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Evening star. [volume] (Washington, D.C.) 1854-1972, August 11, 1955, Image 61

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** THE EVENING STAR, Washington, D. ,C
THURSDAY. AUGUST 11. 1955
C-4
MAJOR LEAGUE BOX SCORES
YANKEES, 3; RED SOX, 2
Boston. A.H.O.A. Now York. A H.O A.
Good'n 2b 5 0 3 2 Rissuto.ss 3 0 0 4
Klaus.zs 0 10 4 •-•Robinson i 0 O 0
WU'ams.lf 40 4 0 Coleman.ss 0 OXO
Jensen,rf (12 10 SSkowron X 0 o o
Zauchln.lb 4 0 15 0 Rich ion.ss 0000
Whlte.c 0 0 10 McD’ld.'-’b 4 2 2 3
1 Daley.c 4 0 3 1 Mnntle.cl 4 0 5 0
Hatton.Sb 4 113 Berra.c 0 2 8 1
Piersnlixf 5 18 0 Collins.lb 4 012 2!
SuUlvan.p 4 0 2 0 Noren.lf 5 0 7 0j
Bauer, rs 5 0 0 0
Carey .3b 412 2
Larsen.p 5 0 2 3
Totals 42 3x38 10 Totals 42 538 15
1 Struck out for White In 4th.
3 Popped up for Rlzsuto In 10th.
3 Struck out for Coleman m 12th.
x Two out when winning run scored.
Boston 020 000 000 000 o—2
NeY York 002 000 000 000 I—3
Runt—Jensen, Zauchln. Berra, Carey,
Larsen. Errors—Ooodman. Klaus. Runs
batted m—Hatton i 2). Berra. McDou
gald. Carey. Sacrifice—Goodman. Rls
auto. MrDouxald. Collins. Left on bases
—Boston. 8; New York, 12. Bases on
balls—Oil Sullivan. 8; off Larsen. 5.
Struck out— By Sullivan, 4: by Larsen. 7.
Runs and earned runs Off Sullivan,
3-0; oft Larsen. 2-2. Hit by pitcher—By
Larsen (White i. Winning pitcher—Lar
sen (4-1). Losing pitcher Sullivan
(14-10). Time—3:2o. Attendance —
84,280.
REDLEGS, 7-6; CUBS, 2-3
FIRST OAME
Cincinnati. A.H.O.A. Chicago. A.H.O.A.
Temple,2b 5 2 5 1 Fondy.lb 3 19 1
Palys.lf 4 13 0 Baker.2b 4 18 3
Kl's'skl.lb 5 2 5 1 Klng.rf 4 13 0
Harmon.lb o 0 1 o Banks.ss 412 3
Poat.rf 4 2 10 Jackson.lib 4 2 0 2
Bell.cf 3 14 0 Speake.lf 4 0 2 0
Batts,c 318 0 Mlksis.cf 30 10
lßurgess.c 1 0 0 0 Chltl.c 3 0 4 1!
Bmlth.3b 5 112 Mlnner.p 100 0 :
Bridges.ss 4 3 0 4 JeficoaLp 10 0 1
Gross,p 2 111 2Baumh'ts 1 o 0 0;
Freeman.p 1 0 0 0 Hlllman.p 0 0 0 1 ;
-Totals 37 14 27 0 Totals 3282712
1 Hit by pitched ball for Batts In 7th. i
2 Plied out lor Jeftcoat In Bth. j
Cincinnati 020 100 400—7 j
Chicago 000 002 000 —2!
t Runs —Temple. Palys. Klussewskl. Post,
Bell. Batts. Burgess. Pondy. Baker. Errors
1 Gross. Baker. Runs batted in—Klus
tewskl. Bell. Gross. Fondy. King, Smith
121, Bridges. Burgess. Two-base hits—
Temple. Batts. Post. Home run—Fondy.
Sacrifice Gross Sacrifice fly Bell.
Double plays—Banks to Baker to Fondy,
Bridges to Temple to Klussewskl. Left on
Eases—Cincinnati. B: Chicago. 4. Bases
an balls—oo Mtnner. 1: off JeOcoat. 2:
off Gross, 1. Btruck out—By Minner, 2-
by Gross, 8: by Jeflcoat. 2. Hits —Off
Minner. 8 In 34s Innings; ofl Gross. 5
in at. Innings; oil Jeflcoat. 6 In 4',
innings; off Hillman. 0 In 1 Inning: off
Freeman. 1 In B*s innings Runs and
earned runs—Off Minner. 3-3: off Oross.
2-2; ofl Jeflcoat. 4-4: off Hillman. 0-0;
off Freeman. 0-0 Hit by pitcher—By
Jeflcoat (Burgess). Winning pitcher—
Gross (1-0). Losing pitcher Minner
(8-6 L Time —2:lß. Attendance—l2,3oo.
SECOND GAME
Clneianatt. A.H.O A. Chicage. A.H.O.A. I
Temple.2b 5 16 2 Fondy.lb 4 2 5 0|
Burgess.c 5 2 2 0 Baker.2b 4 1 3 2!
Klusz’ki.lb 5 3 9 0 Ba’holtz.lf 4 2 2 0!
post.rf 50 3 0 Banks.ss 411 3j
Belief 4 2 10 Jackson.3b 3 0 2 1
Palys.lf 4 13 0 Merrl'n.cf 4 14 1;
Smith,3b 4 0 12 Miksis.rf 4 0 10!
Bridges,ss 3 12 3 Chltl.c 3 0 8 1
Fowler,p 4 2 0 1 28auer 1 0 O Ot:
Hacker.p §001)
Pollet.p 0 0 10
IKlng 0 0 0 0
Davis.p 0 0 0 1 !
3Cooper 10 0 0
Totals 39 12 27 8 Totals 34 727 10
1 Walked and scored for Pollet in Bth.
2 Filed out lor Chltl In 9th.
3 Struck out for Davis In 9th.
Cincinnati 000 201 210—8
Chicago I 000 100 020—3
Runs—Burgess. Klussewskl (2). Bell,
tmlth. Fowler. Fondy.* King, Banks
rrors— Temple. Klussewskl. Burgess.:
Banks. Bell Runs batted In —Kluszewski:
(21. Banks, Burgess. Bridges. Fowler, j
Bell. Baker, Baumholtz Two-base hit—;
Bell. Home runs—Kluszewski. Banks |
Stolen base—Smith. Double plays—Mer-i
riman to Chltl: Temple to Kluszewski. I
left on bases—Cincinnati. 7: Chicago. «.!
Bases on balls—Off Fowler. 2: ofl Pollet.
1 Struck out—By Fowler, 2; by Hacker.;
8 Hits—Ofl Hacker. 11 in 7 Innings,
(laeed three batters In 8th): ofl Pollet.:
8 in 1 inning; off Davis. 1 In 1 dfcntng.j
Suns and earned runs—Off Fowler. 3-3:;
Off -Hacker. 6-5; ofl Pollet. 0-0: off:
Davis. 0-0. Winning pitcher—Fowler
Ts-7). Losing pitcher—Hacker (10-10).
Time —2:18. Attendance —14.184.
m/norTeagues
By the Associated Press
~~ PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE
HftT Anteles. 4—2; Sacramento. 2—7;
(First came 11 innings). _
San Diego, a —o; Oakland. o—s.
Ban Francisco, 0—1.3; Seattle, 3—5.1
Hollywood. 10; Portland. .3,
INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE
Toronto, 1; Buffalo. 0.
Montreal, 8. Rochester. 1.
Oniy games scheduled.
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION
Denver. 8; Louisville. 7.
Toledo. 8: Bt. Paul. 4.
Minneapolis. 4; Charleston, 0.
Only games scheduled.
TEXAS LEAGUE
Oklahoma City. 1—8; Houston. o—l.
Dallas. 1; Beaumont, 0 (12 innings).
Bhreveport. 5; Port Worth. 3 (10
Innings).
San Antonio. 1; Tulsa. 0.
SOUTHERN ASSOCIATION
Mobile, 2—10; Memphis, I—l 4.
Chattanooga, 4: Atlanta. 2.
Birmingham, 5; Nashville. 4.
New Orleans at Little Rock, postponed.
SOUTH ATLANTIC LEAGUE
Charlotte. 3; Columbus. 1.
Jacksonville. 7; Augusta. 6.
Savannah, 9; Macon. 2.
Columbia. 4: Montgomery, 0.
WESTERN LEAGUE
Lincoln. 5; Dea Moines. 0.
Colorado Springs. 9; Pueblo, 2.
Sioux City. 5; Wichita. 4.
EASTERN LEAGUE
No tames scheduled
PIEDMONT LEAGUE
Lynchburg. 4—5; Sunbury. O
Hagerstown. .3: Portsmouth, 0,
York, 6; Newport_News. 2.
Junior League Slate
Extended in Arlington
The Arlington Junior Major
League schedule has been
lengthened two days in order to
play postponed games.
Monday Leeway Range meets
Shirley Food at 7 p.m. at Four
Mile Run. Tuesday Leeway and
Clarendon Trust play at 7 and
McQuinn's meets Vet Vans at 9.
The league championship play
offs begin Wednesday.
SIZES—ONE PRICE .. Bn _ u
7.ioxis . C J H
6.40x15 7.60x1 f
6.70x15 8:00x15 TUBI
6.50x16 8.20x15 ■
HHHH tire holds
Reconditioned • Recappobte Exchange them »aiV price
ARL-ALEX
Reg. $7.50 4718 Hampdxn I 2315 Blodemburg 3300 Jtfftrzan
Wha«l Lone, Befhetdo Road N.E. Davit Hwy.
_ Open Dally I Open Dalle a Sat. Open Dally
Alignment s « 0 » fr 44. 8 A.M. la 0 p.m. s a.m. to » Km
Sspciol Sat. Slp A I Sanday Satardse
jor OL. 6-5200 >« * A M 6r M
* Block> south o/| LA. 6-3885 TE. 6-6807 I
At Our iait-Wett Hwy. lOn Routt I—Next 4 mm. from
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DODGERS, 5; GIANTS, 4
New Twrk. A.H.O.A. Brooklyn. A.H.O.A.
t Terw «r,2b 3 14 1 Honk.3b 3 114
) Lock'nn.lf 2 0 10 Reese.as 2 111
) Mnys.cf 2 0 2 0 Bnlder,cf '>l2o
) Thom'n.nb 3 10 1 Cnmp'ln.c 3 14 0
) Mueller,rf 3 11 O Hodgea.lb 3 210 O
I Hnrrls.lb 2 0 2 0 Furftlo.rf 4 0 0 0
) lHof'n.lb 1 0 2 0 Gilliam U 2 2 10
Amnl'no.sa 3 0 2 2 Zimmer,2b 3 0 14
! Kntt.c 3 1 3 0 Crnig.p 10 0 0
);Mozunnt.p 0 0 0 0 Spooner,o 10 0 0
) Glel.p 2 0 12
i Totals 24 418 6 Totals 24 Bx2o 10
1 Struck out for Harris in sth.
' x Two out in 7th when game wag
called by -ain.
New York 200 020 o—4
Brooklyn 320 000 X—s
Runs—rerwilllger 42). Lockman (2),
, Hoak. Reese. Snider (2). Campanula.
; Krtor —Hodges. Runs batted in—Muel
ler. Hodges (3). Gilliam. Campanella.
, Thompson (2). Two-base hits—Snider,
i Hodges, Thompson. Sacrifice Craig.
. Double play—Oiel to Amalfltano. Left
. on bases—New York. 6; Brooklyn, 10.
i Bates on Balls—Off Monaant, 4: off Olel.
I 4: ofl Craig. 5. Struck out—By Monaant.
. 1; by Ole’, 2: by Craig. 1; by Spooner, t.
Hits—Off Moniant. 5 in 1*» innings: off
, Giel. 3 In 4)1 Innings; oft Craig. 2 in 4
> innings (faced three batters in sth):
. Off Bpooner. 2 In 244 innings. Runs and
> earned runs—Off Monaant, 5-6: off Giel.
0-0: oft Craig. 4-3; ofl Spooner. 0-0.
Hit by pitcher—By Craig (Lockman).
. Wlnn'ng pitcher—Spooner (4-4). Lo*ln«
pitcher—Moniant (1-6). Ttmg—2:l9.
Attendance —19,459.
PIRATES, 3; PHILS, 2
, Fittsb'rtb. A H.O.A. Phils. A H.OA
B.O’B'n.cf 4 0 5 0 Ashburn.cf 4 3 3 0
Freese.:tb 5 2 0 1 Morgan.ss 5 114
Sr Lynch,rf 5 2 0 0 H'mner.'Xb 4 0 13
; i Cl'm'nte.rf o 0 O 1 Knnts.li 40 3 1
Long.lb 4010 2 Jones.3b 53 13
I Atwell.c 317 0 Waltk’s.lb 5 110 0
j'Thomas.lf 4 10 0 Gr'wt'i.rf 4 14 0
lj.O'B'n.2b 4 13 4 Lopata.c 30 7 0
i; Groat,ss 4 2 3 4 Rog'vtn.p 10 0 0
Friend.p 4 0 2 5 1 Blaylock 1 O o 0
Miller,p 110 0
i Meyer, p 000 0;
| Totals 37 It 30 17 Totals 37 93011 j
{ 1 Grounded out lor Rogovln >n 6th. ,
.Pittsburgh .. 020 000 000 I—3
! Philadelphia 000 020 000 o—2l
Runs—Atwell. Thomas. Friend. Green-,
. grass. Lopata. Errors —Ashburn. Ham
ner, Jones. RLns batted in—Thomas (2),
Ashburn 12). Lynch. Two-base hits —
Atwell. Ashburn, Oroat. Home run—
Thomas. Stolen base —Ashburn. Sacri
fices —E. O'Brien (OX, Miller. Double
play—Lopata to Morgan to Lopata. Left
on bases—Philadelphia. 10; PtttaburgK
7. Bases on balls —Off Miller. 1: ofl
Friend. 4. Btruck out—By Rogovin. 3;
by Friend. 7; by Meyer. 1. Hits —Off
. Rogovln. 5 in 5 innings; off Miller. 3 in
4'» innings; ofl Meyer. 1 in 4 inning
Runs and earned runs—Off Rogovin, 2-2:
oil Miller, l-l; off Meyer. 0-0; ofl
Friend. 2-2. Winning pitcher—Friend
(9-81. Losing pitcher—Miller (5-3).
Time —2:45. Attendance —3,922.
MAJOR LEADERS
BATTING (based on 275 bata)—Ka
llne. Detroit. .347; Kuenn. Detroit.
! ..328; Power. Kanawa City. .315: Smith.
Cleveland. .313: Kell. Chicago. .312.
* RUNS—Kahne. Detroit. 97; Mantle. New
York, 9U: Smith. Cleveland, 87: Good
man. Boston. 79; Tuttle. Detroit. 77.
RUNS BATTED IN—Jensen. Boston, and
Boone. Detroit. 88: Kaline. Detroit. <
81: Berra. New York. 79; Mantle. New
York. 71. „ _
HlTS—Kaline, Detroit, 151: Kuenn. De
troit. 144; Smith. Cleveland. 140;
Power. Kansas City. 135; Fox, Chi
cago. 131.
DOUBLES—Kuenn. Detroit. 30: Oood
man, Boston. 27: Power. Kansas City.
25: Finitan. Kansas City, 24: White,
Boston, and Smith. Cleveland. 23.
TRIFLES—MantIe. New York. 9: Carey.
New York. 8; Boone. Detroit, and Fmi
gan. Kansas City, 7. Six players tied
with 6.
HOME RUNB—Mantle. New York. 26;
Kaline. Detroit, and Zernlal. Kansas
City. 23: Zauchln. Boston. 22; Berra.
New York. 20. i
STOLEN BABEB—Rivera, Chicago. 18: i
Jensen. Boston. 13; Minoso. Chicago.
12: Busby. Chicago. 10; Smith, Cleve
; land. 8.
!PITCHING (based on 10 decisions)
; Byrne. New York. 10-3. .769: Dono- j
van, Chicago. 13-4. .765: Nixon. Bos
| ton. 12-6. .706; Hurd. Boston. 7-3.
700; Hoext. Detroit. 11-5. .688.
'STRIKEOUTS Bcore. Cleveland. 174:
Turley. New York. 164: Hoeft, De
i troit. 103; Pierce. Chicago. 09: Garcia, i
Cleveland. 98.
LEAGUE HOME RUNS—7IO (record is.
973 set In 1050).
NATIONAL LEAGUE
BATTING (Based on 275 at bats)—
Ashburn. Philadelphia, and Capanella.
Brooklyn. .320; Kluszewski. Cincinnati.
.317; Post Cincinnati, and Bnider,
1 Brooklyn. .313.
RUNS—Snider. Brooklyn. 98; Mays.
New York. 80; Kluszewski. Cincinnati.
90; Post. Cincinnati, 84; Bruton. Mil
waukee. 81.
iRUNS BATTED IN—Bolder. Brooklyn.
I 11)9: Bloks. Chicago, and bints. Phil
i adelphia. 91: Kluszewski. Cincinnati.
89: Mays. New York, 88.
HITS—-Klussewskl and Post. Cincinnati.
142: Bell. Cincinnati. 140; Aaron.
! Milwaukee. 138: Logan. Milwaukee.
! and Ashburn, Philadelphia. 134.
DOUBLES—Logan. Milwaukee. 31; Post.
Cincinnati, 26; Aahburn. Philadelphia.
25: Reese and Snider. Brooklyn. 24.
TRIPLES—Bruton, Milwaukee, and Long.
Pittsburgh. 9; Clemente, Pittsburgh. 8;
seven player, tied with 7.
HOME BUNB—Snider, Brooklyn, and
Banks. Chlcaao. 38: Klussewskl. Cin
cinnati. 37: Mays. New York. 38;
Post. Cincinnati, and Mathews, Mil
waukee. 29.
STOLEN BASES—Boyer. St. Loula, 18:
Bruton, Milwaukee. 15: Temple. Cin
cinnati. and Mays, New York, 14;
Gilliam. Brooklyn, 12.
PITCHING (Based on 10 decisions)—
Newcombe, Brooklyn, 18-2, .900;
Erskine. Brooklyn. 10-4. .714; Loes.
Brooklyn. 9-4. .892; Lablne. Brooklyn.
11-5. .688; Roberts. Philadelphia.
18-9. .867.
STRIKEOUTS—Jones, Chicago. 144:
Roberts. Philadelphia. 136: Newcombe.
Brooklyn. 120; Conley, Milwaukee, and
Haddix. St. Louis, 105.
«yyi» | gr , -» w ,R<cord u
CAMPY HAS EDGE ,
SLIM AS IT IS,
IN BATTING RACE
NEW YORK. Aug. 11 UP.
—The race for National
League batting honors. be
tween Roy Campanella of
Brooklyn and Richie Ash
burn of the Phillies was
locked tighterthanthis today.
Both Campanella and Ash
burn are batting .329, the
circuit’s top average. But
broken down just a bit
further, Campy has the lead
—.32927 to .32924.
Ashburn had three hits in
four trips against Pittsburgh
last night while Campanella
had one safety In three at
bats against the Giants.
ATHLETICS, 5; WHITE SOX, 4
Chicago. A.H.O.A. Kanaaa C. A.H.OA
Minoso.il 5 2 2 0 Power,lb 4 17 1
Fox.2b 3 0 3 3 Sl'iht'r.rf 4 2 3 0
Nieman.rf 4 10 0 Vato.ll 4180
Dropo.lb 5012 2 Blmps'n.cf 30 2 0
K’nedy,3b 510 5 LoDex.3b 42 16
C’r’n'l.ss 5 115 Plnttan,2b 3 16 0
Busby.cf 3 2 10 D'M'strl.ss 2X14
3Rlvera.cf 0 0 0 0 Astroth.e 2 0 3 0
Lollar.c 3 14 0 Keilxter.D 2 0 2 0
4Coan 0 0 0 0 2Zernfal 10 0 0
Moss.c 0 0 0 0 Oorman.p 0 0 0 0
Byrd.p 10 0 1
H'shm'n.9 10 10
lKeli 10 0 0
Howell.p 0 0 0 0
SAdams 0 0 0 0
Martin,p 0 0 0 1
Total, 38 8 24 17 totals 29 8 27 11
1 Struck out for Harshman In 7th.
2 Struck out for Kellner in 7th.
3 Walked for Busby In Bth.
4 Ran for Lollar in Bth.
5 Walked for Howell In Bth.
Ehicago 000 020 020—4
ansas City . 202 001 OOx—s
Runa—Minoso. Nleman. Carrasquel.
Lollar. Power. Slaughter (2). Valo, Lopes.
Errors—Fintgan. Busby. Runa batted In
—Minoso (2). Nleman. LoUar. Slaughter,
Lope, (3). Two-base hit—Minoso. Three
base hit,—Power, Slaughter. Home runs
—Minoso. Lopes. Nleman Stolen base —
Carrasquel. Sacrifices—DeMaestrl. As
troth. Double plays—Carrasquel to Fox
to Dropo: Fox to Carrasquel to Dropo.
Left on bases— Chicago. 11; Kanaaa City.
3. Bases on balls —Off Byrd. 1; off Kell
ner. 3; off Gorman. 3. Struck out—By
Byrd. 1: by Harshman. 1; by Howell. 1:
by Kellner, 2; by Gorman. 1. Hits—Off
Byrd 6 In 2H innings; off Harshman. 2
In :)H Innings: off Howell. 0 In 1 inning:
off Martin. 0 In 1 Inning; off Kellner. 4
In 7 innings: off Gorman. 4 In 2 Innings.
Runs and earned runs—Off Byrd. 4-3;
off Harshman. 1-1: off HoweU. 0-0; off
Martin. 0-0; off Kellner. 2-2: off Oor
man. 2-2. Winning pitcher—Kellner
18-7). Losing pitcher—Byrd (6-8). Time
—2:33. Attendance—2l.473.
INDIANS, 6; TIGERS, 4
Detroit. A.H.O.A. Cleveland. A.H.O.A.
Kuenn.ss 5 :t 2 2 Smith.rf 6 12 0
Tuttle.cf 5 2 2 0 Woodl'c.lf .112 0
Kaline.rf 5 0 2 0 4Kiner.lf 2 10 0
Torx’on.lb 4 :j 6 0 Wertz.lb 4 0 7 0
Boone.3b 4 3 1 0 Ro«en.3b 3 12 3
Delsinv.lf 4 0 10 Doby.cf 2 0 0 0
B.Phl'Psilf 00 0 0 AvU*,2b 315 1
House.c 3 0 9 0 Naragon.c 3 2 5 0
nWilson.c 1 00 0 2Hegan.c 10 2 0
Hatfield.2b 311 3 StricYd.s* 20 13
Bunning.p 2 10 11 Mitchell 110 0
Aber.p 1 0 0 0 Mossi. p 0 0 11
HEvers 110 0
Oarcla.p 2 0 0 1
-TFaln 0 0 0 0
Dente.za O 0 0 1
7Folles 110 0
Totals 37 13x24 6 Totals 33 10 27 10
1 Singled for Strickland In 7th.
2 Rar for Naragon In 7th.
3 Walked for Garcia In 7th.
4 Struck out for Woodllng in 7th.
5 Grounded out for House in Bth.
0 Singled for Moss! in 9th.
7 Singled for Dentt in 9th.
x N'-ng out When winning run scored.
Detroit __ 000 110 200—4
Cleveland 000 110 004—6
Runs—Kuenn. Torgeaon (2). Hatfield.
Smith. Klner, Rosen. Naragon, Evers.
Foiles Runs batted in—Boone. Rosen,
Kuenn# Naragon. Torgeaon (2), Klner
>4i. Two-base hits Torgeaon. Kuenn.
Tuttle. Three-base hit—Boone. Home
runs—Rosen. Naragon, Torgeaon. Kiner.
Stolen base —Rosen, Sacrifice—Bunning
Douola plays—Avila to Strickland to
Werts; Bunning to Kuenn to Torceson;
rii to Avila. Left on bases—Detroit,
Cleveland. 8. Bases on balls—Ofl
Bunning, 4; Oarcla, 1. Struck out—By
Bunning. 8: by Garcia. 3; by MossL 2.
Hits—Off Oarcla. 12 in 7 innings; off
Moss!, i m 2 Innings; off Bunning. 5 in
6V» innings; off Aber, 5 in 2H innings.
Runs and earned runs Off Bunning.
2-2. ofl Aber. 4-4; off Oarcla. 4-4: off
Mossi. 0-0. Hit by pitcher—By Bunning
(Doby). Passed ball —Naragon. Winning
pitcher—Mossi (3-2). Losing pitcher—
Aber t 6-2). Time —2:44. Attendance —
16.778.
CARDS, 7; BRAVES, 2
81. Lmie. AHO.A. Milw'kro. A.H.O.A.
Hemua.3b 3 10 2 Bruton.cf 4 10 1
1 Boyer.3b 10 0 2 Logan.sa 42 5 7
Moon.lb 3 1 12 0 M'h wa.3b 4 0 11
Musial.rf 4 3 10 Aaron.2b 3 10 3
Virdon.cf 4 0 2 0 Crowe.lb 3 0 111
jfich nst.'lb 53 0 1 Pafko.rf 40 6 0
( RepulskUf 5 15 0 Th ms n.lt 4 110
B'rbrlnk-c 3 0 5 0 Cr'nd'U.c 4 13 1
Gr'massg 3 3 2 4 Burdette.p 2 0 0 1
fp'h'lsky.p 30 0 0 2Tanner 1o 0 o
Jolly.p 0 0 0 0
Totals 34 11 27 9 Totals 34 6 27 15
1 Ran for Hemus in Bth.
2 Piled out for Burdette in 6th.
3 Fanned for Jolly In 9th.
St Louis 002 003 002—7
Milwaukee 011 000 000—2
Runs—Hemus. Moon (2). Mustal.
Schoendlrnts. Burbrlnk. Orammas. Bru
ton, Thomson. Errors—Burbrlnk. Aaron.
Runa batted In—Vlrdon (21, Schoen
dlenat. Grammas. Hemus I2|. Logan.
Two-base hits.—Muslal. Orammas. Lo
gan. BrLton. Crandall. Aaron. Three
base hits Schoendlenst. Thomson.
Stolen basea—Moon. Mutlal. Sacrifice
fly—Vlrdon. Double playe—Logan to
Crowe: Aaron to Logan to Crowe. Left
on bases—St Louis. 8: Milwaukee, 7.
Bases on balls—Off Poholsky. 2; ofl
Burdette. 3; off Jolly. 3. Struck out—By
Poholsky. 5: by Jolly. 1. Hits —Ofl Bur
dette. 8 in 6 Innings: ofl Jolly, 3 in 3
innings. Runs and earned runs—Off
Poholsky. 2-1: off Burdette. 5-3: off
Jollv. 2-2. Hi* by pitcher—Burdette
i Burbrlnk) Wild pitch—Jolly. Passed
ball—Crandall. Winning pitcher—Pohol
akv (8-6). Losing pitcher—Burdette
18-8). Time—2:32. Attendance—32.694.
Enter Cavalier Tennis
VIRGINIA BEACH, Va„ Aug.
11 UP. —Ann Gray and Charlotte
Decker of Washington, D. C.,
were entered In the women's
singles eliminations as the Cav
alier Invitational tennis tourna
ment was scheduled to begin
today.
I hoovers (TTOsEAT COVER I
■ u„ a SENSATION! I
I y.*s PLASTIC “ I
■ t(ATS
■ or Rear—All Corn 559.95
■ o y-w {| i,ro .^ss
ff ” CONVERTIBLE TOPS- -' « ■
■ REG. 459.95 REG. $49.-95 REG. $75
J: 3-PLV TOPS 3-PLY TOPS 3-PLY TOPS ■
S. 3-YEAR GUARANTEE J-YEAR GUARANTEE WITH PLASTIC M:
H*o 40 faM Mare T< ” M Cenvertiklc. REAR WINDOW ■
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DON LARSEN
LARSEN
Continued From Page C-l
been fooling with it ever since
I came up to the St. Louis
Browns in 1953 (under Marion),
but I was afraid to throw it
much. I thought it might be
bad for the elbow. Jim Turner
(Yankee pitching coach) and
Yogi Berra encouraged me to
keep on throwing it and it’s
Anally paying oS.”
Berra, seated nearby, nodded.
“He was mixing them up pretty
good but the slider was his
money pitch today,” Yogi said.
“He had real good control of it.
He was throwing strikes all
afternoon."
Stengel made no attempt to
conceal his elation.
“He didn’t look like much be
fore we sent him down but right
now he’s first class,” Casey said.
"The way he’s going he might be
my No. 1 guy. He seems to know
what he’s doing out there and
he’s shown no trace of the sore
arm that made him practically
useless all spring.”
Larsen acknowledged the
spring soreness but couldn’t ac
count for the malady.
“I didn't go to any doctors or
anything after they sent me to
Denver,” he said. “I Just pitched,
that’s all. I guess I pitched the
soreness out.”'
Junior Playoffs
To Open Today
Playoffs to decide the Junior
League champion In the Mont
gomery County Boys Baseball
Association will begin at 6 p.m.
today at Montgomery Blair High
School, barring bad weather.
Carl Freeman plays Mclntlre
Hardware today and the loser
plays Stonehouse Inn Monday.
Freeman won the Northwest
ern Division with a 19-1 record.
Mclntlre was the Central Divi
sion champion with 17-3. Stone
house took the Eastern Division
with 18-2.
Games postponed by weather
will be played the next day.
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— 1 • HIGHEST TRADE-IN ’« B‘«4*bab.r
• CASIEST CREDIT • Factory Warranty and aw atkarg
Oar 30 Yttrt a/ Exptrienct It Y»ar Guaranitt of a Squart Oral!
ALL TYPES I".' t?ff "^l !% I?! Iff FI AI M
of radio I i | ynPirynWfyi
REPAIRS f i MM I mi " 11 lITJ ifrl
WHILE YOU I I fn * gill
WAIT X
Cleveland Owes
Thanks to A's,
For Top Place
Continued From Page C-l
ahead to stay In the sixth with
his seventh homer of the season
with the bases empty.
Gorman took over the pitch
ing for Kansas City at the start
of the eighth and gave up a
home run to Bob Nleman, the
first hitter he faced.
Kiner Hits Grand Slam
Cleveland had home runs by
A1 Rosen and Hal Naragon (his
first In the majors), but trailed
the Tigers, 4-2, on the strength
of Earl Torgeson’s two-run
homer off Mike Garcia in the
seventh. Then after pinch sin
gles hy Hoot Evers and Hank
Foiles and A1 Smith’s bunt single,
Klner put A1 Aster’s first pitch
over the left-field fence.
Two Innings earlfer, Aber had
relieved Rookie Jim Bunning to
fan Klner with the bases loaded.
It was Kiner’s 14th home run
of the season, the 365th of his
career and the four runs batted
in gave him a major league total
of 1.001.
Big Don Larsen pitched the
Yankees to their victory over
Boston’s Frank Sullivan, win
ning on Andy Carey’s single over
Ted Williams’ head with two out.
Larsen Retires 18 in Row
The tense struggle found
Larsen retiring 18 consecutive
batters from the time Jim
PiersaU singled to start the
seventh until he walked Sullivan
to open the 13th.
Billy Klaus. Boston's fine
shortstop, fumbled Yogi Berra’s
roller, to give the Yanks their
opening in the 13th. After Joe
Collins sacrificed, moving Berra
to second, Manager Pinky
Higgins ordered Sullivan to walk
Irv Noren, with two righthanded
batters coming up.
Hank Bauer broke his bat on
a weak pop fly to Sullivan for
the second out but Carey drove
a long liner over Williams’ head
for a game-winning single as
Berra rode home with an un
earned run. Williams and the
other Boston outfielders were
playing in close.
Both Masterful Pitchers
Sullivan and Larsen were com
plete masters of the occasion. In
fact, Sullivan had a ane-hltter
for 7Vi Innings until the Yanks
put on a threat with Gil Mc-
Dougald’s single and a walk to
Mickey Mantle in the eighth.
Boston got to Larsen for two
in the second on Grady Hatton’s
single with the bases loaded.
Sam White had to leave the
gan\f in the fourth as the result
of being hit above the left elbow
by Larsen in the second. He went
to the hospital for X-rays that
proved negative. Pete Daley took
his place.
The Yanks tied the score in
the third with only one hit, a
single by Berra. Carey walked
and Larsen had a life when Billy
Goodman fumbled his grounder.
Phil Rizzuto’s sacrifice bunt
moved both men up a base. Mc-
Dougald’s sacrifice bunt squeezed
home Carey and sent Larsen to
third. After Mantle walked.
Berra lined a single past
Zauchln, scoring Larsen.
Larsen now has beaten Kansas
City, Detroit and Boston since
his return from Denver where he
compiled a 9-1 record. Earlier In
the year he had a 1-1 record with
the Yanks and brought his sea
son big league mark to 4-1.
Rain postponed Washington
at Baltimore In the only other
American League game on tap.
Dodgers Beat Giants
In the National. Brooklyn
topped New York, 5-4, In a game
called In the seventh by rain;
St. Louis put second-place Mil
waukee 15 games back. 7-2;
Pittsburgh edged Philadelphia,
3-2, In 10 Innings, and Cin
cinnati took two at Chicago,
7-2 and 6-3.
Gil Hodges drove In three runs
with a double and single as the
Dodgers packed their scoring In
the first two frames. The Giants
scored twice in the first with
out a hit against Rookie Roger
Craig. Karl Spooner won in
relief after Craig went wild again
in a two-run Giants fifth.
St. Louis smacked 11 hits,
three each by Stan Musial and
Alex Grammas, while Tom Po
holsky held the Braves to six.
Musial got his I,oooth extra
base hit with a double.
Ted Kluszewski hit his 37th
homer (his 200th lifetime) and
the Cubs’ Ernie Banks tied
Brooklyn’s Duke Snider for the
major league lead with his 38th
in the second game as the Red
legs snapped Chicago’s six-game
winning streak. Rookie Don
Gross won his first major league
decision in the opener.
A bases-loaded single by Jerry
Lynch won for the Pirates, who
had an early 2-0 lead on Frank
Thomas’ two-run homer.
FIGHTS LAST NIGHT
NEW YORK (Madison Square Oar
den)—Carmen Baaliio. 180. Canaetota.
N. Y.. outpointed Itaio Scortichlni. 154.
Italy (10> (nontitle).
MANILA— Little Cezar. 119. Ma
nila. knocked out Caxarreno Gianelll.
117. Italy (21. (For Philippine ban
tamwelcht title.)
WESTERN AUTO
design
extra power
TjK the 12 Hp WIZARD to cut
perform any
lx TKH Full Gearshift Forward. Neu*
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located on the front panel
Long Range
big 6 gal tank . automotive
type fuel pump
M l ® 294 Trade-In
204437 r
Now ... a 12 horsepower outboard motor
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Arcade Nears
Second-Half
Industrial Title
Arcade Pontiac, winner of
first half play In the Industrial
sandlot baseball league, is run
ning oil with second half honors
as well
Arcade’s eighth straight was a
1-0, 10-inning victory yesterday
over Federal Storage, bringing
Arcade’s record to 9-1 with two
games remaining.
The winning run was scored by
Joe Murphy, who tripled with
two out in the top of the 10th.
He attempted to stretch his hit
into a home run and would have
been out by several feet, but he
hit Catcher Ed Scanlon of Fed
eral Storage hard enough to
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Black Yankees Play
Clowns Tomorrow
Jimmy Proctor of Brandywine,
Md., former Maryland State
player, will pitch the New
York Black Yankees when they
come in for a game with the
Indianapolis Clowns at 8:30 pm.
tomorrow at Griffith Stadium.
j It marks the third appearance
jhere of the two teams this sea
;Bon, eact) having a victory.
cause Scanlon to drop the ball
in making the tag.
Charley Hlden, although hit
freely, giving up 11 hits, had it
in the clutch. Federal Storage
loaded the bases in Its half of the
10th on a walk and two infield
hits. Hiden then struck out the
next two batters and forced the
third to ground out.
Silver Hill plays Federal Bu
reau of Investigation at 5:30
pm. today on the West Ellipse.

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