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The Indianapolis Star from Indianapolis, Indiana • Page 41

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roigHs I Mgdp Kn -W WiCl'9iV 'V. ers Upset Ohio State By 24-20 Margin Weather Two Long Scoring Runs, Then Quell Dying Threat By HAROLD HARRISON The Star Sports Editor Lafayette, Oct. 4 The sons Visitors Gain 7-7 Standoff In 4th Period 70-Yard Run Turns Trick With At Big 9 Opener By JACK OVERMYER Star Sports Writer Bloomington, Oct. 4 Indiana forgot about Wisconsin'! speed for just about once this afternoon and the one lapse of memory enabled the Badgers to tie the more-powerful Hoosiers in their Big Nine opener, 7 to 7. A rain-spattered crowd of 30, 000 homecomers, largest throng ever to witness an Indiana home opener, saw the game.

It was Wisconsin's second conference start, having shellacked Purdue last Saturday. INDIANA, AFTER a touch-and-go first half which wound up scoreless had put on a 76-yard march with the third-quarter kickoff to take a 7 to 0 lead when the tricky Badgers threw an entirely different light on matters. At the beginning of the final period, a Hoosier drive fizzled out on the Wisconsin 35 and the Badgers took over. Earl (Jug) Girard, substitute halfback, got around right end to move the ball to the 30. Then it happened.

Earl Mavcs, 190-pound starting fullback, broke so suddenly through the center of the Indiana line that for a second the Hoosier secondary stood motionless, that second was all that was necessary. Maves put on wheels and scooted 70 yards into the Indiana end zone. Mel Groomes got a hand on him at the 5, but by then it was too late. LISLE BLACKBOURNE kicked the extra point. Indiana's only legal touchdown Ohio fullback ack, is hauled down by Clyde end, after gaining nine yards around end in first-quarter action of yesterday's game at iter, is No.

80. RIGHT Indiana's Dick Deranek, right halfback, goes off tackle for a 10-yard gain in the first period at Bloomington center. Purdue He is tackled by Eugene Evans, Wisconsin back. (Associated Press Wirephotos.) LEFT Ollie Cline (33), Lafayette. William Sprang, yesterday against Wisconsin.

Notre SECTION 3 SPORTS, FINANCIAL AND BUILDING The Indianapolis Star SUNDAY MORNING, cf old "Jawn" Purdue wrote glorious page of football history here today as they got up off the floor from last week's miserable showing to outfight and outplay a neavuy lavorea unio siate team for a thrill-packed 24 to 20 vie- 'J- tory. Instead of being disheartened after the sound trouncing by Wisconsin, the Boilermakers bounced back with as fine a display of spirit, aggressiveness and excellent playing as will be seen all season. TWICE THE Boilermakers rebounded from explosive long touchdown runs by the Buck's famed backs and in the closing minute an ironbound Purdue defense staved off Ohio State's dying touchdown threat just when it looked as If the Ohioans might be on their way to pull the game out of the fire. Picking out an outstanding Purdue player would be a difficult assignment but the lad who really carried the mail for the Boilermakers today was Harry Szul-borski, 169-pound halfback from Detroit. He provided the running threat that Purdue lacked last week and that, coupled with fine passing by Bob Demoss and Bill Feldkircher, gave the; Boilermakers a whopping margin in yards gained despite Ohio State's array of great backs.

IT WAS THE first Big Nine victory for Purdue since 1945 and kept alive the" Boilermaker jinx over Ohio State. Ohio hasn't won from Purdue since 1943. In the last three years Purdue has come up with two victories and a tie with the despite the fact they have been underdogs in all three engagements. The 34,000 customers saw Purdue outgain Ohio State on the ground, 365 yards to 236. It was a game that was packed with thrills.

Purdue scored the first time It got the ball and then saw Ohio State knot the count as the brilliant Dean Sensanbaugher raced 98 yards to score on a kick-off return. THAT RUN didn't even dent the Boilermaker spirit and Purdue went out in front in the second quarter on Art Haverstock's field goal. Another explosive 63-yard run by Sensanbaugher, again put Ohio out in front but the Boilermakers fought their way Turn to Page 42, Column 2 a Butler Irish Batter Pittsburgh In Season Opener, 40-6 By RUDY CERNKOV1C Pittsburgh, Oct. 4 (UP) Notre Dame's victory march, slowed Defensive Lapse In 3d PeHod Costly To Bulldogs By BILL TOm, Star Special Correspondent Athens, Oct. 4 Butler University's football team suffered a defensive lapse in the third quarter of its game with Ohio University here today and allowed the Bobcats to come from behind to score a 14-to-7 victory in the Mid-American Conference opener for both schools.

Wins- li lit STATE COLLEGES Purdue 24, Ohio State 20. Indiana 7, Wisconsin 7 Notre Dame 40, Pittsburgh 6. Ball State 31, Eastern Illinois IS. Indiana Central 12, Defiance 6. Hanover 19, Georgetown (Ky.) IS.

Ohio University 14, Butler 7. Indiana State IS, Valparaiso 0. Louisville 87, DePauw 0, Evansville 7, Carbomlale, (111.) 0. Wabash 7, Carroll 7 (tie). Manchester 20, Karlham 7.

Cedarville, IS, Canterbury, 0. OTHER BIG NINE GAMES Illinois 35, Iowa 13. Michigan 49, Stanford IS. Minnesota 28, Nebraska 13. Northwestern 27, U.C.L.A.

26. OTHER roiXKGKN Amhrr.t 13, K. T'at Clnnrd Academy U. Arkuninn Trxn hrMlan 0. Army 47, Colorado 0.

Auburn 14, I oullnna Tern 0. Aurora 1A. F.urr-k 6, Hrlolt 12. Monmouth 0. Loses King Brady and the passing of Quarterback Bob Mills were constant, thorns In the sides of the Bulldogs, and Coach Tony Hlnkle's eleven was forced to make two goal-line stands to halt Bobcat scoring bids.

Butler drove to the one-foot line early in the fourth quarter, but the heavier Ohio line dug and held the Bulldogs In their only other bid. The 8,500 spectators, ready for at least a three-touchdown victory Turn to Page 43, Column 6 The Bulldogs hud gone lnfi the lead In the first quarter on the running, of Fullback Francis Moriarty, and Wingback Orville Williams, but Ohio struck through the air for one touchdown in the third period and a few minutes later powered to their final six-pointer, Moriarty, who just returned to action after being sidelined for two weeks, was relnjured midway through the opening quarter and without him the Bulldogs wore unable to complete a -scoring threat. THE RUNNING of Halfback Bombers Go lUp NEW llllll AH 4 2 4 4 3 2 4 A II 4 It I II ansa ll It II 7 0 0 2 I 1 a i it it i 0 2 0 1 KtirnweiM, llenrlih, rf inrt.ll, if IMAIaaaln, rf ategmnn, lb Jolliiaon, Sb A. Hohlnaon, f( latum, Hhea, i Triumph, 2-1, Behind Shea's Brilliant 4-Hitter Joyous Yanks Toast Shea, Harris Sees Title Today By STEVE SNIDER New York, Oct. 4 (UP) This was the big one for the Yankees today and how they knew it! Roaring into their clubhouse after whipping the never-say-die Dodgers, 2 to 1, for their third victory in five games, the sweating, screeching mob from the Bronx fought among themselves for the right to pound the backs of Pitcher Frank (Spec) Shea and'joltin' Joe DiMaggio the guys who underwrote the triumph.

OCTOBER 5, 1S47 Easily; I California St. Mary'n Cincinnati 20. M. Bonavrntnrr 14. Citlcatn 20.

KIiikn I'olnl o. Colorado 7, Wrstrrn Slat t. Columbia IS, Navy 6, onrnrclla 7, WlUon Junior Collrre a. Connecticut Teacher t7, 0, Cornell CollCBc -20, Itlpon 7. Dartmouth is, Nraror 7.

Duyton 20. Howllnt t.reen IV DrnlMin It), ahlnton anil Jpffrrnon 14. Ill lie III, Trnnm.ee 7. Kraiiltlla and Mnmliall II, Sw arthmorc (. (leoricut l.iMiUlnnu.

Hlnte III. tieorjla Tech 20, Tillane O. (iettv.onrir 6. WeKtern Maryland tirlnnel 14, Knox Hamlin til, Aumhnrf Jl. Harvard ID, Hi.Klon lolverlly 14.

Holy mil If). Temple la, Howard n. Wwt Mritlola Stale n. Illlnoln Mormal MlrhKan Aurmal II. John Carroll Toledo 14.

HalamavMi Z0. Adrian 7. Kanaaa Z7, loaa Ntale 7. Lake Forest i7, Klmhtlrat 1. Lawrence 4'arlelon (I.

Lehlth 21, Cane Maryvtlle za. Centre 0. Miami as, Kent 7. Mlddlehnry I It, llllama 7. MlHHlflipil as, Houlh Carolina 0.

Muhlenhera; n.1. Albrlaht I). New Hampthlrn Khnda Uland Stale! Nevada 1 3, Oreaitn f). New Meilrn 2(1, Knnnnn State New York I'. 10.

nrooklyn O. North Central 82, Jamra Mllllkln t. North Texaa 20, Florida 12. 4 Turn to Page 42, Column that the ball wa taken away from him in the lifth prevented him from aettlng a record for bases on balls in a game. He issued nine, only one, iesa than the Yankee Bill Bevens allowed yesterday to eat Jack Coombs 87-year-old record, What price fame.

A photographer asked Cookie Lavagetto, yesterday's batting hero for the Dodgers, to pose with of bats which the smiling Califor-nian obligingly did. By the way, the lensman asked: "How do you bat, lefty or righty?" Al Schacht, the baseball clown, sitting nearby, then cracked: "Why don't you ask him what team he plays for?" The Dodgers must have set some kind of a record for futility. Until Gene Hermanski opened Erooklyn's half of the fifth inning, they had gone 13 consecutive innings with only one hit, that by a prnchhitter. Hermanski's single snapped Frank Shea's string of five and one-third consecutive hitless innings acainst them. The freshman righthander! held them hitless in one and two-thirds innings last Tuesday.

There were many spots where a hit would have changed the complexion of the game, but the turning point was when Carl Furillo, who was playing in center field in place of the injured Pete Reiser, fouled off two attempted (each side had one called back) came after four minutes of the third period when the halftime-rested Hoosiers threw everything in the book at their opponents. George Taliaferro, Indiana's great running back of the 1945 title team, who got his first real workout of the season today, put on that 76-yard march practically by himself. George took the kickoff to his own 24 and after Fullback Chick Jagade picked up a yard, slipped off tackle for nine more and a first down. Afl offside stalled Indiana temporarily, but Taliaferro got that back and more with a 33-yard jaunt down the north side lines on a screen pass from Quarterback Nick Scbek. THAT PUT the surging Crimson on the Wisconsin 45.

Jagade hit tackle for four and then Halfback Dick Deranek took a hand-off Turn to Page 44, Column little Brooklyn pitcher, went In to run for the backstop, and was sacrificed down to second by Carl Furillo. Johnny Jorgensen, the next Brooklyn clubber, laid Into a Shea fast ball and drove It deep into right center field into Tommy Henrich's waiting glove for the second out. That brought up Cookie, and the crowd greeted him in a manner suitable to his heroic stature. THE COUNT WENT to three and two against the swarthy coast veteran, and then he took a mighty swipe at a ball somewhat high and Inside, missing it by close to a foot. Everybody started breathing again.

The loss was a tough one for Manager Burt Shotton of the Dodgers, as he gambled neavuy in starting Barney, who had not pitched a complete game this year, and nearly brought it off. The youngster really did soma amazing pitching. The iirst three Yankees to face him at the outset of the game got on base by virtue of two walks and Henrich's double. With activity at a furious pitch, Barney bore down to strike out DiMaggio and Bill Johnson and get George McQuinn on an infield tap. Again in the third Barney walked a pair, and this time Di Maggio hit into a double play to end the threat.

It was not until the unbridled Brooklyn thrower got around to issuing three walks in an inning that the Yanks man-aged to count. With two down in the fourth, Aaron Robinson and Phil Rizzuto strolled and the former raced in on Shea's single. ONE YANK WAS out in the fifth when DiMaggio connected for the fourth home run of his World Series career, and the most important of the lot. Barney pitched to two more batters after that, and when he walked tha second of them. Lefty Joe Hat-ten relieved him.

Dame time, quickened its tempo in the defeated Pittsburgh, 40-6, before yard drive with Terry Brennan scoring from the three-yard line. TIIE IRISH pushed 80 yards for another score in the second period and again It was the magic of the Connellsville, signal-caller that rang the bell. Varying his attack, Lujack passed and ran for a total of 51 yards. His momentum carried Notre Dame to the Pittsburgh ten where Doug Waybright snagged a Lujack pass in the end zone to score. Pitt scored during Lujack's ab- Turn to Page 44, Column 6 Facts And Figures B' THE ASSOCIATED PRESS I.

Pet. New Vnrk .1 Brooklyn I I .400 FIRST GAME AT YANKEE STADHM, -NEW VORKi V. Brooklyn 3 a Vork 5 Rranea, Rehrman 5k. Canejr and Ednarda; Shea, Pace IS) and Brrra. 8ETONO CAME AT YANKEE STADH YORK I Rrooklvn 2 New York 10 13 1 Enmbarrfl, (A).

Behrman 'It, Barney (1) and Edwarda; lUTnolda and Berra. THIRD GAME AT EBBETS FIELD, BROOKLYN: II New IS 13 1 Nennom, Bavhi (2). Ilreira 3, Chandler (4), Pair 8) and I-nllar. Berra (7) Hatten, Branca (5), Caiey (7) and Edwarda. FOURTH GAME AT EBBETS FIELD, BROOKLYN New York I 1 Brooklyn 1 3 Bevena, and Berra! Taylor.

fire (1), Behrman (Ml, Caaey (9) and Edwarda, FIFTH GAME AT EBBETS FIELD, BROOKLYN; New Brooklyn 14 1 Hhea and Roblnaon: Barney, Hasten (lit, Behrman (7), taaey () and Ed- "6'' REMAINING SCHEDf LE: Klrth same, Hnnday, Oct. at New York. eleventh (ante, (If neeeaaary) Oct. (, at New York. FINANCIAL FlOt RESl Attendance Receipt I ommlaaioner'a ahare H.

Each Iaaoe'a ahare ass.XSH.S. Each club'a ahare S3S.2AS.27. Attendance for the first Ivc gamea H4.IS0. Receipt for the. flv amea ommuloner'a ahare for the.

flrat fire famea Each leame'a hare for the Srat tame Each cloh'a ahare fw the lira Ave nmrl SI17.A37.40. Plavera' ahare for the flrat four came 43.74.aS. (Playera ahare enly In drat four tame). Barney Bemoans Fast-Ball Trouble New York, Oct 4 (UP) Rex the handsome righthander who coaches wayward youths at Father Flanagan's "Boys Town" during the off-season, regretted in tfft Dodger dressing room that his fast ball had been too wayward agamst the Yankees. The tall, hazel-haired lad from Omaha, told reporters, after the Dodger defeat, "We'd have won this game if I hadn't got Into so much trouble in the early" innings that I couldn't pace myself.

I had to throw so hard I lost some of my edge by the fifth inning when Joe DiMaggio hit that home run." Joe's four-bagger ultimately proved to be the winning marker. 27 A a ti i 2 a (i ii anil II 0 2 I A II II II II I 2 II a I a 1 2 II II II II II 2. II II A 0 II II I II II II II 1 II II 0 II II I II I It II It It I II II II II 11 111 lS, jNa ft .4. lHiKataaaaaaaiaaaaiaaaaaiaaiaiaa-aaaaaa. down to a seven-point lead at half remaining quarters as the Irish 64,000 football fans today.

The Irish, making their first 1947 defense of the national football title, were held to single touchdowns in each of the first two quarters. Pitt, showing surprising defensive power until the reserve strength was depleted, scored its only touchdown in the second quarter after recovering Notre Dame fumble. Notre Dame's master-mind T-quarterback, Johnny Lujack, made his presence evident in his recurrent appearances. His 35-yard pass in the first quarter contributed mightily to Notre Dame's touchdown which wound up a 57- running out on the field and I said to myself, 'Holy smokes, this ball game is I could hardly believe it." DiMaggio who has gone through many." a Yankee series triumph, was as happy as Rookie Shea. His homer, second of the series, was the deciding blow.

What pitch did he hit? "It was one of those fast ones Barney throws," Joe beamed. But the Yankees had plenty else to say about Rex Barney, the Brooklyn starter with the blazing speed. "IF HE COULD just get that ball over more often whooo!" said Harris. "He'd be murder. And I want to say right now these games are awful, I've never sat through two like 'em in my life." Like any pitcher, the 25-year-old Shea, pride of Naugatuck, was happy as a kid over his two base hits, one of which drove in the first Yankee run in the fourth.

But his eighth-inning double pleased him most when some one told him he'd hit the left field fence with it. "Boy, oh, boy," he chortled. "If I'd hit it just a little bit harder I'd have owned this town tonight." HE WAS ASKED what he thought of the Dodgers chances in the series, now, that the Yankees need only one victory to take the championship. "You can think of the darndest he said. Cookie Lavagetto, yesterday's hero, was glum.

This time he struck out with a chance to tie or win the game in the ninth, where yesterday he doubled. His swarthy, lined face was grim. "The three-two pitch was high and inside," he said. "I missed my real chance en the three-one pitch. That was belt high." "You can't do it all the time," he added.

i 11 -M -M0 Frank Shfa (left) and Joe Di.MagKio clown in the Yankees' dr railing room after Shea pitched New York to a 2-1 victory over Brooklyn in the fifth World Series game yesterday. DiMaggio put the Yanks in front with a home run. (Associated Prett Wire-photo.) They couldn have heard Man ager Bucky Harris over the tumult, but what they felt was echoed in the only intelligible spoken words in the first 10 minutes of victory! "WE'VE GOT 'EM now. We've got 'em for sure. Tomorrow we're going home," said the happy, grinning Harris.

Shea, the cockiest rookie in baseball, struggled to reach Floyd Bevens, who lost that heartbreaking one-hit game-yesterday hen Cookie Lavagetto belted a double with two out in the ninth. "I got that guy for you, Bev," Shea screamed. "I got him good." For it was Lavagetto, yesterday's hero, who struck out with the tying run on second base to end Shea's masterful four-hit victory. "That last strike w-as a belt-high fast- one," Shea grinned with his straight black hair stringing down over his face from the mauling his teammates gave him. "AND THE ONLY thing I liked about that pitch was when I saw it in Robbie's Aaron Robinson was the Yankee catcher.

"All of a sudden I saw everybody 'Series Of Surprises' Notes 'J Mala 2H AH Ktnnk, 2b 4-Kelaer Mikala, lb Ifece, ad 4. Kohlnion, Jh. Walker, rl Ilermanakl, If Edward, Eurlllo, rf Jorsenaen, Xb Harney, flatten, Mtlonlrlililo Hetirmin, Vaughan Caaey, (tl.avanf ltc 'lotali Walked for Halten In alalh. Doubled for Hehrman In cventh. tWalked for Hlanky In aevenlh, Hnn for Edwarda In ninth.

HFannrd tor aaey In ninth. NEW HKIrOKI.l (I II I 1 II II II 2 II II (I II II 01 Error Mlkula. Htma halted In Hhea, HIMaaiilo, i. Kotmtaon. Two-baa hita tlenrtrh, Vaimlian, shea.

Home run DIMimi'lo. KarrlHce t-tirlllo. double play I(eee, Manky and 4. Koblnaon (21. Earned riliin New ork 2, Brooklyn I.

l-rt on ba' New Vork If. Brooklyn Ham on hall" OH Harney (Mtlrnnrlaa 2, l.indrll 2, ftlr.ir.iito 2, Hrnrlrh, A. Kohln-aon. ohoaonli hh'-a ft (Bee 2, (Won-trlddo, Edwarda, Kelaerlj Behrman ll-Mairnloj, Struck out By Barney (III-MhkkIo. Jnhnaon 2)1 Khea 7 (Edwarda, lorarnncn 2, stanky, Keew, i.

Hotilnaon, Eavncelloi; Halten (Khealj Hrhrnian 1 1. Inn. II, Mi-qulnnl aaey (Ntlrnwelaal. f'lK'hlna anmmary Barney 2 runa hlla In 4 iiinlm. Hatten a run (I lilta in I'ti Innlnta, Bmrman runa I hit In I Inning, an 0 runa I hit In 2 Innlnan.

Hit ly pitcher By t.aaey (Mndeln. wild pilch Barney. Paaaed halla Edwarda (2. Iia-llil pIKber Harney. I mplrra Mrlinwan f'inelll IM.I Ih.

Itommel (Al.l 2h. f.oe'lr I.M.) 3t, Maaerknrth ll.H, Bmer (Al.l IIP. Attendance 14,379 paid. I Ime 2 sacrifice bunts with Bruce Edwards on first base in the seventh inning, and nobody out. With two away, Pinchhitter Arky Vaughan smashed a double off the right field wall, and for a moment it looked like a replica of Lava-getto's double which scored a runner from first base.

But this time, Tommy Henrich played the rebound perfectly and Edwards had to hold up at third. It was Casey's fourth appearance in live World Series games. He needa only one more to tie Deacon I'hillippe's record of appearing in five World Series games in 1903. Phillippe won three and lost two games for Pittsburgh against the Boston Red Sox. DiMaggio (J.) now has four World Series home runs to his credit.

This is his second in this series and the Yankees' 68th in 14 series. The entire National League has made only 70 round trippers in 44 series. Concluded From Page 1 Ingly well, considering everything. It was the first game the kid from Omaha had started since July 4, and he was as wild as the northern winds, but the American Leaguers had a tough time getting him out of there. IN THK FOLK and two-thirds Innings he worked the young fire-halter Issued nine walks, within one of, the new World Series record set only yesterday by the Ill-starred Bill Bevins of the Yanks, yet only one of them figured in the scoring against him.

Shea's control, on the other hand, was immaculate through the early part of the game, and he didn't let a Dodger reach first until Pee Wee Reese worked him for a walk with one out in the fourth. Thereafter the Yankee star gave up two passes in each of two following Innings, and one of them, opening the sixth, led to Brooklyn's only run. For four frames Shea had a no-hitter working. Only two balls had been knocked out of the infield on him. in that time, and people were beginning to look at one another.

But Shea was spared any further strain on that score when Gene Hermanski opened the. fifth with a clean single between first and second and into right field. HERMANSKI HIT, as a matter of curiosity, was only the second made by the Dodgers in 13 full innings of swinging at the Yankee e) bowers. The other was, of course, Lavagetto'g unforgettable punch that broke up yesterday's struggle. The stage for Cookie's second rendezvous with fate was set when Bruce Edwards, Dodger catcher, opened the ninth with a line single Into left.

Vic Lombardi, Yankees Are Listed 1-2 To Annex Series Today St. Louis, Oct. 4 UV) With the New York Yankees one up in the World Series race, Betting Commissioner Jamea J. Carroll set the Bronx Club as 1 to favorites to take the fourth and last victory tomorrow with Allie Reyn olds on the mound. Odds of 8 to 5 are carried on the Dodgers if Vic Lombardi hurls at Yankee Stadium.

Shotton's Smile Brightens Still Quarters Of Beaten Bums By JOE REICHLER Ebbets Field. Brooklyn, Oct. 4 JP) "The Series of the Second Guess." as it has been called, now is being termed "The Series of Surprises." Even Bucky the gambling manager of the Yankees, could hardly believe that Burt Shotton had nominated R.ex Barney to start for the Dodgers. "You don't he, exclaimed, when informed of the move. "I don't believe it." Harris still didn't believe it was Barney when the young hurler, after giving up two hits and a walk in the first inning, struck out the great Joe DiMasgio, made George McQuinn hit into a force play at the plate and fanned Billy Johnson to escape the inning unscathed.

For four innings it looked like Barney, who had failed to hurl a complete game during the regular season, and who had not been entrusted with a starling assignment since the Giants pinned his ears back last July Foui-th, might accomplish in a World Series game what he hed seen imame to do all year. But his wildness, the only consistent thing about his pitching all year, finally floored him in the fifth. At that Barney did better than any of hia predecessors, giving up only, three hits in four and two-thirds Innings. Only for the tact New York, Oct. 4 VP) The Brooklyn Dodger dressing room today was as subdued as it was tumultuous yesterday.

Only Mnager Burt Shotton kept on smiling and wise-cracking. His pitching choice tomorrow, uhea the Dodgers must win to stay in the series, will, as he says, "probably be Vic Lombardi but I don't think so. It's just a wild guess." Then he added In a serious undertone: "Who else have "It was quite a ball game," said Shotton. "When a fella pitches like that Shea he deserves somethingbut not to beat the Brooks. No." The remainder of the way.

off Hatten, Hank Behrman and Casey, the Yankees collected only two hits, a harmless single by Henrich to open the seventh, and Shea's two-out double in the next inning. The first two Yankees up ir. the ninth reached base on an error by Eddie substitute Dodger second baseman, and a hit batsman, but Casey served up an-. other double play ball to DiMaggio, and Henrich was out trying to score later on a passed ball..

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