Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 June 1951 — Page 13

A 1951 y - ¢ Man “Feder ation oe

a president, irn, and Mrs, ‘ortville, vice n W. Sample, sier Farmer,

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\n be restyled ) be reupholmaterials are 5 out. half the cost ts in a saving lity furniture

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MONDAY, JUNE 8, 109% _

Tribe Outlookili Eye 126

Pitch D

By BILL The Tidianapolis Indians,

ark

EGGERT slightly tattered after losing

five of théir six-game series with Louisville, boned up today

with an off-practice session and awaited the invasion

western clubs. - Unless the Redskins caf

western clubs are going to offer more of what has been hap-

pening to the Tribesters. In 24 games with western clubs, the Indians have won 10.

Three of the west's four clubs, Milwaukee, Kansas City and Minneapolis rank that way from the top of the American Association standings. The fourth club, St. Paul, is in sixth place, half game

But the Hoosiers are having troubles with their own second‘division neighbors. ' Fifteen hits will win a ball game nine times out of 10. The Indians sprayed Victory Field with that many hits yesterday, but Louisville banged out 17 and waltzed off with a 12 to 7 victory. That gave the Colonels the series, five games to one and boosted their season’s total to seven victories in 10 starts against Indianapolis. This automatic paragraph tells you that for the 15th straight | game an Indianapolis starting

perk up their pitching, the.

triple off Inman Chambers in the fourth. The ball hit on top of the

left centerfield wall and bounced!

back into Senteffielq.

IN THE FIFTH frame a double play ball scooted between Johnny Merson's legs for an er-

ror and the Colonels went on to|qualifying on the basis of past’

pick up two Juns.

TED LEPCIO, a 20-year-old infielder just out of Seton Hall, played his first professional baseball game when he held down the hot-corner for Louisville, He handled three chances and went’ hitless in front of Johnny Murphy, the Boston Red Sox minor league director who was in the stands.

» - ” BOB CURTIS, who was on the Tribe's spring roster, has joined the club. The righthanded hurler is a student at Lamar Junior College in Beaumont, Tex.

ey NANNY FERNANDEZ has

Spots Today In U.S. Open

Qualifying Round

Starts in 29 Cities By United Press NEW YORK, June 4A record {number of 1466 professional and amateur golfers turned out at 29 cities across the nation today to [battle it out for berths in the U. 8. Open championship. There will be room for 162 |starters in the Open’s champion|ship flight at Birmingham, Mich.’ June 14-16. However, 36, players, including Defending Champion [Ben Hogan, were exempt from

|records. So that left only 125 spots to be filled in today’s sectional qualifying rounds, with ' the odds

hopeful. Most of the fireworks in this mashie marathon were expected to take place in New York, where 132 players were ready to match scores for 16 berths. Because of the overflow of entries in the big town, two coursese were set aside for qualifying play. | Detroit's section drew the largest qualifying list, with 170 shoot{ing for 15 places. Horton Smith, Vie Ghezzi, George Schneiter,

pitcher wasn't around at the fin- been fined $25 for a run-in with Chick Harbert, Sam Byrd and Ed

ish.

Umpire Bob Hicks over a called

Furgol were among those entered

A second game of the scheduled third strike May 28 and Tribe there.

doubleheader before 3188 fans |officials have been informed that |

Chicago also drew a bulky field,

was called after one and one-half their protest of the 6 to 3 loss, With 118 vying for 10 spots. There

innings because of rain. downpour came with Louisville leading 2 to 0, and made the in-|

| disallowed.

That was the night the Tribe]

The! |May 28, to Columbus, has been were eight berths available to 103

|potential champions at Cleveland. A breakdown of the total list!

field a sea of mud. The postpone- won the first game of a twin billjof hopefuls showed the pros out-|

ment will be made up July 2, an open date here. Louisville, during the six-game series, learned to love Tribe hurl-| ing. The Colonels made off with 69 hits and were given 38 free tickets while the Redskins were; . dabbling with 52 and 21.

Millers Here Tomorrow The Indians have lost four | games in a row and six of their last seven and will have scratch hard to get anything out| of Minneapolis, who opens here tomorrow night. Harry Fisher, Tribe's starting hurler, baited his fourth loss with five bases on balls and seven hits during his three-inning show on| the mound. The Colonels got to him for o gingle runs in frames and a pair in the third | inning. After walking the first, two batters in the fourth, he got | a quick shower and turned the

toil over to Inman Chambers who : was nicked for five hits in three! 5&

innings and was removed via a

pinch hitter in the sixth. Frank 3 Papish and Forrest Main filled|¢

out the parade line to the mound. Taft Wright, Karl Olson and Mel Hoderlein were the big guns! in the Colonels’ hitting spree. Each punched out three hits with

Wright collecting a single, double ®

and home run. Nanny Homers Twice The Tribe was still very much] in the game after the first three! innings, trailing only 4 to 3, but 3 when Louisville pushed three runs across in the fourth on two hits and two walks and .two more runs in the fifth, that waa the game. i From there, the Redskins’ big-|} gest weapon was the pair of 0 towering home runs that Nanny| ¥! Fernandez sent over the left field wall, each time with Teddy Beard on the basepaths. Left fielder Frank Kalin lined! out three singles in as many times at bat to push his batting average to S09.

DOM DALLESSANDRO start-| ed in left field for the Tribe but had to be removed in the first! inning when he cut his fingers| crashing against the scoreboard! in an attempt to snare Taft| Wright's double. |

” » THE COLONELS’ “right fielder, | Charley Maxwell, was an overanxious baserunner in the first inning. On base via a walk he) passed teammate Al Richter on! the third base line after Wright's | double. He Was automatically out. |

NORB ZAUCHIN, Louisville's | m firstsacker, boomed "a 390-foot |

the first two R

that went nine innings instead of

could catch a train no inning of |

Gearhart struck out, for Danish in Tth, Turner fouled out for Main in 9th,

Runs batted in-—-W nt 3 Kalin, | ter, an, Hoderl 2, Merson, Zau chin 3 well 2, Fernan des 4. Fwo-vase as right, Merson, Stevens, Richter, ee-base hits—2Zaucht Home _runs— (Fernandes 3 Wright. “Bouble vlays--Merson Stevens, Moderiein io o ehh ter iZauchin. Left Yile 10, Indians. Ha 11. ‘Base on b ff Fisher Kiely 3, Chambers 1 out. by Atkins 1, Fisher 2. Suge: off Mai Yi °F Fo d off Fish a ngs; of ain § in - gr, 7 LE LR { tehed to 2 jn ab); © x Kiel

Chambers 5 pis in 1 fait by Hicher: b: Kiely Tsagein. tkins. Win. "Losing pitcher

pitch—Atkins, “Balk. LE pitcher—Kiely (6-2). {opshet (2-4). Umpires—Stewart, Jackwski, Fette. Time—2:48. Attendance—3198.

oa

“Ir ibe at Bat AB R H RBI Pct. m Mangan .. ..... 93 15 33 19 .388 Tom Saffell . 88 1g 3% 3 S38 Ted Beard ......... 2% 8 % 3 30 Frank Kalin ........ 149 22 46 35 300 Mel Rus .........x.. 100 18 32 7 .300 Harry Usher sieie VBE iE TRA HE Johnny McCall .... 17 2 5 2 294 Nanny Fernandes .. 172 27 49 35 285 [og Purtoron Snvan 162 23 45 23 278 a rner ve 88 83 18 6 268 Inman Chambers .... 8 0 2 0. .350 oyd Gearhart ..... 41 9% 10 3 244 a Stevens ..... 163 18 37 21 .22 {Dom Dallessandro ... 102 19 21 13 .208 Frank Papish etl TRE 18 Russ Peters ..... 22 TB 43 Fred Strobel ........ 16 3.1 1.003 Forrest Main ..... 13 2 0 0 .000 Loves 34pk Lo. 7.0 0 1 000 John Hutchings von CET 8 000 | Joe Mul 4 1.0 2 .000 o-Base Hits—Rue 10, Ka Fer

In | nandes 8, Merson 8, Stevens 8, Danese dro 5, Mangan 3, Gearhart 2. McCall 2, Beard 2, Saffell, Tu » Fisher. Base Hits—Stevens 3, Mangan 2, 2, Fisher 2, Merson, Turner, Mc-

Home Runs—Fernandez 9, Kalin 8, Man(8g Gearhart 2, rner, Dallessandro, fevers Basgall, Papish. rifices—Main 3 Papin. Lint, Dal- | essandro, McCall, Chambers, Fernandes,

Stolen Bases—Saftell 8, Beard 2, nandez, Rue

| Kalin { Call.

Fer-

Michigan Bowlers Strike Competitors From ABC

ST. Paul, Minn., Sune 4—The| 58-day American Bowling Tourna-| ment ended yesterday and prize; winners split up $77,570 in prizes. | Bowlers from Michigan domi- Bestar nated the marathon kegling to such an extent that only one| entrant in the four divisions, the! C. B. O'Malley team of Chicago! was able to break the Michigan string. Lee Jouglard, the bespectacled 4- Detroiter who finished second to ¥ Dick Hoover in the recent na-! tional match game championships, won the singles crown with a record 775. His teammate Tony Lindeman, Detroit, captured the all events|g title with a 2005 score and Eddie

Ww

Marshall and Bob Benson of Lan- Xindra

sing, won the doublek championship with a 1334 mark. Jouglard won first money of $500 in the singles division and $900 for runner-up in the all events. He also shared 1200 for his team’s finish in the five-man event.

California Bowler Shines in WIBC

Final standings: SINGLES Joustard, Detroit sPPe inns aniniy potion, ’ ropeke. Kan. Casdrunsunr ania 38 breltter.” osha, Wis, © » Akrei .y . 723) Ser ok Philadelphia ‘ . 3 | Twells, Eaiisgelphia “y'

raun, St. Paul . ..lllll0 ; fou lim, Richmond, Cals. nae ver 108 Dallas

ah Foster, DOUBLES

/Benson-Marshall, Lansi Mich. Kindra-Rothbarth. Detroft Gross-Lane,

esse = ERS

Cleveland 15381 Daiiding. An -Anderson, Moline, III. . Drot| ‘affs, Cleveland . . HH Kei er-Miller, nten Harbor ‘ 38 oh - albert, paeveiang nN Baked 1308 Vander Nu olds, Chicane Rapids, Mich, and Cardinap, St. Paul, Minn, 1306

ALL EVENTS Lindeman, Detroit . .......... 2005 Jouglard, Detroit Aha a a Nasr, Claveland

Bue tr ae Fier. Chien Baie yEhie

Cakes

‘ ins CAFS Ll iaiiiiieli 8 1953

Kondrs, FP hliadeiphis " cuse, . » ’ evinhes, Pofledetonis © Varn ananaN Es 1940 FIVE-MAN TEAM ’ Maller, CI ar AP POU

Str. re Detrek : Sm Nir Yok v poi Meister Brau, Chicas: . Fitteburen .

mental Trans, E. and B.'s, Detro ‘ Stransky tons st. Paul vo Radiarts, Cleveland . a

SEATTLE, Wash.—Most of the Laverne Haverley of Los Angeles bowlers were from the Pacific/is the current wearer of the all-

Northwest yesterday, the 17th day ««0f the - Woman's International Bowling Congress tournament

events crown. Her score is 1788,

Ida Simpson of Buffalo, N. Y.

stands at the top of the singles

list with a substantial 639. Billie

here, but it was a California Melton and Ruth Dorris of Am-

kegler who shined brightest,

arillo, Tex., are number one in

Alyce Patti, Burlingame, Cal, doubles with 1157. .

topped individual scoring yester‘day with a tally of 686. Martha

The best five-woman team is still the Hickman Oldsmobile

Adavideon of Seattle and Sgt. Whirlaways of Indianapolis. That

Marge Krauss of Ft. Lawton, team marked up 2705 early in the(} 29-31 N. PENN. | Seattle, rolled high doubles, 1043. tournament ahd. it has y Lincoln 0355

. However, all leadegs stood firm. (been approached.

never “a »

1834

: — | Tosa Softball Notes |

300 were i Nu

jpumbering the amateurs, 839 to

{the scheduled seven. So Columbus 627.

AMARILLO, Tex., June 4 (UP)| |—It was the same old story in the

111 303 0367) 7 Texas PGA tournament. The win- Milwaukee

ner and still champion is Lord «Byron Nelson. | Nelson shot rounds of 69 and {T0 over Amarillo ‘Country Club

io lyesterday to go with his 137 for ris: x the earlier two rounds and take

the 72-hole tournament title with!

la 276.

It was his third victory in four | years, and it was worth $1000. Charles Klein of San Antonio had a chance to write a different ending to the show, but he faded to a two-over-par 72 on the final|Cre 18 and finished one stroke behind Lord Byron at 277. It was worth] $700 to the San Antonian.

Coffin’s Golfers Show Way in 6th Tourney

Familiarity didn’t breed con-s tempt for Coffin’'s golfers yesterday. Four of Coffin’s top six twoman golf teams won the best ball title in the Indianapolis Golf| Association's sixth annual tourney on the Coffin course. The team total was 283. Duos © composed of Clayton Nichols and Bob Crouch, George Dougherty | and Buck Hatfield and Bob Funk] and Carl Brooks each hit 70, two! under par. The Ted Draper-Pete Farkas pair scored a 73. | Sarah’ Shank’s golfers were second with 284 and Riverside was third with 286. South Grove took fourth with 288 and Pleasant Run was fifth with 289. Sixty |L contestants competed.

T 'ompson, Middlecoff

Win Celebrities’ Honors| WASHINGTON, June 4 (UP)—|

|dlecoff tied for first place in the pro division of the national cele- : brities golf tournament yesterday) (with 139's for the 36 holes. | Patty Berg of Minneapolis, {topped the women's division of the two-day frolic with a three-

stacked at 12 to 1 against each

IPhapdeishia Louis

ison

i Jimmy Thompson and Cary Mid- 1S

SCREECH—Grady Hatten slithers into Boston Catcher Walker Cooper safely. The Cincinnati third baseman scored on Joe Adcock's hit to «eft field. The relay to home was late. That's Umpire Artie Go Gore calling the play. The Reds took both games yester ay, 3-1 and 4.2.

n

\ [\ ILA

LEAGUE STANDINGS AMERICAN ASSOCIATION .

Weiss, Jordan (2). and Mordarski; Dries, |

Peterson (2) and Marshall. (First Game) SEE 3115000 003 8 1 {Kansas City .e 004 000 000— 4 3 Thiel,

Landeck

Mliwauxes Kahsas City . RoYi Johnson (4) organ and Courtney. (First Game) 008

13) Porterhaid Second Game) i 000 0— 1

00 500 x— 6 10

Bt. Paul x 0 6 Minneapolis Van Cuyk, Labine | Teed; Howell and

ond y St. Paul ....... ..... 000 Minneapolis i . son, Romano (3) wilhelm and Katt.

AMERICAN LEAGUE First Game

002 - (Lemish (8)

Jester 13) and Unser; Melton, 9) and Courtney.

] Today “Triel (6) and Bur-|

ly

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Giants Climb Into rst visi Cleveland Continues Its Strea

ome After miserable starts, those springtime. ‘sparing partners, the Cléveland Indians and the New York Giants, were making some progress today on their plans to ge together again in October for the World Series, : They both 1 were better off than at any time since Ye

GB Cincinnati

023 04 11 1 Bu Xe 00 and

York c.cconsns 00 000 001— 3 8 1 Cleveland ©’ 000 140 03x— 8 11 3 Raschi, Sanford (8) and Berra; Feller| and Hegan. Losing pitcher, Raschi. Home | runs—Easter, Rosen Second Game | New. York” .........: 000 000 001— 1 4 1} Cleveland- ............ 000 013 00x— 4 10 0} Shea, Ostrokski (7) and Berrs; Lemon | and Tebbetts Losing pitcher, Shes:

{Home runs—Easter, Lemon, Doby, Berra. | |

Fir Galle . 031 000 111— 19 . 000 111 000— 3 4 Ea and Tipton:

Starr (7) Mahoney (9 and Lollar. Losin

1! 0]

Sieater, Hogue (3

pitcher, Sleator Home runs, Philly Lipton, Secunq Game Philadelphia ER 000 000 010— 1 9 1 Lou ,. 000 100 10x— 3 6 1| Lachetd and Astroth: Overmire and { Batts. Home run-—Schefb. First Game

Boston basses snsisns Barhell, ‘Kinder (6) and Moss; icombe, Aloma 4) Kretlow (8) | (TV and Niarhos, Masi. Parnell. Losing pitcher Holcombe. |runs—Robinson, Moss. Second Game Svante «+... 100 000 010— 2 7 . 002 211 08x—11 18

Boston Chicago Stobbs, richs (8)

Evans (5) MeDermott (8) and Masi. Losing pitcher, Stobbs. First Game Washington .......... 210 011 003— 8 12 Detroit ..001 002 100— 4 38 Sima, Haynes (7) and Grasso; Hrucks (9) Johnson (9) Winning pitcher, Losing pltcher, Trucks. Yost, Noren, Sima, Souchock.

Second Game Washington swan 010 100 000— 2 11 Dertol .... 402 001 13x10 13 on” "and Guerra: Robinson. Home runs—Wertz.

NATIONAL LEAGUE First Game

Cincinnati oston

1 0

Trout. and Ginsberg, Sima. Home runs—

1 1

Hutchinson and

|under-par 105. The temperature, 3 | which soared into the 90's yester- | day, forced the lady entrants to 208 | (uit after 27 holes. | The heat got to Dizzy Dean, ! former St. Louis Cardinal pitch-| ing star in Saturday’s opening

200 round. Dean suffered a mild heat

|prostration and was unable to |play- the final 18.

Last Risne 8 s James a at Municibal Stadium

ht's Bush-Callahan til ye! hy vs, Bridge Sh Eb. Te ills rE Blue and

Westln Se phi Rallro io ter hedule at ry Grove: 1, is lon poh Fairmount dass;

Fath Saw Pos Ww, loc eyer's Market vs. "Peasice Gaulbatt

EE —

One-Day Service

PALACE SALON

G. long life

and long mileage, too!

CLL

ROAD-TEST THE

WILLS

STATION WAGON

See Your Nearest

»

808 VIRGINIA AVE. FR-0785

'WILLYS DEALER

104 000 110— 7 13 0! 000 102 200— § 11 0 Hol-

Winning pitcher. | Home |,

Masterson (6) Hin-| and Moss: Jud-

1} 1

eason "started.

The Indians, who floun-|

aut of 10 late in May, then

ater dropped four in a row to! ‘he astonishing White Sox. rebounded from that low point with eight straight victories.

The high note of their winning streak came yesterday before 75,163 delighted fans in Cleveland as first Bob Feller and then Bob Lemon turned in fine: pitching in

lered around and lost nine 15 ,000 Whammies

8 to 3 and 4 to 1 victories over .the hated Yankees.

Hit First Division

around, slowly but surely beat|

hitter, then losing 4 to 3.

Ii

Seal

AT As

Raffensbepger and Scheffing: Blaxtord nd Cooper, Saome run—Gordon. Second Game

000 010 030 4 13 0

Atlanta 8-5, Birmingham 6-6. Mobile 2, New Orleans 1.

Solunar Vables

Saturday unday

al 1:50, I: Hm home field Saturday by sink-| : Indianapolis

s.55 semipro outfit, 6 to 3,

100 000 100— 2 5 3| Manager Eddie Sawyer's scath-

i i

i

|

Atterbury ‘Keystoners' Notch 11th Straight

RICHMOND, June 4 |Camp Atterbury’s 28th Infantry Stanky. Max Lanier pitched shut-

|Division baseball team had its/Out ball until the eighth and gave {11th straight win of the season/UP only four hits, two by Mays Yost connected. [today. They scored a 14-to-12 and two by Stanky. victory over the Richmond Tigers

- EMUWAKEE iii. s 38 IT GOB me IEARSOTIBS, v4 % isn aw as the second game was to start aft-| ‘Amateurs Open ive TK 3 3 8 {ost ton i fond Pian at ad er 10:45 p. m. With the score. tied op | Minneanolis coco 3 2 388 2 ivueller. Home run—Jethroe 3 to 3, Fernandez struck out and rans-Mississippi |gpolere 21000008 HAs Rey pegs Fist Game = ol |pscording Io] Hinjive Pai Paden DALLAS, Tex., June 4 (UP)— INDIANAPOLIS 8 3 us 3° Rew ork i were seconds to go be-|Qualifying play opened today over Columbus nd Game fore 10:45 when the next inning! [tricky Brook Hollow Country Club NATIONAL LEAGUE Pet. OB) (St. Louis oeeanine 100 OU started. Columbus went on t0/in the 48th annual Trans-Mis-|Erooklva .......... 30 333 4 |pBreechen (Follett (8) ‘and Sarni, Rice: score three runs. An inning starts 'sissippi golf tournament. New York . 12 522 4alwimae * gih re Tg ed LB pd BA og] to/2% soon as the previous inning] Upwards of 200 amateur stars | Boston fh 3) Qettel, Home runs—Westrum, ends. | Sinein 22 438 $ were expected to take a crack jneinng First Game | fonts “11 31 Mu 48 {Pittsburgh ..... ... 100 001 000— 18 ol Tribe Box Score |at the 6600 yards par 70 layout Piitsuren 5 a HE al Philadelphia 5 202 00x11 18 | LOUISVILLE today and tomorrow, seeking posi-| AMERICANS EAGUE oct. OB ycen- Koski, ak and _FritsRichter. a AB R B PO AE E tions in the 64-man championship Chica 0 iri 3 1 a1 ; | Losing oticher, Quen. Home runs—dJones, kgpeio, 3b . Li 4 g flight for match play beginning } Bolte po [resuiey : 13 a 3 [Kinder a4 Cum 2 ".. : . sve an o | Pittsburgh §. 0 A $312 iV dnesday Chainbi in oft 22 430 19 philadeiphia 21x— 8 10 0 1S on: "cf zariene- 3.48 8 8 38 ending Champion Jim Eng-| are ton 11 3 4% 1 Dickson, Werle and McCullough; Church | Zavehin, 15 ‘4 © 1 8 2 alish of Des Moines, on hand tog fouphs ------ 3 # 3 WN and Seminick' Losing. pitcher, (Hoderlein, 26.1... 8 9 3 1 2 Of defend his title in the nation's GALES FOR AY o : ¢ Game : : " r Al Chicago ............. - 2 Fond 2 aad 1 11 1 jnira-ranked amateur tournament, AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Brooklyn "I'l! 01) 202 20%— 8 11 0 te was automatically given a berth.| winneapolis at St. Paul (night: | Hiller, Schmitz (6 Rush (6) TOE ixpuankroias' | ¥' '! ° ‘The other 63 were wide open to| (Only same ERICAN LEAGUE maker Meveobe A ome. runs— Hodges, Saffell, cf AB r 5 iy : % 0 the bulky field. There wasn't 2 wasningion - Detaont Louis (night Sou. Second Game (19 Tunings) . . w a - et Beard. rf 4 3 0 1 o o"“big name” star In sight. | ar : LORIGAPO ++ vs issn 000 100 010 0— 3 8 1! Da oendra’ct "8 8 8 & 3 4 But Dale Morey of Dallas, and| New York of Clerelang ght) Brooklyn 00 100 100 100 000 1= 3 8 1 | Ean A a 3 3 3 3 ’ 0 formerly of Martinsville, Ind., a/ a Louts st New ¥ York ler KLE Roe a and Campanella. » . ncinna a Merson, 2b 3 1 3 3 4 1repentant one-time pro and cur-| Bifiiourgh at Philadelphia Pre. A ONAL: LEAGUE Mangan, e ‘3 8 3} 3 1 {rent Southern amateur titlist, will| Chicago at Brookiyn (night) | Qttaxs §1. Rochester 1.3" s . - . alo 6- more isha 2 tt shave Somme backing for the favor RESULTS YESTERDAY | springfield & Toronto's. CURT: 0s is 1.0.0 0 00 AMERICAN ASSOCIA | eal 9, apish Sein 9 0.0 0 Of (First Game) 3 AS LEAGUE Gearhart 1 ve a9 0 N } U Toledo .... .. 063 003 030-13 14 0 Beaumont 6:11, San Antonio 0-3 ah + 31 ¢ 1 Nelson Wraps Up &i of SP l0.0 Pint Ey ember ae | APRS 1 9 0 0 @ Connelly, Sloat (6) and House: Patric { — to | Garlock 8) Moigrd a and Morgan. Shreveport at Houston. postpor oned. rain Peters Sounded ooh or Rabe + Texas PGA Title Toledo : Bevung | 393 010 0— 5 10 3 Chattanooga 12-3, Nashville TA, hm | Goku 345 100 x—13 10 0! Little Rock 3-4, Memphis 2-

or terday.

xy ing

‘Doctor’ Sawyer'’s Needle Jabs His Phils Awake

defeating the Cubs, 3 to 2 and

Pirates, 11 to 2 and 8 to 3,

SAWYER said the Phillies homer which broke a Scoreless tie and “were strangling on a diet Of with Frank Shea in the fifth in-right-handed pitching.” 80 what happens?

[then lost, 12 to 2. and the Browns | trimmed the Athletics, 2 to 1, after losing, 7 to 3.

Gains Seventh

got some strong revenge, doling out just four hits and getting a

{with a homer in the ninth.

{scored the only run after hitting ‘his second double

(UP) — around on a single

Val

AS DEFINED

SURE (shoor), adj., sur’er (shoor‘er);

trustworthy or dependable; certain not to fail or disap-

point expectation; reliable.

Example: Seagram’s finest American whiskey.

their way upward and yesterday |giraight game hit the first division for the first, “Newcombe time, ousting the Braves from y.iierg tops for fourth when they split & double-goa00n to win his fifth header with the Cardinals, win- Hodges hit his 17th homer. Billy ning 1 to 0 on Dave Koslo's tWO-|cox made six hits for the day. ! Ken Raffensberger and Ewell The Dodgers steadily forged Blackwell were almost impregahead, moved four full games in nable as the Reds came from befront in the National League bY hind to win each game at Boston.

8 to 3. while the Reds trimmed plate and a passed ball later made the Braves, 3 to 1 and 4 to 2. The Walker Cooper the goat in the Phillies assaulted the skidding opener. sible for two runs that cost Vern In the American League, the Bickford a defeat. In the after. {White Sox again went two games piece Ted Kluszewski's two-run

{in front of the Yankees by downPHILADEI PRIA, June's up] ling. the Red Box, 11 to 2, after|Sid Gordon hit a first-game Bos-

{in appraisal of his defending | losing the opener, 7 to 5; theiton homer and Sam Jethroe got [oan Philadelphia Phillies’ Senators defeated Detroit, 8 to 4, 000 000 0ix-- 1 4 1/pennant chances this year ap-| Lanier and Rice: "Koslo and Westrum. | {peared today to have brought {m..100 011 010— 4 16 0 mediate results. | “We should be 5 Fame out| {and Brooklyn shou n breez hooting for another 20Eu Ing," Sawyer said only five day | Feller shoot gained his seventh

double gave Blackwell his margin.

one in the second.

hitter and Bubba Church came through with a five-hitter. Willie Jones hit a first-game i hip Bevel while the Phils came from idi e ees nightcap. Gran HamSince then, his Phillies have tr enhh BY Sojding Luke Easter ie take the nigh slam homer and Koski, wai Dusak and. Prits- | \swept to four victories in five hit. two homers and Al Hosen got/Del Ennis and Andy 34 (games while averaging eight runs| , . "1, the second game, Lemon,

homered later, {a game, They beat the Cardinals |. also

ho had won only one game from hit his 12th homer for

Second Fi ea i 020 010, 000— 3 5 tin a two-game series and yester- 31 Yankees in the past two sea- burgh in the opener, “ang 300 008 |day smothered the Pirates, 11 t0/s n. 2nq had lost seven to them,| . Dickson. 2 and 8 to 3.

The White Sox made 16 hits. three each by Orestes Minoso ghd Bob: Dillinger and two apiece bY ining. Easter and Larry Doby got Nellie: Fox, Jim Busby and ‘later Cleveland homers while Yogi Carrasquel in their Vietory over

The Phillies rout Gerry Staley [Berra spoiled Lemon's shutout Tom Poholsky, Mel Queen and

Losing ‘Murry Dickson—all right-handers !—in successive games.

Boston, the big hitters in the Dave Koslo, who has unusual Lou Boudreau and Vern {success with the Cardinals, held led the way with three them to just two hits in the|/Eddie Robbins for Chicago {opener in which Wille Mays Less Moss for Boston hit Vie Wertz led Detroit and coming victory wi by Eddie singles, Tigers in the opener when Pi Al Bima, Irv Noren and Tada

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