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The Escanaba Daily Press from Escanaba, Michigan • Page 10

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Escanaba, Michigan
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10
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PAGE TEN THE ESCANABA (MICH.) DAILY PRESS SUNDAY, AUG. 12, 1945 Cubs Whitewash Braves, 8 To Tigers Nose Out Boston Sox, 5-4 PASSEAU NEAR NO-HIT GAME Boston Kept Muzzled Until Sth: KitrHt Struck Out BASEBALL ion, mtil Claud ball i Chica Brave Pas and balls of the The in the Stan home on Cava retta New' York, Aug. league standings, games of Aug, 11. National League 11 including all Aug, 11 With sseou pitching no-hit the eighth inning, the i Cubs beat the Boston 8 to 0. i struck out eight men 't give a single base on he won his 13th victory ibs picked up two runs st inning off Bob Logan, ck doubled and came Phil single stole second, went third on error and scored when Vin Shupe fumbled.

The other six runs came in the off Johnny Hutchings iur off John Hendrickson. Iv Pafko was hit by Hutch- then Lcnnie Bice got his hit of the game. After Len received an intentional ssen and Hack walked and I Am mgs. third Merullo pass. W.

L. Pet. Chicago 66 36 .647 St. Louis 62 43 .590 Brooklvn 60 43 .583 New York 55 50 .524 Pittsburgh 54 52 .509 Boston 48 58 .453 Cincinnati 43 58.426 Philadelphia 28 76 .269 American League W. L.

Pet. Detroit 5743 .570 5644.560 New York 5249 .536 Chicago 52 49 .515 Cleveland 50 50 .500 Boston 5052.490 St. Louis 48 50 .490 Philadelphia 33 65 .337 SATURDAY'S SCORES red Merullo lok over for Texas Passeau came home forcing in Pafko and Don Johnson after Hendrickson the Braves. Harry I leaguer to right and Hack and when Tommy Nelson fumbled; Cavarrettas grounder. Chicago 200 000 11 1 1 Boston 000 000 2 3 Passeau and Bice: Hutchings, Logan, Hendrickson and Masi.

Old Jinx Defeats Yankees 5 and 3 Cleveland, Aug. 11 New York Yankees met up with Old Jinx again today, and as a i result went down to a 5-3 defeat at the hands of Steve Gromek and i the Cleveland Indians. The Indians scored all their runs in the first inning at the expense of Starter Walt Dubiel, who was pummelled off the mound without retiring a batter. A triple by Butch Meyer, a single by Pat Seerey and a double by Lou Boudreau together with a couple of walks finished Dubiel. New York 021 000 5 1 Cleveland 500 000 7 0 Dubiel, Page.

Holcombe and Robinson, Garbark; Gromek and Hayes. A single root will produce peppermint plants for about four years. National League Chicago Boston 0. Brooklyn Cincinnati 2 New York 10; St. Louis 1.

(Only games scheduled) American League Detroit 5: Boston 4. Washington 11: Chicago 2. Cleveland 5: New? York 3. (Only games scheduled) American Association Toledo 8: Minneapolis 4. Indianapolis Milwaukee Kansas City 5: Louisville 2.

Columbus at St Paul, postponed 1. International League Newark 6: Buffalo 2. Jersey City 5-1: Toronto 3-3. Syracuse 6-3; Montreal 5-2. FAT NEEDED Arcaro and his pretty wife, Ruth, see that all fat is salvaged in their Rockville Center.

Long Island, home. They know used fat is essential for the manufacture of munitions to blast the Japs and medicine. This picture was taken the day the famous jockey was rushed from Belmont Park for emergency appendectomy. (NEA Photo.) GAMES TODAY The Sports Parade By Ken Gundermcm V-8'S BOOST LEAGUE LEAD Birds Eye Drops Behind In National Loop Race Here The Ford increased their National league lead to 2'i games by defeating the Silver Front In an interesting night contest last week. Lieungh Music Store retained their .500 percentage by winning one and losing one while the Birds Eye lost ground by dropping their only tilt under the lights Tuesday.

Peoples Hotel won two games and climbed to within one game of second place. Larmays divided their two contests and are just a half a game behind White Birch. This week the big game under the lights will be between St. Ann CYO and White Birch on Tuesday night. In their last meet- ling the young were and defeated the Birches, 6 to 2.

Thursday night Hotel plays Larmays in the main event. These two teams went nine innings In their last game and another close contest is expected. STANDINGS American League w. ret Dagenais Grocery 17 3 .850 White Birch 12 7 .631 Larmays 12 6 .600 Peoples Hotel 11 .578 St. Ann CYO 3 17 .150 National League w.

rot. Ford 12 5 .705 Silver Front 10 8 .555 Bird Eye 9 8 .529 Lieungh Music Store 9 9 .500 Third Army Captures First ETO Track Title Don't "Skimp" on Lubricants Driving a few more before worn-out lubricants are changed may mean extra wear on moving parts and a very expensive repair job. Use good oil change it frequently and keep your car running at the lowest upkeep cost. DEWEY'S SUPER SERVICE 700 Ludington St. Phone 1142 New York, Aug.

11 OP) pitchers for doubleheaders, with won and lost records in parentheses: National League Cincinnati at New York: Heusser (8-9) and Kennedy (2-11) vs. Mungo (11-6) and Brewer (4-3). St. Louis at Brooklyn: Burkhardt (11-7) and Donellv (6-8) vs. Gregg (15-6) and Seats (5-4) or Lombardi (5-9).

Chicago at Philadelphia: Wysc (17-6) and Erickson (6-3) vs. Kraus (2-3) and Maunev (3-5). Pittsburgh at Boston: Sewell (11-7) and Butcher (9-8) vs. Wright (1-0) and Andrews (6-12) American League New York at Detroit: Bevens (10-5) and Zuber (3-5) vs. Newhouser (17-7) and Overmire (8-8) Boston at Cleveland: Ferriss (18-5) and (8-6) vs.

Harder (2-4) and Center (5-0). Philadelphia at Chicago: Christopher (11-8) and Flores (5-5) vs. Humphries (5-8) and Lopat (7-9). Washington at St Louis: Holo- borow (1-1) and Pieretti (10-8) or Niggeling (4-8) vs. Shirley (7-8) and Kramer (8-11).

Knuckleball ('onls Off Hot White Sox Chicago, Aug. 11 Leonard and his knuckleball cooled off the previously torrid i White Sox today and the big right hander pitched Washington to an easy 11-2 victory before 4.821 fans, i Leonard was the complete mas- ter as he won his 13th victory of the season. In the fourth inning he gave the Sox two hits, wi Kerby Farrell scoring, and in tVe sixth he served a home run ball to i Johnny Diekshot, but the rest of the way Chicago even I threaten. Meanwhile, his mates were clubbing Orval Grove foi seven hits and five runs in the first inning, and they continued the attack on Frank Papish, who came to rescue, during the next I four fiames, scoring six more runs. Washington 510 320 14 1 Chicago 000 101 6 2 Leonard and Ferrell; Grove, Papish and Tresh, Castino.

The Eskymos football team of 1945 will play its most representa- I tive upper peninsula schedule in history, meeting teams from both ends of the peninsula, Iron wood and Sault Ste. Marie, as well as most of the stronger teams between those points. Only sections of the peninsula not included on the Escanaba schedule are the Copper Country and the Marquette Range. Coach George Ru- witch will call out his warriors shortly to begin preparations for the toughest schedule that any upper peninsula team has ever booked. Prospects are somewhat more promising than last year, when the Eskymos were bounced around more roughly than normally.

Football Rate receipts throughout the upper peninsula, and particularly at Escanaba, should he on the ascent this fall, after sev- eral comparatively lean years because of wartime problems. Assuming that the Pacific war will be over when the football season rolls around, which seems highly probable at the moment, many of who have been dislocated from this area will be returned. The Eskymos will have the strongest home schedule, with Ironwood Norway, Menominee and Gladstone playing here. Another factor favorable for the improvement of gate receipts is the probability of the removal of gasoline rationing. Travel for attendance at football games has been discouraged during the past several years and crowds have been generally confined to the local areas.

Still another factor is the probable easing of working hours, with greater emphasis upon Saturday afternoon holidays. If this results, it will naturally free many many football fans for attendance at games who could not attend in past war years because of their jobs. The Green Bay Packers observed their 25th year in the National Pro league at a banquet sponsored by Lions, Kiwanis and Rotary rlubs of Green Bay Thursday Cadet League BY A. I. GOLDBERG Nuernberg, Germany, Aug.

11 (fp its commander. General George S. Patton, looking on, the Third Army captured the first European theater track and field championships with 188 points today as thousands of packed Soldiers Field and saw five E. O. records broken.

The communications zone squad took second with 152 points followed by the Sixteenth Corps with 81. Seven teams, winners of regional meets, competed in the all- European finals run off in this former Nazi shrine. General Patton, surrounded by ten other generals, hailed the competitors for showing the same in- dominitable spirit which made the American soldier invincible. The two-gun general recalled that he had participated in many athletic meets and been beaten never in and I think things, like this that prove that Americans are the best soldiers in the The words drew a roar from the soldier crowd that jammed the stadium. General Patton then stepped forward and kissed the hand of Cpl.

Brady Walker, the Third Army captain from Provo, Utah, who led his squad to victory by winning the discus with a toss Defensive Failings Crisler's Problem Webster Hawks West Enders Ludington Elks 8 2 1 Midget League Webster Sluggers Smith News Agency Hob Nob 9 4 4 Pet. 0 1.000 5 .285 6 .142 Pet. 0 1.000 5 .444 6 ,400 SCHEDULE vs. Birch at Flat Rock. White Brown; vs.

Birds Eye at No. 2, Jenson. vs. Ford at lighted field, 7:45, Jenson; White Birch vs. St.

Ann CYO at lighted field, 9:15. Jenson and Roman. vs. St. Ann CYO at No.

2. Brown; Silver Front vs. Ford at No. 4, Roman; Larmays vs. White Birch at Flat Rock, Jenson.

Front vs. Birds Eye at lighted field, 7:45, Roman; Larmays vs. Peoples the hundreds of local football fans presented with a plaque in commemoration of the occasion and the trials and tribulations of the Parkers, as well as their successes over the years were reviewed. It If IF i T' I uas disclosed that the first Pack- if meet oaaif ers team, organized by the now night. Coach Curley Lamheau was Hotel at lighted field, 9.15, Brown and Roman.

Highland Twilight Pairings Issued; A mixed two-ball foursome tournament will be held this afternoon at 2:30 at the Highland Golf club. Dinner will be served at six followed by cards and dancing. The schedule for the twilight league Tuesday evening at the Highland club follows: FOR VCUR CAR We need several used cars, any make or model to fill customers needs. If you want to sell your car at the highest cash prices bring it to us for appraisal. Immediate cash purchase you get the cash right away.

DeGrand Brisbane Distributors Escanaba US-2 5th Ave. N. Mert Jensen S. Ostman J. Cass H.

Koch Con Lemmer H. Hengesh T. Swift Ed Hirn, Jr. E. Martin Ed Schwartz Ray Hirn Les Smith E.

Swanson Leo Doty Vachon J. Bartel E. Beck J. Clairmont Ben Yagodzinski A. Valind B.

Erickson Jim Douglas L. Krantz H. Johnson H. Winchester T. Irish Bob Douglas M.

Ashland T. McMeekan Dr. Christie Savageau L. Beauchamp Nels Jensen V. Smith Ed Mart insen G.

Oberg Flath Dr. Ed Hirn Art Jensen Bud Stade C. Johnston E. Dittrieh Dr. Corcoran Geo.

Walter W. Berglund Pat Frederickson Ben Douglas Dr. Fred Hirn O. McCormick F. Wawirka S.

Ulrich Hal Reade i G. Milkovich A. Hemil G. Nelson Art Goulais E. Bessonen Geo.

Bergman Elmer Beaudry N. Harris Vanderberghe G. Champlev F. La Branche R. Moras J.

Novack Ben Skaug Sinkwieh To Star On Air Force Team Colorado Springs, Aug. 11 Frankie Sink- wich, who rose to football stardom with Georgia university and the Detroit Lions, will try for a new gridiron job around here, and nobody who says he make the grade. Sinkwieh, now an air force private after a hitch in the Marine Corps, will handle many of the chores which the Second Air Force Super-Bombers the last two years assigned to Glenn Dobbs, Tulsa all-American passing ace. Dobbs has gone to the Pacific. Sinkwieh is counted on by Walker to be No.

1 actor in a star- studded cast. The 24-year-old fullback, who weighs 200 pounds, was voted the most valuable player in the National Profes- I sional Football League last fall. i He was second to Don Hutson of Green Bay in scoring, and led the loop in punting with a 42- I yard average. defunct Acme Parkins: eompany split a post-season financial melon that gave each griddcr exactly 516.50 or 51.50 per game for the 11 game season. Talk shifting the Green Ray franchise to Milwaukee was unceremoniously squelched at the Green Bay dinner.

No one individual owns the Green Bay Packers. Stockholders are 114 individuals and business places in Green Bay who bought shares at $25 each during the hectic reorganization period of 1933. rl he stockholders have never received a dividend because the corporation was established on that basis, A reserve, however, has been established for lean years. The Packer followers boast that they have never had a team in all of the years. The 1945 team will open its schedule Aug.

30, playing the College All Stars in Chicago, an honor earned as a result of winning the national championship last season. Cuban Makes Good In New York Debut New York, Aug. 11 Zabala, Cuban southpaw, made a successful major league debut with the New York Giants today by holding the St. Louis Cardinals to six hits and winning his game 1 The Giants salvaged the finale of a four game series with the Redbirds by raking five hurlers for 14 hits, including a home run by Rilly Jurges. St.

only run came in the third on Del Young's double and Debs single. St. Louis 001 000 1 6 0 New York 211 130 14 1 Gardner, Jurisich, Creel Byerly and Rice; Zabala and Kluttz. Series With Reds Swept fig Dodgers Brooklyn, Aug. 11 swept its five game series with Cincinnati by taking finale 5-2 behind Les Webber, who pitched his first game for the Dodgers since his recall from Montreal.

Goodie Rosen, trying desperately to overhaul Tommy Holmes of Boston for the loop batting championship, led the 10-hit attack with four singles in as many times at bat. Cincinnati 000 020 6 1 Brooklyn 000 210 10 0 Riddle. Modak, Lisenbee and 1 Lakeman; Webber and Peacock. Cadet League Enders vs. Ludington Elks at Ludington Park.

Hawks vs. West Enders at Junior High. Elks vs. West Enders at Junior High. Elks vs.

Webster Hawks at Webster Playground, Midget League News Agency vs. Hob Nob at Ludington Park. Sluggers vs. Smith News Agency at Junior High. Nob vs.

Webster Sluggers at Webster Playground. STANDINGS Giant League Pet. Garage 1 0 1.000 Webster 1 0 1.000 Marines 1 1 .500 See-Bees 0 1 .000 Northtown Cubs 0 1 .000 Ludington Sluggers 0 0 .000 Midgets 0 0 .000 vs. SCHEDULE Garage Webster Yanks at Webster Playground. Tuesday Ludington Sluggers vs.

Midgets at Ludington Park. vs. Northtown Cubs at Webster Playground. Yanks vs. Marines at Royee Park.

See-Bees vs. Ludington Sluggers at Ludington Park. SOFTBALL vs. PRESS The Post Office crew and the Daily Press Inkslingers will meet in a diamondball game at 10:30 this morning. The game will be played at the No.

1 diamond Likely batteries will be Kittner and Olson for the and McCarthy and Sabourin for the Press. Ann Arbor, Aug. 11 (JP Michigan Football Coach H. O. (Fritz) Crisler would put plenty of points in his future reference book following the two and one-half hour scrimmage this afternoon in the Wolverine Stadium.

The workout climaxed a six- week practice session and will be followed by a two-week layoff. Michigan gridders will begin fall drills on Aug. 27 and continue up to the opening game here with Great Lakes Sept. 15. Defensive failings were the most noticeable part of the Saturday afternoon scrimmage but few of the errors were glaring ones.

Ali though Crisler, as might be expected, kept his offense pretty much under wraps with most plays being of fundamental nature there was evidence that the Wolverines again will be a potent scoring aggregation during the coming fall. Walt Teninga, 17-year-old freshman from Chicago, showed offensive spark as he scored two touchdowns but another 17-year-old, Louis Rrunsting, end from Rochester. gained credit for an assist on one of them. Teninga tallied the first score of the game as he split off tackle from the eight-yard stripe but Brunsting had paved the way to the score by recovering Wes fumble on the 12. other score was on a wide end sweep from the seven-yard line.

Danny Dworsky, Sioux Falls, S. freshman, who is recovering from a leg injury, also looked good on offensive as he drove to two plunging touchdowns and accounted for several sizeable gains through the middle. Joe Ponsetto, rugged Flint quarterback and captain, scored once on a fake pass play and connected with Ed Bahlow, navy trainee and former letterman at Wisconsin and Central Michigan, for a 50-yard pass play tally. Don Hershberger, 17-year- old end from Freeport, 111., supplied the best thrill when he grabbed an in-the-air fumble at the line of scrimmage and dodged 35 yards to pay dirt. Other scores were made by A1 Albright and Leonard Dovalovsky, hots first year men.

Ponsetto converted three of five kicks while Howard Yerges. reserve quarterback, kicked three extra points in as many tries. Dovalovsky made good his only conversion try. Final score of the game was 41-21 in favor of the White team but the score mean much since Crisler used more than a dozen men interchangeably in an effort to even up the offense and defense. Ed McNeill.

Toledo freshman end: Stan Kuick, 17-year-old tackle from Midland; Allen Wahl, another 17-year-old from Oak Park. 111., and Brunsting were outstanding among the linemen. While most candidates showed a definite lack of college caliber experience, sideline observers agreed that there is plenty of reason to anticipate a good Michigan team hv the time the season opener rolls around. of 142 feet 9 inches and placed second in the javelin throw and hammer throw'. The communications team leader w'as Cpl.

Charles Edwards of Hammond, Ind. In one of the most spectacular performances of the day the negro youth, his teeth flashing, burned up the track to win the 200-meter dash, take third in the 100-meters and the broad jump and ran the anchor legs on the wdnning 400-meter and 800- meter relay teams. The top feat of the day was accomplished by Cpl. Horace Mamala of Hammond. who set a new ETO mark by running the 100-meters in 10.7 seconds over a track dulled by rains.

The time was only five-tenths of a second off the standard held by Jesse Owens and Harold Davis. Other soldier records were established by Lt. Andrew Meidnig of Brooklyn. Lt. William Tribou (home address not given), Cpl.

David Hasselman of Wilkinsburg, and Cpl. Matthew Flahery (home address not given). Neiding, 1941 Manhattan College cross-country captain, nosed out Sgt. Matt Donahue of Cleveland in winning the 800-meter run in 2:00.3. Tribou representing the communications zone, clipped 4.6 seconds off his own ETO mark in capturing the 1500-meter run in 4:05.3, Hazzelman, a former Columbia star, won the shotput with a heave of 48 feet, eight inches, bettering his own mark by eight inches.

Flahery, of the Third Army, threw the hammer 147 feet eight inches. STEVES PLAY ATESCANABA Teen League Ball (lame Scheduled At 2:30 Here Escanaba Yacht 21-Mile Event Today The Escanaba Yacht club will stage its annual 21-mile race for universal class sloops on Little Bay de Noc today, beginning at 11 a. m. oft the yacht harbor entrance. Three boats will compete for the Delta Hardware trophy: Bonnie, owned by Boyce; Oslo, John Mitchell; and Yankee, Ed Erickson.

Billy Bissell will not enter, having recently sold his sloop Lucille to a Sturgeon Bay yachtsman. The boats will sail over a triangular course, from the Escanaba yacht harbor to Portage Point, Peninsula Point and the starting point, The Escanaba Teensters baseball team will be host to Leo Stephenson club at the Escanaba diamond this afternoon at 2:30 in a Teen league game. In the other league game scheduled this afternoon, Gladstone will play at Nahma. Manager Ness announced yesterday that Scott will pitch for Escanaba this afternoon and Johnson will hurl for Stephenson. Escanaba remains undefeated in the Teen league, but the Steves have promised vengeance today for defeats they suffered at the hands of the local outfit earlier in the season.

Lions' Coach Has Big Hole To Plug Detroit, Aug. 11 With Frank Sinkwieh, their all-round back field ace, lost to the army, the Detroit Lions open a five-week football season at Windsor, next Saturday and Coach Charles E. (Gus) Dorais have to look twice to know that his No. 1 job is to plug the gap left by departure. Approximately four full teams are slated to report to Dorais with the first squad for twiee-a- day workouts leading up to the National Football League opener Sept.

23 at Chicago against the Cardinals. Only tentative exhibition game facing the Lions before their regular league schedule opens is a Sept. 9 date with the Philadelphia Eagles at Buffalo. The Lions intend to travel to Buffalo by boat. Absence of Sinkwieh, the league's most valuable performer last season, throws his baekfield post wide open to spirited bidding from a pair of holdovers and at least seven newcomers.

Veteran Detroit halfbacks expected back include Art Van Tone, regular wingback of last season, and Tiny Jack Lowther. Newcomers who will enter the scramble for job include Bill Ford of Hardin-Simmons college, Jack Redding of Tennessee. Don Kingery of Texas A. Dave Ryan of Hardin- Simmons, and three men without major George Dodd of Martin, Harold Fredericks of Sutton, N. and Paul Johnston of Mishawaka.

Ind. Kingery, Dodd, Redding and Ryan all have military discharges. The Lions, with the bulk of last squad returning, expect to find enough talent from among 20 newcomers to field a club stronger than 1944 in the line but hardly on a par in the backfield with Sinkwieh among the missing. Last Detroit outfit finished the season with five straight victories for a second place tie in the western Lion record in eight seasons. OLD SUPERSTITION Cutting oil a tail and burying it under the doorstep will prevent the animal from straying away from home, according to an old superstition among people of the southwest United States.

DETROIT HOLDS LEAD IN LEAGUE Relief Hurler Caster Smothers Red Sox Rallv In Fifth BY FRANK KENESSON Detroit, Aug. 11 Johnny two successive homers, the second with two men on base, went for nothing today as the Detroit Tigers clung to a one-run lead behind George relit chucking to edge the Boston Red Sox 5 to 4 and protect their one game American league lead. The Tigers tagged the Boston starter, George Woods, for seven five of them for extra basq the first two innings to up a 5-0 lead before Lazor belted his first homer in the fourth with nobody on base and his second in the fifth, scoring behind Byron La Forest and Tom McBride, who had singled, to make if 5-4. Caster, who reported yesterday following his acquisition from the St. Louis Browns, put out the fire in the fifth and gave only two hits in his 4 1-3-inning trick.

Mueller, however, gained credit for fourth victory Woods steadied to hurl five straight hitless innings after his ragged start and the only Tiger blow after the second frame was Rudy single in the eighth off Mike Ryba. Joe triple accounted for the first Detroit run in the opening inning and doubles by Bob Mairer, Mueller, Hoover and Jim Outlaw along with Ed Ror- single were worth four mora. Tiger tallies in the second. New York Next In the meantime Caster was in real trouble only once, much of that of his own making, McBride singled to open the Boston seventh and when Lazor drew a pass rut ners moved up on Dolph perfect sacrifice. Leon Culberson was walked intentionally to fill the bases with one away and Caster fanned pinch-hitter Bob Johnson and forced catcher Jim Steiner to lift a fly to Greenberg to en the inning.

Although thp Red Sox outhit Detroit 10 to 8 the Tigers thus salted away the rubber game of the five-game series and awaited appearance of the Nev York Yankees, who play bills in Briggs stadium Sunday and Monday and a single game Tuesday. Clean-up Spot: Detroit, which had only four scattered singles i losing to Randy Heflin if to 0 on Friday, looked like a different club in rattling four doubles and a triple off Woods in the first two innings today, but Woods soon cut down the Tiger pace two homers, both into th right field seats, were his third and fourth of the season best fielding plays of the day were diving stab of Eddie Lake's grounder over third base in the third and one hand catch of foul fly" against the boxes in the fourth attendance was 13,331 paid Jim Tobin. pitching purchase from the Boston Braves, reported today and will draw a starting assignment against tl Yankees Monday Sundav isf for the Tigers, who will send Hal Newhouscr and Stubby Overmire against the third nlace Yanks, games behind Detroit. Boston AB RII 40 Lake ss 5 0 0 2 La Forest 3h ...5 1 10 3 Me Bride If 5 1 2 0 Lazor rf 4 i 3 0 0 Camilli lb 01 7 0 Fox xxxx 0 0 0 0 Culberson cf 4 0 2 5 ff Newsome 2b 3 00 2 1 Johnson xx 1 0 0 0 Tobin 2b 1 00 1 i Holm 1 0 0 3 i Ferriss 1 0 0 0 Steiner 1 00 3 Woods 3 0 1 0 2 Metkovich xxx 1 00 0f Ryba 0 0 0 Totals 37 4 in 24 If, for Holm in 5th. for Newsome in 7th xxx for Woods in Sth.

for Camilli in 9th. Detroit AB 11 A Hoover ss 4 2 2 4 40 Borom 2b 4 1 12 I Outlaw cf 3 01 4 Greenberg If 3 01 4 Cullenbine rf 20 0 3 York 1b 4 0 1 5 1 Maier 3b 41 1 2 Richards 3 0 0 3 Mueller 2 1 1 0 Caster 1 0 0 0 Totals 30 5 827 6 Boston 000 130 000- Detroit 140 000 Runs batted Lazor 4, Borom 2. Mueller, Hoover. Outlaw. Two base hits Woods, Maier, Mueller, Hoover, Outlaw.

Three base Home 2. Stolen bast York, Double Forest, Tobin and Camilli. Left on 7. Bases on 5, Ryba 1 Mueller 2, Caster 3, Strikeouts Woods 2. Ryba 2.

Caster 2. off Woods 7 in 7 innings: Riha 1 in Mueller 8 in 4 2-3; Caster 2 in 4 1-3. Winning Losing Gowan, Rommel and Favarella. Attendant 13,331..

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About The Escanaba Daily Press Archive

Pages Available:
167,328
Years Available:
1924-1977