Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 July 1952 — Page 22

Staley May

Hat for

Boss

By CARL LUNDQUIST

United Press

Sports Writer

EDDIE STANKY still has a long way to go to win a pénnant in his rookie year as Cardinal manager, but his

ace Pitcher Gerry Staley was

a good bet today to win him

1 Hat from his old boss, Leo Durocher.

Before the season started Stanky bet Durocher a hat Staley would win more games than any +f the three Giant aces, Sal Mag je, Larry Jansen or Jim Hearn. Last, night Staley won his 12th gamé, 10 to 3, over the Phillies, ad the Cardinals extended their winning streak to 10, longest in the majors this year. Staley thus became the No. 1 winner in the league. The crafty right-hander, who was on the All-Star squad but didn’t get into the game at Philadelphia, coasted home as his mates piled up a 9-to-0 lead, knocking out the Philly All-Star hero, Curt Simmons, with a four--un outburst in the first inning.| The Cardinals, now in third | place, eight games behind the | leading Dodgers and 813 behind the runner-up Giants, gained on both teams, The Cubs topped Brooklyn, 7 to 6, and the Pirates upset the Giants, § to 4, in 12 innings on Gus Bell's two-run homer. The Reds topped the Braves, 5 3 3. » IN THE DL League, the White Sox moved to within 2% games of the leading Yankees by winning 2-to-0 and 4-to-2 decisions at Washington. The Yan;ees handed the Browns their ninth straight defeat, 10 to 2 while the Athletics drubbed the Indians, 11 to 1. The Red Sox and Tigers were rained out. The Giants were about to wrap up & 4 to 0 shutout for Hearn when Pittsburgh exploded for four runs to tie the score in the ninth, then went on to win on Bell's blast. ‘The Cubs capitalized on two getting four runs in the three in the fourth to Gene Herhits and

came home on Boston errors. y Pierce pitched two-hit ball Saul Rogovin followed with a six-hitter as Chicago made it seven victories in a row at Wash-

A n this year. Eddie Robinson hit his 13th homer in the second

game. and er. | | The Yankees collected 13 hits,

incl homers by Yogi Berra, his and Billy Martin in de-| fi ‘the Browns. The Browas| - } three errors for four ms runs and helped by yleld-| ing ‘walks and hitting = batters with pitches. Lefty Alex Kellner breezed wl a four-hit victory at Philadelphia in Elmer Valo drove in four with ‘a triple and two! singles.

Fight Results

By United Press

BRIDGEPORT, Conn, ~— Don Bow 132, Cliffside, N. J. outbointed Eadie] Company 135, New Haven, Conn. (8). RWALK., Conn, — rll 0 ur King, Toronto, Sutpointed Arma nde Llanes. Puerto Rico (10),

first place in the beer league

today.

Bs: | Sateston

Locke Wins British Open

by Locke of South Africa

won the British Open golf championship "for the third time

He came from behind with a 74-73 in the final two rounds to finish the 72-hole tournament with a total of 287 strokes. Locke, winner in 1949 and 1939, | trailed the pace-setting Fred Daly| of Ireland by four strokes at the beginning of today’s 36 holes. The stocky South African played so slowly the tournament committee warned him to speed up his play as he methodically chopped down,

By EDDIE ASH |against the Milwaukee pastimers. boys ‘have lost five straignt and {Hailing from Lake Worth, Fla., are now trailing IF YOU have some extra bou-|where- he was a protege of the City by 2% games. lquets to toss around, pin a clus- veteran Cy Slapnicka, Cleveland! !tef on the Indianapolis Indians.

Times Sports Editor

The Tribesters finally crashed)

division again and were proudly! perched in fourth place today and! only a game and a half away | from third. The home boys achieved it the) hard way, by] outlasting t h e| second - place] Milwaukee Brew-|

4, in 12 innings. In to night's] contest, the In-| dians’ “boy won-!| der,” Herb Score,

Eddie Ash school,

make his debut in Triple-A com-| night, which is ladies’ night at| weiss and a double by petition” by going to the moundithe Tribe park. The Mil'vaukee| Nielsen turned the trick. The run

. 3

iscout, the 19-year-old bonus baby

ithe American Association's firgt{30TABpEW, 13 expected to show the! a5 the ninth inning came wp. |

Brewers a blazing fast fall. How| well the lad will perform under; |professional league fire is proble-| matical but Tribe Manager Gene Desauteis is willing to take the| chance because he believes the

|youngster has a lot of naturalnendous triple

ability.

them to two hits the last time he| faced them. It is said Liddle is| soon to be called up ®y the parent] Boston Braves. " ” »

fresh out of high| THE BREWERS are a cinch to to deadlock the game again at 4 is tobe rough on any adversary to-iand 4. A single by George Stirn-

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

= Boy-Wonder Horls For Tribe Tonight

|center wall and scored ihe Manager Bucky Walters of theirun after one out on a ers to win the Brewers intends to call upon his choice by Harry Maimberg. series opener at/“mighty mite” southpaw, Little Brewers tried for Smith Victory FieldDon Liddle, who shut out , the pate on Malmberg's x . last night, 5 tojIndians, struck out 15 and held! {Al's speed beat the throw.

leading Kansas

The Mowe werd aheaiout the Indians, 3 to 1, last night

Large Luke Easter led oft for the Redskins and hit a home run the proverbial mile, high and fav the right bel

lf

over wall and billboards.

Al Smith, next up, ted a

against the

and “a single. | Indians tallied a run in their half

Milt

the Irish star."

Daly, unable to handle the | strong west” wind and rain | which swept the Royal and St. Anne’s course, finished with a | 77-76 for a 289. i = n s GENE SARAZEN, the 50-year-| old American who made a bril-| liant showing in the qualifying play, wound up with a 77-76 also, for a 300. Jimmy Hines of Chi-

cago also finished well back in

the field with a 74-77 for a 302. Willie Goggin of Montclair, | N. J., the only other American] in the field, made the best U. 8.| showing. The 46-year-old pro| finished with a 75-78 for a total of 298. Peter

Thomson, 22-year- -old|

Australian player, took advant-| age of Daly's poor play to slip| {into second place with a 288. The! Aussie finished with a five-under-| “ipar 70 after shooting a 77 this

PINEAPPLE KID—Carl [Bobs Olson, Honolulu, watches while his three youngsters, Vincent, 3; , eat pineapple from Hawaii. There will be more pineapple for the family if Olson can beat Robert Villemain of France in their middleweight match at San Francisco to-

Brenda Lee, 2, and Carl Jr., 5

morrow night.

ST. PAUL, Minn., July 11 (uP)!

morning. He began the day Ini__pyawiing Henry Ransom of St.

third place, five strokes behind

_| Daly.

Frank Stranahan of Toledo, O.,|

put together his two worst rounds jred- hot field today into the second THE ACCENT WILL be on —70-80—after- playing mediocre round of the $15000 St. Paul, [talent nationally and city-wise as

golf in the first two rounds and finished with with a 309.

Signs s With Packers. |

GREEN BAY, Wis, July 11f UP) — Charles Boerio, a hard-|

Bay Packers, zani announced today.

and rookie Al Bes-/ Cal,- led a]

| Andrews, Til. |selink of Escondido,

Open Golf Tournament at Keller|

Course. {

Ransom and Besselink carded] leight-under-par 64s over the first|®

18 yesterday to pace the By the| Woodstock, has received entries

par-breaking field to play the

Key hits by Nellie Fox hitting. linebacker for Illinbis last Keller Course in more than 20] Minoso won the open- year, has signed with the Green years. Thirty-seven golfers posted Coach Gene Ron-|scores below par 72 before the}

{first round ended.

S7iND

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION w

Lost Pct. GB | Kansas City . 58 31 644

Milwaukee ..... «= 3} 31 633 2 {Louisville ........... 45 43 B11 11a) INDIANAPOLIS ..... 43 4 44 13 | an, St. Paul 42 44 AB 13%) {Minneapolis 38 48 442 17% Columbus ... .39 50 438: 18 32 55 368 2¢

NATIONAL LEAGUE Won Lost Pet GB

Brooklyn ceenne dl 20 680 New York .......... 47 2T 638 45 St. Louis 34 .580 8 Chicago 35 561 10%: Philadelphia 41 A861 17% Cincinnati 4“ A436 19% Boston . 47 390 23 Pittsburgh 59 272 33 AMERICAN LEAGUE Won Lost Pct GB New York 48 23 613 Chicago 46 34 375 2% Cleveland ...., rans 42 3M 553 4 Washington .....eees 39 36 520 7 Boston .......cee00se 30 38 520 1 Philadelphia ......:: 32 87 464 11 St. Louts ........«i. 33 48 410 18%: Detroit ... . 25 49 338 W%! INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Won Lost Pet GB

600 573 1% 529 5% 54 8 A468 10% 465 11 425 Al 15

Montreal 32 Rochester SYIacuse . ....ee0a.s

Toronto

40 39

Buffalo ... 36 _50 SA Dallas 4 Beaumont Shreveport San Antonio "” wy orth

Obla oma City .. Houston

AT3 3a 10%3

GAMES TODAY AMERICAN ASSOCIATION (AM Games) Milwaukee at

ht TANAPOLIS, #15

is at Charleston

Kansas City at Louisyille NATIONAL LEAGUE New York at Pittsburgh. Boston at Dlacinnat. Bhiladeiphis it 8° Lo ht elphia at gent), AMERIC file Ux

St. Louis at New Detroit at Boston, york samen), Chicago at Washington (night). Cleveland at Philadelphia Hnieht)

GAMES TOMORROW

AMERICAN ASSOCIL a. ST nespolis at

* image at Chu leston ty =» olumbus npn,"

(night).

at Louisville - (night),

495 Ld

AT ANBAN POLS, 8:15)

| | | |

i |

AMERICAN LEAGUE

t. Louis at New York. troit at Boston. Cleveland at Philadelphia Chicago at Washington. { NATIONAL LEAGUE Brooklyn at Chicago. New York at Cincinnati. Philadelphia at St. Louis Boston at Pittsburgh.

RESULTS YESTERDAY

AMERICAN AS BIATION {Minneapolis ......... Charleston 210 o3x1d Corwin, Nicholas’ ae omasic % g Libby: Houtz and 8t. Paul . “ol wl 101 3 1 3 {Columbus 002 00x

Moore, Negray (2), a

| (8), Byerly (7) and Bosiack, 00, (0, On who will compete here, hopes for entry box this wéek was Don

Miller, Allen (9) and

Kansas City 230 38 200 213 013-12 171 2

Louisville 5 10 3 Erautt, Jones (4), hg Ry {5) and Owen; Austin and Bvans. AMERICAN LEAGUE (First Game) Chicago os ave OO0 oa 000-~ . 5 1 i Washington 000 000 000 0 2 Pierce (10-6) and Sheet; Porterfield, {Consuegra (9) and Grasso. Losing Pitch-

sr-Porterfield (6-9). Second mel Chicago | Washington { Rogovin, |terson, Ferrick (7), 9) and Keller, 2 Winning _Pitcher—Rogovin (8-8), { Pitcher—Masterson 33.

| Cleveland . 0 000 1 1 1 , 300 023 30x—11 10 2

Sleater (9) Home Run—Robinson. Losing

Philadelphia : : 0 033 130 | /ynn, Jones. (6) ani egan: ner > TR, ones Ang a he games in front in the American Wynn (9-8) 200-30 3 o 3 Association today on the explo|S. Louis 000 233 uo 3 a o/slve hitting of First Baseman Madison (6) an i Fine:

—| Kuzave (5-3) and Berra.

Maltin, Berra. Losing Pitcher—Pilletts

{ 2 Detroft at Boston, postponed, rain, NATIONAL LEAGUE :|Brookiyn . 301 020 000-— 6 10 2 {Chica 400 300 00x 7 9 2 | Erskine, Black (1), Van Cuyk (6) and {Campanella; Rush, Klippstein (1) and |Atwell. Home Runs—Robinson, Snider,

{Winning Pitcher—Klippstein (8-6), Losing

| Pitcher—Black (3-1).

Yas hia 3 60 020 001— 3 11 2 ouls % 300 1x10 13 0 = "a1 Mons Ridzik i 3, |p Sfmone. 16), Kon ty 7 and Rice. Home

| Bursess: Staley (12-6) Abd D. un—Burgess. Losing Pitcher—8immons, a ihe)

New York ... 000 4 14 2 Pittsburgh 002-616 2 Hearn. Wilhelm (9), Koslo (10), Spencer (10) and Westrum, Yvars (10), Pollet, aragiola. Home Run

{Wilks (10) and Bi, Winning Pite t-Wilks (4-3). Losing tcher-Spencer 3-4 (Be . 4 oo 00 103-3 8 3 | Cipstanais 002 000 03x— 8 7 1 gon (7-7) and Cooper: Raffensberger | (10-8) and Rossi TEXAS LEAGUE | Houston 5. Dallas 3. | San Antonio 3, Ft Worth | Beaumont 13, Oklahoma Shreveport 1, Tulsa 0

erty 1

' 2

Fehr's

FRANK FEHR BREWING CO., INCORPORATED, LOUISVILLE 2, KENTUCKY

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ood oo1- 4 13 4

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Haynes,

By JACK WELSH

the 1952 Western tennis tournament opens Monday for a week's stay at the Woodstock Country ub. Jack Rogers, tennis pro at from some of the nation’s top flight performers and hinted additional entries of similar caliber are expected before the first set begins,

Ralph Burns, Eleanor Bailey

United Press Telephoto

registered after two down.

BUT THE strategy falled to work this time. Smith smacked a long single to right center and Nielsen raced home with the victory run. The Indians won on

Indians to What's $60,

By BILL EGGERT Ts GOSTING the Cleveland baseball club $60,000 to learn what’s the “Score.” And the boy-wonder, Herb Score, plans to give the answer while he’s here with the Indianapolis Indians. He's Tribe Manager Gene Desautels® starting hurler tonight against Milwaukee at Victory Field. Any high school pitcher can throw a baseball, but’ the speed behind. Herbs s-w-0-0-s-h had 14 major league scouts knocking at his Lake Worth, Fla. front door with king-sive checkbooks. - Only Cincinnati and ‘the A’s were conspicuously absent.

# = = THE 19-year-old sandyhaired, freckle-faced youth, who comes from the South by way of the North, is a surefire future great according to Cleveland General Manager Hank Greenberg. Score says he could have a bigger major bonus, but preferred to sign with Cleveland. Here's what Score did this year that hustled scouts to Lake Worth. He won eight

ransom. seelink Biey Stars, Little Stars Shine In Western Tennis

and Stan Malless are Indianapolis #

champions. in the field. w. ” = MONDAY'S SESSION with the men’s singles and the women follow Tuesday. In the latter division one of the, standout entries will be Miss. {Anita Kanter, Modesto, Cal, {champion of her home state. ‘Miss Kanter is currently battling for a title in the 42d United States Lawn Tennis Association's clay court crown at Chicago. | Anita, top - seeded in the |

| event, moved to the semifinals

yesterday with a 6-4, 6-1 vie-

| tory ever Dorothy Levine of [NCAA champ Hugh Stewart of] lexpected to stand in the s She now joins Mrs. [Southern California and Grand lin awe of it all. The

1 8| Chicago.

| seeded players in the tourney. Pat Stewart of Indianapolis,

better success in the Western]

begins :

gg Han

Patty Stewart

ing Dick Savitt, Orange, N. J.; exnational champion Billy Talbert of New York; Art Larsen, San Leandro, Cal.; Tri-state champ| Noel Brown of LoS Angeles,

Soa| Lucille Davidson as the only |Golden, Wilmette, Ill.

ANOTHER ARRIVAL in the

[Candy of Australia who is

{Open, having been beaten yester- battling in the clay court event

day in the clay courts by Mrs. Davidson of Des Moines, Iowa, 7-5, 6-2.

!| The men’s division in the West-|

{ern ‘includes some of the top {tennis names in the world includ-

at Chicago. Talbert and Savitt] {will vie for top-seeding with the {latter probably: getting the nod. The New Jerseyite, now con- | sidered second in America only to Vic Seixas, continued to be

THE Kansas City Blues are 2%

Don Bollweg. Bollweg's 4-for-4 in Louisville {last night included a home run, two triples and a double to knock in six runs as the Blues kayoed the Colonels, 12 to 5. Louisville could distinguish itself only by routing Ed Erautt, the league's

{

Junior Baseball

RESULTS ¥Ao STERDAY BROOKSIDE Hall-Neal 1, RE ethodin

Blues Widen AA Lead

leading pitcher, out of the box with a 5-run rally in the fourth. Kansas City Third Baseman Kermit Wahl also had a good night at bat, 3-for-3. Elsewhere in the league, Co-| lumbus squeezed by St. Paul again, 6-5, as young Stu Miller recorded his sixth straight vietory of the year and Charleston won its fifth game in the last six, 10 to 3, over Minneapolis.

Softball Notes

Bm-Roe hd ht weay results: oavenger Fy Paper 5; Purdue i 1 Company 1,

Eo A LEAGUE-—Drexel Gardens Valley

Disihessin E A LEAGUE—Municipal PAL 15, Riverside Cardinals 7; PAL 12, Continentals 6 BROAD RI

Northwestern

IPPLE B LEAGUE—Citizens| Savings x sib FS Sa 5 BR B

i rE Rockets

Ey

; 3 erside Jets 1; Siifiton » Kini 7 — St. AnFlores rani PAL orth

east LE AGue ~= Northeast Andrew!

AGUE-—Junior tre) ight Folk 8, a. Phillips oy Tigers 12, Christian sth Yi

wiacur - VFW 9, 1: va LEAGUE Aliyersal( wks 4B

G UR Rebels 18, | M AGUE — Hornets 7! C iE AOE = Mushy .

Irvington A Church

i 9:30, NYC AA vs.

Farm Bureau

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Foods va. van: »

W. J. Holliday vs. : Karpex vs.

A Drexel ar

,» 5 Bright Peanuts 8 160 SA AlSiars will. practice at 3:30, .. tomorrow on Riverside No, 1. The

, m k All-Stars will Rractice at the same! time on Riverside No 3 =

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and lost none as his Lake

the player to beat on the clay courts at Chicago when he defeated Harrison Bowes of Highland Park, Ill, 6-1, 6-0, in yesterday’s third round. Savitt, a winner at Wimbledon find Australia last year, is expected to use the Western tourney here as a tuneup in the event he is selected for the Davis Cup team. Gardnar Mulloy of Coral Gables, Fla., a Davis Cup veteran and often national doubles king,

| were Dick Hoover, south

14 hits, the Brewers lost on 10. The Redskins got two home runs, the visitors one.

In the fifth inning Joe Montalve blasted ome out of the | park over the left field wall for the game's first run. Op- | posing pitchers at the Stary

{ for Milwaukee, and L vd Dickey, southpaw, for Indianapolis.

iar goose-egRing the Brewers and holding them to three hits

in six innings, Dickey was touched for a double by Luis Marquez as first up in the seventh. Then Dewey Willlams smacked a line drive back at Dickey and it tore through the pitcher's glove for a single, Marques stopping at third. Dickey’s little finger on his glove hand was dislocated by the hot smash and he had to leave the game.

Learn 000 'Score’

TRIBE'S HERB SCORE—A $60,000 fast ball.

Worth High School nine won

the Florida championship. Those eight victories included two no-hitters and five onehitters and he averaged better than two strikeouts per inning whiffing 140 in 62 innings,

» ” = THE lanky southpaw started his prep baseball career at Holy Name of Mary High School in Valley Stream, Long Island, N. Y., as an outfielder. In 1949 he entered Lake Worth High where he has recorded six no-hitters in three seasons. Baseball isn’t all. He plays basketball, golf, tennis and swims, too. His first Indianapolis appearance was last Monday night again Cincinnati in an exhibition game. Pitching 2%; innings, he . struck out four Redlegs, gave up two hits, one run and walked two. ‘Score has lots to learn—first he has to throw his curve ball with the same motion he uses for his fast ball, but that fast one is going to keep American Association batters loose at the

is a possible late entry here. = E J -

TALBERT, formerly of Cincinnati, has been named captain of the Davis Cup squad which will meet Japan in the first round at Cincinnati starting July 21. N

i ’ In the Spring Lake, N.J., In vitational tennis tourmey, Talbert, now ranked No. 5 the nation, advanced with an easy victory yesterday over Dr. Jack Geller of New Rochelle, N. Y., 6-1, 6-3. Mulloy, third seeded in the eastern meet, knocked off Tom Lewyn of Scarsdale, N. Y., 6-2, 6-3. The big names shine brightly {to be sure but city entries aren’t dows s divi{sion may be filled with upsét |with the likes of Burns, Malless| ‘and _others. » » » BURNS recently won his fifth| (city championship in six years and then teamed with Malless for their third doubles cro in four years. Burns and M

dates back to 1934,

Other standouts include the DeVoe brothers — Chuck and John, Chuck was a star at Princeton, being seeded seventh | in national collegiate competition, John is better known for his torrid basketball pace at Park School but he’s shown plenty of promise on the courts. The field also includes Kenny |Jones, Bill Boyer, Andy Bicket,

Charles Karabell, Ben Harlan,

Miss Stewart will be making {her first start here since her trip to Memphis, Tenn., for the Southern and also her stop at Cincinnati for the Tri-Btate tourney. Patty didn't defend her city championship this year which hi, Bailey ultimately won.

SY P(t)

: EN Tide ten

1 i

ARIES CLT) vl

0

ess’ | thampionship suceess as a unit]

Bob Bastain, Ralph Linder,

Clyde Akard, Curt Dankert, Ronnie Roberts, and Jimmy McClure.

plate.

Welsh Rare Bits

By JACK WELSH

Satchel Paige of the Browns has his own way of evaluating Manager Marty Marion—“Man, he plays shortstop the way Duke Ellington plays ’de piano.”

- . If Clark Springer, the exGOP chairman from Indiana,

<

FRIDAY, JULY 11, 1952 -

CHARLIE SIPPLE came in and Marquez scored as Wally Post forced Williams at second. Bob

[Montague followed by walloping ja homg, run over the right field

Sipple retired for a pinch hitter in the 10th and George in worked the 11th fer the Indians. He, too, stepped aside for a pinch hitter and Bob Kerrigan pitched the 13th and received credit for the win. Hoover lasted until the niath on the Milwaukee rubber and was replaced by Bert Thiel, who wound up the losing pitcher. ~ " » EASTER’S double in the sixth was a blast that carried to the center field wall, He got two hits and his average went up to .353. His homer was his fifth since the parent Cleveland club optioned him down. Nielsen stayed red hot and four hits fattened his average to .321. Moreover, he's getting his hits against both left and right handers. The Indians used 15 players, the Brewers 12, and the contest lasted 2 hours 50 minutes. The attendance was 2485 and the fans put on a rooting show when the home boys tied it up in, the ninth,

- . =

HERB SCORE goes on the active list tonight and Ben Taylor comes off to permit the Tribe to stay within the official player limit of 21. ' Easter lost a hif in the third when Montague made a diving stop of hard drive back of first and made the throw for the putout while flat on his back. The Indians’ catchers, Troupe

handicaps. The former has an injured finger and the latter a Tribe Box Score > 7" MILWAUKEE Kisus, 3 .......... srr 3 Bruton, of ........ 5:90 3 3 1% Hartefleld, 2b ......5 6 1 6.32 © Marquez, If ixpire 3 F222 0 0 Cm RERS A : 1 0 8-6 ¢ 1» } 1.3 3.4 6 & 90 y 8 x 1.2.6 4 Hoover, p e 0 2 4 %¢ Thiel, » o.0 8 1 0 4 [ o oul when “wining a sored. INDIANAPOLIS RE ool 1 3 1 T3749 1 4 1 0:0 1 3% 18 3 21 0 5 1 28 # } 1 € 10 1:1 41% © 6 06 0 0 6 8 0 2 0 oD 8 2 @ ® 8 06 0 0 a 6 0 0.0 9 80 06 06 © 6 8. 0 0 0 Totals 3 3% 19 8

43 Taylor grounded out oe inple 1 Soin Baumer hit inte double Shai noun ink in 11th.

(Twelve Innings)

Milvadkee . . + G99 000 300 100-4 INDIANAPOLIS ceria. 000 010 002 101-8 RUNS MER a Sal Y nt

Meee

TWO.BASE i HITS—Eagter, Marquez, Bru-

BASE HIT-—Smith. RUNS ~— Montalve, Montague,

wa RIFICES ~~ Thiel, Malmberg, Stirne DOUBLE PLAYS Dickey t. ta Easter, Mestipas ie oor BEE , on ly Hartsfield to Ertman, Easter te Maimbers a BASES Hil waukse 6, Indian.

Hoover 1, Dicker

HO

e ol ea" il 8 Dickey 4, Hoover

* oh

doesn’t quit making like a prize fighter at the convention, delegates will have to second him before they can second a motion,

» - The Indians are starting their | rookie pitcher Score tonight | and that’s something Milwaukee probably won't do.

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7% Massachusetts Avenue In The Middle of The First Block

Dickey 5 in 6 inni (an fo 3 2 batters in 7th), Sipple 8 in 4, Hoover 8 in 8 (snd to 2 batters in 8th), Thiel 6 & i 1 in Kerrigan 1 in 1. taive. Ki an. Thiel. Se on, Mullen and Stewart ATTENDANCE--2465. > Tribe Averages BATE G AB 78 3B HR RBI Pet. Faster ane 3 7 2 05 8 3 Nielsen .... 2 45 10 3 $ 4 1 Hutson 104 13 3 6 2 14 317 mith ..... 25 ™ 12 2 s Nn 3 Mipimbere J a 45 : : : 310 sont. ms de 8 ed 1H 3m bi .180 20 46 7 1 T 37 356 | Proupe «104 2 » 208017 Bn 50 |Stirnwetss’ . 4 A # 3 } : 3 HH Rv Tatar 3868 A ow ON BH +33 5 3 104 5 13 3 0 | ABernathie 19 5 3 85 56 8 31 28 |Byerink .19 8 6 90 39 8 38 42 |Dle 0.33 B 4 91 44 91 41 44 Chatales ... 16 5 4 61 57 80 40 34 Narleski ..,. 3 sg 5 1 67 99 71 9 eR il BREN errigan .. _'Tosheff varyy 2 00 1 4 & 3

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HELSINK first rhubar Olympics de when both and Red Chin: the draw for t nament.

Apparently a one or the ot eventually wou International ] tion included to decide the q the champion: teams, inclu United States from qualifyin

‘A half hou was announce by the Inter Committee.

THERE WAS why the draw it was obviou taken because nor Communis permitted to er

Both Chinese to be accepted not be decide members of Olympic Comm day. The committs nically neither to compete be: have a nation mittee which | for membershij

Both Chinese officials here teams be acce] alist Chinese © training at 2} Chinese team Russia. ' Both grouj what amounts Olympic team most of the 2 on the progra

THE INTER mittee has take

group is eligibl

mits that Natio iously had qual in good stand tends members when Nationali trol of the coun to move its go mosa. *

“Our positior the Nationalis not in control cannot reco China as a mer pic organizatia dage, president pic committee : of the Interns explained. “On the othe: technically has member beca Olympic commi by Federation.” Brundage ex Red China hi by the vario Federations, w before being International tee. ¥ BRUNDAGE predict the fi pointed out tir said it was ° Nationalist nor would be perm games which s tomorrow. Nationalist C munist China I on the officials ganizing commi the question a | the cold war. Nationalist was invited tc games, but th withdrawn af nists over-ran forced the Ns ment to flee tl In the bask Chinese teams byes. Communi included in gro garia, Switzerls glum. Nationa group “B” wit

Israel, Hungar