Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, July 03, 1917, Night Extra, Page 10, Image 10

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gW- cT :.' ' . EVENING LEDGER-PHILADELPHIA, TUESDAY, JULY 3, 1P1T
ABOUT THREE YEARS AGO BOSTON NATIONALS STARTED THEY
-t,v'! je9r -.vl.-.w" ,
PHILS .WOULD HAND OUT $15,000 IN
GENUINE MAZUMA FOR SCINTILLANT
INFIELDER OR CLASSY MOUNDSMAN
Dependable Secondary Material Sadly Lacking
and Brush Is Being Combed to Locate the Right
Parties C. Mack Similarly Engaged
rpirB strain of nn unusual amount of playing, with Its seven' tax on the pitching
strength of the team, promises to work with icverso nncllsh on our Phlli.
who return today to ghe hattlo with the subdued and mlrncleless Braves from
Pawston. In three days five games will bo played a double-header and two on
the Fourth of July. '
There should be no reason to feel nervous oxer the chances of tho home-town
boys In the pennant race, for Pat Mnran has the classical and brainiest aggregation
In tho league. However, we must admit that the substitute material Is very weak,
and If one regular Is relegated to tho side lines the stuff Is off. Oscar Dugey and
Bobby Byrne arc tho sub tnneldcrs, and tho outfield talent on the reserve list
consists of J'nink Schulte. How can a blg-leaguo club get along with only three
men (b fall back on7 Then we have tho pitching staff. Alex Is good; so are rtWe.
Mayer. Lavender nnd Ocschger. But suppose one of thoso men goes bad? The
team will be In a very bad way. The only nttong part of the club Is In the catching
department. Bill Klllcfcr Is tho best backstop In cither league, nnd his under
studies, Eddie Burns nnd Jack Adams, are capablo players.
Pat Moran leallzcs that something must be done In a hurry, and President
Baker feels the same way. Scouts are gumshoeing through the bushes for talent,
and It's a cinch that some new faces will be seen on the home lot If any rural
phenoms are discovered.
"TITE ABB willing to pay any price for ball players these days," said
' President Baker. "If a first-class pitcher were on the market -wo
would go as high as $15,000 for him, and that goes for Inflclders, too. In
a case like this money Is no object, and It Is my desire to give the fans of
Philadelphia a championship club, regardless of the cost."
Connie Mack Also Is Looking for Talent Without Results
TT ISN'T nn easy matter to get ball platers these days, and Connie Mack Is
-- having his share of hard luck. The boss of the A's also has his bank account
wide open and any bush leaguer who shows sufficient promise can grab part of It.
Connie has been looking for ball platert for three years now nnd his search Is not
yet ended. He has tried out more joung plaers than any other two managers In
the big leaguos and Is showing persistency that Is hard to equal. Mack wants a
first-class ball club which can compare with the famous machine of old He will
not experiment very much In the futuic. nnd those who do not appear ripe will
depart wearing the official tinware At the start of the season Frank Thrasher
Was hailed as a wonderful outfielder and swatsman extraordinary. He was given a
chance nnd foozled terribly. Instead of keeping him on the bench, as In the olden
dayB, Frank was shipped back to Atlanta, where ho now Is playing.
Lee Gooch wa3 another example. The burly Southerner won a couple of
Barnes with his trusty bat nnd had n hitting ntcrago of more than .300, but ho
couldn't field his position nnd vta3 sent to Springfield, Mass. Lee looked ery good
at tho plate and would have been an Ideal pinch hitter, but that's not Connie's
aystem. A man must bo able to do more than one thing if ho stays with the
Athletics, and that meant curtains for Mr. Uooch.
Wally Schang now Is playing In the outfield, where he belongs. The former
tnustached hero Is a good hitter nnd will strengthen the club considerably lf he
plays every day. We take our lives In our own hands when we say that Wally
ts a better fielder than n catcher, but that seems to be the case. When he Is
behind tho bat Schang has the pitcher In n nervous state most of the time, and the
youngsters cannot work with him at all. If he can keep away from concrete walls
Wally will do well In the outfield and should stay there.
T
1HEB.E are two promising recruits
season Is ever they should hrcak
Dugan, the Infleldcr from Holy Cross, and Pat French, the outfielder nnd
speed merchant from Maine. This pair Is nbsorblng knowledge from the
bench and will be given a chance to show what they can do on the next
western trip.
Barry Believes Red Sox Arc Due for World's Scries Again
TACK BARRY, manager of the world's champion Hod Sox, can't understand why
the critics of baseball are picking a rlche lower than first place for his crlmson-
hoscd warriors. The team, ho points out. Is Just as strong ns It was last jcar,
when It went through the moit grueling fight of n decade to a woild's champion
ahlp. If anything, he believes, the Bed Sox must be figured stronger, for they hate
tho ndded strength of a now pitcher, Hadcr, for first-class relief work.
The Red Sox have one bad attack of trouble which will have to be Ironed out,
however, before Barry can be taken bcriously. The loss of Bill Carrlgan not as a
manager, but as a catcher and n coach will have to be overcome before tho Red
Box will be figured on paper ns strong ns the White Sox as they now stand. Catching
on the Boston club Is atrocious, from a hlg-leaguo standpoint. Neither Cndy nor
Thomas Is a capable receiver for a team of Boston's standing, while Sam Agnew, a
really high-class receiver, a hard hitter and an excellent man at throwing to the
bases, IS doing bench duty. Last year when the world's series drew near Thomas
Was picked out for some exceptional praise. It was declared for him that he would
develop some day Into the same steady, consistent catcher as Carrlgan. With this
atrength the hose were figured strong in the catching department. The loss of
Carrlgan. however, let Thomas down with a bumn. Cadv notor im hn.n .,...
thing more than an ability to get his hnnds
rpHE best pitching staff In tho world won't deliver the goods when the
catchers are unablo to handle them right. This Is the main reason
for tho success of pitcher after pitcher who Joined the Boston club under
the regime of Carrlgan.
Delaware County Baseball League Is Booming
, rpHE wonderful interest In baseball outside of the two big circuits was amply
demonstrated In the Delaware County League when more than 4000 spectators
watched Upland defeat Chester on Saturday In a sensational ninth-Inning rally.
The roster of players In the Weeks circuit contains enough stars to pick a combina
tion that would compare favorably with the American and National Leagues.
Among those drawing pay, checks are Charlie Dooln. former manager of the Phils'
Stanley Baumgartner and, until a few days ago, Charles Albert Bender; Briscoe'
Lord, fnmous with the Mack machine when It won two pennants; Mark and Lai, of
the Chinese University team; Howard lohr, who was with Cincinnati and Cleveland-
.a ianue, rormcriy or mo federal League and Detroit Americans; Joe Knotts. a
foimer Trlstate catcher, and Tiny Turner, also of the same league; Spalding, of
Olympic soccer games fume, Bill Eschcn, a Southern League outtlplder; Ted Bald
Win, crack West Chester basketball plajer, and Rube ('ashman and Ally McWll
Hams, whoso names in the baseball world are known wheretcr the sport ts played
Other players In the league nre equally well known.
The Delaware County League Is the organization with which "Home-Run"
Baker became affiliated when he quit the Athletics, and Is the only league In the
history of baseball playing on Saturdays and holidays that was ever offered admis
sion Into the fold of organized baseball.
UPLAND was depending on "Chief Bender to pull It through, and
Pitcher Earl Twining will be the hero of the hour If he can defeat
Stanley Baumgartner at Chester on July 4 In the morning game.
Fall Latest Sensation as Distance Runner
fTtHE West has developed another great mller whose rccoid-breaklng performances
In the last month stamp him as one of the best distance runners Jn action at
present. Many good mllers have been seen In the last two years, notably Wlndnagle
of 'Cornell; Overton, Yale; Carroll, Michigan; Meyers, Chicago A. A and Boynton'
of Cornell. The most recent sensation is E. If. Fall, of Obcrlln College, who covered
e mile In the Western Conference championship meet In 4:16 2-5, and an hour later
cqptured the two-mile run In record-breaking time.
Jole Itay, of the Chicago Athletic Club, was considered the best distance runner
Jn the Middle West, In view of his brilliant work In the eastern Indoor meets last
-winter, l-all's fine work brought about much speculation as to the relative merits
of the pair of runners and a match race was arranged, The Central A. A. U. cham
pionships were held on Stagg Field, In Chicago, last Saturday, and nay and Fall
faced each other In the mile. After completing one lap' Ray dropped out. Fall con
tinued without much opposition and turned In a mile In the remarkably fast time
of 4:16, breaking tho Central A. A. U. mark by 51-6 seconds.
IT WAS a bad day for Ray. He later started in the five-mile run and
was beaten by five yards by his teammate, Bert French.
Bender Must Show Better Form
K,' TF PAT MORAN expects Chief Bender
'- close race with the Giants, the once
he did In Brooklyn. He served here twice as a rescue pitcher, and In each Instance
was a bad as the, man he relieved or wprse. He succeeded Joe Qeschcer yesterday
after five Innings and the Dodgers touched him for five hits, two earned runs and
one unearned run In three Innings, which Is no way to save a ball game. 3ender
went to the mound In the second game on Saturday, after Mayer had been knocked
out In the fifth Inning. The score was 6 to C In favor of Brooklyn, and the
Phillies had an excellent fighting chance, aa Cadore was wabbling badly. One
harmless hit was made off the Indian In the sixth Inning ot that game, but In the
wryenth the Dodgers bunched four hits off him for two earned rum, and those runs
sponsible for Brooklyn winning by
Ljw s ii-ljain thUMCerd and
'..
In the M.icklan camp and before the
Into the box score. They nre Joe
. -. ...... ....u..,, ,.,,j -
on the ball when It came near.
to be of any serv(ce to him in maintaining
great Indian will have to show better than
9 to I, Bender's lack of stuff is aa nppar-
it U hard to see how -lie. can be of much
'j. '
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BIG JULY FOURTH
SPORTS PROGRAM
Aquatics, Racing, Field
Meets and Red Cross Tour
neys Among Features
IRISH CLUBS TO CONTEST
Tomorrow will be the biggest day In the
field of sport In this country All thoughts
of war temporarily will take n hark sent In
the thoughts of the men wearing the uni
form of this country stationed In this city
The track and field events for the enlisted
men at the naty yard li.it e drawn numerous
entries, Including many Mar intlege men
who are stationed at I .on Kile Island
Another big meet will be stastd nn the
Belmont plateau. Falrmnunt P.uk where
ninro than a thousand joung athletes of
Philadelphia vlll compete In the g.imes ar
ranged by a subcoinniitttp of Councils The
winners nf the man eientn will ifcelte gold
watches and sllter cups
Tor those who ,ue Interested In th
ponies there will he inan.t racing meets In
the afternoon at Frankfnid, Nat berth,
Pownlngtown, Pitman, Djhcrry and Mount
Holly.
The annual field day of tho t'lan-Na-Oael
Society will be held at Point Breeze Park
and a tarlcd program has been arranged.
In the afternoon there will he tinck and
field eontet,t. for registered a ivt"rx '
dancing contests for members of the Irish
clubs
The water rainltal nn the Hc!ui)lkl.l
for the 1 eneflt nf the Itcd i'ros will lie
'he first of Its kind In this section of the
country The principal boat race will lie
the eight-oared etent. hkh a Paella
coast crew, composed nf former members
of the University nf Washington and Inland
Stanford are enteied against the best nf
tho local eights
Although there Is no big golf tourna
ment scheduled, most of the clubs In this
district will hold patriotic matches for the
benefit of the Bed t'ross The same Is true
of tennis, tho only big tournament being the
annual one at Beach Haten
NIAGARA 7-DAY RACE
MEETING ON TOMORROW
Fine List of Entries for Big Fourth of
July Handicap Stakes
NKW YORK. July S Tomorrow the
bugle will cal. the horses to the post for the
opening of the Niagara, Baring Association's
seven-day meeting of the thoroughbreds, the
last one that maj be seen at the track
across the rlter In some time Tho meeting
promises to be n most notable one. for never
were prospects brighter for a splendid gath
ering of high-class horses and keenly con
tested races
The entries for the Fourth of July
stakes, a handicap at a mile and seventy
yards follow: Borrow-, Pennant. Bromo.
Liberty Loan (formerly Al M Dick) All
Smiles, Christie. Fruit Cake, Commonada.
Bondage, Brumley (Irumpy, Sasln, Old
Broom, Churchill, Rancher. Sands of Pleas
ure. Russell Square, Skeptic. Tom McTag
gart. Prince Ilermls. Baj berry Candln.
Roamer Rune. Ketvessa. Atttell. Blerman
Monty Ring. Bamej Shannon Leochares,
Cordon Rui.sell. McAdoo. Waukeag. Hub
bub, Harry Shaw Malamont. Raider (for
merly Van). Tea Caddy. Hauberk, Ormulu.
r.elJtllp. Graphic. Incog, Arratan, Trial by
Jury and Westy Hogan
RAIN CALLS HALT TO
P. R T. LEAGUE GAMES
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Old Jupiter Plutlus spoiled a
lot
of fun
for the members of the carmen's baseball
league today, for his little rain act caused
the postponement of all four games sched
uled One Important contest, between German,
town, the league leaders, and the runner-up
team Allegheny, was sidetracked on ac
count of the shc-wers Reports had It that
the "Germans" were due to lose their first
game of the season, and a big crowd as
sembled at the scene of the big contest at
Magnolia and Cheltenham atenues.
WESTERN GOLF TITLE PLAY
TO GET UNDERWAY MONDAY
CHICAGO, July J. The annual West
ern amateur golf championship will start
on Monday morning on the links of the
Midlothian Country Club, Blue Island, II!..
and will finish on the following Saturday
afternoon.
While the strength of the entry from
the West Is assured, the officials of the
Midlothian Cluh and of the Western Golf
Association are particularly desirous of se
curing the appearance of the best of the
eastern golfe1. In order to make the tout
nament a decisive test for the amateurs
of the entire country Helnrlch Bchmldt
won the title last year.
NATIONAL LEAGUE PARK
.-..-.--. Ht1 i "rH
THE DAYS OF REAL SPORT
BUXTON EASILY DEMONSTRATES
THAT HE IS IN A CLASS BY HIMSELF
AMONG THE GOLFERS OF THIS CITY
Made It Known Early That Winner of Event Was
a Real Champion in Spite of Decision of Golf
Association of Philadelphia
f:
IOB the second year In succession Cam
champion of Philadelphia At a time when
tho wate of hysteria about the war was
sweeping ncroos the land the United States
Golf Association decided not to glvo the
title .Since then those officials at the head
of that organization hate Ixen busy ex
plaining that It was at the urgent request
of the Secretary of War So tho Coif Asso
ciation of Philadelphia has followed suit
and announced that In none nf the tourna
ments would a championship or prize be
aw aided So to all Intents and purposes
Buxton did not win the championship last
Saturday, for there was none to be won
But. ns he said a few days before the
final match. "So far as I am concerned
the tltlo passes In case I should not win
I feel that the man who wins this event
ought to bo the champion of Philadelphia,
and If I win It 1 have the right to be known
as tho champion " Of course, this Is con
trary to the ethics of tho game, but there
neter was a flnei or a'tuarer sportsman than
Huc-k He did not wish to go on record
in the etent of any one else winning the
tournament of hating a lot of people say
that the tournament did not amount to
anything because no title went with It
Most of us realize by now that both the
national and local golf assor'atlous acted
hastily when thc took the nctlon that they
did.
Sports Should Continue
i:en the President of tho United States
was Insistent that the youth of tho coun
try should continue to play baseball, golf
and tennis for In that way he thought
they would best condition themseltes for
the struggle As a matter of fact, only
two men In Philadelphia were affected b
the war, and they were Hugh Wllloughby
and Francis Keiible Tho first Is In the
natal reserte and tho second is at Fort
Niagara trslng to win n commission
It is tery probable that after the golf
officials raw Secretary Baker that gentle
man forgot all about the golfers and tennis
plaers. It Is not as If there were a mil
lion orftwo of young golfers In this coun
try. Of the million or more golfers In this
country fully 80 per cent of them are men
past tho thirty-year mark The youngsters
of the nation hate not taken to tho game
as they have to tennis, nnd It Is not that
the game does not appeal to them, but It
Is rather because It is so much more ex
penslte than tennis or baseball.
Different AVith Golfer
Give a youngster a racquet and a half
dozen tennis balls and he Is equipped for
a year's play With the golfer It Is dif
ferent He requires at least a half-dozen
clubs and a bag. and half-dozen balls will
not last him more than a month or two at
the best No one can play golf well unless
he has a caddie to carry his bag and watch
the flight of the ball In all our country
clubs the dues for the tennis players are
much cheaper than for the golfers. And In
a month It will cost the golfer more than
It will set the tennis player back for the
entire ear.
So eliminating the young men who are
the real contenders for our national golf
championship, the number of hoys In the
twenties who play golf Is very small com
pared with those past the thirty-year mark.
Take any club you please In the Philadel
phia district, and If 20 per cent of the
membership Is made up of young fellows of
the conscription age, it Is unusual, to say
the least And whllo no one doubts for a
moment that the United States Golf Asso
ciation acted from the tery best motives In
going to see Secretary Baker, the action
in deciding not to award any championships
was a hasty one.
Women's Association
It has been rumored that no title will be
awarded In the women's golf championship
and here Is the real absurd end of the whole
situation Probably the reason Is that the
golf officials think It would not be fair to
call oft the title In tho men's events and
then go ahead and award the title to the
women. The upshot of this will probably
be the formation ot a women's golf asso
ciation There Is no reason under the sun
why the United States Golf Association
should run the women's championship and It
ST. LOUIS PREPARES FOR
BIG GAMES IN SEPTEMBER
Word Has reached here from St. Louis
that the athletic followers In the Mlssourlan
capital had at last started preparations to
hold the national A. A U, championships in
September. To raise a fund of 110,000 will
be the first Item of the preparatory work.
The national A. A. U. was beginning to
perfect plans to hold the meet on an elab
orate scale on one of the local tracks.
suits n
TO ORDER aMaJL
.80
TO ORDER
K4nr4 from (M. (tr as4 H
PETER MORAN & CO. ",Bi
TAir.HKS
Iff MARKKT. KKTKANTK N
ITS J0IM
To 60 CFF ,
XKld-NAY.
HURR uf"
UVCPTHiuG
Is tery likely that that body would be
tery glad to get rid of the responsibility.
But to get hac'f to Buxton for one min
ute The championship was fn many ways
one of the best contested affairs In the his
tory of the organization in splto of the
fact that Knight broke so badly In the
afternoon Both men were fortunate In
one thing and that was that other players
eliminated a lot of players who were re
garded as inoro likely contenders for tho
championship than the victors And in the
case of the tlctors these In turn were beaten
so that when It came down to the semifinals
the only real contculer left was George
Hoffner, nnd Buxton had no great trouble
In beating him
Interesting Round
The morning round between Knight and
Buxton was ono of the best played rounds
ever seen In this city. Tho medal cards
showed how well both men were going. If
any ono other than Buxton or some one
who has had as much experience had gone
up against the martelous golf Knight put
up ho would have cracked, and Knight, in
stead of being two up would probably have
been six or set en up On several occasions
Buxton would play the holo In par figures
only to hate Knight sink a bird, yet the
tetcran refused to crack even at a time
when ho was four down and things were
going ngalust him
Yet In the afternoon the golf that Knight
displayed was worthy only of an eighteen
or twenty stroke man. Instead of losing
the six out of the first seven holes he
should hate lost them nil. Not once, with
the possible exception of the ninth hole, did
ho play golf worthy of his fine morning
round It was one of the most curious re
torsals ever seen on a Philadelphia course.
Buxton, on the other hand, played with the
skill of a master, and at all times was his
golf of a very fine order He showed last
year that he is the bes; golfer in the Phila
dolphla district and there is no reason this
year to change tho Judgment of last year
Ono fitting champion succeeds tho other
and both their names arc Buxton
in
ATLANTIC
LIGHT
ATLANTIC
W -
- .J
SEEM TO HAVE FINISHED
TY COBB'S CLOUTING RECORD IS
PEACHY ONE, BUT CAN'T COMPARE
WITH ONE MADE BY NAP LAJOI
While Hitting .400., Great Frenchman Went Bin?
gleless Twelve Straight Games Umpire Bait-j
, Tr, r-c4-1sr anrl "nnPStl't-, Gfit AnvtVlinrr
By GKANTLAND RICE
Alan Scegcr
American Member of the Foreign Legion Killed in Action July 4, 1916
Somewhere in France where crosses lean
Above so man praves today;
Where faded lilies place their screen,
And summer winds kneel down to pray;
You, who first ventured overseas,
To watch, at last, the light grow dim,
God must have sent his gentlest breeze
To bring your spirit back to Him.
Somewhere in France, dust unto dust,
You wait beyond the Inn of Life,
Where through lone nights the guarding crust
Shuts out the clamor of the strife;
But far above the crimson sod
No barrier your soul might stop,
When from the Great White Throne of God
You sec the Legion cross the top.
A year ago today you knew
The endless melody of song;
You saw that summer skies were blue
That drifting summer days were long;
You waited, while the twilight's breath
Came crooning some old serenade,
To hold itnur "rendezvous with Death
At some disputed
Today the Legion holds the line
Unbroken An the drivinn mass.
Where you have helped
in aripping oiooa i ncy anaii iwot fatal '
And now beyond the far divine
You sec the Starry Flag advance
Amonq the millions who have died
For love of Liberty and France.
The Eagle's wings at last are spread
Above a never-beaten shield,
Where still among the deathless dead (
Your specter haunts the clotted field; i
And borne afar on summer's breath I
You send this message hurtling through
" had a rendezvous with Death
tfi'rf not fail that rendezvous!" '
wJ,
'IIILC Ty Cobb has gone a ast number
of games without missing a hit. we
recall an even more astounding record
Some fifteen years ago, when Nap Lajole
was at his best, around 400, he went twelve
games without making a hit
At the end of the twelfth game Mons
Lajole was on the vergo of diving off some
high steeple, but he Anally pumped one
safely out and then resumed his old .400
stride
Argument Starting
It Is easy enough to open nn argument
And one of tho easiest ways we hate found
is to announce that Leonard will murder
Kllbane or In turn to suggest that K1I
bane will tear the heart out of Leonard.
Both boxers have their backers In co
pious quantities. For the fact remains that
so far as advance dopo Is concerned nu
two men wcro ever more evenly matched.
Both are chockful of cleverness, both are
fast and both can hit. Kilbane outclassed
Welsh almost as far as Leonard did, but
Benny produced tho K. O. which Johnny
failed to show.
A short bout between this pair will be
very close to a draw. At the best only a
hade will exist, and this shade may fall
either way.
You Answer It
Kicking at umpires has cost ball play
ers thousands of dollars In fines and in
numerable days of suspension upon the
bench when they were badly needed by
their club.
On the other pinion, how many decisions
have been changed by such protests?
Some one has advanced the argument
that military drill has put the needed morale
into the White Sox machine. If (this Is so,
the South Side around Chicago's way will
be bitterly against any form of peace for
the next ten years.
Buth Is suspended Then Pennock steps
Into Buth's place and pitches a shut-out for
a starter The only way to demoralize or
o&BioVn
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to write the sinn A
dismantle that Bed Sox array is to set ',
groups or ten or twelve at a haul. oth
wise It's a waste of time -j
"Jack C-urley wants $20,000 from Wi!
laru No wonder War hm nn I,.. t
atrocity compared to suggesting to a flitt?
er s manager that he work for a living j
EDDIE MAHAN TO PITCH
FOR MARINES' BALL TEAM
-
Former Havard Star Will Face dm
Church Nine in Game
Tomorrow
lumorrow ancrnoon the United suti
Jlarlno Corps baseball team will travel tt
Christ Church baseball park. Tenth ul
Butler streets, to meet the Christ Clmrd
team Eddie Mahan, the famous all-iroral
athlete from Harvard, and who Is tf.
tioned at League Island, will twirl for tin
marines. Artie Drew, the recent lUt
twiner ior .-vortneast High, will probatrl
""" " " "",u
.!
LOCAL SCRIBES INDORSE
THE NEW YORK CHAPTEK
Members of tho Philadelphia cAapurd
the Baseball Writers of America, at ij
clal meeting yesterday, adopted a resotoun
Indorsing the action taken by the New Tort
unapter in tne Aicuraw case. v
The newspapermen also went on rear!
as requesting President Tener, of the X
tlonal League, to call a meeting at th
earliest possible date for the purpOM t
giving xne case a run investigation.
The action taken by the Phlladdpli
writers follows that of the New Tot
members, who have requested that the K
Graw case bo reopened and that the nm
papermen whoso Integrity has been 5
tioned by the renudiatlon bv McGrawofft-
tcrvlew-s believed to be true In every dtUKB
be given a ncarlng. j
ATLANTIC
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