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Des Moines Tribune from Des Moines, Iowa • 6

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WINS OVER 133 ENTRIES Yanks Blast Des Moines Tribune Sports 5 Refineries DES MOINES, IOWA, SATURDAY, JULY 15, 1944. Sports Roundup By Hugh Fullerton, jr. 2 UNDER PAR Walters, Night Mound King, at 30 Victory Clip LONDON, ENGLAND (U.P.) A fleet of 750 American heavy bombers swept up from bases in Italy Saturday to bomb five refineries and a pumping station at Ploesti, in the center of the Romanian oil field, while British Lancaster bombers crossed the channel to pound the rail center of Villeneuve St. Georges, nine miles north of Pari3. Early reports from the Ploesti raid were that the targets were accurately hit and that they sent up huge columns of smoke, which rose to a height of 20,000 feet and were visible for more than 100 miles.

The British raid on Villeneuve, one of the largest rail centers in the Paris area, followed up at urls By Joe Reichler. (Associated Pres Sports Writer.) Bucky Walters, ace pitcher of the Cincinnati Reds, has added a flock of new laurels to his already imposing string. Friday night Walters won his eighth consecutive night game in defeating Mort Cooper and the league-leading St. Louis Cardi nals, 3-0. It was his ninth victory under the arc-lights in 10 starts -4 m.

The National league champions have been able to tally only once in 40 innings off the converted in-fielder, making but 23 hits. In Bucky became the first major league hurler to notch 15 victories, which puts him in line to become THE I PITCHER TO WIN 30 GAMES SINCE DIZZY DEAN OF THE CARDS ACinEVED THAT TOTAL IN 1934. The Reds have completed exactly half their 1944 schedule. Nova Collapses From Exhaustion After Loss NEW YORK The football Tigers (ex-Dodgers) will begin training at Abilene, Aug. 6, and general manager Tom Gallery says he'll guarantee a weight reduction of 20 pounds per man including himself.

Likely Tom would lose more only he'll have the privilege of staying in the air-conditioned confines of Hardin-Simmons U. while the athletes will have to venture out for morning and evening workouts. The Tigers also will engage the Redskins in the Rocky Mountain area's first all-pro game at Og-den, Utah, Aug. 29. Gov.

Herbert Maw, one of the sponsors, looks for a crowd of 18,000. And what's in a name Ty Cobb, Donaldson has just been placed on the voluntarily retired list of the Kingsport, Appalachian league club. NOMINATION SECONDED: Announcing that he has signed heavyweight Tony Shucco to fight Georgie Parks in Washington, July 24, Jimmy Johnston adds that his guy ought to get a medal. Tony stiffened the German champ, Adolph Heusser, in 1933 "right in front of. Goeb-bels and Goering, and he says he'd have done the same thing to them if he'd known what they were up to." But Shucco was disqualified for what the German referee called "unfair fighting," so you can figure what would have happened if he had carried cut the rest of the program.

SHORTS AND SHELLS: Notre Dame's Jake Kline is making the first move to organize a college CLORIS UPLVCIIL-VN. Choice of Scouts and Raiders. RELATIVES ft CJ Ftte-'-- Lou Nova is shown on his back following his collapse in his corner after the decision was given to Lee Oma following their 10-round battle at Detroit, Friday night. Dr. Norman Schlafer (center) is bending over Nova to examine him.

WIRE-PIIOTO CP). this season to rank him as the king of night pitchers. The shutout was his fifth of the year, top for pitchers in the majors and his thirty-fourth In his career, which also makes him the shutout king of all active hurlers in the big leagues. It was the third time he has blanked the Cardinals this season and his fourth victory over them. no stocK in the tneory tnat the ponderous Van Nuys, battler "was stunned by what he thought a bad decision.

The verdict was well received by the fans. "It's a funny thing though," reported Dr. Schlafer. "Nova said, 'What, they gave the decision to He must have been thinking about Lee Savold, one of the last fighters to beat him." Largely because of a stabbing left hand, Oma piled up an early lead before he ran out of gas in the seventh round. At this point, Nova got in his best work and had Oma in trouble In the eighth.

However, Oma rallied In the ninth and put on an excellent finish to take the tenth. In a scheduled eight-round pre liminary Jimmy Reeves, 166, Cleveland, formerly a headliner here, was flattened in one round by Jimmy O'Brien, 172, New York, protege of Sugar Ray Rob inson. The fight ended with White landing all the blows and Armstrong weaving and bobbing around the ring, without doing any punching. In the semi-windup, Eddie Hud son, 135, Los Angeles, won an easy eight-round decision over Genaro Rojo, 136, Mexico City. Call Off Game The baseball game between Iowa State Navy and Cary's Collegians, scheduled at the Western league ball park Saturday at 6 p.

m. has been called off. baseball coacnes asso-3 i iMntinn. I.nud cheers iien- ry (Bow 1) Frnka, Tulsa U. coach, announces a "ceil ing" price of five bucks for the accumulated wisdom of eight good grid tutors for his first coaching school HENRY FRNKA.

next month. son of the late Brian Bell, head of the Associated Press Washington bureau, has just entered the University of Virginia. He was a three-sport athlete at Washington's Western High chool and editor of the school newspaper. SERVICE Flight Lieutenants Warren Stevens and Lew Hayman, R.C.A.F., former Syracuse U. athletes who went to Canada to coach, have been revisiting the Syracuse campus and report that Canada, too, is looking for a postwar sports boom.

Joe Skladany, former Carnegie Tech coach, likely will be around the Bainbridge Naval Training center long enough to help coach the Commodores next fall. He's in physical instructor's school. Sergt. Taft Wright, former White Sox outfielder now at the Greensboro, N. overseas replacement depot, says he needed four years to make the big league grade once, and he wonders how long it will take after the war.

"That job isn't going to be waiting for me," he explains. Jack Barlass cracked Grand View's par by two strokes to shoot a 35-35 70 and capture the Meredith Publishing Co. golf tournament Thursday. Par for the course is 36-36 72. He beat a field of 61 entries.

See 4-Minute Mile by One Of 2 Swedes By Jack Cuddy. NEW YORK Gunder Haegg and Arne Andersson, the mercurial Swedes who raced again Friday night before 20,000 fans at Stockholm, Sweden, may be nudging the "dream" four-minute mile before they complete their foot-racing duels in October. Andersson achieved an upset victory Friday night over Gunder the Wonder in Stockholm stadium. He was clocked in 3:48.4 as he out-ran the great Haegg in the 1,500 meters the metric mile. But this winning time was comparatively slow against the 3:43 registered by Haegg in win ning their first 1,500 meter test, at Gothenburg, Sweden, a week ago Friday night.

That 3:13 of Haegg's considered the indicator of a four-minute mile. rfc A Jesse Abramson of the New York Herald-Tribune, one of America's outstanding track and field writers, emphasizes that the traditional time difference for the 120 yards between 1,500 meters and the mile run ia approximately 17 seconds. ADD 17 SECONDS TO 3:43 AND YOU GET THE FOUR-MINUTE MILE. Abramson adds, however, that this is only an approximation which figures that Haegg was traveling at the rate of 7.35 yards a second which incorrectly in dicates that Haegg would have covered the remaining distance from 1,500 meters to the mile in 16.3 seconds. Abramson points out that-regardless of the attractiveness of such figures they are essentially false because the actuaL time difference for the 1,500 meters and the mile Is a bit more at least 17.6 seconds.

Haegg, himself came close to the four-minute mile when he ran in Harvard stadium last July. He was clocked in 3:48.8 at 1,500 meters, for an American record, en route to his 4:05.4 for another American mile record. He covered the differential dis tance in :17.6. But he still was much farther away from the four-minute mile than the 4:02.6 world record for the mile registered last year by Andersson. Haegg's :17.6 for the differential indicates that the time gap is closer to IS seconds than 17 However, the fact that Andersson presses Haegg, and vice versa, in their clashes, which will develop Into full mile runs indicates that both will be going all out through the 1,500 and through the remaining 120-yard gap.

This might bring them close to four minutes for the mile. There was a time when track scientists established 4:01.6 as the absolute limit of human ef fort for the mile. But that limit has been discarded because of the rivalry. In less than six weeks Just starting their rivalry Haegg has produced world marks of 3:43 for 1,500 meters and 8:46.4 for two miles; and Andersson has returned a new clocking of 2:56.6 for three-quarters of a mile. Sweden may be neutral, in the war, but Haegg and Andersson are mighty hostile toward the four-minute mile.

Major Leagues American League. DETROIT, MICH. UP) At one and the same time heavyweight Lee Oma obliged old neighbors and stuck a new feather in his hat. Oma, who began his fighting career in Detroit, added to recant successes in the east by winning a split-decision victory over Lou Nova in 10 rounds here Friday night at Olympia stadium. It was Oma's nineteenth straight victory and Nova's first defeat after 14 triumphs on a comeback.

At 207 Nova had a 22-pound advantage in the weights. The 5,057 fans paid 12,730 for the show. Referee Elmer (Slim) McCle'l-land awarded the fight to Oma, seven rounds to two, with one round even. Judge Joe Lenahen concurred, but Judge- Frank Fisher voted for Nova. When the decision was announced, Nova collapsed in his corner.

Dr. Norman Schlafer, state boxing commission physician, ATTRIBUTED THIS TO SHEER EXHAUSTION and put Armstrong, employing his usual aggressive, rushing tac-ticts, landed the harder blows, but White hit his man oftener. Referee Abe Roth awarded Hammering Hank eight rounds, Judge Benny Whitman called White the winner by a shade, and Judge Frankie Van called it a draw. The United Press tally sheet had White ahead seven rounds to three. In the eighth heat Armstrong cornered White on the ropes, but the Slugger fought his way out of the trap to capture the round.

tacks during the night on Han over, Germany, and on flying bomb installations in northern France. Seven of the four-en- glned bombers failed to return. Tons of explosives were showered on large concentrations of rolling stock and German military supplies caught in the railyards while awaiting shipment to the Normandy bat-tlefront. Bad flying weather developed over the channel again Saturday, hampering Allied aerial support of the ground forces in France. The attack on Villeneuve was the third strike in 24 hours on enemy communications in me immediate Paris area.

Robots The official program of remov ing civilians from London because of robot bomb attacks constitutes the "biggest and most speedy eva cuation of any of the war," Min ister of Health Henry U. Willink said Saturday. He disclosed that 207,468 persons registered for evacuation and 152,652 were taken away from the British capital under the program in the 13 days ending Friday. Flying bombs caused some dam age and casualties last night in the southern counties, but quiet prevailed In London for the fifth successive night. The German radio said the pur pose of the attacks "is not only to destroy industrial and military objectives, but also to create among Londoners the feeling of constant insecurity by which their capacity for war work will be adversely affected." Cite Party Rule Against Negroes COLUMBIA, S.

C. (U.P.) A delegation of six Columbia Ne groes Friday appeared before the Richland county Democratic par ty's purging committee and were informed that they were barred from voting because of race and color. Headed by a Negro attorney now a private In the army air corps they stated that they appeared In response to postal cards Informing them that they wore Incorrectly registered for the Democratic primary July 25. They said that they had paid taxes and could read the constitution and wished to know why their names were removed from the voting list. In reply, the purging committee which struck all Negro names from party enrollment lists under directions of Richland County Chairman Tom Pearce cited the section of the party rules stating that it is an exclusively white organization.

France- Continued from Page 1. was dragged away by his com rades. There is little cause for opti mism over a possioie suaaen breakthrough by the Americans in this sector where there are no indications that the enemy is with drawing, officials said. But the pace Is swifter on the western end of the 48-mile front where the yanks are closing In on Iessay. On one sector of the front the Germans are putting tank personnel into the line as infantry men.

They have been robbing their rear echelons of all available personnel for days to keep up the strength of the front lines. Artillery. One feature of the day's fight ing has been th8 enemy's in creased use of artillery, indicat ing he at last has been able to get runs tin from the rear areas. But the Yanks still have heavy superl ority in artillery. On the stalled Caen sector, a staff officer said the British had captured more than 7,000 Ger mans and inflicted at least four times that number In casualties on the enemy niiye D-day.

He said the Germans had sent two tank divisions from the Russian to the western front. The Allied bag of prisoners in France topped 54,000. The Americans announced June 11 they had taken 46,819 prisoners. Reprisals The Nazis have labeled French resistance groups franc-tireurs (irregulars not subject to interna' tional law protecting regular combatants), it was revealed Saturday. Consequently, Gen.

Dwlght 1. Eisenhower declared that French forces of the interior "constitute a combatant force" and that any Germans treating them otherwise would be brought to speedy justice." These forces form "an Integral part of the Allied expeditionary force" and reprisals against them violate rules of war by which Germany i3 bound, Eisen hower declared. Name Aides To Meagher At Iowa Navy IOWA CITY, IA. The selection of a coaching staff and the arrival of 67 more potential candidates in a new battalion Friday com pleted Coach Lieut. Comm.

Jack Meagher's plans for beginning Iowa Pre-Flight School's summer football practice Monday. This boosts the, number of qadets expected to report for the three week practice program up to 120. The assistants, announced by Lieut. Comm. Harvey Harman, Seahawk athletic director, included Lieut, (j.g.) Charles (Bud) Wilkinson, former Minnesota star and Gopher aide, who also was on the Pre-Flight staff last year under Lieut.

Don Faurot; Lieut. Charles Jaskwich, former Notre Dame halfback and University of Mississippi mentor; and Lieut. Steve Sinko, who did his pre-war playing and coaching at Du-quesne. This trio, which will handle the football duties afler 5 o'clock in addition to regular station assignments, offers a variety of naval work as different as the coaching divisions. Sinko, who will rate as line coach, is in labor engineering and as such directs the school's 28 acre victory garden.

Wilkinson, center specialist, is a platoon officer in the military 'department. While Jaskwich, who will concentrate on the backs, won't be changing offices for he is a member of the instructional football staff. The lack of experience which characterized the previously surveyed battalion also is apparent in the new group with only seven cadets having played post-high school ball. These include Halfback Orville Lane of Fort Madison, who was on the Iowa summer practice squad in 1943; Charles Kel-ber, halfback from LaSalle-Peru (III.) Junior College; Pete ITaw-slng, halfback from Chicago's Austin High who competed at St Mary's Pre-Flight; T. E.

Pritch- ett, freshman tackle at Rice; James Tiller, halfback who attended Georgia Tech; and a pair who performed on the Daytonia Beach Navy eleven, coached by Meagher, Tackle John Lee of Midland, Mich, and Fullback James McEvoy of Detroit Cooley High. LS.C. Coach Goes to Navy AMES, IA. Jack McGuire, swimming coach at Iowa State college since 1941, has been sworn into the navy as a lieutenan (j.g.). He will report for Indoctrination training at Hollywood, July 31.

Sunday's Baseball Schedule NATIONAL LEAGUE. New York at Philadelphia (2). Brooklyn at Boston (2). Pittsburgh at Chicago (2). Cincinnati at St.

Louis (2). AMERICAN LEAGUE. Boston at New York (2). Philadelphia at Washington (2). Chicago at Detroit (2).

St. Louis at Cleveland (2). Baseball Stars (By the Associated Press.) Hank Borowy, Yankee Betted Tex HughHon of the Red Sox 4-3 In a pitcher' battle lor his twelfth vlo-. tory. Steve Gromek, Indians Pltehed and hatted team to a 3-2 vtetory over Jir.iwn.

tn InnltiK, when 'lie (Unified In Kay Mack with ulimlnx run. Hoboy Kutalella and Ituas hrlMu-plier, Uhli-tlrn Kxlnlella nlnxletl In a imlr of nm In Dm ninth nf tlm nnener In iflvn tlm a roniiient Oirli-(oiiIiit beeanie tint Athletlr hurler to defeat Karly of tint eseiiutom since Wynn entered major. I'hll avarretta. Cubs Made three hit and drove In two ninn, bexlrie seorlnn three time hlnmelf as Cubs defeated Clrate. 11-S.

Are Adam, filant Relieved Harry Feldman In ninth and Ntemmed l'lillly rally to give Giants 2-1 triumph over Phlllle. Krank Overnilre, Tlicer Wanked White Sox with two scratch lilts as liner won 2-0. Kinky Walters, Red Rlnnked Cards with six hits as Reds defeated Slort Cooper, 3-0. for Walters' fifteenth victory. Fight Results (By the Associated Press.) TIV'KKTON.

R. I. Willie ltnwehe, 130, Wilmington, knocked out Jerry Darby, 133. New York. 1.

Tlt-'er Nelson, 144, New York, knocked out Johnny Cool, 137. Worcester, 4. ATLANTIC CITY, N. 3. Eddie Giosa, 132, Philadelphia, outpointed Frankie Mills, 13B, Philadelphia, 8.

Harry (Red) Schultz, 138, Philadelphia, knocked out Carmen Grasso. 3 42, Philadelphia, 2. I.ONO BRANCH. N. J.

Roy Green wood, 146, Long Branch, outpointed Frankie Velez, 46, Puerto Rico, 8. Russell Richter, 40. Pateraon, and Jlmmie Mills, 140, New York, drew. 6. WORCKSTKK, Ernie Forte, 145, Providence, knocked out Joe Alba-nese, Kverettt, 3.

Frankie Ross, 139, stopped Duke Bruce, 134, Holyoke, 6. HOIXTWOOn Henry Armstrong, 136Mr, Los Angeles, and Luther (Slugger) White, 141, Athena, drew, 10. ARMSTRONG, WHITE DRAW Name Cloris Pinup Girl By Jane Boulvvare. A boy-and-girl friendship that started about eight years ago has led to a Des Moines girl being chosen pinup girl of the navy scouts and raiders at Fort Pierce, Fla. The girl Is Cloris Leachnuiii, 18, 4100 California drive.

The boy, Ramon L. Thomas, hasn't seen Cloris since she was In Stowe elementary school. But he didn't forget her, and when hin mother sent a clipping of Cloris picture which appeared in the July 4 Tribune, he entered It In a pinup contest at his Florida training base. Cloris, however, admits she doesn't remember Thomas. "There were 133 entries," Thomas wrote in his letter to Cloris announcing the honor, "and I'm darn proud to be the owner of the winning pinup girl." Title.

Cloris title is "Scouts and Raiders' Pinup Girl," and the boys, described by Thomas as "a rugged bunch," have asked for a large photograph of her for their canteen. Thomas recalled In the letter that he and Cloris took piano lessons from the same teacher, and added: "The last lime I saw you personally, you were a. little bit of a thing. If I remember correctly, you had freckles, but you were sure cute. If I may be so bold to say so, I think you are beautiful now." Tha scouts and raiders choice ia a blue-eyed blonde, 5 feet 3 Inches tall, weighing 110 pounds Radio and drama are her major interests which she will study next fall at Northwestern univer sity.

Interests. Ker other Interests are swimming, dancing and music (she's teaching piano this summer). Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C.

Leachman, Cloris has appeared ih Kendall Community playhcu.se productions and high school plays. She also had a part in a WAC movie produced here. General Killed In Plane Crash CHATTANOOGA, TENN. Ma j. Gen.

Paul W. Newgarden, commander of the 10th armored i lH al fY nr a colonels, and at tpTlt I least tw no other fif were in- i killed XgT, CHl persons stantly near; here Friday army plane crashed during a heavy storm. a t. Lester M. Nichols, itil- Ho relations of- fleer for the 5 10th armored division at Camp Gordon, said newgarden.

General Newgarden, Col. Renn Lawrence, commanding a combat unit, and the others had been en route from Fort Knox, to Augusta, where a Iroop review was planned at ('amp Gordon Saturday to celebrate the second anniversary of General New-garden's command. Col. Howard Clark, Fort Oglethorpe commander, said the crash occurred at the height of a wind and electric storm. Portions of uniforms and insignia were found, he said, denoting the major general, colonels, a staff sergeant and a flight officer.

Burglar Wounds Co-ed With Bottle PHILADELPHIA, PENN. (IV) A young burglar shattered a milk bottle over the head of a 17-year-old Temple university co-ed in her dormitory room Saturday, then summoned her housemother, friend3 and an ambulance, and escaped, leaving her unconscious. Police said the girl, Sophie Davidowitz, Hazelton, a pre-medical sophomore, surprised the youth as he ransacked her room. She still was unconscious when police arrived. She was taken to Temple hospital.

HOLLYWOOD, CAL. Henry Armstrong hit harder but Luther (Slugger) White landed oftener and so their furious 10-round bout before a sellout crowd of 6.500 Friday night was termed a draw. There were no knockdowns or clinches and there was hardly a let-up in the violent exchange of hooks and uppercuts with both hands at close range. The match was a war charities benefit. Armstrong, at 136 Vi, weighed the lightest of any of his comeback battles.

White tipped the ecales at 141. FACE IOWA 2 X. its MRS. 1JCZNER.SKI. MRS.

RICHARDS. Both Claimed Body. Compromise On Funeral PHILADELPHIA, PENN. (JP Mourners for John Walter Licz- nerskl, former army sergeant whose body was claimed by both, his widow and his mother, gathered at a funeral home Saturday. Neither of the weeping women, would consent to its being burled from the home of the other.

They compromised on the funeral home late Friday aftr Common Tleas Judge Vincent A. Carroll said from the bench that their court fight was "a profanation of this dead soldier's body." Llcznerskl, 27, died last Monday, having left the Castle Point. N. government hospital ta which doctors recommended him. as an advanced tuberculosis patient Testimony at the hearing disclosed that his wife, Fay, 26, urged him to remain at th hospital while the mother, Mrs.

Helen Richards, took him Into her home. Llcznerskl received a medical discharge from the army nin months ago. A daughter, Arlene, 2, also survives. She will receive her father's $10,000 government life insurance policy under a compromise reached Friday. See Turkish, Nazi Break ANKARA, TURKEY UPy Reports circulated in Ankara Saturday that diplomatic and economia relations may be broken shortly between Turkey and Gemrany.

The Allies were said to have demanded such a break. The Istanbul newspaper Tan quoted a Nasi news agency a saying the German tjrelgn office had warned that Germany was closely watching southeast European developments, especially a "country which is considering going to war." War in October? LONDON, ENGLAND UP) Guardedly hinting that the Germans expect Turkey to enter th war "before the end of October," a broadcast from Berlin said Saturday that most foreign representatives had left Ankara for summer residences. The Japanese, Hungarian and Bulgarian envoys will follow the lead of German Ambassador Franz von Papen In quitting the capi tal, the agency reported, saying this showed "the calm prevailing In political circles. "It is believed possible, however, that military operations of far-reaching extent may develop before the end of October which will demand a. great deal of attention," the broadcast said.

It added that these developments might result from increased Allied efforts to influence Turkish policy. Trouble With Roostrs. CHICAGO, ILL. Becaus his roosters crowed too much to suit his neighbors, Adam Ber-nackl went out of the live poultry business. The court ordered Ber-nacki to slaughter his roosters a soon as he receives them.

Neighbors complained that the roosters crowed from dawn to dusk at regular intervals. 1 tmdjJ CHAMPS HERE SUNDAY fan A Games W. Pet. Hehlnd St. I.nuU 4ti Mil New Vork ..4 1 an 2V4 Hoaton 43 US 1 2', Cleveland 3 43 Ha.hliiKton 38 41 iWt Detroit 3S 4i .4 75 7 Philadelphia 37 4 i .408 7'4 ChlcaKO 31 7(4 Friday's Ilesults.

New York 4. Bout on 3. Cleveland 3, St. I.oulx Z. Detroit 1.

111. am. O. Philadelphia 4, Washington 3 (lira itartie) Philadelphia 4, Washington 3 (second (ame). National League.

Games V. L. Pet. Hehlnd St. T.nttlR fit 2i PltturKh 40 31 .563 lO'i liieinmttl 43 3t .5,8 1 111.4 New lork 38 3S 1 5Vi Itrooklvn 33 43 .434 21) Philadelphia 32 41 211 Chicago 30 41 .4 23 2(Hj Ili.iton .30 46 23 Here Is the Barnes-Ambassadore Softball team of Omaha, a strong aggregation which will oppose the Walker Realty company team of Des Moines at Western league park Sunday at 7 p.

m. The Ambassadores are tied for first place in the Omaha city league while Walker Realty won the state championship last year and at present is In second place in the Des Moines City league. Walker Realty has won 10 league games while losing two this year while the Ambassadores have won nine out of 11 starts, the two defeats being at the hands of the Nebraska champions, 1 to 0 in nine innings and 2 to 0 in seven innings. The members of the Omaha team from left to right are as follows: front row, Donnie Johnson, Dorothy Wlsinskl, Theresa Danze and Mary Lou Kevasnleski; back row, Louie Butera, manager and coach. Marge Kozal, Connie Kudlacz, Ruth Krenzer, Delores Kudlacz, Lloyd Barnes, sponsor, Eileen Kemp, Rosemary Dargy, Alice Cole and Ina Lou Spaulding.

Friday's Results. Clilrarn 11. Plttuhnrch 5. New Vork 2, Philadelphia 1. (inelnnntl 3 St.

I.onlx O. Only games achedulrd..

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