OUTFIELDER Tiger 5 Other Greats Honored Even Spilball Star Elected Free Press Wire Services NEW YORK Henry Erti-mett (Heinie) Manush, onetime Detroit Tiger outfielder of the 1920s, was named to baseball's Hall of Fame Sunday along with five other former stars. Manush, 62. lives in Sarasota. Fla. He is one of thtee living members of the six named by the veterans' committee Sunday. The committee considered only those men who have been out of .baseball v 20 or more years. MANTSH started his year major league career with the Tigers in 1923. He also played with St. Louis, Washington and Boston in the Amer ican League and Brooklyn and Pittsburgh in the National League. Both in 1926 while with Detroit and in 1928 while with St. Louis he batted .378. He posted a lifetime average of .330, before retiring in 1939. Other named to the Hall of Fame were: Burleigh Grimes, last of the spitball pitchers; Urban (Red) Faber, who spent all of his career with the White Sox; Miller Huggins, who managed the New York Yankees to six pennants; pitcher Tim Keefe and handyman John Montgomery Ward. The election of Grimes and atFaber marked the first time ei tnat any of the 17 pitchers wno to a on; at! atj j defense- n used the spitball when the majors banned it in 1920 have been given the game's highest honor. The spitball disappeared of Howe;ficially from major league base-clirmed ball once and for all when in Grimes delivered his last "wet one" fr the Yankees in 1934. his FABER, WHO still lives In ; Chicago, won a total of 253.. 'games, including four 20-victory: .seasons for the Chicago White Sox between 1914 and 1933, and also scored three victories overi the New York Giants in the! 1917 World Series. Grimes, who spent most of his time with the Brooklyn Dodgers' and won 270 games in a career! spanning from 1916-1934, lives defen-semen Bark-lpy Delvec-ohio !in Trenton, Mo. of five; Hl'GGINS, a peppery. 5-foot, end- 4-inch, 148-pound infielder with Cincinnati and St. Louis in the National League between 190 Turn to Page 2D, Col. 1