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The Jackson Sun from Jackson, Tennessee • 8

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The Jackson Suni
Location:
Jackson, Tennessee
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8
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SPORTS mm SPORTS PAGE EIGHT JACKSON, TENNESSEE, MONDAY, MAY 24, 1954 WANT ADS 7-3333 mm Night Work At College Park Slated For Today, Tuesday Veterans Steal Suinidciy Spotlight From Young IBSg League 'Abates to help work the skinned areas of Modern Kitty League Mark For Consecutive Defeats Falls As Generals Lose MADISONVILLE, May 24 The Jackson Generals established a modern Kitty League record when they, lost their 19th straight game of the 1954 season by a 11-9 count to Madisonville here Sunday afternoon. to right scoring Lucas but Arter Jaycees, tjeen-agers and other volunteers are needed at College Park basball field tonight to rush completion of facilities with opening day only one week off. Jaycee Chairman John Blend said this morning that the lights will be turned on tonight and Tuesday night in order to move the civic project toward a successful conclusion. Most pressing items confronting the workers are backstop wiring, parking area and the Infield. The parking area has been graded but cinders still must be applied so that the large crowd anticipated for opening night can be conveniently parked adjacent to the field.

Jack Randolph of Randolph Nursery will bring a small tractor and discing and cutting equpiment Br JOE REICHLER AP Sports Writer Baseball may be a young roan's game but you can't convince Bob Feller. Ted Williams. Mickey Vernon. Preacher Koe. Marv Grissom and some of those other greybeards.

Led by these veterans of 36 or thereabouts, and the 39-year-old Ellis Kinder. he "Old Guard" had quite a day yesterday. Even such yearlings as 33-year-old Andy Paf-ko and George Kell got Ideas and joined in the fun. Feller, who will be 36 in November, pitched his first victory of the season and the 250th of his career as the Cleveland Indians beat Baltimore in a double-header 14-3 and 2-1 to increase their American League lead to 2'i games over Chicago. The tribe h3d to go into extra innings in the nightcap to post theirllth victory in a row.

Pitcher Art Houtteman won bis own game with a 12-inning double that scored George Strickland. Al Rosen's homer in the ninth, his eighth in the last nine games, off Bob Tur-ley. forced the game into overtime. Williams banged two singles and drew three walks in six times at bat. drove in a run and scored three as the Boston Red Sox out-slugged the New York Yankees 10-9.

Kinder hurled the last three innings to receive credit for his second Boston triumph. The Red Sox tallied seven runs in the last three innings to knock New York into third place. Kell. playing his last game for Boston, collected three hits, drove in three runs and scored twice. It was.

not until after the game that he learned he had been sold to the Chicago White Sox for undisclosed cash and infielder Grady Ilatton. Roe not only went the route for the first time this year but starred on offense as the Brooklyn Dodgers captured a double-header from Pittsburgh 5-4 and 6-2 to climb into a tie with Milwaukee for first place in the National League. The grizzled southpaw, a notoriously poor hitter, smacked a single and double and scored what proved to be the winning run in the opener. Duke Snider walloped two homers for the Brooks in the nightcap. Pafko.

playing In his 12th big league season, was the big gun in Milwaukee's double triumph over the Chicago Cubs. After driving in the tie-breaking run with a 10th-inning double in the Braves' 4-2 opening victory, he blasted two homers and a triple and drove in five runs In the 9-3 nightcap. Rookie Ray Crone and sophomore Chet Nichols were Milwaukee's route-going winners. Grissom. third pitcher used by Manager Leo Durocher, held the Philadelphia Phillies scoreless in the final three innings, protecting New York's 6-4 lead.

The Giants swept past the Phils into fourth place. Willie Mays batted In three runs with a triple and single off loser Curt Simmons. Vernon, who joined Washington in 1940. clouted a home run and three doubles to lead the Nats to a 9-4 victory over Philadelphia's Athleticst Elmer Valo, 33-year-old outfielder, hit a three-run homer for the Athletics. Eighth-inning home runs by Minnie Minoso.

Cass Michaels and Sherman Loll a gave the White Sox all their runs as they came from behind to defeat Detroit 4-3. Relief pitcher Sandy Consuegra. 33-year-old right-hander, replaced 35-year-old Virgil Trucks in the seventh and received credit for his third victory without a defeat. Detroit's Steve. Gromek, 34, had a shutout until he ran into the eighth-inning avalanche.

Outfielder Wally Post drove in five runs with a home run and double to lead the Cincinnati Red-legs to a 13-6 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals. The result boosted the Reds only two percentage points out of the first division and dropped the Cards from first to third place. Qualifying Rounds Are Scheduled Today In Southern Amateur Golf Tournament KITTY LEAGUE Won Lost Pet. Behind Union City ..15 5 .750 Owensboro ..12 6 .667 2 Fulton 13 7 .650 2 Mayfield ....11 8 .579 3 Hopkinsville 10 8 .556 4 Paducah 8 11 .421 Madisonville 7 12 .368 JACKSON 0 19 .000 14tt Tonight's Schedule JACKSON at Madisonville Fulton at Union City Owensboro at Hopkinsville Mayfield at Paducah Sunday's Results Fulton 18, Union City 6 Hopkinsville 15, Owensboro 11 Paducah 13, Mayfield 7 Madisonville 11, JACKSON 9 AMERICAN LEAGUE Won Lost Pet.

'behind Cleveland ...24 10 .706 Chicago 22 13 .629 2Vt New York ..20 13 .606 ZVt Detroit 16 13 .552 5 Baltimore ...12 19 .387 10 Washington ..12 19 .387 10 Philadelphia 11 21 .344 12 Boston 9 18 .333 11 Moneay's Schedule Philadelphia at New York (night) Only game scheduled Sunday's Results Boston 10, New York 9 Cleveland 14-2, Baltimore 3-1 Washington 9, Philadelphia 4 Chicago 4, Detroit 3 NATIONAL LEAGUE MEMPHIS, May 24 MV-Dixie's top play-for-fun golfers tee off today, trying to qualify for one of the 64 berths in the Southern Amateur golf tournament. Thirty-six holes of qualifying play was on tap, 18 today and tomorrow, then four days of match play for the championship. The dopesters figured a 141, one over par, would take the medal over the 6617-yard Memphis Country Club course with its skinny fairways, thick roughs and slightly turtle-back greens. Favorites were plentiful on the eve of the tourney but mentioned most often were: The defending champ, Joe Conrad, of San Antonio, Hill- 40-Year-Old Sammy Snead Realizes Time Running Out Jackson will play at Madi- sonville again tonight and re turn home Tuesday night to open a three-game series against Paducah. Paducah had held the modern consecutive loss record at 18, and the Chiefs also have the dubious honor of possessing the all-time loss mark.

Exact number of games in that victory less string is debated but 25 Is the generally accepted figure. The modern Paducah record was set in 1937 while the old mark was established in 1922. Sunday's defeat was much the same story for the Generals. They hit the ball hard, but the pitching was unable to quiet the bats of the opposition. Jack Strunk, hampered by a sore arm, started on the hill for the Generals but was belted out in the first inning after retiring one batter, walking two and giving up a hit.

He was relieved by Jim Kluck, who was tagged with the loss. Kluck was pitching with one day of rest and most of that "rest" was spent on the bus trip from Jackson to Madisonville. The slim righthander was making his ninth mound appearance of the season for Jackson. The Generals outhit the opposition 15 to 12, but left nine men stranded on the sacks and had three thrown out running Danny Meyers continued his hot hitting streak for Jackson as he rapped three singles in four times at bat. Bill Hughes also garnered three singles and drove in three runs.

Manager Lou Lucas returned to the Jackson lineup to rap a double and two singles and garner a trio of RBIs. Left fielder Harry Arterburn pounded a pair of doubles for the losers. Big blows of the game were Mad-isonville's Bob Latshaw's circuit clout in the fourth and shortstop Bill Pass's inside-the-park homer in the second with one on. Jackson picked up a run in the first when Mike Luciano singled, Meyers walked and Stewart Riles dropped a sacrifice bunt. Bill Hughes singled to center scoring Luciano but Meyers was thrown out when he rounded third too far and the catcher fired the center fielder's throw quickly to third base.

Madisonville pulled away to a 6-1 lead by the end of the second but Jackson came up with five markers in the third to tie the count. Luciano walked and consecutive singles by Meyers, Riles and Hughes accounted for three runs. The third came in when Rous let Hughes' single get by him in right field. Wayne Jones struck out but Lucas singled Hughes home. Arterburn reached first on Pass' error and both runners advanced.

Mike Milinazzo rapped a one-shot Netter Wade Herren Rallies To Capture Rogers Memorial Tennis Tournament Won Lost Pet. Behind Brooklyn 20 14 .588 Milwaukee ..20 14 .588 St. Louis ....20 16 .556 1 New York ...18 16 .529 2 Cincinnati ...19 17 .527 2 Philadelphia 17 16 .515 2 Chicago 14 19 .424 5 Pittsburgh ..11 27 .289 11 burn was cut down at the plate. Kluck fanned to stop the inning. Jim Sears, last of three Miner hurlers, received credit for the victory.

Leading the Madisonville attack was second baseman Frank Bra-gan, who rapped) a double and two singles. A former Mississippi State diamond standout, Bragan is the brother of former major leaguer Bobby Bragan. Jackson AB OA Luciano, cf 4 2 1 1 0 0 Meyers, 2b 4 2 3 2 3 0 Riles, 2 2 1 8 0 0 Hughes, lb 4 13 7 11 Jones, rf 5 0 0 2 0 0 Lucas, ss 5 2 3 0 3 0 Arterburn, If 5 0 2 2 0 0 Milinazzo, 3b 0 2 2 2 1 Strunk, 0 0 0 0 0 Kluck, 4 0 0 0 2 0 x-Byrd 1 0 0 0 0 0 Totals 39 9 15 24 11 2 Madisonville AB OA Borzellino, 3b 4 1 1 1 0 1 Bragan, 2b 5 3 3 3 3 0 Pass, ss .4 2 2 3 3 0 Wallace, If 3 0 0 1 0 0 Rous, rf 2 1 1 0 1 1 Latshaw, lb 4 2 2 8 1 0 Weaver, cf .......4 1 1 2 1 0 Segin, 4 1 1 9 3 0 Crane, 0 0 0 0 0 0 Johnson, ..2 0 10 10 Sears, 1 0 0 0 1 0 Totals 33 11 12 27 14 2 x-Byrd line out for Kluck in 9th. Jackson 105 012 000 9 15 2 Madisonville .332 200 Olx 11 12 2 SUMMARY: RBI Hughes 3, Lucas 3, Milinazzo 2, Bragan, Pass 2, Rous, Latshaw 4, Johnson 2. 2B Lucas, Arterburn 2, Bragan, Pass, Latshaw, Johnson.

HR Pass, Latshaw. SH Riles, Wallace, Rous, Crane. SB Lucas, Bragan 2. Left Jackson 9, Madisonville 7. HO Strunk 1 in 2-3 inning with 3 runs; Crane 7 in 2 1-3 innings with 6 runs Johnson 5 in 31-3 innings with 3 runs.

BB Off Strunk-2, Kluck 3, Crane 2. Johnson 2. SO By Strunk 1, Kluck 5, Crane" 2, Johnson 4, Sears 2. PB Riles. WP Sears.

HBP Hughes by Johnson, Wallace by Kluck. Winner Sears. Loser Kluck. 2:20. Day and Rommell.

Zimmerman Is Winner Of Southern Snipe Event CHATTANOOGA, May 24 CP Carl Zimmerman of Akron, Ohio, went home today with top honors in the third annual Southern Snipe Championship Regatta here. Zimmerman piled up 4,346 points yesterday to take first place in the two-day event on Lake Chicka-mauga. Billy Roberts of Chattanooga finished second with 4,182 points and Eddie Williams of Kansas City was third with 3,905. May 25 the Infield into a smooth condition Randolph stressed that the tractor can break the ground up but that a great amount of manual labor will be necessary to work the dirt into shape for the opening games night next Monday night. Scaffolds and tall ladders must be brought into use tonight to com plete wiring of the backstop.

All wire is on the 175-foot long backstop except the top section. Blend noted that an increased number of Jaycees turned out for the project last week when night work was made possible by the lights. He added that he was certain the members would continue their top efforts this week in order that everything will be in readiness for a successful opening night of the Babe Ruth League. man Robbins, hometown lad who won the Southern Intercollegiate this spring; former champ Tommy Barnes of Atlanta who fired a 66 in a practice round and husky Dick Collord of New Orleans. Little, red-haired Conrad, now a lieutenant stationed at Lackland Air Force base, check in yesterday and promptly shot a 32-3567 practice round.

Most of the 114 entries apparently found the course rough going during practice with very few sub-par rounds reported. Besides Conrad and Barnes, only Ronnie Wenz-ler, son of a former Southern champ, college student Mason Rudolph of Clarksville, and Sgt. Jimy Brass of the Lackland base told of beating par. doubles championship. All four women are from Chattanooga.

In yesterday's semifinal play, Herren was pressed to down Gentry 6-3. 2-6, 7-5 in one men's singles match and Daniel defeated Davis 6-3. 10-8 in the other. In men's doubles, Daniel and Davis beat John Powell of Flora, 111., and George Johnston of Murphys-boro. 6-2, 6-2 and Gentry and Smith eliminated Herren and Jack Chapman of Birmingham 6-4.

0-6, 6-4. In the women's bracket. Miss Voges eliminated Miss Rush 6-0, 6-4 in the semifinals singles play and Mrs. Morris defeated Virginia McCampbell of Knoxville 4-6, 6-1, 6-3. In the doubles, Morris and Bass beat McCampbell and Mrs.

Gladys Frank of Knoxville 7-5, 6-2 and Voges and Rush downed Mocelle Rankin and Nancy Perry, both of Oak Ridge 6-0, 8-6. Fred Smith Wins Hopkinsville Golf Tournament Crown HOPKINSVILLE. May 24 OPV-Fred Smith of Nashville, owns the only two trophies ever offered in the Hopkinsville Invitational Golf Tournament. He added the Spring Invitational crown yesterday to the Fall Invitational title he took last year. Both tourneys were inaugurals and are planned annually.

Smith shaved a stroke off par 36-3571 yesterday to finish with a 36-hole score of 141, three strokes better than Bob Roesch of Fort Campbell. Capt. II. B. Barker of Fort Campbcl, the 18-hole leader, fell off the pace yesterday and into a three-way third place tie with Jim Jones of Bowling Green and O.

H. Shelton of Paducah. They had 145 s. Harold Stevens of Nashville and Billy Martin of Madisonville came in with 146's. Bob Toski Takes Golf Money Lead With Eastern Win BALTIMORE, May 24 LW Bob Toski headed for his next golf tournament today as the sport's leading money winner and a con fident candidate to succeed Ben Hogan as the little giant of the fairways.

The 127-pound belter from Liv ingston, N. shot to the top of the heap yesterday with a smash ing seven-stroke victory over the rest of the field in the $20,000 Eastern Open. Besides pocketing the $4,000 first-place check, which raised his earnings this year to $10,988.74. Toski also became the first campaigner of the tournament trail to rack up his third major triumph of 1954. Trenton Auctions Held For Babe Ruth League TRENTON, May 24 Auctions were held here Sunday afternoon for the Trenton Babe Ruth League which is expected to get underway either on June 2 or June 9.

Auctions for the league which includes boys from ages 13 to 16 were held in the Peabody High School cafeteria, Thomas Lemond announced. Games will be played on the diamond at the Gibson County Fairgrounds. New uniforms have been ordered for the four participating teams. Sponsors have bees selected for each team. By GAYLE TALBOT NEW YORK.

May 24 UP-Sam Snead will observe his 40th birthday Thursday, and so there comes the realization that time is beginning to run out on the wealthy-ex-hillbilly. If he is ever to collar the will the wisp he has been chasing all these years, the National Open Golf Championship, it had better be soon. Soon after 40. as any of the stars of other days will tell you. the legs begin gradually to go and those 36 holes on the final day of the Open become a terrible grind, i The sing might be as good asj ever, but when legs become tired I it is difficult to maintain the degree of fierce concentration re quired to win championships.

Because of tin, and because ot the spectacular golf he has been shooting lately, it will not be surprising if Snead draws greater individual galleries even than Ben Hogan. the defending champion, in the Open beginning at Baltusrol June 17. Hogan. by the vay. will be pushing 42 this time, but the Bantam already has won his four; Opens and has proved long since that he comes under none of the! recognized rales governing age and; physical fitness.

Snead's army of admirers, who long have regarded his swing as the greatest in the world, will be pulling for him to crash through before it is too late. They will regard it as almost a personal tragedy if. once again, the balding West Virgininian fails to win the biggest prize of them all. The suggestion has been made, incidentally, that Snead and Hogan be placed in the same threesome for at least the first two rounds so that the crowd may see the two titans in hand-to-hand combat, but it's doubtful that tournament officials will go for the idea. One Tonight 6:50 p.m.

ST. LOUIS CARDS vs. CHICAGO CUBS BASEBALL PLAY BY PLAY with HARRY CARAY BROUGHT TO YOU BY ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC ST. LOWS NEWARK LOS ANOBJS Budweisei2 Irish, Yank Lead British Amateur Golf MUIRFIELD. Scotland.

May 24 OF Irish Joe Carr. the defending champion, and Frank Strafaci of Garden City. N. one of the leading American contenders, led a bulk field today into the second round of the British Amateur golf championship. CarV defeated Capt.

John F. Mc-Neilly of Lynn. 4 and 3. Strafaci eliminated C. R.

Duncan Leeds, a middle-aged Scot physician. 3 and 2. Two of the American title favorites Frank Stranahan of Toledo, Ohio, and long-hitting Bill Campbell of Huntington, W. Va. drew first round byes.

The United States began with 35 players in the 286-man field. This delegation was sharply reduced by first round setbacks. The casualties, none among topflight contenders, included, in addi tion to McNeilly: John Breckcn-ridge Larchmont, N. John Schumacher. Lincoln.

Maj. James Seals, New Haven, John Anderson, Ottumwa, Iowa, and Christopher Dunphy. Palm Beach. Fla. Three American Army men stationed in Europe were among the first round winners.

Capt. Malcolm Stokes of Garden, City, N. won over Thomas Cochrane of Scotland. 8 and 7. Harry Ridgley of Haverford.

a serviceman stationed in Britain, ousted John Hartopp of Scotland. 4 and 3. Larry Carpenter, Springfield, N. a 23-year-old serviceman in Army intelligence in Germany, rallied to down Roddy Mac Kenzie of Scotland, 4 and 3. Jaycees, Lions Win In Huntingdon Loop HUNTINGDON, May 24 The Jaycees and Lions won Little League openers here in the first night of play of the Huntingdon loop last Friday.

The Jaycees downed the VFW 14-2 in their first game. 'Bill Per- ritt hit a home run with one man on to spark the victors' hitting attack. Kenneth Pinklcy was the winning hurler for the Jaycees and Bill Wright was the catcher. The los ing pitcher was Paul Dunn with Mike Brandon behind the plate. The powerful Lions took a thriller from the American Legion by a count of 2-1.

Buster Bager hit a home run for the victors. John David Presson was the win ning pitcher for the victors as he registered a no hitter. Joe Akins was the catcher. Marshall Smith was the losing hurler for the American Legion. Buster Barger took care of the catching duties.

TOAUMffl Th Martin Firearms Company, craftsman in steel and maker of piaciiion guna tinea 1870, offer you auparb new razor blade at remarkably low cost. Double-Edge and Single-Edge Martin Bind, 12 for lit. Injector Type, 20 for Your money back if not com pletely unified. Iha Martin Firearms Company rtrMm Karen, now naven, conn. WHITE DRUG CO.

Main St Ph. 7-96W of them tells us that, while it would be great fun, the resultant gallery would be certain to foul up the course for all the other players. Ironically enough, during the years that he has been building up his unique record of failure in the Open, Snead has seen it won by five or six players who do not begin to match his over-all list of successes and are. to put it bluntly, less talented. The fact remains, though, that on a certain day when all the chips were on the table, each of them rose to the occasion and wrote his name in the big book.

Stone Wins At Dyersburg DYERSBURG. May 24 t.F Newspaper photographer Albert Stone, Jr. fired a three-under-par 69 yesterday for a 143 total to win his second West Tennessee Golf Championship. Stone, winner in 1947, became the third man to capture the West Tennessee twice in its 18-year history. The Jackson Sun photographer, who had a two-over-par 74 Saturday, finished three strokes in front of the number two man.

Shedrick McKain of Memphis, who had a 73-73146. Stone teamed with Bill Currie, Hailey Miller and S. O. Rose to give the Jackson Country Club the four-ball championship. The team had a 14 under par for 36 holes.

Stone also won the hole-in-one contest. George Yeager of Dyersburg, 1953 winner, finished fourth with a 72-76148. Flyweight Champ Wins TOKYO. May 24 GP World flyweight boxing champion Yoshio Shirai tonight hammered out a narrow, 15-round decision over little Loe Espinosa of the Philippines in a title bout. MILES OF SMILES Let's go to Russ Crocker and see what they'll give us in trade for a new car.

Russ Crocker Buick Co. fEddle Malone and Don Martin MINUTE TIME LIMIT Red Robert KNOXVILLE, May 24 Birmingham's Wade Herren came through as expected to take the men's singles title in the Rogers Memorial tennis tournament here yesterday, but not without a bad scare. The slow-starting Alabaman dropped a grueling first set in the finals 5-7 to second-seed Sam Daniel of Columbia, S. but quickly recovered to take the match in straight sets 6-1. 6-0.

Two Tennesseans. Gavin Gentry of Knoxville and Mason Smith of Oak Ridge, teamed up to win the doubles title, defeating Daniel and Bill Davis of Knoxville 0-6, 6-1, 9-7 in the finals. In the women's division, 14-year-old Marilyn Voges defeated Mrs. Doris Morris. 6-3.

6-2 in the singles finals, then joined Miss Betty Rush to turn back Mrs. Morris and Mrs Martha Bass 10-8. 7-5 for the Atlanta Crax Moving Up In Southern By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Atlanta Crackers, bouncing along on a nine game victory string, today are threatening to move back into the Southern Asso ciation lead from which they were dumped nearly a month ago. Aided by Little Rock's 5-2 victory Sunday over the league- leading Birmingham Barons, the Crackers moved to within one and a half games of first with a 5-1 defeat of Memphis. Atlanta's Bob Giggie kept the Chicks under control with a six- hitter marred only by Ed White's ninth-inning homer.

The blow cut off Giggie's skein of scoreless innings at 21. Homeruns proved the undoing of Birmingham as Adolph Regelski and Ralph Atkins powered them for the Pebbles. Elroy Face hurled four-hit ball to give New Orleans a 10-2 victory over Nashville and Mobile edged Chattanooga 1-0 despite three -hit pitching on the part of Dick Hyde and Gonzalo Naranjo. Face helped his own cause with a double in the eighth when the Pels came up with seven runs to break up what had been a tight pitchers' battle. Mobile's Billy Harris allowed the Lookouts nine safeties but his shutout was saved by three double-plays.

The bears got their run on the lone extra-base hit of the game Lyle Olsen's double. Chisox Buy -George Kell CHICAGO, May 24 In a lavish, uncharacteristic gamble, the Chicago White Sox paid a reported $100,000 for hard-hitting George Kell and now are ready to acquire another famed slugger, Phil Cavarretta. Frank Lane, the Sox general manager, got third baseman Kell from the Boston Red Sox for reserve Infielder Grady Hatton and cash so much that Red Sox General Manager Joe Cronin "couldn't turn it down." Lane didn't announce thr amnnnt involved but Manager Paul Rich ards, when asked if It was $100,000, said: "I think that's pretty close." In a further effort in nrn iin the Sox for a determined pennant orive, Lane appeared on the verge of takins on Cavarretta. thm h. posed Chicago Cubs manager, as a pinch hitter and coach.

Kell has hit over .300 the last seven seasons and Cavarretta has a lifetime .292 battine mark in 19 seasons at first base for the Cubs. Monday's Schedule (all Night) New York at Philadelphia Pittsburgh at Brooklyn Chicago at St. Louis Only games scheduled Sunday's Results Brooklyn 5-6, Pittsburgh 4-2 New York 6, Philadelphia 4 Cincinnati 13. St. Louis 6 Milwaukee 4-9, Chicago 2-3 SOUTHERN ASSOCIATION Won Lost Pet.

Behind Birmingham 27 15 .643 Atlanta 24 15 .615 1 Chattanooga 22 17 .564 3 New Orleans 21 21 .500 6 Nashville ...15 20 .429 8 Memphis ...17 23 .425 9 Little Rock 15 22 .405 9 Mobile 17 25 .405 10 Tonight's Schedule Memphis at Atlanta Little Rock at Birmingham Chattanooga at Mobile Nashville at New Orleans Southern Association Atlanta 5, Memphis 1 Little Rock 5, Birmingham 2 Mobile 1, Chattanooga 0 New Orleans 10, Nashville 2 South Atlantic League Savannah 5. Augusta 3 Columbus 3, Charlotte 2 Jacksonville 5. Macon 2 Montgomery 6, Columbia 5 (10 innings) American Association Columbus 4-1, Louisville 2-4 Toledo 5. Charleston 2 Kansas City 12, St. Paul 9 Indianapolis 12, Minneapolis 9 We now have 1954 Hunting and Fishing License Folding Picnic 98c WHITLOW'S 205 N.

Market Phone 7-7281 Support Your LITTLE LEAGUE and BABE RUTH LEAGUE SPIN THROUGH Your Crass Cutting with this Call ua foe Free Demonstration Wilson's Outdoor Equipment Bells Road Phone 2-3111 if I VVN I MSB 1 Is 4 0 Announcing Our Semi-Annual Tailoring Display Tuesday, A representative of Ed. V. Price Co. will be at our store to show hundreds of imported and domestic fabrics in WRESTLING-ARMORY WEDNESDAY, MAY 26. 8:30 P.M.

TAG TEAM MATCH icguir ana tropical weignis, tor suits, topcoats, sportcoats, and trousers. Your choice will be hand cut to your own measurements in the style you prefer and tailored-to-order by Ed. V. Price custom tailors since 1895. These are better grade clothes nationally known for fine workmanship and' easy, fit Styles for men and women.

Plan now to come in. Lone Eagle 1 and Roy Welch vs. 2 OUT OF 3 FALLS 60 MAIN EVENT CHAMPIONSHIP MATCH Southern Junior Heavyweight TTicGall-Biugkes "Specialists in Men's Styles" Ray Piret vs. 2 OUT OF 3 FALLS 60 MINUTE TIME LIMIT Admission; Rlnpide, SI; Gen. 75c: Children 25c; Colored SOe, Advance Tickets at Hiram's and Commercial Now Stand.

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