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The Boston Globe from Boston, Massachusetts • 6

Publication:
The Boston Globei
Location:
Boston, Massachusetts
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6
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41,141111,11 Six Sports THE BOSTON DAILY GLOBESATURDAY, OCTOBER 12. 1946 Forg 1 fife 1 Hurler' Comes 7' Cl RI t- ff' 1 1 I 4 la for et" Sox WHAT A RESCUE PARTY! Dif3bson Allows Cards By Gene Mack 7 ,1 I ot 1 He Ilitt4K TH 1-1RYN TO STEAL CENTER 1 el Pr- 511v 0 0 SO( A WICKED' 0, ift tote I 4 '4' gret4 1 '10 IAL FIELD NOT Four Hits, Subs Lead 4 oAsE OLOW AT 'THE t. tk 'START BuT ctucel 03 (-4 14 41n 4 'IF (')e I IP. Ili 66 .0 Attack in 6-3 Victory A TMEY-CAME bleAR LOOKK6Ct 'N (A om vihirreyy FLY our zl, Pi WHO'S Jrntle MOW 1 et HT IMPER -11-1 "I' PARTEE ENGNEERED SAVEC1 VkNEIS 6- -CIA'RAGI0LA -TIAREW 046 1 A AA or il .4 is LIKS TAPS ow akeY'S STEAL villir- .11 Slaughter Injured, May Be Out FANNEPAMP GAVIIS delot, ,..0 ft WiitN MOORE 1 we 0 ALL A LIFT 144.4,1 -041-- 4, 1 A of Crucial St. Louis Tilt Sunday tz ti.) alb -)- 4., SAV .0 I moil's 1 14 IAA 1-00K rilrel .6 elm At: I 1 11.

wool banas ngs Nason sox open 7 Innings AA Ale104m2 ci 41 yaw 4402,..11 111010riV Iv WI if 0. go Continued from the First Page With Basehits but 1 1.40,........,......a:...0 But it was Dobson who Cards Trip Ted in 3d i YAM I FP i 19116 i 1 If 4- ..4" -toomor el. ii, IP' 3 under his glove in the locker occurred on yesterday's game. a SI' 1 ,1,,, e- found the shiny white new ball An unusual World Series feat UL9'04 I 1 ev''' recd. 4.mX'57:.7?"".-, itt: 'V' 1 i 1 eb I) In every inning but the third, 1 taxtlz)) 4, yesterday It was Dobson the leadoff batter for the Red Sox (2., molo 14 who walked out into the bright opened the inning with a basehit.

1 sunlight of the ball park to been equaled )11p 0 me Some sort of a record may have lifil, 1 ir C' 4 1 1 TO 3Ee do. s. pitch had not the Car- CoIX 4 9 ENN1 victory and a 3-and-2 lead in it the Red Sox to a 6-3 dinal unorthodox defense pre- Illglit, ik wall Kis P.0.6 7. 11: Hop I ev1 -fr 010 THA vented Ted Wams' grounder to 50r4 GO the right of second base, opening CLJI-ar HAP eAk nOWN 64 5 0 the games and set up Sunday's the third inning, from rolling LEAPINIG FROM amorie 40 ot0-p, ..,5, 5 0 Cto -00e -er-o- i safelY OW e. 1 ..4, 7 I I super game at St Louis as a 3 vvN Dave Ferriss-Cat Brecheen duel jir Tme ROOF TOPS yeNilalf: A Af which may live forever in looked like agile cerebral gym- ok HomeR- al: It viol 7.

1. (10 --c-s1-1 Series isory. Dobson did it. Four hits, in- cluding Stan Musial's blazing double, he allowed. The forgot- Dom into forcing Gutteridge at third on a It didn't look so hot a jiffy later, though, when Ted Williamswhammed 1 a screaming line single into right I i 2., tt iieeo.

Ainwe'l 401 1 Oe' yr' vikl va, -JI 0 IIIPII, es Ps xi WAs Ik WOOPeD im AMP NEARLY $tizteorkM WHEN MUSAL-COOLPNI s-r Loos ewes' ten man sent eight Cardinals fieldhis only hit of the gameto grouching back to the dugout, send Pesky dashing home from sec- et victims of strikeouts. ond ahead of Slaughter's so-so FiNt? TliE 50 FUNNY ALI 4HNI wrrti PARTEe ON ts-r t3LIT 401 VE Ret CAUGHT FtOy NAPPO.IG 1 Six Forg 1. Dobson Allows Cards Four Hits, Subs Lead Attack in 6-3 Victory Slaughter Injured, May Be Out of Crucial St. Louis Tilt Sunday Nason Continued from the First Page 2 But it was Dobson who found the shiny white new ball under his glove in the locker yesterday It was Dobson who walked out into the bright sunlight of the ball park to pitch the Red Sox to a 6-3 victory and a 3-and-2 lead in the games and set up Sunday's super game at St. Louis as a Dave Ferriss-Cat Brecheen duel which may live forever in Series history.

Dobson did it. Four hits, including Stan Musial's blazing double, he allowed. The forgotten man sent eight Cardinals grouching back to the dugout, victims of strikeouts. Sports 1.Ztel..'1.-ffurio..::ci.i..7r1'.i.i-r. Sox Open 7 Innings With Basalts, but Cards Trip Ted in 3d An unusual World Series feat occurred on yesterday's game.

In every inning but the third, the leadoff batter for the Red Sox opened the inning with a basehit. Some sort of a record may have been equaled had not the Cardinal unorthodox defense prevented Ted Williams' grounder to the right of second base, opening the third Inning, from rolling looked like agile cerebral gymnastics when he teased Dom into forcing Gutteridge at third on a bouncer to Kurowski. It didn't look so hot a jiffy later, though, when Ted Williams whammed a screaming line single into right fieldhis only hit of the gameto send Pesky dashing home from second ahead of Slaughter's so-so THE WHAT A RESCUE PARTY! ti, 04 F-Pf' A 4)47 1 1 3 7 cs I NZ A--ss: I 17 Ctit-er HAP.eitkl 41 LEAPINIG FROM -0- TRE ROOF TOPS WITH I-115 SomeR- BOSTON DAILY GLOBE VATe PEALTTHe SO( A WICKep 13i-0W Al -rme 'START BUT Nr( R1C4HT INP1ER GUM PARTEE EMGNIEEREP A ft WI4tN MOORE FANNEP, AMP GAVE VS ALL A LIFT 00' SATURDAY, OCTOBER 12. eY- CAME WoKiNa 41LLY ON oirrey's FLY OUT AV' ANc-IS 11,0611117 -41 1946 0 ei 1 -rT WAS stReAM WHEN MU5AL-COOLP411'---. t-1N9 WITH PARTeE ON 15-r OUT PLOT 50 FUNNY WHEN REP SwoOPeo AMP NEARLY CAUGHT Soy NAppiNG (-(-- WHO'S rrrc-RY mow -CIA'RAGI0LA -TIAREW OfJE LIKS TAPS ON CULeY'S STEAL kwe TO 3Ea: THAI EvE10.4, $0r4 C4sp cf-e, DOWN 4, By Gene Mack He MOST 1)404 TP-16-Y-14-6ye To STEAL CENT flELO NOT 1 EsA s-r Louis ewes' Atom Pitch Did It! i BOX SCORE OF FIFTH GAME Slaughter Plays Every Inning All Year Until Struck by Dobson's Pitch BOSTON (A.

L) AB TB PO A Gutteridge, 2b 5 0 2 2 0 2 0 Peaky, ss 5 1 3 3 2 2 2 DiMaggio, cf 3 1 1 2 3 0 0 Williams, If 5011400 York, lb 2100801 Higgins, 3b 4112010 Culberson, rf 3 1 2 5 2 0 0 3111810 Dobsonp 3000010 Dobson Second Only to Ferriss in Wit Record at Fenway By HAROLD KAESE Totals 33 ST. LOUIS (N. AB Scboendienst, 2b 4011310 Moore, cf 4000200 Musial. 1 3112700 Slaughter, rf 2000000 Dusak, If 1000000 Kurowski, 3b 4100310 Garagiola, '4100710 Walker, lf, rf 4023100 Marion, ss 4000171 PtIllet, 0000000 Brazle, 2000010 Jones 1000000 Beazley, 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 Hats off to the scurves, who have won two of the three -victories scored by the Red Sox over he Cardinals in the World Series, which last night left for St. Louis.

Hats off to the pickups, the has-beens, and to the hand-me-downs who helped the Red Sox to their first pennant in 28 long seasons. Hats off to Don Gutteridge for stepping into the second base job and doing a bang-up job yesterday for the migrainic Bobby Doerr. Hats off to Leon Culberson for his sixth-inning home run off Al Brazle, which 1 eased the pressure on the Sox. And hats offbare those beans, folks to Joe Dobson for pitching the Sox to a 6-3 victory which left them just one tri- "mu" umph, one teeny-weeny little triumph, from the baseball championship of the world, the universe and the cosmos. Joe has been reading some scientific magazines lately, because he said he beat the Cardinals yesterday with his "atom pitch." The "atom pitch," he explained, is an explosive curve caused by a chain reaction, or sump'in.

Dobson was Joe Cronin's. secret weapon, and Dobson's secret weapon was the "atom pitch." "Up and atom," said the burr-headed right-hander before he went out to face the Cardinals in an assignment he knew was his only at 11:30 yesterday morning. After the horrendous 12-3 defeat on Thursday, which squared the series at two-all, Mickey Harris poked his head into the manager's cubbyhole. St. Louis Fans Ask New Announcer Work With Britt ST.

LOUIS, OM It (UP)St. Louis baseball fans are "highly displeased" with the work of the radio announcers handling the World Series, acting Mayor Al. bert Schweitzer telegraphed the sponsor today, and want new men appointed to work the final games. Schweitzer told the Gillette Safety Razor Company that either Dizzy Dean, Gabby Street, Johns fly O'Hara or Caray should work with the Boston announcer on the concluding game or game. Arch McDonald of Washington and Jimmy Britt of 801011 have announced the Series so far.

"Then who will it be Sunday in St. Louis?" asked a reporter. And Cronin thereupon continued to keep everybody guessing by saying: "Hughson er Harris; I don't know right now." Ttudy York took pictures of most of the Cardinal batters during thett practice. The big Indian bought a camera in Chicago about three weeks ago and has used a dozen films since he took up the hobby. "I think I've got some good pictures," laughed York.

"but I'm nol sure what they'll look like when they're developed. Maybe all et them will shows fellows standing on their heads or something like that. 0 Bishop Henry Knox Sherrill. presiding head of the Episcopal Church in the country. and Bishop Louis M.

Kelleher, auxiliary bishop of tins Catholic Archdiocese of Boston. sat together in a box along the third base line. "This makes for unity. doesn't it? asked Bishop Sherrill. and hi grinned as he turned towards his companion.

"We're rooting eta heads off for the Red Sox." The clergymen were guests ot Happy Chandler, the baseball corn. missioner. Cronin decided to play Lee Cut. berson in place of Tom McBrido in right field because of the at pastures to be covered in that section. "I thought.

too. that Cut. by had a better chance of reach. ing that fence and he came through with a home run. Joe McCarthy.

former Yankrt manager, was again closeted wits Cronin after the game for fully fivo minutes. They refused to mentiot what has been so secretive abous their talks the past few days here but the thought Is once again quite prevalent that Cronin wants te leave the baseball field and move into the front office with N1Carth3 succeeding him as manager. Bobby Doerr joined the team 01 the train after having spent ths entire day in bed suffering from bad headache and sick stomach.Dr Ralph McCarthy believed that Doen would be ready for the Sunda game although he said that the ail ment was worse than he first (hag nosed it. Don Gutteridge, who replace, Doerr and played adequately mak ing a couple of hits and playirl errorless ball in the field. wantet just one more single in the game to make him happy.

"Then I would have matched mi Series hitting when I played for the St. Louis Browns against the Car dinals in '44. I got just three hit in that whole Series." Marlon explained his disastrots mmwM001 Totals 33 3 4 6 24 12 1 Batted for Brute in eighth. Boston (A. ........110 001 30x-6 St.

Louis (N. 010 000 002-3 001 30X-6 000 002-3 throw. Pol let now made the lonesome walk toward the first base stands and disappeared, a forlorn and solitary figure, in to the gloomy cavern of the grandstand. Alva Brazle, a tall, loose, lean character of Huckleberry Finn type, pitched from there to the eighth. Alva sat on a keg of dynamite every moment of the journey.

Culberson Takes a Hand In the first five innings the Red Sox had II men on base and salvaged only two runs. Roy Partee's solid single to center and Dobson's sacrifice. which was tardily played to second base, and Gutteridge's single got the second runin the second. Yeh, Brazle was perched on a dynamite keg, like a man smoking a cigar, all the way to the sixth. He was having more narrow escapes than some of those Dogpatch citizens on Sadie Hawkins Day.

And then Leon Culberson, who is from Rome, and always does as Romans do, took the issue into his own hands. He was the first Bostonian to bat in the sixth. He looked at one slanting Brazle offering and did not see much virtue to it. It was a ball. He looked at the next, and fell in love with it.

He pounded It high and far up into the haddock nets about 25 feet from the left-field foul pole. The ol' Rinky Dinks were really rolling, eh? So it was 3-1 Into the last of the seventh, where the Yawkey A. C. removed all lingering doubt with a three-run uprising. paced by bespectacled Dominick Di Maggio, who opened the inning with an authoritative double to left on Brazle's first pitch.

My, how the patrons howled when the Kid came up, looking very cross indeed. having grounded out in the third and having swung and completely missed three Brazle pitches in the fifth with two on, nobody out. The Kid looked grim, but Brazle did it againstruck him out on a 2-2 pitch, an inside curve ball. Marion Only Human The Cards had elected to pass Rudy York intentionally twice to this point. They did it again, putting two on.

And that left it in the lap of Mike Higgins, 37-year-old campaigner, and a very tough customer to pitch to with people on base. Higgins took a called strike. then doubled between Dusak and Moore with Li'l Professor sprinting home like sixty. With memories of his homer still distressingly fresh, the Cards elected to pass Culberson now, bringing up Roy Partee. Now practically the only reason the Red Sox had harvested only two runs from seven hits in the first five Innings was Mr.

ShortstopMarty Marion had roved far and wide, cutting down mean hoppers, playing brilliantly in the tight spots. But he is only human, this long, lean man. And he proved it now with the bases loaded, one down. Partee snapped a shot to Marion's right. and Mr.

Shortstop made a magnificent stop Terrific. But he was after that double play. He threw off balance and threw beyond second base and far out to right field. York waddled home. So did Higgins.

The score was 6-1, and everybody knew, now, tbiat the Red Sox had the guts to win this World Seriesmaybe on Sunday. when Dave Ferriss will go out there in the midst of an enemy throng at Sportsman's Park, St. Louis. Dobson Won Game for His Father, Says Family in Arizona COOLIDGE, Ail, Oct. 11 (AP) Joe Dobson won today's World Series game for his father, William C.

Dobson, who died last June 7, members of the Dobson family said. The day after his father's death, the Boston Red Sox pitcher was scheduled to start against Detroit. He went through with the assignment and won, 15 to 4. He then flew to Coolidge for the funeral. He earned, did this big man with the curly hair, a clean shutout, but once again the home forces staggered afield, and this staggering accounted for the Cards three runs.

Befuddled Afield John Pesky, who was ablaze at bat with three hits, was befuddled field. It was his boot of Joe Gara giolas hot ground ball to short with two away which set up the enemy's first run in the second inning. John parked squarely in frorit of the ball, and it squirted through him end raced on twinkling stitches out between Williams and Di Maggio for a two-base foozle. Harry Walker then doubled to left and the run came home. Dobson waded through them with his powerful right handed throws for eight innings.

Over that stretch, while a congregation of 35,982 patrons burst into spasms of applause each time he marched sturdily of the mound. only six Cards reached base. Two of 'em got there on errors, one when he was hit by a pitched ball. He was Enos Slaughter, the man who personally had murdered the Ted Sox on Thursday afternoon. Dobson hit him on the left elbew in the fourth inning, just as Ted Williams had been nicked 10 days ago by Mickey Haefner of the Senators.

Slaughter may play no more in this Series. Enos left the contest In the eighth. finally. but he was no menace out there yesterday. and there were no shuddering sighs through the far reaches of the grandstand because of him.

He was feeding docilely out of Dobson's brawny right hand. He dribbled out to the infield once, popped to William3 later. Anyway. Big Joe. a farmer boy with cheeks of tan, had a 6-1 lead as he charged down to the ninth and that run was as sour as a green blueberry.

Far From Frisky Start Joe got himself off to a far from frisky start in the ninth by passing Musial. being very cautious and losing his man. This was Joe's first and only pass of the contest. That's how he was firing that pertater out there yesterday. But it was a little storm cloud, lathering darkness as the inning progressed.

Joe struck out Erv Dusak. the substitute left fielder for the Cards, and the parishioners bellowed in great glee. One out. Kurowskl on hand. Whitey smacked a puny.

undernourished bouncer to the right of Pesky. It might have instigated a double play and ended the inning. It was good for one killing. at least. But John had the great misfortune to come up with his second boot of the game, his fourth of the Series, and there was Mhsial on second, grinning like a cat.

and Kurowski on first. Very rapidly they were upon third and second. for Joe Garagiola rolled out to York at first base. Now Harry Walker, tall, gracefully swift kid brother of the famous Dixie, only Cardinal to get two blows, smashed an honest single into right field and two runs were in. Three runs all told.

All of 'em earned. That is to say. brother Joe Dobson unwound and gave 'em Hail Columbia all the way. The Cards. very chipper as a result of their 12-3 burying detail which they'd sent into Fenway Park Thursday, brushed off their illustrious left-handed pitcher, Howard Pellet.

He looks like something out of Hollywood. and his curve is even more handsome than he. Singles On First Pitch But Po Bet didn't ecape the first Inning. The Sox had him down, rolling him on the turf, before he could get anybody out. Doerr didn't start.

of course. So Don Gutteridge, an old Cardinal himself, opened the game by greeting Po llet's first pitch with a vicious swing. and singled a hot one through Musial at first. Pesky, who harvested three blows, then maced Po llet's second pitch to right field for another single. IN.tanager Eddie Dyer, his face alive with worry wrinkles, rushed out to V-- mound to act as chairman of a conference.

The result, Pollet remained among the contestants. This WI 0 Pr Gay, JOHN Six to jP ot Six to RBI. 'Dams, Walker 3, Gutteridge, Culberson, Higgins, Partee. 2B1I, Walker. Musial, Di Maggio, Higgins.

11B. Cu lberson. SB, Slaughter, Culberson, Pesky. Sac, Dobson, Di Maggio. DB, Partee and Pesky; Marion, Schoendienst and Musial.

ER, St. Louis (hi. Boston (A. 5. LOB, St.

Louis Boston (A. 11. BOB, by Brazle 6 (York 3, Di Maggio, Partee, Culberson); by Dobson 1 (Musial). SO, by Dobson 8 (Moore 2, Kurowski 2, Slaughter, Jones, Schoendienst, Dusak) by Brazle 4 (Williams 2, Dobson 2); by Beazley 1 (York). Pitching Summary: Po lict, 3 hits, 1 run in 1-3 inning; Brazle, 7 hits, 5 runs in 6 2-3; Beazley, 1 hit, 0 runs in 1.

by Dobson (Slaughter). Wild Beazley. LP, Brazle. limps Ballantant (Ist.L.) Plate; Hubbard (A.L.) lb; Bar lick (Isl. 2b; Berry (A.

3b. Time, 2:23. Attendance 35,982 paid. it Eagles in 56-7 Romp Keane Continued from the First Page "No," answered Slaughter. "It's awful sore.

I can just about lift it. It hit me right above the elbow. Lucky it didn't hit the bone or I might have broken my arm." Trainer Doc Weaver stepped through the crowd to take a look at the bruise which had now grown to the size of a pingpong ball. Ile asked Slaughter to try and flex his arm, but Slaughter was able only to bend it slightly. Says He'll Play Weaver just shrugged his shoulders when asked whether or not he thought Slaughter would take an active part in the remainder of the Series, and said: "You can't tell about those things.

Sometimes they cure in a hurry and others take a long time. -111 play." said Slaughter. 'Have no fear of that. Williams must have had the same thing and he was back in a couple of days, wasn't he? "That's the first time I've missed an inning all season long. I was looking for a fast ball and it broke in on me instead.

Dobson. He's fair. A little rough on right-handed batters but not too tough for left handers. Dyer, as usual, was quick to announce who his next pitcher would be in the Series. "Brecheen Sunday, men," said Dyer, "and if there's a seventh game and I'm sure there will be well.

I can't say now who it is. Maybe Dickson, maybe Munger, maybe Pol let, I'm not sure. 'Toilet just didn't have it. His back ailed him (it was reported that he was given treatments until midnight before the game) but I thought that he would work out the stiffness like he did in St. Louis.

The game was too important, though, to allow me to leave him in the box any longer. Garagiola Spiked "It's over now but I certainly had to squawk on that econd run they scored to put them ahead. Partee was out at the plate in the second inning. Joe Garagiola has spike marks on his left arm from Partee's shoes. Joe.

let 'em look at 'cm." Garagiola bared his left arm which did show indications of having been spiked. had him easy," said Joe. "Here's how it was" and he spun around as though on a swivel to demonstrate the play. "But Ballanfant (plate umpire) said he couldn't. see nothing but dirt when I showed him my arm." spouted Garagiola.

"It was just one of them days. I didn't have any luck at all. The Cat (Brecheen) will beat them. Then we can fight it out in that last one." Partee insisted that he was safe on the play which caused such a turmoil in the Cardinal dressing room. "I tagged the plate with my right foot and swung my left around," said Roy.

"Maybe be tagged the left One, hut I had already scored when he did it." The surprising thing about the Iled Sox room after the game was that there was no exulting over the win' when the team walked in. Eddie Pellagrinl was the first to break the stillness when he beamed: "Nice pitching. Burrhead (Dobson); you had something out there." "I got them out with my curve," said "That clutch Planned It That Way "Me tomorrow?" he asked Cronin. The manager nodded and said simply, "Be ready." So Dobson pitched, to the surprise of some Red Sox players and many unofficial managers; and Dobson, likewise to their surprise, won. "I planned it like this all the time," said Cronin last night.

"I've worked my pitchers exactly as I've planned in the series so far. And in the sixth game in St. Louis Sunday it will be Harris or Ferriss." Ferriss, best Sox pitcher of the series, figures to pitch, so it probably will be Harris, who no doubt will hold the Cardinals to three hits ond shut them In picking Dobson, a right-hander with a 13-7 record, Cronin reasoned as follows: He has the stuff, especially the curve, to bother the Cards. With the wind blowing from right we'll make the Cards use. the left-handed batters and let them hit to the long field.

And Dobson pitches his best games in Fenway Park. Dobson was second only to Ferriss in effectiveness at Fenway Park this season. Ferriss won 13 games, lost none there during the season. Dobson won 11, lost one. His only loss at home was in the last game of the season, won7-0 by the Senators.

Dobson pitched the first three innings and allowed one run. Dobson allowed four homers at Fen-way Park. Harris allowed 11 homers and his record there was 10-4. 6 11 16 27 7 3 TB PO A 47 Players Against 21 ,000 See Contest Statistics Kings Point Viral downa Yards gained ruabing (net), NO Forward nnnnn attempted. 27 Forward passes completed.

12 Yards by forward panties 63 Forward Intercept ed bi 2 Yards gabled runb ack intercepted pass 10 Punting a (from scrimmage) 37 Total yards all kicks rit turned 101 Opponent fumbles reenvered 1 Tards limit by penalties 150 11.C. 2149 22 ft 139 2 13 20 110 1 134 and Paul Williams, a pair of footballers who stood out, despite the BeeCee onslaught. BOSTON COLLEGEGould. McLaughlin. Bowdring, Spinney.

Degan, Lipka. le; Donovan. McCarty, Saunter. E. King.

It; Murray, Darone, I J. King. Kennedy. Twomey, Kuhn, Chg; ouinard. Quinn.

V. Palladino. Prouatola. Norcion, rg; Furey, Sisti, rt; Wisnicuski. Caesarto, Papaleo, Nicketakis, re; Burke.

Stuka. Ciashy. Panciera. qb: Hughes. Cannava, Burns, Diminick, Farrell, Killelea.

Ihb; Cahill, Aznavortan. Poissant, Morrow, Bennedetto, rhb; Songin, IL Palladino. Derosa. lb. KINGS POINTNoucette, Smith, Rudd.

re; Loesberg, rt; Fecteak, rg; Wesnser, Knowelton, Lowe, Borowski. Ig; Wolfe. It; Ilegeman, Allen, le Davenport. Mc- Crane, McKie, obi Michalski, Simmer, Welliams. rhb; Webster.

Viau, fhb; Groov- er, McCarty, ersten. lb. Score by periods.I 2 3 4 Total Boston College 7 14 28 7 66 Kings Point 0 0 0 7 7 Touchdowns, Killiles 2, Palladino. Gould, Papaleo, Brennan, Burns, Aznavortan, Davenport. Points by goal after touchdown, Panciera 7, Williams.

Point by pass after touchdown, Morro (pass to Bowdrine, Referee L. J. Kelley (Dart- mouth). Umpire, le E. Kennedy (Spring Hill).

Linesman. W. J. McConnell (Middlebury 1. Field fudge.

A. K. Samborski (Harvard). Time, lour 15m. periods.

S. M. U. Wins, 15-6 Oct. I Myers Uses Kings Point; By HERB EMMY The Mariners from Kings Point Merchant Marine Academy must have the Tap Kamikazes and the Nazi sub wolfpacks were on the prowl again last night at Braves Field, as the Boston College football team tossed all kinds of aerial bombs and surface torpedoes.

to sink them, 56-7, before 21,000 fans. Theo game wasn't even a good scrimmage for the Eagles after the opening quarter, and Coach Denny Myers used some 47 players. getting down to the jayvees before the final whistle blew. The first team played only the first period and briefly at the start of the second half. Myers had a chance to see practically every substitute under fire, but it is doubtful if he learned anything, so weak were the game visitors.

Tally In Fourth Until the final period the Mariners had advanced only once over the midfield stripe, and that occasion was in the first period, when they spent a few fleeting seconds on the B. C. 48-yard line. In the last period the Mariners were on the B. C.

48 once more against the Eagles' scrubs, and then finally reached pay dirt with 312 minutes to play after recovering a B. C. fumble. End Dick Davenport on a 9-yard pass from Jack McKie scored the sole Mariners' tally, with Paul Williams converting the extra point. John Killilea served notice of what was to come on the opening kickoff when he raced 92 Escapes Second-Guessers Cronin had good arguments for pitching Dobson, rather than Harris, yet if the Red Sox had lost yesterday, the manager would have been warmly second-guessed.

No doubt I would have been the No. 1 second-guesser. Dobson won few big games for the Red Sox during the season, but he may have won the big game of the Series. He beat Newhouser here, 4-0, with a three-hitter in April, and he had a four-hitter and two five-hitters to his credit during the season. It was Dobson who beat the Yankees, 12-5, after the Yankees had beaten the Sox by that score in their first appearance here in April.

The Sox were pleased, but not elated, as they left for St. Louis with a 3-2 lead. They don't look forward to two games in Sportsman's Park. They know they still can lose the Series. Three times have teams with a 3-2 lead lost the last two games on the roadthe Tigers in Cincinnati in 1940, the Senators in Pittsburgh in 1925, and the Giants in score.

He added Freshman 'paalssletcr pitch all ZiTt.ermIX 'Inc the sixth Ts ROOM Washington in 1924. another touchdown in the third ran Southern Methodist to a 15-0 that I was going to pitch until Joe those "do or don't '1. The Red Sox had better win the sixth game the me- period. Bob Palladino, Al Gould, victory over Oklahoma A. and M.

to- Cronin called me in just before picked up Partee's grounder ar4 Dom Papalee, Tom Brennan, Ed night before 28,000 fans in the cot- batting practice and told me." threw it blindly at second base. 1 Smooth Entertamment by ors show. Burns and Dave Aznavorian all ton bowl. The sensational Payne Mickey Harris was a little sur- it worked I made a great play. I KILEY Sensational experienced the thrill of tallying as completed 12 passes in 14 tries and prised that he wasn't the starting didn't so I looked like a bu rganist Bu the Eagles progressively increased scored both Methodist touchdowns.

pitcher. "I dropped into Cronin's you have to make those plays nt twata "Moly Nespt Sunday Bruins Buy McAfee From Hershey Club their point total from seven to 14 to 28 in the first three periods. Don room after the gme last night and you don't in the ii asked him if. I was play shortstop oing to pitch," leagues." HERSHEY, Oct. 11The wing duties on the Bruins third Miami Tops T.

C. a SMORGASBORDfrom 6 to 8 p. m. Panciera booted seven extra points; said Mickey. "He answered 'be he wasn't in there for the final MIAMI, Oct.

11 (AP)--Little so I thought that I was the Most of the Boston team flew tt Saturdays in the OVAL DINING ROOM Boston Bruins announced today line when the Boston club St. Louis on the 6 o'clock plane ant 1 I 1 Douglass M. Boone. Gan. Mgr.

score so freshman Bill Morro passed Davey Eldredge, a Miami boy, and man." the purchase of Norman Joseph its season next week. He for- freshman Bill Bowdring for that Ed Injaychock, of Wilkes-Barre, Cronin, however. insisted that he were expected to arrive there some i 1 Ample Parking Spac McAtee, 25-year-old left wing and merly played with St. Louis and point after. center from the Hershey Club of sparked the University of had planned on Dobson.

win or lose, time around midnight. Doerr. Ha Indianapolis in the Amerkan Outside of their fourth period Miami Hurricanes to a 20 to 12 vic- before the disastrous beating the and Charlie Wagner. Tex Hughsor .11... the Amerkan League.

McAtee League. lie is the fourth new- score which kept them on even tory over the Texas Christian day previous. "I've had this thing Rip Russell. Don Outtenclge. Jin who 16'7.

B' 'Tsti Ss Bsti rol, KE-114 stands 5-9 and weighs 165, is1 expected to take over the left socjothe oome ecratrovej ing tohinantkdeDBornui Gnrsothso.is sea- terms with the Eagles in the final Horned Frogs before a crowd of set right from the start of the Series; Bagby, Bill Zuber and Cronin tool thers be Babe ratt, period, the only bright spots in 30,860 football fans in the Orange every pitcher has been used on a 6 o'clock train with the Card the Mariners' rout were Lou Viau Bowl Stadium tonight schedule." nals leaving an hour later by rail Sensational Organist twatta resopt Sunday SMORGASBORDfrom 6 to 8 p. m. Saturdays in The OVAL DINING ROOM Douglass M. Boone, Gan. Mgr.

Ample Parking Space 1940, the Senators in Pittsburgh in 1925, and the Giants in Washington in 1924. The Red Sox had better win the sixth game, the records show. Bruins Buy McAfee HERSHEY, Oct. 11The Boston announced today the purchase of Norman Joseph McAtee, 25-year-old left wing and center from the Hershey Club of the American League. Mc Atee, who stands 5-9 and weighs 165, is expected to take over the left From Hershey Club wing duties on the Bruins third line when the Boston club its season next week.

He formerly played with St. Louis and Indianapolis in the Amerkean League. He is the fourth newcomer to join the Bruins this season, the others being Babe Pratt, Joe Carveth and Don Grosso. yards for the first score. He added another touchdown in the third period.

Bob Palladino, Al Gould, Dom Papa lec, Tom Brennan, Ed Burns and Dave Aznavorian all experienced the thrill of tallying as the Eagles progressively increased their point total from seven to 14 to 28 in the first three periods. Don Panciera booted seven extra points; he wasn't in there for the final score so freshman Bill Morro passed to freshman Bill Bowdring for that point after. Outside of their fourth period score which kept them on even terms with the Eagles in the final period, the only bright spots in the Mariners' rout were Lou Viau DALLAS, .11 (AP) Freshman Frank Payne passed and ran Southern Methodist to a 15-6 victory over Oklahoma A. and M. tonight before 28,000 fans in the cotton bowl.

The sensational Payne completed 12 passes in 14 tries and scored both Methodist touchdowns. Miami Tops T. C. U. MIAMI, Oct.

11 (AP)--Little Davey Eldredge, a Miami boy, and Ed Injaychock, of Wilkes-Barre, sparked the University of Miami Hurricanes to a 20 to 12 victory over the Texas Christian Horned Frogs before a crowd of 30,860 football fans in the Orange Bowl Stadium tonight was my pitch all afternoon. I didn't know that I was going to pitch until Joe Cronin called me in just before batting practice and told me." Mickey Harris was a little surprised that he wasn't the starting pitcher. "I dropped into Cronin's room after the game last night and asked him if, I was going to pitch," said Mickey. "He answered 'be ready, so I thought that I was the man." Cronin, however, insisted that he had planned on Dobson, win or lose, before the disastrous beating the day previous. "I've had this thing set right from the start of the Series; every pitcher has been used on schedule." error in the sixth as just one those "do or don't things." picked up Partee's grounder are threw it blindly at second base.

1 It worked I made a great play. 1 didn't so I looked like a bum. Bu you have to make those plays 41 you don't play shortstop in the bq leagues." Most of the Boston team flew tt St. Louts on the 6 o'clock plane ens were expected to arrive there some time around midnight. Doerr.

Ha and Charlie Wagner. Tex Hughsor Rip Russell. Don Gutteridge. Jin Bagby, Bill Zuber and Cronin tool a 6 o'clock train with the Card nals leaving an hour later by rail..

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