Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 July 1951 — Page 14
‘could pick eight pitchers without regard to teams while Stengel haa Williams, St. Louls' George Sis-| - to- pick one from each team. “addition to Newcombe and Rob- 1 ~erts, he has such stars as Sal other major leaguers to better
can League park. That was last vear in Chicago, when the Na-!
Robin Roberts
AL Hitter I ie ant weed 4 Times, Dies
who has won 11 and lost only! . Br United Press four with the league's last-place. DETROIT, July 9—Harry Heil team. : mann, “Both managers a also announced League batting champion and one batting orders. They were: lof the graatest right-handed hitNATIONAL L LEAGUE AMERICAN LEAGUE ters of all time, died today after
2%: Heilmann, Top
|
seven losses 81. the
A o.ef Ia Jong illness. al. 3 it The 58-year-old former Detroit! E or, | Tigers slugger died at Henry Ford {Hospital with his wife, Mae, at| Ama? Carrasauel. se ‘his side.
Stengel and Sawyer |
pitcher from the eight hurlers majors riellmann carved out an| available to each, Roberts got ‘equally successful career as the the nod .over righthander Don “Voice of the Tigers,” oa Newcombe of Brooklyn who has ing Detroit games, won 12 and lost four games this season. | Stengel's choice was even more’ difficdlt. But having chosen Gar-| ver, there appeared little doubt) that Ed Lopat of the Yankees would be the top relief choice for | the fourth, fifth And sixth innings. oes Sega Saffering Jom a se After that it could be Freddie : on staying on the job. Hutchinson, Detroit; Mel Par-| nell, Boston; Bob Lemon, Cleve- ail land; Bob Schants, Philadelphia;| "ann had cancer. Conrado Marrero, Washington or r > Randy Gumpert, Chicago, HEILMANN hit .403 in 1023 to Bawyer perhaps has greater all- | {beat out the immortal Babe Ruth!
around mound strength, since he by 10 points, He was
# » »
IT WAS while beginning » [18th season broadcasting the TH {ger games at spring training in (Lakeland, Fla, that he was | stricken with pneumonia. He
with Boston's Ted
,.Roger Hornsby, Ty: Cobb, rry Lajoie and: Bill. Terry, the
3
Maglie and Larry Jansen of the 400 in modern baseball history. New York Giants, Brooklyn's A ——————————————— Preacher Roe, Ewell Blackwell of Cincinnati, Warren Spahn of Publinx Tour ney Boston and Dutch Leonard of Beaton Gets Under Way The American Leagué has won| MILWAUKEE, July 9 (UP)-|
1 and the National League five sian Bielat, genial truck driver =¥ Ap 37 All-8tar games, but from: Yonkers; : N.Y.
. tees ott ERA Le SR Mom al ivadiy on the first rowed
triumphed in an Ameri-\qurunge of the National Public * 43g [Links golf champlonship: The stocky ’ defending pion was expected to have little {trouble in his first match against, {Bill Fenwick of Detroit, but a | wide open field of at least a |dozen top-rated contenders will {offer tough competition before | Saturday's final rounds on the Brown Deer course, Most of the 210-man field teed off over the rugged, rolling course in the first 18-hole round of the six-day, match-play grind
tionals won a 4 to 3 decision in 14 innings, the only overtime game of the Series.
Sugar Ray ay Picked Over English Foe
LONDON, July 8 (UP) Though he 18 riding a string of six knock-! out victories, England's Randolph Turpin was getting little support from the experts and the bettors
today for his title bout against today. Forty-six golfers who World Middleweight Champion drew byes will join the play toRay Robinzon tomorrow night, (morrow, |
Heavyweights Top Amateur Card
In the experts corner, only one out of 11 newspaper fight critics predicted that the 23-year-old British champion would conquer the 31-year-old world king from New York. Two heavyweights bouts will And the odds-makers ‘vere top a 10-ight amateur card making Robinson a steady 5 to 2 scheduled in the Sahara Grotto
favorite. Punch Bowl, 4100 B, Washington EE. {8t., Thursday. M | Don Evans, 109. Indianapolis Look, a Golden Glove heavyweight champ, PITTSBURGH. July 9 will meet Bob Elazer, 205, Cin-
(UP)—It wasn't until yesterday that Red Schoendienst of the Cardinals hit
Gloves, Ne a | Two light-heavy Golden Glove
fancy champs. now in the top fight cate-
cinnati. FElazer held the Queen City title in this division in Golden
In the sixth inning of the Ory. will put on the other “Dig” the second game against bout of the evening, Willie the Pirates he hit a homar Crawford, 185, of Indianapolis left-handed With no one on "ill meet Bob Sweeney, 100. Cinati base. Then in the next in- ¢inna s ning he PAE it about Procepds from the card will go a bit—he hit a home run into the Grotto charity fun. Adi ssi § p ‘gate is 75 cents, oht-he , 7 mission at the gate \ Xe handed With one man general; 25 cents, children. Bouts 30.
start at 8
Turner Favored PHILADELPHIA, July 9 (vp) Joltin' Joe Gets
—Gil Turner, Philadelphia welter. Jolted Twice
weight who has never lost an NEW YORK, July 8 (UP)
amateur or professional fight, ruled a favorite today at odds up Yankee Outfielder Joe DIimaggio will be able to play in the All-
to 8 to 5 for hia 12-round bout with seasoned Charley Fusari, Irstar game tomorrow despite a leg injury he suffered vesterday
vington, N, J.,, at S8hibe Park to- | at Boston.
night, The club announced that IA- | Maggio's muscle pull in his left leg is “only minor” and will not sideline him at all. It was a rough week-end in general for DiMag. He was | benched when ‘Manager Casey | Stengel pulled him out of the Red Sox game at Boston Saturday. DiMaggio slid into second base yesterday during the sec- | ond inning and had to be re- | moved when he pulled the | muscle. Gene Woodling replaced him in center.
Softball
AT W, 16TH ST. MIDGE Janay Mitchel, Indians oq IS.dap stofk ca
Inst aight 4 814 i is,” (ond and Butch Bago
* Witte and Jimmy Pai fs won ihe wo an june) events Heat w id Hel ‘Harrison, Johany raed "and 8 OME--Winner of last night's
Hunt Bg! 1a Softball ih | arrei Bar Bar: Results in the an, Hassler C hed Tun 3a a yesterday: Sam's Tavern 3. Kramer a. in ket #'S0uth Side Rebels 11. Phill
Spendny Products 10, Indiana M onl Veena 3
i e Ki lor capt i. » nd_ Darringer rosy dain i a8 Wionert bid ore B aa % er, | ae A
Myo arday results at ech Grove: Ha Rutt. Tolohone 6. 8 cedvay F Fro “fodian Ren ~~iroy = Telephone pee y + ¢ Fal Ontarta, al a big car Hn Central AA 1; Allied Florists “3.
raee
me was Kinman Garage 1, Ae .
Laat Meadow, He Fh Linden. Los wi MEhts. schadule:
reasles- Santoert: nm, Rive.
y 5 Celt Nn eltic on | t vs, PFairmo Be ni 55. ARRInS w Post vs, W.
four-time American
Examination later revealed that
cham}
> 5
save their 5-4 win. the last 15.
on Larry Doby's extra-bases
seven-hitters by Connie Marrero and Sid Hudson gave Washington a 3-1 and 8-2 sweep over
| the A's.
Brooklyn stepped out eight and a half games in front of the National League race when Jackie Robinson’s 11th inning homer beat the Phils, 8-4, while 8id Gordon's 10th inning homer
| beat the Giants for the Braves,
Since ending his playing career beat the Cards, 8-2, then lost to them, 9-8, while made their choices of starting in 1933 after 17 years in the, the Cubs and Reds were rained out.
+ & »
!
| ever, Vie Rasch was nursing
| two out in the fifth when Lou Boudreau homered
Boston's ‘Going’
y United Pres The old cry,
out today by a panicky, “there
Boston Red Sox surged into the strongest midseason position they have held in an American League pennant race since 1946, The old script of lagging behind at the half- |
way point and then staging a i frantic last-half drive was con-
signed to the trash basket, The | Sox this time are grinning over | the league-leaders’ shoulders— |
the White Sox—and ahead of the Yankees from whom they
had just completed ‘a three- ;
gamé sweep.
Contrasted with their posi- I in 1047, 1948, 1049 and | 1950 the Red Sox are a shoo- |
tion
in this year. They trailed the Yankees by eight games in 47, the Indians by 6% in 1948, the Yankees by 81% in 1049 and the Tigers by eight last seadon, at a similar stage of the race. ‘. o .-
AE YANKEES won Sassy.
| in 1947, but in’ each of th
three years the Red Sox a]
mighty second-half drives that |
just fell short. They managed to tie the Indians in 1948, but lost the flag in the league's only
| Indiana's entries in the fourth, Juniar
Amateur championship helped ke
Runs--Thompson, | tates Golf Association tourna. 3-5 ome : "| map pve mark to $08. a new tecord eller Marshall and Cordon. The Hoosier list included 29 solfers AD soklyn pi 1 wt = 8 12 incense of 24 over last vear e lin ns- B Phil kin] hi 31 100 0— 4 11 2 men will compete for six Rlaces in t Ade RS One ou 3% 9 King! of Timo Tl 3 nny at fhe Unvantty 40) and Campanella, Walker "n ; Chy reh, | Francis Truitt will handle the qualite- AIRE pier” Palen 33) en] ‘ing session at ihe Country Club of Indi- pur ome Rit
anapolis July 1
A salesman ‘8
t Fenway The fruits of that hunch bloomed today, how ever. Friday, Vollmer batted in two runs with a triple as the Sox beat the Yankees, 6-2; Sat- | urday he smashed a grand-slam home run as the Sox beat the Yanks, 10-4, and yesterday he completed the series sweep as his two-run homer put the Sox ahead for an eventual 6-3 win.
THAT upped the Box to second place, bounced the Yanks down to third and only the failure of a ninth inning Browns’ rally against the White Sox kept the Bostons from going into first. The White Sox needed three pitchers in the ninth to Boston now has won six straight and n of
Cleveland, meanwhile, kept only four games out of first with 8-3 and 10-2 wins over Detroit
THE Yankee collapse was the big news, how-
8 “here they come,” was drowned |
wasDs e the “death” of Phil RoninAon. bi Tim ai
Jim Delsing opened it with a double off reliefer Joe Dobson. Marv Rotblatt came in to pitch then, and walked pinch-hitter Ned Garver. Enter Luis Aloma for the Sox. Fred Marsh bunted out on the third strike and Sherman Lollar hit into a double play.
* o »
DOBY hit his 12th and 13th home runs, a triple and a double to drive in glx runs as the Tribe beat the Tigers for the 12th and 18th times in 14 games this season. The Dodgers won a battle of homers.: Roy Campanella’s 10th put the Dodgers ahead, 1-0, in the fifth. Bubba Church's first with a man on made it 2-1 in the Phil fifth. Pee Wee Reese's fourth tied it at 2-2 in the sixth, but Tommy Brown hit his fourth of the year in the Phil sixth to make it 3-2. The Dodgers tied it at 3-3 in the seventh on two singles, a walk and Carl Furillo’s fly—then won it in the 10th when Robinson's 11th scored Duke Snider ahead of him. The Giants had a 5-2 lead on the Braves in the seventh when Boston tied it on Willard Marghall's homer, Ebba St, Clair's triple, Manager Tommy Holmes’ pinch double and Walker Cooper's double. Then came Gordon's winning homer in the 10th.
barrage, while
8-5. The Pirates ® >
RALPH KINER ended his three-day suspension with his 20th homer and two doubles to lead the Pirates to a first game win over the Cards, and Red Bchoendienst's first two homers of the
year paced a 17-hit 8t. Louis attack that won the second.
Brooklyn's ‘In’
ly United Press
a 3-0 lead with
“We're in!” That was the ecstatic pennant ery of Brook- | lyn's defiant Dodgers today as they savored their | substantial eight-and-a-half game lead over the | rest of the pack ‘and visioned World Series’ checks that can't possibly be cashed until Oe- , tober.
they go,” as the |
| asked Pitcher Ralph Branca, somewhat more quiet and re- | flective than the rest. “This is my sixth season with Brooklyn and overall, it's the greatest club I've ever seen. | “No one will catch us,” he | answered his.own question, “not { unless we suddenly come up | with a whole flock of injuries. n
” ” »
. ag LEAGUE STANDINGS THE DODGERS have ample
AMERICAN A ri
n Lost sot GB | reason to rejoice. They recentRs, , © = ly made a clean Sweep. of their tiie Paul 4 + three-game series “with “the {Mipneapol) ; * Giants and now boast what ap: | : BTR Rie mbus ead.
io ~
“TF cafit remember ever havyw! Ing such. a big lead" said Glee- \ 2) ful Gil Hodges. “This is the best 1 | position we've been in since I I a] joined Brooklyn several years 2 ago. I don’t see- how we can
{Chicago ittaburgh
mak nay sess
AMERICAN L EAGUE
Cooper 3 ie, and Westrum. 11-03, win
ae care Th
iT). Koslo . piteher, Chipman
tanty 3-1 nel Church. Ree. Brown and
Grandstand 3150-Gen.
{Life's not all bad when you're|
“Who 1&8 going to catch us?” |
de
STOCK CAR RACING “TOMORROW NIGHT 8:30 ©
Gates Open £:30—Qualifications 7:00—Pirst Race My
ANDERSON, July The, tall’ bronzed. golfer in the red shorts and checkered cap slammed his putter on the ground just off the 18th green and gave the ground a vialent kick with his cleated shoes. _ It was Dale Morey, the Martinsville sandpaper salesman uf ats of the leaGiig amAEUTS in the coumisy 4 wel 5s : the state. ~~ He had just rounded the Anderson Country Club
course in 70 blows, two under par, and still was so angry he didn’t want to talk about ft. 2 nn DALE_AND nearly all of the other amateurs who will play in the 51st State Amateur tourney here played practice rounds yesterday and there wasn’t a happy face among them, It isn’t that the course is not in good condition as golf courses go. It's the 6610-yard layout. It's tricky and dangerous for parshooting golfers.
LOUISVILLE, | July 9 —
an Indianapolis Indian. Sometimes you get an even break. The Hoosier Redskins thought about their life's
estate today while making tracks to Toledo and a new start tomorrow; It seems the even break popped up here yesterday when| . the Tribe lost the first game tol the Louisville Colonels, 4-3, and came back to win the second, 7-6, in 10 innings. Royce Lint and Ed Stevens could look at yesterday's work with mixed emotions. Lint saw a four-game ‘personal winning streak ended by losing to the Colonels in the first tilt. First {Baseman Stevens enjoyed a game(winning homer in the second con{test in which he moved his con{secutive game hitting streak to 125.
DALE MOREY . .. ing at two under par.
, What did Morey think of the Al Richter’s hit in the ninth in- “Youre a newspaperman and I Lint his first defeat ever by al was far better off than most of AS ONE golfer explained after Bad Heave Hurts At Ith St t d 6 fe. in some of those sand and gone to second when Lint ‘enough, building up a 2-0 lead on] The Indiana Gun Club will play | “yeh” said still another, “what to two bases on a high relay in 57th annual state trapshoot. ot These golfers may have been e Indian to score, being plated ning at 9 a. m, ihe higher than in past years. The {Class C, 88 to 91, and Class D, 154 that would qualify for the eighth. Then - Louisville -tled it! for class trophies in the same, stage for Richter's game-winning the program. flight to start match play on back from & 1-0 deficit to a 2-2antries should be mailed to the anapolis there were 12 shooters
course? “Oh, no you don't,” he growled ning. His scoop single to center he's kick- don’t have anything to say about scored Pitcher Jim McDonald the course. {Colonel nine. Royce had won. seven! his amateur buddies. times over the Colonels since| X ec ed a 8 = joining the Tribe in 1947. V finishing a far-over-par round: One was out when Richter made "Why you're liable to lose your his bingle. McDonald had singled threw a low heave that bounced Tra shoot Here ! ye ake aren't sand traps,” piped laway from Catcher Jim Mangan, es golfer standing nearby, “those are dungeons.” errors. Ted Beard scored in the post to more than 200 sharp- about that fairway where you (fourth when, with two out, John-| | shooters this week in the four-day have to walk single file to stay in {from the outfield. Beard came in, Preliminaries will be stretching the “toughness of the !in the confusion. | Thursday at the club located ati sourse, but it was the opinion of {from third in the seventh on, There will be four divisions of field, which was swollen to 240 by [Jim Mangan’'s ground single. {shooters, Class A, those shooting tee time this “morning, believed A double by Beard and a sin-/88 and under. championship flight. up in the bottom of the eighth gvent. {qualifying rounds today and toon Bob Broome's single and Tom| Shooters are ‘required to pur- MOrrow and the low 64 shooters double in the ninth. | Out of state shooters will com. Wednesday. The second game was nip-and-ipete in every event but the state! Last year when the tournament tie in the Afth,: thanks fo Da {Indiana Gun Club, Route 12, Box. ‘tied for one place at I TE ‘In 1949 lesandro’s eighth. homer of the 506, India tis 1 iL SADR Fo es ig nape ", neat } ARE a eh AAT
The first game was decided by as he kicked the ground again. from second and gave Southpaw But in all his disgust Dale | The Tribe started out welll ‘ny Merson’s single was stretched \the short grass?” Frank Kalin was the second E. 38th St. and Post Rodd begin: most that qualifying scores would That Set Stage 194 and over; Class B, 91 to 94; it would be scores of more than \gave the Tribe a 3-2 lead in the trophy winners are not eligible O'Brien's double. That set the chase their shells when entering| will go into the championship tuck all the way. The Tribe fought handicap title. Reservations for Was played at Highland in Indigeason, a 360-foot blast aver the — . i Ant tHe
field wall. righifield wa Juniors Rained Out {it was 155 that got a golfer into
After that it was up and down. Stevens finally lowered the boom | The pint-sized pastimers of oe a | Junior Baseball, Inc, and their |
and that was it. Forrest Main| picked up his 10th win in relief. | The Tribe will play in Toledo] Vietory Field All-Star program
MOREY is expected to be one
ot. GB | Miss now.” post-season playoff. In 1949 |ghicaso "i = | Brooklyn Centerfielder Duke |tOMOrTOW night, Wednesday and| today bowed to the weather- lof the top contenders for the title they lost th at by drop- |New York .. 8 : Snid y ® Thursday. Then it’s off to Colum-| man. Rain forced postpone- (won last year by Bob Myers of ey lost.the pennant by drop- [5f8 hg 8 nicer was squally optimistie. “1 |. yerore re orting back to Vie- Indianapolis. | ping their last two games of pet : 473 11 | hope they don’t catch us, I tell |ous before rep ‘ ot ment of the affair until Pp Bh n i 1812 everybody,” he said, “But deep |[OTY Field next Tuesday for a set) .. = Some of the late entries at the the season to the Yankees. Adelphia 491 #4" down in my heart 1 don't ep with the Red Birds. ib dd a tee today included Dan Scism and Then last year they petered GAMES TODAY how anyone can.” ne . Il Francis Fleming of Evansville, t ‘ : | 1 A « Semi-Pro Baseba {Dick Cardwell and Don Farringout in late September after RICAN ASSOCIATION Snider saw room for improve- ABR H O rel s Minneapolis of Kansas ity (nist). ent. h : | Beard. ef iiiisianens 1 23 2 3 Camp Aiterbury's 28th Infantry Divi- ton of Kokomo, George Kaperak traveling at better than a .700 8t. Paul at Milwaukee (night). ment, however. {Mean She 3 2 1 31 0 Olson baseball team swept a two-game of Terre Haute, and Bob Hamilclip for two months. One ah TEAGUE “I'd feel better if we had a pars Ty c4 0°00 g; week. ~end bid vy from the Muncie Reds {ton Jr. of Evansville. | % " i “ _ ist 15 oh 26 00 | The Red Sox had just about | No sames 8 Shediléa, Arab 10-game lead, Je simile. 1 re. Stevens Ib E88 91 Yarden nt Ca mam forma: Tournament officials said no exploded another myth, to0— | No ames scheduled. when I was with Mon- Mangan. ¢*........0 3 0 1 & 1 OBR jdcionia Phillies nuriing ace. pitcosd additional entries would be taken. that they couldn't beat the RESULTS YESTERDAY treal in 1948 we had an 18-game Lint»... 130-0 1 3 0 REAR BS T%E the box ‘in the second|Before the tournament is ended Yankees in clutch games, . lead. Man, whatta’ feeling that | ...... 31 3 8 25 1 oioning when the Kevstoners nicked him the winner and runnerup will play . AMERICAN LI was, Brooklyn called me up on [for two runs. The 28th won the second |; h That was just an old wives .. Pan 0<i3 IL. Ol A , 1 of th ly xOne out when winnihe run scored, game, 8 to 8. yesterday oles of golf. tale today in the wake of the Miwaukee = iH 030 J01—1 ‘8° 9 ps Fi at year and a few LovisviLe Sox’ three consecutive blast. |oMcGlothin and Thompson, Heed (1; days later, Montreal clinched |gichter, ss 3 7.8 0 a Wall, Donovan Hoover (9) and Unser the pennanf ”» Lyons, 2b 1-66 3 ings of the defending world's | 8: Pau rhin, tiivwaukes, ‘second game is Tom Wright. If 0 1 98 Be Thrifty— champions. The Yankees threw fret Br | Brooms, " : i 0 0 their three best pitchers — Ed |§jupbus 384 8 lL CAL ABRAMS, sitting near- |zaychin ib 1 3% Be Safe! Lopat, Allle Reynolds and Vic Rake, hui wl hb rgan on- by, declared the Giants weren't Boaeneln. Bn 1 4.33 Raschi—at them but the Red Boole 8) : ‘dead yet” even though they |McDonald, p . 3 13.0.3 0 Let Sox knocked out all three and |&if Game al a fioted + foory rainy had just dropped three tough | Totais ....... 10 21 18 3 had trouble winning only yes- Ts Peterson (8) and Marshall: Hoots games, jadians Rolls Ara * 0% 3 3194 n u terday’s 6 to 3 game. They and Mordarski Susur} This big lead we have” he A Butied ToManaalic Fooerice, d | 4 | had led all the way to win Fri- ainneapolis (First 100 002 001—.4 § © sale thoughtfully, “isn’t a guar- | Richter a Daliessandso, O Brien, Douties ’ v ) -Lyons, eard, ‘Brien, . O8 day's game, 6 to 2, and romped, Kansas City. -.. 100 190 000.2 10 8 an vi Mig we'll win the pen- |ZiR0" Home Run—Hoderlein. Singles— 10 to 4, on Saturday. snd Courtney ines | nant Bui it Sure puts BB OB the Mead Ande oun a on TIRE CO Minnespolts . Rs 4 1 right road. It also means that ier, Lyons. Zauchin (3); Cole, Merson, » : # Kansas City . 400 00 Sad anyone who might have any Stevens Jett—indlanapeiis 3 plulsville - » omas ar 11 ¢§ , yf n mr cD THE SOX appeared to have | Jomasic Barnhill iS and Katt; Pake. jqeas. of catching us will have |Striccestso pint 6. McDonald 1. Hit By raised an even more imperti- AMERICAN LEAGUE to do it soon or forget about i nee Donald ora Fa nent question--can the Yankees (First Sa oi— 1 7 o It until next year. Lint (8-3). Umpires—Clege. King, Briseese. win at Fenway Park? ton 300 000 60x — 3 3 1 “1 Giants have a way of Time Ling SECOND GAME i The answer so far this season i Coleman (11 and Tinton! Sder- bouncing back,” he pointed out. INDIANAPOLIS is “no.” The Yankees have I And then, with his tongue in RE. 34% S ond G Beard, cf 0 0 played eight games at the Fens pn (Seem 000 To Jo—3 1.3 cheek, he added: “But they've Setaon: db 15%] and haven't won yet. As a re- ae a A aan BOt a long way to bounce.” Daliessandro, i: 08 sult, the Sox hold a season's '8) and sen 13.3) and Kiutis That was exactly the way the evens oY as $} 22.8 is 0-4 edge over the team they are New Yor a oir ‘og 00-3 8 0 other Dodgers felt. Tooanoes 0... 3 3 8-2 3% stor ( a2 29 2 ’ ~ { supposed to fold against. Raschi Reynolds mn Kuzava (Th and “We're breezin’ now,” chirped Moca w Tere 9 2 : 2 a 0 Manager Steve O'Neill and Berta. Scatberoush (3.4) and Rotar, Pee Wee Reese, Main, PB Liiennunnnns 1 0.0 2 0 the rest of the club admit, how- MeDougal, Boudreau, Vollmer The forlorn Giants don't have Totals. iis. BT Id 31 1 ; 1 ever, that the big test will come Cleveland i0a foo 100 g 11 0 is be told — because they felt hi LE 2.04 W ' . . th RP etroit 00 003 v6 J when the Sox open a two week Wynn fR-8) and Hezan: Bearden. Trucks the wind as Brooklyn flew by. Richter. ss ¥ hea § : 3 3 2 : Don + Let Bad Brakes Spoil invasion of the West following 8: Tr Wiens gorowy (8) and Ginsberg. deni. sini. 1 ¢ 3.3 3.8 > tomorrow's All-Star game. cota Cty TUCKS Kauffman Publi Tatty Wright. if .....3 0 1 3 0 8 . - { inx Broome. rf 24 © 9 0 0 Y Y + Y sx ow NM eee Tai oe innit ' Ace, gen: of rifled our vacarion... or rour 1 lang : .....0 0000 4310 0-10-28 AAR as mR RR. Aan. Ron caaueRiIny, BC seseees i < THE ROAD has always held Seirait" oo 000 (a0 203 1 0 Dies of Heart Attack Chapman, 3b 11.0. $3130 . - » Jared . ® tts rbAarth, ¢ ...0.. odd terrors for the Sox even JA her . ! Sthart 4 Doll 1 PITTSBU 1 Forres. PL iirerreanns 3 0 1 0%} Week-End Trip! when they were driving down Tout @, and Rovinson. i osing pitcher, SBURGH, July 9 (UP)— Mueiler, p ......c.0. 4.0.1 0 1 9 . the stretch in '48, '49 and '50. If Dobe 4 i Carl Kauffman, who won the na- totals ........... @ en Bono : : : sym in Chicaso © 100 200 10a + 13 4 tional public links golf champion- INDIANAPOLIS ........ 010 014 000 1—1} Expert wheel alignment. Prompt, reliable service on all makes they can hold their hot pace in g “fou, 003 (70 (00 ship three times in a row. died of Lousvils -........ ©. 100 122 000 0—8 ' : the next two weeks against the = Pierce Dobson ®. Rotdlart 91, niom 3 Beart Btiool a ec 0 Rung Batted In—Cole, Tom Wright, Dal. of cars. See us today for safe, trouble free miles. West, the Sox will feel they ‘are Batts Winning pitcher. lerce (9-6) ack yesterday in his iessandro. Chapman (3). Turner a a in." Losing Pitcher Mahoney 0-1) Home Carrick home. ASE Ravens, wo-Base od : Ae WED A | The 53-year- / Zauchin _ 12 At the moment, the rest of NATIONAL LEAGUE vom: a a Dd gouer ho rose Rhard. se ven . a Plays—Ric 5 SHOCK { - { tame) Ol ein an uching Naso ea | the league is in no mood to ar 8 "000110 20 110 30f public links performers, had Stevens Left on Bases ANARSLId gue with them. ttsburg 013 ‘00 Olx— 8 14 | Loutsville 13. Base on Ball socal) 5 p Staley. 1 rechgen 3 ole Rice: | been {ll only a week. Kauffman Muel er Lo Main 1 Strikeouta—MecCall 4 — | Friend, 8 (8) a Ar : Qin eCal { | ning pitcher. Qrrieng 3 Xs Losing pitcher, | {highlighted his golfing career into Tin 5th), Ferris 10 In 5%, Main 5 in, BSORBERS Golf Notes faltt pit “Home Rant Ker 1920 when he won his thiralf, Muh, <n 4h tll Pion, ice A Tur — Ma i i. 0 A ramioBaliB tive 185. L (Second ra a 4.3 straight U. 8. Public Links title. Laser Meher 3:3). Umpires King. Bris: § Ouls ndance-—; midh Lous won, the champtoighip_ ths Pii burgh 000 B= | He was runnerup in 1926. case and Cleat. Time— e {Amateur tournament at Douglas Golf ad oholsky, Sica 10) Qo Staley) and! na | Course h hot 87-89 Wilk 8, ORSON, i Walsh d: a A Lat aliee hit secretary. Laonard Reed, Mc ullough Win piteher, Chambers : { tor the aladem Reed had a 87 lA in 8 Losing pi itcher, * wWiks 1-2. Hom . 1 : | Mhngueganent whith jae aanexed the Cincinnati y Bhicaso. both games post- | . women's title by firing a par four on the poned. rain. , Arst hole in a playoff. She edged Elisa _ (19 Innings) - ® FORD beth Stanfield of Indianapolis by ane Rew d "Yor 000 220 00 Je 3 i CIRCLE CITY | firoke. Both carded 161 over the reg ie Richols
| ecHevroLer $ © PLYMOUTH
1070
INCLUDES INSTALLATION
CAPITOL CTY TIRE £0.
Adm. $1.00—Children 50¢
THE FIELD will firé 18-hole
.
FAS was :
155: In 1948 it was 154 and in 1047
Who will you asked. It name, an indus When will month or next Mr. Walte is for Ford 1 tional Leag without, in th being for him. B his position et \ O'Malley says: \ opposed to him,” Mr, O'Malley r Penn. Not conte it’s the Rickey ii » MR. CLARK first club owner Street throw fro Washington mor fans first, last a The paying fs “Baseball does.1 club owners. I fans ...” For that rea urges the appoir tinguished Amer one with a W ground such as F Justice of the “who knows bas " ON THAT bas ate against Al distinguished An He knows base to pitch for Mr, less his sense changed since t for very little m which has alw Mr. Griffith. » ALBERT BE DLER came tol tinguished Amer ‘Washington bas baseball and co ber shop quartet There appear do not believe 1 a complete succ sioner and are anybody bearin label with restr:
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MR. DEL, WE boy who made to be in charge favors an indu ably one who spf Mr. Webb is From coast to ¢ ing edifices be mark of his -¢ pany, among Vv Vegas gambling the ]Jate Bugsy | business associa To my knowle not. identified tt would entrust -w céivably the eli ‘© Fairless of U. 8. Jr, L, B, May
3 world, Bernie =
chant prince, Bc roader and any fellers. In Mr, ° ball is not a sp ness, and shoul business man.
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THIS WILL c information to committee whic to look into b: with a view tc only the legali clause but to the game is su or anti-trust leg Earlier the committee, Em Brooklyn, who loyal baseball cated he hoped colleagues that to exemptions mantic grounds tional sport,” ¢ plainly does no with Mr. Webtk it is big busine: If a showdov between the tv Webb would be position by poir ple it is to mak baseball -in-a v is in the recor MacGenius, Bot those *“distingu and Bill Veec] bundle. Mr. Ve noted, is back same. o MR. PHIL made a mint ¢ mint naturally negative sort o baseball doesn’ a policeman . . This is in re port that the oi J. Edgar Hoove vate eye. Hox contacted but v the time. o I CAN'T agr leg. I think b needs a police for immediate continuing gua i ruption. What can for baseball? believe for a ¢
