Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 September 1952 — Page 11

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I SPORTS The Indianapolis Times Gi, : S— SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1952 PAGE 11 : ; won| | Sports Roundup-.-- ly Ga mes Ahea d N Card Rookie Stops

Exclusive Century Club Of AA Hard to Crack

Bums, 5-2; Cleveland

Loses, Yanks Win cs

THE MILWAUKEE BREWERS of 1952 qualified for membership in the American Association’s exclusive Century Club .'. , It was only the sixth time in the league's history that the championship club cracked the century mark in victories over a 154-game schedule. This season's Brews finished with a 101-53 record. The Indianapolis Indians joined the Century Club in. 1948 when Al Lopez’ fast, hard-hitting team won the title with a 100-54 record. . . Kansas City posted the all-time

By United Press | BROOKLYN, Sept. 13— | Brooklyn's National League lead dwindled to three games

—the smallest it’s been since {the first week in July—when Cardinal Rookie Stu Miller slow= {balled the Dodgers into-a 5-2 dee

AN ASSOCIATION PLAYOFF | AMERICAN SasocIA series) {feat today while the chasing

By United Press | CHICAGO, Sept. 13—The {New York Yankees, although they struck out 13 times,| \rolled over the Chicago White] {Sox today, 6 to 5, and pulled a| game and a half ahead of Cleve-| {land in the _tight American! | League pennant f

I . . . . race, — AA record for 154 games in 1939 by finishing with a 107- | The Yankee victory combined Kansas CItY ......eeeeeseeess Wor 1*“'Giants were beating the Reds. 1 Minneapolis uoveiivsiriinnnnsis 1 3 | Despite a pre-game warning by

47 mark. Incidentally, Indianapolis, which finished third and 25 games off the pace that year, achieved an amazing upset | by eliminating the powerful Blues in the first round of |

{Cleveland's defeat by _Boston [first in 10 games for the Indians, to add a full game to the New [York margin with only 12 games left to play. Once again Second Baseman

Manager Chuck Dressen that it was useless to try and “kill the ball” withsthe soft-tossing Miller on the mound, the Dodgers ap= peared impotent at the plate as

Lost Milwaukee 0 St. Paul 4

(Milwaukee win series)

INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE PLAYOFF (Best-of -seven series) Won Lost 1

the post-season playoff, decisively, four games to one. | Billy Martin, who drove in Montreal ........coeoieviinn } they tried waiting, bunting, slugOn the 1939 Kansas City team were such stars as Phil | three runs in the Yankee 6 to 4 ROTOR 4 0 Iging and every offensive tactic

BY atuse they could think of. They got only four hits. “It's no use trying to murder the ball against Miller,” Dres-

win Friday night, was the hero. He had two singles in | four times at bat today and again drove in three runs, two of them in the eighth inning,

(Rochester wins series)

Rizzuto, Jerry Priddy, Vince DiMaggio, Jack-Saltzgaver and Johnny Riddle, among others . . . Bill Meyer was the manager. The series opened in Kansas City and the Blues were such heavy favorites it looked like a shoo-in . . . But the Indians,

Times photo by Raymond Bright.

QUICK-OPENING—Tom Wheeler (66) of the White team starts a block into the Blues’ Don Kovach as Fullback Phil Arnold put his head down and starts into the secondary during the second half of yesterday's game. The Blues routed Butler's White squad, 58 to 0.

THREE-1 LEAGUE PLAYOFF (Final, best-of-five series) | Terre Haute .. isan vane Evansville . nan mums 3

NATIONAL LEAGUE

F | 2 | sen had told his players.

, : to clinch the New York vie- on batt” Pet. GB, just gives you that ‘nothing’ with no prestige to uphold, were not hampered by pressure . . , : tory before 25,542 fans. {Brooklyn ...eaeens Bn H {| pitch. You gotta and there « . . / § 5. 60 574 , o Free and easy, and intent upon knocking off the mighty cham- aA Out Butler Blues Roll RIGHT HANDER Marv Gris- Philadelphia 8 a 1 and walt for it ‘Thats a pions, they made their hits count, benefited by some breaks |. orey : som, who pitched for Seattle last | cincinnati. 7 4 2% BUT THE Dodgers waited in and the Blues got panicky A ; ° year, tied the league high for Jewel, .. % 108 38 51 |vain as Hiller struck out eight, i 7 In Western | strikeouts in one game this sea-f AMERICAN LEAGUE {led from the second inning on Y ae : Si, 7 1 son as he had the Yankees whif Won Lost Pct. GB and easily registered his fifth THE SERIES wound up in Indianapolis. . . . When go : fing throughout he oe | Sieveliad “rarsvrees o> a 1a victory against two defeats. the Indians won the fifth game, giving them four victories Semifinals By JACK WELSH Choi eben #2 11, Rookie lefthander Kenny Lehe : ad : lagainst eleven wins, he Struck|w,chington 310 122 Iman started for the Dodgers, was and the series, the many fans on hand at the Tribe park By United Press BUTLER UNIVERSITY'S Blue squad matched the 93/out two men in each of the first Eniinselphis 38 1% capped for five hits in three infelt so sorry for Manager Meyer they cheered him as he | CHICAGO, Sept. 13—Two mem- degrees temperature with a sizzling offense yesterday after- three innings. Detroft ............ 340 38%2 pings and absorbed his second y g y y bers of tne Walker Cup. team | g p Y y =| In the fourth he whiffed three loss without a victory ‘ . \ sl : : : a A 88 . trudged, dejectedly and almost in tears, off the field Pp noon to rout the Whites, 58 to 0, in the annual intra-squad|, ‘tors but one of them, Hank GAMES TODAY Te 4.0.1 lead

from the third base coaching box, trounced by an inferior foe. S In the same playoff, fourth-place Louisville eliminated second-place Minneapolis, four games to one. . . .

Frank Stranahan and Harvie Ward Jr., won their semifinal matches today and meet tomorrow in the finals of the 50th Western Amateur golf championship.

|

largest since 1945. Coach Tony Hinkle put 66 can-| didates through the mill in a reg-|

{ulation game but when it was]

football game at Butler Bowl. The margin of victory was the| Bauer, turned into a run. Catcher Darrel Johnson dropped the ball and Bauer was safe at first. He advanced on Gil 8

late in the second quarter and set up another Blue tally, Johnny Riddle gained 27 yards on two

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION PLAYOFF (Best-of -seven series) Kansas City at Minneapolis. AMERICAN LEAGUE Washiosion omeiolt, ‘a ew York a eveland, Mcpougald's | hicago (2).

Boston at Chicag ingle and scored on Martin's] Philadelphia at SL Louis (3).

they never relinquished when they put together three hits in the second inning. Peanuts Lowrey singled and traveled to third on Larry Miggins' long

2 : + | Cincinnati at Brooklyn. Having used up all their powder rand r i Stranahan, Toledo, O., scram-|/over he was neither cheered nor runs to reach the White 21, Keith first hit. ; gincjpnal at Brooklyn, double to left. Lehman fanned g p powaer, energy against |, , all over Exmoor’s well mani-|dismayed. |Weesner then skirted right end| Vic Raschi, who won his 16th Rico ut Bogton lia (0). Tommy Glaviano for the second

Kansas City, the Indians returned, to normalcy and Louisville knocked 'em off in the pldyoff finals, four games to one. . .. 1 oF The Colonels stayed “hot” in the Little World Series

and captured that, too, ovef the Rochester Internationals, four games to three . , (‘Owen J. Bush and Bill Burwell

shared the Louisville management in 1939 , , . Indianapolis also had a pair, Ray Schalk and Wes Griffin, ~ ” » t " » " Returning to the American Association's exclusive Century

cured fairways but ousted fellow Walker" Cupper Bob Knowles, Boston, 4 and 2 in their 36-hole semifinal match.

Ward, insurance salesman from |Atlanta, Ga., pulled his faltering game together after a disastrous morning 39:on the outgoing nine

Hinkle divided the varsity into two balarced units, but the Blues’ offense ripped through the White squad early after the opening kickoff. It was only a question of how high the final score would go.

to eliminate Dale Morey, Mar-|

_|tinsville, Ind., 3 and 2. |

2 »

THE MEETING

» tomorrow be-

Though the Blges jolted their| “opponent” with spectacular runs and a fair-fo-middlin’ aerial game, Hinkle saw gaping holes in the over-all defense that left!

for the score. Johnson missed the

point and Butler led 33 to 0. 5 " ”

to the Blues 27 early in the third|i

and the Blues took over.

tively, the Blues reached the White's 16 yard line, A 15-yard roughing the receiver penalty set up the Blue's next score, Ko-

victory against five defeats in today’s game, : (men, walked one and gave up THE WHITE squad penetrated five hits and three runs in five

quarter but Quarterback Bob|Sain, formerly with the National (0

Wagner's pass failed in the clutch League : {tagged for five hits and two runs

With Les Gerlach passing effec-{ While striking out two and walking one,

struck out two GAMES TOMORROW

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION PLAYOFF (Best-of -seven series) Kansas City at Minneapolis. AMERICAN LEAGUE Washington at Detroit, nly game scheduled)

nnings. His relief hurler, Johnny

NATIONAL LEAGUE Cincinnati at Brooklyn. Bt. Louis &t New York. (Only games scheduled)

-.. RESULTS YESTERDAY _ AMERICAN ASSOCIATION PLAYOFF . Best of even series) Kansas City 9, Minneapolis 8, AMERICAN AGUE Boston 4. Cleveland 3 (10 innings), New Yor

Boston Braves; was]

Allie Reynolds came in for | the ninth inning after Sain had issued singles to the first two

out, but Miller shot a single past Billy Cox for two runs, St. Louis bolted to a 4-1 lead in the fourth, thanks to some faulty defensive play by Jackie Robinson, whose first inning bunt had scored Pee Wee Reese ‘with. the Dodgers’ first run.

all the way to third when Robinson let Lowrey's potential

1 ¢ tween Ward and the blond him with a farrowed brow all yach then split through the mid-| batters. §, Chicaga 5. double play ball skip through Club . . «Columbus, under Derby Day Billy Clymer, won with weight distor will be their fourth. afternoon. dle for the Drie, g Mantle struck out three times| = Ra edule) his legs. : 100-52 in an early year, 1905 . . . Columbus repeated under Yard owls a 1up lead in the a. 8 Two plays later Dick Camp- aks he yal A New Fork %, Cincinnati 2 THEN Miggi oy slashed Bi in i . i ; ow IF BUTLER is to launch a] bell, making his first appear- , only one short of the Yankee X x3 nnati 2. ggins slashed his sece Ray Blades in 1933 with 101-51 “oo Milwaukee made it the Ward, who complained of hook- 4. hoy 1952 season, the Bulldogs| ance of the year in a Butler record for one season, set by rex OBIE fimes scheduled) ond straight double to drive home

first time<in the war year of 1944, with a 102-51 record under

ing all day, let the veteran Morey

will need a reasonable facsimile

uniform, intercepted Wigkner's

Frankie Crosetti in 1938.

Montreal 3. Toronto 2

Slaughter and send Lowrey to

the copibined management of Charlie Grimm and Casey Stengel Bray Sp lead ang én nee of defense to go hand-in-hand] pass and raced 40 yards to NEW Yon CRICAGO | Terre BEE) LEAOE RiaxOrF third. . + +/The Brewers also had two pilots this year, Grimm and [margin himself at the recess. Lig Hest Sharp Famine game; Sevte Bil Hugheet Souveried Rizzuto 3 8 2 § croquet as 3 I ge —— - i Sues rought Xp am Bucky Walters . . . Of course, during the years of 168-game |gmerc. SR ajing ‘his a He Jona piled up 21 first. | In the fourth period, the Whites Boras: 3 3 1 1Mbimeenis $1 48 HM ome Run Lehman and intentionally passed &chedules, breaking the century mark in victories was not un- [while the even tempered Ward| downs to the Whites’ 6. In started a march and reached the Bayerst 3 ] : 8 Mele:ri’1 1 1 - [Pinch Hitter Hal Rice to load the : It happened 13 ti played deliberate golf. Harvie| Yards rushing the ‘Blues col- | Blues’ 29 before a 15-yard holding MAEVE § 3 3 §iohmwone 2 013 0 * * bases. common . . . It happen imes. turned the 27th in one under par| lected 272 against the Whites’ penalty alted the bid, Fluce on| Keller” 188 otolare 11880 Nips Tri he Del Rice was retired on a pop ® x = x = = while Morey pos 82. ovach 8 e | Sain, 118 0Krsnich.3b 2 0 0 1 up, but, when Miller hit to Reese, WRITING in Look magazine, Bennett Cerf told this |36 to go five down. — = C | The Blues passing game saw|ihe Way again with a Pass: if. Fass oh Near a LN Guites Poems Robinson was late covering secone: Years ago when the football team of tiny Centre Col- | Morey chopped two shots oft |7 Of 15 completed for .78 yards. Jon Ne re a Tne to Stewartit 2.1 0 ¢| CLEVELAND, Sept. 13—|0nd. preventing a double play and lege came out of Kentucky to beat the then-mighty Har- Ward's lead with a par at the: (The White squad Bit. 4 of 11 for Riddle which was good to the 20. _ Miranda 9 9% %mhe Indians fought from be- Slowing Lowrey to gutte op the 27th and a' birdie at the S1st |21 yards. Totals ITITIIl Totals TOT 0 g force, or ase

vard it gained nationwide fame as the Praying Colonels + + « because at crucial junctures of a contest all the boys would kneel and pray. One day in the dressing room the Centre coach suddenly hissed, “Down to your knees, boys, here comes Grantland Rice, the famous sports writer.”

but the Tarboro, N. C. native held on to close out the match on the 16th when both pared.

Bluffton Tops Taylor, 25 to 0

The Blues® secondary defense was particularly sharp, intercepting four passes and returning two for touchdowns. = # 2

IT WAS strict ly baseball weather but it didn’t deter either

Two plays later Gerlach passed to George Freyn in the end zone. Hughett converted. : The ' Blues’ final score came on a pass from Gerlach to Don Campbell which covered 44 yards late in ‘the quarter.

New York Chicago

Dougald, Carrasquel. Robinson, Mele, Rivera, Stewart,

hind today to tie the Red Sox

with a 3-run seventh inning burst, but then were defeated, 4-3, on Ted Lepcio’s 10th inning homer, and fell a game-and-a-half behind the league-leading Yankees,

Keller called out on strikes f n_ 6t

Wright sacrificed for Johnson in 7th, Edwards flied out for Krsnich in 7th, Stewart singled for Grissom in Sth, Brown ran for Robinson in 8th. Miranda ran for Lollar in 9th.

ov 200 116 020 6 . 100 200 011

RUNS—Collins 2, Mantle, Bauer 2, Me-

Brooklyn got a run back off the 24-year-old Miller in its half of the inning on a walk and singles by Roy Campanella and Cox. The Cards collected their fifth and final run in the sixth on singles: by Del Rice and Solly

squad. Both teams played a full | ERRORS—Fox, Joh | They get a chance to make entire sur- We recall when the same powerful Praying Colonels Taser Soteiat hour with bruising contact. There FOO { BH ALL RUNS BATTED IN"Mande, Berra. Min- (hat ere in hand.to.| Hemus plus Red Schoendienst’s of DRESS visited Indianapolis to play DePauw on the old Washing- | BLUFFTON, 0. Sept. 13—| "ere no injuries. Bienatt ASE HITS—Noten. MeDesea. |NADd Combat. They play the |IONE-AY to right, + 33 . Bluffton College scored in three 1ne Blues top offensive unit Colleges THREE BASE HIT—Cottins, C0 "414 | vanks for the last time this year ST. LOUIS BROOKLYN a leading ton Park gridiron. . . . It was in the early days of the |g. ters here this afternoon to W2S Fred:Davis, Wayne Walls, HOME RUN_Mele. °"" with Mike Garcia, a 20-game|memusss *3 3 ARuciiort 38 8 8 : : 3 , § i i] p IVvansy § LE. — . t ’ | Reese,ss of shirts point spread system of betting. . . This system had not |overwhelm Taylor University, Norm Ellenberger, and Don Kelly. Lt atTor oe 0. SACRIFICE" WTS Mebouratd, Weieht, winner, pitching against Ed | Muiarti 4 ta HERA RE , i [25 to 0. {In the Blues’ line, Bo alforg,] a as 3 ' DOUBLE PLAYS—Marti Ri te| Lopat. [Sightr,rf 5 3 3 OlPafkodf 4 0 2 1 ait $2.98 to yet got up full steam over the country but the Praying "Halfback Charlie Spencer fig- Mike Marmion, and Bernie Eugen] VYYse (Neh.,). Teachers 12, Au- cotting ON BASE ig ered. *Y aa . The Indians trailed 3-0 going Lowrey.of Ea S Cmpnelia.e 11%)? Colonels knew about it and weren't adverse to picking |ured in all of the touchdowns for Were standouts. |p Sutann J. Sion 30's (BASE ON BALLS—Kaschi 1, Grissom 1./into the seventh when they tied Givinods 1 0 © ol Cox’ib” i 8 . up a fast buck. . .. Parlay cards were unknown. Bluffton. In the first, he caught| Dick Berndt, freshman line- |g 3 Rt iy | "STRUCK OUT—Grissom 13. Rasehi 2,/the count. Luke Easter's homer |H. Ricelt- $1 0 ou hes.s. 1 0 0 0 p y g Sul Ross State 19, McMurry 6. Sain 2. | Rice,e $1 8 1/Nelson 1000 IALS Public betting was winked at and blackboards were in pool One 1ossed bY Quansrvamk Bun packer from AL |N. Dakota State 12, Concordia, WITS Ol Grissom 12 in 8 Stobbs oan: & man on base Was the big MilGe. $1 1 JWeiew.. 3100 i out on defense for the White. | Whiley 12 batters In ninthy. | PIOW. : 3711 27 10) 3421 9 rooms, saloons and cigar stores . . . You handed over the amount NEXT OFPONENT Jerry Garrett was the best of |g nn) 0. 2 | “RUNS "ND FARNED. RUNS—Grisom 8 The defeat snapped Cleve | H. Tice intentionally: walked for ‘Glave » of mon ted to bet to the bookie, stated ” . Sept. 20e-tudiana ential st Taylor, the White's mild running [River Falls (Wis) 29, Augsburg sit 0 and 0. Reynoids 0" and os | Jand’s streak at nine straight. |" Nese ‘boosed out for Huches' in 3th n - { ] he » | ° 5 an eynolds an \ % . eison poppe ou or ughes In . ey you wanted to 0.the 00'ue, slater YOUr _proposl- | ington in.the first period, In| attack. |" (Minn) 0 | WINNING PITCHFR—Revnolds (16-5), | During that time, the Indians Bt. Lows... 420 201 000 ORIYA ean . “en 000

End : warriors came to town a couple of days ahead of the game. [Over from the three for the sec- first / ay . | TIME—z:49. RE RESat ph ampanella, » : : soup 4 € game. ond Blutfton score, the Re ry Walls Tae Ft. Wayne South Side, 14, Short-| ATTENDANCE—25542, day, and—on top of ,that—Bob | miiler Bensan © Rice: Robinson, : strangers all to Indianapolis and to the boys on the old levee . ., S : yards jor A> ridge §, Ee Lemon failed in his bid to be-| RUNS BATTED IN—Robinson, Miller 3, a i | 1 Spencer passed to Jim Benroth touchdown. Johnson kicked the Gary Roosevelt 18, Mann 0 E ille L i a us Miggins, Cox, Schoendienst. del 1 They placed bets all over town, “Centre to win by so many |in the third and to Jim Oliver inlextra point. ‘South Bend Washingt th Ye gues Some the Ties tui 20gamel FREGATE ETOCS. vo, Softw, usdelothe : ints" DePauw had a fairl d he fi . othe fourth for touchdowns. Both| * x = | pen 2nd Washington. 39, South! MOREHEAD, Ky. Sept. 13 winner, Early Wynn has won 21 Sasthten’ : points” . , , DePauw had a fairly good team but thé first point AM h | Bend Adams 7. (UP)-—Morehead College scored and Garcia 20 | SACKIPICE WIT—Furiile. o Hem- : spread “propositions” attracted only a few takers So the |gree temperatures, oo" | GENE KUZMIC intercepted Pro F il once in the last two minutes of . a ITS er error een ito Resse. s oths ; pra 5 a Na [Sree Lemperative!: ,. Tom Rohrabaugh’s pass on tne Pro Footba both halves tonight to defeat| ROOKIE LEPCIO's homer, his|, VEIT ON BASE—S. Louis 11. Breok- : raying Colonels revisited the “stores” and offered additional [Tr on Tipisein) 3 0 Sue White's first play from scrimmage | (Exhibition) {Evansville College of Indiana. |fourth of the year, came.with] BASE ON BALLS~Lehman 2. Miller 5 3 points to stir up faster and heavier “action” , . . This time it | = Cr ttttereececs : 34 dashed 83 Jars foe f: suaricer; B40 ¥eaneie 0 49ers 35, Cleveland 14.9, in the season opener and|two out. He lined a three-one|"Wibdk "oUr iter 5 Lehman 3. * 8 P ol. : ’ I ni Y 2 - worked . , . Then the Colonels went out and won the game | ohmson: again kicke e extra 5 gain revenge for last year's loss Pitch over the left field fence. WAYS 0 Leman 5 in 3 twaines ayon 7 . . : . | 2 Ka d 0 point. Philadelphia 35, Los Angeles 14. at Evansville. | The Tribe had but one safety (ditched fo 3 batters fm 4th); Huches 8 . with points to spare to wrap up their bets. yoe n i sare fie opening Cliicagy Cardinals 66, Camp Polk | Quarterback Charles Porter off Boston starter aged Ellis Kin- | "RUNS "AnD EARNED RUNS—Lehman | 1 > 2 3 F 2» . ; end . (passed a half dozen times in a der when the seventh started. ® piSs¥p BALL—Campanelia. = = * ef IN THE SAME era a big coup was manipulated on | 1V__FIGht Show [2 vures around rishi end for'al service Teams |90-vard drive, with the last being Kinder had retired the frst 15 WiNNINo, MECHFRCMusr son w Conf bask 1 2 Tommy Bain, 118-pound ama-| 2y. e touchdown climaxed a Bolli Air B {to End Harold Barker on the one, | Tribesmen to face him before| UMPIRES—Ensein, Boggess, Jackowski, a a Western Conference basketball game . , . It was the Big |(o,r boxing star, retained his city 65-yard march by the Blues. | Ning r Base 14, Quanticorrom where he stepped over for Harry Simpson singled. Smelt” Nine at the time . . . For some reason we don’t recall an |amateur championship last night yr Siler came Hight Pack in Masines 0. |the first score in the final minute| Lepcio doubled to the left field| ATTENDANCE—19.as2. : . X . on the weekly boxi : . w . {of the first half, corner in the second where Dale * Chipped : important game was played in the afternoon instead of at Se a ing Sg wie a strike to Don Campbell for a| 49ers Trim Browns. [Morehead veersss 0 7 0 7—14/ Mitchell let it bounce off the wall, Giants Ed e ¥ night, as originally scheduled . . . But announcement of ing out John Dotson in the second first down on the 47-yard line. AKRON, 0.~The undefeated! Evansville ...... 0 0 6 0— 0 He took third on a long fly by| al the change in game hours wasn't distributed around the |round. . secon Rely ang Walls Satvied the Blues Bas Francisca 49ers came from Touchdowns—B ar ker, Bloss, Sammy White and scored Dick] . : : . : . rger nd in the first quarter last| Pol ; |Gernert's fly ball, R ad 3 } 2 Midwest . . . At least it wasn’t received in Indianapolis, or Ws another tod Jetson Fon] stepped inside tackle on the next night to beat he Cleveland SA'S. ater wuchdowns—Pay ne y e S, oO if so, somehow the information didn't get around. from Duteh West Ee oS enyplay for the score. Johnson again|Browns, 35-31, before a capacity| Kid Gavilan Wins THE BOSOX'S second tally By United Press ES But a character got Hold of the final score in the late |2 second-round TKO over Andy a wtercepted a White pass Bot ors 30.000 In the Rubber! BUENOS AIRES, Argentina, | Sano; the thin Whe B Dom NEW YORK, Sept. 13 afternoon, circulated around the bookie “stores” and era novice Tunes Legion] : | Wet wisi ara: glove and took third on Billy| The New York Giants pulled tandard cleaned up on bets . . . The bookies and professional | Melvin Allen knocked out ver: Papnant R t a GI [boxed his way fo a unanimous ang. second. DiMagme: somes] Mica Of their 1051 pennant ‘ollar gamblers were caught sound asleep and were taken for [hon Lee. Jouh Eojer Siored 2 aces ar a ance oro asin over Eduardo|when Joe Tipton was out of po- Pace and within three games . : y an on ausse o rgentina in a non- , d " h Cuffs) plenty . . . Sometime later, the facts leaked out . . . Imagine | williams TKO’d. Bob Floyd. "NATIONAL LEAGUE title bout tonight, The Argentine Soon Jor Easier tow io the wher “Bob Ellon e ol tt Collar the red faces and threats of reprisal . . . Looked for a while | v 1 SAME DATE LAST YEAR |fighter was loudly applauded at|® The final a as Pus came|ning single gave them a 3-2 vic- : X was going to mark a spot. : [Brooklyn =o. .o.00. 5. er 5B OL Na OB oL Ee a enue ot hin Lepvio Was safe as ANIOLY OVO" The Reds: otto th George Mikan, Mr. Basketball, passed his bar examina- W | hR Bifs |New York .... 55 . : Rosey 1st his’ high popper to; Aroc:ivn meanwhile lost lo the . 9 ’ : + passed his bar 9 eisn Kare {oy JOH 3 5 Se 3 2 8 51 506 6 13More experienced champion. Gav-|ghort left and the speedy third|Cardinals. 3 Collar tion the other day and is now qualified to practice law in By JACK WELSH Ro LE i "8 65 529 151; 16 ! 2a §_Yictory was unquestion-|gacier took second, Sammy| At this date last year, the ts Minneapolis , . , George is so tall he'll be able to stand be- y BROOKLYN—(13)—At h 1 [because the fans expecton mory| White then doubled, driving in|Glants were six games behind, \ . : The N ome (10)—Olncinnati, 14, 15; Pitts- because the fans expected more|(ne runner : and they came on to win the pen- - fore the jury box, bend over and reach all the way into the rind out 3 boii So burgh, 186, Lid i 28 (2), 24; Boston, 26, 27, 28. Away (3) from him, | 2s » nant. A big lift from their valback row and tweak the nose of a tinate juror, RY tan RK (18) : : | “ THE TRIBESMEN g|lant “bench” crew gave the 14Y20 - n obs e juro and still beat the White Sox. NEW YORK~—(18)—At home (10)—St. Louis, 14, 15; Chicago, Probable Pitchers touch Kinder until th Sold Giants true ant dreams 16-162 .8. gg... a We derstand the clubhouse 16 17; Boston, 28 (2), 24; Philadelphia, 26, 27, 28, Away (3)—Phila- Today in Mai i ae again today ; A ZULU tribesman of South Africa has won the | Y2s 8.nOW full of rab. delphia, Sept. 13, 20, 21. 3 | in _Viajors | Continued on P. ! A : British Empire flyweight boxing championshi His bit's feet. ST. LOUIS—(18)—At home _(8)—Cincinnati, Sept. 23, 24, 25;| Owon-Log hanited Press ocoir | n wy. 12mOoh 2 MONTIA KENNEDY and SIZES 2 2 ker fo Jak ‘ : Pp... : ® 8.» Ohicago, 26, 27, 28. Away (7)=New York, 14, 15; Boston, 18 (2); New vo AMERICAN LEAGUE Blues Take 3-1 {Rookie Hoyt Wilhelm, who made 4) © ring moniker is Jake Tuli .", . It's strange the wrestling | Warren Spahi of the Braves Chicago, 19, 20, 21. ANERICAN Lact | aan 2h or edn ® Cleveland his. 64th appearance of the sea- -— romoters overlooked a bet here to add i je, | beat the Pirates for his ME N LEAGUE rot ares Lar Ve rAeld 12-13) at De-| T son, also contributed some bril2 Remember the original Zul ha to thelr Menagerie: | sana straight shutout. I guess : ; SAME DATE LAST YEAR Boston (Trout 9-11 and Nixon 5.4) at| Lead In Playoffs Hant relief pitchfhg as the Glants s ember the origina Zulu ?...Hewas acon | go National I angue realizes nu. W L Pet. GB GL W L Pet. GB GL iwo games > #4 and Rogovin 13-01—| MINNEAPOLIS, Sept. 13 (UP) [recorded their 11th victory in the RES tender for the world flyweight and bantamweight boxing | It's the Spahn-ing season. Sow York «c+ 85 57 598... 12 © 86 52 62 1 16 isons (Shaye 1 ana, Kemer| Kansas City edged Minneapolis last 14 games . titles some'35 years ago in the days of Pal Moore, Frankie : 128" in gi yon to. is A po. % = 12 Be TONAL 1 Fe a ings tolight. 9.10 3. 10 oD kT a ne ye 9 . » : ia J : ; oi | NATIONAL LEAGUE take a 3-1 lead in the American Jjured Hank Thompson, dellyButions—In- Burns, Pete (Kid) Herman, Benny McCoy, Johnny Ertle taroday fu the crucial Same hry si. rw YORK~—~(12)~At home (3)~—Philadelphia, Sept. 19, 20, (atherford go Fodblelan 2.4) at Brookln| A sociation semi-final playoffs, | ered a single that t Collars and and Monte Attell , “* ever, . the ‘original Zulu Kid Gerela's TE Br Syeland. way (9). Cle yelund; 14; Detroit, 16, 17; Boston, 23, 24, 25; New You! (fiaddix 1.1 or Brazle 12-0) at : dit ba BM home Al Dark with two out in on t— Panel wasn't a tribesman’ from Zululand , o , He was born'in | 4ians but the Yanks might CLEVELAND D-— (11) =A home (9) New York, 14; Washingto [ts Bona Hark 13 and SSH ES Nor fri "unt bore that, Letty Har : : : . . na. gg LIE TEN , Ml, . - AE : of y ad ” Ht 5 4 0 8. ; Baty 4 | Potenza, Italy, on 4 [have a special mesage in (16, 17; Detroit, 19, 20, 31, 3%; Chicago, 23, 34. Away (2)==Detroit, b (Hogu# 1-4 and Waugh 1-6 ibys Pedkowski of ao ay TE I store ; 4 4 Die Sept. 27, 28. a , “ t. Phifadeiniia (summons 11.8 : ony Sr Cl —— : x 4 Ar : = 4 : ¢ i & i 4 » A

’ i ati

tion” and he wrote it out on the board . , . The Centre grid

)

the same quarter he plunged

oa

The Blues started to roll in the|

High Schools

and McGowan,

LOSING PITCHER—Grissom (11-9),

PIRES—F roese, | had scored five shutouts.

Stevens, Summers

But. there was no shutout to-

- aL

RUNS—Slaughter. Lowrey 2, Miggins,

Enos Slaughter opened the | fourth with a single and went