The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, August 02, 1951, Image 3

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    THURSDAY, August 2, 1951
THE BATTALION
Page 3
LeadingHurlers Can t Stand Aggies
Strain of Double-Headers
By Associated Press
Pity the poor pitchers, caught in
the steaming heat and doublehead
er jam of the steaming four-club
American League race. Even the
best are crumbling under the
strain.
Allie Reynolds, no-hit ace of the
Yankees surge, lasted only one in
ning yesterday against Detroit as
New York lost a 9-8 first game.
Things were so tough that Casey
Stengel brought him back to res
cue Tom Morgan and save the
Yanks’ two-game lead with a 10-6
edge in the second.
Lemon Shellacked
Cleveland’s Bob Lemon was bom
bed in the sixth at Washington
where overworked Mike Garcia, a
13-game winner, had to help save
an 8-6 first game. Early Wynn
failed to last in the second game,
fading for a pinch hitter in Wash
ington’s 4-3 victory.
Only one Boston Red Sox pitch-
” er has gone the route in the last
seven games with the club home at
Fenway Park where it is supposed
to be invincible. Instead of gain-
3 ing ground, the Sox have dropped
2% behind the Yanks.
Ellis Kinder made his fifth ap
pearance in a week yesterday after
Willard Nixon pulled a tendon in
his thigh sliding into a base. Nix
on, inconsistent all season with
only two complete games, was
pitching two-hit ball for seven in
nings when hurt. Walt Masterson
and Kinder nailed down his 5-1
edge over St. Louis.
Chicago Hurler Goes Route
For a change Chicago got a full
nine-inning job as Billy Pierce
whipped Philadelphia, 4-3, to re
main seven games off the pace.
But White Sox pitchers have been
showing the strain during the East
ern swing, Howie Judson and Joe
Dobson in particular.
Brooklyn’s pitching also had a
rough time at Pittsburgh where
the Pirates knocked out Ralph
> Branca and roughed up Loser
Clyde King to win 12-‘9. Ralph
Kiner hit his 27th homer for the
Bucs and Gil Hodges No. 31 for
Brooklyn in the loosely played
’ struggle.
The loss cut the Brooks’ lead to
nine games because New York
split a pair with Chicago, losing
3-2 to Cal McLish and winning
2-0 on Rookie A1 Corwin’s seven-
hit shutout for his first big league
victory.
Despite a 1-0 blanking at the
jands of Cincinnati’s Kenny Raf-
Jensberger, the Phillies held tight
to third place because St. Louis
lost.
Cards Drop Close One
The Cardinals were edged out
by Boston, 2-1, dropping into a
fourth-place tie with the Braves..
Warren Spahn won his 12th on a
five-hitter. Sam Jethroe sped home
. from first on an infield out and
wild throw by Stan Musial to win
the game in the seventh, nullifying
6 2/3 innings of hitless relief
pitching by A1 Brazle.
George Kell, who had a five-hit
day, slashed a single in the eighth
inning to beat the Yankees in the
first game at the Stadium. Kell’s
hit was off Spec Shea but Jack
Kramer was the loser. Two homers
by Gene Woodling and one by
Yogi Berra went to waste. Hank
Bauer drove in three runs and Joe
DiMaggio two in the second game
victory. Even Morgan hit his first
Major League homer but he need-
Bucs Play Benefit
For Julius Sellers
Pittsburgh—(A > )—Not long ago a
group of former Pittsburgh Pi
rates, along with Pitcher Bob Fel
ler of the Cleveland Indians, played
the Pirates an exhibition for the
benefit of Julius Solters.
Solters, a former American
League outfielder, operates a tav
ern here. He has spent thousands
of dollars trying to regain the
sight he started losing 10 years
ago after being hit in the head by
a thrown ball while with the Chi
cago White Sox.
Solters received approximately
$15,000.
But one of the checks which
swelled the more than $12,000 gate
receipts long will be cherished by
Solters. It came from A. B.
Chandler who sent along $250 just
a few days before he quit as base
ball commissioner.
ed help from Reynolds to stave off
a late threat that included Joe
Ginsberg’s three-run homer.
Cleveland came up with three in
the ninth to win the first game at
Washington but succumbed to Ju
lio Moreno’s seven-hit pitching in
the second half of the twilight-
night double. A1 Rosen, Luke East
er and A1 Rosen homered for the
Tribe during the night.
Ted Williams and Vern Stephens
slugged successive first - inning
homers for all the runs the Red
Sox needed to numb tthe Brownies.
Nelson Fox’s ninth-inning double
scoring Pierce was the winning
blow for the White Sox at Phila
delphia.
Brooklyn came at the Pirates,
scoring two runs and loading the
bases when Cal Abrams struck out
to end it. Nine pitchers were used,
five Pirates and four Dodgers.
Rhubarb Mars First Game
Larry Jansen was beaten by the
Cubs in the Giants’ first game at
Chicago, marred by a rhubarb in
the eighth when Manager Leo Du-
rocher insisted that Sal Yvars bat
ted out of turn. He fanned any
how, but the Cubs were ready to
protest to the umpires if he got on
base. Later Durochef admitted he
was wrong.
Corwin retired 15 men in order
until Frank Baumholtz beat out a
bunt. Only three runners reached
second base on the Ottawa grad.
Cincy’s run oft Russ Meyer of
the Phils came in the sixth on
Johnny Wyrostek’s single and Ted
Kluszewski’s double.
Mural Golf Qualifying
Round End; Play Starts
Little League
Playoff Set
For 5 Today
The Southside Food Market
Red Sox and the Seven-Up Tigers
Ivill square off against each other
at the Little League park this
afternoon at 5 p. m.
Winner of this two out of three
game series played on successive
days will be the Little American
League champions and will play
three out of five game series
with the Conway Phillies, winners
of the Little National League, to
determine the city champs.
Gold baseballs will be awarded
to the city champions and silver
baseballs will be given to the run
ner-up by the First State Bank
* and Trust Co. of College Station.
Probable starters for this after
noons game will be Bobby Potts
for the Red Sox and Joe Campise
* for the Tigers. Little League
rules require a pitcher to have
sixty hours rest after pitching
four innings and no pitcher can
hurl more than nine innings a
week.
Qualifying rounds for intramural
golf have been completed a^nd first
round pairings have been announ
ced by Joe Fagan, pro-manager of
the A&M golf course.
First matches must be played
by Friday, Aug. 10; second round
play must be completed by Wed
nesday, Aug. 15 while third and
final rounds must be played by
Monday, Aug. 20.
Fagan has asked all players to
leave their address and the date
they would like to play their
matches at the pro-shop so the
contestants can make necessary ar
rangements.
Each match will be nine holes
or may be 18 if both parties agree
beforehand, Fagan said. The
matches will be played on a match-
play basis.
Bucs Blanks Tribe
For Fifth Straight
The league leading Pirates of
the College Station Summer Soft-
ball League made it five in a row
for second half play yesterday as
they humiliated the Indians, 14-0.
In complete command of the
game at all times because of the
wildness of L. L. Fischer, Indian
hurler, the Pirates scored most of
their runs via the RWI (run walk
ed in) route.
Homer Adams limited the Tribe
batsmen to six hits and also
notched his fiLth win of the sec
ond half play.
A contest between the Tigers
and the Giants at College Park was
rained out and will probably be
replayed either tomorrow or Fri
day of next week, depending on the
decision of managers Les Richard
son and Newt Williams of the
Giants and Tigers respectively.
Contests Monday find the In
dians and Giants squaring off at
the College Park diamond while
the Tigers and Pirates tangle at
College Hills.
Wednesday afternoon the Indians
meet the Tigers at College Hills
while the Pirates and Giants clash
at College Park.
Championship pairings arc as
follows:
Louis Hearn vs. Miller Barber
Charlie Hodge vs. Alex Pegues
Johnnie Storrie vs. Bill Holmes
Joe Bennett vs. Rex Martin
First flight pairings:
- Andy Anderson—bye.
John Jones, Jr. vs. J. E. Slaught
er
M. R. Strickler vs. Jerry Temple
ton
Lester Smith vs. Hal Haltom
Second flight pairings:
Max Rychlik vs. R. D. Pratt
Gene Sellars vs. Bill Carroll
Bob Godfrey vs. L. O. Wilkenson
R. L. Harris—bye.
Favored for 1951 SWC Title
By Sports Writers at Coaches School
Minor League
Boss Defends
Farm System
Washington, Aug. 2 —
(AP)—Minor League ruler
George Trautman yesterday
defended baseball’s use of the
“farm system” and “work
ing agreements” between major
and minor league teams.
“There is room for both types
of operations,” he told a congres
sional investigating committee.
And, in response to questions by
Rep. McCullough (R-Ohio), he said
a prohibition of either or both
would be “deterimental” to organ
ized baseball.
He also said minor leagues can
not stand much tampering with
baseball’s rules covering:
• Territorial rights, which gives
a franchise owner the exclusive
right to baseball customers in a
given area; and
• The reserve clause, by which
a player who signs a contract with
a team is thereby prevented from
dealing with any other club un
less his contract is sold, traded
or torn up.
A lot of minor league clubs are
having a tough time of it financial
ly right now, he said, “and the
territorial limit is one of their
chief supports.”
He said, too, that if the teams
don’t have the protection of the
reserve clause those with limited
finances will be eliminated.
The congressmen, intent on soak
ing up quickly enough information
on baseball rules to consider bills
to exempt the game from anti-trust
laws, peppered him with questions.
College-Bryan Swimmers
Go to Conroe Tomorrow
Attendance at 21 TRA (Thor
oughbred Racing Association)
tracks during the first six months
of 1951 showed an increase of 3.7
per cent over a similar period in
1950.
Smorjjasbord-MSC
MSC BALL ROOM
Sunday, August 5
Served From 7-8:00 p.m,
A “FOOD FAIR” For Those Who Yearn For
Something- Appetizingly Different On A Hot
Summer Evening!
Service By RESERVATION ONLY—Phone 4-5124
To Make YOUR Reservations . . .
Get a Party Together and Come to the
SMORGASBORD-MSC for an Evening of
Fine Food and Fun!!
Swimmers from Boy Scout Troop
411 of College Station and Troop
12 of Bryan will journey to Camp
Strake near Conroe tomorrow to
compete in the Sam Houston Area
Council Swimming meet.
The swimming events wall be
held on Friday and canoeing and
life saving events Saturday.
Entries in the class A senior
division are Gayle Klipple, Dick
Weick, Tom Barlow, Tom Terrell
and Bob Barlow all from troop
411.
Troop 12 will enter Nolen, Tho
mason, Spell, Carsey and Hawley
in the Class B senior division.
Class A junior division is rep
resented by J. R. Smith, Pete
Hickman, Joe Steen, Albert Stev
ens, Stuart Helvey and Richard
Smith from the College Station
troop.
Troop 411 is representing Brazos
County in the class B' junior divi
sion with a team composed of Dick
Hickerson, Richard Miller, Jack
Burns, Bill Fudge, Charles Dela-
plane, Bill Potts and James Adams.
In the canoeing contest the local
troop will have Orin Helvey, Ter
rell, Delaplane, Robert Cleland
and Don Burchard entered.
Klipple, Weick, Bob Barlow,
Orin Helvey and Smith will com
pete for the life saving honors.
San Antonio, Aug. 2—(AP)—Texas A&M was establish
ed yesterday as the favorite for the Southwest Conference
football championship by sports writers here for the Texas
Coaching School. They predicted Baylor a close second and
Texas just behind Baylor.
Eight writers picked A&M to win the title, while two
others rated them in a tie for first. Baylor was picked by
five, with one tie, and Texas was first on two ballots, with
one tie.
Texas Christian was picked for fourth place with one
■♦•first place selection and one tie.
Southern Methodist was fifth, Ark
ansas sixth and Rice seventh.
Here’s how they ranked on a point
A&M 118, Baylor 111, Texas 104,
Texas Christian 81, Southern Meth
odist 54, Arkansas 35, Rice 29.
Texas college teams ax - e in fivd
other conferences this year and
college coaches attending school
placed the top teams like this:
Border Conference—Arizona.
Lone Star Conference^—East
Texas State.
Texas Conference — Abilene
Christian College.
Gulf Coast Conference—North
Texas State.
Missouri Valley Conference—
Tulsa.
Practice Session's
While sports writers were “put
ting the monkey on A&M’s back”
by picking them to win the SWC
title this Fall, some of the players
who will probably aid them in fu
ture years, along with other par
ticipants, were reaching the peak
of training for football and bas
ketball games tomorrow night and
Saturday.
Football squads will taper off
today because their battle is to
morrow night but there will be an
other day of hard practice for the
cagers.
Paul Bryant of Kentucky, coach
of the South griddei’s—schoolboy
stars from the Southern region
of the Texas Interscholastic League
—grew optimistic over the chances
of his team beating the North,
coached by Frank Howard of Clefn-
son.
Bryant Sets Defense
Bryant set up his first defensive
unit against Howard’s single wing-
back attack and was pleased with
what the boys did. This team was
composed of Howard Moon, John
Reagan (Houston), and Joe Schero,
Brackenridge (San Antonio) ends;
La Von Cox, Galena Park, and
Jerry Fitzpatrick, Harlingen, tack
les.
Lonnie Martin, Cotulla, Jack
Cruther, Gladewater, guards;
Leighton Younger, Austin, right
linebacker; Don Miller, Port Nech-
es, left linebacker; Billy Quinn,
Jefferson (San Antonio), and Lar
ry Graham, Lamar (Houston),
halfbacks, and Richard Earl Black,
Temple, safety.
Offensively, Bryant said his
three up-men, Duane Nutt, Corsi
cana; Eddie Hennig, Tyler, and
Bobby Page, Leverett’s Chapel,
showed “100 percent improvement.”
The game is being rated a toss-
up although the south has a weight
advantage of eight pounds to the
man in the line.
Forrest Anderson of Bradley,'
coaching the South basketball
squad, and Cliff Wells of Tulane,
tutoring the North, revealed they
had agreed to alternate their teams
at the half so all boys would be
certain to get to play.
CLEARANCE
l f± PRICE
Regular $17.95 to $24.95 Regular $29.95 to $79.95
Now to $12.« Now »14.» to m*
About 300 better dresses by established manufacturers
and couturiers . . . Cottons, Linens, Silk Shantungs, and
Rayons in Fashions for Town, Travel, Career, and After-
five p.m. All sizes. Excellent Values in Quality Merchan
dise—at Great Savings.
Smart Shop
Bryan
Texas
Hank Mills, second from right, front row, seemed
quite happy at the time this picture was taken
although probably not afterwards as his team
went down in defeat. Others are, front row,
left to right, George Johnston, Keith Hargrove,
Barney Welch, A. W. Crain, Mills and M. L.
Wilson. Back row, left to right, Jim Watson, Keith
Seymour, Dub Waldrip, Luke Bird, unidentified,
Tom Cartwright and Dee Moore. After yester
day’s defeat by the Pirates, the Indians sport a
1-4' win-loss record.
—(Picture By Staff Photographer Ira Vail.)
PAY-DAY STOCK-UP SAIE
® GROCERY SPECIALS •
can
85c
-Sliced
2 cans 25c
4 oz. French’s pure
Black Pepper .
Np. 1 flat cans—Rosedale-
Pineapple . .
No. 2'/ z cans Del Monte Halves
Bartlett Pears . . . can 43c
46 oz. cans Kimbell’s Grade A
Grapefruit Juice 2 cans 41c
Standardized Strength—Sunsweet
Prune Juice qt. 34c
No. 1 cans—Standard Grade
Tomatoes ... 2
cans
24 oz. Welch
Grape Juice . . .
Halves—flat cans—Bits o’ Sea
Grated Tuna .
23c
37c
2 cans 55c
Get a coupon worth 25c on a can of Mrs. Tuckers
Shortening with each—(No limit to quantity)
Meadowlake Oleo . lb. 29c
Heavy duty detergent
Surf large box 29c
Made of pure sweet cream — Meadowgold
Butter . lb. 79c
Kraft’s Salad Dressing
Miracle Whip .
No. 1 Tall cans—Brookdale
Keta Salmon . .
pint 37c
each 53c
Regular bars—Cashmere Bouquet
Toilet Soap ... 3 bars 25c
No: 303 cans Rosedale (Libby’s pack)
Sweet Peas ... 2 cans 27c
Wesson Oil pint 33c
This weekend only. Popular brands
Cigarettes . . . carton $1.86
Kimbell’s Best
Flour . . .
Six Flavors
Jello .
5 lb. bag 43c
. 2 pkgs. 15c
Hershey’s Dainties
Chocolate Chips 2 pkg. 39c
Refreshing Summer Drink Mix
Kool-Aid .... 6 pkgs. 25c
Sunshine—Krispy
Crackers . . 1 lb. box 27c
Crisco 3 lbs. 83c
• MARKET SPECIALS
Heart o’ Texas
Fryers
Hormel Assorted cold cuts
Lunch Meats .
Jasmine rolls—pure pork
lb. 59c
lb. 49c
Sausage
lb.
Armour’s Dexter Tray pack
Bacon lb.
From Choice Calves
Sirloin Steaks . ,
39c ^
il«
hi
49c nd
. . lb. 99c )
From Choice Calves
Seven Steaks . . . lb. 83c >
Choice Veal
Brisket lb. 49c
From US No. 1 Loins—End Cuts
Pork Chops lb. 53c
(Center Cuts, lb. 65c)
(We are buying only the
best in Beef and Veal-
Choice AA)
• FRESH FRUITS & •
VEGETABLES
The best flavored melons we have had all season.
Thin rinds. Caution: Slice beginning at the stem
end, or they’ll break up.
Watermelons . . .lb. 13/4c
(CHILLED, 1/2C per lb. extra.)
Thompson Seedless
Grapes lb. 15c
No. 3Vi size Pascal green
Celery 2 stalks 25c
Large Attractive Fruit
Bananas 2 lbs. 23c
Specially selected for deep freeze or the table.
Elberta
Ripe Peaches ... 2 lbs. 29c
• FROZEN FOODS •
Honor
Green Peas ... 2 pkgs. 45c
Honor
Broccoli pkg* 29c
Honor —CUT
Green Beans . 2 pkgs. 47c
Hills o’ Home
Boysenberries . . pkg. 27c
Snow Crop — 6 oz. cans
Orange Juice . . 2 cans 43c
In the shells — Deviled
Crabmeat .... each 29c
Specials for Friday & Saturday - August 3 - 4
Southside Food Market
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES