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Sunday News from Lancaster, Pennsylvania • 30

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Sunday Newsi
Location:
Lancaster, Pennsylvania
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Page:
30
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

-GREATEST NET SHOW ON EARTH 30 THE SUNDAY NEWS, JUNE 24, 1958 Mon ixnbledon I Srf1 sis i V'V i I 4PA 'v- Vi A mrn'ji I jj fv v-j Gibson-Brough Tussle Features All-Star Cast By STERLING SLAPPEY WIMBLEDON', England, June 2.3 () The great est tennis show on earth opens Monday at ivy-walled Wimbledon with ah American Negro girl pressing Louise Brough as the queen of the cast. Althea Gibson, tall, lean and boyish looking, has won 18 tournaments since she started a tour for the American State Department last Autumn in Southeast Asia. That string of victories, practically unmatched since the days of Don Budge, has promoted he to fourth seeded in womens singles for the Wimbledon championships it has made her No. 3 in betting, odds turned her into a trailbrazer for her race and made defending champion Brough move over and share the limelight. ry ,71 vi r- today.

Braves pinchhitter Del Rice had just hit a solo homer to tie the score. It was Milwaukees eighth straight victory. (AP Wirephoto) (See story on page 29) NEW YORK, June 23 HAPPY BRAVES Hi Milwaukee teammates greet second base-man Danny OConnell (4) at dugout after his home run in the ninth inning beat the New York Giants, 2-1, at the Polo Grounds her JOHNSTOWN IS SLIPPING Hint Lancaster Or York May, Get In Eastern Loop By PETE BUSSER The re-entry of Lancaster, or York, into Organized Baseball is seen as a matter of days, it was learned Saturday as Eastern League officials cast covetous, eyes toward the Bose cities to take over the Joh nstown franchise. Diminishing attendance their first matches Tuesday In elude: No. 2, Mrs.

Beverly Baker Fleitz, Long Beach, vs. Pilar Barril, Spain; No. 5. Shirley Fry, St. Petersburg, vs.

Christine Mercelis, Belgium, and Mrs. Dorothy Head Knode, Forest Hills N. vs. Shirley Waters, Britain Heres The Pattern The general Wimbledon program, although it is not always followed to the letter, calls for mens singles play on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays with womens singles on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays. Unlike the American Nationals, both mens and womens doubles and mixed doubles also played here which makes Wimbledon the biggest and most important tennis tournament of them aiL NEW YORK, JUNE 23-WIFE VISITS ZIMMER AT HOSPITAL Brooklyn Dodger in-fielder Don Zimmer is comforted by his wife, Jean, at Long Island College Hospital in Brooklyn today where he was taken for X-rays.

Zimmer suffered a fractured cheek bone and a concussion when he was hit flush on the left side of his face by a pitch thrown by Cin-. cinnati Redlegs Hal Jeffcoat Doctors said Zimmer will have to remain in hospital for several days. He may be lost to the team for at least two weeks. (AP Wirephoto) ON THE LINE liy Bob Considine Lititz Nips Strasburg Garman, Henry Star Iti City-County Triumphs E. Petersburg, Quarryvillc, Manlicim Win Mens singles play opens the 70th Wimbledon Championships Monday.

The for the mens title, the most coveted in tennis, is wide open since Tony Trabert, 1955 winner, gave up the amateur ranks. Usually mens singles is the big draw but this year, primarily because of Miss Gibson, women's singles is of equal interest. Mis Gibson, 28. of New York, does not plav until Tuesday when she meets Edda Buding. Whether the match will be honored with assignment to the center court awaits the decision of the august all-England club officials.

Center Court Match Miss Brough of Beverly Hills, Calif, plavs 16-year-old Jean Forbes of South Africa Tuesday and that definitely will be a center court show. Defending champions always grace the center court their first time out. Miss Gibsons oponent is one of a family of four tennis playing Argentine-Hungarians. She is 19 and her father, Dr. Franz Buding, is the traveling coach of the 'Buding team.

Aussie Favored With Trabert gone. American men fortunes are very low. Australian hopes for providing the first mens Wimbledon champion since Frank Sedgman in 1952 could not be higher. Lew Hoad, erratic and unemotional, is seeded first and a fellow Australian Ken Rosewall is second. Hoad plays Don Fontana of Canada on the center court tomorrow.

Rosewall meets Britains left-handed Davis Cup doubles player John Barrett, The three American men seeds are No. 4, Budge Patty of Paris who lived in Los Angeles before becoming an expatriate: No. 6, Hamilton Richardson of Westfield. N. now a student at Oxford University, and No, 8, Vie Seixas of Philadelphia, the 1953 winner who appears past his peak.

Patty plavs Alfred Huber, an Austrian: Richardson has Jack Arkinstall, one of the second string Aussies, to contend with, and Seixas plays Malcolm Fox of Baltimore. Davidson 3rd Seeded Third-seeded Sven Davidson, possibly Europe's best player meets G. D. Owen of Britain and Kurt Nielsen, the Dane who plays best at Wimbledon he has been finalist twice without ever winning-meets one of the regional qualifiers. Nielsen Is seeded seventh.

The other men's -seed. Jaroslav Drobny ranked fifth meets In dias Davis Cupper Ramanathan Krishnan. Drobny, the keif-exiled Czech who now holds Egyptian nationality, won the singles In 1954. Other seeded women $tars and NEW YORK, June 23 (INS) Sportin around; The management at Monmouth Park race track took a long chance on giving 15,706 fans heart trouble Wednesday by calmly refunding thousands of dollars bet on the favorite in the seventh. The horsfe came out of the box riderless, thanks to an absent-minded assistant starter ho held on to the jockey too long and pulled him off as the field went away.

Old timers swore they never seed generosity of that sort displayed by a track management, it further endeared them to this handsome and comfortable Jersey track. Reporter Frank Conniff, picking up a refund on a $10 ticket, said, after all these years, Ive finally got the ideal system. Play em this way and you cant lose. Three errors, a hit batsman and one safety allowed Columbia to score two runs in the fourth frame. Lititz.

He halted Strasburg the rest of the way. Bob Herr went the route for the losers. East Petersburg protected its Vi game lead in the Central City-County League Saturday with a 14-2 victory over Christiana as AI Eckert pitched four-hit ball for his third straight win. LEAGLE STANDINGS G.B. li Johnstown and the long hops to the western Pennsylvania city by other clubs of the Class A league have brought the matter of a franchise shift to a head, a source reported.

Lancaster I considered the best bet to replace Johnstown because it is nearer to other Eastern League cities. It is only an hours drive to Reading and just two hour to Allentown. York, it was reported, i the alternate site if necessary arrangements can not be completed for the transfer to Lancaster. Attendance Dipt Johnstown acquired an Easlern franchise in mid-season last year replacing Wilkes-Barre. It drew well for the remainder of the season and had large crowds at the start of the current campaign However, attendance has slacked off considerably for the last place Johnnies.

June was to be the deciding month if the franchise would stay or be transferred. And far. there is nothing to indicate that the club will remain. Then, too, excessive travel has soured the owners who desire a site closer to the other seven clubs. Johnstown is some 170 miles from Lancaster which would mean a travel saving of 170 mile for most of the clubs.

This is a considerable expense especially for the northern cities; Syracuse, Schenectady, Albany and Binghamton; when they swing south to Williamsport, Reading and Allentown. It was pointed out that Johnstown upsets the compactness of the league. Lancaster was last considered for an Eastern League berth back In October of 1953 when loop prexy Thomas A Richardson favored the Red Rose city for a franchise in what was to be a ten-club circuit. This never materialized. After sitting out the 1953 sea on, organized basehall returned to Lancaster In 1954.

The then Philadelphia As placed a Piedmont League franchise here. This continued throo-h now Kansas City As withdrew their help and it was the ui the downfall of the Piedmont. for the first time when they tee off against the stars of 27 other nations in the International Trophy and Canada jCup golf matches today (Sunday). The tournaments, which run concurrently, end Tuesday. It's a great honor to have Sam play as my partner.

Hogan said at a luncheon before their plane took off from Idle-wild the other day. Then he reconsidered and shyly corrected himself. I should say it's a great honor to play as Sam's partner. if Hogan, winner of four National Opens and loser of the last two by a whisker, and Snead, who has won more pro tournaments than any golfer alive, failed to beat the foreign pairs John Foster Dulles should call for an agonizing appraisal of the cards. IT wont happen for a long time, but efforts already are under way to force mobility upon future service football classics.

Those working on the job see no reason why Philadelphia should be the perennial site of the Army-Navy game. They would move it to a different area each year. The Air Force Academy, which will be in the picture in a few more years, gets on the move next fall with a small but significant game against Whittier probably in the Rose Bowl. Columbias Russ Garman and Mountvilles Barry Henry starred on the mound Saturday while Lit-itz hiked its City-County League first place lead to lVi games with a 7-5 decision over Strasburg. Garman stopped Elizabethtown, 4-2, and had a no-hitter going for seven Innings before Dump Eber-sole led off the eighth with a single.

The losers added three more hits in this frame for their two runs. The win was Carmans fifth against one loss. Gerry Dunkle, now 4-2, worked for E-town and doled out six hits. LEAGUE STANDINGS 1(H TODAY'S GAMES I ftitt at Ktrasburg Fliiftbethtown at Columbia Marietta at Mountville Ail game start at 2:30 p. COLOMBIA E-TOWN ab a Bra varan If 4010 Rimer cf Nickolaus lb i 2 10 1 Yohn is I'SHohdel ns 5 13 3 MUltr If Kratzer 4 0 4 0 Weaver lb Reinhart rf 4 2 2 0 Hess 3b Sheckart 3b 4 0 0 3 Ebersole 2b 4 14 4 Bell 2b 2 0 6 6 Dunkle 3 10 3 Garman 4 1 0 2 C.

T'pson I 0 2 2 Hardy cf 3 0 2 0 P. T'pson rf 1 0 2 0 Germer rf 110 0 Totals 35 6 27 13 Toiais 22 4 27 15 Columbia 801 tiM 0104 E-Town WHS 9i(N-2 Ebersole, C. Thompson, Bravman. Reinhart, Sheckart. Bell.

EYohn 3, Weaver 2, Hess, Ebersole. 3B Reinhart, 2B Hohenadel. BB Garman 4, Dunkle 1. SO Garman 5. Dunkle 2.

WP Garman 5-1 1 LP-Dunkle (42)v U-Witwer Obeu. TODAYS GAMES Christiana at Last Petersburg Quarrvvllle at Epbrat (at at Farsdlis Manheim at Canestega (Ail gamas atari at 2.49 Stauffer and Fcllenbaum in Tennis Finals Henry held the winless Marietta club to a pair of singles, winning easily, 13-1. He fanned 11 and walked only one for his second win. Clyde Butz and Don Houck rapped homers for Mountville. Elbe Kreiders bases loaded triple and Tut Landis three-piy blow with one on featured Lititz six-run third inning that proved decisive, Ron Zangari started for Lititz but needed help from Lem Sipe in the sixth.

Sipe came on with none out and the score, 6-5 favor STRASBURG LITITZ ab a a ab a a B'otr cf 5 2 2 0 R. Ker 1Mb 4 0 49 Flick 3b 3 0 0 1 L. Landis ss 3 0 7 3 Rtneer 4 2 3 0 ider cf 4 3 2 9 Bstock 2b 3 2 2 3 Dietzel 2b 3 12 1 Darrab ss 4 1 9 2 A. Landis 3b 3 1 0 3 Gebhart rf 4 10 0 Harmh lb 2 0 4 0 Rtneer 3 0 8 3 rshey 10 0 0 Miller lb 4 1 10 0 Shirk 4 3 9 1 Herr 3 0 0 2 Aspnl rf 3 19 0 Wilson 1 0 0 0 Zangari p-lf 4 19 3 Sipe 10 0 0 Totals 34 24 11 Totals 32 6 27 11 aPopped up for Herr in 9th Strasburg O0 311 000-8 Litite 009 000 10 7 Flick. J.

Rlneer, Bargerstock, Darrah, Miller, L. Landis, E. Kreider, Dietzel 2, A. Landis, Shirk. April.

Bargerstock, Darrah, Gebhart, R. Rlneer, Herr, Dietzel, Herahey, Zangari. 3B E. Kreider A Landis, Miller. J.

Rir.eer. 2B Dietzel. BB Zangari 2. Sipa 1, Herr, 3 SO-Zangari 3. Sipe 5, Herr WP Zangari i3-2.

LP Herr (2-2), Henry, Dennenberg, Quarryville stayed In contention as it walloped Conestoga, 21-4, while Manheim edged Gap, 2-1, as Bruce Wohnsiedler and John Hart hooked up in a tight mound duel. Christiana broke away to a 1-0 lead in the first inning but East Petersburg came back with five runs in the fifth. Pete Zerphy led the winners attack with three bingles. Don Wert paced Quarryvilles parade of 20 hits with a triple and four singles. He was also the winning pitcher.

Mike DeBerdine homered for Quarryville in the second frame Ray Stauffer, Harrisburg, a member of the Camp Hill team in the Inter-County Tennis League, and Dr. Harold Fellenbaum, of the Mount soy team, battled their way to the final round in the 26th annual ICTL tournament at Manheim Saturday. Stauffer, playing his usual steady driving game, turned back the bid of Eiwood Snyder, Lancaster, by scores of 6-0 and 6-4. Snyder, shut THE All Star game got its start by being the fans game. But it may not stay that way very long, if ways and means are not devised to provide the fan with a better opportunity to vote for the players he wants to see in this annual interleague battle.

After Arch Ward died (he thought up the idea for the game and his paper, the Chicago Tribune, supervised the poll-taking and election count) the paper tossed the game back into the lap of Organized Baseball. Ford Frick enlisted the advice of the sports editors of the three wire services but found none of them was set up to conduct the massive vote. They, in turn, took the matter up with client papers, several of which have cooperated. In another year, Mickey Mantle would have received perhaps several million votes, so far-flung and coordinated was the balloting. This time he was top vote-getter with hardly 25,000.

John Barrington, sports editor of INS, has suggested tiiat in the future the host team's public relations office serve as a clearing house for a nation-wide poll operated regionally by major and minor league clubs through their publicity offices and with the help of local newspapers. If something of this nature is not worked out, the game will surely lose its Impact as a source of much-needed goodwill between baseball nd the fellow who keep it alive, the fan. 13 American Women Vieln British Golf Broad St. Tops Lancaster Girls with the bases empty. It was his 0U jn first set, made a battle second of the season.

Wohnsiedler fanned 15 batters, walked two and was nicked for four blows as he outdueled Hart who limited Manheim to three safeties. of it in the second, but the number one seeded player from Harrisburg, had too many placements for the Lancaster player. Fellenbaum, defeating second seeded Vic Morrison, of the Mrs. DuPont Is Net Champion PHILADELPHIA. June 23 (A1) Mrs.

William Du Pont Wilmington, won the Philadelphia District womens grass court tennis championship for the sec-end straight year by defeating Mrs. Francis A. C. Vospers of Bellevue Hills, 6-3, 5-7, 6-0, In a one-hour and 12-minute final today at Germantown Cricket Club. Smashes Feature Speedway Races Jim Shaffer, New Castle, captured the feature midget race at Lancaster Speedway Saturday night.

Shaffer, winner of the first heat, was awarded the victory in the 25-lap race shortened by some 7 laps due to an accident which sent Hap Brown, Rochester, N. to the hospital. Brown's injuries were not immediately known. In earlier races, two other drivers were injured in smash-ups. Jim McKinley, Red Lion, was the most seriously hurt when his car and one driven by Ken Roach, Pnncipio, locked wheels.

McKinley's car went end-overend and out of the oval. He suffered a broken arm and numerous cuts and bruises. Roach suffered cuts. Second place in the feature went to Freddie Meeker, of Norwalk, while Ken Hildebrand of Laneaster was third. Heat winners, in addition to Shaffer, were Roger Bailey of Patchogue, L.

and Hildebrand. MOUNTVILLE MARIETTA ab a ab a Houck 3b 3 1 0 0 Derr ss 4 0 16 Webb 3b 2 0 0 1 Smith cf 3 0 10 Houck cf 5 1 2 0 Bailey If 10 0 0 Hill lb 6 2 ft 1 White lf-cf 4 0 10 Henry 4 2 14 MrKam rf 4 0 4 0 Fox 2 0 6 0 Mathiot lb 3 0 14 0 Rohrer 2 2 5 1 Shire 3 14 0 Butz If 3 12 0 Miller 2b 3 0 15 Mchlan rf 3 I 0 0 Seaman 3b 3 0 13 Trary rf 1 0 0 0 Geltcher 0 0 0 1 Wilson 2b 3 12 1 Myers 2 10 1 Kreider 2b 1 1 0 0 Charles is 5 3 10 Totals 40 15 27 8 Totals 30 2 27 16 Mountville 510 001 21113 Marietta 000 01 000 Houck 2. C. Houck, Hill 2 Henry 2, Fox, Rohrer, Butt 3, Kreider, Mvers, D. Houck, Wtlson, Charles, Derr, Bailey, Miller.

HR Butz. D. Houck. 2B Charles, Rohrer. BB Mve-a 5, Henrv 1, Geltmacher 2.

SO Myers 4, Henrv 11. WP Henrv 2-2 v. LP Geltmacher (0-2). UJ Weitkamp, Plegerer. E.

PETERSIM RO CHRISTIANA at a ab It a Weldle 3b 3 14 9 waiter If 4 0 9 0 Camp Hill team, by the scores of 6-2, 3-6 and 6-4, had to play his best to win. The first set was all Fellenbaum, who was hitting the ball like a champion. After reaching 1-1 in EhTemn if 1 1 i wirdfiTab ,4 2 athe second set, Fellenbaum three Ncomer ri 2oi RdciiH ct a times had a lead in successive ioij1 games, only to drop them to the Camp Hill representa- Zerphy 4 3 4 0 Engle Eckert 6 10 3 Llfllfjf 2 0 0 Ifztnnnjnite 37 12 Totals 33 4 27 14 WliaCtOlIS Broad Street's Church League softball team scored a 9-2 win over the Lancaster Girls In an exhibition game Saturday evening at Long's Park. The game featured the local church's annual picnic. The Motors jumped off to quick 7-0 lead after two frames to ice the verdict.

Outhitting the victors 9 to 6. the girls left 10 runners stranded on the base-paths. At 6 00 p. m. tonight the Laneaster Girls will face the 7th Ward Stars on the Rocky Springs a-McPsoo 1 0 0 0 Hilton 3b Carrigan 3b 3 2 3 1 Dver rf Shuman cf 4 110 Barnett lb Rser lb 4 2 15 9 Axe Clinger lf-c 6 110 Fieles If Touli 41 14 -Fanned (or weidte in lib itive, making the score 1-4.

Games 5.: ITU t'i ill-Jithen followed service with Mor- ChriilUn. lu w. sl x1 Hilton, Dv.r, Wetdlr, C.rrlg.n 2. rison winning, 6-3. Lane.

000 101 02 Broad Street 34(7 020 9 rf Bay a 1 Gteai New 1 56 JOHfJSOH SEA-HORSE Ut as litile as Dolores Siegfried and Greb-Inger; R. Brown and Groff. Shum.n W. 2. Cllnjer, Ehle-mn.

N-Sromer Emich, Zerphy 2. Eckert, W-idle, Emuh 3. Zerph), Eckert, W.rden Hawk. 3B Newcomer Rimer, Echlemtn. 2B B.rnett.

Dyer. BB Enele 7. L.riiry 4. SO Eckert 4 Lkdley J. WP Ecken 13-01.

LP Engle (0-31. Sneath Hiepler The third set developed into a battle of endurance. Morrison out-steadied the Mount Joy dentist un-till the score reached 4-3 in the former's favor. At this point Fel-lenbaum, seeded number four, steadied his temperamental game abk hiuff cf i (n outlast Morrison, who was rap- 3 10 4 3io idly being worn down by a com- 4 coa.M it 4 i i bination of the intense heat and 4 01 cct Ik 3 21 JlFellenbaum's flat drives. 3 0 14 skiiF 3001 Staufter and Fellenbaum will op-3 on Hrt rp 2b 3 9 9 P08 eac oter 2:30 p.m.

today 3 i Kem 3b 3 0 9 jon the Manheim courts for the 1956 ICTL title. The match will Coe Reaches Golf Finals OKLAHOMA CITY, June 23 INS i Slender Charley Coe rf Oklahoma City advanced to the finals of the Trans Mississippi golf tournament today by scoring a one up victory over Jim Hiskey of the University of Houston. Coe, three-time winner of the amateur event, birdied the 18th and final hole to eliminate the collegian from Texas. Ronnie Wenzler, 21-year-old college student from Memphis, also advanced to Sunday's 36-hole finals by eliminating youthful John Cam of Lubbock, 4 and 3. SUN'NINGDALE.

England, June 23 Thirteen attractive American feminine golfers happy with the course and hopeful of the weather felt confident today that one of their number would wm the British Womens Amateur Golf Championship, The Americans are scattered through an international field of 115 which will compete for this highly regarded title over Sunmng-dale Tuesday through Friday. Because of the quality of the entry list, golfing experts believed this year's championship will rank as the finest women's golfing event played in the British Isles since World War II. The membership of both the American and British Curtis Cup teams is entered. With British women' golf definitely on the up beat, the entire British contingent is regarded as the best in years. "This should be a rugged tournament to win, but that makes it all the more fun, said Barbara Romack, the sun kissed blonde from Sacramento, Calif.

Miss Romack was runnerup last year on Northern Ireland's Port-rush course. She was beaten 7 and 6 in the final by Scotland's careful shotmaker, Mrs. Jessie Valen tine, who is defending her title this time. Margaret (Wiffi) Smith, 19, from St. Clair, ranks among the favorites to take this title.

She hammers out drives with the power of a good male player. On June 17 Miss Smith won the French women's title, beating Britain's Angela Ward one up in 36 holes. In addition to Misses Romack, Nelson and Smith, other American Curtis Cuppers entered here are little Polly Riley, Fort Worth, Pat Lesser, Seattle, the American Women's Champion; Mary Ann Downey, Baltimore, recent winner of the Southern Womens title; Mrs. Philip Cudone, Montelair, N.J., and the non-playing team captain. Mrs.

Harrison Flippin, Philadelphia. I MANHEIM Oibble 2b Paine 3b Stoner If Wit men Wftltner cf Wohn'ler Wentltnc rf Even lb QrtybiU ss Totals 30 3 37 13 Totals 29 4 37 I 4l -Fanned lor Ntvhauser id 9th be the best OUt Of three SCtS Manheim j. 4t I4 7 Gas inw Gibblt. Wltman. Bentner.

2B Otbble, BB-Wohneidlcr 2 Hart 3. 80-W'ohnteidler 16 Hart I. WP Wohnseld-ler U-2 LP Hart (1-5. Minnlch Lon I Mirmak Rifle Shoot Winner ONE of the great success stories of sports is Del Miller, the buggy-race man whose friendly beast Knight Patrol, will be the one to beat in the first running of the $75,000 Messenger Stake ak Roosevelt Raceway Saturday. If Del were as famed in flat racing as in harness racing he would have to be a combination of Sunny Jim Fitzsimmons, Eddie Arcaro.

Leslie Combs II and the Aga Khan. He's a top trainer, driver, trader and breeder. Fresh out of the Army in 1948 he hocked his all and bought a so-so stallion named Adios for $21,000. Last August he sold Adios to the Hanover people for $500,000, after selling $400,000 of Adios' yearlings and realizing $252,450 from stud fees. Then he bought back a one third share in the 16 year old sire for ten of whose sons and daughters have set world records.

Miller's stable has won in purse money over the past four seasons. About of that sum was won by horses Del himself raced. He trained the other winners. The game owes him much. His forceful support of the Phillips gate and elimination of the old heat methods streamlined the game into what it is today.

Its tasj to own a great new Sea-Horse. Ask about oar convenient time payment plan. COHEN BROS. 104 S. George St.

Ph. YORK 82-933 Smith p.M 2 0 0 0 Hph'f 88.3b 4 2 2 1 Warfel if 4 0 10 Bro ka 3b.c 3 2 3 5 TAPASCO, June 23-Edvard V. Mirmak, 753 N. Franklin Street, Lancaster. captured first oi place in his division of the Na-d tional Rifle Association championships here today.

Mirmak compiled a score of 320 out of a possible 400 to lead in sub-junior class. Competition was from four positions at 50 yards. The Lancaster team came In third in its class with a score of 1,300 out of a possible 1.500. Member of the team were Edward and Carl Mirmak, George King, Glenn Latschar and David QI AItRTVIl I that Wood is 6 3 D'B dine lb 5 3 17 Stev'snn 7 4 8 0 F'hbach 2b 6 2 1 2 KesMil 3b 6 1 1 8 Sample If 4 12 0 Hawlett rf 2 0 0 0 liberty cf 3 2 0 0 Carroll 2 0 0 0 le ri.lf 6 10 0 Writ p.cf 6 .4 2 2 Total 52 70 27 13 Qoarrrvllia Mb 271 04111 CsnfiUll 009 00(1 OM 4 l.iniley, Humphncsr, Warfel. Brooks.

Woods j. T)e Brrdina 4, Stevenson 2. E-hharh, PesselU Sample 2. Eb-erlv 2, McCardie 2, Wert 4. Carroll.

Humphries, Herr 2, Brooks 2. HRDe Berdine 3b Wert, Brooks. 2b Eih-barh, Stevemon, De Berdine, Vrev, BB Wert 2, Carroll 2, Smith 2. Trtmble 2, Urey 2 SO Wert 4. Carroll 3, Urey 2 Wert (1-0 LP Trimblt (0 5).

Schreiner 4t Burtor. CONESTOGA Herr 2b i Lin, icy lb 4 is I d-IL c'VL 4 i Garvin ci 3 i 3 Tr'bie 3 Tntatk 332Tiithe Eyinrude Motors Aristo-Craft Boats Thompson Boats BURGARD BROS. West 8 Philadelphia Street YORK 21837 FITS FINE Shortstop Eddie Bressoud adjusts the shirt of southpaw Jim Constable. The youngster were called up to the New York Giant rom the Minneapolis club. BEN HOGAN and Sam Snead wili be playing together as a team.

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