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St. Cloud Times from Saint Cloud, Minnesota • Page 12

Publication:
St. Cloud Timesi
Location:
Saint Cloud, Minnesota
Issue Date:
Page:
12
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

mo II Urn attle for Class Tuesday to t. Joseph, Milroy The class finals are wt with St. Joseph and MUroy meeting for the championship Tuesday night at 8:30. St. Joe, the Great Soo league titlists, advanced to the finals with a 10-6 win over Norwood Sunday afternoon while Milroy won two weekend games, beating Ada 6-3 Saturday and Warroad 19-3 Sunday to reach the championship game.

Class A action found Benson passed throuch the gates. In the afternoon session 1,570 were on hand while the evening games pulled 2,193, the second largest crowd of the tournament. The fine crowds Sunday brings the total attendance to 13,850 with five or possibly six games remaining in the meet. Two Class A games are on tap tonight. Two metropolitan teams, Minneapolis DeVaci and St.

Paul Lorence open the night session at 6:3 with the loser facing elimination. The afterpiece will have Benson and Spring Grove clashing at 8:30, Spring Grove has to win to stay in the running. Providing nq. more rain mars the schedule, Class A will decide its champion Wednesday. Title game is set of 7:00, and if a second and deriding game is necessary, it will be played at 9:00.

as the only unbeaten team in the double-elimination playoff after taking a 6-0 shutout from Minneapolis DeVacs Saturday and a 7-4 thriller from Little Falls Sunday. In other Class A play Spring Grove dropped Jordan from the running with a 1-0 victory Sunday night. The fans responded to the idle weather Sunday as 3,763 Milroy In One-Sided Win Over Warroad In the first seven-inning game of the tourney, Milroy topped Warroad, 19-3, to gain the finals against St. Joseph for the class championship. Milroy sent 13 men to the plate in the 10-run fourth inning.

Six hits, four singles and two doubles coupled with a hit batsman, two errors and two walks provided the scoring opportunities. Pat Davison went all the way for Milroy, striking out six and allowing Saints Finish Fast To Stop Norwood St. Joseph's Great Soo championa reached the State baseball tournament final Sunday afternoon by defeating Norwood of the Crow River A'alley league, 10-6 in Class B. Three St. Joe pitchers held Norwood to 10 hits as Harvey Heurung started, was relieved In the sixth by Ray Stock and Bob Obermiller came in in the seventh.

Obermiller, following his fine performance of last Friday, held the losers to two hits i MWitum "'Ji 1 wwhidiwim mii ft si fumam iiaim mhm i tarn only one extra-base hit, a double by while driving in two runs witn a single and a sacrifice fly. The Saints took an early lead with five runs in the second inning. John Kresbach started the big second with a two base hit after Warroad Gains Semis Over Ada 6-3 Lome Lien came through with his Hub Klein went down on strikes i 1 t.iJ, 'V -v 7 i i 4 A i sXl Don Pfannenstein walked, Bud Reber doubled, Harvey Heurung was Milroy Gains Semis Over Hibbing, 9-5 Milroy's Class team put down a late ninth Inning rally by Hibbing Saturday to gain a 9-5 triumph. Four Hibbing runs scored in the second brilliant pitching exhibition Jack Vytlaciel in the fourth. Vytlaciel and Joe Koening both scored on a single by Bill Sargeant.

The 25 hit slugfest was played before 1,570 paid fans in 1 hour 43 minutes. The seven-inning rule goes into effect in any tournament game when one team leads by 10 runs or more before the completion of the seventh frame. Four doubles and a triple were hit for Milroy by Mark Dolan, Joe Dolan, Roy Erb, Pat Davison and Leroy Lanoue. Warroad's first run scored in the first on three singles and a fielder's choice with Jack Hodscon crossing the plate for the tally. Joe Dolan led the Milroy hitting attack with four for four and scored three times.

His brother Mark, hit two for four and scored four The three Dolan brothers figured in the game's only double-play with the ball going from Joe to Mark to Don. in as many games, hurling warroaa into the semifinals of Class witn a 6-3 win over Ada. Monday night Lien tossed a four-hitter to oust Sauk Rapids from the running and 'Saturday night he hurled a neat five-hitter to elimin hit by a pitched ball, Skip Linne-man sacrificed to center field, Ray Kresbach struck out but took first on a dropped third strike. Wayne Haupt singled and Chuck Pfannenstein struck out to end the inning. Norwood rallied in the sixth as it scored four runs and tied it up with lone telly in the seventh.

The Saints went ahead in the top of the eighth with three ruas off a double, two singles, three walks and Obermillers sacrifice fly to left field. Two insurance run in the ninth proved unnecessary as OrtonviUe scored once in the last frame. Six stolen bases by St. Joseph in the second, three of them at home plate added to the spectacular win. ate Ada.

Lien cot in trouble only briefly, allowing a pair of runs on two ruts in the eighth, but otherwise kept Ada in check. i1 i Meanwhile, Warroad was getting Zt behind Lien with a 15-hlt attack. Dan McKinnon and Jack Hodscan -1 1 ninth on a lead-off double by Bob Janaschak, three walks and a single and a double by Rod Wood before Reid Lovness came on In relief and pitched to one man, Vic Mukl, striking him out. Milroy got three of their runs in the third on three walks and two singles. They added four In tne fourth on two tingles, a sacrifice, two consecutive triples by Roy trb and Don Dolan and a double by Mark Dolan.

Nine men batted in the big inning, six of them getti.ig hits. The added one tal' in the fifth and another in the top of the ninth. Lefty Don Anderson went eight and two-thirds inning for Milroy, giving up seven hits, fanning and walking 10. His control started to go in the top of the eighth ana got worse In the ninth, the baes being loaded when LovneoS came in set the pace with three hits each. Warroad got off to its winning start with one run in the initial inntne.

McKinnon led off with a St. Jowph (10) Linneman, If R. Krertbach, at HiUPt, 4 2 single to left, went to third on Jim c. PfnnBtin, rf Pishs single ana was piatea wneu Earl Sargent lined as ingie to H. Klein, cf cipal stadium.

Glenn Schrupp is the Norwood third baseman. St. Joe defeated Norwood 10-6. (Times photo) BUD REBER is safe as he slides ink) third base during the St. Joseph-Norwood game Sunday afternoon at Muni The two clubs then battled for 2 2 0 0 1 0 0 r) 8 a 0 0 3' I 3 0 1 0 2 (1 a i 0 1 1 11 ho 1 2 3 0 2 1 1 po 0 A 0 2 1 0 1 4.

1 4 0 0 0 18 po 1 (1 a 3 0 1 1 1 ill Svskopf. a 4 MoKinnen. lb 3 Kosstjd, lb 1 Hodgson, if 4 Fish, p-rf 3 xStukel I cSargent, ef 3 Lien. rf-2b 3 Koenig, c. 1 Ganvo, Vvtliclel, 3b 3 Nash, 2b 1 iSargent, rf 1 Olimb.

1 Total 30 MUroy (I9i ab F.rb, rf 4 Grant, rf 1 D. Polan, lt 3 M. Dolan. 4 Kramer, cf 3 J. Dolan, 2b 1 Lanoue.

2h 4 Wllkenlng. 3 Philhppl, If 2 Davidson, 4 four scoreless innings. But Warroad broke it wide open with four runs in the sixth. The second of eight Little Falls in 9th lips enson batters, Joe Koenig opened with a 1 2 6 0 4 1 2 11 0 0 0 27 PO 1 1 2 2 11 fl 0 2 2 0 0 0 to put out the fire. single to leftfield.

Jack Vytlaciel J. Krebabach, 3b Pfannenstein, 2b Jtber. lb 5 Heurung, 1 Ptock. 0 Obermiller, 1 Total 3 Norwood (6) fichnipp. 3b D.

Feltmal. Will sen, cf Zellman, 2b Braunworth. Schmidt. 2b 2 xO. Feltman 0 W.

Grimm, If 4 I.enwn, rf 2 W. Feltman, rf 1 nibb, 3 O. Grimm, 1 Mliroy (9), HTrb. rf Dolan, lb M. Dolan, mi Kramer, cf J.

Lotau, 2b ab 4 5 4 3 3 1 4 3 3 0 Cation, 2b pring Grove Eliminates Jordan Lanoue, 3b 15 21 It Totals 33 rtullipl, If Mettler, Anderson, Lovneee, x-Hit Into double piny for Fish -Benson 7, Little Falls 4- 1 1 2 2 2 0 1 0 1 1 0 It 1 2 0 3 po I 8 1 2 2 a 27 po 2 3 2 8 1 5 3 0 1 0 2 0 Triples by Chuck Bosacker and Lyle We6trum in the ninth inning broke a tight game wide open as Benson handed Little Falls a 7-4 defeat in Class A Sunday night. The timely blows came after the Red Sox had taken a one-run lead in the bottom of the eighth. The loss was the first for the Red Sox in tournament play so far, while Benson continues undefeated. Gene Ecker was the hero for the Chiefs after he came on with none out in the first Inning and three Little Falls runs on the scoreboard. Ecker went on to dLsh out just three hits over the nine innings and reached first on a fielders cnoice with Koenig moving to third.

Vern Nash then singled to right to piate Koenig. Vytlaciel scored the second run of the inning on Jack Stoskopf single to left centerfield. Nash crossed the plate on Hudscan's fielder's choice and Stoskopf came home on an error. Trying to come from behind a 5-0 deficit, Ada pushed two runs across the plate in the bottom of the seventh inning. Earl Anderson drew a walk, -Rent to second on an infield out and was plated on Dale Serum's single to left.

Ory Holland then crashed a double to lei centerfield, the first extra-base hit of the game, to puih Scrum home. Ada pulled within two in the eighth frame. Hugh McMullen drew a walk, was moved to second when Earl Anderson walked and came home on Ken Orvlk's single. But Warroad wasn't taking any chances, picking up one insurance run in the top of the ninth. Hods-can singled to open the tnning, went to second on an error, advanced to third on an infield out and came home on a sacrifice fly.

Totals 35 Hibbini? iM ab Jim Lipovctz, rf 3 Haben, 2b 4 Taddel, 4 Marlon, lb 4 Wood, rf, if 4 Rice, 2 Jerry Lipovetz, jf i J. Makl. 1 Grillo, 3b 4 Hubbard, 1 Vondcrhaar, 2 B. Makl 1 ninth. Warroad 100 200 0- 1 Milroy 503 1 10)01 11 Stoskopf, Fish, Lien, N'ASh, la-naue, Davison.

RBI Erb. Dolan, Kramer 3, J. Dolan 4. lanoue 2. WKkcnlng Philllppi 2, Davidson 2.

E. Sargent, Nash. 2B Dolan. Vyltllclfl, Divl-son, Erb, M. Dolan, E.

Sargent. i'B -Lanoue, Kramer. SB M. Dolan. Wil-kening, Phllllppt.

Kramer. LOB -Warroad 7. M.lrov 4. DP J. Doian-M Dolan-D.

Nolan, Lanoue-Catton-D. Dolan. BB Fish J. Dlimb 2. SO Davison 8, Fish 1.

Olimb 4. HO-Iish in Olim'j 3 In 25. PB-Wllkentn. HBP By Daviaon (Koenlgi. bv Fish ill.

Dolan). Fish. Jerry Rickey. Ott- Stewart, Bud Belllg. i 43.

Totals 35 10 27 6 Ran for Schmidt in ninth. Ft. Joseph 050 000 03210 Norwood 000 004 101 fl R. Krebsbach 2, Zellman, Braun-worth 2. RBI Haupt, Keber.

Ober-mllle, D. Feltmann 2, W. Grimm, Len-7 tn. 2B J. Krebsbach 2, Reber, D.

Feltmann 2. Braunworth. SB R. Krebsbach. Haupt.

C. Pfannenstain, J. Krebsbach, D. Plannengtein, Keber, Heurung, D. Feltmann.

Linneman, Hcurun. Schmidt. W. Gnmm. LOB St.

Joseph Norwood 10. BB HeurunR 4, Stock 2. HO Heurung fl In 5 (pitched to 2 in 6th Stock 2 In 1 (pitched to 2 In 7th). Obermiller 2 In 3, Dlbb 7 In 7i. Chiefs Win Over DeVacs Saturday Grimm 1 In Vi.

HBP Dlbb (Heurung), Grimm (J. Krebsbach, B. Kretw- hacnl. Wt Z. iB araunworin.

Obermiller. Dlbb. TJ Herb TUcher, Bud Belling, Jerry Hlchey. T-2 46. Spring Grove Unorthodox Hugh Orphan tossed Spring Grove to a 1-0 victory over Jordan in the double-elimination Class A playoff Sunday night.

Orphan, delivering in an underhand fashion, was nothing short of brilliant in gaining the shutout, giving up Just two scattered hits. The loss ousted Jordan from the tournament since it T.as its second to date. Spring Grove last its opener to Little Falls the first day and has come through with two wins since that time. Actually, a pair of Jordan pitchers came through w-lth fine pitching exhibitions. Little Joe Shrake started on the mound and gave up four hits in seven innings, striking out nine.

Jim Geske came on in relief, in the eighth after Shrake apparently developed a sore arm, and blanked the sides the rest of the way. The winning run was plated in the top of the second inning. Dick Seltz, Austin baseball coach, lined a single to left field. A passed ball moved Seltz to second and he came scampering home on Lyle Johnson's single to left centerfield. Meanwhile Orphan was real tough.

He set the side down in Totals ...27 7 27 14 Grounded out for Vonderhaar In fl Milroy 003 410 001-fl Hibbing 001 000 004-5 Taddel, Marlon, Rice. RBI F.rb, M. Dolan 2, J. Dolan 3, Haben, Tad-dei. Marion, Wood 2.

2B M. Dolan, Grillo. Wood. 3B Taddel, Erb, D. Dol-an.

SB Mettler. J. Dolan, Anderson 2, Rice. DP M. Dolan-J.

Dolan-D. Dolan. LOB Milroy 11, Hibbing 11. BB Hubbard 4, Variderhaar 4, Anderson 1. SO Anderson 8, Hubbard 2, Vonder-har, 3, Lovnes 1.

HO Anderson 7 In 8, Lovnehs 0 In 'j, Huohard 6 In 3', Vonderhaar 5 In 3'-'i, Makl 0 In 2. WP Anderson. Anderson. Hubbard. Herb Tiseher, Jerry Rlch-cy, Bud Bcllig.

T-2 34. Winona Teachers Top Stout Institute 18-6 Winona, fP)VJ i a Teachers scored three touchdowns in the first quarter after recovering Stout Institute fumbles and went on to defeat the visitors from Menominee, 18-6, here Saturday in a non-conference game. po 1 11 2 10 1 0 Warroad (fl) SUftkopf, 8 5 McKinnon, lb 5 Hodgson, if 5 Huh, rl 5 Sargent, cf 4 Lien, 5 Koenig, 3 Vytlloel. 3b 4 Nash, 2b 4 and double. But both died there as Oistad got two on strikes and the third on a pop-up.

Benson went after a little insurance in the bottom of the seventh. After one was out, Chuck Bosacker singled and Howie Peterson followed with a single. Lyle West-rum then lined a single to shortstop, who threw wild at third allowing Bosacker to score. Two passed balls THE FANNING MILL got credit for the win. Benson's formula for winning came on the ability to collect timely hits when they were needed the most.

Actually the Red Sox stayed even with Benson in hit with six each. And four of the Little Falls blows went for doubles. It didn't take the Red Sox long to get to starting pitcher Ronnie Tucker. The first four men up collected hits, for three runs. Hub Zyvoloskl opened the assault by lashing a double to left center-field.

Ron DeLaHunt followed with a single to plate Zyvoloskl. Jere Wilczek then singled to short right field with DeLaHunt coming all the way home as the rlghtfielder threw wild to second base. Wilczek scored the third run on Junie Welsbrich's double to leftfield. The three-run margin held up until the fourth inning when Benson cut the deficit to one. Lyle Westrum drew a walk from Kruch-ten, and with two out, Paul Sherry got his first tournament hit, a home run over the leftfield fence for two runs.

Benson made it a new hall game in the top of the fifth, plating the tying run. Pitcher Ecker blasted a line drive to rightfield. Virg Deer-ing came in too fast and the ball got over his head, allowing Ecker to move to third base. Ecker scored when shortstop Jere Wilczek was charged with an error. Little Falls took a temporary one-run lead in the bottom of the eighth inning.

Wilczek singled, Weisbrlch walked and Elmer Kohorst reached first on a fielder's choice to lead the sacks. Harlan Olson ran the count to three-two before drawing a walk to force in the run. But Benson rapped up the game with their big four-run ninth. The two triples accounted for all the runs after Ecker and Howie Peter Benson continued on its unbeaten way Saturday night in the Class A double-elimination playoff with a 6-0 whitewashing of Minneapolis DeVacs. The loss by DeVacs was their first in tournament play, but they remain in the running in the losers bracket.

Rod Oistad. a draftee from Fergus Falls, pitched five -hit ball in his shutout. Oistad struckout 10 over the route, while giving up four bases on balls. Benson backed up Oistad with nine big hits and errorless play in the field. Benson opened the scoring in the bottom of the fourth Inning with a single run.

It was the first scoring between the two clubs in seven innings, including the four play before rain washed out Thursday's game. Howie Tucker got the scoring started by walking after one was out. He came all the way home as Duane Hansen singled and the ball got through the, leftfieldcr's legs. The DeVacs' first serious threat came in the top of the sixth when the first two men up got a single Football Player Dies From Injuries Manchester, N. H.fP) Arthur J.

Cronin, of Beverly, a 17-year-old substitute back on the St. John's prep school football team, suffered a fatal neck injury Sunday in the opening game against Manchester Central High. The senior honor student died rn route to the a hospital after walking off the field complaining "my head Brother Norman, athletic director of the Danvers, prep school, said the youth apparently was hurt in a scramble for a loose ball after Central punted in the fourth period. "He seemed to slip on a wet turf," Brother Norman said, "and strike his head on the ground." Dr. Samuel C.

May, acting medical referee, said Cronin suffered a dislocated neck. brought Peterson and Westrum scappering across the plate. Benson continued its assault in the seventh as Paul Sherry walked and was advanced on the passed ball. Sherry then scored, as Berens blasted a single to left field. The fifth run of the inning crossed the plate when Duane Hansen clouted a double to plate Berens.

order in the second, sixth and seventh innings and pitched to Ave men in only the first and ninth by Frank Fairing to a frames. Jordan got life in the bottom of the ninth when Orphan experi Total 39 IS 27 11 Ada (3) ab po a Johnson, rf 1 1 0 0 Edgeton, rf Simpson, rf 10 0 0 McMullen. 2b 2 0 3 2 Samuelson, sg 4 2 2 Anderson, If 2 0 0 0 Orvlk, cf 4 2 2 0 Serum, 4 1 11 3 Slpe, 2 0 10 Flnelll, 2 0 0 0 Holland, 3b 4 111 Nlelson, lb 3 0 7 0 Totals 29 5 27 Warroad 100 004 001 Ada 000 000 2103 Men, Holland 3, Nlelson. RBI Stoskopf, Snigent. Nash, Orvik, Flnelll, Holalnd.

SB Johnson, Holland. SB-Johnson 2. McMullen, Sargent. LOB Warroad 9, Ada 5. DP Holland-Mullen.

Koenig-Vvtliciel. BB Lien 4, 81p 2, SO Lion, 10, Si pp. fl, Flnelll 3. HO Slpe 13 In 5'3, Fiiirl'l 2 In PB Scrum. L-Slje.

HBP Men (Johnson). U-Jerry Rlchev, Jay Matthews, Otto Slewert. 2:07. enced his only trouble. DeVacs (0) Sticka.

Relchel, 2b Turner, rf Brovold, 3b Tomlinson, cf ab 5 2 4 4 2 4 Spring Grove (1) ab Howard. 4 Ellingson, rf 4 Molock. 4 Seltz, 2b 4 Johnson, as 4 M. Solie, lb 4 ROKtad, ef .3 Myhro, 3b 2 Orphan, 3 Nelson, lb Dietrich, If 2 Newton, If 1 Fullerton, 4 Lelnlnger. 2 Larson, 1 (1 0 2 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 1 1 0 2 0 2 0 To 0 1 0 2 4 A 3 0 7 1 24 po 1 5 2 10 5 1 1 1 1 0 1 2 1 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 1 1 0 0 fl 0 0 0 po (1 1 8 2 2 11 4 0 1 27 po 3 1 10 2 4 0 2 0 0 .32 ab 4 4 3 Totals Jordan (0) Erickhon, Oarbctt, rf OBrien.

.31 ab 4 4 4 Totals Benson 1 6 DeMarce, cf Bosarker, Peterson, 2b Westrum. Warmath Holds Final Scrimmage Pollard, 3b 4 Hovanec, lb 3 Nolden, 2b 4 Sunder, rf 2 Carlpon, If 2 Shrake, 2 Grske, 1 Sherry, lb 3 Berenj, 3b 4 H. Tucker, rf 2 Hanson, If 3 Oistad, 4 son drew bases on baLs lib llv Associated Press NATIONAL LEAGIK Minneapolis (JP) Minnesota's football team Saturday held its final all-out scrimmage before the opener with Nebraska and drew mixed Bonoa n) DeMarcf, rf Bosacker, Peterson, 2b West rum. Berrns, 3b Sherry, lb Hanson. If H.

Tucker, rf R. Tucker, Ecker, Totals .33 9 27 8 rieVacs ooo ono ooo Benson OOO 100 50x Sttrka, Helehel, NcImmi, Dietrlrh. RBI Berens, Hanson. 2B Nelson, Brovold, Hanson. 8 Peterson.

LOB DeVacs 10, Benaon 10. BB Lelnlnger 6, Oistad 5. SO I-einlnger 4, Larson 1, Olmad 10. HO Lelnlnger 9 In 7. Lar-on 0 In 1.

PB Fullerton 2. Leming-er. Jav Matthews, Otto Siewert, Jerry Richry. A 54. 5 5 4 5 3 3 A 2 Totals 29 2 27 10 Spring Grove 010 000 0001 Jordan 000 000 0000 Rostad, Krlckfon 2.

RBI Johnson. Carlson. I.OB Spring Grove 6, Jordan 6 BB Orphan 2, Shrake 1. SO Orphan 6, 9, Geske 1. HO Shrake 4 in 7.

Geske in 2. HBP by Shrake (Rostad), bv Orphan (Hovaneri. PB O'Brien. Shrake. Jay Mmt-heus, Otto Siewert, Jerry Rlehey.

1 .53. New York Brooklyn Milwaukee Cincinnati Philadelphia St. Louie Pel. OB S3 54 .633 SS 60 a S2 A7B 72 76 21 i fa 77 .473 23' 69 78 .469 24 SO 88 .405 53 84 .301 40 1 1 0 2 fl 1 0 0 0 1 fl 1 2 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 Pittsburgh 1 2 11 0 2 1 1 27 po 1 3 0 2 A 12 2 0 1 0 THAT THE STATE BASEBALL tournament currently in progress here still is a desirable thing to have has been evidenced over the weekend Representatives of the city of New Ulm were in town making it known that they would like it very much if the tournament would be returned to that community in 1955 So before it gets yelled around that St. Cloud la all through, fed up and tired of it all, let us announce this, if you will: Sports, which has been the group seeking, backing and working before, during and after these state tournaments here not only wants the tournament again but wants it next year And before you say: "So soon?" in accens wild, let us also remind you that when St.

Cloud was striving mightily to get St. Cloud selected as the site and spending hundreds of dollars in the process it was a.sking for a complete state bas-eball association tournament, not part of a tournament After the tournament was awarded to 6t. Cloud, remember, one classification was permitted to withdraw unto itself and operate a playoff of its own Sports, would like the tournament again, if vou please, with or without Class AA And, for the record, and bearing in mind that all citizens know how bad the weather has been for baseball, today it is still possible that the 1954 tournament with only Class and A teams competing will outdraw the 1952 tournament held at Austin, for example (At Austin in 1952 tournament weather was almost perfect, temperatures were in the 90s) Present tournament attendance is 13,850 There are three sessions to play Austin in 1952 drew 18,367 Since the tournament started here two-thirds of the normal rainfall lor the entire month of September has fallen on St. Cloud that is, 1.98 inches It rained here September 11, 12, 13, 14, 16 and 18 in measurable quantities and more On September 15 and 17 it rained traces During that entire period it was cloudy and cold, according to Bill Trebbc, bos at the VS. weather station, and he should know ANOTHER I ELLOW who knows about the rain is Phil Nierengar-ten, city superintendent of parks, who has been charged with the responsibility of getting and keeping the playing field at the stadium in shape Phil has turned in the most spectacular performance of anyone in the tournament I believe the shortstopping of St.

Joe's Ray Krebsbach on one occasion was about as amazing as anything I've seen when he stopped a ground ball while on his stomach and retired a player at second base But Phil has been performing magic for 10 days Once a Hibbing player walked into the tournament office while rain was drizzling away, asking when his team would play Phil said the field would be ready two hours after the stoppage of rain The player laughed and said it couldn't be done He knew because he was in charge of the grounds grooming in his town and knew something about the problem But he was out playing second base in two hours thereafter here Phil's tricks of legerdemain on that field, called "masterful" by state secretary Ernie Johnson, have not been accomplished without expense To date about $500 in expert man hours and city sand have been poured out so that the games might be played This cost will be sustained by Sports, from its tournament receipts whatever they might be The sand also will have to be removed at Sports, cost I cams competing in the tournament seem to f.ivor this as a state tournament site for facilities and location And in these next few days St. lmprs to prove that It ran be the urene of plraiant autumn weather also (aniP4 Todar Total "4 little FaV.K (4) Zvvolohkl. If New York vs. Biokivn: Maglie (13-6 vs. Podres (10-6), nlRht.

Toms' Monahan Goes DeLaHunt. rf Cincinnati at Milwaukee, 2: rod- bielan 7-9 and Pearce (0-(li Wilrvk, Welfbrlch. 2b Kohorst, Olson, lb nerrlng. rf Floor, 3b Krurhten. Wclgcl, On a Five TD Spree Spahn (19-12) and Burcfette (14-13t.

St. Louis at Chicago: Pouolsky (4-6) vs. Minner tll-9). Only gumes scheduled. Games Tuesd.iv Plttf-burgh at Philadelphia.

New York at Brooklyn. CtncinnnU at Milwaukee. St. Louis at Chicago, 2. comment from coach Murray War-math.

"Good Improvement for a week's work," he said, "but there's too much cf a drop off in talent between the teams." Warmath's conclusion was borne out by the results of the scrimmage, which found the White first struig-ers scoring five touchdowns, four of them against the second team. The Maroon third tram mustered three scores against tne White fourth. The first team was led by the McNamara brothers, Bob and Pinky, who picked up large chunks ot yardage from their halfback spots, both on passes and handoffs from the split T. Bob paraded a punt 60 yards down the sidelines lor the first While score and captured a 31-yard pass from qaurterback Gcno Cappclletti to set up the third. Pinky pranced eight yards into the end zone with the second touchdown, and sprinted 79 yards from scrimmage for the fifth.

John Baumgartner, hard running fullback performed well for the Whites. The slippery turf resulted in a dozen fumbles. Duane Jennctt, junior left half, and Jim McNeely, sophomore end, were injured during the afternoon's play, conducted without bcenfit ol time outs or a halftimc rest. iWe oUier Gophers watched lrom Uie sidelines. AMI IUCAN I.KGII BabsRomackVins Women's Amateur Pittsburgh (fp) Amateur golf, which has been losing ground to the pros in the past few vears, has received two strong infusion of championship blood within three weeks.

But the question still is: Will it last? Sunday blonde Barbara Romack of Sacramento, who likely would ge the best new attraction the women pros could offer, was crowned women's amateur champion. Three weeks before, Arnold Palmer, a highly promising young golfer, won the men's amateur title. Barbara says definitely she won't turn pro. Arnold, necessarily cagey because of the amateur regulations doesn't say he will, but doesn't 6ay positively no, either. He's the son of golf pro and has very few interests outside the game.

Miss Romach, a tiny 110-pound girl, look at it this way: "I want to play golf for enjoyment of the game. I wouldn't turn pre for anything." I. IV (IB 'HiKl K'8 40 7.i New York U'U 4S fi.fi Chicago P2 ST lfi'i Bo I on 1 2 Detroit 64 S4 -14 Wa.shiupton PI 44 52 97 Philadelphia 49 99 3J1 o9 Totals 33 7 27 34 Benion O(0 210 004-7 Little Falln 310 000 010-4 E-H. Tucker. W11c7vk 2.

RBI-Bo-fucker 2. Westrum 2. Sherry 2. nel.a-Hunt, Wctsbrtch. Olson.

7vvookl, Wrisbrteh, DeertiiR. Ploof. 3B-Eek-r, Bosacker, Westrum. tm-Sherrv. SB Bii-ncknr I OH -Benson 7.

Lit tie Ffl" fl. TIP-Ploof. Weisbrlch and Olson BB Ecker 2. Kruchicn 2. Wrigel 4.

SO Keker 9. Welpcl 6. HO H. Tucker 4 on 0 (pitched to four In ltt), Ecker 3 In 9. Krurhten 3 in 5 (pitrhed to one in etht.

WeiKl 3 In 4, WP Ecker. HBP-Knichten (Sherry), Erker (Krurhten, Del nHunti. Ecker. Welgel. U-Hcrl) Tlscher, Otto Slewert, Jny Mathews.

A 2,193. By Associated Press Dennis Monahan, a dynamic and diminutive right halfback, today was marked as a man to watch in MIAC football. Monahan, just 5-8 and 145 pounds, ruined St. Marys with a five touchdown du piay Saturday nis'nt as the Tommies whipped the Redtr.en. 40-6.

In the other conference game, Augsburg fought Duluth Branch on even trems, but bowed 7-6, the margin being a missed extra point in the third quarter. The Hamllne at St. John's game was postponed to today because oi wet grounds. In non-league tills, Macalester made a lir.n quarter safety stand up for a 2-0 victory over Dubuque, Ouslavus defeat. Mankato Teacheis, 14-1), and Mu.m-head Teachers battled Concordia to a 7-7 tie.

Monahan scored twice in the first quarter for St. Thomas, running seven yards and taking a 38-yard tass from quarterback Bernie Raclz. His three third quarter touchdowns came on a 35-yard tofs from Raeu and runs of 63 and 23 yards. St. Mary's got back in tiie (tame biietly in the second period when Jim Ricklick passed for a touchdown to George Richord to narrow the margin to 13-6.

But Monanan blew the gates open in the third period. Concordia fought off repeated scoring thrusts by Moorhead Teachers to preserve its record of not loMii; to the Dragon 18 ycats Muorhr.td pushed to Concordia's inc yard line the lir.al nnnuus of play, but had to scale for it third tie the scries, Ciaines Toehtv CliteaRo at Cleveland; Kcogun 1 16-8) vs. Feller (12-31, night. Detroit, at. Baltimore: Zuverink (8-121 vs.

Coleman (13-16), night. Washington at New York: Schrnttz (10-8) vs. Ford (lfi-8), night. Philadelphia at Boston: ilrny (3-11) vs. Brewer (9-9).

(James Tucriav Chicago at Cleveland. Detrot, at Baltimore. Washington at New Toik. Philadelphia at Boston, Bangkok Robert Cohen, 117Vt, France, outpointed Chamrern Song-kitrat, 117. Thailand, 15, world bantamweight title match.

Hollywood Art Ramponi, l.Ki;i, Oakland, stopped Andy Escobar, 135, Redondo Beach, 7..

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