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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 23

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Brooklyn, New York
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23
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jf': 7x0ufty Flock Relief Hurlers Come and Go But Very Few Ever Save Games FURGOL FINDS NEW GRIP IN PGA TOURNEY Ties with Harbert For Lead After Two Qualifying Rounds Columbus. Ohio. June 22 (U.R) Marty Kurgol of Albuquerque, The Dust-OH Pitch mmmiam' mr iwaaaam.aa.a.aaaaaa.aaaaaaaaaaa........aa "V- Is in Style Again RECENT INCIDENTS Don't look now, but it looks 1'ke the harassed pitchers have armed themselves and are firing back. Action along various National League fronts has been strongly tinctured with essence of rhubarb. Prob Fail Newcombe In Red Uprising By HAROLD C.

BURR The Dodger bullpen at Ebbets Field is just a place in the sun where a lot of guys sit a waking their call to the Rickey colors. Yesterday first Jack N. went out after the quali fying medal in the 32d P.O. A. Golf Championship today, brim 1 ming with confidence in a new cross-handed putting grip improvised halfway through the opening round.

7 Desperate over failure to Banta andhen Clarence Pod-bielan got the jiod from Coach knock putts on the front Clyde But they nine, Furgol switched to the new grip and blazed home in 37-33 TO to tie slugging Chick should have been asked to pay their way into the park. 'I i Harbert of Detroit for the lead after the first of two qualifying rounds. Harbert fired 33-3570. They were a shot ahead of Johnny Palmer of Badin, N. runnerup to Sam Snead last year; Dick Metz of Arkansas City, Ellsworth Vines of Los Angeles and 51 year-old Al Watrous of Birmingham, Mich.

The six leaders were the only HEAVY ARTILLERY Here ore four reasons the Dodgers are right in the thick of the National League pennant fight. The team's leading sluggers, all hitting over .300, they are, left to right, outfielder Duke Snider, catcher Roy Campanella, second baseman Jackie Robinson and outfielder Carl Furillo. Canapanella is tied for the National League's home run lead with Ralph Kiner of Pittsburgh. Each has 14. It was after Don Newcombe, wild and tiring, had passed Bobby Adams in the ninth.

Banta threw six pitches and they were all balls and Pod-bielan served up four more to crowd the cushions. Presently Peanuts Lowrey, a villainous midget, shot a double to the left field corner for three runs and a 6-to-5 Cincinnati triumph that threw Brooklyn back into a first-place tie with the Cardinals and broke their five-game winning streak. Flatbush is buzzing today pros to clip the par 72 at Scioto Country Club, although record-breaking practice rounds earlier in the week indicated the scor ing would he hot. Soft greens. 1 Ns'ir marred by the foot-prints of the early starters among the 128 players shooting for the title.

Wynn Makes Hits Scarce for Yanks with the old second guess, Should Shotton have let New Cleveland, Ohio, June Although Bobby Brown's fourth home run of the season in the ninth deprived him of a shutout, Early Wynn easily checked the New York Yankees with four hits here yesterday as the Cleveland Indians evened the series, 5 to 1, before 10,737 paid fans. MYSTERY DODGER NO. 6 The contest's under way for the rich jackpot in the popular Clubhouse Quizz on WOR-TV, with this Dodger as the sixth in the series. All set to take a fling? All you have to do is drop a card to Ehlers Clubhouse Quizz, Box 450, Manhattan 46, N. giving your name, address and phone number.

Then tune in to Bob Edge on WOR-TV (Channel 9) after each game. This player's a right-hand hitter, is a college man, now a merchant, is 6 feet tall and weighs 205 pounds, and was an outfielder. He played minor league ball at Binghamton, Newark and Oakland. He was with Dodgers when Detroit played Pittsburgh in World Series. Wrong guesses so far: Otto Miller, Burleigh Grimes, Jack Fournier, Babe Herman, Glenn Wright, Buddy Hassett and Dixie Walker.

combe stay in and attempt to work out his own salvation? It's the oldest question' in the baseball world from which a manager has no protection. "I took him out because he was wild," declared Old Barney in explanation of his moves that turned out so badly. "He threw one pitch to the backstop in pitching to Adams in the ninth. It was obvious that he had nothing left. That crazy ball was enough for me." If Banta had come on and The big Indian right-hander struck out seven and had a no-hit game until the sixth when helped thwart their attack on par.

Slash Field to 4 A second round today will slash the field to 61 for 'match play opening tomorrow with a pair of Midden death 18-hole matches all the playing pros fear. After tomorrow all matches are scheduled for 3G holes. "I couldn't sink a long putt on the front nine," said Furgol. "So I decided to hit 'em cross-handed. I usually hit the dinky ones that way, anyhow." From then on he was even par until the 17th where he rammed in a 20-footer for a birdie, then picked up an eagle on the ISth with a dazzling five-iron shot that put him two and a half feet from the pin.

Harbert, runner-up to Jim Ferrier for the 1917 championships, missed numerous chances for birdies along the way but until Furgol tied him, it looked as if his 70 would stand alone. Vic Raschi, the losing pitcher, ducked a pitch and had it hit his bat for a single. It was Wynn's fifth victory and Raschi's fourth defeat. got out of the inning there would be no questions asked The Indians got to Raschi for single runs in the fourth and fifth, Ray Boone driving in one with a fly ball, and But that's always the of the second guess. Banta has turned in some sound relief Constantino Choice To Decision Fiore At Fort Tonight Al (Bozo) Costantino, East Side welterweight, ruled a slight favorite over Carmine Fiore of Greenpoint in their eight-round bout at Fort Hamilton tonight.

At Dexter Park, Paddy DeMarco is the choice to beat Ray Edwards of Jamaica, L. in the feature ten. doubles by Jim Hegan and Dale chores in the past. Shotton has Mitchell producing another. The Indians picked up three no high grade fireman and has to use what odds and ends he's got in their windbreakers out runs in the eighth on three hits FALCON NINE ENDS BUSHWICK STREAK Scoring two runs In the eighth Inning to tie the score, and then three more in the ninth, the Falcons of Riverhead, Long Island, champions of Suffolk County, handed the Bushwicks their first setback after 10 straight wins at Dexter Park last night, 6.

The Falcons are the first white team to win from in nghtfield. N'ot in Teak Form ably the general unrest will spread until ora ncK lbsuex his annual bulletin decrying harsh methods and promising harsh penalties. "The bean ball must go!" he will declare. There was that little thing in Chicago recently. Bobby Morgan of the Dodgers had just hit a home run.

The next batter was Jim Russell. On the first pitch, Mr. Russell was Fpilled upside down by a ball that sailed perilously close to his ear. Russell is an old campaigner who has been thrown at before. He especially does not like to be thrown at in the Chicago ballpark where a bad bleacher background makes a high pitch difficult to follow at any time.

He arose, expressed his feelings in a few well chosen words and charged. Jim and Paul Minner opened the Chicago outdoor wrestling season early. Ultimately, Russell was sent to the Fhowers te cool off. Umpire Babe Pinelli permitted Minner to stay in the game. This seemed unusual, but the Dodgers filed no violent objections, possibly because they had been hitting Minner pretty hard.

The other night in Boston. Cliff Chambers of the Pirates buzzed one close to the well-shaped noggin of Earl Torgeson. The temper of the Boston first baseman caught fire. He removed his glasses and started for the mound. This, too, led to a temporary suspension for Mr.

Torgeson for attempting to wrestle without a license while the pitcher stayed irt the game. Chambers went on to l-to-0 victor', too. Recently in Pittsburgh, Boh Miller of the Phillies was on the mound and Ray Mueller, 38-year-old catcher of the Ti rates, was at bat. After this particular pitch, Mueller did not charge out to wrestle. Nor was he available for immediate comment.

He was in fact unconscious as they carried him off the field on a stretcher and later sent him to a hospital for observation. Thus life goes on. There are periodic waves of bean ball rhubarbs almost every year. One is much like the other. Attempts to completely stamp out the practice of throwing at hitters have not been permanently effective.

LAST YEAR'S BULLETIN A year ago, both major leagues issued strongly worded bulletins aimed at the bean ball. They react as follows: "Umpires are hereby instructed to warn a pitcher if he throws a ball close to a batter, if they think it was done intentionally. If he does it again, he is to be put out of the ball game and the league office notified. "For a second offense the pitcher is to be suspended for ten (10) days without pay. "For a third offense the pitcher is to be suspended for thirty (30) days without pay." It is a very beautiful bulletin, but I have yet to see an umpire warn a pitcher and I have never heard of an umpire in the major leagues putting a pitcher out of a game for merely throwing a bean ball although pitchers are sometimes chased after a rhubarb developing from throwing at hitters.

Since, technically, pitchers have never been found guilty of a first offense on the field, they cannot be found guilty of a second or a third offense. The weakness of the bulletin lies in the phrase, "if they (the umpires) think it was done intentionally." The umpires have responsibilities and duties enough without being asked to think, too. Actually, the umpires refuse to put themselves on record as mind readers and duck the responsibility for declaring a bean ball "deliberate" or "intentional." CHAIN OF "ACCIDENTS" The weight of circumstantial evidence makes no difference. At Ebbets Field the other night, Brooklyn's Gil Hodges had a really narrow escape. Sal Maglie of the Giants got a count of two strikes and balls.

This is the traditional setup for the bean ball or duster. The pitcher can afford to waste a pitch and he can use that waste pitch to "loosen up" the hitter. Maglie threw a fast hall that ball players call the most dangerous kind of a duster. It sailed behind the batter's head. This is a pitch that shakes the nerves of the steadiest hitters.

The tendency is to pull away from a close one. This is likely to result in a serious skulling with the ball pitched to this particular spot. "My heart was in my throat," admitted Umpire Larry Goetz. "I didn't, think Hodges could get away from the pitch." But Goetz treated the pitch as an accident. Later, Maglie almost hit Hodges again and he did hit Carl Furillo, who had two earlier hits, in the back with a fast ball.

The umpire refused to read the pitcher's mind but the Dodger bench maintained that Maglie's mind was an open book. THE "BRUSH BACK" After the battle at Boston, pitcher Chambers denied that he had thrown a bean ball at Torgeson. "I was just trying to brush him back," insisted the Pirate. This is the established explanation of a pitcher. Nobody can knock it down even though it knocks dozens of batters down.

I have even heard Pres. Frick declare, "Brushing a batter back is part of the game, but a bean ball has no place in baseball." This calls for a delicate distinction indeed. I don't see how a batter can be brushed back unless the ball is thrown close enough to scare him. And I don't think a batter is poing to be scared by a pitch that isn't aime'd at him. Scores ranged as high as 88 off Joe Page, Y'ankees' relief ace.

Only four putouts were recorded in the Cleveland outfield, three of them in the ninth. Newcombe obviously wasn't at his best. He passed six batsmen and the lone hitter he ana among the luckless shooters were four name players who'll have to scramble to reach the match play brackets. Henry Picard of Cleveland, win struck out was Ewell Blackwell, Wynn's most troublesome Fiore, undefeated in the past the Red starter. Double plays spot was the eighth when he10 months, is confident he can the Bushwickj this season.

Carl Braun, the visitors' ace righthander, who plays pro filled the bases with three of upset Costantino and gain ner in had 77; Lawson Little -of Monterey, had rescued him in the first two Innings. Four reckless Reds were thrown out on the bases in the recognition as contender in the basketball with the Knick's, op 1 Vic Ghezzi of lnwood, N. wicks meet the Philadelphia Meteors and irv Sunday's double-header, tackle the Ashevllle Blues of the Negro Southern League. The box score: Fllooni I Biuhwli-kf lb al ibih first three. A fine stop behind posed the Bushwicks.

After the winner in 1011, blew to 70 and 147-pound division. He has Tony Manero of Greenwich kayoed Joey Attria and Tom third by Billy Cox on Connie Ryan and a long throw across my Bazzano in the past two months. Costantino Is a favorite at the to Gil Hodges in the eighth prevented Cincinnati from tying it RVborieOb 5 0 0 3 3: If 503 30 former U. S. Open Champion, had an 81.

Most of the other tournament pros were close enough to slip in without expending great 4 3 3 3 1 up then and there. his five walks, hut Joe DiMag-gio, who last night got his safety, hit into a double play to end the threat. A 17-hit assault on five pitchers yesterday put the St. Louis Cardinals back into a first-place tie with a 14-to-0 victory over the New Y'ork Giants. Three players, catcher Del Rice with a triple and two singles, and Marty Marion and Bill Howerton with three Dllllncham.ll 4 13 10! Hanlaon.U 0 10 0 0 Oattte.lt 1 0 0 0 0 Big Newk was hit hard by Trtetet.2b 3 10 3 Ovaduko.cf 4 3 1 5 0 DIOraoe.lb 5 3 3 10 1 Cucoln lo.3b 3 10 0 3 Henry.rf 4 0 3 0 0 4 0 0 3 1 Brown ,0 4 0 1 5 1 Brooklyn club.

In his last start there he defeated Joey Carkido and last season scored a kayo McOarrhy.rf 4 3 3 4 0 Ted Kluszewski and Grady Hat- eirort. Bob Hamilton of Landover 5 13 11 JaeKer.lb 4 0 14 ton to open the second and the over Pete Kennedy. Smlth.ot 4 0 1 3 Bowe.p 3 0 0 0 0 Reds might have had him out The semi-final six will bring Lena.o 3000 100 00 100 00 Mor an a 0 0 0 3 0 tUflartjr winner in 194 Lloyd Man-grum of Niles, 111., and AI Brosch of Garden Citv, L. were tied with 10 others at Braun.p Hloa together Tony Johnson, East Side, and Hal Sampson in a re 3 1003 0 0 0 0 0 of there if Hatton hadn't tried to stretch his hit into a double and been laid by the heels on fifth inning he held the Bushwicks to but one hit and fanned five, whiffing the side in the sixth. The Bushwicks were leading 6 to 2 going into the sixth inning when George Dillingham tripled and Jerry McCarthy followed with a home run to make the score, 6 to 4.

In the top half of the eighth, the Falcons scored two more runs to tie the game. Fatal Ninth Then came the ninth with one out, Connie Ricci beat out an infield hit; Gatzke batted for Harrison and popped to first for the second out. Ricci stole second; Jerry McCarthy was turn match. The pair fought a ToUll 37 11 27 10 Total 38 8 9 27 It Hint batted for Lens In 8th Inning. Raflerty batted for TTiebel In 9th Innlna-.

even par 72; Snead also had 72 Duke Snider's rifle peg to Pee wee Reese. although he qualified automati ralcona. Riverhead 10100202 3 9 Bushwtckj 3 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 0 8 singles apiece, led the attack in draw three weeks ago. Tommy which every Cardinal hut Tipping of Glasgow, Scotland, pitchers Max Lanier and Gerry faces Tony Allegro, Bronx, in Staley hit safely. Stalev re-1 another six.

Three fours com- Gene Hermanskt, Snider and Buna batted In By Dllllnrham, McCarthy Yastremikt, Jaeger 3, DlOrac. Cucelneilo. Robinson batted across cally for match play because he is defending champion. During the first day's firing, the field was 537 strokes over lieved Lanier in the fifth the card, a trio of tallies in the third and Henry 3. Errora By Yutrenukl.

Jaeger, Smith 2, Braun, Zachary. Two-baaa hits McCarthy, Yaatremakl Thrm-bx hlu Oil. llnrham, Jaeger, DKraoe. Home run McCarthy. Stolen bcuea Hied.

Horai. Brown. Buea Lefty Max got into a jam with Promoter George Sheppard the National League champions par. here were only five racked up another in the fifth eagles and 230 birdies. on balia Off Braun 4, Bow 3, Zachary 3.

Struck out By Braun 7, Bowt 5. Wild Ditch while the Reds were executing uraun. sdi orr bow 7 In 7 1-3. Zachary a twin killing on Ilermanski 4 In 1 2-3. Losing pitcher Zachary.

Umpire DODGER BATTING Newcombe blew two-thirds of Hopklni, Bergen and ZaIMr. Tun of gam 2 hours, 33 minute. passed, and Zachary, in trying his lead in the eighth when Ted at Dexter Park held over his rained-out card intact from last week because of the interest, the De Marco-Andrews bout created in advance sales. De Marco, in line for a bout with Ike Williams for the lightweight crown, has a more balanced style of attack than heretofore, and Jimmy Dion, his manager, believes Paddy is Kluszewski drove in a couple to pick Ricci off second base threw into center field, Ricci of twinkling Redlegs with double to left center. McCarthy in Hotel Bed With Attack of Flu scoring; uari xastremekt sin out retiring a man and went on to gain the victory, his sixth.

The win ended a four-game Cardinal losing streak. For the Giants Whitey Lock-man kept up his terrific hitting with a homer and two singles. The Giants have announced the signing of Willie Mays, 19-year-old Negro outfielder. Mays was assigned to the Giants' Trenton farm club in the Class Inter State League. Described by the Giant front office as a ball hitter" he stands 5 feet 11 inches and weighs 170 pounds.

The Dodgers might have Chicago, June 21 (U.R) Joe made their eighth a big round if Robinson hadn't turned third gled McCarthy to third and Norman Jaeger tripled to score both McCarthy and Yastremeki. The Bushwicks record to date stands at 17 wins and 5 losses. McCarthy, manager of the Boston Red Sox, was confined to his hotel here yesterday with ready for a chance at the title. He has won five bouts this Player ib 2d 3b hrrbt pet. Robloaen 54 204 42 74 23 3 5 36 .363 Snider 53 215 42 72 8 2 12 35 .335 Hermanakl 24 SO 5 18 4 1 9 .320 Bankhead 11 26 381000 .308 Farlll 54 229 30 8 2 4 34 .301 Campanella 46 150 30 45 4 3 14 34 .300 Hodge 54 1B7 28 55 TO 1 5 33 .279 Rmwll 29 84 20 21 5 1 7 16 .250 Newcombe 13 28 3 7 1 0 0 4 .250 Fallra 13 4 2 1 0 0 0 0 29 117 16 29 8 0 2 12 .248 Brown 10 13 1 3 I 0 1 1 .2:11 Rreae 40 155 2 11 6 1 2 15 .228 Morran 38 11.1 21 24 5 2 3 13 .212 Shahs 31 106 14 22 6 2 3 12 .206 Barner 13 5 0 1 1 0 0 0 .200 Bnt 16 12 1 2 0 0 0 2 .167 Pndhlflm 14 19 131001 .158 Fdwirdt 16 45 4 7 1 0 2 6 .1" Rh 13 34 3 5 1 A 0 1 .147 Mlkulf 24 43 4 I 0 0 2 .116 Hattrn 9 jo 210000 .100 Branc 12 14 1 1 0 0 1 2 .071 I-Mi 2 0100000 .000 Relardl 3 3000000 .000 on Carl Furillo's infield hit and been trapped by Virgil Stall-cup's heads-up throw.

He led the Reds a merry chase and a combined attack of pleurisy and influenza. Tomorrow night, the Bush year. Edwards, who has boxed with success locally and in New England, packs a good wallop. In the semi-final six, Freddie scrambled back but they let him go because Furillo was al ready on the bag. MAJOR LEAGUE RECORDS Mays, who was graduated, Smith faces Joe Aponte Torres, from high school yesterday.

while heavyweights Joe Orgen Brooklyn had the equalizer on played with the Birmingham and jimmy wails meet in an- Black Barons for a year and other six. Three fours are also second in their half of the ninth with one out, but Howie Fox, the fifth Cincinnati hurler, left half. I listed. J.L,. National League YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Cincinnati 6, Brooklyn 5.

St. Louis 14, New York 6. Pittsburgh 5, Philadelphia 3 American League YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Cleveland 5, New Y'ork 1. Chicago 3, Boston 1. Washington 12, Detroit 4.

Philadelphia 4. St. Louis 2. it there. Willie Ramsdell re ceived credit for the win, pitch ROBBY SETS FANS STRAIGHT night ing to only two batters.

This was the first time Newcombe night. set him Elks. The kid rooters sat In Chicago 3, Boston 0, night. STANDING OF THE TEAMS W. L.

Pet. G.B has failed to finish against the Reds. He was shooting for his sixth straight victory. silent sorrow whiie the Dodgers ingloriously blew the game in the ninth. Brooklyn 33 21 STANDING Detroit New Y'ork St.

Louis 33 21 Plea to Keep Don Newcombe in Box After Don Newcombe had a am Philadelphia 31 22 .611 .611 .585 .536 .519 WANTED! 1 RELIEF PITCHER If Sf is 1V4 4 5 i X' Cleveland I Brooklyn Boston 30 26 Chicago 27 25 OP THE V. L. 37 17 38 20 32 25 32 29 26 31 24 33 20 35 20 39 TEAMS Pet G.B. .685 .655 1 .561 525 .456 12M .421 144 .364 174 .339 194 al itrh ti Cincinnati sferrtmkn.cf 5 2 Carl Furillo's 10-game hitting streak was in the gravest danger of being broken while Ewell Blackwell was on the mound. Furillo doesn't like Blackwell's side-arm delivery.

"I've made two hits off the guy in five vears," confessed Boston New York 25 A heavy morning shower left the infield muddy in spots. Sewell shook up his batting order to shake his Reds out of a seven-game losing streak, walked Bobby Adams in the ninth inning at Ebbets Field Lowrm- If Pittsburgh 21 27 .481 7 36 .386 1VA 38 .206 17 Cincinnati 16 Washington Chicago St. Louis Philadelphia yesterday and Coach Clyde Sukeforth, under instructions TODAY'S GAMES the Reading Muscle Man gloom-j ily while Blackwell was warm-; from Manager Burt Shotton, leading off w'th Lloyd Merri-man and restoring Stallcup to shortstop favor. H. IJ.

1 1 0 Cox, 3b 4 0 1 0 2 1 2 0 00 0 0 1 2 5 2 3 0 1 2 9 2 Sntder.cf 211 11 1 0 3 Roblnaon.2b 4 0 2 1 7 0 3 3, Furlllo.rr 40 1 2 0 1 6 HHodgea.lb 4 0 0 14 2 0 0 0, 3 0 0 4 2 OOOIcMlksta 0 00 0 0 0 1 Oj Reeae.au 3 11 4 3 1 2 4: Newrombe.p 3 10 13 001 Banta. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 00 0 0 0 0 1 iia-shub 100 00 000! 0 0 Tolala 33 3 9 27 21 0 0 Cincinnati (Wehmeter 3-8) at Wyroatek.rf Kliiar kl.lb Ryn 2b Srhefllng.c Ramsdeil.p aAdania Howell. SlalicMp.sa Blarltwe.l.p Pramcaa.c Smith, Fox.p came up the dugout steps to ing up. Brooklyn (Bankhead 5-2 1:30 p.m. replace the big righthander; He didn't get the ball out of with Jack BanM.

Jackie Robin-i'hc infield the three times he MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS St. Louis (Pollet 6-1 and Mun- faced the slender Redleg, gcr at New ork (Koslo 6-5 and Jansen 6-4). (2). 1:30 although on his last try he hit. NATIONAL I.EAGLE Player and Club Muslal.

6f, Louia Roblnaon, Rronklvn ft AB .11 1H3 42 70 Pet .370 p.m. 54 204 42 .36:1 the ball hard, hut right at Connie Ryan. Furillo got his steak-i Lorkman, New York A.1 224 77 .344 LV4, -L Tot! 32 6 8 27 IS a-Waiked for RamAdell In 9lh. b-Ran for Prameaa in Oth. C-Ran for Campaneila In 9th.

-Struck wit for Port bielan In 8th. -Walked lor Co In 8th. 54 212 30 73 344 St. LouU Snider, Brooklyn S3 213 41 72 son joined in the conference out on the mound. To many of the 8,580 watching fans it looked as if Robinson was making a plea for Newcombe to stay in the game.

"No. Sir, I wouldn't do a thing like that" Jackie made denial TODAY'S GAMES New York (Ostrowski 2-4) at Cleveland (Feller 6-5). 2 p.m. Boston (Parnell 5-6) at Chicago (Scarborough 6-6). Philadelphia (Shantz 4-6) at St.

Louis (Overmire 2-3), night. Washington (Kuzava 2-5) at Detroit (Gray 7-2). TOMORROW'S GAMES New York at Detroit, 8:30 p.m. Boston at St. Louis, night.

Washington at Cleveland, night. Philadelphia at Chicago, night. AMERICAN LEAGUE Pittsburgh (Dickson 2-7) at Philadelphia (Simmons 8-4). (Only games scheduled). TOMORROW'S GAMES Pittsburgh at Brooklyn, saving mi on namsueii in me eighth on a ball that Virgil Stallcup had no play on the batter.

-0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 3 6 -0 0 3 0 1 0 0 1 0 55 125 40 R5 48 201 38 7J 53 177 35 S3 Cincinnati Brooklyn Kell. Detroit Drojjo, Boaton Doby, Cleveland Evera. Detroit Zartiia. Boston i 47 1R9 38 .349 48 189 34 S3 .333 p.m. in the dressing "I just But a Dodger team skein was thoueht I had something.

I shattered when Brooklyn didn't HOME RUN8 Wllllama, Bed Bog 20; Roftpn, Indiana 17; Dropo. Red Sox 15; Stephen. Red Sox 13; Campanella, Dodgera 14; Kiner, Plratea H. Rl'NS BAT1KO IN Stephen. Red Rot thoueht that Aoams had batted hit a home run all afternoon Cincinnati at New York, 8:30 p.m.

St. Louis at Boston, night. Chicago at Philadelphia, night. Errora Atallrup, Blackwell, Reeae, Robinson. Hutu batted In Hatton, Hermankal.

Snider. Roblnaon 2. Kluazeaakl 2, Lowrey 3 Two baae hue Hermanakl. Kluezewakl 2. Snider, lowrey.

Stolen baaea Reeae, Roblnaon Sacrifices Reeee. Double playa Roblnson-Reefe-Hodrea. Reeae-Roblnaon-Hodeea, Ryan-f-'tallcup-KluaJ'e-Aflki, Left on basea Cincinnati 7, Brooklyn 8. Base on balla Oil Blackwell 1, Fox 1, Newcombe 8, Banta 2. Struck out by Blackwell 6.

Fox 1. Newcombe 1. Hits and runa Off Blackwell 8 and 4 In 7 Innings. Perkowskl 2 and 1 In I'll Inning. Ramsdell 1 and 0 In 23 Innlna.

out of turn." or more had been made in The Reds had put in a newneir last 11 games battery in the eighth of Willie 67, Red Sox 65, Drooo. Red Sox! SR. Weaz. Tillers 38; 52. Rl'NS Williams.

Red Sox 59: SteTinena, Rrd Sox 55- Peskv, Red Sox 54, Jethroe, Bravea 49; Kell, Tlgera 43. HITS Bell. Tigers 85: Lnekman. Otanta! Smith 0 and 0 In 1 3 Inning. Fox 0 and 0 Ramsdell and Dixie Howell.

Rut instead of Willie, the Knuck, batting in the departed pitcher's spot Ramsdell hit for In 2 3 Inning. Newcombe 6 and 4 In 8 In nlnga (none out In fithl. Banta 0 and 1 Robinson stole his fourth base of the year three of 'em in the last three days. Added to tha cash customers were 1,250 orphans, the guests HE DID ENOUGH DAMAGE Left fielder Peanuts Low-rey of the Cincinnati Reds is out attempting to score from second on Wyrostek's single in the ninth inning against the Dodgers. Catcher Roy Campanella makes the tag.

Lowrey had just socked three-run double which enabled the Reds to trim the Dodgers, 6 5. In 0 lunlnga, Podblelan 2 and 0 In 1 Inning. Hit by pitcher Bv Smith (Campanella). Winning pltohor Rafltadell f3 71. Loalnj pitcher Bant (4 41.

Umpire 77; Llpon. Tlrer.1 4, Roblnaon, Dodfera 74; Svrphena, Red Box 74. PITrlllNO Miller. Phllllea 5-0: Byrne, Tankeea 8-1: Robert, Phllllei 8-3; Hlller, Cuba 4-1; Konatanty, Phllllea 4-1 Braxl. Card! 4-1; Hanford, Tankeea 4-1: McDer-mott, Red Sox, 4-1; Trout, Tlgera, 4-1, Johnny Pramesa.

the catcher, manager switched his lineup to Jotda, Goetl and DraaevU. That 2.33. AUetmanc 8,580 Paid. THURSDAY, JUNE 22, 1950 23 the confusion of Robinson of the Brooklyn Lodge of the.

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