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Sunday News from Lancaster, Pennsylvania • 33

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Sunday Newsi
Location:
Lancaster, Pennsylvania
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33
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2 2 2 2 00 0 0 LANCASTER ELIMINATES CARDS FROM PLAYOFFS Yanks Boost Lead; Giants Cut Dodgers' Margin Bombers Shade, White Sox; Red Sox Nose Out Indians CHICAGO, Sept. 13 (A)-The nosed a game and a half ahead Indians in their torrid pennant ing the Chicago White Sox, 6-5, Raschi (16-5). LP Grissom (11-9). McGowan. U- Froese, Stevens, Summers and relief pitching of Allie Reynolds sharp hitting.

The victory, coupled with Cleveland's 4-3 loss to Boston, gained a full game for the Yankees, whose ace Reynolds came in with Sox on second and first in the ninth with none out and cleaned up things with only one score and not a ball hit out of the infield. Fans 13 But Loses Luckless loser Marv Grissom, 35-year-old righthander, struck out 13 to tie the American League's season high, but gave up 12 hits. Reynolds came in after Johnny Sain, who had replaced starter and victor Vic the start of the sixth, weakened in the last two innings and nearly drained away a 6-3 lead. Second sacker Billy Martin, for the second straight day, belted a- cross three runs. He singled across the third Yankee run in the fourth for a 3-1 New York lead and settled the issue in the eighth by punching a two-run single through the box to make it 6-3.

Reynolds to Rescue Rivera singled to open the White Sox ninth and when Sherman Lollar poked another single the crowd of 25,542 began to roar. Reynolds came in to supplant Sain. Reynolds got Hee Rodriguez to roll to short for a force play on Willie Miranda who ran for Lollar. Eddie Stewart also tapped an infield roller, this time forced, to second. and Rodriguez was scoring, to leave New York ahead 6-5.

"hen Reynolds got Chico Carrasquel on a bounder to third and the game was over. Raschi Wins 16th Raschi, who acquired his 16th win against five defeats, got out with only one run scored against him no the first on three Sox hits. In the fourth, Sam Mele poked his 16th following an error by Collins on Eddie Robinson's roller first to knot the score at 3-3. to After that, Sain did all right unthe, eighth when a three-hit clus11 produced another Sox run. Then ter the ninth and Sain's hasty came retreat.

The Yankees' game-deciding, out. Hank Bauer's walk and Gil eighth developed after two were McDougald's double set the stage for Martin's payoff single. Grissom, who had a 2-1 record the Yanks, gave his best today, but sloppy fielding hurt him. against His mates contributed two unearned Yankee runs before he left for a pinch-hitter in the eighth. Chuck Stobbs handled scoreless ninth.

New HOA AB York Chicago AB Collins, Mantle, 1b cf 4 0 4 1 Minoso, If 4 Rizzuto.ss go 0 3 4 5 6 0Fox, 2b Berra, 1Rob son, 1b 4 Noren, 1f 0 Stobbs, Bauer, rf 05 oMele. rf 1Rivera.cf 3 4 2 2 3 Johnson, 13 Martin.2b 1b Wright 0 Raschi, a Keller 0 0 Lollar, Sain. 0 0 Krsnich, 3b 0 Reynolds.p 0 0 0 0 Grissom.p cEdwards Stewart eBrown 0000 0 0000 38 13 27 11 Totals 34 10 27 Totals out strikes for Raschi in 6th. 8-Called on Sacrificed for Johnson in 7th. c-Flied out for Krsnich in 7th.

d-Singled for Grissom in in 9th. 8th. -Ran for Lollar in 9th. -Ran for Robinson e- -Ran for Robinson in 8th. -Ran for Lollar in 9th.

York 200 110 020-6 New 100 200 011-5 Chicago R-Collins 2. Mantle, Bauer 2. Mevera, Dougald, Stewart. Carrasquel, E--Fox. Robinson, Johnson, Mele, Collins.

RBI -Mantle, Berra, Minoso, Martin 3, Mele 2, Robinson Stewart. 23- Mele. Noren, SB- McDougald. Rivera. S-McDougald, 3B-Collins.

Wright, HR Mantle. -Martin, Rizzuto and Collins 2: Mantle and Berra. LB -New York 8, Sain Chicago 1. 5. SO- BB--Off Grissom 13, Raschi Raschi 1, 2, Sain 2.

Grissom -Grissom 12 in 8, Raschi 5 in 5, HO5 in 3 (faced 2 batters in 9th), Sain 1 in 1, Reynolds 0 in 1. WP.Stobbs The Observer By George Crudden LANCASTER Red Roses THE have never lost a Governor's Cup or a Shaughnessy run-off in the Interstate League's post-season competition. The Roses have competed in four I-S play-offs and have won every one. The local club's unique record is without parallel not only in the Interstate League but perhaps in all of baseball. The local team won its way into the playoffs in 1940, 1943, 1944 and 1945 and swept the whole four meetings.

In 1940 the Roses finished fourth in the regular race. In the semi-finals George Crudden Cy Perkins's club defeated Wilmington 3 games to 1, and in the finals smashed Reading 4 games to 1. In 1943 Woodie Wheaton led the Roses to the regular season title, and in the semi-finals the locals once more eliminated Wilmington 3 to 2 and then outlasted York in the finals 4 games to 3. In 1944, Lena Blackburne's first year here the Roses finished 4th for play-off berth and then in the semi- againes trounced Wilmington three to none, the Cup 4 games to Allentowns the and then topped for Roses captured the regular season race, and then beat Trenton 4 games 3 to qualify for the finPage 36-OBSERVER SUNDAY NEWS SPORTS THE SUNDAY NEWS, SEPTEMBER 14, 1952-33 CHICAGO, Sept. 13-MANTLE SCORES FOR YANKS- New York Yankees Center Fielder Mickey Mantle (right) skids into home plate to score on Yogi Berra's single to right in first inning at Comiskey Park today.

Chicago White Sox Catcher Darrell Johnson (47) has ball in his hand after taking throw too late from Sam Mele in right field. (AP Wirephoto) Cards Defeat Dodgers, 5-2, Behind Sensational Rookie BROOKLYN, Sept. 13 (AP) Stu Miller, precocious rookie righthander of the St. Louis Cardinals, stalled Brooklyn's National League pennant drive today as he pitched the Redbirds to a 5-2 victory over the Dodgers. The defeat cut Brooklyn's lead over the runner-up New York Giants to three games.

The Giants advanced by nosing out the Cincinnati Reds, 3-2. Miller also played a leading role in the Cards' 11-hit attack against recruit lefthander Ken Lehman and two relief pitchers, driving in three runs on a single and ground ball. Only Four Hits The youngster's vast assortment of pitches completely baffled the Dodgers who managed to solve his offerings for only four hits. Miller walked only two and fanned eight in gaining his fifth victory of his brief major league career. Brooklyn led only once, in the first inning, when it scored once with the help of two errors.

With one out Peewee Reese was safe on a bobble by shortstop Solly Hemus. After Duke Snider struck out, Reese stole second and continued on to third when catcher Del Rice's throw sailed into center field. Jackie Robinson then dropped a surprised bunt down the first base line to score Reese. Drives In 2 Runs The Cards forged ahead for keeps in the second inning when Miller singled with the bases loaded and two out to drive in two runs. The Cards, wrapped it up with two more the fourth.

Enos Slaughter singled and moved to third when Robinson erred on Lowrey's low liner. Miggins doubled off the scoreboard in right field to drive in Slaughter and chase Lehman in favor of Jim Hughes, a recent acquisition from Montreal. Robinson Makes Miscue However, Robinson failed to cover second quickly enough and the Hal Rice Lowrey scored. Dodgers managed, only to force Hemus walked to re the bases but Red Schoendienst flied out to Page 36-CARDS St. Louis Brooklyn AB 0 AB Hemus.

ss 0 Furillo, rf 3 Sch'd'st, 2b 0 3 3 Reese, 88 4 Musial, 1b 4 0 10 0 Snider, cf 0 Rob'son. 2b Lowrey, cf 0 Pafko, If Miggins.If 2 0 0 Benson.3b 0 3 Hodges, lb Glav 3b Cox, 3b H. Rice. 1f 0 Lehman, D. Rice.

3 Hughes. 0 Miller, 4 3 a Nelson 1 0 Wade. 00 0 0 Totais 37 11 27 10 Totals 30 27 -Popped out for Hughes in 7th. Louis $020 201 000-4 Brooklyn 100 100 000--2 R- Slaughter, Lowrey Miggins. D.

Rice. Reese, Campanella. D. Rice, Robinson, Miller, Benson. RBIRobinson, Miller 3, Miggins, Schoendienst.

2. Hodges, Slaughter. SBand Reese. S- -Furillo. LB--St.

DP-Robinson. Brooklyn Reese Hodges. BB--Off Miller 2. Lehman 2. Hughes Wade 1.

SO-Miller 8. Lehman 2. Wade HO -Lehman 5 in 3 (none out in 4th). Hughes 5 in 4. Wade 1 in 2.

PB Campanella. WP-Miller LP -Lehman 10-2): -Engeln. Boggess, Jackowski Pinelli. A- Giants Beat Reds, 3-2, Cut Lead To 3 Games STRANAHAN AND WARD TO MEET IN GOLF FINALS CHICAGO, Sept. 13.

-Frank Stranahan and Harvie Ward swept through the Western Amateur Golf semi-finals today to set up a championship feud prolonged since when the two rivals tangled at Prestwick, Scotland. The 25-year-old Ward, at that time, trounced Frank 6 and 5 in the finals of the British Amateur. The Toledo Star has been seeking revenge in a major meeting ever since. The 36-hole title match starting at 9:30 a.m. EST tomorrow developed into a natural when Stranahan, the defending champern Amateur crown, played a ion and seeking his our fourth Westgame of constant, brilliant recovery shots to defeat Robert Knowles, Beverly Farms, 4 and 2.

Ward, the consistent Atlantan who won the 1949 National Intercollegiate crown, made the duel complete in the other 36 hole I match by eliminating Dale Morey, Martinsville, 3 and 2. It will be the fourth match-play competitive bout between Stranahan, 30, and the handsome Ward. Ward downed the Toledo strong boy 1 up to win the 1948 North and South Amateur crown. Stranahan beat Ward 2 in the same finals the next year. Then last June, Harvie trounced Frank in the British Amateur.

Knowles, a Walker Cup player and French champion, frittered away a 3 up lead after the first nine holes in the morning and was only 1-up entering the second round. Stranahan squared it on the 19th with a birdie 4 and went 1- up on the 21st with another birdie by planting a No. 6 iron approach two feet from the cup. From there on, Frank never let his 38-year-old opponent off the hook as he piled up a 3-up margin after 27 holes while Knowles was wandering from trees to traps. Morey, current Indiana State Amateur and Open champion, started out as determinedly as Knowles and had Ward 3 down after the first nine.

But Ward then won the next four holes with two pars and a pair of birdies and eventually climbed 3 up at the turn. NEW YORK, saved Sept. 13 Young Hoyt Wilhelm the day again today and the New York Giants shaved their deficit in the National League race to three games by overcoming the Cincinnati Reds, 3-2, before a crowd of 8,843 at the Polo Grounds. ing Combined Brooklyn with Dodgers' the league defeat at the hands of the St. Louis Cardinals, the Giants' victory gained Leo Durocher's men a full game in the pennant chase.

red But for the second day in a row, the story was Wilhelm, the remarkable youngster who made his 64th appearance of the year for the New Yorkers. Wilhelm Called After Monte Kennedy began to feel the pace, Wilhelm strode the mound the seventh with one Redleg out and Johnny Temple, who had a singled, on first. He proceeded to put down the threat by forcing Bobby Adams to ground out to Bob Elliott, who was filling in at third base for injured Hank Thompson. Wilhelm then struck out Willard Marshall. That have ended had any of hopes Re may overcoming the Giants, and they wound up the day's proceedings with just four hits.

Elliott Drives in Run The Giants scored the winning run in the sixth when Alvin Dark opened with a scratch single, went second on Whitey Lockman's sacrifice and held up when Monte Irvin flied out. Thomson passed intentionally and Elliott singled to left sending Dark across and that was it. The two starters, Joe Nuxhall of the Reds and Bill Connelly of Page 36-GIANTS Cincinnati New York Temple, 2b AB 5 .0 A AB 0 Hofman. 2b 4 Adams.3b 3 0 3 3 Dark, ss 2 5 3 2 0 L'ckm'n, 1b Klus'ski, 1b 2 1 Irvin, If 4 0 Adcock. 11 3 0 0 Elliott.

3b M' 2 3 Hartung.rf Landrith, 0 Yvars, Nuxhall, 0 0 0 0 Westrum.c 0 1 2 0 0 2 0 aPel'g'ini 1 0 0 0 Kennedy.p 0 Schmitz, 0 0 Wilhelm.p 0 bHatton 1000 Totals 30 4 24 10 Totals 27 5 27-10 a--Fanned for Perkowski in 7th. b- Flied out for Schmitz in 9th. Cincinnati 200 000 000-2 New York 200 001 00x-3 R- Marshall. Dark 2. E- Kluszewski.

RBI-Marshall, Greengrass Thomson Elliott. S- Lockman, Wilhelm. Temple, McMillan and Kluszewski: Kennedy, Elliott and Lockman. LB- Cincinnati 7. New York 6.

BB Off Nuxhall 2. Perkowski 1. Schmitz 1. Connelly 3. nedy 3.

2. Schmitz nedy 3. HO-Nuxhall 2 in 1-3. Perkowski 2 in 5 2-3, Schmitz 1 in 2. Connelly 1 in 1 (none out in 2nd), Kennedy 3 in 5 1-3.

Wilhelm 0 in 2 2-3. Wild PB- Yvars. -Kennedy (3-4), LP- -Perkowski (12-9). U-Ballanfant, Barlick, Gorman and Donatelli, A AHL Will Adopt Schedule Mon. ST.

LOUIS, Sept. 13. (P)-The American Hockey League board of governors will take up the schedule for the coming season at a special meeting Monday at Buffalo, N.Y. Emory Jones, president of the league, said today he will present drafts of two one Real Delight, Next Move, Winners By JOHN CHANDLER NEW daughters YORK, of Bull Sept. 13 did (P Lea themselves proud today as Calumet Farms Real Delight and Alfred Gwynne Vanderbilt's Next Move won split divisions of the rich Beldame Handicap at Aqueduct.

Next Move had an easy time in the first section, hitting the wire three lengths: before the closest pursuer, had to survive a claim of foul before dragging down $43,400 from a gross pot of $62,000. It was a different story in the second division, as Real Delight and Eddie Arcaro had a battle right down to the finish before the Calumet star won in the final few jumps. They made it, however, and Real Delight's share of the $62,000 in this scramble was $42,400. Both were timed in 1:51 flat on a fast track. old daughter of Bull Real Delight, a bay three year light, got home three-quarters of a length ahead of the Woodvale Farms Marta with Marian O'Connor's La Corredora third in the field of nine fillies and mares in the second division.

Arcaro, had Mrs. the S. V. Calumet Zauderers flyer Gay Grecque set the pace for about mile before running out of steam. La Corredora took the lead in the stretch run, but Edwas hammering away on Real Delight, and she finally made it.

Kiss Me Kate was fourth, followed by Busanda, Valadium, Gay Grecque, Parading Lady, and Libba in the mile and eighth affair. Real Delight paid $3.20, $2.70 and $2.40 and had highweight of 126 pounds. Next Move won the Beldame in 1950. It seemed for about 15 minutes they might take her number down this time after jockey Nick Wall riding Clifford Moor's Miss Traffic claimed a foul against Eric Guerin, aboard the Vanderbilt mare. But after studying the movies, they let the result stand.

Eagles Upset Los Angeles By 35 To 14 Count BY RALPH BERNSTEIN PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 13 (P)- Big Adrian Burk outmaneuvered the Los Angeles Rams and their vaunted passing duo, Bob Waterfield and Norman Van Brocklin, to lead the Philadelphia Eagles to a 35-14 victory today in a National Football League exhibition game. A crowd of 35,000 sat in 95-degree heat--the hottest Sept. 13 in Philadelphia history to watch the 15th annual Philadelphia Inquirer charities pro football promotion. The Rams scored first in the opening quarter when Andy Robustelli blocked Burk's punt in the end zone and recovered for the six points.

Waterfield converted the first of his two extra points. The Eagles struck back to tie in the same period when Bob Stringer intercepted no Waterfield pass and returned 35 yards to the Rams' four from where Jim Parmer smashed over. Bob Wolston kicked the first of his five extra points. The half in a 14-14 tie with Los Angeles' second TD coming on four-play 80-yard drive, climaxed by a Van Brocklin's pass to Dan Towler. The Eagles scored on Burk's one-yard quarterback sneak with two seconds left in the half.

Philadelphia, winning its first game under new Coach Jim Trimble, completely outclassed the Rams in the second half, scoring twice in the third period on touchdowns by John Huzbar and Pete Pihos. and one in the fourth on a 63-yard drive in which Parmer went the final seven yards. LOS 7 7 0 0-14 PHILADELPHIA 7 7 14 7--35 Los scoring: Touchdowns- Robustelli, Towler. Conversions -Waterfield 2. Philadelphia scoring Touchdowns- 2, Burk, Huzbar, Conversions- -Walston 5.

Jones' Homer In 9th Wins For New of scrap on and York Yankees the Cleveland today by shadthe masterful Billy Martin's CLEVELAND, inning homer tory over the the Tribe a New York in race. Pennant Picture (By The Associated Press) NATIONAL LEAGUE Pet. G.B. G.L. Brooklyn York 89 52 .631 13 86 55 .610 3 13 Remaining games: Brooklyn at home (10) Boston 3.

Cincinnati 2, Philadelphia 3, Pittsburgh 2. Away (3) Boston 3. New York at home (10) Boston 3, Chicago Philadelphia 3, St. Louis 2. Away (3) Philadelphia 3, AMERICAN LEAGUE Pet.

G.B. G.L. New York 85 57 .599 12 Cleveland 84 59 ,587 112 Remaining games: New York home (3) Philadelphia Detroit 3. Away (9) Boston 3, Cleveland 1, 2, Philadelphia 3. Cleveland at home (9) Detroit a 4, New York 1, Washington 2, Chicago 2.

Away (2) Detroit 2. Standing of Teams By The Associated Press National League Won Lost Pet. Behind Brooklyn .89 52 .631 New York 86 55 .610 3 St. Louis 81 60 .574 8 Philadelphia 76 65 .539 13 Chicago .71 73 .493 Cincinnati .63 79 444 27 Boston 62 79 .440 Pittsburgh 40 105 .276 51 American League Won Lost Pet. Behind New York 85 57 .599 Cleveland 84 59 .587 Chicago 74 68 .521 11 Boston 73 68 .518 Washington .73 70 .510 Philadelphia .73 70 .510 St.

Louis .58 83 .411 Detroit 48 93 .340 SATURDAY'S RESULTS By The Associated Press American League New York 6, Chicago 5 Philadelphia 11, Detroit 5 Boston 4, Cleveland 3 (10 innings) (Only games scheduled) National League New York 3 Cincinnati 2 St. Louis 5, Brooklyn 2 Boston 8. Pittsburgh 0 (Only games scheduled) PROBABLE PITCHERS By The Associated Press American League New York at Cleveland (12:30 p.m.)Lopat (8-5) V8. Garcia (20-9). Boston at p.m.)Trout (9-11) adn Nixon vs.

Dorish (8-4) and Rogovin (13-9). Philadelphia St. Louis-(2) P.m. Littlefield -Shantz (1-4) (22-7) and Bearden Keliner (7-6), (11-12) Washington at Detroit- (2:30 p.m.) -Marrero 110-7) vs. Gray (12-14).

National League Cincinnati at p.m.)Wehmeier (7-11) vs. Rutherford (6-6), St. Louis at New York- (1:30 p.m.)Haddix (1-1) or Brazle (12-4) Vs. Koslo (9-6). Chicago at Boston-(2) (12:30 p.m.)Klippstein (9-12) and Schultz (5-3) vs.

Wilson (12-11) and Surkont (11-12), Pittsburgh at p.m.) -Waugh (1-5) and Hogue (1-6) Vs. Simmons (11-8) and Meyer (11-13). Aga's Tuylar Is Winner Of 176th St. Leger Race DONCASTER, England, Sept. 13 (P)-Tulyar, the Aga Khan's compact brown three-year-old colt, made clean sweep of Britain's flat racing classics today when he sped to victory in the 176th running of the St.

Leger. With a crowd of about 250,000, including Queen Elizabeth, looking on, Tulyar swept around the field from a boxed position on the rail to breeze home a three-length vietor in the one mile, six furlong and 132 yard grind for three-yearolds. Earlier in the year, Tulyar, the hot favorite at 10-11, captured the English Derby at Epsom Downs. The win made it seven vicetories in seven starts this year for Tulyar who is far in front as British racing's all-time record money winner. The race was worth $44,577 to the Aga Khan, one of the richest men in the world, and it boosted Tulyar's total earnings to 808.

The winner was clocked in 3:07 4-5 for the distance. Smirke always had his mount in an advantagious position for the late run with which Tulyar has won virtually all his races. Sept. 13. (A) Ted Lepcio's, 10th gave the Boston Red vicCleveland Indians today and dropped and behind first place the hot American League pennant The Boston victory, coming as the Yankees defeated the Chicago White Sox 6-5, snapped Cleveland's winning streak at nine games.

Lepcio, who also scored two other runs, belted Bob Lemon's 3-1 pitch over the left field fence with two out in the top of the 10th after the Tribe had scrambled from behind to tie the game at three-all in the seventh. Lepcio Has Some Luck There was no doubt about Lepcio's fourth homer of the season. But his two previous runs were aided by less than perfect fielding. In the second. he doubled to the barrier in left field and scored on two flys.

The ball hit the barrier low enough so that possibly it could have been caught had Dale Mitchell decided to take a chance. His other run--in the sixth-was helped by the wind. His high popper got away from Al Rosen in back of third and went for a double. From there he scored on Sam White's double down the left field line. Dom DiMaggio singled off Lemon's glove in the third and scored the other Sox run.

Billy Goodman singled him to third and then Al Zarilla grounded to Luke Easter at first. Easter elected to touch first before trying to cut off the run and the throw was late to the plate. Easter Hits 30th Ellis Kinder, who pitched perfect ball for 4 2-3 innings, held the Tribe masterfully in check until the seventh. But then Larry Doby singled over second and big Luke Easter slugged Kinder's next throw 335 feet into the right field stands. It was Easter's 30th homer of the year and tied him with Doby for the league lead.

Still in that inning, Rosen lined a single to left and scored on a bunt and a fly out. When Harry Simpson tried to sacrifice, Lepcio threw wild to second, attempting to force Rosen. Johnny Lipon jumped for the ball and came down on Rosen as the ball rolled into center field. Interference Ruled Umpire Jim Duffy ruled Lipon had interfered with Rosen and Indian on to third. Pinch- hitter Bill Glynn's fly scored him.

After that Lemon settled down, putting the Sox down in order in the eighth and ninth. He had two outs in the 10th when Lepcio connected. Maurice McDermott, who relieved Kinder in the eighth, got credit for the victory. It was his ninth against nine losses. For Lemon it was the 11th loss against 19 wins.

Boston Cleveland AB 0 AB DiM' gio, cf 5 3 1 Mitchell.If Good' an, 2b 5 2 5 3 Westl'ke, If 1 Zarilla, rf 5 1 5 0 Avila, 2b 4 0 1 Evers, If 4 0 3 0 Doby, cf 4 1 Lepcio, 3b 5 3 2 0 Easter, 1b 12 White, 5 2 5 0 Rosen, 3b Gernert, 1b 4 0 6 0 Simpson. rf 0 Lipon, SS 2 0 2 Tipton, 0 Kinder, 00 1 aMcCosky 1 0 0 0 Hegan, Boone, SS Totals 39 9 30 7 Totals 36 7 30 8 bGlynn Lemon, cMajeski 0 1 0 0 a--Popped out for Tipton in 7th. b-Flied out for Boone in 7th. -Popped out for Lemon in 10th. Boston ..011 001 100 Cleveland .000 000 300 0--3 R- DiMaggio, Lepcio 3, Doby, Easter, Rosen.

E-Lepcio. RBI-Gernert, Zarilla, White, Easter 2, 2, White Glynn, 2. Lepcio. HR-Easter, 23 Goodman, Lepcio cio. S- Avila.

DP--DiMaggio and Gernert. LB- Boston 8, Cleveland 5. BB--Off MeDermott 1, Lemon 3. SO -Kinder 4, McDermott 1. Lemon 8.

HO -Kinder 6 in 7 1-3, McDermott 1 in 2 1-3. PB-Tipton. WPMcDermott (9-9). LP Lemon (19-11). U- Berry, A Paparella, Duffy and Rommel.

T- 3:01, Chandler Plans Baseball Tourney TOKYO, Sept. 13 (INS)- A. B. "Happy" Chandler, former big league baseball commissioner, said today he is international baseball tourney, to promote good will among nations. Chandler, address before the America Society in Tokyo, said intends to invite 10 nations to take part in the tourney which will be held in Brooklyn at Ebbets Field.

Chandler, now International Baseball Congress Commissioner, arrived in Tokyo yesterday with the Fort Myers, Colonials, American contenders for the interhemispheric non professional championship. Snead Takes 3-Stroke Lead In Eastern Golf BALTIMORE, Sept. 13 (P)-Sam Snead turned on the steam today to leave the field in the dust at the three-quarter mark of the Eastern Open with a three stroke lead over his closest pursuer. The golf craftsman from White Sulphur Springs, W. birdied his way to a four-under par 68 and 54-hole total of 206, 10 strokes better than par for that distance.

That put Snead in line tomorrow to break the record winning score of the past two tourneys, 279 for 72 holes. Snead broke from second position at the start of the third round, one stroke behind Johnny Bulla of Verona, Pa. But Bulla faltered in the mid-ninety degree heat on Mount Pleasant and went two over par for the first nine. Snead was three under there and kept winging away to beat par by another stroke on the back nine. Bulla, leader for the first two frounds, wound up two over par The Lancaster Red Roses defeated the Allentown Cardinals, 8 to 7 here Saturday night in the fifth and final game of the semi-final round of the Interstate League's Shaughnessy play-offs.

A home run by Johnny Jones in the ninth won the game for the locals. The Roses captured the series 4 games to 1. Lancaster will now meet Hagerstown in the finals beginning this Sunday afternoon at Hagerstown. GOLDEN ARROWS NEXT FOR EAGLES SATURDAY NIGHT HERSHEY, Sept. 13.

The Ft. Jaekson Golden Arrows, sparkling with name college players from all over the country, are confident they'll give the Philadelphia Eagles quite a battle when the two teams meet next Saturday night (September 20) in Hershey Stadium. Last year, the balanced Arrows wound up second in the scrap for the mythical national service football crown. The 1952 personnel is heavy with members of the crack 1951 team. The Arrows are coached by Fred Land and have been in training in their South Carolina base for four weeks.

The squad numbers over 50. Indiantown Gap Military Reservation with about 15,000 in uniform, will attend the game almost entoto. Military personnel from other nearby camps such as Middletown Base and the Naval Supply Depot in Mechanicsburg, also are gobbling tickets: Among the better known college gridders who'll start for Ft. Jackson are Jack Del Bello, quarterback from South Philly High School and the University of Miami; Alan Egler, fleet halfback from Colgate; Jimmy Glisson, scatback from Tulane: Showboat Boykin, from Ole Miss; Doug Lockridge, center Alabama; Bill Slate, guard from North Carolina and Nick Bolkovac, 235-pound guard-tackle from the University of Pittsburgh. One of the team's top linebackers is Charley Phillips, 230-pound Negro from West Virginia State.

Phil. lips was named to the Negro AllAmerica in his senior year at West Virginia State, Pitcher Turns Parson; Will Build Church AUGUSTA, Sept. 13 (INS) -A former pitcher for the New York Yankees and Boston Red-Sox ball teams reaches the goal tomorrow he has coveted since childhood. Paul Hinrichs, who played with the Sox in 1951 and the Yankees in 1949 and 1950, will be ordained into the ministry Sunday at our Redeemer Lutheran Church in Augusta. Hinrichs, who paid his way through school by playing baseball in the summer, will be assigned to build a congregation and church in Aiken, the hydrogen bomb materials plant.

Cortinas Will Attempt Swim Down Ole Miss LOS ANGELES, Sept. 13 (INS) Jose Cortinas, 35-year-old conqueror of Catalina Channel, left Los Angeles today Louis, where he plans to launch a swim down the Mississippi River. The Cuban-born marathon swimmer said he hopes to start his Mississippi Swim Sept. 20, "and swim downstream as far as I am able." Cortinas completed the 22-mile Catalina Channel crossing on Aug. 31 in 28 hours 55 minutes.

The Mississippi River record is credited. He to swam John 292 Sigmund miles of down- St. stream in 89 hours, 52 minutes. Australia's "Big 4" Score Net Triumphs and dropped to a fourth place tie at 211 with Jimmy Clark of Laguna Beach, Calif. Ted Kroll of New Hartford, N.Y., vaulted into the runner up spot with a 69 for a total of 209.

A stroke behind him were Ed Oliver of Lemont, who matched Snead's 68, and Earl Stewart Jr. of Dallas who had 71 on the third round. Snead said he couldn't ask for better putting than he did on the first 11 holes. He scored all his birdies up to there and parred out. He sank six foot birdie putts on the third, fifth and seven holes, a 30-footer on the ninth and a 10-footer on the 11th.

On the contrary, Bulla messed up his game by taking three putts on the fifth and sixth holes. Kroll helped himself up the ladder of $15,000 in total prizes with an eagle three on the 14th. The Anzio Purple, 525 yards with a stumpy Heart veteran of driver and spoon and dropped a six-foot putt. LOS ANGELES, Sept. 13 (INS) -Australia's rampaging tennis Big Four, led by their seige gun, Frank Sedgman, roared to four straight victories today in the opening of the 26th Pacific Southwest Tennis championships at Los Angeles.

Sedgman, Mervyn Rose, Ken Rosewall and Lewis Hoad all won easy matches for the land downunder, further emphasizing the potency of future Davis Cup prospects. Sedgman lashed to an easy victory over a hard working but ineffectual youngster, Brooke Grant, seventh ranking California junior by a score of 6-2, 6-1. Sedgman treated 2,000 fans at the Los Angeles Tennis Club to little fireworks, being content to coast along in 92-degree temperature. and coming tennis whippets had no trouble beating first round opponents. Rosewall defeated Vincent Fotre of Beverly Hills, 6-1.

4-6, 6-2, and Hoad dropped Bill Young of Los Angeles, 9-7. 6-1. dint of fine back court hitting, Young shot into a 6-5 lead in the first was unable hold service, against the aggressive pounding of the Australian visitor. Mervyn Rose, the big Aussie left-hander who carried one of the two singles assignments in the Davis Cup march of the Australians over the Americans, manhandled Harvey Glenshaw, ex-Pepperfine College varsity; ace, 8-6, 6-1. In the meantime, Ken McGregor, Australian net star, announced that he has dropped out of the tournament because of stomach injuries and will fly home Monday.

The net ace suffered pulled stomach muscles during a practice session with his teammate, No. 1 amateur star Frank Sedgman, earlier in the week. McGregor said that his condition was so painful that he could not give a true accounting of himself in the Los Angeles tournament. calling for 33 home games in a 66-game season, the other for 35 home games of a 70-game season. Last year the league clubs played 68 games.

The governors also will discuss the recently adopted no-re- call rule which prevents teams in the National League from recalling players sent to the AHL on loan. Pittsburgh, Providence and Hershey have objected to the rule and to one limiting the player squad to 13..

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