Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 September 1949 — Page 13

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MONDAY, SEPT. 12 1949 THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES name on = z PAGE 13

Tribe Yields Pennant To Saints By Margin of Half Gone}

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| Yanks Begin ‘Tremendous Soar Keeps Yankees On Top {Clash With - == | To Polish Pol TR Millersin z= | For Pennant | = AA Playoffs

ng, gathered .

6 attack the » New York who attacked id busses, ine oung woman 1d severed. e conduct of es of Sept. 5 )00 policemen ile the hostile -goers. None rrested. h resulted in ‘ame to hear tors to Hyde on, Violence, Communists, ety of all the

h St. ice Friday, I s and Georgia [llinois-Butler vaiting, I de Jnion Station ng up traffic, et where the

, the operator

r immediately vn and there ould secure a ening to the

oximately 10 letters of the ler people and acks in order halted by the | the so-called

vere drowned pet car to the \ssed by the r, as well as gave me an ton St., where 9. brags of the its operators t- some of the ong that the picture?

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are orized by the ve spent cone stop watch— ems faced by solution is so ‘hy the Public not thought

Pair ‘and Can Now

Coast for Title NEW YORK, Sept. 12 (UP)—

The magic number was 15 for the New York Yankees today, and; translated into third grade) arithmetic, that means they can| polish up the center field flagpole for their 16th pennant in 28 years. Three full games In front with but 19 to play, any- combination| of 15 Yankee victories or Boston] Red Sox defeats will” settle the| issue. It means the Yankees can play| bad ball—their worst of the sea-| son and still win, It means that,| allowing for the worst, the Yankees can drop more than half of their games and still make Boston win two out of every three of their remaining 15 to gain even a tie, If New York wins only nine games and loses 10, then in ordér

even to tie Boston will have to

win 10-out of 15 or 11 out of 15 to take it all.

Others Look Worse

Hopeless as the Red Sox case may be, things look even worse for the other so-called contenders. Detroit, which took over third place from Cleveland yesterday has 14 games left and would have to win 12 of them to overtake the Yankees at a nine out of 19 pace. Cleveland, with 17 to go, would have to win 13 of them to tie such a Yankee mark. The Bombers, who have never been out of first place since opening day, made their position_considerably more secure yesterday when they won two weird games, 20 to 5-and 2 to 1, from the mis: erable last place Senators while Boston was dropping 6 tp 4 and 4 to 0 heartbreakers to the Athletics. In the first game the Yankees put on a 12-run third inning in which they broke a major league record by drawing 11 walks, They got but four hits in.the melee, one

~0on a collision between Outfielder,

Ed Stewart and Shortstop Sam Dente which incapacitated both plavers. The Athletics combined home runs and good pitching to deliver their two crushers against the Red Sox. Sam Chapman and Pete Suder hit homer# to give Joe Coleman the runs he needed for the opening victory, and as Carl| Scheib” pitched a two-hit second

String of Injuries Left Team Undaunted, Says DiMaggio

League Leaders Go Out Every Day To Show Themselves They Can Win

(Copyright 1949 " New York World-Telegram Corp.) By JOE DI MAGGIO

NEW YORK, Sept. 12—I have been asked to write

the story of the Yankees in their dpe by-day fight for the

pennant. First, let me tell what kind'of team I will write about. The Yankees are a club with tremendous spirit.. { want to make that strong, because there was a point where we might have been discouraged. It may have been close. Something wonderful happened. We didn't crack. That is the secret of our season. It ties in with our injury list, which you know about. I think

. this club had more injuries than all other Yankee clubs I played with —put gether:

THE FIRST lew injuries didn’t bother us That could happen to anyone. When it kept on, and we saw other clubs having better luck, it got in our minds. We began to think about injuries. That could have had-a bad reaction. We could have worried ourselves out of the race. z We didn’t. The turning point came about a month ago. Maybe we had so many hospital cases we just forgot the whole thing. I don’t know how it happened, but you could see the tension was off, from the way we acted. We began to say that no matter who was hurt there would be somebody there to take his place.

8.8 8 8 BE THAT'S THE way it worked. Everybody took his turn. Of

course it is Joe Page's turn every day. He did it again yesterday. |

He is phenomenal. But the guys on the bench went up to get a hit, too. I don’t have to go down the list. But don't forget Tommy

Byrne. When your aces are knocked off, you can’t hope for |

much. When our aces were knocked off, Byrne picked it up several times. He helped when we couldn't expect help. There is always a man ready. Yesterday we had to win the

Oilers Still Unbeaten

Champs Will Tangle With Milwaukee In Best of Seven

(Continued From Page One)

right down to the final game of the regular schedule before bows ing out of the pennant picture. The Tribesters swept yesterday's doubleheader from the Toledo Mud Hens at Victory Field before [15,390 fans, largest crowd of the | Season. | The scores were 2 to 1 and s (to 4. As the Indians launched play jon the last day they were but one-half game. behind league{leading St. Paul. : -

But the Saints also swept a

oo

Thi CEE

Tribe Box ‘Scores

{twin bill at Milwaukee and ane {nexed the title by four. percents

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LS — Ye * on Cassini, Firrandes alk ists press noch: Moreover, the last-place Hens

{age points, that one-half game (Firat, Dame) the Indians couldn't make. up. a ot AB R,H.D.A %. But the. Tribesters made a gal(Kasha ane 0 0 4 1 9lant fini¥h. They won eight of Puna: rf i © & 3 § Other last nine starts and seven Lape db... 3 1 3% on a row, Sunday night a week Barnacle. 3b 3.0 1 3 4 3ago, the Indians were six games 3 cern 1 1 1 2 0 Stuart. © ........ 3 0 0 1 2 obehind « Totals 3 1 4 3« » 2 They split the Labor Day INDIANAPOLIS SA doubleheader with Columbus, wine | Beard. rf 3 0 0 5 o oning the first, losing the second. asain, 2 % $1 73 1 3 Then on Tuesday night, the | Elen, 0 3 8 1 $ 2 8 Redskins opened up and displayed alin If i 0 0 3 0 o.some fight. Although their Rett e 4 8 5» 3 5 {chances looked hopeless, they een, D ....erirnn 3 0 0 3 o okept winning as the Saints Jotals...........38 3 3 2 4 0 stumbled and kept losing. Tolsd0aroris 980 30 oto The Apostles lost six straight Run

batted in—Fleming 32, Lerchan, before saving themselves at the

Two-base hits Barnacle, Mayo

bases—Beard, Lerchen. Left on bases—To. last minute in iedo 5. Andianapolis 5 Base on Balls — > ute Milwaukee on the

Stua R002, Suruck out=By Soon final afternoon of the campaign. Fi fame PRessens "Soa LJmpires—| It was the second time in the

Beton Gemmth {history of the American Associa TOLEDO tion that the race lasted until the RH O A E yery last game.

. 5 Hens Haunt Indians Haunting the Indians, however,

Mordaraki 8 was the three straight games lost $orona 3 in Toledo on Sept. 2, 3 and 4 just Ginsberg before coming home to complete

Gg » 28! RII de iy ®

Tot 33 4 10 18 » 1 their schedule: Ginsoers ‘filed out ‘for March in seventh. The lowly Mud Hens were IANAPOLIS AB R H 0 A E rough on the Redskins all season,

Sane : s especially in the Toledo park, Eien i { {where Indianapolis was defeated alin, 1t . .. ...... 3 J |seven times in 11 tilts. |Baliciana HSH ees } In games with the Hens at VieKlutz, 8 iiveraninss.d J tory Field, the Indians won eight gi P+ tixseen $0940) ) and dropped three. In 22 games wriszein % 6 12 “3 between the clubs, Indianapolis

7 ? os hu won 12 and lost 10.

ts—Fernandes. Peters still were tough to beat here yes-

se Hordaraig. Knicker a Three-bas Mavi Hom

o run Fernandes, ht hia | terday. The Tribesters won on renen’ mieming. plays apse "io Mavis to only three hits in the first game

Soran od BE "Trdanansti Hy en. Sent o on and on seven in the nightcap. To-

Bettenhausen Sets © Eg preh 6." Strick out t= By March ledo got four in the first encoun ning he er—Lin mpires game shutout, Chapman and Ed-| , Berafin. Time ter and 10 in the second.

A endanee 15 300 Tops at Turnstiles

The Indians compiled a 1949 3 ” indians at Bat {home attendance of 414,967. Last d ew [aC ar (Final) year, as pennant winners, it was AB R H RBISB Pct. 494,547. The Tribesters led the DETROIT, Sept... 12. (UP) Daliesaandre a ll4,13 30 19 342. league at the turnstiles both

a 302 47 103. 40 1 Tony Betténtutisen celebrated his rome ns bi FEneS record a at Rothe was ar

ses, and trole die Joost provided the home runs. important second game. It meant five up on the losing side with | ° * and that the Detroit, putting on a gallant, ©nly 19 to go. Fred Sanford did it. He gave us that lift we In ( ity Baseball Series nces equal to but probably futile stretch drive, needed with Bre scoreless innings. . o the Indian- took over third place by beating Eliminate Atkins-Saints, 7 to 6;

nating all the the White Sox, 1 to 0, at Chicago de a fair re for its 10th straight vietory and, Meet DeWolf News Next. Saturday. . Ry JIM HEYROCK ee

Tents “of “the ~~ UT Its 18H TH THE THE 20 Singlek by : . Hoot Evers, Connie Berry, and

THAT 1s the kind of help we had since we stopped worrying. That 8 the kind of ball club I'will write about. =. We are in good. position. and it: is nice to hear we wilt win:

But that's a guess. I think we can win. But I got tobe shown =~ ~~ By JIM HEYROCK ~~ ~~ “HAS HRHAHEAEEEE SEIERT GREE SRST Fleming... 338° 1°15 MM

1 4 3 14 birthday Se P des ... 599 107 187: when did the Boh Swift in the ninth gave Vir- we ‘can win. ’ . Capitol Oil today loomed as the favorite to win the City Series 33d birthday _nniversary today Fernan “a Coats. 51 Is 12 3 in games won, 30 lost. On the road e Indianapoli gil Trucks the run he Save { That's the way we all feel. We do not believe it is in the bag. of the Indianapolis Amateur Baseball Association. ’ by cashing a check, his first cassint ...... 52¢ 86 157 61 14 .300 it was 46 won and 31 lost. The oe “publia his 17th win, a three.hitter | There is no cockiness on this team. There is no slacking. The Oilers, under the leadership of veteran play-for-fun pilot piace winnings in Detroit's first (amie... 148 18 44°30 1 29 Indians played a full complement , - . , ta 4 : RQ: - : X eatherly ..., . ; The Browns knocked the once- We go out every day to show ourselves we can win. Luke Allison, yesterday edged out the Atkins Saints, 7 to 6 at y40.,.00 AAA automobile race in pera. ‘a3 18 i ? 219 of games, 154. St. Paul fell one

~

(This is the first of a dally series written exclusively for Riverside Park. 7

y i i i conde Pet eee. 176 22 «1 30 ‘267/8hort. The Saints had a lateProud a Shamplon Trg The Indianapolis Times.) The deciding game will be played next Saturday when the Oilers ne arly wo fiesaes, Bal Turner vo.... 308 48 81 50 : pr season postponement with Min- : : A 8 Jettenhausen, driving a Bdl- |¢ a. i ’ A them, 5 to 4, with a four-run out- meet: DeWols News. The Newsies Franklin, Ind., Merchants, 11-0 g hn. nie. . jit expolis Uiat couldnt be played

in I drew a bye in yesterday's round y ® lenger Special with -a ~Super- Gutteridge ... 112 37-28 1 250 - Tribe fans poured into Victory [ty nae Pom °F ~ oday' S Baseball Calendar of the double nn affair. at Franklin. Sacks’ hurler Glen charged midget . motor, rewrote Klutz ~.. 19 11. 32 M4 0 M8 ’ ¥ Ss 0 : au

Field early yesterday and stayed = ine Vad r Two-base hits—Fernandes - 35, . Flemi thd Lehner also hit a Brownie homer, LEAGUE STANDINGS Capitol Oil is the only undefeated Clayton allowed one hit and the record books yesterday as'he ,, ° = H 22, Kalin 18. pat 1, mn late, many waiting around to hear

on her linens

» social world. (Second Game)

8 speeded to victory in the Motor as they ended a seven-game los- AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Eats . 30 0" 100 1— 1m 3 1 2 team in the series, struck out 14. Spee 30 Yictory In ihe 3 Orr 17. Scala 12. Turner 11. Dallessandro 8 the retugns of the Saints’ second ing streak (Season Ended) ochim. Haddix and oe Habe- There is a possibility DeWolf Capito O11 * Atkine- Sits: City's first spee ass Peters 8. Kiuttz 8, Ganss 7, Gutteridge 6, game in Milwaukee. The Cream an exposition gs . WoL Pet GB Aion in. Hage McCall and Scherbartn Newstheourd dump the Oilers Pooley AB 4 9A AB H OA'1933. .* Weatherly 2 City does not have fast time. ; : oole 21 Ww og 0 43 3 sw Park Three-b — , . : net his match. 3 Homers for Musial fipiifarous 3d 8 (Pies Game Saturday. 1 this should happen. iil. § | | Pe The Tinley Park Ill rer Fernantes 5 cones s. Cony | It Was'a standing roqm only o Relentless as ever, the Cardi- Jinneapolls it Baa i I is 03 J 90— 2 3 3 another game will be played to ooreif § 3 4 30 4 0 averaged 81.25 miles per. 1 pe Kain 4. Peters 4 Gutteridge 3, Fleming CTOWd. In the twin bill opener, after being nals again went 1!3 games in: Columbus 8 us Toenes and Yelenl: Groth and Drescher determine the 1949 city champion. Lelleriy § 210 p 10359 Over the one-mile gn oo nd 2. Kluttz, Ganss, Weatherly. Mel Queen was matched up with And science front of the Dodgers in the Na- Toledo Ms Ale By (mie Called End of Ah. Darkness) Paul O'Connell was the Oilers’ Emidvrt 391% : I 9 9 0 break the previous Fairg go Home Runs—Fernandez 21, Fleming 14. Marlin Stuart. The Indians got i . , g eee Minneapolis 100 100 00 Males.p 0 0 0 0 Buercierif 4 2-2 0 record of 77.8 mph set by AY | Kalin 13, Conway 13, Turner 12. Beard their only runs in the third when t 1-1 r by defeatin 1 h ks of nature, ional ‘League race b) 8 AMERICAN LEAGUE Kansas City 010 001 00— 2 3 1 fireman yesterday and pulled the F¥SRR., 3 § 0 $3505" 14 0 3 y ‘ 5. Ganss 4 Cassini 3. Gutteridge 3 the Reds, 7 to 5 and 7 to 4. Ston NenE¥ on & L Pet GB. Sims and’ Yelen: Henrichs and Folles. .winfiers out of a hole. O'Connell icke p 2 1 0 1 Keech in 102 a Y Webb of Da Pere sar Dallotecdry 2.1 two errors and a wild pitch were 0 5 - ate —e qs (81 ap - . r be here agal Musial had three homers for the Boson 84, 85 804 3 AMERICAN LEAGUE entered the game in the first, Totals 40112710 Tots 2 621 1 Travis DN 0 pn Ay Weatherly followed by a long single by Les "the fire this day-32 for .the season. Oneitifl., na ge (Fini Game) frame with-the bases Jonded With], J, Reis graimded wut tor Memel 8 HO, or Tovatrs drives wile MY opening wi Flaming: blanked the Hens until y I 7 1 1e inois , - came in the Openers in nien Chicago 3 8 1 1 Phlladeiphis ? 300 Lox — 4 i 0 Saints. Gaplil Saints : 197 500 000—6 ron Fohr of Milwaukee finished Lint 14 3 Muir 9 8 the ‘eighth when a double, an inJay Hr or — Washington “98 oN Goleman” and r Hushaop and Teowetts Five runs had come in and there "yw; 2. OConnelt Lollar third a lap behind the leaders. Queen B, houn : + field out and a single accounted Howie Pollet, coasting a ong, were two_outs. O'Connell retired [x le. Menrie ns Poole. Williams. 3 Detroiter Ralph Pratt was fourth. Hutchings 4’ 2/ Klinger 3 ‘ for One Marter. - Then Queen diye . his 19th game in the nightcap NATIONAL LEAGUE (Second Game) the Saints without further dam- MGR, Mass I 2 nell Britcn SA Main 9 7 Riddle 12 2 y t J Staley picked up his W L Pet GB ton 000 000 000 19 2 0 Runs batted . 1 Lolla Parsons Injured Johnson un 9 Malloy 4+ 9 posed of the visitors in order in lossa v OE or - 2p po Brooklyn 5 2 8 A adeiohly chson nd Batt a heb Sag 28¢ and held the Saints to four Smith, Deve 2 1 2 1 ase hit Fifth place went to Lee Wal- eer een the ninth - ie t opener, rooklyn son a atts. Sc o Hn , S Lead th pla 4 1 . i Be Res Postly vic- New gore ® a Boa i * Astroth. Losing pitcher, 8tobb safeties over the remainder of the | Pritchard 1 D Nila Fools ard of Schenectady, N. Y. Jim All- Stars, Pendleton, [Lint hooked up with Ed March * f Be . - route. t ses Cap on Ly thy 2 ivi ; i 3 dase on balls Off Male avies, Los Angeles, driving a six- in the seven-inning nightcap and ory from the Giants, 10 to 5, for Bion "UH m2 : (First Game) At 1 Ott Males Pavit 2 Jory eighth decision in nine Cineinhat 3 8 io i" Nashungten . 000 000 0 9 1 He helped win his own game op y i O'Connell wheel car, was sixth; Bill‘Holland, Battle to 6-6 Tie goose-egged the Hens for six : > s 4 ow 2) 203 21x--2 in y Annin Me 4 Rucke > eo ing pv . > is a g i i f Presi games, but they lost the services Chicaso oy. 3 388 ih) Ci Ivert. Welter ot 1 307 33a ine the ninth with -a single. With one’ Ton 2 in 4 t by } By Males Reading Pa seventh; Walt The Indianapolis All - Btars innings, At the same time the Y hE o ests 0 , ; INTERNATIONAL ) arly. Reynolds. ‘Shea and Berra, Siivera. out, O'Connell moved to second |fiiicha 0 ¢ tes Brown, Massapenua, N. Y., eighth; came from behind yesterday aft- Indians were in a scoring mood. to his cronies of shortstop Peewee Reese for at : ) NAL LEAGUE inning pitcher. Reynolds Losing pitcher , | seicer W Merce re . i 5 ; | coring 1 eck, Reese suffered con- (Final Standings) Calvert on Eddie Poole’s single and scored (fin. er 0 Néal Carter, De*roit, ninth, and ernoon to tie the Pendleton Re In the sixth, Jack Cassini batted 0 dismiss his a : WERE ro break in his left Buffalo w L Ret GB. (Second Game) on a single by Kenny Williams. It er “Rickelhau nor. time . Duke Dinsmore, Dayton, 10th, formatory football squad 6-6 at in Lint on a long fly, Ted Beard 8 Ss, aK, § iho s 1 v : ~ n a ” » : Late * ’ elbow when hit by a pitched ball. Severs City B81 30 4 Iwanngtont © MM pe pie), Was the deciding run. Fall Cree Hicks Bods Co L crowd of 21.183 saw Betten- Pendleton. singled and Nanny Fernandez lowed White A six-run rally in the seventh was Montreal comme uz aa NIRS fg pane: 8al30, 20x Pade And. Two hits, two walks, fwo hit 5, 2,8 § 2.4, A004 hausen grab the lead after the * Supposedly a breather game be- blasted a homer over the left field: : featured by Carl Furillo's grand, vracnte Coe W313, Berra. Winning pitcher. Sanford batsmen “and three errors gave gndsong 3 1 2 ¥ 7 1°10 37th lap and keep it until the end. fore the Stars’ conference open- wall, It was his 21st of the sea pected to fire Ee a gh Carl Erskine won Baitimore » 83 i 108 37 "I Cleveland 001 011 100— 4-14 } the Atkins-Saints their five runs Cookecf 5<1 0 9 B Dix 0 0 Webb, who led from the fifth to er in Cincinnati mext Sunday. son. } . ate investiga- $ism over, strat ht game in a * —_— 3a se Louis 10,004 00x 3 12 1 in the first stanza. en ee 21 2 saint 18 1:0 the 47th lap. threatened late in the. Reformatory eleven scored Lint weakened in the seventh has been un. is en 8 '" GAMES TODAY" | Winnin, Fannin, "Ferrick. Papa and is Sacks Used Cars finished their $land : $1 : 0. & Dito =8'% § the race but dropped behind some- in the middle of the first quarter and final round as the Mud Hens tne Heraiig hn "Phils 1s0 closing with a AMERICAN LEAGUE | Bentony Pitcher. Fannin. “Losing” pitcher season yesterday by trouncing the Mooren 41 i 1 Ja ? 4 { what when forced to slow.down on a three-yard plunge at the rallied. Two singles, a triple a ings seem of 1 . The a ed Ee ABird. |- «Yo sames scheduled J NE ee oouiyor ; , co “M 1 0 0 2 to pick up a pair of goggles. end of a 53-yard sustained drive. double and an error gave them usn, § Se——t— 2 J

place position with 3-to-1 and- 6- No fais NATIONAL LEAGUE Johnny Parsons, Van Nuys, Noel Good, quarterback, sal- four runs.

3 I“ 300 000 000 Tali Vo % 21 : l ( 1 Tota 3 E13 power to Yricks and swits: Wikht and Wheeler * Major League Leaders he TY cal

he for] eeeemereta—. Fall Creek 000 100 400-5 Cal, was slightly injured when vaged a tie for the Stars by Forrest Main relieved Lint and e bartering of to-3 victories over “the on RESULTS YESTERDAY NATIONAL LEAGUE By United Press Hicks Body 103 " his Kurtis-Kraft Special skidded sneaking over the goal line in the was smacked - for one «hit, a county courts raves 4 Boston. Ten ts AMERICAN ASSOCIATION ontiseiah (First Game) NATIONAL LEAGUE on a turn and crashed into a last three minutes of play after double. He got the next two - ? eintzelman pitche - . 2 adelphia ... 001 W—-78 G” AB. R , ‘bankme halls, to win his 17th game in the open- St ubnul 902" 100 100 210— 6 1 3 Boston 000— 0 Robinson, Brooklyn 140 839 109 dirt embankment, driving “his team 46 yards in six swingers, - however, to end the

Tavlor, Bahr “and An

eintzelman and. Lopata: Voisetie fall Blaushter, 8 LL 134 408 85 er and Russ Meyer won No. 13 yuviffe, Trier Hae ndenen mae " and" Enaaten Lompeiicher.” Voiselle. Muh 19 e)

George Connor, veteran Los plays in the last quarter. !|game and’ regular season.

econd yiia 8 A 124 432 1% . Angeles driver, was forced from — - (Se } | ) in the afterpiece. at Thea] cond Gam os 1 Bhiladeiphia 004 4 420 go 000— 6 S $143 2! Yoana: N ¥ 139 580° 89 “ the race by a broken spring in the f maneuvers so Ralph Kiner ran his homer Milwaukee Bahr and 1% 900 8 1 13] ls simmons ‘and Lo ik rd AMERICAN LEAGUE ‘ 78t Iap % Conpoc y ¥ } il arrett and Salkel w G. AB. § ; 2 = prouse the frit ton io 48 by Bitling (wo more, Triner. Studener, Grate, Fox, AFiin and | pitcher, Meyer. Losin osing ¢ pitcher. Bickford" wi liams. B Boston 140 1 138 Dinsmore set a new record for res 8 eac Ey a. \ : 12% 307 t y single lap when his time for one . , (First Game) | Dillinger Bt 122 484 61 ng I ] SONS f the mansion Pittsburgh ended a five-game los- Columbas (First 00500 olo- 1 la. on 001 100 Be - 1 3 3 DiMaggio, Boston 130 544 118 mile was clocked. at 38.5 seconds. i vw TING ghan has set ing streak with a 7-to-3 victory Loli ille 0 000 10; in nha Stale Bred, 5 Mitchell. Cle " 132 544 69 ~ He led for the first five laps, then g petitions of over the Cubs at Chicago. Yad allude — Rapp; RR | Ra fi na, Peter and Bo Rice! Kiner.' Pirates pe Funs Cardinals 32 ¥8me 2145 REA dropped behind to finish 10th, na rs —————————— I I is - “. Ine 4 Cooper. pinning pitcher, Staley. Los- Willams. R837 Sauer, Cubs 21 CITY SERIES STANDINGS — - tephens, “ar se ever would Tg Dt : (Fecand camo r %. J Additional Sports. (Called E uns Batted In Capitol Oil ) @ 0 nvolving trips ls uls ne of ah, Darkness) 10 1 Stephens, RS 148 Robinson. Dodg. 113 De olf Naws ' “Ian yroblems w ol 4 9 1 Williams.. RS 144 Kiner, Pirates 108 “Atkins. Saints ‘ : Page 14 company, New [wel Hot te. A Be v Berkowekl, Black- Wertz. Tigers 129 SElim inated , an ell ne «Osing pitcher, Perkowski

| Chicago - Pike ursh om HH 2%- RHR

000.120 2: T7111 ns, Muncrief and Sch and Masi Mure pitcher, RE Dickasn |

——

WANT A GOVERNMENT JOB? Vd BBE “MEN — WOMEN

ghan's opera. ervice Bureau = fruit baskets ward fashion,

Banta rskine and CampaWin Dioher. Zavala piteher, Erskine Losing

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Start As High As $3,351.00 a Year | teet u Inches yesterday to finish | Prepare Immediately in Your Own Home | secon. n a local sports meet, ® 6 4 0 0.0 oo The crowd roared its approval. THOUSANDS OF PERMANENT APPOINT. What's so good about a 5-11) MENTS NOW BEING MADE . FRANKLIN INSTITUTE

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ich an offense ards of moral the Washing-

One-Legged Jump

HAMBURG, Germany, Sept. 12! | (UP)=Dr. Manfred Loos of Ham- | to alten Ha | burg made a high jump of five oncept of the But he is not

over Vaughan earth-shaking

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