny MacPayden, Alejandro BROWN and WDOD'u’ES have wanting. d- 301 100 Withe one out Dominic Di o Jersey City. 2; Montreal, 0. Jim Dean and Arnold Maggio. | will succeed Travis or Lewis if H*»h, 1 0 0 0 0 0 Carrasquel, 7. Jimmy Pofahl, who probably they •Williams 1 0 0 Pacific Coast who had hit 0 0 0 League. Anderson have compiled a unique previously three dou- Uncle Sam s team next month, still can’t throw. W. L. Pet. W. L. Pet. Join Totals 40 14 and horrible record in a combined bles. singled to center. Dean then 15 27 11 1 Sa'mento 12 4 .750 Oakland 7 9 .438 FLO RS H E l M The season Is only seven days old and these seven developments have WASHINGTON. AB. R. H. O. A. Seattle 11 4 .733 L. Angeles 5 9 .357 7i walked Lou and hit Pete ls E. 3 innings of relief toil against Finney Case, rl 4 1 2 2 0 0 San Diego 10 6 .667 S. Fncisco 6 11 .313 their seven heads. We watched 71-year-old Clark Griffith accom- Fox in the back. Jimmy Foxx pro- j reared homely Cramer, cf- 4 2 1 5 0 0 Hollywood 7 8 .467 Portland 4 11 .267 the Red Sox. They have elimb into his 12-cylinder car yesterday and saw happier 24-year-old Chapman, If_ 4 0 0 1 0 0 Seattle, 9-3: Oakland. 4-1. plished the feat of allowing 12 pelled Di Mai.gio across with a; Lewis. 3b _ 4 2 2 1 3 1 San Diego. 10-0: San Francisco. 9-1. which Travis, ss runs. 10 hits and 14 walks. mighty poke backed Cramer Government workers pile into their jalopies and that’s why we ain’t living _ 4 1 3 2 3 0 Portland. 7-6: Hollywood. 5-11. Hitting Bloodworth. 2b_ 3 1 0 2 1 o Los Angeles, 5-1: Sacramento, 4-3. against the center-field barrier. had a two batters has been the only sort to that at the moment. Old Griff big surprise party Archie, lb _ 5 n 2 9 0 01 up pledge American Association. When Pete Fox scooted for second the rise ! Evans, c- 3 0 0 3 1 o I of revenge they seem able to obtain. j and at the last minute he discovered cake didn't and c W. L. Pet. W. L. Pet. planned Early, _ 2 1 1 2 0 0 on an steal and 3 Also attempted Finney, Hudson, p _ 1 0 0 0 3 0 Louisvville 4 01.000 Toledo_ 2 .400 Starters Helpless. [ the candles wouldn’t light. who had taken third after Anderson, p _ 0 0 0 O 0 0 Columbus 4 1 .800 St. Paul 2 3 .400 Foxx’s ; 3 the MacFayden. p_ n n o o 1 0 Indian'olis 3 2 .600 Kans. City 2 .400 With that type of twirling, long drive, feinted for the •AT* Dean, p_ o n 0 0 n Minne'olis 2 3 .400 Milwaukee 0 4 .000 plate. 1 Nats have viewed three possible Dean threw tMyer _ 1 0 0 0 0 0 St. Paul. 6-5: Toledo 2-4. to Buddy Lewis at third O o o 0 flit into On the rVernon_ 1 o Minneapolis. 7-14; Coiumbus. 3-16 (first. victories oblivion. in a bid to trap Finney. 10 innings). warped wings of what is flatter- Statistics Totals 36 R 11 27 12 2 Kansas City. 7-8: Indianapolis. 3-2. Dean only threw in the general ■Batted Louisville. | Major League for Ryba in seventh. 4: Milwaukee. 2. ingly called relief pitching Wash- direction of Lewis. couldn’t tBattedefor Hudson in sixth Buddy Texas League. has sailed into the cellar. * Monday. April 31. 1941. tBatted for MacFayden in eighth. ington have snared his writh a crab W. U Pet. W. L. Pet. pitch * Boston An otherwise formidable team 120 031 043—14 Houston 6 1 .857 Dallas 2 4 .333 fairly net, so both Finney and Fox romped ! NATIONAL. Washington 200 002 040— 8 Okla. City 3 1 .760 S. Antonio. 2 4 .333 is shackled in the AMERICAN. Runs being dungeon across. batted in—Fox. Travis (3). Pea- Fort Worth 5 3 .625 Beaumont 2 6 .250 Results Yesterday. a or two who Results Yesterday. cock. Ruba. Doerr (41. Di Maggio. Archie, Shreveport 4 3 571 Tulsa O 3 .000 for lack of pitcher Brooklyn- 10: New York. 9. Cronin. Cramer < Shortstop Cecil Travis returned to 4). Foxx. Two-base Oklahoma City, 5-5: Fort Worth, 1-3. could the club a chance Boston. 14: Washington. *. Boston. 7; Philadelphia. 5. * hits—Di Maggio (3), Lewis. Ryba, Tabor. give fighting Mew York. IS: Philadelphia, 6. Cincinnati. 7: Pittsburg, 8. Beaumont. 6-0: Shreveport, 3-9. action despite a badly damaged Doerr. Three-base hit—Peacock. Home Dallas 5-4: Tulsa, 3-1. by checking the opposition for a Cleveland. 4: Detroit 2. Chicago. 11: St. Louis, 10. knee, two and a run—Cramer. Stolen bases—Di Maggio. Houston. 11: San Antonio, 0. thumping singles m Louis-Chleaso. cold. (2). Finney. Fox. plays—Foxx to short span. Standing si the Cl a be double and in three runs Cronin, Tabor to Doerr to Fox. Tabor to Southern Association. no batting f> Standing of the Club*. There is encouragement, either, L. Pet. OB. Foxx, MacFayden to Travis to Archie. W. L. Pet. W. L. Pet. as his contribution to a lost cause. Pet. O S. W. in the fact Dutch Leonard and L W. L. Left on bases—Boston. 9; Washington, 9. Atlanta ,Pt)n 3 5 o New York _5 1 .833 .91 Little Rock .375 Travis won’t take a rest Bqnon _5 l.ooo First —0(1 Hudson. 2: off simply _ 3 1 .760 1 Memphis 7 2 .778 Nashville 4 7 .364 Sid as the 2 .667 1% Chicago Hudson, regarded glory ClRvelanc’. _4 St. Louis_ 3 2 .600 114 Ryba. 2 off Anderson. 5: off Hash, fl: off N. Orleans 4 4 .500 Birm'gham 3 6 .333 cure. In 1939 he twTice was leveled Naur Yorlt_ 4 3 .571 MacFayden. 1; off 1. Struck guys of the Washington pitching 2, Brooklyn___ 4 3 .571 2 Dean, out— Chattan’ga 6 6 .465 Knoxville 3 7 300 influenza and and bounced cScsgo _ 2 2 .500 2'a By Hudson. 2: by Hash, 1: by MacFayden, by grippe Boston _ 3 4 429 Memphis. 4-5: Birmingham, 3-4 (first, have two decisions 1 1 .500 3J4 staff, dropped 8 tJ Louis _ 214 1. Hits—Off Ryba. 9 in 6 innings: off back in the _ 2 .400 2’.-a 10 inrings). too soon for 2 .333 Pittsburgh 3 lineup Philadelphia _ 4 314 .333 3 Hash. 2 in 3 innings: off Hudson. 11 in Chattanooga. 21-6: 9-3. each. Sid’s start is reminiscent of Cincinnati _ 2 4 Nashville, When he was _ 1 3 .250 31, 6 off Anderson. 0 in 1 safety. spiked by the Ktrolt Philadelphia_1 8 .166 4 innings: inning; Atlanta, 8-7; Knoxville. 1-5 (second, 6 last season, when he won only 2 Y^ahington_ 1 5 .167 41a off MacFayden. 3 in 1 inning: off Dean. innings). Yankees’ Phil Rizzuto on Friday Game* Today. Games Tomorrow. 1 in 1 inning Hit br nitched ball—By Little Rock. 6-4: New Orleans. 5-0. of his first 11 games. The Red Game* Today. Games Tomorrow. Dean 'Fox). Wild pitch—Hudson. Win- they said he’d be out a week, but Sooth Atlantic League. Sox have had a minimum of diffi- BOS- at Wash 3:15 Bos. at Wash.. 3:16. Brooklyn at N. Y. Brooklyn at N. Y. ning pitcher—Ryba Losing pitcher—Hud- they underestimated silent Cecil’s fmr York at Phila. New York at Phila. Cinci. at Chicago. Pbila. at Boston. son. Umpires—Messrs. Rommell. Ormsby Macon. 3: Jacksonville, 0. culity in hammering him freely. at St. Louis at Cleve. Phila at Boston. Cinci. at Chicago. and Hubbard. Time—2:48. Attendance— Columbus, 5; Augusta, 4. courage. at Louts Cleve Leonard has been more CRteaao at Detroit. Chicago at Detroit. Only games scheduled. Pittsburgh at St. L. 18.000. (Only games.) impres- w sive in losing twice to the Yankees, Steve Sundra. who was rained out I ; but the Nats are finding it in- creasingly tougher to absorb con- $|05° Dom Di More to Red Sox Than Great Joe's Brother solation in defeat. In losing five Maggio of six games they have indicated they could be a comparatively classy Little Mates as Keen Fielder outfit if staked to some Chap Highly Respected by Dangerous Hitter, pitching. FFAlStflOWER Genuine white buckskin, as soft and cool Anderson, MacFayden Fail. *A£i» POKY EXPRESS «T it rains tomorrow,” when he beat out a dribbler to hood sissy, is content to contrib- and Vince, in 112 games, made hope Clark Griffith, of course, is claim- as a snowdrift with brown diminutive, Third Baseman Buddy Lewis of ute his part and let it go at that. 13 assists. l GALLOPED 33 topped confessed bespectacled in but it With the Red Sox there is no Dom never will rank ing everything sight, may S an© CHANGED Dominic Di Maggio to Gerry the Nats. He w’as taut, pressing with Joe calfskin, hand-stained to a rich coffee * require time before he is able to deep Moore, Boston newspaperman, at the plate, and blamed himself inclination to regard Di Maggio as a hitter, principally because, TIMES negotiate a waiver deal and the j RSESg last Wednesday night, “I'd give for running too much in spring lightly. Prank Shellen- while he has power for a little shade. Your choice of full Nats are demonstrating they can’t wing tip a day off,” con- The rains came and the back, who saw Joe, Vince and man, he can’t match pokes with anvthing to get training. afford to wait. Some 18.000 fans tinued the little fellow who is of Mrs. Di Dominic Di Maggio play over his big brother. He’s standing or the new front youngster Maggio's who saw the Red Sox hand the brogue, Norwegian style._. from the shadow of his major league outfielding brood quite a span of years in the on his own feet as a respected emerging Nats a 14-8 trimming yesterday at brother, Joe, of the out of his , rates Dom player, however, and the Red Sox more famed miraculously snapped are inclined to Most Regular $0 95 that if he had are content Yankees. “I'm overtrained.” slump. high enough to say they have the next Stylts O *>d uf> the Di brothers best to Joe agree. So the skies cried for the pol- He since has been a verv diffi- Maggio play- thing himself. Dominic You Boston hopped on Hudson to take Sox . cult to out. In his ing for him it would be may have noticed him yes- ished Red gentleman get a 7-4 lead in the six innings he he has who would play center field. terday as he connected for three Thursday's game with Washing- last 14 trips to the plate labored, blasting Sid for 11 hits, in- Dominic four He would be in center doubles and a off assorted ton was rained out and collected 10 hits, including field, six doubles and a Washington B. H. cluding . soaked up required rest. Only a doubles, has scored five runs and says Shellenback, because he can pitching. HAHN few days before, unable to swat a stolen three bases. cover ground on a par with Joe 14th & G 7th & K *3212 14th *4483 Conn. Ave. or Vines of the ball squarely even in batting On a team that boasts such of the Yankees and Ted Pirates and he throws more ac- BASEBALL practice, Dom displayed his first sluggers as Jimmy Foxx ™?E. *Open evenings Dominic There is a for a RACES TODAY sign of temper since joining the Williams, quiet little curately. pause as much but Dominic HAVE *>U CHANGED fled Sox last season. He splin- doesn’t command quite prolonged argument, Havre de Grace Washington n. Boston the to back it jfered his bat against the dugout attention as he would in other has figures up. EIGHT RACES DAILY 'tbURMdfeRCHL but it’s all Last season, playing in 94 Penn* iteps. surroundings, right R. R. train leaven Union CALI FOR The out- Dom led the American Station 12:20 p.m.. direct te track AMERICAN LEAGUE PARK VFT? In Boston's first two games the with him. 23-year-old games. —E. S T. resembles almost League with 16 assists. In 133 180-pound, 5-foot 8-inch out- fielder. who ragT RACE AT III f M Joe made b fielder obtained only (me hit, anybody’s idea of the neighbor- games only assists,