Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 October 1949 — Page 14
PAGE 14 —_ : THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
- Muir To Shoot For Second Win Over
TUESDAY, OCT. 4, 1848
. Joe Williams Says— Roya Is Brooks Never
i i
Joe Given Coveted "Just to Help Settle (?) the Squabble
Assignment in First | Series Tilt at Home ¢
Indians and Montreal Resume Title Play
Here Tomorrow; Errors Beat Queen, 3-1 § By BILL V.GGERT, Times Sports Writer EN ROUTE WITH THE INDIANS, Oct. 4—The In-|
dianapolis Indians were speeding toward home today still) the favorite to capture the bunting in the 1949 Little World! Series after dropping a 3 to 1 decision at Montreal last night | before 9956 fans. i The loss was the Tribe's first in the three-game series;
. . : that ended there and resumes: Little Series Standings |(omorrow night at Victory (Best of Seven) Field ! W L Pet. . { INDPLS. (Amn. Assn.) 2 1 .667, It's a best-of-seven match. Montreal (Int. Lg)... 1 2 .388 With no intent of alibing, In/dianapolis could have won last ‘night with erroriess ball. The box score fails to tell the game's). !story—with only three hits off the | Tribe's veteran Mel Queen in six , {innings and none off Chet John- ’. son in two frames, Score 3 Runs | That was all the hitting the, Royals did but they scored three] runs on two hits and two errors| in the fifth frame to charge Mel Queen with his third post-season | playoff loss and his 12th for the {over-all season against 25 tri-| {umphs. i As the two clubs resume play {at Indianapolis tomorrow, Man-| ager Al Lopez will start with (southpaw Joe Muir and come ‘back the following night with {Royce Lint, another lefty, { : Montreal Manager Clay Hopper § probably will go with Clarence Y : ’ # |Podbielan or Johnny Van Cuyk It appears in this Acme Telephoto that not all of Notre Dame Coach Frank Leahy's men kept For Kermit Wahl (above), gig | their hands on their chests while blocking against the Washington Huskies last Saturday. Irish FullMontreal Royals' third sacker, Add to Woes | back Emil Sitko (left) puts a block (?) on Husky End Chuck Olsen (right) during the game, as Irish #1} be like coming home when | Good lefthanded pitching has) Guard Paul Burns comes up from the rear.
the Canadian team invades Vie- Thurs Mudtreal all deason and! s = = s 8 =» x x = Field tomorrow. Wahl [pot A oe Satur Ale ' : HH HP for ld tomerrem: uma Loa vou snwrany wd sn: Leghy's Charges Against Officials Stir sity baseballer. The Royals wrapped up last
mens sane ne sen wo Up Storm of Indignation on Coast
George Schmees drawing one of
ind ————
sm ol nr “ 2 PRE > thas ; > §
' ; Queen's four bases on balls, . {series between Notre Dame and : Roeky Bridges lined a single to Newspapermen Express Amazement at il avai OF he 3he ou centerfield an y rd, in! ion: i | pute. be a an attempt to scoop up the ball Accusation; Some Say T ay Were Lenient P “Even ' many Notre Dame
By United Press 3 ne bum, ot Sse nai cies! Officials of the Pacific Coast Conference and West Coast from first base. {newspapermen today expressed amazement and indignation over { charges by Coach Frank Leahy of Notre Dame that the officlating _ Lifts High Fly {in last Saturday's Irish-Washington game was “incompetent and Catcher Maurice Atwell then| prejudiced.” lifted a high fly t6 short left! Leahy made the charges after his team drew 11 penalties centerfield. Frank Kalin lost the totalling 135 yards in beating the jerended the officials as “‘extremeball in the lights and Bridges University of Washington, 27 to 7, ly competent” and “if anything,
alumni and solid supporters who were so proud of their team's brilliance were embarrassed at the famous coach's attitude,” Brougham wrote. “It was all so unnecessary.” Another who criticized Leahy’s outburst was Ron Bloom, Spokane, Wash., Chronicle spor writer, |at Seattle. Eight of the penalties 0 jont toward Notre Dame.” {who wrote that the pone in Pitcher Dan Bankhead, who Were for major infractions—il-| «coach Frank Leahy should coach's charges “left a bad taste was not his usually wild self for legal use of the hands, clipping consider himself fortunate that in the mouths of many who saw Montreal, laid down a sacrifice holding and unsportsmanlike con- pis team was ‘hot called four or the whole thing.” attempt that bounced over Nanny duct. five times for unnecessary rough-! An anonymous University of Fernandez's glove for an error,| Victor O. Schmidt, commis- ness in addition to the eight! Washington regent declared last and Al Gionfriddo brought Atwell sioner of the Pacific Coast Con- major penalties that certainly night the Huskies would never home with long fly to Beard. |ference, defended the four offi- were calied right,” Hollingbery play Notre Dame on the gridiron The Indians’ lone run in the cials who worked the game as said. again. fifth came after Jack Cassini|'the best and most experienced Hollingbery had written in his was safe on an error, credited to|in the west.”
Sam Jothroe (above) will be | ent after a pop fly in front of urday and therefore I am unable that Notre Dame had 3 played the of football we saw turday,” the man to watch on the base home plate, Cassini stole second to discuss intelligently all occur- game against “15 men — the!the regent said. 5 y
ths fomorrow night when the land dashed home on Fleming's rences there,” Schmidt said. “But Washington team and four. offiontreal Royals invade Victory Li single to right. {I can say that we appointed four cials.” gion had praised the Refuses to Comment Field for the fourth game of Issues One Walk {of our best and most experienced officials for their handling of the washington, refused to comment the Little World Series. Jeth- | After. Queen was lifted for a Oficials whose integrity is above game. ‘on the controversy. The officials roe, Royals’ centerfielder, is the [pinch hitter in the seventh Chet|duestion.” | He reported: linvolved were forbidden to comspeed merchant of the club. Johnson went to the Tribe mound | List of Officials i “qt Too Many Penaliey Irish 'ment by Pacific Coast Conference be * & = and retired six of the next seven, The officials who worked the! Secms-10-10e that the Irish jules: Tribe Box Score
batters, issuing one walk. ame were Thomas D. Wilson .nVOKe too many penalties for| Ai gouth Bend, Leahy said he The Indians threatened in the! Eollege of the: Pacific, Tee. Such a high-class team. It isn't 1
referee; o+ all necessary for them to play
INDIANAPOLIS ninth. Kalin drew a walk. Jack fell obliged 10 Jean Sut In 4 : alk, Jack : s is ” ARM 0 a XConway fanned, Clyde Kiutta|y lo ne Go", Sean fert: WE (ootball that causes them to 108 yu" cam iy penalized 135 yards, Beard, of oo 3 0 0 3 0 ilbanged out his second hit ana Pre W. H. Frazier, Gonzaga. ., mych yardage. They are cap- as we mors. ol 9 yaros, Cassint. 3b «4 1 1 2 3 Spmurner, batting for Joh nit |Inesman, and Elwood T. 8tar- gh1e of winning without penal- as we were, 311 the. people In the Fernandes. B ..... $09 3 0 1 A hy f onan, hui buck, Chicago, field judge. es.” B pe stadium will think it was an illeIB sane » , -| S. " Weatherly Miaienns 4 0 3 1 otkilling pulled by Montreal. | Leahy charged immediately| pgllingbery, annual coach of gal unethical and dirty team. Kalin, Mt 38 9 3 8 o As the two clubs, officials and After the game that the officials the West team in the traditional ,, .' © hidn't play any differently Conway, 8 , 4 0 0 1 4 0gports writers travel to Hoosier- all tried their best to even UDP mast-West All-Star Shrine game than we ever played,” he added, E-3 ‘3 2 3 1 1 Sand in five coaches, it is in-{that football game” and stormed at San Francisco New Year's but if 1 didn't speak up the peoBelt... 1 8 8 6 4 oteresting to note that Fernandez that “none of the four will everipay, said the Notre Dame iine- P'® ho SaW Loe “game would Johnson. » . 'e 8 ® o o oand Montreal's Bobby Morgan, Oficiate another game for Notre men repeatedly used extended ink we were ditry.” | Lint .,.... .® 8 0 0 & 0both most valuable players in Dame as long as I am associated fore-arms in their blocking. | Leahy also deemed “slightly irTurner 1 o 0 0 Opa leagues this year, have with the school.” |" “When you lift that arm” he regular the fact that the officials Totals % 1 3 a » 3falied to get a hit in the first) He sald later at South Bend, said, “you are breaking the rules, [yeued MOON Plotutes of the
iRiia this ' 1948 Notre-Dame Washington Bell lined out for Queen in seventh. {three games. Fern Ww! Ind., that he would accept Cor-iand if you're caught you should : a Lint ran for Klutts in ninth, | was i) last Baden by i bus, “but the other three, I'be penalized. Frank (Leahy) 8ame on ihe Morning of last SatsoTuraer bit into double pay for John-|yyoh cold, has gone hitless in WOUIdN't Want any part of them.” should look closer after the line Ray's contest, | ; . 4 | | Orin (Babe) Hollingbery, for- fundamentals on ~ffense.” i I never heard of it before,” he
MONTREAL {11 trips while Morgan has be hey Raab RO AS rrr ot 10 a en merly one of the West Coast's, Royal Brougham. sports editor S&id- “If you take the officials Jethroe, ef ......... 30 8 4 0 ®hay vet to notch a hit ' "leading coaches who wrote a of the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, nto @ room and show a moving Staniviada, 2 pit 41:18 oy NN | guest column on the game for the criticized Leahy for “griping” and Picture and point things out. it’s Comparison 3 8 3 § 3 4 TRIBE NOTES: Johnny Hutch- (Seattle Post-Intelligencer, aiso/foresaw an end to the football BiiNd, 10. influence thelr judg: WABL 3b .\ iicesks 2 0 o 1 1 tilings as usual lifted some of the g Tn ' TL . r Z . t all very much Schmees, rf .......4 3-1 606 1 0 0 gloom from the Canadiens in K-Y D 4 t + Ol ha ! 1 regret I a Ts Brides. ® une] 1 303 3 Montreal. The Big - Humphrey % erear o e ISS LeRUY: S014, ye Bever=wade Bankhead, » ....... 2 0 » 0 1 oclowned in the bullpen and dur- B HM ° CIRHT ki i : : : g before, but I felt I had to es 3 5 keene wing ore on: BOOSHS It to Head of the Liskin. we oh INDIANAPOLIS ...... . 400 00 | Rt tect the reputation of Notre Montreal “00 03 sox_s|D88e. Several Montreal writers By PAUL WILLIAMSON P
Dame.”
Runs baited In—Atwell Gionlriddo, Delleve Hutch to be funnier than The Williamson system, like dozens of other amateur and Fleming. Two-base hits—Weatherly, Cas- Al Schacht because his comedy professional systems of forecasting college football results, suffered i. Swi Yasts-—-Oliogteiddo. Jud. is extemporaneous..- : {several upsets last Saturday. head. Double plays—Morsan, Bridges ana] L-25t Dight's gate figures were: But sliding Tnto first place this week in the team ratings is KenConnors 3. Left on bases—Indianapolls 8, Attendance, 9956; net receipts, tucky. It is in the No. 1 spot by virtue of its startling 47 to 0 defeat Monfreal 8. Base on balls—Queen 4.!316,440.49; commissioner's. share 'of “Ole Miss,” a good team In any leggue. Jobnaon 1, Bankhead 4. Strikeouts— $2466.07; each club's share, #8 = . In second place is Army, for
Queen 4 Johnson 1, Bankhead 6, Hits | : , Off Queen 3 in § innings, Johnson 0 in 2 $2053.08; players’ share, $9864.30 Bes} Se. overwhelming Penn State, 42 to
‘Kentucky
87 . Losing pltcher—Queen. Umpires—Ryan | AN€ three-day totals are: Atten-jarmv : 98 8 Tennessee dis 7. Next comes Texas,- because Padden, Donatelli, Moore, Time-3:10. dance, 37,508; net receipts, $60,- {txt bo ~~ fd lowa © $11 Texas beat Idaho 58 to 7. MichAttendance—9958, 450.58; commisisoner’s share, Oilahoma 33.0 Houston 0. 8:3 gan is fourth, The Wolverines are 2 ” = =» {$9067.58; each club's share|Michizan St. 978 Alaoams 86.9 either good again or Stanford is - Indians at Bat |$7556.32; players’ share, $36,270.36. 2%, Sh 48 dake rorest 30% greener than it was supposed to i ’ v v 3 Qu 5 (PLAYOFF AND LITTLE WORLD SEES) |; Players’ shares uly ih the frst) Sita "ov $83 Saris Sara fe3/NAve been. R H RBISB Per | OUr Bames’ receipts. eir slice] Arkansas 98.8 Colsate 83 The upsets over the past weekDallewssndro ...31 5 8 1 @ .ai|MAY amount to $46,000 with win-| Birch 304i diate $0'end that gave the system it ip 13 28 ii e Inning club players getting 60 per Foire Dame 30% oar, SU BY headaches: were SMU Missouri; MF 5x iuvee 5 13 « © .olcent. UCLA 938 Winton 53 A cro pi ! Beard ... 18 18 & « 95 While in Indianapolis, the Mon-| 3h 333 Louiaviie 0." 84.3 Duke-Tennessee; Columbia HarPernandgs 517s “analy i sf 4 J » a. oat State 33 Mosturray Savard; Wyoming-Colorado A&M; ay $12 3 ¢ anil in the Claypool Hotel. | geore’ HES Me) ca. fHOkaloma ASM Denver; pious onway 718 9 .0 38 d sh 3 act n-Witchita an ; Klutts 2% 3 4 ‘mm Montreal has a special defense Ric: 3980 loge D. sri ton-Witehita and others Kalin, 11 13 18 8 .ns for Fleming's hits to right. Last gtanford 216 Yale M3 — Cassint ¢ 14 10 1 .1 night Shortstop Morgan played De 3 BC Bi we Peters ® 1 1 8 .Bgver second base, Second Base-|Giereia sod 4 a shoes P4id : Gaga fon 81 ii~ FURST NOT FIRST i en ! o + » ‘teiman Bridges was back on the javiand 920.3, xd Twe-Base hte—Pleming 5. Beard ¢ OUlfield grass between first and; okishoms A&M 90.3 0! : Weatherly 4 Pernandes 3. 3. second and Firstsacker Chuck nNireinwestern 903 yall iH i Kalin 3. Turner 2. Dallessandrd 3. Con- Connors played deep off the in- Toe State LH Colorado U. 838 way. field and near the lime. In the linots 3 Loh 048 Bt, 3 THER Sn WHITE gThree-base Mis—Beard 3. Fernandes. sixth, against this shift, Fleming Nm, « Mer 81 Gren sae’ 3 es’ kh : {screamed a single between Con: Baylor 886 W. Virginia a1 Heme rems—PFleming § P Kain 4 herd a Cony ander inors and Bridges to score Cassini | Kini 381i Drake 2 The Indians and Royals are . 83.0 H $0
Turner, Kilutts. Dallesséndra. PITCHERS’ RECORDS scheduled to arrive in Indianapo-
ee pry So: 7 §itte tomorrow morning at 6:40. san nn ais AOR .uayos ol vases $4} BOY uve sries He a Hate * 'Solunar Table Montreal at Bat Most anglers know that fish
(Playeft and Lie World ' |have a favorite time during the
SEAT COVERS
MADE FOR ANY CAR
RH RBI pe Gay and night when they feed Cimolt 1iiiiienes h . ; i Sad 1 mani w en they i ccmpiiéd, 2201 N. Capito! New York and New Jersey Madison and Troy T 4 & ir The Times by John Alden 1211 W. : TT 3M gion designates these times in id wun. Dotigh ; 1211 W. Wash 2037 E. Wash. 45 S. West Atwell ... arouse 3% an effort to tell the fibarman : ~ . TAD, Yoder Calvert. Va. Ave. and South St. 42d and Fall Creek Bivd. 401 Kentucky Ave. Behmees siiiees : 309 hy 1 " oT . a nr gi 3 ithe buat uime te wet hus ne had switched,” he Emerson and Bethel, Beech Grove Connors +..i..i, 48 6 9 1 308 Sor Ma or ES TCE scosns’ yn iy 8 4:40 me 5 dar’ .. $A 2148 300 CALVE4T RESERVE Blended Whiskey ' Bankhead J cor lp fies Gh Ba 4 2868 Proof-43% Grain Neutral Sprite : i = i RR 38 Calvert Distillers Corp, New York City
El a a a Sl a ak RAE haa ina aa aaa a
“We can get plenty of gamesl But 18 fhe wo , wal jin post-game story, before Leahy's with ‘name’ teams without having Jota) to 24 and inte a ie for toplSPOL. Ne Wil {ainanding nd LA DRI ell when he and Bankhead|, “I was not at Seattle last Sat- accusations had become known, to subject our players to the kind po ;
, ve Howie O'Dell, head coach at §io%e MB. Ind. Central
any public complaints about offi- round decision here last night over series. Old timers insisted it was
HoosiEr PETE
20 0
Bulldogs Defy Won a Series
: | There's a First Time for Y 4 Mud y |e Everything—"'Is This It?’ :. | NEW YORK, Oct. 4—The Brooklyns have gone O for In Workout four in World Series competition. Which is to say they've | been in four and have yet to win. On the reasoning there's
a first time for everything this may be their year. In the Many Players Nurse other league Detroit blew four before winning a set if that's Injuries After ‘encouraging to the Flatbush faithful. Battle With Wabash | Brooklyn's first modern], o's catch on Babe Ruth at
Rain drenched fields failed to, pennant was achieved in 1916. the Polo Grounds in 1921 and Jos {keep the Butler University Bull- They won one out of five DiMaggio’s robbery at the ex-
i { {pense of Hank Lieber in the same dogs indoors yesterday afternoon , ins the Red Sox that ral DO in 1936.
jas Coach Paul (Tony) Hinkle with Colby Jack Coombs getting s = = lsent them through light exercises a 4-3 verdict. A young left hand-| jv WASN'T UNTIL the hoppla {and ran plays. ier named Ruth accounted for one had died down that it gradually Although Harry Farmer senior| °F their setbacks, a 2-1 six-hitter 3oumed on the young men in the lend from Anderson returned to that went 14 innings. Casey press box that actually this practice yesterday ‘afternoon for Stengel will remember that series. should have been a comparatively lthe first time in weeks, the Bull- H® Was in right for the NL simple catch. There were two on.
namps. Hit a lusty .364, by the DiMaggio represented the tying dog injury list reads lke the CEP run. Gionfriddo should have had
; wa : [nasieg Hew ae Ewes, Next came 1920 and Cleveland. his back to the wall out theré
! ” The Brooks failed to distinguish/from the instant DiMaggio arHad Satie big y BY sbas } one themselves in that series, either. rived at the plas M he had beurt \dearly for the victory, their first, 1t Was a best five out of nine playing Nie po RO or mors {of the current season. test. They took the second and woulds't ve a Jo ae | See | James Morris, Bulldog trainer, third games behind _excellent/than teres © ope in , | Grimes and catch. Someone was nodding
| ! i pitching by Burleigh jsaid today Fuviau Weidekamp, Sherry Smith, then dropped four the Brooklyn dugout.
{forced out of the Wabash game | inal lvsis the Brooks ! last two being! In the final analysis during the first half with a headin a row, the lost the series because of in= Ho otal oy > gio ® JujsBuwe. = = =» [terior prong. Nove of sue? | THEY DIDN'T qualify for the starting Dp rae, Yair EL) ig ano again unk 1001. They an, te mnngs: Bul shen |injured left thigh and is doubtful CEH vary dropping four pended Leo Durocher—made 27 as a returnee this week. | . \pitching shifts. Hugy Casey was
{while winning only once. At that, { ; lin six of seven games and picked {they made it closer than the) two. viclovies.
records indicate. Three of the Do you remember who got |senior end, has a bad leg muscle Sames were decided by one run. putting over tha
: Twice crushing breaks were credit for land Morris has indicated : : . abe ih 3 indi priv tbat he against them. Fat Freddie Fitz- tiiucher df. the Yanko? Jos
. Page. He took over in the fifth Saturday. hues _/simmons was pitching a master iSatuntey na Schuesier; ul ful game when a line drive put and pitched one-hit, scoreless ball suffering from a. mild shoulder Dim out of action. And game| the rest of the way. tos separation and also is on the NNO: 4 was lost when Mickey Owen! It is interesting to note tha
Chapman May Not Start * Ralph Chapman, Indianapolis
|
: dropped a third strike to add the Yanks still have Page on a open Mid-Amer- ® New chapter to the legend that their side Whereas the Brooks 49 lean competition Saturday everything happens in Brooklyn./ not seem to ave pig Na against an undefeated Western It was the Yanks against the measures up iy oe 3 he = Reserve team from Cleveland, Brooks in a return in 1947. and; Which Casey, at his ig Pout Coach Mike Scifry's Red Cats this time the NL champs brought sessed as a Te h i ao have defeated Kent State, 23.20; !t Tight down to the wire for Possible to overestimate tae Vee and Olivet, 69-8 : ’| their best showing in the series Of & pitcher who can come in an ——— up te then. They won three take charge of a disintegrating . games and had an eafly lead ball game in a short series. Hoosier Scorers lin the seventh and final. This, Of course, a manager is in an incidentally, was at once one of even happier situation when he the shabbiest and most absorbing has pitchers who can go all the . » series ever played. {way without help, an idea which i IX- d Tie There were two stick-out per- is herewith passed along for formances. Floyd Bevens pitch- brother Shotton’s consideration. Indiana college football scorers Ing a eme-hitter for the Yanks And Jers Je ym 23am a os ana eo Se tha) hone only to lose the game and Al there's a first time for everything Were rc) 30d y a 2Y!Gionfriddo taking a three-run|-——even for a World Series triumph ea Hota Ae > Bee. homer away from Joe DiMaggio. by a Brooklyn entry. two touchdowns obit last ou |Coaute Lavagelios Dich Suey kee Hi ee oh att week off the right. field wall with two Yankee it Parade honors. 1" BT Toms oe us i " -I ; uth and Lou g om Re i a ogtiaay Aa Vell Tip rw thelwedier’ls Wives m fini scoreless against Franklin while| at twosty teammate Bill Crowe”made both
| » » - Central Greyhound touchdowns BEVINS' one hitter was op the no cutting jas Central lost a 14 to 13 de- slovenly side. He was wild all no bitin cision to the Grizzlies. Crowe's afternoon and 10 of the Brooks mes g
2 points last week brought his drew passes,
|until Lavagetto broke through
P i his service it looked as if he was,
. EE aa ur X ljoset, HB, wigravila” 3 1H the series, you know. 'AIR-VENT {nf Senet. 1 34 Bucky Harris was managing {Badmond E, Aunderson -3 } 18 the Yanks at the time and the [™ “= mom wwe ne \8itko. FB Notre Dame. * 3 3 is second guessers gave him a harsh i Macholiz. HB ‘Anderson. ...2 2 1 13 going over for putting what : Baker, QB. Ball Stats 2 3 1 13 proved to be the winning run on §
. base in the ninth inning. The Two Gaits Yearlings book says you just don't do that.!} To make matters worse Pete: Average $2162 Per Head Reiser — purposely passed on: | LEXINGTON, Ky., Oct. 4 (UP) orders by Harris—was limping on 4 “~The first consignment of 54 & sprained ankle. To make first | standard-bred yearlings to be of- he would have had to hit the ball fered at the annual five-day Tat-|2 fur piece. Of course, as soon as | itersalls sales here last night Reiser was put on a pinch runner i brought an average of $2162 per went in for him and when Lava-': head, about $700 below last year’s &etto got hold of a fat Bevens'': ‘opening average. i | pitch .Reiser’s runner and the The total sale price of $116.750. other chap who was on base—was K. D. Owen of Houston, Tex. it Gilonfriddo?—came home with paid the night's top price of $14.- the winning markers. Gionfrid- b {500 for Hal Senator, a son of Hal 40's catch came in the sixth in- ; Dale out of Romola. as the two Ning of the sixth game with the ;
10%
Gaits Farm consignment f Brooks leading 8-3. There were Carmel, Ind. nee under rom two on. If the ball had ‘dropped i hammer. {into the left field bull pen—and : Same Luxury |
that's where it was headed for— § . o the DiMaggio blast would have! Harry Dunn Wins Fight tied the score, and since the’ Times Special !Yanks got one in the ninth the! CHICAGO, Oct. 4—Harry Dunn, chances are they would have won. ! 155, former Indianapolis Golden This was one of the most spec{Gloves champion, won a five- tacular catches ever made in the
Blend of Costly !
LA FENDRICH
“THE HOUSE OF CRANE” Distributors, Indianapolis
Lance Harris. 180, of Chicago. even more amazing than the one Bobo Drago. 135, Louisville, won Harry Hooper of the Red ‘Sox a five-round decision over Ted pulled against the Giants in 1912. Weems. 135. of Chicagn Others rated it ahove Bill Cun-
GAS Reg.-81 Octane ~~ Gen. ETHYL
K eep The Difference!
Yan Stenge 2to 1
Paper AL Cham Pitching,
By CARL NEW YOR rate as favorite Brooklyn— as good an infi Yankees have lot depends on "That is why 1 this series is Normally the o on cold and har
of wrapping up tl in four straight ; But the bettors way this time. T the odds at as hi favor of the Y: paper they don’ choice. Take that outfi Ordinarily, the bi Joe DiMaggio an has the top batt a .346 mark. Bu is still below par attack of virus waylaid him two kept him out of final two days o Young an
Behind DiMagg come six Dodg young guys all, and speedy as | ning. There's C Reading, Pa., can field with a .32 dizzy .424 figure weeks of the car more he owns th arm in baseball. Luis Olmo, the | Puerto Rico who the Mexican Lea Marv Rackley (Buckshot) Brov sey’s pride Gene 299 and baseb: boy, Duke Snide! at .202. Snider, rapidly the rangiest fel ness, also is a the home run outfield with 23 v the gardeners in with 104. But alas, whe of the Yankee 0 19 points belov Hank Bauer at . ling at .270, Ct great) Keller at at 243 and Jo 242. Shades of | Lazzeri
In the infield both outfits is and even thoug verted outfielder, the accolade to lyn’s young Gil nevertheless the man in the DI Henrich leads hitting at .287 has one more ! Hodges batted i 114 to 85, but Henrich is the 1 No Compa At second ther comparison. Jac
DiMag And M
(Copyris NEW YORE know about the Some of the would like to kr We have-the Casey and John Casey knows He played with | them. He can | from the pitchin Mize studies p hitters watch ev make. He has | the Dodger staf off from the hit Casey and M valuable in tl though Hugh is little item they ; winning a gam can mean thes Casey and M! on the sketchy Brooklyn. - Rememb
I remember hs son, Hodges, Re manski, maybe had a good look ca and Hatten, I notice Gion: any more to m only hope I can did that time. Our new men Dodgers as ofte they did learn | year’s exhibitio! « Our older me: 47 series and tt they have a be . But that worl Dodgers saw us That's why I may "have the Casey and Mize Of course we Dodgers. And <gcouts sizing u made their repc the dope was team
. Scouts often They help. But on the field and ‘The player h: of view from stand. He has
