Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 April 1950 — Page 16

Wo Hinson :

Mules Stubborn But It Was Fun

1889 Fan Tells of Trip to Park and Thrilling Games

By EDDIE ASH, Times Sports Ellettsville, Ind., Dear Mr. Ash, Indianapolis Times. : T'WANT YOU to know how miich 1 enjoyed your article in the Apr, 23 Sunday Times about the old Indianapolis National League ball team. I am past 84 and probably one of the few left who sdw that team play. It Wag in June of 1889 on a full swing and the ball went ! the grounds now occupied by sailing high for the center field | Methodist Hospital, at that fence. | p time practically out of the CHtY. nentor, beat It ta he fence by &| My brother and I sat hig UP aplit second, leaped up on the in the bleachers and cou ey fence with a foot on the nailing! farm houses all around north of iy, oq snared the ball with his! us with live stock of all kinds gloved hand. i i roaming the countryside. Myers fell to the ground in a The only. available transporta- p... put he held the ball. He tion from out in the state then ,. 4" .chbhed that batter of ‘a was by rail. We took a night ¢pree.run homer and he received train from here (Ellettsville), got great ovation from the almost into the city at 4 a. m.'and ate ,chausted crowd: breakfast in a restaurant on 8. Illinois St.

tor pr. 26, 1950.

! & {

8 The game ended Indianapolis 3. At 9 o'clock we went Cleveland 1. We got home the

to the street car depot located in next morning at 4 a. m.; had lost| .

the middle of Washington St, {wo nights sleep but felt what we just a little east of the intersec- had enjoyed on our trip was worth | tion of Illinois.

He

y ®

AE

\

pen Dia

it We bought transportation to the

ba'| park. We were just in time cecause at that moment a street cr pulled up labeled “Ball Park” and powered by two small mules, We got aboard and didn't go far until the car was full and overflowing with ball fans. The trip was uneventful except for the driver, who was pretty busy exercising his vocal chords and whip to keep the power from failing. But in spite of his very best

| clutch pitching,

OSCAR HOUSTON, Box 62, Ellettsville, Ind. n n n MR. HOUSTON'S most interesting letter presents. solid proof that the great national

pastime was just as exeiting

61 + « + Played in a rustic setting | with farmland all around and | cows in the corn, it still pulled ' the fans out of their seats with | slugging and daring catches. { ”

Years ago as it is today. | |

a aE

_——— ew

efforts the mules ran out of gas two or three times and he had | NATURALLY, you will be to stop and let them rest. For [Amused by Mr. Houston's descripthis the driver had to take a [tion of the mule-drawn street ribbing from the fans. cars of his younger days. . . . But we finally got to what I Plodding and stubborn, but they! think was. the end of the line, We eventually got fans to the ball walked a block west to the ball park. .. . The difference between park. Indianapolis was playing then and now is not in the mules Cleveland in the first game of a but in the jet-propelled humans morning-afternoon doubleheader. [racing time 24 hours around the The teams were out warming clock (minus one today). . . . up. Amos Rusie was there pitch- Going to the ball park was a ing to the batters in hitting praec- lark in the Eighties, according to! tice. He was a product of In-| dianapolis and I was told had re- day In June, 1889, . .. Fans were cently joined the Indianapolis forever begging the driver to team. He was a rugged boy per- crack the whip for more speed. haps 19 or 20 years old with a - « . Nowadays it requires watchmagnificent physique weighing ful John Laws to slow the traffic. around 200. y uu | Rusie later established himself, MR. HOUSTON falled to as the greatest pitcher of his! mention the cost of a street time. He was a fast ball artist. , car ride to the old park three If I remember correctly Kirby | score.and one years ago, but we pitched the morning game for In- | Judge it was five cents, which is dianapolis and Buckley caught. “O'Brien pitéhiéd for Cleveland. T forget the Cleveland catcher's name. It was a hard-fought, error-

board the mules, 1 less.

to boot, no :

® = =» i THE Indianapolis ball park

the oldtimer's version of his big -

all of a nickel ... And the street || | “car company had to bed wad

Vie

Swift-footed Doris Sher

v

Hoosier

o, Winnipeg, Canada, lunges for first base. . Co J #9 y y i %

teammate , , . Bev

less game with good pitching. At the end of nine innings the score was 2 and 2. Then the umpire stopped the game.

We took a ear back down town

L Tennessee is

in the Eighties was located at Tennessee and Tinker Sts. , now Capitol; Tinker Is 16th . . . The park in

had lunch, and took another mule, 1889 the city's second , . . | car back to the afternoon game. The first was on & Delaware | ~—Boyle was Indidnapotis’ - pitcher —8¢and Buckley the catcher. I don't! E. Ohio pnd Oriental, the fourth | remember Cleveland's battery. at E. Washington and Gray... | Cleveland got good pitching. but] W. Washington Park was the not good enough to beat Boyle,! fifth, and then to the current the old master. The brilliant play-| spot . . . These were organized ing of Glasscock and Denny of baseball parks , . . There were Indianapolis was something to! two Federal League parks, at | see. At the end of the seventh In-| Riverside and on Kentucky Ave, | dianapolis led, 3 to 1. Cleveland] _ a. nN 8 got two men on in the eighth by NIGHT BASEBALL ; two scratchy singles but had two light in Indianapolis at old Washout. ington Park along about 1930 ,., . Now the finest catch I ever saw happened. Up to the plate came a Cleveland slugger who had been hitting and topping the fences all around the circuit. Boyle and Buckley worked on him until It was two and two.

game in the American Associa-|

{Moines in the Western League . . .

ger . . . An Indianapolis resident

The fans were standing up, Corriden is now a White Sox liams of Roosevelt ran the 100- Brooklyn Dodgers. Night ball was a de- yard dash in 10 seconds flat, good time temperature. and a Sam Sims of Ft, Wayne Central, {under the same conditions, took {the high hurdles in a smooth 13 jeague, Racine, Kenosha, Wis., |seconds,

tensed and fearful. coach . . . Then Boyle gave him one a pression baby now grown into a little too good. He met it with giant, ”

Pat O'Sullivan Captures

Booming Drives, Perfect Putting Proves Too Much for Favored Mrs. Page

PINEHURST, N. C., Apt. 290 (UP)—Pretty Pat O'Sullivan of

.. Gary Roosevelt

esis Winner at Relay |

Makes 46 5-6 Points

To Capture Title KOKOMO, Apr.-29 (UP)—Gary

Roosevelt won undisputed possession of the 25th annual Kokomo High School Relays Class A title first 8aW | (,qay, an honor the Rough Riders shared last year with Ander-

The Indianas pioneered the arc son, by collecting 40 5/8 points.

Warsaw captured the .Class B

No records fell but Bill

CC

sidering a

‘tion after Tribe officials watched crown held last year by Missisa game under the lights at Des sinewa, which dropped to a threeway tle for 10th place among the {Johnny Corriden was the mana- 18 teams entered.

Wil-

45-degree the war in anticipation of World light

rain.

+Other-Class A-team totals were

North-South Championships =. 40%, Ft. Wayne South

2215, Kokomo and Muncie Central

10 and

leach 171s, Ft. Wayne Central 13, {Warren Central Castle 95. On the B side,

New

Auburn had

¥ ” * of

erly Hatzell, Red: Key.

All-America League Officially Starts 1950 Route of 112 Games Story and Photss by HENRY. E. GLESING JR. :

WEST BADEN SPRINGS, Apr, 20—Amelia Bloomer was far ahead of her time when she helped reduce the number and weight

“Bloomer Girls” of the All-America Baseball League.

the Racine, Wis, girls’ baseball .team has reported here for spring training. Hd § - There are more curves here To make up the loss, the team than a Brown County road, but it's a serious business with the girls as they primp for the 112game summer season. : Five of the girls are ‘“rookettes,” trying to replace veterans who have been with the team since the league was organized in 1943 by Philip K. Wrigley, presi‘dent of the Chicago Cubs, and Branch Rickey, president of the

cine, along with some 75.000 fans, keep the team from being in the red each year. The game has grown so popular with women fans they favor different girls on the teams.

When the girls are off the diamond, they are chaperoned by coach Irene Hickson. The girls’ attire is very feminine on the street. They are not allowed to wear shorts or slacks. Between May 18 and Labor Day, the ball club will play 112 games. Half of the games are on the road with the remainder at home. Rockford, Ill, and South Bend. Racine- will. meet each team 16 Each of the four teams Was times during one season and will helped financially by Wrigley, who visit the other towns three times. paid 50 per cent. of their costs. The towns are located close Today the league has grown to enough so they can travel by bus. eight teams with the addition of The longest trip is 250 miles. Rt ay a Grand Rapite, Mich! The regulation ball diamond ia Muskegon, J.ea., 8. tho . girls. league. is. 72-ft.. base

The league was started during

War 1I stopping big league baseball. During the first year, there were only — four teams in the

Orange, Conn. blended. booming drives and perfect: putting: today: 301s, Plymouth 22, Pike Twp. 0f 111 Resides the “eight teams, tHe’ to take the 48th North-South Women's Amateur Golf Champlon- Marion County 20, Wabash 14}, paths and 55-ft. pitching distance ship with a brilliant upset over Mrs. Estelle Lawson Page of Chapel Rochester 13, Carmel 11, Butler

Hill, N. C.. 3 and 2. 1 .The pert, 23-year-old girl's icy calm dissolved into breathless excitement after she closed out ——— - - -

. the match against favored Mrs, ; “Page on the 16th” green wo xf: Wayne North 10-foot putt. “Oh dear, I'm very happy. 0 lifi Ni 3 or

just don’t know what to say.” MISHAWAKA, Apr. 29, (UP)

she said. “I've never won anything else outside New England. Ft. Wayne North swept the]

I was lucky but I didn't actually miss too many shots.” Mrs,

0,

Beech Grove 9!j, ewa, ‘Lawrence Central and Knex 7 each, Garrett 6, Franklin Twp., and Bluffton 5 “reach; Fairmomit 3 and North: | western of Howard County 1.

| Chester

Twp.,

Mississin-

“Big Ten Foes Top Purdue, Indiana

Two Hoosier Big Ten baseball

favored to take her eighth North- day with a team total of 541%. yesterday. The lowa Hawkeyes nosed out

South title. But Miss O'Sullivan qualifying nine indi ‘iduals and’ sank a 20-foot putt on the first two relays teams for next week's ‘hole to take the hole with a birdie, all-conference meet at Elkhart: She went two up on the third with’ Archie Adams of

Page had been heavily Eastern trials of the NIISC to-teams fell before conference foes

(Purdue, 6 to 5 on a diamond Northside sloppy and cold from a sleet- making up the rookie team.

& par four. Mrs, Page won the broke his own 100-yar® dash rec- storm. The Boilermakers took a

long fourth hole with a birdie and ord of :10.3 with & :10.2 time they halved the fifth. Twe Up Again al honors. Miss O'Sullivan went two UP ong other record fell as Milton again on the short sixth with a pose of Mishawaka and perfect trap recovery and then Montagano - of Elkhart added the eighth hole with & Par yyrneq in pole vault heights of

five, 11 feet 11 inches. Ros She took the ninth to make the the old mark rar Ph ai

turn four up with a two-Under-' (other team totals, men and par 35 to Mrs. Page's 39. {teams qualified were. 3 3. Page Semmed the Ses} South Bend Central, 45'5, 10 or the next five holes as they in4ividuals and one relay team: halved through the 14th and laid \ishawaka, 40%: eight men and

tied his 200-yard | w hurdles rec-

the 15th to cut the Irish Deauty’s men and two teams, Elkhart, 23,| Ten starts,

lead to three. Canned 10-foot Putt On the fatal 16th, Mrs. Page

Sank her Sut Jor 2 Dirdle san TON", and Goshen, 0, none.

Vietory

monn" 18th Straight Victory

{four men; South Bend Riley 18,

fifth round of ‘a

bout at

ord mark of :23.3 to take ndividu- Tow

andiq 44.0 lead in the first inning on a home run by Bill Showron, but a evened it up and took over in the eighth.

Indiana was whipped at Ann

The loss was the league tilts for the Greyho

gave

v v +

in three

starts, gum, ass Sl

two men; South Bend Adams, 13, Earlham Whips IC two men; Michigan City, 5, two men; South Bend Washington, 2, 10-5 In Baseball Game | Times State Service

RICHMOND, Apr. 29— Indiana moved up to the post of ‘superinCentral vesterday saw its hopes tendent of -physical education for defending Big 10 champ,

"second in

Bill

for a first place tie in the Hoosier, the Richmond school system. Conference blasted when Earlham Elias will be head coach of

unds Col vie-!

league now has two teams of rookies traveling the U. 8, playing exhibition games, During the year of exhibitions, most of the girls gain enough experience to make a regular berth the follow-

from the mound to the plate. The regular baseball diamond has 90ft. base paths and 60-ft.. six-inch pitching distance. The pitchers throw overhand with a 10-inch ng “Vear. Last year the rookie team traveled over 15,000 miles covering 28 states. . big league ball. SL Each year more than ‘2000 girls - Hitting 1s one of the weaknesses

in the U, 8. and Canada try out among the girls. If a player hits

for the baseball league which is between .225 and .250, she is rated operated differently from men's high in the batting department. baseball leagues, Girls are scout- Pitchers, on the other hand, have ed upon recommendation of their better control on the game. One coaches in softball leagues. year Joanne Winter set a winning Out of the 2000 girls only 40 record of 33 games. She is rated rookies are picked. Of those as one of the best in the league. selected, some fill vacancies of Sophie Kurys is the league's the eight teams, others are used top “thief.” She has played in more than 800 games and set a Since the league was started, record of 166 stolen bases. it has proved to be a bad busi- At the end of each season, the ness risk. Each year, the cost of girls go back to their home towns the Racine ball club is $55,000. and teach school or continue {The salary of the ball players their own schooling. Joanne Winranges from $55 a week for the ter, whose home is in Racine, op-

Pat ,rbor, 10 to 3, by Michigan. The rookies to $100 for the veteran. erates a candy store. both Wolverines scored four runs on Indiana's starting pitcher, | Tosheff, in the second inning and Michigan hurler Ed Grenkowski scattered six Hooster hits for the victory. It was Purdue's first

Richmond Names Purdue Golfers Lose Elias Grid Coach 0 Ohio State RICHMOND, Apr. 20 (UP)— LAFAYETTE, Apr. 20 — Ohio

confer- gy) Elias, a junior high physical State University's golf team deence game this season and IN-| question teacher, was named feated Purdue, 14'§ to 1214 here team. ; Miss O'Sullivan a dead stymie on one team; La Porte, 4015, seven dlana’s second loss in three Big head football coach of the Rich-'today over a rain-swept course. Noblesville placed third with High School Red Devils It was the first loss for Purdue 281; points followed by Westfield

{ mn | today! Elias, a native of Martin's Ferry, 0., who was graduated from morning “foursome.

in 13 Big 10 starts.

Racine slugger ., . June Peppas, Ft. Wayne.

Old-Time Gridders

| ‘Has-Beens' Whip

of complicated clothing, but she wouldn't recognize the modern-day | Prospectives, 13-0 The powder-puff baseball season officially is open now as! ()d-timers are never too old to Sheds some light. He said approx-! limately 150 principals convened Ww .4 83 Bittner (N) defeated DeLove

the prospective 1950 Butler grid ‘squad.

“hall This balls fraction of Sible_ for one tackle, and. at full-,

an inch larger than the regulation

| | !

Teach Youngsters

teach youngsters a lesson. “Yesterday, a group of Butler

to a smart 13 to 0 triumph over|

The game was marred by an intermittent downpour of rain which handicapped both teams ‘and especially the better-condi-| tioned varsity.

First Touchdown

Scoring their first touchdown after three minutes of the initial quarter, the yesteryear performers garnered all the points needed to win iSleet on three successive attempts) ‘bulled over from the two after] teammate Bob Strayi-had inter-| cepted a pass on the 18. Francis Moriarity scored the! second one with a two-yard| plunge after he and Bill Kerbox|

|started a drive from the varsity

Highlight of the game was the appearance of Freshman Coach Frank (Pop) Hedden who was sent in at tackle and at fullback {for the oldsters. He was respon-

back he carried the ball once for a tacklers floored him. -

The old-timers racked up 134] yards

downs.

Bill Stubbs Leads In Track Honors

Times State Serviee

|

high point man in the annual Hamilton - County traek meet held here yesterday but his 17%

{

points weren't enough to give his

school the meet victory. } Sheridan High School, captured! {the event, held annually the last {Friday in April, by scoring 43 points. Carmel was second with 36 points. { Stubbs won the 100 yard dash,’ the 220 and the broad jump and| ran anchor on the half-mile

with 15 and Section Central with’

OSU took an 8-1 lead In the 1214. i Purdue won

|

the University of Maryland, re- four of six individual matches in Dem DiMaggio Becomes

placed Dick Tiernan. Tiernan the afternoon play.

‘69, two under par. La

football and wrestling, and will ‘assist with the baseball team.

» Track

$315. Valparaise #815. Relavs) os

Yar

Fred Wampler of Indianapolis. fired a -

Papa for First Time

- BOSTON, Apr. 20 (UP)-—Cen-/Boston Red Sox and his wife be-|

\football's pads and pants appear mothfF bound from sea- | ®t ison to season, That's how the true signs at the 2: 'cross-roads read. . |Let's analyze it, Jeeves, but good.

one-yard gain . before three to

offensively and 8 first

{The

ferfielder Dom DiMaggio of the:

JEEVES,

request.

© That's no order, Jeeves.

It's probably noin particular—at

s =» RIGHT NOW,

T wo winter polls were taken. Ham- Jimmie Angelopolous

mond Times Sports Editor John Whitaker and Assistant Jim Skufakiss took. one, South Bend Riley Football Coach Paul (Spike) Kelly followed suit. Both are in Northern Indiana's football

“hotbed.

The first poll said the princi-

pals favored another. vote for spring drills, that pressure probably would be put on the IHSAA in May to reinstate drills. Gary and Hammond failed to take a i stand. F

The results said “the faction

- - . IT WAS SAID the vote of 77 to 74 against the drills “represented a skimpy majority of schools with a minority of enrollment.”

» - » POLL NO. 2. Spike “polled” all 8 143 eleven-man .[football-playing erines, . .-. i schools. He received 105 replies. |his

He~said 88 coaches replied: in

the affirmative and 17 in the neg-! ative, It was reported 62 princi-| pals favored spring drills, 27 did Marion Crawley has had the not, that 16 were undecided.

please order an extra supply of moth this spring. Might even make that a standing spring-time

“Just a thought . , . thoughts of spring . . . spring football, that is. It's this way, Jeeves. The football advocates’ hopes - of spring football drills, like : ethereal-less emittences of open Oct. 8 at home with the Care the crystal preservants are dinals at 2p. m.

evaporating. body's fault least visibly.

balls

Forces. The Halasmen officially

i yun GEORGE ENGLAND, who

dropped out of Purdue a week ago, missed most of the spring drills. He accidentally: rammed his hand through a small glass window going through a door at Carey Hall. Six stitches were necessary. © England, who is always ramming something, will ram at Butler this fall. . . .Cathedral teammate Wait Viellieu, now 210, is a promising Boilermaker lineman. :

~ ” » ABOUT TRACK—Warren Central Track Coach Walter Mowrey sports two medals he won in the first county track meets in 1012 and 1914. He was a high jumper, His Warriors have owned the county title seven years. ... Mows= rey recalls the feats of John Wea~ ver, . father of Hurdler Byron Weaver, who's doing fine at Pure due. The elder Weaver won ‘five first places in the pre-World War I days. . . . Dave Ostheimer of Warren expects to join Byron at Purdue. Purdue's Bob Rodibaugh didn’t go to the Drake Relays because a motor he was holding. fell on hit foot. . . . Rodibaugh, the

! ex-Pike star, is a junior letter

favoring spring drills won out man. 56 to 41, but more than 50 schools failed to answer, probably be-|track coach, Don Knight, recalls cause the question was asked dur- his unbeaten half-mile relay team ing the holiday rush.”

Shortridge’s former veteran

lof Ed Ziegner, Emory BSchlake, |Hugh Dalzell and Al Piel, which {holds the best Indianapolis hailf{mile time of 1:32.6 made in 1938, The Blue Devils defeated Lew {Wallace for the state title by {15 yards gn the water-logged {Butler traCk in the rain. Dalzell and Piel are ex-Michigan WolyMr. Knights thinks boys ‘were never really {pushed all year.”

5.8 ABOUT BASKETBALL-—Jeff's

leathery look this spring. He was

The defense rested. The state in Florida for a couple of weeks

hasn't any real findings, but the Sunuing, state’s case, if presented, would Christmas job shopping early..., appear in reverse.

JT MIGHT start with “the didn't ge

second poll. In the main, the questionnaires were sent to athletic directors and football eoaches. Many high school principals did not see them. The principals’ attitude in the matter, apparently was camouflaged in a glittering generality. The query wanted to know if the principal would vote for

spring football again. We're |

told it was NOT a direct question to the principal. That's dif-

ferent.

2 = =» COMMISSIONER

-at-Bloomington two -weeks—-ago. in #2 8-3; Oh i Spring football came up and the has developed intp ,a community “has-been” football stars, having heads sounded off regarding the project. The businessmen In Ra- to rely on experience, maneuvered future of spring football. Mr. Phillips said’ all but one 2nd principal ‘spring sports have fhetr freedom of expansion. Ex-Principal Phillips says he has received letters from other academic heads who : have not seen any questionnaires. —invading Illinois parlayed 11

favored letting

NOW MR. WHITAKER writes to L. V. that, in his opinion, if a real vote by principals were taken, the measure would be turned down flatly. Sounds contradictory, & no? -But it might be the true curthey rent pulse bi of Northern Indi-|'n_ five league tilts, sunk them Fullback Tom gna.

- » o The IHSAA administrator:

contends some of the coaches’ | ' gripes for spring drills might be

lessened if the schools paid the coaches when they begin toiling in the sun Aug. 15 and not wait until school actually opens. Sounds plausible. Ci One more point,

-

On that

voting favorably just to keep Ne® JUfasr A peace with their hired help. Could fhe fea be. “We don’t Khow, TT Tr We know spring sports are hire’ tum Widcats may call BE-¢

stay. » »

” i MORE ABOUT FOOTBALL — downs, while the varsity chalked One hicaRo Jick rn! aa Sa up only 40 yards and three first i). year. At 35 boys per, that's! {more aspirants than players in lall 10 or our local schools com-! bined. . . . The Chicago Bears will! [train for the seventh year at § Joseph's farm-land football camp 100 miles southeast of Chicago. Golden Bears meet the NOBLESVILLE, Apr. 29—Bill Champ Philadelphia Eagles Sept. Stubbs, Carmel High School was 10 at

the (W) 6-1

(1-74 opening vote, L. V, P. indicates some principals, “about 20” probably did Managers not yet booked In sn organized some “hedging” two years ago, "

t.

Wrigley Field for the Armed

but not to do any {Reports had him dickering with {Miami University, . . . Crawley get onthe ~same “coast. Come round-ball season, he and {his flock of returning juniors will {be on the hot spot, an unfair {expectation in Hoosier basket ball,

Badgers Edge Irish In Tennis, 5 to 4

Times State Service | SOUTH. BEND, Apr. 2i.—Wise |consin’s tennis team edged out {Notre Dame, 5 to 4, here this aft ernoon. It was the first victory for Wisconsin in the 10 times the

L. V. Phillips two teams have met.

LE 0, Page (W) defeated Truile 3; rn (W) defeated * Overhoser=(Ni 6-4. 3-8, 6-2; Peterson (W) defeated Hennessy (N! 7-5. Schmids {W) defeated Herb Hoene (N) 6-4, 8-2.

David and Tuite (N) defeated Muyellep Schmidt (W) 6-1, 9-7: Bittner and Hennessy (N) defeated Deloye and Crable -1,- 7-5: Peterson and Page ( feated Qverholser and Tonti (N) 6-2, 6-1,

Gophers in Cellar

MINNEAPOLIS, Apr. 290 (UP)

hits and five Minnesota errors into an 11 to 2 Big Ten baseball victory today in the first game of a scheduled doubleheader. Snow and cold cancelled the second me. The defeat, the Gophers’ fourth

|deeper into the cellar. . | Tilinots 123 210 200-11 3 Min 000 000— 2

i nesota ... .-030 i Plain and Hoffman: lundsen. Skoog (4) Garbpett (9) and Gostic, Mykelbust (9).

Softball. Notes

The Marion County Amateur Softball Association vill meet tomorrow - at 7:30 m. at the arborn Hotel Gym. Meetteam managers of night and be held

ngs for all twilight leagues will day during th

every Mone

e season. Players’ punt - “rio “ecards will ‘be distributed at the ioe

meeting and must be signed before the games ay ; ech rove, Municipal and Longacre stadiums affiliated with the association

G will be eague are invited to attend. Brightweod softball team will prac~ Rock deeds ni esir Ww! \ should ca Sn-1308 after

irls wanting te 47 out with the Tas

SMOKES COOLER DRAWS EASIER

1. FENDRICH

AIR-VENT ,

Te AA.

1 ne

NO CUTTING BITING

IT fT

OO WV

BACKED BY

LEADERSHIP ; Three sizess yo 10¢ en 2 |

LA FENDRICH

for 25¢ A5¢

wo

SINGLLS ‘ David (N) defeated Warren Mueller

| de”

~gmpires

Bob Fron

Radl

Right

Run | By M NEW Y Phillies, a cl out six-hit I first major | The 24-) the Three I Internationa was comple Braves and ¢ ning rally hi The lanky right-hander Vern Bickfo scored Phila runs in that Hamner, Ed Ennis also pi Sco Boston sca the first innii Jethroe was | scooted to th and came 1 Stan Lopata with the ball him off base. Luke Sewe climbed = out League cella spot to the id ing Pittsburg . Gaining pa three beating the Pirates’ Reds clouted (Windy) Mc( and Hal Greg ing homers and Ron Nor Eddie Era Frank Smith and received umph, Snap W In the An spectacled Jo St. Louis Bro 5 to 1, and s five-game wir The Brown! with a three. sixth inning. gan the rally run of the then laced a Arft walked singled for t ¢ Lemon's" s Pieretti, then former team: playing his f Browns, Ostrowski hits and wou out were it r double and pinch single | fielder Luke | by Manager 1 first time played right dians.

_.__Rain washe

New York ar games in th and the Phi contest in th In the majo game, Allie R Series pitchir first victory up only six hi Yankees trim ton Senators, gio drove in double and a 1 sewed up th runs ‘in the f

Pittsburgh AB H ( ard of 3 ¢ opp. Coogan ib 3-1 iner if 51° Frnandz,3b 3 0 Wstlakecf 3 1 Mrtugh.2b 2 0 Schenz,.2b 1 0 Rojek,s. 3 2 FitzGride 2 0 Turner.c 2 1 Chesnes,p 0 0 McCall.p 10 Gumbert.p 1 1 Rickert 10 Gregg.p 00 Totals 33 82 Rickert ground bert in 8th. Pittsburgh ..... Cincinnati .....

Errors—Coogan,

riman

* yuns—Kluszewski, 101

Adama AOR ases—Pittsburgh on balls—Off Ch

Ths. Winnix Losing pitcher—C tres—=0ore,

Wake To Yi

Want: He To

CHICAG( who scrawled the New York with the Chic Wakefield for an undisc still refused t after a long from Washing ‘General Mans Specifically, his demand fc he wrangled w spring until ¢

phone from that he took when he went but thought h

Napole NEW YOR! Napoleon Rey: er with the Ne been sold to ti in the Intern: Giants annour Reyes play