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The Decatur Daily Review from Decatur, Illinois • Page 17

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Decatur, Illinois
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Section DECATUR SUNDAY Section 2 Sports Classified 2 Decatur Herald, Founded 1880 7 Decatur Review, Founded 1 878 Decatur, Illinois, Sunday, April 24, 1955. Decatur's Youngest Team To Play in MOV This Year White Sox Tie Modern Major League Record Slugging Kansas City, 29-6 '-i' 5f v' ISII MS W. Galbreath 's Summer Tan and win the $111,700 Wood Memorial yesterday at Jamaica track. Across the top, from left, Summer Tan, ridden by Eric Guerin, and hits the finish line a neck ahead. (AP Wirephoto) Nashua Victor by Neck, Summer Tan Is Second Kansas City, April 23 (AP) Chicago's WTiite Sox slugged the Kansas City Athletics 29-6 today, tying the modern major league scoring record for one team for one game as they lofted seven home runs out of gusty Municipal Stadium.

The rampaging Sox blasted little Bobbv Shantz almost out of the park as Bob Nieman hit a 3-run nomer, one ot a pair tor nis aay VtUlIY, ill UIC 11131 lulling, Sherm Lollar greeted him with a leadoff homer in the second. Chicago scored seven times in the second off Shantz and Leroy Wheat. Besides Nieman's two homers, Lollar hit a pair, and Walt Dropo, Minnie Minoso and Jack Harsh-man, the Sox' starting and winning pitcher, each tossed a round-tripper into the pot. Vic Power and Bill Renna of Kansas Citv also blasted homers high over the left field fence as the ball rode merrily on the wings of a strong south wind that blew up to 30 miles an hour at times. The 29 runs equalled the modern record set in June 1950 by thei Boston Red Sox in a 29-4 victory over the then St.

Louis Browns (now the Baltimore Orioles). It fell one run short of tying the American League record of 36 runs for both teams in one game set by Boston in a 22-14 massacre of -the Athletics when they were in Philadelphia, also in June of 1950. Chico Carrasquel, who had four for five Friday night against the A's, chipped in with five more Saturday. Lollar" also had five. He and Minoso each drove in five runs.

The Athletics used five pitchers after Shantz in a desperate but futile effort to stem the Sox hits. Commies Win Over Paducah 'Albany, April 23 (Staff) Manager Al Unser's Decatur Commodores cut short a ninth inning rally by the Paducah, Chiefs of the Kitty League today to score an 11-7 exhibition victory. Paducah scored four runs in the ninth after two were out as pitcher Hicks, who went all the way, tired. First baseman Bill Skemp speared a line drive to end the game. Decatur scored five runs in the third, including a home run by catcher Jim Schaffer.

The Commies got two runs in the fourth and two more in the ninth. After scoring once in the first, Paducah went until the eighth before scoring again. Two runs crossed the plate in that inning. Decatur is scheduled for a day off Sundav. Leroy UTieat, Bob Trice, Ed Burt-schv, Bob Spicer and Ozzie Van Brabant all paraded to the mound and trudged awav in the slipsteam of Chicago base hits.

CHICAGO Carrasquel, SS AB PO A 6 6 5 1 4 1 1 2 2 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 Fox. 2b Minoso. If KeU, 3b Jok, 3b Nieman, rf McGhee. cf Dropo, 1 Rivera, cf-rf Lollar, Harshman, Totals KANSAS CITY Power, lb Jacobs, 2b Finigan, 3b Zernia), If Renna, rf Wilson, cf DcMaestri, ss Litrrell, ss Astroth, Mackenzie, Shantz, Wheat, Trice, Burtschy. Spicer, Van Brabant, 5 2 AB 27 PO 2 0 2 Totals 34 6 6 27 10 3 Chicago Kansas City 473 302 206 010 340 29 000 6 RBI Minoso 5.

Fox, KeU 2. Nieman 7, Dropo 3. Rivera 2, Lollar 5, Power, Finigan. Renna 4, Harshman 2, Jok. 2B Finigan 2, Rivera 2, Minoso.

Kell, Astroth. Fox. HR Nieman 2, Lollar 2, Renna. Dropo, Power. Minoso, Harshman.

BBHarshman 3. Shantz 1, Wheat 1, Burtschy 1. Spicer 2, Van Brabant 1. Dorish 2. HO Shantr 7 in I 2-3.

Wheat 3 in Trice 5 in 1 1-3, Burtschy 7 in 2 1-3, Spicer 4 in 1 2-3, Van Brabant 3 in 1 2-3, Harshman 6 in 8, Dorish in 1. W--Harshman (2-0). Shantz (0-2). Hoeft Blanks Indians As Tigers Triumph, 3-0 Cleveland, April 23 (AP) Billv Hoeft limited the Cleveland Indians to three hits today while pitching the Detroit Tigers to a 3-0 victory. The 26-year-old lefthander gave up a pair of singles in the first inniris and a double in the seventh while handing the defending American League champs their first shutout of the -year.

He set the Tribe down in order in the third, fourth, fifth, eighth and ninth innings. Rav Boone, a former Tribesman, hit his second home run of the year in the second. Singles by Hoeft, Harvey Kuenn, Ferris Fain and Boone produced two more runs in the third. Mike Garcia, losing his second game against a single win, gave up 11 hits before being benched for a pinch hitter in the eighth DETROIT AB PO Kuenn. 5 1 2 3 Hatfield.

2b Kaline. rf Fain, lb Boone. 3b Delsing. If Turtle, cf Wilson, Hoeft, Totals CLEVELAND Smith, rf Avila, 2b Dobv, cf Rosen, 3b Kiner. If Altobelli, lb Mitchell, lb Strickland, ss Hegan, Garcia, Wight, Totals 35 3 AB 11 27 PO 0 2 27 0 3 27 14 0 Detroit Cleveland 012 000 000 000 000 3 000 0 RBI Boone 2, Fain.

2B Strickland. HR Boone. BB Hoeft 3, Garcia 3. SO Hoeft 6, Garcia 4. Wight 1.

HO Garcia 11 in 8, Wight 0 in 1. Hoeft (1-1). Garcia (1-2). Nashua (4) comes up on the outside under the whip of Ted Atkinson. Across the bottom, Nashua, catches and then passes the mile-and-an-eighth classic.

His time for the distance was 1:50 3-5. Mrs. Dorothy Pershall Beltz Simmy finished third, so far back of the two fighting leaders that he might as well have been leading home horses in another race. It was 25 lengths back from Summer Tan to Simmy. The Rokeby Stable's Cup Man trailed bv another six lengths in fourth place.

The Lazy Ranch's Door Prize was last. AU are eligible for the Derby May 7 at Churchill Downs but only Nashua and Summer Tan rate a ticket to Kentucky off their performance this warm, pleasant afternoon. Nashua paid $4.20 and $2,10 in winning $75,100 and running his total earnings to $477,440" on a record of 10 victories and two seconds in 12 starts. Summer Tan, 13-20 choice, returned $2.10 to place. There was no show betting.

Ex-DHS Gridders Play in Illinois Practise Came Don Kraft, arid Jack GoTdy hoth got into the Illini practise football game yesterday afternoon. Kraft started at fullback on the Blues, who lost 20 to 13 to the Whites. The former DHS fullback carried the hall six times for 25 yards on the weaker team with another freshman, Joe Gorman, an all-stater from Mt. Carmel High of, Chicago, being the standout on the field with 87 yards from the fullback spot. Gordy, who Was only shifted to a guard post last Wednesday, made a verv creditable to the coaches.

Braves Edge Cardinals in 12th, 5 to 4 Milwaukee, April 23 (AP) Southpaw Chet Nichols had more trouDie from his own mates uic ot. louis t-aminais today but he held on until Bobby Thomson's 12th inning single the box gave the Braves a 3-4 victorv. Nichols went the full 12 in nings in his first start of the sea son and pave up onlv six hits, Three Milwaukee errors gave the Cardinals three unearned runs. Thomson, Milwaukee's leading run producer, singled on a 3-2 pitch from rookie Bob Tiefenauer with the bases full as the result of St. Louis strategy that didn't work, After Nichols flied out to rWht to-open the botiom of the 12th Billy Bruton dumped a double into right and got to third on passed ball by Cardinal catcher Del Bice.

Tiefenauer then issued in tentional walks to Hank Aaron and Eddie Mathews to set up double play that would have got ten the Cards out or trouble. ine ivniwauKee victorv before 22,838 fans broke a tie between St. Louis and the Braves for sec ond place in the National League. The Braves did all their damage, until the 12th, in the first 1 1-3 innings at the expense of rookie starter Larry Jackson. Thomson drove in a first inning run as he grounded out and Dannv O'Con-nell's single drove in another in that frame.

Milwaukee chased Jackson in the second with two more runs on a double by Nichols, a triple by Bruton and Aaron's single. The Cardinals tied it at 2-2 in die top of the second on runs driven in by Rice's sacrifice fly and Alex Grammas' single. An error by O'Connell' rriade one of the runs unearned. Bruton dropped Rice's fly in the sixth with two-on and two out to let in anotherunearned run and shortstop Johnny. Logan made his first error of the year on Ken Boyer's grounder in the eighth to permit the unearned St.

Louis run that tied the game at 4-4. ST. LOUIS Moon, cf-if Musial. lb AB 6 5 5 6 2 "2 3 5 1 1 1 44 AB 5 4 6 4 4 5 4 5 PO 0 6, 0 0 1 9 3 4 0 1 0 3 0 3 0 4 3b Repulski. lf-rf Elliott, if Virdon, cf Bover, 3b Rice, Grammas, ss Jackson.

pt Schultz, Smith, Tiefenauer, Totals MILWAUKEE Bruton, cf Aaron, rf Mathews, 3b Thomson, If Adcock, lb ss O'Connell. 2b Crandall, is'ichols, 6 34 PO 2 5 3 4 1 0 2 2 1 16 0 2 1 3 0 4 1 0 Totals 43 5 11 36 17 3 x-s-One out u-hen winning run scored. St. Louis Milwaukee 020 220 001 000 010 000 000 4 001 5 RBI Rice, Grammas 2, Thomson 2, O'Connell. Bruton.

Aaron. 2B Nichols, Bruton. 3B Bruton. BB Jackson 1, Schultz 1, Smith 1, Tiefenauer 3. Nichols 5.

SO Schultz 3. Tiefenauer 1, Nichols 4. HO Jackson 6 in 1 1-3: Schultz 2 in 4 2-3: Smith 1-1; Tiefenauer 2 in 4 1-3. Nichols (1-0). Tiefenauer (0-1).

OLIVER, CHANDLER IN VIRGINIA BEACH TIE Virginia Beach, April 23 (AP) Ed (Porky) Oliver and Chandler Harper fired their third consecutive sub-par rounds today to finish in a deadlock for the Virginia Beach Open golf tournament lead at the three-quarter mark. Both had 54-hole totals of 196, eleven under par. Oliver" carved a three-under-par 66 to go with two previous 65s. Harper, who had notched a 66 in the first round, shot his second straight 65. Eastern Games Called Off Charleston, April 23 (Staff) Today's Eastern Illinois State College Quincy College baseball doubieheader was postponed because of rain.

i College Golf Detroit 16, Northwestern 11. Bradley 19V4, Notre Dame 7V4. Bradle'v 1 4 Vi Western 3 Vi Notre Dame 14V, Western 3V4. College Baseball Michigan 3-11, Wisconsin 1-4. Northwestern 17-1, Mich.

St. 6-6. Normal 4-7, Southern 2-8. Another Tom Zachary Standings National League Pet. G.B.

3 4 4H 41 6H 8Vi 9 Brooklyn Milwaukee St. Louis Philadelphia Chicago New York Cincinnati Pittsburgh 11 7 6 6 6 3 .917 .700 .600 .545 .545 .333 .182 .000 American League Pet. G.B. Chicago New York Boston Cleveland Washington Detroit Kansas City Baltimore 6 7 6 6 4 4 .750 .700 .600 .600 .500 .444 .222 .200 1 1 2U 4Vi. Yesterday's Results NATIONAL LEAGUE Brooklyn 3, New York 1.

Chicago 1, Cincinnati 0. Milwaukee 5, St. Louis 4. (12 innings). Philadelphia 8.

Pitlsburcn 0. AMERICAN LEAGUE Baltimore 3, Washington O.Detroit 3, Cleveland New York 7, Boston 2. Chicago 29, Jvansa i. Today's Games NATIONAL LEAGUE New Y'ork at Brooklyn Gomez (0-1) vs Newcombe (2-0). Pittsburgh at Philadelphia (5) King (0-0) and Surkont (0-2) ts Owens (0-0) and Meyer (0-1).

Louis at Milwaukee Haddix (1-0) vs Buhl (1-0). Cincinnati at Chicago (2) Fowler (0-3) and Valentine (0-0) vs Jones (1-1) and Rush (0-1). AMERICAN LEAGUE Chicago at Kansas City Donovan (0-0) vs Kellner 1-0). Detroit at Cleveland Lary (0-0) TS Score (1-0). Washington at Baltimore (2) Schmitz (1-0) and Pascual (0-0) vs Moore (0-1) and Rogovin (0-1).

Boston at New York Nixon (2-0) vs Lopat (0-1). ILLINI BEAT WISCONSIN IN DUAL TRACK MEET Champaign, 111., April 23 (AP) The University of Illinois opened its outdoor track season today with a 78-54 victory over Wisconsin. A continuous rain prevented any chance for records. Three men each won two events to pace Illinois' triumph. Ralph Fessenden, Big Ten 300 yard champion, won the 100 and 200 vard dashes; Abe Woodson won both Lurdles, and Karl Jonsson, sophomore, from Sweden, took both the mile and two mile runs.

Topping Wisconein scoring was Charlie Thomas, who won the discus and was second in the shot put. Age Average to Be Around 20 Years By Howard V. Millard Herald and Review Sports Editor While the Mississippi Ohio Valley League will have an abundance of vouth this season, with the possible exceptions of Koko-mo, Hannibal and Paris, there isn't any doubt that Decatur will, be represented bv the voungest -group of players in the history of I organized ball here Of the 17 whose ages are known, onlv four will have cast a ballot in an election, local, state or federal. Even with two of the players listed at 23 vears, one 22 and another 24, the average for the 17 Opening Day Tickets There remain about 400. box seats for next Sunday's opening game at Fans Field at the Sports Center, selling for a total of General admission tickets that have the usual first game price tag of $1 can be purchased there as well as the following places: Black and Co.

Haines and Essick. Kreker's Music Store. and Hardware Co. Romano's Inn. Paul's Confectionerv.

Decatur Currency Exchange. Kembrook Dairv. expected to head toward Decatur next Thursdav morning is 20 vears, four months. But this should add a. lot of color to Al Unser's troupe for it can be recalled that Arthur Pink-ey Whitney came to the Commodores right out of Breckenridge-High School in San Antonio, Texastt and Max Surkont was just nearing 17 when he pitched here and led the III in strikeouts.

Both reached the majors, Tiit- .1 Tl .,,11 nev with the rnuadeipnia ia- tionais and Surkont is pitching in the National League: Thirteen of the 17 are single with Ed Jones of Wilkes Barre, being the oldest. The right handed hitting and throwing out fielder as 24 last March 1 5. Another outfielder, Louis Mar-kle of Smithville, Ohio, will be 24 next Aug. 8 while Warner Siebert of Hartford, is 23 and John Shannon a second sack-er, is 22 vears of age. The other age brackets are 18 The last two years the Decatur club got a big jump on the rest of the league because of having much more experience and that is gen-erallv the case.

But last season after the big jump the clubs made up of young er players such as Danville, Clinton and Dubuque came fast to ward the end of the season. It will be remembered that Clinton bested Decatur in the first of the Shaughnessy playoffs while Danville took care of Dubuque. Three of the contenders were farm clubs stressing vouth while Decatur was a so-called independent. In the final playoff, Danville bested Clinton three in a row for the title. There will he some familiar faces with other clubs for the Paris Lakers have Ed Rouse, Ken Pavne, and Sisk to name three.

Creed Nance, who came to Decatur from Hannibal because the St. Louis Cards thought him no prospect and too old, may be back with Hannibal. Nick' Starasta is helping out at Kokomo and could be orie of the catchers for that club. But by and large the farm clubs of Lafayette, Clinton, Mattoon and Decatur will be long on youth. There will be just one manager who was in the league last season, Bobby Clark at Clinton.

Jim Granneman at Hannibal served in the league as a pilot before Decatur came in for 1952. The other' managers are: Dubuque Ira Hutchinson; Kokomo Walter Dixon: Lafayette Mark Wylie; Mattoon Burl Storie, and Paris Rich Rigazlo. It will not be long until you will be getting acquainted with them at bat, in the field or on the third base coaching lines. Six sequence photos show how Belair Stud's Nashua drove hard from behind in the home stretch to overtake Mrs. John Lakeview Seeks Revenge Against-Bulldogs Monday Lakeview and St.

Teresa play the concluding game of their home and home baseball series Monday at 4 p.m. at Hess Park. St. Teresa, -with John Sta-plcton allowing onlv one hit, blanked the Spartans, 2-0, last Monday. Stapleton likelv will go to the mound again Monday.

Paul Schimanski is the 'probable Lakeview pitcher. St. Teresa has a 2-2 record arid Lakeview 3-2. It's a Central Conference game. Rediegs, 1-0 Chicago, April 23 (AP) The Chicago Cubs used a bunt-sacrifice-single combination today to score the only run of a pitching battle in stifling the Cincinnati Redlegs on five hits for a 1-0 victory.

Hardluck Warren Hacker, trv-ing for his first triumph of the season, held the Cincinnati power to a pair of singles and a safe bunt until two outs in the sixth inning, then had to leave after an unusual accident. Trying to field Gus Bell's bunt, Hacker did the splits on the infield grass and pulled a muscle in his left leg. Jim Davis replaced him and his knucklers shut off the Redlegs with one safety, a beat-out bunt bv Charley Harmon, and a wasted ninth inning double bv Wally Post. The Cubs, also to five hits by Joe Nuxhall and Jerry Lane, who took over in the eighth, won in the sixth. Jim Bolger led off with a safe bunt.

Gene Baker sacrificed him to second. Frank Baumholtz singled him home. CINCINNATI Temple. 2b Harmon, 3b Bell, cf Kluszewski. lb Gorbous, If Post, rf Bailey, Seminick.

McMillan, ss Nuxhall, Lane, Totals CHICAGO Bolger, cf Baker. 2b Baumholn, rf Sauer. If Ranks, ss Fondy. lb Miksis. 3b Chiti.

Hacker, Davis, AB 3 4 3 3 3 4 2 1 3 PO 0 4 1 1 1 2 0 7 0 1 1 2 2 0 2 1 3 I 0 0 0 5 24 12 PO I 4 1 1 1 2 0 3 0 2 0 10 0 2 New York, April 23 (AP) In one of the greatest races New York ever has seen, the Belair Stud's Nashua came from behind in the last strides today to defeat the favored Summer Tan bv a perspiring neck in the $111,700 Wood Memorial at Jamaica. Two weeks from todav the pair will hook up again in the added Kentucky Derby at Louisville, hut there is little doubt that Nashua the champion two- year-old of 1954 still has the number of Summer Tan. Summer Tan, owned hy Mrs. John W. ruled the fa vorite of an excited throng of 21 due to a sensational workout here last Mondav.

But it was Nash ua, from William Woodward's Belair Stud, who proved he had it when the chips were down in this great a 1st running ot the Wood Memorial. Nashua, sleek bav son of the imported Nasrullah, has been called a problem child, unpredictable in spite ot his potentially great promise but this was his fourth straight victory this season without defeat. As forecast, this was a slug 'em, knockdown duel between two ter rific three-vear-olds. None of the other three horses had figured and that was the way it came out. Nashua won bv a scant neck in Wildcats, Spartans Split East Lansing, April 23 (AP) Michigan State and Northwest ern split a Big ien baseball doubieheader todav, Northwestern winning the first game 17-6 and MSC taking the second 6-1.

College Tennis Augustana 9, N. Central 0. CLINTON DUBUQUE HANNIBAL PARIS DECATUR MATT00N LAFAYETTE K0K0M0 At DECATUR Mav 3, 4 Mav 29, Julv 2, 4. August Mav 21, June 27, Julv 24, August Mav 23, June 29, Julv 27, AugustN23, Mav 15, June 14, Julv 17, August Mav 13, June 12, Julv 15, August 12. Mav 5, 6 lune 2, julv t.

7 Auoust 3. Mav. 7. 8 June 5. 6 1955 Mississippi-Ohio Valley League Schedule Totals 27 1 5 27 10 0 Cincinnati 000 000 000 0 Chicago 000 001 00 1 Clinton At Dubuque At Hannibal At Paris At Decatur At Mattoon At Lafayette At Kokomo Mav 1, 2 Mav 25, 26 Mav 27, 28 Mav 9, 10 Mav 11, 12 May 17, 18 Mav 19, 20 Mav 30.

30, 31 June 22, 23 June 24, 25, 26 lune 7, 8, 9 June 10, 11 June 17,18, 19 June 20, 21 Julv 3, 5 Julv 29, 30, 31 August 2 julv 10, 11 Julv 12, 13, 14 Julv 19, 20 Julv 21, 22, 23 Aug. 31, Sept. 1 August 25, 26 August 27, 28 August 8, 9 August 10, II August 17, 18 August 19, 20 Mav 27, 28 Mav 25, 26 Mav 11, 12 Mav 9, 10 Mav 19, 20 Mav 17, 18 June 1 OFFERS June 30 July 1 June 22, 23 June 10, 11 June 7, 8, 9 June 20, 21 June 17, 18, 19 4 August 1, 2 julv 29, 30, 31 Julv 12, 13,14 Julv 10, 11 Julv 21, 22, 23 Julv 19, 20 29, 30 August 27, 28 August 25, 26 August 10, 11 August 8, 9 August 19, 20 August 17, 18 22 Mav 23, 24 May 3, 4 Mav 17, 18 Mav 5, 6 May 9, 10 Mav 11, 12 28 June 24, 25, 26 LOW Mav 31, June 1 lune 17, 18, 19 June 2, 3, 4 June 7, 8, 9 June 10, 11 25, 26 Julv 27, 28 Julv 4, 4, 5 July 19, 20 julv 6, 7 July 10, 11 Julv 12, 13, 14 21, 22 August 23, 24 31, Sept. 1 August 17, 18 August 3, 4 August 8, 9 August 10, 11 24 Mav 21, 22 Mav 1, 2 Mav 5, 6 May 17, 18 Mav 11, 12 May 9, 10 30 July 1 June 27, 28 May 29, 30, 30 COST June 2, 3, 4 June 17, 18, 19 June 10, 11 June 7, 8, 9 28 Julv 24, 25, 26 Julv 2, 3 Julv 6, 7 Julv 19, 20 Julv 12, 13, 14 July 10, 11 24 August 21, 22 August 29, 30 August 3, 4 August 17, 18 August JO, 11 August 8, 9 16 Mav 13, 14 Mav 7, 8 Mav 19, 20 May 1, 4 May 25, 26 May 27, 28 15, 16 June 12, 13 June 5, 6 June 20, 21 BASEBALL May 30, 30, 31 June 27, 28 June 29, 30 July 1 18 Julv 15, 16 Julv 8, 9 July 21, 22, 23 Julv 2, 3 July 29, 30, 31 August 1, 2 15, 16 Aug. 12, 13, 14 August 5, 6, 7 August 19, 20 August 29, 30 August 25, 26 August 27, 28 14 Mav 15, 16 Mav 19, 20 Mav 7, May 1, 2, 3 Mav 27, 28 May 25, 26 13 June 14, 15, 16 June 20, 21 June 5, 6 May 29, June 1 FOR June 29, 30 July 1 June 27, 28 16 Julv 17, 1 8 Julv 21, 22, 23 Julv 8, 9 Julv '3, 4.

4 August 1, 2 Julv 29, 30, 31 13, 14 August. 15. 16 August 19, 20 August 5 6, 7 August 31 August 27. 28 August 25, 26 Mav 7. 8 Mav 13, 14 Mav 15, 16 Mav 21, 22 Mav 23, 24, Mav 1, 4 3, 4 lune 5, 6 June 12, 13 June 14, 15, 16 June 22, 23 June 24, 25, 26 THIS May 29, 30 julv 8.

Julv 15, 16 julv 18 julv 24, 25. 26 julv 27, 28 Julv 2, 3, 4 4 Ausust 5.6,7 August 12. 13. 14 August 15. 16 August 21.

22 August 23, 24 August 29. 30 7 Mav 5. 6 Mav 15. 16 Mav 13. 14 Mav 23, 24 Mav 21.

22 May 1,3 June 2, 3, 4 June 14, 15. 16 lune 12, 13 lune 24, 25. 26 lune 22. 23 Mav 30. 31 Tunc 1 SEASON julv 8.

9 1 Julv 6. 7 julv 17, 18 julvl5.16 julv 27, 28 julv 24. 25, 26 Julv 4. 5 August 5, 6, 7 August 3, 4 August 15, 16 Aug. 12, 13, 14 August 23, 24 August 21, 22 Aug.

31, Sept. 1 RIB Baumhohz. 2B Chiti. Post. BB Hacker 1, Nuxhall 1.

Davis 1. SO Nuxhall 3. Lane 2, Davis 2. HO Hacker 3 in 3 2-3, Nuxhall 4 Lane 1 in 1. Davis 2 in 3 1-3.

Davis (2-0). Nuxhall (1-1). STROH TAKES SECOND IN WOMEN'S BOWLING Billie Stroh took over second place in the Dawson and Wikoff women's handicap singles bowling tournament at Schaefer's yesterdav with 584. Marv Van Cleve continues in first place with 588. Ethel FraW- Tom Zachary, University of man is third with 575, followed North California first baseman, is: by Rosella Jones 567 and Betty the son of the former big league jCarr 565.

pitcher of the same name. 1 The tourney continues today..

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Years Available:
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