Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

The Cincinnati Enquirer from Cincinnati, Ohio • Page 11

Location:
Cincinnati, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
11
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

St. Louis Cardinal holdouts say Branch Rickey can made a dollar go farther than Walter Johnson and the late George Washington. BASEBALL CLASSIFIED ADS FINANCE SATURDAY MORNING, MARCH 7, 1936 Reds- Wallop Athletics In First Of Inter League Tilts REDS TAKE UP WRECKING ATHLETICS WHERE CONNIE LEAVES OFF I LOSS TO LOUIS LOWLY A'S Prove Easy Picking. To Mean Hr JVSi A tSEL-V-lUGr MOOO ill Kill k7 WA-T'S i-et of you nlflMffJI Hard Hitting Rolls Up Total Of Ten Runs. Scores Upset Victory Hollingsworth Goes Well Except For Wildness Si Johnson Is Slammed Hard.

BY JACK RYDER. rECUL DISPATCH TO THB ENQUIRKB. Miami, March 6-The flying Reds, with their feet once more on the solid ground of the North American continent, grabbed off their first engagement in the Grapefruit League by trouncing Connie Mack's weird aggregation of nearly tail-enders by a count of 10 to 7 at Miami Field this afternoon. Our boys, barely recuperated from their journey among the Spanish countries, and their long trip yesterday through the ozone from Santa Domingo, distinguished themselves at the bat by pounding all four of the veteran Mack's young hurlers with considerable vigor. They collected fifteen safeties and earned all but one of their ten tallies.

18 Scarsella was the leading hitter in more ways than one, for he socked out two singles and a lordly double and was also plunked twice in the slats, or some similar region. THAT OLD WILDNESS. Al Hollingsworth pitched the first five rounds effectively but for a slight touch of West Indian wildness in the third, when three straight passes gave the Athletics the only run secured off the lefthander. But Si Johnson, who Is struggling hard for a comeback this season, made heavy weather of it In the last four frames, during which he was hit safely seven times and issued four bases on balls. Two of the blows off Si were long-dl3tance homers far over the right-field wall and he was nicked to some extent or other in every inning he pitched.

He was actually in some danger in the last half of the having arrived at this point with a six-run lead, which the A's proceeded to cut In half by pounding out a double, triple, and home run before Si could retire the side. He finally got them out and the Reds were safe, for this day at least. YOUNGSTER GOES WELL. The brightest spot on the Red lde was the keen and clever work of young Kahne, who is subbing'for Billy Myers at the short field, xne youngster played very fast ball on the green, starting two life-saving double plays, and also crashed through with a three-bagger which terminated the big rally in the fifth. The veteran Connie Mack, always optimistic and hopeful, presented a line-up composed almost entirely of athletes still unknown to big-league fame.

What's Matter, Men? Casket Ball Team, Coached Brevity Top-Heavy Choice For Florida Derby Today 114 pounds, and the Greentree Stables, Jamboree, carrying 118 pounds and mounted by Silvio Coucci. Other entries are Mrs. P. A. B.

Widener's Dnieper, Jockey J. Gilbert, 120 pounds; Weston Adams' Gallant Gay, Jockey Stout, 118 pounds, and the Wheatley Stables' Faust, Jockey Ira Hanford, 118 pounds. AB. R. IB.

PO. A. Kampourls, 2b 5 Klggs, 3D 8 0 1 Cuyler, ct 5 113 0 0 Scarsella, lb 4 4 3 9 0 0 Campbell, 4 2 2 1 0 0 Ralmondl, 10 13 0 0 Walker, rf 3 2 2 1 0 0 Blakcly, If 3 0 1 1 0 0 Kahne, as 4 1116 0 Hollingsworth, 2 0 1 0 1 0 S. Johnson, 2 0 0 0 0 0 Total! 39 10 15 27 14 1 PHILAD'LPHIA. AB.

R. IB. PO. A. Mailho, rf 4 1 1 1 1 0 Yarter.

ZD 3 1 1 3 0 Johnson, cf 5 1 2 5 0 1 Puccinelli, If 5 2 2 1 0 0 Oglesby, lb 3 0 2 12 0 1 Peel Eon, as 5 0 0 3 3 0 Petero, 3b 3 0 0 0 4 0 Hayes, i 0 1 Matzurak, 1 0 0 0 0 0 Finney 1 0 0 0 0 0 Rutherford, 0 0 0 0 0 0 Ferrazzi, 0 0 0 0 0 0 rratton 0 0 Smith, 1 0 0 0 0 0 Conroy, 2 110 0 0 Totals 35 7 9 27 14 2 Finney batted for Matzuzak In elEhth Inning. tPatten batted for Ferrazzi in third inning. 1234567 8 9 03104002 010 Philadelphia 001 0 0 111 37 Two-Base Hits Cuvler. Scarsella. R.

Johnson 2. Three-Base Hits Kahne. Conroy. Home Runs Mailho, Puccinelli. Left on Bases Cincinnati 12.

Philadel phia 8. uouDie avs Kahne to Kamnnur In Scarsella, to Kampourls to Scarsella; Yarter to Peerson to Oglesby. Struck Out By Hollingsworth, by S. Johnson, 3. Passed Balls Hayes by Smith, 5.

Bases on Balls Bv Hollingsworth. 3: hv 8. Johnson, by Ferrazzi, 2. nil Dy Micner By smith. 1: bv Matzu zak, 1.

Base Hits Off Hollinrawnrth. 3- off Johnson. 7: off Ferrazzi. 4: off Smith. 15: off Matzuzak, 6.

rime of oame 2:15. Umpires Kubbard and Savino. Small Crowd Sees Reds Battle A's; Only 793 Present SPECIAL DISPATCH TO THB ENQUIRES. Miami, March 6 The second game of the series will be played at Miami Field tomorrow, with Gene Schott starting for the Reds and going five rounds, and Don Brennan taking it up from that point. Connie Mack doesn't know what pitchers he will use, and no one would recognize them if he announced them.

Baseball has a tough time here In opposition to the closing days at Hialeah. There were 793 paid ad missions, a large percentage of whom were Cinclnnatians vacationing here. The Florida Derby will get the big crowd tomorrow, though there are no Annie Oakleys out for that event. The Reds and A's will have to wait for Sunday to collect their expenses here. Many prominent visitors from Cincinnati came out to get their first 1936 glimpse of the Reds.

Among those in the stands were noticed Gus Hllb, onoe part owner of the Reds; Harry Gilsey, retired jeweler; Harry Hartman, sports announcer; Harry Arns of Glendalc and his son, John, who were guests of Fred Benz of Coral Gables; Bill Leonard, well known in political circles; Alec Squibbs of Lawrcnce-burg, who is wintering here; Bob Bishow, Walnut Street literary man, and many others, Iarry MacPhail, In reply to many queries as to the Red holdouts, requested The Enquirer to make this statement to the fans at home: "I have not heard a word from any of them since I left home for Puerto Rico, nor have I written to any of them. I am satisfied that the offers of the club to all of them were not only fair but liberal. We try to be that way with all our play ers. But it is entirely out of line for Babe Herman to demand a larger salary than Mel Ott of the Giants, Wally Berger of the Bostons, or Paul Derringer, leading pitcher of the Reds last year, is getting. Continued On Next Page.

Red Club Rejects Middletown Offer For "Farm" There The Cincinnati Reds definitely rejected yesterday a proposal to place a "farm club" In industrial Middle-town, 25 miles north. "We're definitely out at Middle-town," said Frank Lane, business manager of the Reds, after a longdistance conference with General Manager Larry MacPhail. "We made Middletown a proposition that would have justified our placing a team there, but they said they couldn't meet it. The enthusiasm at Middletown was fine and I believe they stretched themselves to make us the offer they did, but we don't feel we can go in there on their terms." At Middletown persons close to the group working for the inclusion of that city in the Middle Atlantic League as a Red farm said they did not expect a new offer to be made to the Reds. President ElmerDaily of the league, who sought to interest the Reds in Middletown, said business interests there offered a guarantee of the sale, of 6,000 one-dollar tickets, but that the Reds wanted a guarantee of 7,200.

BOXING BOUTS MARCH 12. Akronf Ohio, March 6 (AP) Ohio American Legion state amateur boxing championships, originally scheduled to be held here March 4, but postponed because of local labor trouble', will be held definitely Thursday, March 12, in Akron Armory. CINCINNATI. Says Schmeling', Confident Of Stopping Bomber. "Who Has He Beaten?" Asks Max German Is To Leave For U.

S. Next Month. Berlin, March 6 AP) Looking lean and fit after a winter passed in hunting deer and wild pig on his game preserve near. Muencheberg, Max Schmeling told' the Associated Press today he intended to quit the fight game for good if he fails to whip Joe Louis in June. The former champion, only four pounds over his best fighting weight of 188 pounds, despite the fact that he has taken only the lightest kind of exercise for several months, expressed the firm conviction he would stop the Brown Bomber.

"If I wasn't sure I could beat him and then win the title again," said Schmeling, "I wouldn't have taken this fight. "It isn't the money I'm interested in. It is my last chance to win back my title, and only Louis stands in the way. WE SHALL SEE. "I never felt so good before fight in all my life.

All we have to find out now is whether Louis can take it. I know I can." As far as Schmeling is concerned, Louis still has to prove he is a great fighter. "He's had the softest time any modern heavyweight ever had," the former chamnion A has he beaten? Baer was washed up, scared to death. Camera was nothing. Levinsky was just a has-been.

Retzlaff never could fight much. He won't find me scared. He's got to prove in the ring that he can beat me." If Schmeling has thought up any method of fighting Louis after watching the Negro knock out Paulino in New York several months ago he wouldn't disclose it. "I'll figure that out after we get into the ring," he said with a smile. "The greatest thing in my favor is the fact that Louis will be the favorite.

I like that for a change." MAX EXPERT SKIER. Schmeling stopped in Berlin for only one day en route to Garmisch-Partenkirchen with his wife, Anny Ondra, who is making a picture calling for some skiing. Max is a proficient skier himself, but he won't risk any injury this time. He intends to leave for New York about the middle of April, and will go immediately to a training site not yet selected by his manager, Joe Jacobs. "I promise you that I'll be in as great condition as I was against Steve Hamas at Hamburg last March," said Schmeling, "and you saw me there.

"I'll find out the answer to the question of whether Louis can take punishment. If he takes what I give him and then comes back to win I'll be willing to quit for pood. One thing I feel certain of is that it won't end in a decision." Cardinal Rally Defeats Cubans Havana, March 6 (AP) A three-run rally in the ninth Inning, featured by Pepper Martin's homer, enabled the St. Louis Cardinals to defeat the Almendares 5-to-4 today in the second game of their four exhibitions here. The loss was a heartbreaker for Ruiz, who pitched superbly for the Cubans.

With the Cardinals trailing 4 to 2 and two men out In the ninth, the Cuban right fielder, Ro-que, dropped Frank Frisch's fly and the rally started. Fred Anken-man, running for Leo Durocher who previously had singled, scored on the error. Martin then settled the game when he belted a drive to the center field flagpole, scoring behind Lyle Judy, who ran for Frisch. At Havana Inninm 1234S8789 R.H. E.

St. L. N. 000020003 5 10 0 0012001004 6 2 Batteries Hallahan, Wtnford, Potter and Ogrodowskl; 8. Kuli and Ferkina.

BOTH OWNERS WILLING, So Top Row And Time Supply May Meet At Arlington. Fort Worth, Texas, March 6 AP) Turf dom's sweet plum, the re-running of Top Row's half length victory over Time Supply in the $100,000 Santa Anita Handicap, appeared to have been picked today by Arlington Downs. Trav Daniel, resident manager of the Downs, received word from F. A. Carreaud, owner of Time Supply, and A.

A. Baroni, master of Top Row, which made it look like a race for April 12. "Will ship 14 head from Santa Anita Monday. Will be glad run Time Supply against Top Row," Carreaud telegraphed. Baroni, who shipped to Tanforan in order to arrange income tax reports in Nevada, assured Daniel "I would rather race at Arlington Downs than any place I know" and said he would plan to arrive at Arlington for the meet starting March 26.

Daniel said the Dallas Handicap, ordinary a $5,000 would raised to a $10,000 added for the Top Row-Time Supply race. Ariel Cross, also a Santa Anita sensation, South Gallant and nine, others have entered the handicap. Berger Signs His Contract; Other Training Camp Notes It The only one in the batting order In Hialeah Park Feature Ward-In-CIianeery Travels Mile In 1:35 4-5 Conservative's Disqualification Fourth Of Meeting. SPECIAL WSrATCH TO THK ENgURKR. Hialeah Park, March 6 Ward In Chancery, which once carried the silks of a British King, flaunted the colors of Mrs, G.

C. Winfrey to an upset victory in the Eau Gallie Purse, mile feature of the pre-Derby card at Hallcah Park today. The elderly son of Warden of the Marches paid $14.90 and blazed over the mile in 1:35, three-fifths of a second slower than the track record set at this meeting by Steel Cutter. Incidentally, Steel Cutter was the second horse yesterday, but he was carrying 108 pounds, 15 pounds more than when he set the track lecord. Tempestuous was third and High Glee, the early leader, Wa3 lourth in the field of seven.

The fourth disqualification of the season occurred when Conservative, owned by Buddy Hirsch. swerved in front of her field and Impeded horses in the second race, a test for maiden two-year-olds. Mis. W. H.

Cane's Square, paying $5.70, was placed first. Dark Friend second, and Legion third. OUTRUNS FIELD. Stubbs, rapid-breaking three-year-old, racing for Townsend B. Martin, outran his field from flag fall to finish in the Ocala Purse, the six-furlong supporting feature.

After opening a commanding lead, the son of Sir Gallahad III. successfully fought off Torita's belated challenge by three-quarters of a length. Stubbs ran the six panels in 1:11 and paid only $3.50. Miss Bam was a distant third and The Hare fourth. George D.

Hill, sound technician, will provide the public address system for Charity Day, Monday, at Hialeah Park. Two speaker sets and ten loud speaker horns will be distributed at vantage points on the grounds. Jimmy Wallingford, ace announcer, will introduce the prominent women sponsors of each race, as well as the film, radio and theatrical celebrities in the "Parade of Stars." "Senator" I. Aaronnon, one of Continued On Next Page. Patty Berg Falls Before Mrs.

Hill; Miss Miley Loses St. Augustine, March 8 (AP) Patty Berg, golf's greatest youngster, fell after a gallant struggle amid the ruins of stymies in America's oldest city today. Mrs. Opal S. Hill of Kansas City, who taught the eighteen-year-old Minneapolis girl many of the inside tricks of big-time golf, defeated her one up in the semi-final of the Florida East Coast championship.

Joining Mrs. Hill in the eighteen-hole final, to be played tomorrow, was Mrs. Maureen Orcutt Crews of Coral Gables, who played some of the most brilliant golf of her great career to crush Marion Miley of Lexington, 2 and 1. With flawless control, Mrs. Crews breezed over the championship St.

Augustine course's 6,345 yards in 73 shots only one over men's par and seven strokes under women's perfect figures. Her putt for men's par on the final hole, which the played out in an attempt to match her medal record of 72, hung stubbornly on the lip of the cup. Although Mrs. Crews's medal was three shots better than the best-ball card of the Hill-Berg match, the galleryites watched Opal and Patty fight it out. They were rewarded with a grand battle up to the final putt.

By Woman, Shows Up Oregon Tourney. packed gymnasium was in an uproarall except Miss Clark, whoso poker face never changed expres-sion. She learned to play basket ball at Peru State Normal, in Nebraska. Nearing 40, she has the dash and vim of a college co-ed and swims with the best. In 1922, she came to Port Orford where she is principal as well as basket ball coach.

"We use stranght man-to-man defense and fast-breaking offense, based on good fundamentals of pivoting, shooting, passing and dribbling," she said. Her boys call her "a grand person and the best high school coach in Oregon." They were so determined to come to the tournament that most of them climbed out of bed where they had been ill with influenza. In six previous tournaments, Miss Clark's teams finished near the top. For her teams there are no locker-room tirades. If there is any "dirty work" to be done, as she calls it, a student manager doubles for her.

it Foxy" Griffith Puts One Over On His Pitchers Orlando, March 6 (AP) Owner Clark Griffith of the Washington Senators has slipped a bonus clause into the salary contracts of most of his pitchers this year. If all the hurlers reach the figure necessary to bring in their bonuses the Senators could win the American League pennant, for the total is around 105 games. The hurlers understood to have agreed to a stipulated salary plus the bonus, when and if, are Buck Newsom, Earl Whltehill, Ed Links, Jimmy De Shong, Pete Appleton, Hank Coppola, and Dick Lanahan. Under their agreements the boys must win the approximate quotas listed below if they are to grab more cash: Newsom, 20 games; Whltehill, 18; Onke, Coppola, and De Shong, 15; Appleton, 12, and Lanahan, 10. The bonus offerings range from $500 to $2,000.

Griffith has in other years opposed the bonus system, but now he's decided to gamble. BOSTWICK HORSE REFUSES In Pete's First Start Of British Steeplechase Campaign. Lingfleld, England, March 6- (AP) G. H. (Fete)-Bostwick, millionaire American amateur jockey, lost the first start of his current British campaign today when Castle Irwell, Grand National nominee, refused at one of the fences in the Corinthian Handicap Steeplechase.

Castle Irwell, given top weight of 175 pounds, refused at a fence midway on the course of two miles, four furlongs, and ran off the course. Bostwick pulled his mount back on the course and completed the course without further mishap. The winner was R. Gore's Jungle Song, with Captain G. N.

Brown-hill's Gay Devil second and Lord Abergavenny's Silver Linnet third. Castle Irwell was the betting favorite at 2 to 1. Male Mentors In Ashland, March 6 (AP) Miss Ruth E. Clark's Port Orford High School basket ball team, loser only three times In conference games over a period of 14 years, is providing headaches for mere male mentors. Her quintet emerged today as the first round sensation of the Southern Oregon Normal School's annual invitational tournament.

It ran up the highest score, 42 points, and played the best defen sive game in holding one team to two points. In the second game, her boys had to travel three extra periods to beat Riverton High, 19 to 18. The announced today he had sent a telegram to Outfielder Hank Leiber ordering him to camp to confer about his salary differences. Leiber is at Tucson coaching the University of Arizona team. He already is a week late in reporting and the lone unsigned Giant player.

West Palm Beach, March 6 (AP) Ed Coleman, husky outfielder of the St. Louis Browns, not only is hitting the fences with his clouts, but is laying down some effective bunts. And Manager Rogers Hornsby is pleased with both. No serious defensive practice has yet been undertaken. Several of the pitchers appeared well enough advanced in training today to pitch three innings in a practice game scheduled for Sunday.

Lakeland, March 6 (AP) The pitching staff of the Detroit Tigers appeared today to have advanced beyond the batters in training. Lynwood Rowe and Jake Wade held an opposing nine to four scattered hits and no runs in a practice game while their teammates gathered eight runs off the Continued On Next Page. Stops Izzy; Winner In Fifth sounded, was warned three times by the referee for questionable methods of warfare. One of Gastanaga's long rights staggered Primo once, in the second round, but the Spaniard made no move to follow up his brief advantage. In the third round Izzy was saved from going to the floor by the ropes, after being given a mighty shove in mldring.

Brigadier General John J. Phelan, Chairman of the State Athletic Commission, said he was "perfectly satisfied with the honesty of the fight," but announced, nevertheless, that the purses of both principals would be withheld pending a final hearing next Tuesday on charges that the managers of Castanaga and Camera are "business associates." "That is simply precautionary," raid General Phelan. "We do not want to risk any comeback. Nothing developed at today's meeting to justify accusations of collusion, but we will give the case a thorough bearing, nevertheless." whom the Reds could distinctly remember was Bob Johnson in center field, who showed his class by con tributing two or three fine running catches and plunking out a pair of doubles, both off his namesake, Silas. Tha root nf thi Mar-Ulan entour- age consisted of struggling rookies for whom has been set the dif ficult task of filling the shoes of Jimmy Foxx and the other star whom Connie put on the auction block last winter.

They are to have a tough time doing it, Judging by their very ordinary performance to day against a team which is still somewhat deficient in class itself. TEAM ptiOOKS HOPELESS. One game is not much of a crite rion, but unless the Athletics im prove remarkably during the next few weeks of training they seem to be as firmly immured in the dun geon of the American League as the Reds were in a similar com partment in the National for four recent years. The Reds began operations on Ferrazzi by scoring three runs in the second round on hits by Scar sella and Campbell, a foozled bant by Oglesby, a couple of wobbling passes and a force-out. Scarsella's double and Walker's single gave them one more off Ferrazzi in the third.

But their big inning was the fifth, with Smith as the victim. A walk to the first man up and four hits including a powerful triple by Kahne, were good for four runs and Tnnrtrln nf vlrtnrv. Thev o.inehp.d Miami, March 6-AP) A big bay three-year-old ''on which Joseph E. Widener, pins his hope of winning this year's Kentucky Derby gets his greatest test tomorrow in the eighth and last running of the $20,000 Florida Derby. Widener's colt, Brevity, will go to the post in the big race, the fifth on the Hialeah Park card, tlfe top-heavy favorite to outdo 10 other crack three-year-olds named, from 94 nominations, for the mile-and-furlong classic.

Because Wldener, President of the Miami Jockey Club, which operates Hialeah, looks with disfavor on the overuse of the term "Derby" in describing horse races, the $20,000 feature, biggest stake event of this year, will be called something else, probably the "Flamingo Stakes," next year. It will yield place in importance, too, to the Widener Challenge Cup Handicap, to be increased in the 1937 running added to $50,000 added. Jockey Wayne D. Wright, youngster who brought Top Row home the winner in the recent $100,000 Santa Anita Handicap, will ride Brevity tomorrow. The horse will share top weight, 120 pounds, with three others.

Next to Brevity, wagerers were inclined to favor Pete Bostwick's Mont Blanc, with Jockey Eddie Ar-caro up and carrying 118 pounds. C. V. Whitney's Bright Plumage, Jockey Sonny Workman up and carrying 120 pounds; the Maemere Farm's Maeriel, with "Litzy" Litz-enberger in the saddle and carrying 120 pounds and Mrs. Emit Denmark's good Higher Cloud, assigned 118 pounds and mounted by J.

Longden, leading Hialeah jockey, are all considered threats. Comparative longshots are such entries as the Tranquility Farm's Songmaker, J. Renick up and given 118 pounds; R. W. Collins' Old Comrade, ridden by J.

Pollard, which was assigned the lightest weight, Mushers On Way In 30-Mile Derby At 20 Above Zero Fairbanks, Alaska, March 6 (AP) The temperature was 20 degrees above zero as Northland dog mushers lined up for the thirty-mile ice carnival dog Derby today. Fourteen teams were entered, headed by Bob Buzby, Fairbanks business man, three times winner. Another entrant was Leonard Spella, famed dog musher of the thrilling diphtheria serum run from Fairbanks to Nome in 1924. United States District Attorney Julian Hurley, who placed second last year, entered a team of all white dogs this year, St. Petersburg, March 6 (AP) It took Wally Berger, holdout outfield star of the Boston Bees, less than ten minutes to iron out his salary difficulties with Bob Quinn, general manager of the club, today and he donned a uniform for his first workout of the spring training season.

Quinn announced that there was no compromise. Instead, slight misunderstandings, due to promises made him by the former owners of the highest paid outfielders in out Quinn said that Berger is one of the highest paid outfields in the the National League. The signing of Berger, one of the leading batsmen of the National League, leaves only Hal Lee, another regular outfielder, outside the Bees' fold and Manager Bill McKechnie is not alarmed over Lee's absence. Pensacola, March 6 (AP) Manager Terry of the Giants, back here after a brief visit to Memphis for treatment of a swollen left knee, Damaged Eye Camera Is New York, March 6 (AP) Ponderous Primo Camera, blasted out a five-round victory tonight over Izzy Gastanaga, wild swinging Spaniard in Madison Square Garden. The huge Italian, scaling 268, was awarded a technical knockout when Referee Arthur Donovan stopped the fight because of the condition of Gastanaga's damaged left eye.

The Spaniard scaled 2084. Camera, although obviously rattled by his opponent's unorthodox style, had a decisive margin on points throughout. There were no knockdowns, however, and the crowd of 9,000 onlookers, including 8,834 cash customers who paid continually jeered the ponderous Prime's tactics. Camera, booed for roughing, back-handing and, at the end of the third round, for playfully poking Gastanaga in the jaw after the bell it off Matzuzak in the eighth by counting-two more on Cuyler dou ble and hits by Scarsella and Rai- tnond. They needed most of these before they got through.

The A's collected only one run off Hollingsworth, who walked three consecutive bat ters In the third, one of them scor ing on an out. JOHNSON FANS 'EM. Johnson fanned the side in the sixth, but they got a run on a hit and three passes, one of which forced the tally over. Mailho jolted one over the fence for a homer in the seventh. A hit and a fumble by Kampourls, Who was too anxious to start a double play, yielded one more in the eighth.

Conroy opened the ninth with a triple and scored on Mall-ho's long fly to Walker. With two out, a double by Bob Johnson and a homer by Puccinelli gave the A two more and made the score less one-sided. Not a very refined exhibition of the pa3time, but it is too early in the season to expect world series play..

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the The Cincinnati Enquirer
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About The Cincinnati Enquirer Archive

Pages Available:
4,581,778
Years Available:
1841-2024