,FAGS TWENTY THE MICHIGAN DAILY TITESDAY, OCTOBER, 1, 1935 .. 11 I'l - - - -W-E-"-T- -,T,--UES....AY,.....O...T........................ Vaughan Gains Batting Crown In Senior Loop Joe Vosmik Appears To Have Clinched The Title In The American League NEW YORK, Sept. 30. - (RP) - There seems to be no danger at all in awarding the major league batting titles to Floyd (Arky) Vaughan of the Pittsburgh Pirates and Joe Vosmik of the Cleveland Indians before the final official results are in. Vaughan was as safe as the pro- verbial church at the top of the National league when the unofficial records showed a .386 average for him and .350 for his nearest rival, Joe M edwick of St. Louis. There was a chance that Buddy Myer of Wash- ington, trailing Vosmik's .351 by six points, could capture the American league lead but it was a slim one. The third place men in both leagues, Gabby Hartnett of Chicago at .344 and Jimmie Foxx of the Athletics at .3 3, were too far back to be con- sidered. Gehrig Down Rain uprooted Lou Gehrig's fondest hopes and floated them down the sewer along with other debris. The big flood which struck New York three weeks ago put out the fire that was Gehrig so effectively that what- ever chance the Yankee captain had to retain his '34 batting champion- ship must be regarded today as defi- nitely belonging in the past tense. It will be remembered - with a catch in the throat of all sensitive Yankee fans - that Gehrig was hit- ting like a man possessed of a won- derful madness before the rain came and threatened to stay forever. Afterl marking time for almost four months of the season, the big guy suddenly started to get better than ever before3 irn his life. Threatened Vosmik Iij the ten previous games before the deluge, Gehrig had bagged a prizet collection of large, well-shaped ears,f once belonging ,to pitchers, with a batting average of .543. He lifted himself up to .340 for the season, only thirteen points behind Joe Vos- mik, the leafier.f Came the rain and the quenchingl of the fire. Three games with the A's were washed out, depriving Gehrig \ of the rare pleasure of teeing off on the odd characters Connie Mack had brought back to civilization withf rod 'and gun. Two more gamesI against succulent White Sox pitching,c Gehrig's meat for fattening up that .543 spree, also were carried away by the rain.t Probable Mound Opponents In Series Opener LYNWOOD ROWE LON WARNEKE Happy Days, Remarkable Days -" 1935 To Major League Baseball NEW YORK, Sept. 30.-(/P) - The year Babe Ruth retired; the year when the fans came back; the year base ball turned theatrical; the year of the remarkable rookies - all of those and more were included in the remarkable 1935 major league base ball season, which closed Sunday. Seldom in recent years have so many matters of importance taken place on and off the ball fields in one major league campaign. The retirement of Babe Ruth after more than 20 years of major league stardom-half of them as the great- est figure in baseball - stirred the interest of the fans to a high pitch, as the home run king started his final season with a new club in a new league, hoping to settle gently into a managerial berth, and failed to com- plete his task. Ruth may not be recorded as the, greatest player or even the greatest home run hitter, considering the rise of such new clouters as Detroit's Hank Greenberg, but there's no equal in sight for bringing the fans throughI the turnstiles. As a "gate attraction" he will continue to be the standard by which all others are judged. Braves Collapse An American Leaguer all during his, great career, the Babe hitched his fortunes to those of the harassed Boston Braves who found that Ruth wasn't the answer to their troubles, and ran into one jam after another as the club continued to lose both games and money. Failing to get financial support Judge Fuchs finally, was forced to forfeit his majority ownership to Charles F. Adams and retire from the presidency. The club lost little time falling into the National League cellar and before I the campaign ended established a' "'modern" record for the circuit in los- ing games when they dropped their 110th of the year. The "theatrical" aspect - linked closely with the new interest shown by the cash customers - turned up when night base ball made its first ap- pearance in the big leagues. The Cincinnati Reds gave a good trial to the floodlight game, and the final judgment apparently was that night ball may become a lifesaver for los- ing clubs. Many teams in both cir- cuits plan to give it a whirl next year. The first night game in major league history was played at Cincin- nati before 20,422 paying fans on May 24 and six succeeding flood-' light contests there attracted crowds of the same size. Those night gatherings at Cin- cinnati didn't approach in size some of the crowds that turned out for daylight bills. A new National League' attendance record was set at NewI York May 30 when 63,943 paying fans poured into the Polo Grounds to see the Giants and Dodgers play a double- header. In July the Yankees and' Tigers played a twin bill before 62,500' fans and the Giants and Cardinals played before more than 50,000 in Au- gust. LIKES BIG SQUADS Wesley (Plowboy) Fry, new head coach of the Kansas State College football team, Big Six champions, believes in large squads. He asked 85a candidates to report for the opening drill this fall. Caliente Track Opening Hailed As Inevitable Lifting Of Mexican Ban On Gambling Presages Legal Racing Season AGUA CALIENTE, Mex., Sept. 30. - (AP) - Caliente's $2,000,000 race track, closed two months ago because of the ban on gambling in all Mex- ico, will reopen this winter. The handwriting on the wall is un- mistakable. The Foreign Club, most elaborate of Tijuana's palaces of chance, has already opened with what are desig- nated as "permissible games." These, under the edict of the new governor of Lower California and with the sanction of President Cardenas, are ecarte,*chuck-a-luck, poker and such similar pastimes. Roulette, dice, black jack and the like are on the blacklist. Hotel To Reopen As soon as labor difficulties are ad- justed, the famous Caliente Hotel planned to cut down the barbed-wire fence, fire the armed guard and in- vite guests to wine and dine again "in romantic old Mexico." When the resort was closed abrupt- ly in July the water was turned off, a fence erected and guards installed in and about the premises. The water has since been turned on again and gardeners have been busy re- pairing the damage created through lack of care for flowers, shrubs, lawn and trees. The Foreign Club is owned by a corporation headed by Wirt Bow- man, formerly president of the Agua Caliente Hotel Co., but now a mi- nority stockholder in the concern. Bookmakers Barred As soon as the Caliente Hotel swings back its doors plans will be launched immediately to get another race sea- son under way - with pari-mutuel gambling; no books. When the track closed it was run- ning on the basis of three days a week, but with enough races to in- clude a complete four days' program at the ordinary plant. It had been planned, however, to go to four days a week, to continue through the fall, and then when Santa Anita took up, to race only on that track's off day - Sunday. Owners of horses were being en- couraged to bring their horses to Caliente early this fall and there pre- pare them for the Santa Anita sea- son, race them at the border track if they liked, and then be on deck after the Arcadia meeting closed for an auspicious spring program. %77. 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