Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 August 1949 — Page 31
peturn from: trips for the
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the mother the home of-
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wo has made into various yrid, left New + trek July 18,
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—— SUNDAY, AUGUST 7, 1040
w i 0 “Fives, Ruce
DiMaggio, Rizzuto Hit
New IHSAA Board Convenes With Commissioners
fegve: 16 Men Stranded
2 Homers Apiece to
New York Blasts 6 RoundeTrinpers .
aki
~ Opponents” 3; Pa
ge Credited With Wi
NEW YORK, Aug. 6 (UP)—Six home runs, nl off by ninth-inning circuit clouts by Tommy Henrich and Joe}. DiMaggio, enabled the New York Yankees to overcome a five-run deficit and beat the St. Louis Browns, 9 to 8, today
before a frenzied ladies day crowd of 19,935.
Trailing 8 to 7 in the ninth, the Yankees tied the score
sigue
when Henrich walloped a
was DiMapgio’s. second homer of the game and his 10th of the year. Home runs by Paul Lehner, Sherman Lollar and Gerty Priddy, - helped. the. Browns . knock .outl. Allie Reynoids and build an 8 {8
The Yankees thén routed Chuck’
tory for the
homer off Joe Ostrowski, 7ahala Pitches second St. Louis hurler. CHff/ " Fannin relieved Ostrowski and 4 . . DiMaggio belted his first pitch nts to Viciory: into the\Jower lert-field stands, It |
Holds Cards to 6 Hits for 3-1 Win
ST.LOUIS. AUG... 6 AUP)! Adrian Zabala, Cuban southpaw, 3 advantage by the fourth frame. ....4 i; nis second straight vic-| New York Glants| Embree with two runs in the. jon 0 he turned back the St.) fifth on homers by Phil Rizzulo|y ois Cardinals with six hits to]
and DiMaggio. Two more Newio,, 34
~¥ork-Funs-came. jn the sixth when
Rizzuto connected for his second! successive homer with Gerry Cole-
“Pitching - his Second straight, victory since he was recently reinstated after jumping to man on base. Mexican ‘league, Zabala had the| Agciciand Larry. (Yogi). Berra had hom- Cardinals blanked. on. three hits
ered in the third inning for New pefore they finally broke York's third run. Fred Sanford scoreless spell with & run in the Vevay. and Shelly M. Caldwell Bluffton.
and screw-baller Ralph Buxton ej followed Reynolds to the mound C but southpaw . Joe Page, who
F Co losses although he wasn't around pater with five hits. one a ho 4 The Giants collected 11 hits, all itch Pitches IAC S th All- Sia 0 of st at the finish, It w , one mer, hurled the ninth inning, gained off Max Lanier, also recently re- i ce ou aws in ar n 08 as only his second homer in”
ghth inning. Zabala shut incinnati in his first start,
credit for the victory, his tenth.linstated,” who was making
St. Louis '
ABHO 0 Al 1: BEL =~ 1 Starters in" Junior Tilt Next Sunday 1 8 2 Pe it. 1 a i. % 8 8 3 8 1a ThosnntE ¥ Q Alpterinu.ct "3 0 al in ih Ends pops pair of local promising southpaw hurling upstarts, whese base3 3 . Schndns* 2 § 1 3 1 i El Ok Twin Bl a AE yt moeet prs povilfiegieos eatures o e annual un of ase es . rg imeem re ily dian hex 0-0 "18 8 r 310 gManonse 113 ¥~-Fitehr- rhe Rot VICLOFY FTI Hex SUKAaY. —— 00 i090 41 5 1Rice —-§-33 i Mallory vesterday accomplished A i000 31 1 3 Giaviano #211 4an almost unheard of feat in| Coach Pete Sprecher's Fairview Red Sox moundsman, Pon § 10 0 8 400 0 Klein | 0 ’ ¢ baseball. Harry pitched a no-hit, | Dixon, a Shortridge High School product. may face Coach Joe Martin.p lno-run game, {Davis’' Irvington Aces hurler, Ronnie-Wuensch, a Cathedral High 0000 i - ’ y rou BRE tals 37132731] Totals 36112710) Totals 31 62710) That of course has been done School sophomore. BLATE 37102512 Totals i ‘ { Klein flied out for Lanier in 8th ne out when winning run ored , , 100 101. G30 before; "but it was the second] Each of the: prepsters is undefeated in .league competition to Binder} ‘forced Coleman for Buxton in'St 000 000 010— 1 ame of a double-header Fitch date and Dixon is sure to see action with the Red Sox, one of the Stirnwelss ran for Lindell in 8th Ps, I ‘Schoendion Ockman, Irvin, XH. hag pitched And: he won the last year's three championship gt. Louis Lo 204 200 0008 Lockman, D. Ric don; Musial, Sacri:|OTSt one too. teams automatically given a ark 2 2 3
riddy, Rizzuto. Runs batted in| -8ie Lehner 4 Re ynolds ist. Her re. Priddy-2, Rizzuto 3. DiMal 2, Two-base hits Coleman, ¥ Peilagrin IM ur pa Lsbner, Lollar Reris, Priddy. |
SARE, bases. Lo uis 55: New York 6 Balloon Kevnolds 3. BE ki 1 ke 8
and 2 "Buxto Pag i ; defeat Phe Oilmen. The victorious dE has and 3'in 303: Fan- !Bucs Bow to Phils hurler seemed to get stronger as)
tched to one batt er)
Winning h 10. - BR: : Deve Frpsick ad une ” GE same— On Sisler’ S Single |was in any real danger. He struck 5 paid }
Attendance=19; b%%
games when he blanked the De-
troit Tigers with five hits today (Continued on n Page 32, Col. 6) front, Boughton Excavating split
as the Boston Red Sox won, 3 to] 0, for their seventh straight tri-| umph. Parnell’s performance - represented the seventh consecutive full-route stint by a Red Sox pitcher. It. also was the sophomore southpaw's fourth shutoat of the sgason and his 19th com-piete-game. : Dom DiMaggio collected two singles and ran his" consecutive] game-hitting streak to 33.. Detroit. Boston
X aM AR 2. Henrich Double’ Flo Priddy to Graham: He a Ram. bh
seventh start for the Red Birds anier wound up with his hire, BI
e hits—Rigney, Mize Stolen bases | sockman. Double - -plays—~Rigney to H.| § Thompson to Lafata
lk—Zabala 3 St
1. His and Juns-—Off : in Cer 0 a y pitched Dall: WH a . Jiicher Lante:
PITTSBURGH, Aug. 6 (UP)—on balls. . ; | he Philadelphia Phillies
—Bosor Zero Tigers, ==
apped a five-ganie [68ing streak
————
AMERICAN. Associknor,
Pct
BA lnpranaroLIs RY » so 80% 1 0 st. "Paul 46° 603 4 0 Milwaukee ....... ho 53 539 gg Minneapolis ...... 5 58 47 1 3 Columbus vers 34 60 4 13 § Lou asville. [oo MC 80 474 3 o Kansas City 53 61 4685 1° 1/Toledo a 73 360 ’ otals 11 92718 AMERICAN LEAGUE {or Berry in etghth w 1 Pet 000 000 000—0 New York 84 37 #34 100-001 01x—3 Clove! and 80 41 504 ephe Doerr, Zar- nsto 3 in 43 578 ave DI Prinessbis cairn DB AT Be rifice—Goeod man: | Detro dives BB 40 CR s to Berry Lo LipoficChicato. orev... 43. 50 4M 1 oft base—Detroit Washington +8 63 164
Louis 4 69 330
NATIONAL LEAGUE | w +1
Pet = Esl . > Mek Mrs dd rrp BR 38... 614. Gavan and Hur Time of game—1:54. | Brpokiyn ves 61 i 610 At ndance—23 526. . = New York ree 53 48 528
B
oston Tivneens 52 51 505%
shurgh 46 he 460
Cleveland Edged | nitneigh in reas 51.52 A95
ineinnati . 43 5 412
Again by A’ S, 2- 1 | Enicago ee 85 8
PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 6 (UP) «Artful Dick Fowler shut out] the Cleveland Indians for the} second straight time today as tite ss Philadelphia. Athletics evened the series here with a 2-0 victory before a. ladies’ day. crowd. of 26,782, of which. 12,297 paid.’ Bob lemon, a-i3-game winner, |
—suttéred--his..seventh. setback.
when Mike Guerra singled to left, | Fowler sacrificed and Wally| Moses grounded past Joe Gordon ith two out In the third inning, Another run crossed with two
(© ontinued on 1 on Page 32, Col. 8)
Probable Pitc Pitchers Today
(Won and Lost Records in Parentheses: AMERICAN LEAGUE Chicage (Gumpert 8-0 and Pierce 5-9 Washington Harris 2-8 and Caivert «12)~tlwo games
GAMES TODAY: ° AMERICAN "ASSOCIATION * (All Double-Headers) Kansas City at INDIANAPOLIS a :
Milwaukee af Toledo. - St, Paul at ColunrBus Minneapolis at Louisville,
AMERICAN LEAGUE All Double Headers) Blolouks ab NeW. LOL kos Detroit at Boston Cleveland at Philadelphia Chicago at Washington.
NATIONAL LEAGU} New York at St, Louis, Boston at Chicago -(2),
. Brookiyn at Cincinnati %
Philadelphia at Pitisbursh 2:
RESULTS YESTERDAY
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION (All Night Games) Kansas City 3, “INDIANAPOLIS 2
innings).
Cleveland (Benton - 3:3 and Wynn 8-3) Toledo 5, Milwauked 4.
"at Philadelphia (Coleman 5-10 and Bris ste 10-8) two games, Papal 2-5 and Gar k (Byrne 8-6 and Port
0, .BAMme: “Detr Hol teman , 8-8). at Boston McDermott LI TIONAL LEAGUE
two gaanes. . Philadelphia (Borowy 9-8 and Dohnelly' - Eran at bu Hh 2 Chambers $2 and - ast
tw ow york rung to 9 at St. Louis
ods gor 10-4) lyn ‘(Hatten 8-6 and Barney 5-41 .. Sindall _(Raffensbergef 11-11 and!
>
Bt. Paul 8 Columbus 7 Louisville 4," Minneapolis 2 . AMERICAN LEAGUR' New York 9. St. Louis 8, Boston 3, Detroit 0
= wl
if . NATIONAL LEAGUR Cincinnati 8. Brooklyn 2
.Philatelphia 4. Pittsburgh 3.
Chipago 10. Boston ‘4. x York 3, Bt. Louts 1,
* Sti Fours b Bat title in the Manufacturers league. Struck out--By Lanier |
Um - n Stewart and "con - Alon ae T5193 an. Time. wy 16.
n Dick Eisler delivered bases loaded in the sixth frame ra pinch single. in the ninth innihg that enabled Mallory 10-ioe: the
Yor a" 4 to 3 victory over “the game. while. Frank Baird, with| Darnell ) Pittsburgh Pirates. + /two hits in three times at bat and] 1
Until 3isler came off the bench Walt Fields’ circuit drive with| BOSTON. Aug: 8 (UP) tetty to supply the winning hit, every one on paved the way in the sec-| Mel Parnell became -the first-run had been driven in by homers, ©nd encounter, f major league pitcher to win 16 Andy. Seminick ‘clouted his 16th Other Results
- Cleveland i Chicago §, Washington. 5 (13 innings). |
the Newrmembers of the Board of Control of the IHSAA for the coming” school year convene with Conmisdones LV. Philips and | The Birds came from behind Jenin by Paul Hinrichs as the President R. B. Tonce to tie it up and had the ns threatended to pull the
nil (Second... cow): Hinshaw, H. C.. Benedict, |Dases filled in the ninth when Jeontest. out of the fire.
out
his
obert Hinshaw for a summer session to prepare for the 1949.50 school his| Miller; Hammond: Harry C. Wampler; Washington; Phillips; and -Oto--Albright,
Dixon, Wuensch Probable Mound
A ————————————— a ro —
By pitching the twin victories} Left Fitch gave his teammates the
Br He won the first game 7-6 and the second 5-0. ~Piteh-twiried-a-no-hit:~ne game in the second half ot the | “twin bill after he had gone all} the way in the first encounter to!
the game progressed and never go out three and gave three bases!
In..the first contest it. was Dee Compton's nome ‘run with the!
Elsewhere on the amateur
a twin-bill with the Allison Jets: +and Naval Ordnance. The Steel: men dropped the first contest, a 10-inning affair to Allison by..a "4 to 3 count but came back to down Naval Ordnance 11 to5 in the nightcap. In the first game Knute Dob-! kins stole home in the ninth to “tie the contest for Boughton and! send the game into extra in-| nings but Charles Rugh’s double
his eye on it. Keystone Avs, front. of a flashlight for a few seconds, give off a bright bluish light.
me route. ” ”
| He flub! it. He apparently for: ane of the owners,
i Then came me thy Martha Evans balls. wf
‘was next.
take a shot, it Jaoked easier. «| Drive, was first up Tuesday night.| “It’ ‘#-surprising,”
v
Wis
»t
berth on the two-way double- | header program slated Sunday. ° Wuensch All-Star Candidate Wuensch is one of the outstanding candidates for a berth on the All-Star squad which will oppose the Red Sox in the contest scheduled for 6 p. m. for boys under 15 years of age, - The other three tilts on the _
toe final attraction at 8 p. m. under the arcs for boys under 19.
“Wilk-be: 0 cents: Sg Dixon is a two Coach Sprecher, former Indianapolis Mapleton outfielder, “associated with Junior Baseball,.since its inception in 1943. That year Coach Sprecher took over a group of 12-year-olds, 12 of whom made the 16-player team for the Shortridge Blue Devils when the North Side school added baseball to its Rthletic program in 1947. Dixon Is S.H.S. Freshman Sprecher’'s current new crop of youngsters is now bidding for the 15-year-old title after winning the 13-year-old crown last summer
games.
-Hfired by Jack Rudd. Not bad in| hess. over ‘a par 27
course.
says Jim Rees, As- far as the owners can de“how few balls/ termine, their course is the only At least it'll be another excuse to got to turn on his flashlight’ to are lost each night. Last week we one in the country where night] add to the list for slipping awa B | find. out where the ball was. had 13 Rlayers- and lost only 10/golf is being played without the from the wife for an evening with y ¥
fosnam of Soodlights.
-
Ronnie Wuensch li asestad 7. Bich So ia OF Hasaix Putting Lint on Second.
tall and weighs 168 pounds. ‘Wueénsch lacks Dixon's physic all
kets for the four-game c wl SSdtuted. weighing only 128 pounds j Ee ei8Rd AtANAINE five; feet six inches, Mud Hens Beat
aS oF $0 ‘His only mound pss nl » ¢ league or tourney play last year) Brewers, 5.4 came in the semi-finals of the| ooi,EDO. O.. Aug. 6 (UP)
annual city series: when he 1ostiA home run by. Catcher BiH Mor-| ¢ to 3-to Rhodius in 10 innings. |darski.-and .two errors. by Mil. |Panished "by Umpire Hank Soar
Has 47 Strikeouts |waukee first baseman- Nic Etten|
He ‘has struck out 42 batters|in the sixth inning tonight.to en-| {a Jong argument before Lopez in seven games to date and is an lable the Mud Hens to .beat the BO e thumb.
ail-around player.
mound. ‘two more while Don Lund's long] Last night's game evened the The Junior Baseball card Sun-| fly plated the fourth rally: i [series at one apiece, ~ day is one of the features of that “gtarting “pitcher Bill Foti put] Lose 3 Big Chances’
group's baseball program designed down a Milwaukee threat in the with an unbeaten record in -11 10 provide for adult supervision seventh after Hank Moss’ double, . ’ and to purchase equipment for trad scored “Bill Conatser. Dixon, 14 years old when he en-jthe players.
| course. sia. Lat bases—Minnes He 34 14,8 In 0%, Muir 0 in %, Hinrichs 0 in ™ It might be the coming thing.|hill 4. Mecan 8, th out— narapl Winning -piteher—Burdetis. Lasing pitcher call J, Mu ts—0 ~—Queen, Umplres--Soar, Serafin, Hainien,
Sth he ys;
(Front row, left to right) are:
-
select card for Junior Baseball 8. In eight tilts last year. heii cad ¢ in #4 innings, Roman and was safe y y Hit by pitcher—By Haugstad| on ‘an error, with follow: First game at 1:30 p. m. Allowed only three runs while 3 gobt ylides” &connail Vinaae| Lint holding second. Don Gut. for boys under 13, second game at," R a tae Inches Haddix Hit Umpires—W. Wegiphs of Pad-|teridge ran for Kluttz. Ted Beard - 3:30 p. m. for boys under 17, and He stands six gon and King. Time—3:41. A} mance] [popped out but Cassini delivered
“ AB H O A AB H Q A 6». combined “With Bob Mathews’ }-rolied in Shortridge--as-a--fresh-i.~.One--hundred. Silty. . teams... Alpina zn 251-3 Alpisonsa sn 23.5.3 3:But- Dom Dallessandro looked: at - “a TE . > man last January. has never lost vided into 23 leagues; are playing auceinst 4 9 1 Sisrchan a ; { - (Continued on Page 82—Col. 5) Don Dixon a game to a team of boys his’ baseball here “this Vear. {Moss If ~~ 8 1 1 RAL: it a § Continued on y Page 33, Col. 3 74 i . — | Phillipa. 3b ¢ 1.1 JLupienis 4 319 0 : — ——————— mb — — —— i | Ett 3 211 1Lundlf 4130 ww « x =» in ’ aithne § 33 iliac {4 4 * Mamma Might Get Whacky’ If Hubby Pla S Night Golf ar {IEEE 111 Tribe Box Score Byrnes. 0 0 0 0 nC KANSAS CITY Triner,p 0000 n w Martin’ 06000 | ABER H O An illow Brook Has , Total, JAF Tote Tarkan: ferent 81 2 0 a yr Le or erry n \ sen 2 6B Blackout Game walked’ a I on «. | Delsing,. ef. .., 4 0 0 : 3 3 . By JIM HEYROCK “Martin rad” {8 "AGuoin , : ass me : : v 000 102 100 4. Collins, 1b ........8% 1 3 &® ‘ When hubby picks up his. golf Yoledo = 010 on 00x— 3! pn eschir 2 md 0 2 3 > ticks at a ang hengs Joe pated gaarel) Phillipe. garcia Wilson ........,., 0 0 0 8 0 0 ee door; mei ae + erry. Lun 88. Two-base MOGI = Houle, ys ivr Oy ogc : $ 5: Sony, —-Kntokersf 2 . 3 ls might be to look out the window. 3] Home rune Phillips: Modarek! Witek, 3b cerinicd 0 17 23 0 - 4 Di ¥ to 2% aS nothing but pitch dani Sactifice—Poul,_ Doubler piava-—Perty ol gepgowiis #1... 40.0 00 8 31 + ness er sec ond: ‘reaction might [ienchace Yo Mavis fo-Lupioth-Biakionasd | bupadelior sv wii 4-13-20 1 ve TS Ie B hospitar case ' {| Toledo 5. Base on Dalis—-01ff Perry 3 Madison, .p ........2 0 0 0 3 9 F - to? ruc ~BYy y 3, t ; G.B (est solid object. : Triner 1 itlte—Off Perry 8 in 1 athe, | Burdette, P sees 0 0:0 0-0" i Poti 8 in 8 innings, Triner 1 in I inning. | Hinrichs, p ....... 0..0..0-6-0 9 ; a “Bat you-can-retain-your-com-- - [Clerk 3 oh 3 jan ng: SNNBISE Bis oft tilimummin oi wimtbumsabtepetgin ’ ot] (4-8) osin c | . —- wg w— —— — 9 posure girls, because night golf Umpires—Klegg * Mul len, Tobin, Time Totals 333 8 3 8 |} 11 |is now being played in Indianap- 1:51. Attendance—935 . {wre 2 olis. Saw #t with my own eyes rt——— Wilson ran for Drescher in 9th, 12 olis. Sg y © Y§S. . INDIANAPOLIS 183 " » » = : : - 19%21° THE THREE owners. of the Colanels Win, 4 2 AB AR MH O- A B #2 willow Brook Golf Course, Jim LOUISVILLE, Aug. 6 (UP) o— Beard. rf 4.0 0 «0 0 | Rees, Joe Taylor and Chet Bock- {Louisville moved within half a Cassini. 2b ...8 1 8 3-0 1 |oski, conceived the night golf idea - |game of fourth place tonight as (Fernandes, 3b .....5 0 1 1 10 three weeks ago. Now, each Tues- they defeated Minneapolis 4 40 2. Fleming. ib : © 01 81 1.15 day night, as soon as it gets so Johnny McCall, who received | Dallessandro, i 5° 0 3 6 0 o dark you can't tell a six ‘iron credit for the victory, and Gordon Scala, cf $ 0.1 32 0 0 (fronr a four wood, a sizable crowd Muellér, combined pitching efforts Peters, ss /..........4- 0 1 3 3 0 |gropes its way to the tee and [to ‘hold thé Millers at bay while Lint FEET eee - | smacks golf balls into he black- {Johnny- Douglas and Jim Plersall Turner, © 4 0 1 8 32 0 | ness. accounted for the winners four! Queen p 1.9.0.0 0 a ~The regular weekly session was pailia. nw FE ei ups, Bsa 0.0.00 0 “weld last Puesday-and-12-goifers— | e Colonels br a 1- lutts a 0 5 0 0 played the back Yr of-the Wil- [the third on "PIEFSELS double to Gutter TE ; | center, which plated Ken Chap; hr low Brook course-in the dark. This is how it works: Several It was 9 p. m., dark, and flashli hts were turned on when: Times Photographer Bill Oates snapped |man and Tom Wright, | Totals wcicaniendl 3.2230 958 dozen golf balls are given a coat- this crowd of night golfers, just before they teed off on nine holes of night golf. Left to right are Minneapolly Lowisvile | Lint ran for Peters in 10th, ing of luminous paint. Each golf- pay| Coen, 850 N. Pennsylvania St.; Jim Rees, co-owngr-of Willow Brook; Henry Marer, 383% Guil. | (Mopeds "3 £ 1 }/Douglas.in "§ 310 3 Rltey ty on “= Bi) Muir in ioth,y» er carries a Sshiight-=to see ford Ave; Chet Bockoski, co-owner; Ruth Goodlet, 4334 Broadway; Logan Dobson, 4701 N. Key- | Rowellict ; 3.1 plidecdeine 1 1 { i | Sutewriate ran or. Kishta Jn Jo i [here oes going and also 10 ione Ave.; Martha Evans, 4544 Kingdley Drive; John Beck, 4539 Crittenden; Janet Nelson, 4604 | Workin ot 39 3-0 Beat 3-8-4 Heanarcion ei ol 2 [oang PE Crittenden; Richard Watson, 3903 N. Ridgeview Ave.; Amy Fidler, 4544 Kingsley Dr.; Paul Evans, irabimtn 16 $08 dhneton 2 § 38 3 mune batted in—Drescher, Cossini * : # ngs. a ¥! > | | --A CADDY stands on the green, - 4544 Kingsley Drive. Baronlip 3 } 8 dikobinson.ct 9 8 i | Workman 2. Two-base hits—Collins, Works . “ Bashiignt i hand 16 ast "a of the Kingsley Drive- address. But to make it even more diffi-i ACCORDING TO Rees, it's. best Brady 16 IR uellorp 1 0.8 a Pleasing Tareusiame.. hilatinlt 19 marker for the person teeing off.) a 1 “574100 Total 30 937 8 ¢ run—~{Cassinl. Stolen s-~Dallese When a player hits the ball, ev- Ste Sook a Sareiul ance dl cult, the course runs a blind par not to use the flashlight except) Jotats . 33 814 10 He ae on Sater andro. Workman, Sacrificos=Parnandes, erybody on the tee tries to keep fos ie of 4701 N. tourney on Tuesdays when- the for finding the flag on the greens. fence. oo out for Barnhill Madison, Queen, Workman, Burdette, Lefy
crowd is heavy. Best right score It's easier to see the shining balls {Minneapolis
The balls, after being held in went down the middle on . the on the course this year was a 33 without a lght, he says. If the night. gdif : grows, the owners intend to put in| Peariall, olen bases—Hod aver nine b rod
. lh
hitting above “po rumbled Tony Lupien’s;double-header this afternoon-and the .400 mark. He patrols the grounder and then threw wide to Lint and Bob Malloy are expected outer garden when not on the|the plate, allowing a run to score.| ito receive the home mound as-
In 3-2 Loss Despite 12 Hits In 10 Innings
“Mel Queen and Madison Go 9 Blank : By EDDIE ASH, Times Sports Editor The American Association race was tossed into an exact _|tie again last night as the Indians bowed to the Kansas City Blues in 10 innings and the Saints won in Columbus. : The score here was 3 to 2 as 7761 Victory Field fans watched their Tribesters lose despite the fact they stacked up 12 hits to puly eight for the Blues. . {~The Redskins got: one of more runners-on-base in-every St Pal ges "inning e except the third and _
fifth, but 16 of them were left
stranded 0 Um LIS 0 It was a scoreless contest until i ; y. the-ninth when both sides-scored : . one run. Mel Queen and Dave Saints Capture Third Madison waged a fancy mound . 2 v battle, atthough the Tatter was res nope Straight. of Series. ~HIROVOR- LD IHR ncn nm sn COLUMBUS, O., Aug. 6 (UP)| Then Queen finaily tired in the ts edged the eXtra inning and was solved for ~St. Paul's Saints edge -|two runs. He was releived by Joe Columbus Red Birds by an 8 to Tiyuir Tt was Queen's seventh dee margin to take their third straight feat. He has won sixteen games, game in a five game series here, Lou Burdette, who relieved Mad~ in Red Bird stadium tonight. hsor “wis “relieved himsere=fi the = {the game ended. Phil Haugstad.| Cassini Gets 5 Hits
{Saint's pitching ace, won his 16th] .y..1 Cassini. Tribe ., second {victory of the season against five sacker, was the night's nding
Jimmy. Romano, who won the! two seasons: {opening game of the series Friday, night, relieved Haugstad in theo
{ninth and put out the Columbus {Joe Collings | smacked -a__double ' Tire Tt wax “the seventh “loss ~0f jun the right field line after one ing. for HAL: out. and soored-on-Bii-Drescher'y-
as a Tribester, In the Kansas City ninth, after ueen had pitched four-hit ball,
"southpaw; ingle. : who was charged with the defeat.| 14 "tn, home ninth. Cassini | st Tau ? Combe a Ibelted his homer over the left | Pendletn.cf 4 3 3 9 Steiner2h 4 3 3 Jed wal and sent the game into 1 Re Lb EL LEU 10 sy Ncndelly Sineies +14 0Lans 321 4 Inthe tenth, Johnny Lucadello - $33 Ramps : 34 3/opened the Blues’ half by Betting 3 : 3 Gotan 3 1 1 sia single. Burdette sacrificed an | Best's 1a i|{Joe Muffoletto worked the tiring
Tat, +E Regi, 3 971 Cuter {OF 4 walk Hank Wark, rig) ry Por Logan 0 deep r center, la Zi, Stu. ous for Ramp in sh. |scoring Lucadello and Muffoletto, Columbus ......... 000 022 021-1 Queen was lifted and Muir fin. batted | 0'C nell. Hicks, Stam. «RES, Batt cia Sonpen. 1 hd lished out on the ‘Tribe rubber | Anderson. , Deal Two-base "hits—Ander- | without allowing the Blues ad- | ton: 0 Connell: Home ryn-—Deal. Stolen! 4itional runs. [Dates Pendleton. Addts. ton, Madison In th | Hicks. to Bel the-—home-—ten th, Russ- Pe Double. plays Schens 10 Hicks Sens” to ters led off with a single and 1o.|Royce Lint ran for him. Earl
Acosta to Steiner to Mad ef Bases on balls -Off Haddix § Deal ":| Turner was erased on a roller,
t on bases wo. Paul 11, LR
he!l2 Th 1 Tsing: Deal 1 in 2% Innings. | Clyde Kluttz batted for Muir
la. Abort. single. and Lint. scored. Fernandez Pops os Hinrichs was" brought - i “pitch to Nanny Fermariin il pegs popped to’ Lucadello: for the {game-ending out, Tribe Manager - Al Lopez was’
in the ninth after a third strike {sparked a four-run Toledo rally| Was called on Beard. There was
| Brewers 5 to 4. The teams are hooked: for A
{Mordarski's homer brought in|signments.
On three occasions last night, Indians left three men on Toate. In the sixth they had the
Milwaukee Toledo {sacks loaded with only one.out.
+ 319 000 o-2 on base—Kansas City 7, Indianapolis 16, Dousias, {Base on balls—Off Madison 5 Queen 1, Muir 1. Struck oul By Queen 4, Madison lei, Dou Burdette 1, Muir 1, Hite—Olf Madison Jennings, Rowell Sacrifices Cha - » in 8% innings, Burdett 511%
Errors~Hofman
popularity .
; TRoswess. ' Time — 2.80. Attendance «7781, [Pitchers Kansas City, Keegan and Hillery ° sr
-'s \
