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The Gazette from Montreal, Quebec, Canada • 18

Publication:
The Gazettei
Location:
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Issue Date:
Page:
18
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THIS GAZISTTR. MONTREAL, MONDAY, JUNE 10, 1941. VOL. CLXX. No.

143 Royals Slide Back to Third Place in Double Loss to Chiefs, 10-4, 4-3 18 BETTING ON TITLE FIGHT HEAVY ROYALS WIN TWICE OVER JERSEY CITY CASUAL CLOSE-UPS By FALL BEHIND WINGS WITH MUNGO, KEHN VICTIMS ON MOUND INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE BOX SCORES Louis Still Favorite But Support Grows for Billy Conn Capture Saturday Tilts, 2-1 and 1-0, in Pair of Mound Duels Big Four Grid Loop Vetoes Move To Suspend Operations This Year MMrrraisrarMranrapwrBrasMraMraMraMrsaara 9 Votes to Carry On After McCaffrey Cites Opinion of Government on Sport Hughes Says Locals May Switch to Ball Park By SID FEDER. (Associated Press Sport Writer.) Chiefs Belt Five Pitchers for 14 Hits in Opener, Scoring 8 in Fourth CARLETON, HEAD SCORE FIRST SAME. BUFFALO (I) ROCHESTER (2 IF) Ml I ts a oo rfarrli. rf 4 0 I 4 oTallon. 4 I lo.

....4 ft 0 0 Yount. II I I I I I 0 0 8 0 Kunniikl, in. .4 1 i Mejer, 51). ...3 1 1 In 1 1 0 Kinll ll cf 8 0 I tll.romr. 11 4 I 4 0 ll.ili ken AOS 0 Wvm.iek.

0010 ai'auieile ,.,.1 0 0 0 IllM ieiiar 0058 Sti 8 OOo 4 ria. 0 I l.eirv, (I 0 8 IjUfltnlrkl, 0 0 0 Vhil. 8 0 0 0 ll 1 Tolala ..,.80 1 0 87 11 Total 3D 1 41 1 1) I a Itattad lut Ilrnrken In h. O1 in 00 I Korhriier Inn 0 0 fl'i 8 friiirtttuan' Krrr, Levey, hunt batted In. lela.

Smlih. Thrr-b5 bit. Kinlih Kurtmskl. HaTltlcaa Harli. Henrkeo.

D-ud play. Kiirmvekt to FalUin to Itaiii. Le.l an haiee. Iluflalo Korhnter Itatei on fit Oomlikl 3. Whl! J.

Kiruli wit. 3, Hulk. Whlta. I'nrplrM. Ora-vl and l'arker.

Time, 1.43. THIRD LOSS FOR KEHN Former Hurls Five -Hitter in Opener, Latter One-Hitter in Nightcap for Eighth Win Young Right-hander Gets No Help from Mates Burk-hart, Krakauskas Silence Royal Bats president of the I.R.F.U.. told the delegates that government officials had expressed the wish the Union continue operations. "Sports are still being played in England on a minor scale," said McCaffrey, "and the government feels the benefits derived from various branches of athletic competition should not be overlooked. At the same time it was understood this held good of course as long as play did not interfere with military training." HE'S REALLY PITCHING NOWADAYS Ed Head says.

"The first year I used my right arm, 1938, I played the outfield and couldn't throw at all; the second year, I could throw purty good, but I didn't know where the ball was going, and then the third year I really started pitching." And Head the 21-year-old Royal mound star, unique in the fact that through his love of baseball and determination not to quit when his left arm was so badly fractured it was almost amputated, he transferred himself from a natural southpaw into a made-over right-hander has been really pitching ever since. Ed got back into the winning groove on Saturday at Jersey City with a sweet one-hit effort after two reverses which following a string of victories in all his first seven starts this season. Just note how his record reads now: IP. R. H.

BB. SO. Won Lost P.C. 77 20 56 35 55 8 2 .800 That's a neat won-and-lost mark, but the significant factors in that line of statistics are the hits as compared to the innings pitched, the bases on balls and the strikeouts. Good pitching can be measured fairly accurately by the hits allowed approximating the number cf innings pitched.

Head, as you can see, is considerably better than good, having permitted 21 hits less than the number of innings he has worked; that is very stingy twirling; and he has yielded only a meagre 20 runs. His bases-on-balls total is low, attesting control, and his strikeouts are high averaging almost one per inning and that bespeaks speed. So what more can you want of a hurler? New York. June 15. There Is something about the whole picture of the Louis-Conn fight that just doesn't add up.

It became more apparent than ever today as both the champion and the challenger went through their last stiff sessions of banging sparring partners around in preparation for Wednesday night's meeting at the Polo Grounds. At the finish, the 49th Street betting commissioners agreed that this is the "bettingest" fight to come along since Louis' second session with Max Schmeling. On top of that, they've shaved the odds down to 2 to 5 on Joe. and still the boys with a bob or two are coming along to lay it on the line. Yci.

when Louis was 1 to 8 against such dreadnaughts as Buddy Baer and Abe Simon, bettors were scarce. Then there is the fact that Conn is just a little man. When he finished mussing up four sparmaies today he scaled just over 175. He probably will be three or four pounds heavier at the weigh-in Wednesday, alongside Joe's 200. To Conn it has been iust another FIRST CAME.

JERSEY CITY (3) NEWARK a ii 'io a inhwi. Ottawa, June 15. CT) Interpro-vincial Rugby Union officials decided Saturday at their semi-annual meeting to carry on again this year. The Big Four will play as "usual with Hamilton Tigers, Toronto Argonauts and Montreal's unnamed team seeking the title won last year by Ottawa Rough Riders. After a motion that operations be discontinued for the duration of the war had been made by Hamilton representatives, the point was thoroughly discussed and it was agreed it would be in the best interests of the sport to operate again.

James P. McCaffrey, of Ottawa, A FUTURE FLYER? tlnvl. it 4 1 1 rf 4 114 0 Manltt. II 1 0 1 8 lNninnktiip. it 8 8 O'MliKKl.

Rill Wliek. Jb 3 0 0 1 1 lhUHener. .4 Mil Matnard. 0 0 8 n'viaik. lt Representatives agreed that all .8 8 2UO .4008 :rk.n.

Sti 4 0 0 1 t. 1 0 Hinareln. 0 0 1 0 8 1 Hilrnwetse, 211.. 4 114 4 r.nrke. tf 8 0 1 Kan.

0 lour teams will nave to oepena pretty much on home talent this year and will have a lot of juniors I 0 OiWuhhurn. 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 p.l 0 0 0 0 lOuerlncilo ...1 1 .2 0 0 0 1 CubOika. p. in their lineups, with so many of the boys enlisting for service with oti7 Tota't 32 3 101 Canadas fighting forces. Ottawa delegates reported that everything possible will be done to have Lansciowne fark in goon playing condition by the time the season arrives.

Lansdowne has become hard and bare with so many soldiers drilling on it but military authorities have promised the Ot a Hailed lor East In Jersey Clljr 010 1M I Newark 401 (131 (Mi Summary Errnrn, tVwke. fC-na-eln. Hjoi battad in, lavn 2, Mack M)ekl Kei'elier. -ni-kamp, McTarthy. To-ba bit.

hit. latii. Ham rum. Mark 2, Ma McCarthy. Trankiiouia 2.

rtout: p.aa. Srhareln to rUlrrwetia In Mark, Martin in W.tek. Lett on bai, Jerey CMy 12. Newark i. Paaa on hi I la, off Waihburn FrankViui 4, fait 8, Cuoml.i J.

F'rurk mn. by Ftar.kiimjsa I. drirbt 3 Hilt, off Wuhbum. 1 lo 1 1-3 Irmrfi; Frtr.khncfa. 4 In 7 2-3; F.at.

4 in CorwM. 5 In I. Hit by pitcher, by tat (Hoirreai Wl.d pitch. Frankhouie Wlnnlrf pitcher Frankhnme. Loaina: pl'rher, Far.

Voipitea. Moienda and Van Time I sfl fight all during his training at Pompton Lakes, N.J. He has poo-poohed Joe as "just another fighter (Special to The Gazette.) Jersey City. June 15. Jersey City Giants fell victim to the pitching wizardry of Tex Carleton and Ed Head here Saturday afternoon and suffered two losses to Montreal Royals, 2-1 and 1-0, as the Royals closed the gap between themselves and the league-leading Newark Bears.

Carleton stopped the Giants with five hits in the opener to best Harry Feldman in a pitchers' battle and Head notched his eighth victory of the campaign in the nightcap with a one-hit display that snapped his two-game losing streak. Head pitched masterful ball. Aside from Red Davis' line single opening up the fourth which was the only hit he allowed, he did not let another man reach first base, facing but 22 batters in the seven innings and striking out five. Royals got" their lone run in the second inning on Jensen's single and a pair of errors, by Atwood and McCarthy. Carleton was almost as good In winning the opener.

Given a run in the first inning on Campbell's single and Graham's two-bagger, he pitched hitless ball through the first three frames. Two hits in the fourth put him in hot water but he retired the next three men in order. Jersey tied it up in the sixth with a single by Witek, a tawa Football Club they will be given time to put the field in con dition for the football season. Bill Hueb.es. representing the VI I does, Joe will walk In there and tear his head off.

The other is that Conn will have to "keep his Irish down" this time. In the past whenever Billy has been tagged, he has gone off the handle and wslked in to slug with, his particular partner of the moment. Anyone in his right mind would just as soon stand up to the business end of a mule as try to rate shot for shot with Louis. Money continued to pour into Promoter Mike Jacob's ticket office today. The possibility grew for the first gate of more than $500,000 in three years.

This would mean 40.000 or more customers. By HAROLD McXAMARA. Greeted by 8,500 fans as they returned from a long road jaunt still in second place and within striking d-starce ol the International League lead. Montreal's Royals fell victim to Sunday Fever yesterday and cropped two games to Syracuse Chiefs to plunge once again into th.rd place, three games out of the league lead and one behind Rochester Ked Wings. The Chiefs, second-division occupants all season but still about the most bothersome club the Royals have had to face this year, on five Montreal hurlers for a 10-4 victorv in the opener and then eked out a 4-3 nightcap decision to climb into fifth place.

While the Syracusans were pounding out 20 base-hits during afternoon, 14 In the first game ar.d half of that number in one Dig inning, the Royals were pecking away here and there at the offerings cf Ken Burkhart and Joe Krakauskas, the winning pitchers, for a measly 14 blows, 11 of them singles. All this belting on the part of the Chiefs resulted in Van Mungo suffering his first defeat of the season in the opener and Chet Kehn his third in the nightcap. Kehn has won seven while Mango has won just ence. Mungo had no excuses for his defeat, but it wa3 a heart-breaker for Kehn. who pitched great ball and made only one mistake a hame-run pitch to Goody Rosen in the third with one aboard.

That was only the second hit he allowed and he did not give up another before being lifted after lour frames a pinch-hitter. WEAK AT PLATE. However, the Royals, who started rff the season in great fashion but have gained most of their recent victories on pitching alone, were simply going through the motions st the plate and were leaving men stranded all over the place. As an example cf just how the Mrntrealers got their runs, they picked up two in the seventh of the nightcap and had the tying run on second base with two out and yet they didn't get a hit that inning. Thrpe walks, an infield out and a wild pitch caused all the 1r2 sacrifice and Gordon's hit doing the '4 job.

Royals went in front to stay, now. Because ne lost 50 per cent, of his punch." "I'm going to win by a decision." he told The Associated Press today. "This is Just another fight for me even though the world's heavyweight championship has been my goal for three years." LOUIS TRAINS HARD On the other hand, Louis, fresh from a season of bowling over second-rate heavyweights, has come up to this fight as if he expected to take on a combination of Demp-sey, Sullivan and an army tank all in one, instead of an overgrown light-heavyweight. He predicts a knockout and his training work of crowding sparmates, trying for a quick Sunday punch, has shown it. Yet he lacks considerable of his old drive, even although his right is still nothing to "hang cut your chin" for.

It Js largely after watching these antics, beside a firm conviction that Conn's speed is just a little more than Joe is geared to go along with, that I pick Conn to win the decision and dethrone Louis in this, his 18th title defence, and thus end the longest reign of any king of the ring in modern history. There are two things, however, that may make this just another stop in the Louis grand tour. One is that Billy won't be able to go low speed in the first few rounds, as he has done in the past If he A CURVE-BALLER BECOMES A FIREBALLER Back in his southpaw days, Head was strictly a curve-ball pitcher. He threw them in side-arm and his curve was his chief piece of equipment. Even now he occasionally goes out and tosses a few balls southpaw just for fun, and he can still deliver a fairly good curve with his left hand.

After he had changed over to a right-hander and had "really started pitching" again, he still was a curve-baller, with scvo great amount of speed until suddenly, as Ed says, the speed "sort of came to me all at once by itself." His speed he attributes to two things. One was that although before the automobile accident that ruined his left arm he was exclusively a southpaw ball player, he was not left-handed in everything. He used his right arm a great deal working and it was strong, though untrained for baseball. The other thing was more important: In the beginning. Head confesses he knew nothing about "followin through." But he ran into an old Southern Association catcher.

Denny Montgomery, now a high school coach in Louisiana, and Montgomery taught him all about the follow-through. To him, Ed extends full credit for much of his development, particularly the development of his speed. Heads says, "I'm not really as big as I look out there on the mound, and unless I can get that kick off the rubber, I don't get any stuff on the ball." The follow-through did more than anything else to bring out his speed, and Head then began to make real headway. When he pitched a no-hitter, striking out 21 batters in the process, in a semi-pro game, he was spotted by a Brooklyn scout and entered the Dodger orbit. Bill O'Brien, Royals' trainer, declares that, muscularly speaking, Head now "looks so much like a right-hander that you'd think he had always been that and never a southpaw.

The right arm is developed to a far greater extent now than the left, and so are the back muscles which contribute power to the right arm." however, in the seventh, when Jensen collected the hit off Feld Montreal Football Club, said the Montreal team may find it advisable to switch its home games to Montreal's baseball stadium unless a reduction could be secured from McGill University for the use of Molson Stadium. Ottawa and Montreal delegates said they plan to sponsor junior teams but Hamilton and Toronto delegates were uncertain about their plans for juniors this year. Bill Foulds, chairman of the board of referees, suggested that the league might find it advisable to use home referees this year, thereby reducing expenses, but delegates decided the old plan of appointing officials would not be changed. Delegates attending the meeting were: J. P.

McCaffrey, president; D. W. Brown, secretary; Dr. Max Kinsella, Bob Gamble, Percy Robinson and Tom Alison, Toronto; J. D.

Chilman and Clint Wigle, Hamilton; Bill Hughes of Montreal, and Samuel Berger and Jack Welch of Ottawa. Kingston Tops Volants, 8-4 Kingston." June 15. KK Kingston kept its perfect home record in the Interprovincial Senior Baseball League here Saturday scoring an 8-4 victory over Hull man since the first inning. Kampouris sacrificed Jensen along and he came home on Sammy Bell's single to left field. Carleton breez Gazetta Photo (Copyright Retorted).

BUDDY 1IELLYER, popular ed home from there, although the Jerseys had men in scoring position in their half of the seventh. SCALP TROUBLE? PSORIASIS ALOPECIA MONTREAL (2) JERSEY CITY (I) ab.r hor. a ihrtl.io.1 Campbell, lb. .4 1 1 7 1 narla. i.

All kindf of hair a Lt. l- i Corbitt. 0 0 0 IMKoax. If 10 0 10 Mill 4 113 3 3 0 0 7 0 young Westmount boy who made good with Pittsburgh last winter in his first season in the professional hockey ranks, has filed an application for acceptance in the Royal Canadian Air Force. Hellyer, who went from Montreal to Oshawa to Pittsburgh and is counted on as a future Toronto Maple Leaf, would Huihei.

0 0 0 3Wltele. Graham. ..4 04 OiMtCarthy. 16 Jenjen. rf 3 14 OjMajnara.

Kampourii. rf.S 0 0 0 OOorrton, 4 0 14 0 4 0 2 0 3 3 0 13 0 4 0 0 0 0 Ken. 2b 3 0 1 1 Cook rf reefed by specialist, D.E. York Scalp end Hair Treatments. 1458 MA.

7200 0 0 5 1 tH.ai mire. Catltlon. p. ...3 0 0 0 dtran. 0 0 0 2 ta xniny total 31 2 27 OiCoomija.

0 0 0 0 2 be one of the first professional hockey players to go on active service if accepted, possibly the first. Volant. Totali 29 1 5 27 10 a Batted for Faldman In 7th. Montreal 000 JflO 2 Ut'ty Clljf 009 0(11 0001 Summary Error, Corbitt. Buna batttd In.

Oraham. Gordon, Bll. To-bae hit, Campbell. Dirli, MnCarthjr, Kampmirta. Jenien.

l.aft baea. Mnnirtal (. Jar City T. flam Art balla, off Carleton 4, Feldman 1, Cflnmhi 1, Hlnir reit. hr Faldman Carlatim 5, romb J.

lllti, eft Faldman, In Innlnei; Cwmhi, 1 trouble for Joe Krakauskas. who In 1 Lotlnr pitcher, Faldman. Vmplm. lltnllna ana Barry, lima, 1.30. gave up only five blows but had himself in constant hot water with eight free passes.

were doing fine in the SECOND SAME. JERSEY ITY (0) opener and Mungo was coasting MONTREAL (I) ab.r do a I Campbell, 0 1 0 ab do 1 ..30181 Corhltt. ai, ...8 0 0 2 ..10000 Dana, Foi. bMartln Witek. 2b HushM, ..10 0 0 ..3 0 0 2 Graham.

3 ONLY CASE OF ITS KIND Bill, who has been training athletes in baseball, hockey, football, track and so on, for nigh on to S5 ytars, knows of no other case In his personal experience nor has he ever heard or rend of another exactly similar to Head's; the accomplishment of a metamorphosis from being a natural southpaw pitcher into a crackcrjack right-hander. O'Brien has known of men who tried to do It, but never of another one who succeeded. But Head achieved it by perseverance and diligence at the expense of many a sleepless night when his back and elbow shrieked their protestations against the unprecedented things he was doing to them. At first, of course he was a "scatter-arm," then, after long practice throwing to a spot, control was won, and finally came his speed. Now, he is able to pitch such a game as he did against Jersey City on Saturday, allowing only one hit, not issuing a base on balls and only once or twice being behind the batter.

Only once this season has he looked really bad, that was in his recent start at Newark when he got mad at the umpires, lost his control and was constantly behind the batter. Jrnsrn. rf 3 ..3 0 0 11 2 McCarthy, lb a.ong behind a 2-0 lead as a result of Joe Becker's double, a single by Ccrbitt, a stolen base and a single by Hushes in the third when the blew up in his face. Gene Hasson's double opened the fourth inning and before the side was retired three pitchers had serv Kampotirla. rf.l 2 0 0 1 0 Maynara, Gordon.

Bill 2b 3 0 0 10 Cnoltt. Bffktt. Bead, 2 ..2 ..2 ..2 ..1 ..1 ..0 Atwuod, Htnihaw. Totalt .23 1 8 21 a Voting t-jnn. ed them up to 14 men, with seven getting hits and four drawing free Tolata 21 0 1 21 12 Batted for Henihaw In tlih.

ttatttd lor Foil In 7th. Montrail 010 000 01 blow in that inning was the first of Lin Storti's pair of home runs. Hasson's double was followed Jcrey City O'MI (WO 00 Siimmarv Errora. Fon. McCarthy.

WHek, At by Deals single and Storti's drive wontt ftaerlflret, Knxi, Head. play, Ren- shaw to Atmird to McCarthy. Ift on bates. Mnot to the top of the scoreboard. Mungo settled down then and got two real 6, Jorney City 1.

Baea on ballf, off Henshaw 4. Wtnirk out. br Head 5. Hlti. off Henhiw.

8 In lnnln: I.ynn. 0 In t. Ixlni men a row but a single by Burxnart himself re-kindled the pHrher. Henshaw. Lmplrca, Berry and Benilna, Tim.

1.10. ame. Rosen walked and Sherlock singled another run in. When Lor sac re also singled for the fifth HIS ONE FAULT There's only one thing wrong with Head as far as the Royals are concerned: he won't be with them next year. Manager Clyde Suke-forth figures Ed is just about ready for the big-time and will be up there with the Dodgers next season.

Says Sukey, "Head has the speed to do it and he knows enough. I think his control will suffer somewhat up there; it always does with any young pitcher breaking into the ma'jors, for the boys are much tougher to pitch to In the big leagues. But Ed will go up and stay up." (Continued on Page 22) run of the inning, Mungo was ccrricked and Wes Flowers trudged out to the mound. WITH ROYALS AT BAT and ON THE MOUND Wes was around barely long enough to get acquainted. He fed a pass to Hasson which loaded the sscKs.

then grooved one for Bill XageL who batted for Deal, and HITTING. sgel poinded it for a two-run coubie. When Flowers gave three THE OLD SUNDAY BLUES talis to storti. he left and Al Sher er came in to complete the pass. jnaQinz tne bases anew.

Then Sherer forced in another run with a walk before Bottarini grounded out. The same was as good as finish ed then but just to make sure of t.imgs the Cniefs picked up an-ether run in the seventh Rambert vis throwing by this time and another in the eighth on Storti's second homer, with Lawson on the mound. Royals, meanwhile, got ABH.2B.3B.hr JEI.PC Walters 47 18 1 1 6 .383 Ross 3fl 12 2 0 1 11 .331 Corbitt 205 83 8 3 0 22 .307 Jensen 215 64 13 1 3 34 Bell 185 4 7 0 1 17 Ml Hughes 214 63 9 3 0 30 .294 Carleton 14 4 1 0 0 1 .288 Campbell 230 63 7 3 2 22 .274 Becker 11 3 1 0 0 0 .273 Staller 78 21 4 0 4 15 .270 Graham 156 41 12 3 6 22 Sherer 20 5 2 0 0 3 Kampouris 95 21 4 0 0 9 .221 Kehn 23 5 1 0 0 1 .217 Mungo 11 2 10 0 2 .181 Lawson 6 1 0 0 0 2 .167 Rachunok 14 2 0 0 0 1 .143 Gassaway 7 10000 .143 Head 31 4 0 0 0 1 .130 Macon 17 2 0 2 0 1 .118 Rambert 3 0 0 0 0 0 000 Flowers 21 0 0 0 0 0 .000 riTCHINO. IP. H.

BB. SO. W. PC OaMAway 27 7 31 10 14 1 0 1000 Head 79 20 88 3.1 55 8 2 41 11 30 19 23 4 1 .800 Kehn 72 25 4fl 47 42 7 3 .700 Rachunok 44 18 33 35 21 4 2 .667 Mungo 21 15 22 14 13 1 1 .500 Flowers 56 30 62 29 21 3 4 .429 Sherer 70 33 69 24 41 3 5 .375 Macon 28 19 28 15 9 1 2 .333 Rambert 17 13 23 9 7 0 1 .000 Lawson 18 11 21 9 5 0 3 .000 f.r.g.e runs in the sixtn and ninth. Tne point in the sixth came through Jensen's second single, George Staller double and Bell's infield out; the ran in the ninth resulted from frnrles by Becker and Tinch-hitter Frrd Walters and Corbitt's tap to thi rmrltrr.

Kfysln lftokfd pitiful at the plat trie liighUap as they left nine stranded to run their tola! fcr the afternoon to 18. They had men scoring position in each of tr.e first four innings before gettina Second Game: SYRACUSE (4). AB.R. H. PO.A.

Rosen, cf 3 11 1 0 Sherlock, 2b 4 0 0 3 4 Longacrt, If 3 1 10 0 Hasson, lb 2 0 0 6 1 Hirtje, 2 113 1 Storti, 3b 2 0 112 Deal, rf 2 0 0 1 0 Nagel, rf 1 0 0 0 0 Williams, ss 3 0 1 3 0 Krakauskas, 3 1 1 1 1 Totals 25 4 6 21 MONTREAL (3). An. it. n. ro.A.

Campbell, lb 2 11 8 0 Corbitt, ss 3 2 2 2 3 Hughes, 3b 3 0 111 Graham, If 3 0 0 0 0 Jensen, 4 0 1 1 0 Kampouris, 2b 3 0 0 2 2 Staller, rf 1 0 0 2 0 Walters, 2 0 0 5 0 Kehn. 1 0 0 0 2 aBecker 1 0 0 0 2 Gassaway, 0 0 0 0 1 bRoss 1 0 0 0 0 Sherer, 0 0 0 0 0 Totals 24 3 5 21 9 a Batted for Kehn In 4th. Batted for Gassaway in 6th. Syracuse 002 002 04 Montreal 000 010 23 Summary Errors, None. Runs batted in, Rosen 2, Jensrn 2, Storti 2.

Two-base hits, Corbitt, Hartje. Home run, Rosen. Sacrifices, Hartje, Staller, Rosen. Double play, Sherlock to Williams to Hasson. Left on base, Syracuse 4.

Montreal 9. Bases on balls, off Krakauskas 8, Kehn. 2. Struck out, by Kehn 3. Krakauskas 3, Gassaway 2.

Hits, off Kehn, 2 in 4 innings; Gassaway, 4 in 2: Sherer. 0 in 1. Wild pitch, Krakauskas. Losing pitcher, Kehn, umpires, Tobin, Berry and Solodare. Time.

1.42. Attendance (estimated). 8.500. their f-st run in the fifth, when tr.ry also allowed two men to die, srd were retired in order only in t-ie sixth. The teams go back at each other "At last Tve done it," our hero cries, As you can plainly see, "This 'Will you' stuff is plenty tough.

It's a bottle of Dow for mel'- First fame i SYRACUSE (10) AB.R.H PO.A. Rosen, cf 4 1 16 0 Sherlock, 2b 5 12 3 5 Longacre, If 51200 liaison, lb 2 1 7 0 Deal rf 2 1 1 0 0 Nagel, rf 3 0 2 2 0 Storti, 3b 4 2 3 1 0 Williams, ss 4 0 0 3 3 Bottarini, 5 0 0 5 2 Burkhart, 5 2 2 0 1 Totals 40 10 14 27 11 MONTREAL (4 AB.R.HTO.A. Campbell, lb 5 0 0 12 1 Corbitt, 4 12 5 4 Hughes. 3b 3 0 12 4 Graham, If 5 0 0 1 0 Jensen, rf 4 12 2 0 Stiller, rf 4 0 110 Bell, 2b 4 0 0 3 4 Becker, 4 2 2 1 1 Mungo, 1 0 0 0 1 Flowers, 0 0 0 0 0 Sherer, 0 0 0 0 0 aKampouris 0 0 0 0 0 Rambert, 0 0 0 0 0 bRoss 0 0 0 0 0 rKehn 0 0 0 0 0 Lawson, 0 0 0 0 0 cWalters 1 0 1 0 0 Totals 35 4 9 27 13 a Batted for Sherer in 3th. Batted for Rambert In 7th.

Ran for Hons in 7th. Batted for Lawson In 9th. Syracuse 000 800 110 10 Montreal 002 001 001 4 Summary Error, Bell. Runs batted in, Corbitt 2, Hughes, Storti 4, Sherlock 2, Longarre, Kagel 2, Williams, Bell. Two-base hits, Storti, Becker, Hasson, Nagel, Staller.

Home runs. Storti 2. Stolen base, Corbitt. Double play. Bell to Corbitt to Campbell.

Left on bases, Syracuse 10, Montreal 9. Bases on balls, off Mungo 2, Flowers 2, Sherer 1. Rambert 2. Burkhart 4. Struck out, by Mungo J.

Burkhart 5. Hits, off Mungo, 8 in 3 23 innings; Flowers, 1 in 0 (faced 3 f-ight resumption cf the five game series, which continues with xughters tomorrow and Wednesday. ii i EXPORTS ARE ESSENTIAL I Visit! itoyas nave Deaten the Chiefs but three times this season and have lost six, another game going FOR THE CARRYIHG ON OF THE WAH it innings to a z-z draw. DStt By purchasing British eoods to the utmost of your ability. i ADnrrj IF YOU WANT A SUIT EitabUsbed 1900 Manufacturers BETTER WIPERS WASTE CHEESE CLOTH and SOFT SOAP SHOP TOWEL RENTAL SERVICE THAT WILL MAKE-UP WELL WEAR WELL AND KEEP ITS SHAPE Um Off batters); Sherer, 1 In 1 1-3: Rambert.

3 in 2: Lawson, 1 in 2. Hit by pitcher, by Burkliart (Hughes). Wild pitch, Burkhart. Losing pitcher, Mungo. Umpires, Solodare, Tobin and Kelly.

Time, 2.05. mvw aV avaa4 ihesc Suitings creates a feeling of con fidence. 3.

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