Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 September 1949 — Page 21

“FRIDAY, SEPT. 2, 1040 ~~ __ THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES ___ : _ PAGE 21)

ra Joe Willioms Says—

Hint of Scandal |

Tribe's L

HEY KIDS

VISIT OUR

713d

ate Surge Fails To Scare Sa

” " > 7 * we $n tm Touches Tennis: Tigers folp . (Aiatic Clik Swimmers 12.82 in City Most No Change in Race v » . ed 7 ¢ Game Set Back 50 Years as Ww 3 D : y A | di ne R i t r ~ Ex-Champ Carries Opponent a. Yanks Boost Ss Indians egis 2 ; * * * st Fave We of a SoC eh Song Sh Sane atl Fifth Win in Row CTR or meses me rns coor nr un || 0Q0UE Lead —~; STATE FAIR, usly groo mea y. or : roe ihre ook ic Rl men ve three stands of Austin, Tex., 1035 national singles champion, was accused of | la ou I“ Redskins Now Tackle Old Nemesis, the = on —. This ‘sort of "thing, while morally shocking, is an accepted | Detroit Trips Boston Mud Hens; Johnson Shades Haddix, 3-2 ; w and stop et practice In the prize fight racket where the hustle for a quick TOLEDO, Sept. 2—The Indianapolis Redskins still are cruising the Machinery Soe kes no ? Sia] restraints. But In vnalwell this is one | To Give New York along. winning regularly and waiting for the league-leading St. ): re of sport no pretender, imposter or charlatan may ever aul Saints to stumble. ; " ] hope to enter, yoy : Full 3-Game Margin But’ apparently the Hoosier Indians are going to wait in vain. ' ; To give you the details. The feature match at Forest Hills NEW YORK, Sept. 2 (UP)-— They won their’ fifth straight in Columbus last night, 3 to 2, and 8th Yesterday ough Sogethes Allison oe oy Jamies Burchuso, who Every time the Yankees are chal- {the pA in st Paul, Founed the Milwaukee Brewers again. : a y known as Drop ot Burchard. |,.,c0q for the league lead they As of today, therefore, the Bitu-|,, =~" ost hits, both doubles. This is because he stresses the drop shot in tennis and because Rave held since opening day; ation remains the same. The In: Tea n agp Green Maro FACILITIES many of his well wishers seem to feel that he should. Allison and they |dians. still are three. and one-half t Bear a the first hit off Hade ; Burchard met in the third round of the senior singles. get help from unexpected |games behind—with no indica- fourth hy oF his 14th three-bage Allison went into the match the betting favorite as logically quarters. {tions that the Apostles are/dix. was is

he figured to be. After all, he's a former national champion |

whereas our man never got beyond the tennis advertisements in: | Sears Roebuck catalogue. } ’

threatened with a slump. |ger of the season. He scored on { |" The Saints have only 11 games a single by Fernandez.” The first [to play, the Indians 12; with the|nine Tribesters were retired in {regular - season closing Sept. 11. order, six on strikes, before |All clubs haye been eliminated Beard broke the spell. as pennant contenders except the) Kalin Starts Rally season-long rivals, St. Paul and| r=. winning seventh, Frank Indianapolis, Kalin singled and pulled up at Home on Labor Day |third on Dallesandro's double, Now the Indians must battle par Turner flied out, the runners their nemesis, the last-place To holding their bases. ledo Mud Hens. It's a three-game| y..." Conway received an ine series, the first at Swayne Field tentional pass, filling the bases. tonight, with single games to Don Gutteridge ran for Conway. follow tomorrow night and Sun-igil,"vltied” tor Johnson and day afternoon before the Tribe-| at out a roller, Kalin scoring. |sters return to Indianapolis onl a dix picked up the ball and |Labor Day for a twilight-night | 0 DR A Tow th. Arst ‘Was idouble-header with Columbus: |

Tottering after two straight! losses to the suddenly spunky! amt nin |Browns, they rallied their own| WHAT PROBABLY encouraged the sinister thought that forces yesterday for a 4-to-3 Allison carried our man is the fact that he entered the arena with | Victory in their season's finale at physical imperfections. He had a tennis elbow, Now to the |St. Louis. “At the same time they) innocent - bystander it might seem that the possession of a |Tecelved surprising but welcome tennis elbow would be helpful to a tennis player. On the contrary. |aid from the Detroit Tigers, who As our man explained: “It's just like having a terrible hang |Xnocked off the Boston Red Sox, nail” But to his credit he .concealed the true state of his |7 to ©. desperate condition and went boldly forward. “My inspiration is | nat the Yankees were menDiMaggio’s heel’ he murmered in a bellowing bass. tally and physically let down There may be some who, having read -his atch pieces, after the most recent run. of got the impression that our man approached. this challenge |DJuries which felled Tommy with a laughing heart and a frivolous mood. Nothing could be Henrich, newcomer Johnny. Mize farther from the truth. He overlooked no detail, as Walter Pate, and Catcher Charles Silvera, was| who captained the triumphant Davis Cup team in 1937, will tell 1opvious, It looked a3 if the Rod You......... “Walter, .I'm- going to--need -a- drink -before ‘I-go out Sox’ might yse.the_ adversity as there. Would you advise brandy?” |a stepping stone to their own ' $a. a 4". o J eal Art Hout h . PATE WAS horrified . . . “Worst thing in the world for you. | ut Spunky Art Houtteman, the Tike some spirits of ammonia. Not 8 stimulates - you you |never-quit kid who almost lost his sharpens your vision.” Our man snorted something, edged In life in that Lakeland, Fla. auto ingust, Delakly walked away, and Pate lost an old, dear friend. [T795h last =p Hing, Jw - Teed a n the way to the court Frank Shields, no longer a youngster : himself but sti J predatory notions of the Red Sox. iment 8 still a grand player and a grand fellow, stopped He blanked them on just seven

“Burchard, I've been reading your stuff for 20 years and {hits at Detroit while the Tigers

Tom Moran, Bob Loser nd Jim Maran front row, left to a i! Moran Land Charlie Ardery (back row, to right) will be representing the Indianapolis Athletic Clu y- 199 : high and wide. Dallessandro and Sunday in the City Championships at the Riviera pool. “1 ise IGE Fins have beeh ivi scored on the error but Gutters

Al i In 29 slasnés 1ho Nedsking Jbave| IF, » Bo A ott Hata AA Baseball Writers Name Roy Hartsfield: As Classiest League Freshman for 1949

Malloy is slated to pitchfor the andro home. Milwaukee Sécondsacker Will Get Tryout a

- The Birds' two runs, tallied in Tribe tonight: - | With no pressure to hold them | the fourth, developed from a back, the league's cellar dwellers| nit. a walk, an infield out a are hard to beat despite their|another hit, A running catch by {lowly position. They hit all kinds|Dallessandro -in the first inning

; . | {was the fielding of the game. this is the first time I ever suspected you knew anything about [oc © "1p ng & rousing 15. Next Season With Boston Braves lof pisutug. Sud if thicy get Sood I. waa Thdianapolis® 28th tennis.” Shields from now on will run as a dog house entry 12. Hits Off Parnell - pitching themselves, it's just | victory by a one-run margin this with Pate. * What's more, they made 12 of | By EDDIE ASH, Times Sports Editor |bad for opponents. on . \ 8 "ww |them' off lefty Mel Parnell, the! Roy Hartsfield, the Milwaukee Brewers Georgia Peach, agile Nine In Eleven |y ah I'S COOL IT WAS ‘OBVIOUS from the start that our man was taking Only 20-game winner in the Sécond sacker and double play artist, was named the “Outstanding By defeating the Red Birds in Tribe Box Score “lL Allison too lightly or else deliberately leading him on with the majors: this season, who went Freshman of 1949” by the voting members of American Association |Columbus last night, the Indians INDIANAPOLIS Montgomery idea of coming from behind in a burst of dramatics. This, truth |down to his seventh defeat. | Baseball Writers’ Chapter, it was announced today by league. head- |extended their surge to nine vic-| | ABR HEH O AB Clift to be known, is one of his weaknesses, A tendency to ham it up, | The loss put Boston three full quarters in Louisville. ral { [tories in their last 11 starts. | Beard. ot .. vis1.1.3.4 : iF HI Pretty soon, too, it became evident that the net was too high, 4 |§ames behind New York and| Tabbed fora a, Ag with the parent Boston Braves nex | That's red hot going in any Cassini 7 nd 8d ri ‘THE SET UP’ circumstance that was inimical to our man’s best efforts. Whether (five vital games behind in the 3800 this. 23-yeas.old xioki® = Gon .and in 108 games took part {league—any league, ‘that is, that JL ll." "TL 5 8 7 1 0 SET UP this was intrigue or just carelessness I would not care to say. lost column. Parnell had beaten |flelder outstripped such HEAVY 70 double Dlavs, After which he doesn't have a St. Paul In it. yan 1... ..... UT Another thing, the officials were flagrantly “prejudiced, loud |Detroit four straight times this| vote-pulling freshman stars a3 othed A ri Bam. . The series finale in Columbus Duessandro. cf ....3 1 3 3 8 0 and unmannerly, and while demonstrations on the part of spec- |Year and nine times in his two|Ray Dandridge, Minineapo : 50 P ht was between southpaws, Chet Turner c .......... : i. : : ' ° tators at tennis matches are always to be deplored, there are times |Di§ league seasons. But with Vic| infielder; Clem Labine, Bt. aul; Back in civilian life in 1946, Johnson, Indians, and Sanwa. ng say lS 5 0.0 : when such outbursts are justified. Wertz leading the hit parade with|ron man relief pitcher; Danny Hartsfield played part of the sea- Haddix, Red Birds. - dee crue 9: 9-8 8 2rd ir Just because Allison once won the national championship in (four singles, Parnell just didn‘t|0’Connell, the Saints’ young third son with Charleston in the South i | The Tribesters won on Mix hits) ehnses, s ......... 3° 0 0 1 0 0 . these same surroundings Is no reason why he should be coddled |Dave it on this occasion.. Oddly,|baseman; Jerry Scala, Indianapo-| Atlantic League and moved to the as the Birds were held four IIE. sco roosanrae-d- 0 1.000 v Y 300 by myopic old men with nostalgic hangovers. of Detroit's 15 hits and Boston’s|!!s’' fleet centerfielder; Archie WIil- other side of the keystone sack. Johnson stepped aside for a puch Main. © c..cooceines 0.06 01 o . * . = = 1 rw seven there wasn't an extra base Son, Kansas City fly chaser, and in 1947, his 86 double plays were hitter in the seventh, but received po = "aia Li te 6 AS THE MATCH progressed—if that's the word—our man got {DIow in the game [Bob Mavis, Toledo's brilliant sec-iight: atthe top In’ the South B credit for the triumph. FOTTest| wits yadied for Johnson in seventh. ir 54. RL 004s down to cases, a position in which he is always at home, and pro- Lefty Tommy Byrne, who ond baseman. TAtiantie. ' Main finished out the Tribe| Gutteridge ran for Conway in seventh. ulette Goddard ceeded to produce the quality of tennis of which he is capable. needed relief help from Joe Page, The AA Freshman Award. Moving to Dallas in the Texas. .§ mound toll, ,. COLUMBUS . VENGEANCE” This, oddly, caused a large number of the spectators to grow quite [Scored his 12th victory for the Which includes a ne Savings | League in Joa, Ye engaged i 92 is a Johnson gave up three hits and BH QA: Auticer Tutier lll and one of them, Lawrence Baker, president of the club, cov- |Yankees. Roy Sievers and Stan|Bond, has Deen wor In Iie past bid Joubie Plays, . oul Slender Roy Hartsfield . . . writers’ |two runs in six innings, Main no 5N3 8 3% CK BEAL" ered his eyes frantically and was heard to mumble, “Good Lord, Spence tapped him -for homers, Jerry Witte, Toido, [O46 FIVE agtast EnievepSit, EEHIRE oo + |runs and onehit in three. Haddix alo 3 0 0° ti BE this will set tennis back 50 years.” : {while Hank Bauer hit a two-run Dark Hwan — a Sie cig B ' |got out of the game in the seventh rh aire ICES ‘at 8:38 Nevertheless, our man who, by now, was giving his all—with |homer for New York in the sev. Rosen, Kansas a Ys a [Pa West Fulton High EchosL ID; = : “\for a pinch hitter and Cotton|Lans. 3 3 + 1 3 3 no. takers—presently found himself leading four games to one in |enth to provide the final winning Beard, i 8 yas 8 Close! AL hk Fulton X a a " Indians at Bat ; Deal worked the rest="of the eo 2313 30 the second set and just as everybody was thrilling to a marvelous margin. ruaseAup te asl ow Fear. Ga to a ix Fa Ey 3 oN a ab RK RBI sb Pet.idistance for Columbus. ; 928 3° Piofiands dnd getting ready for a tremendous upset, a knowing, | Cleveland won its 17th straight > i, 105 Te On Ste bon rg an in r.| Fleming... Li 6 103 2 3, M8 °° gwe In Seventh 3 3 2 r 3 oving and yet commanding voice floated out on the soft Septem- |extra-inning contest by defeatin, weighs aIns tarred in Amer-ig.,, aon 4 : Notisin ..ooeeeenses ST. Th. 00 ber air. P the Philadelphia Athletics, 2 to g feet 9 inches Sud bats Rgithang- fean Legion Junior baseball top| Citsndre 18 8 mia 1 an| THE Tutiasis {5llley one Tun a Bienen © 9 ST 00 sther Williams “Now's the time to drop dead.” lin 11 innings last night. Larry ed. He is married and has one rough American Association Rernandes ...555 99 176 "123 13 .317 rh 8 DE i Ean n 'S DAUGHTER ” child, daughter Edna Karol. games of Aug. 31, Roy collected Kalin ........ 38 48 111 7 2 .310|the seven sters got two! Totals ............ Whe would now our man better than Mrs. Burchard? |Doby singled home Thurman|™. "vy iwaukee ace spent 25/187 hits for an average of .322,(CMsini ......480 19 14 6 14 .30/more, enough to win In the tight! Natisin fanned for Haddix in seventh. N ACTION FROM - ~ | Tucker with the deciding run. : 4 es h! He batt 76 age ad scored |O"s:«::-- HTT 43 20 1 geno, ¢ INDIANAPOLIS ....con.oos 000 100 200-3 Us HITS! ° Bob Lemon checked the A's on months in service, 12 of which He batted in runs and scored |g, ,,, “"'"" 6 11 3 13 0 am Tadd Columbus: . ines 000 200 000-3 THE BEST" arker evives Old Net six hits for his 17th triumph. were overseas. He made his pro|116. Twenty-four of his hits were g.,rq ...384 102 108 36 2: 28 Thirteen Indians were erased; Runs batted jn—Pernandes, Klutts. Pus< . . » : | The-St. Louis Cardinals widened debut as a shortstop in 1943 with doubles, eight were triples and 10 Weatherly ... 42 8 11 9 0 262 by the strikeout foute, nine times seiman 2. Two'base hits—Dallessandro om c Hii i e ra | their National L lead Atlanta of the Southern Assocta: were homers. He-stole 12 bases. Turner ......380. 41.1543 0.260 by Haddix, four by Deal. John- Pusseiman _Three-base hii—Beard Leth : . Feud With Stur ess Toda { : eagye Jead 10 1W0 = a BT ~————— |Conway 500 72 130 68 4 358 gon fanned five and Main three. [0% Duses—Indiamapolts 5. e yen - mimi) Y Basis by heating the Phillies, ¢ - Betta arti 41 1s § ‘Sai Nanny Fernandez and Clyde Dass on ball Of Sanssan 3 Xx nag 3 : . . . : [to 0, while Broo on spit a day-| by || C utteridge .,. : “1. Btrikeouts—By 4 rectory Match Shapes Up as First Classic One night twin bill with Cincinnati. | asenaq aienaaqr Two-base hite—Pernanges 33 Fleming Blt poe Lhittes, Jagied In Sudiiastix & Beal € Hite_O8 Juhpsen 3 tn

+ o mrp CAL 7 g/15 Scala 11. Turner §, Klutts 8 Ganss 7. v ; | South STANDINGS Boston ...s........ 000 000 000— 0 F Bl. ty Tot erides 8 Dellessandro o.(by E : 9-8), Losing pitcher—Heddix (13-12), Al FOREST HILLS, N. Y., Sept. 2 (UP)—Frankie Parker of Los pis 17th trian money parr AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Pachell,' Masiérson. and» Tevbetts; | Weatherly 3, Auanary NY. 4003, datndie got two of | UTPire—Moore. Scania and Jackowskl. Crib ion Angeles renewed an old feud today with stylish Eric Sturgess of the Phils to fi mo . ding ) i hi Ty G.B:Houtteman and A. Robinson, LoSinF) . Three-bass hits. — Beard 14. Turner ¥: Dom Dallessandro_got Wo Of tine Li _Attsndanotcilt Atiendan : ia 2 Epa South Africa in a ‘third-round duel that shaped up as the first classic | t t Ye - The Cards APOLIS # FR 3° 5: Barnet ¥: sininge) Scala 7, Fernandes 6. Conway 6. Kalin 3./ , f ven @ 1911 W. Meret tch of the 1949 U. 8. t : | Bot to Ken Heintzelman for a run eo... §1 331 11% phuadeiphia .... 000 000 001 00— 1 § g Cassini 3. Peters 3. Gutteridge 3. Gans. < o : er ATT match of the J. 8. tennis championships. {in the first frame on three singles otk 8 3% da v | Cleveland ...-.. 010 000 000 01— 3 8 0 Klutts, Weatherly, Fleming. gg RF They had met five times before and Parker, the little mechanical and added th . a POE ve 7 461 | Scheib and Guerra; Lemon and Hegsl.,| Meme runs—PFernandes 19, Conway 13 ; HD SRONTIER man who twice won war-time national titles, holds a one-match edge jn Fo oy ree unearned tallies Glumbus ~....... Rf 3 8 8h ion 090 900 900 9 4 ‘ 3 Kalin 12, Turner 11, Fleming 11, Beard 5. ew di - eee in th ies. Both hi ; ji Pa da Ci Tv eR AR EY SY } c Sie. pe Ganss 4. Cassini 3. Gutteridge 3. Scala 2. { 2 EL, 57% W. Wak BE Nt S atnats Gonzales, seeded second to! - Brooklyn won its day game, AMERICAN LEAGUE Welk Gopaales and BATYS, Byens: Oum- Peters 3. Dallesandro. sy rdind “ BE-2828 er Er Where, [11 to 8, bit th a Dhed | re ype pao) Wz DEEL and. Malone. Losing _pitcher—Weik. ] : { Brian Donlevy Sturgess excels to such a degree Schroeder, led the upper bracket 5 DU e Reds snapped York YY TH Ta Se ———— = Pitching ] | RY TF " he rolled clear to the finals of the Quartet into the quarter-finals by the Dodgers’ five-game winning|Basion «°° moa 8 3 NATIONAL LEAGUE WL wu ; morrow From 17:48 nationals last year before Dick defeating Jim Brink of Seattle in streak with a 4 to 3 win in 10(Beuoit BOB 3 8 cmcinnan LT OA YT en » - 3 Joh 32 : : WITH A Cartoon Circus! T on impressive fashion, 6-4, 6-4, 6-4..1nnings in ths finale. Four Dodg-| ladeiphia ef 80 sam 12 Folia ooo 00 000 Me=it 3 | Queen 0 “BiEhOUR 75s 1} : rev . Gonzales of Los Angeles stopped '™P 3-4, 6-4, . . dg-| Kp adelok 830 tls a BROKE anovicitat0l SOLA 1 chines .... 4 KUDger .,..... 3 4 ’ { SIDE By {Saturday he'll meet Larsen, victor ©T'S Were required to quell a Red Ra chouls i .8 i ue ten. Erskine, Palica, Minner and Cam- Main .. 9 6Malloy ........ 41 LEON S HAND TAILORED UIT a In, he wi tha : over John Bromwich of Australia, UPTiSing in the ninth inning of © >" "¢ rien {Panella Winhing pitcher Erskine. | Muir 8 RIRIdAIe ~....... 12 J r 2203 ' 0 the winner this time goes a, ."» 0 co a 4 6 4 the opener. Dixie Howell’ NATIONAL LEAGUE CCI Game, 18 8) ol el oF 1) Sirs COOL berth in the upper bracket quar- 3-8, 7-9, 6-2, 6-4, 6-4. i Xie Howell's tripie “Uw Lo Pee OBIBrookiva ll. 100 020 000 0 3 '8 ° Fight R | : . —Burt Lancaster terfinals alongside Gonzales, Mulloy gained his spot by down- and Ted Kluszewski’'s double gave st. rous .:...... 70 48 623. —— Wehmeier “and Howel:: Roe. Barney. V1Q t Results AYE... andl they're Fg ‘RLACK EAGLE" Gardnar Mulloy of Coral Gables, 08 tiny Felicissimo Ampon of the Cincy the verdict in the second Bios ne i 3 i | macten Fayed Sod Compuueliy. ie) aw FORK. (Guegatare Srenal_ins i : x Ea 118 Prospect PARTS Fla., and 22-year-old Art Iarsen Philippines, 6-3, 6-2, 6-0, and will Same. : | Bi adelohi a Ph Chicaso ~.......... 130 130 ore— 8 13 3B Rygseno, Tae pm gn POPULAR PRICED 100} Paine COOLL- “of ‘Ban FrAntIsco, who made it oct the Sturgess-Parker winner.| The Braves made it 12 wins in pituburer 011: 31 8° 4 i) ade, “Laoiiard.* Agking ind Schelling: sohnny Brienbruck, eh Brooks. Richard Deunfor ~~ sil aT I8CO, Who mude it Sonresier a Sifaight opie Saris Wits. an sw 4 triumphs ail... -$i%|goana and _Balkeld, Losing . pite ita | gene Salisbury, 149 North sz | A ~t— SJ nadian Pacific” Coleg over Via r Cernik of Czecho-| . was victory LLSHUTER .....evee 004 001 000— § oN “ADA Mass. Billy Graham. |] ay RR tr mere tcf = wis other Pippy handed by slovakia, 8-6, 6-3, 6-2, was a strong |17 for lefty Warren Spahn who GAMES TODAY Neg, Fork Chesnes. pm iid oper. 18. New York (16, 8." Joie ! A good, well filling Loon Hand Tallored 1531.8. Ean 8, mbledon Champion Ted, .i4'ty dispose of survived one bad AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Dickson and McCullough. Masi; Behrman. | ae. : MA-3252 Schroeder of La Crescenta, Cal, .>'o" te 10 dispose of Sam Mateh, inning, { (All Night Games) Hansen, Higbe and Westrum, Winning as sult costs no more than an factory GEL IN EXILE" i who ousted Gianni Cucelll of The Giants won their fourth TANAPOLIS at Toledo. {tcher— n. J | Additional Sports “made garment. ln fact Mf costs less be PIAN AGENT 35g flies seeded loreigpen battle Ttaly, 6-0, 7-5, 6-1. Moylan earned Straight, topping the Pirates, 9§| Louisville st iClubus: Philadelphia 800 000 960— 8 { COU o oo 0 ei’ n »s i 1 a { : $ \ . Pa ‘3 A < | .. J {1 SI bracket pl ne Shey 9, eagmast by delen fo 5 Auney aakhod it ita al Kansas City at Minneapolis. ang Lega oi Heintzeiman, Simmons Pages 22, 23 = A - f , 3-8, | > nning in which TY — ee ———— —;

Of U. S. Tennis Championships Phils in 3th Place

Other Matches |14-12, 6-1, 6-1.- Sedgman downed |Bill Rigney hit a two-run homer. | Schroeder tangled with Sam the veteran Frank Shields of New Ralph Kiner got his 38th homer Match of Los Angeles, Eddie Moy- York, 6-1, 11-9, 6-3. , {of the season and the fifth primi lan of Trenton, NJ. drew" yourg| “Talbert Has Troubles islam blow of “his career: “tying!

AMERICAN LEAGUE Chicago at Detroit : Philadelphia at Boston ‘(night (Only games scheduled.)

| 24. Cassini 31, Kalin 18, Conway 17. Beard

nson

the third scored on a wild throw Deal 0 in 3. Winning

“Patricia Neal a] Ease was favored to oust an all time Pirate record set in| "AT Nias Games rss tes oriainens ai fis " albert o y esselam, who had his troubles the early '30's by George Gran-| Erookisn at New Wor st : ‘ a REL ER | nh Cle re J] YOU SR MORE 0% IL "SAL" > : . » Va, winning | es | . ORE | . co played the always rugged 12-10, 6-4, 1-6, 2-6, 6-2, Talbert . ¢ RESULTS YESTERDAY ’ oat LN-Lw Czech, Jaroslay Drobny. {routed Arnold Saul -of.Los An- Major League Leaders AMERICAN ASSOCIATION . » YOUR MONEY S-ALLEY. .- —————————————eiiiry | 50105, B&, B-4, 6-3... oh By United Press Kansas City ©... 007.000 002— 913 of . hn EE ——— SHOTGUNS & RIFLES |. Five American women, headed NATIONAL LEACH oto met 31 8 I An Fabries - {by defending champion Margaret | Gbinson. _Bilvn.. 132 801 1 1 Pil and Brady ' - i So J 7 «22 Rifles . .. . $12.95 up |Osborne du Pont of Wilmington, [Musial &t Lguis. i i i 3 {Mitnaukes Sn we a—-3a 3 LL agg [ Styling Prawning Belguim duiemais 108.80 {Del,, and Louise Brough of Bev-{ pomson, ¥ Y.... 1 o 4 37 remy Triner - and Burris; Bahr and [AY w in T ing 1814 |erly Hills, Cal., reached the quar- AMERICAN LE nderson. nen Sooty, 2 rimm ies Superposed Over and Under. |terfinals. Beverly Baker of Santa wie ‘ -Boston.. 8 AT X pet rod ! 100 000 ont 001 3 R 3 w I T llorin rauletie Goddard Made in Belgium $219.00 Monica, Cal, Doris Hart of] ell * Betrolt ie 1% iis 8 183 | “iervert. March, Butland, Sloat and / n a g ” 13 ahd 0 GB. ........ Miami and Barbara Scofield of 416. Boston | i i { Ginsberg: Palm, Mueller and W. Robin- 2 VENGEANCE Stevens Binele me ..... $18.98 | san Francisco ‘all got in. iiehell” dev’. 14Y 584 8 | i Xl In Fitting , Audrey Totter Iver Johnson Single | Miss Brough, Wimbledon cham- Ru Runs Batted In .. | AMERICAN LEAGUE 7% =" CK BEAL" au PAITe, Shetruns — $21.45 |pion, met Miss Baker and Miss! Ulm" Gon 8 Wikiume, & 80x 8 ew Yom jo Rum—-11 Leon's Is a practical faller shop m Mat.—1:30-4.00 ing Shotguns $22.95 | Hart played Miss Scofield today | Mostal* cards % Rovinson Dod... 1 Byrne. Page and Silvera; Kennedy, nol a factory or a branch store. TLE i Alushes 410-Ga. Bolt Action Re- $20 55 to fill in the upper bracket semi- Gordon, Glants.. 25 Riner Pirates... of Papal and Moss, Lollar. Winning pitcher, You can 300 your clothes actually artoons and Fun! pleiiiss shoisunn le Shot v finals. ; Ji Bin being made. You con be sure of mn ———— yin e, $1.98 | Mrs. Du Pont had a scare from getting fhe personal Inforest of Collate at 19th Daisy Red Ryder 1000-Shet G4 gf | plucky Betty Rosenquest of South! |. Loon fhe Taller in seeing you are. all of the Vigilantes™ gobi IY |Orange, N. J., who had a 2-0 lead | completely satisfied. 000L! we BLUE POINT AUTO |on the champion in the third set rn t 1268 SUPPLY [but couldn’t keep going. Mrs. Du - ~Tyrone ower Ie er n & Ray Sts, [Pont ran out the match, 4-8, 6-2, RATLKITEOR corey Delaware, Matis y Sta Jo : Tallor Shop Clothes

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