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Detroit Free Press from Detroit, Michigan • Page 18
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Detroit Free Press from Detroit, Michigan • Page 18

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1 Wednesday, Sept. 13. 1950 DETROIT FREE PRESS Lead; Easter Meats Yankees Take ers Mug Site, Principals and Facts of Title battle 1 As of TODAY Tliis Is a Nciv LaMotta; He's Polite but Rough By Pr-1 imiuujipwpw. a ii i.n.ni .11. .1 .111 nw .1 mnii immmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmcmrmimmmmm tf MM iVg.

I A li v-i I 1 1 I. 'v 9 fro ttjlrT" A vTv ji 7 Tribe Wins, 8-7, on His 3-Run Belt BosoxKeep Pace, Topple Chisox, 2-1 Free Press Wire Services With two out in the ninth inning, Luke Easter belted a three-run homer which enabled the Cleveland Indians to beat the New York Yankees, 8 to 7. The defeat shoved the Yanks into second place in the tense American League race, a half-game behind the Detroit Tigers. The Boston Red Sox helped tighten the race as Mel Parnell gained his 16th decision in a 2-1 victory over the Chicago White Sox. The third-place Red Sox now are a game behind Detroit and only a half-game behind the second-place Yanks.

Great Play by Sivift Aids Trout Wertz Hits Homer as Nats Bow, 3-2 BY LYALL SMITH Free Press Sports Editor A little went a long way as the Tigers clawed their way to a squeaky 3-2 victory over Washington and eventually moved back into the American League lead. Their grasp on first place didn't materialize until several hours later, when the Cleveland Indians nosed out the New York Yankees, 8 to 7, with a ninth-inning rally. The loss dropped the Yanks a half-game behind the pace-setting Tigers. Joltin Jake TaMotta is a well-dressed man these days. The boxing Bull from the Bronx has come up with a piece of apparel he never could get to fit him before.

It is the cloak of pride. On Jake it looks good. The Jake LaMotta who battles Laurent Dauthuille in defense of his middleweight boxing crown at Olympia Stadium Wednesday is far removed from the LaMotta who first came to Detroit in 1943. He was a chunky club-scrapper who came in to meet Jimmy Edgar. He was a surly snarler from the teeming tenements of New York, a merciless and ruthless brawler.

He was mistrustful of everyone, expected nobody to turn any favors for him and displayed no disposition to turn any for the other guy His two best friendswere his lethal fists. He figured he needed no others. He still has his fists. There is talk that they no longer pack the knockout drops they once gripped. Jake says they do.

But they longer are the center of his life. LaMotta has come a long way from those early, hungry days. He has gained just about every goal he has set his sights on. He has a title, green stuff in the bank, a beauteous wife and a new-found pride. A Gentleman-Fighter? "I'M NO GENE TUNNEY," he grinned.

"But I'm sure finding out that there are a lot of other things than just beating the stuffings out of a guy. I'm taking special lessons from a fellow in New York. He's got me reading good books and the funny thing is that I like them." Jake has come out of his shell. He talked with almost-alarming frankness about the new home he is building on Pelham Tale Tape LAMOTTA DAUTHUILLE 1 Complete Card Jake LaMotta, New York, vs. Laurent Dauthuille, France, 15 rounds for the world's middleweight championship.

Ray Barnes, Detroit, vs. Jimmy Welch, Columbus, 8 rounds, 160 pounds. Lou Woods, Detroit, vs. Martin Doyle, Detroit, 6 rounds, 164 pounds. Joe Garza, Detroit, vs.

Jesse Bradshaw, Buffalo, 6 rounds, 150 pounds. Charley Brown, Detroit, vs. AI Gronik, Detroit, 5 rounds 148 pounds. Frank Polizzi, Detroit, vs. Al Green, Detroit, 4 rounds, 130 pounds.

Marcel Sauve, Montreal, vs. Tony Lomo-naco, Grand Rapids, 4 rounds, 164 pounds. First bout at 8:30 p. m. Main go at 10 p.

m. 29 yrs. Age 26 yrs. Weight 158 Height 5 ft. 7 in.

Reach 66V2 Chest (Normal) 41 in. Chest (Expanded) 422 n- Neck I6V2 in. Biceps 13 in. Forearm 11 in. Waist 30 in.

Thigh 20 V2 in. Calf 14 in. Ankle 8 in. It will have a rumpus room but Jake passed over that one Going to have a swell library, he admitted. "I already told the architect to put a couple of locks on the door so I realty 1 i LAURENT DAUTHUILLE (LEFT) HOPES TO WREST MIDDLEWEIGHT CROWN FROM A crowd of more than 14,000 is expected to witness scrap in Olympia HE'S 2-1 CHOICE TO KEEP TITLE can catch up on all the reading I missed." The championship he lifted from the late Marcel Cerdan here last year apparently has been the balm which soothed the old LaMotta wounds of poverty and hardship.

His changed attitude has carried over to his activities inside the ring as well as out of it. Jake Favored over Dauthuille He will frankly tell you that is a fine fighter. He had no alibis for the defeat the young Frenchman hung on him BY TOMMY DEVIXE The world's middleweight championship which Jake LaMotta won at Briggs Stadium 15 months ago goes on the line Wednesday night at Olympia where he meets Laurent Dauthuille, of France. The 15-round contest will mark Jake's second defense of the 160- rvfafor League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE THE YANKS went into the ninth inning at Cleveland with a 7-4 lead. Allie Reynolds got the first man out but walked the next two.

Tom Ferrick then took over and Bob Kennedy doubled, scoring Joe Gordon and moving Thurman Tucker to third. "Larry Doby, who had homered early in the game, fanned, but Easter followed with his second home run of the night to end the game. The Yankees out-hit the Tribe, 14 to 6.N Parnell stopped the White Sox on five hits but the Bosox needed 12 to win. It was Boston's sixth straight victory and their 24th in the last 27 games. ALL THE scoring in Boston's victory came in the first two innings.

The White Sox caused Parnell some uneasy moments in the ninth inning before Mel's eighth straight triumph was assured. Boston's first-inning tally came on Johnny Pesky's infield hit. Bill Goodman's single to right and Yern Stephens' long fly. The White Sox knotted the count at 1-1 in their half of the first on walks to Chico Carrasquel and Eddie Robinson and Gus Zer-nial's single which scored Carrasquel. The deciding Boston run came in the second as Al Zarilia opened with a single, moved to second on Matt Batt's infield out, reached third on a wild pitch and stored on Dom DiMaggio's single.

NEW YORK AB A CLEVELAND AB A Tueker.lf 4 4 RlZZUto.S Ii 3 1 H. il. II. If 3 II I II Ji 'i II Berra.e ft 'i 1 II llolit.rf 1 1 II IMMaK.rf 4 3 Mize.l 3 II 1 I Bauer.r 4 I 1 II Easier. 1 4 -i 3 41 II I 3 13 4 3 II 1 3 ii 4 1 Ko.en.3 3 Boone.

I II I i llecan.e Johnson. 3 .1 I I 3 1 1 Wvnn.n 3 II 1 II il li Irerrirk.ii II aK.I.emon 1 II eiK.o It II h.Murrav 1 I clinrdon Totals nnll5lil7 Total 33 6 27 10 iTuo out when wlnnlnr run rored. aSirnrk ut for Zoldak in 'ind. I.I. rounded out for Weik in 6th.

New York 3 3 0 0 1 fl 7 Cleveland II 1 OlO II 4 8 Rizxiitfi Iloun Berra I)i- Maccio. Tin ker. Kennedy -i. loli. Eater Koen.

Iiorilon. r. hommi, Reynold-. RBI KiMassio 3. Riznto.

Berra II. can. loly 'i. Easter 4. Kenned.

Bauer. 'Ill Coleman. Kenned II II IliMac-iii. Rizrilto. Berra.

loli. Easter Reynolds IIP Weik. Boone and Easter: Coleman. Rirzuto and Collin: BiMine and Avila. I.B New York Cleveland fi.

BB Reynolds 6. Weik 4. Wvnn 1. Sll Reynolds III, Weik 'i, Eer-riek 1. Reynold 4 In S'i.

Eerrlrk 'i in 'At. Wynn 5 in Zoldak 2 in Weik 3 In 4. C.romek 4 In 3. WP liromek -7. LP Eerrick 18-6).

Attendance 29.454. BOSTOV AB A PiMm.ef ft 3 2 Petky.3 3 2 1 3 I 4 SiteDhn's. 3 18 1 Drooo.l 4 17 3 IHwrr.2 4 12 1 Zarilla.r 4 3 Battfi.e 4 1 1 Parnell, 4 3 CHICAGO AB Carrau'l. 4 12 Phillev.r 4 1 3 ft 3 Oil Zernial.lf 4 Maieski.3 3 1 2 aeala Masi.e 3 1 Eox.2 h-Xnlillnr 1 3 Wicht.n 2 c-Niarho Totals 36 VI 27 It Total 2 6 27 16 a Ran for Maieskl In Oth. Mironnried out Eox in Sth.

rWalked for Wicht in Hth. Boston i hieaco 110 OOO OO 2 1 II OOO II 1 Pesky. Zarilia, Carra-niiel. Carrasquel. RBI Stephens.

Zernlai. Di Muslin. Wicht. Mai. IIP Carrasquel.

Eox and Rnhinfton: Parnell. Stephen and llrfipo: Maieski. Km and Rohlnfton: Me-Cormlek and Fox. I.B Boston O. Chiracn 9.

Bll Wicht Parnell 6. Sll Wight 3. Parnell 4. WP Parnell (16-ttl. LP WlKht R-lft).

Attendanee 9.119. Tulsa Sinks Fort Worth FORT WORTH, Tex. Jim Blackburn checked the Fort Worth Cats with three hits here and Tulsa scored a 5-2 victory in the opening game of the Texas League semifinals playoff. One ofthe hits off Blackburn was a home run by Fred Storck with a man on in the eighth inning, and this accounted for all the runs off him. Pet.

GB IVt. GB DETROIT 86 49 .637 Philadelphia 8.1 53 .610 New York 86 50 .632. Brooklyn 7 .565 fi'i i Boston 86 51 .628 1 Boston "3 59 .553 8 (Cleveland 81 58 .583 7 Xeft York 73 60 .519 8'i 59 76 .437 27 St. "Louis 69 66 .511 132 Chicago 53 86 .381 35 (Cincinnati 58 75 .436 23" St. Louis 50 86 .368 56 81 .409 27i Philadelphia 47 92 .338 41 Pittsburgh 50 85 .370 32 i LYALL SMITH- lightly.

Dauthuille LaMotta LEFT Golf Championships. Tat Devany, of Grosse He, and Mary Agnes Wall, of Menominee, bowed out in the second round Tuesday, leaving the state with- 1 1" ronroccnf iiro in tVia mi tr-wt ment. Miss Devany lost out in the first extra-hole match of the tourney, yielding to Barbara Blakely. of Anniston, 1 up, on the 20th hole. MISS WALL bowed to Polly Riley, the southern and western amateur champion from Fort Worth, 6 and 5.

Defending Champion s. Dorothy Germain Porter, of Westmont, had putting troubles and became the first of the top-ranked players to fall by the wayside. Mrs. Albert G. Hayes, of Phila- i delphia, delivered a one-up tri-i umph on the 19th hole.

Seek Waivers I on Detroiters i Two pro football players from Detroit were placed on the Na-'tional League's waiver list, pre-. liminary to drawing their releases. They are Center Vic Banonis, of Georgetown, being cut loose by the Chicago Cardinals, and Halt-back Harry Szulborski. of Purdue, who was with the Green Bay Packers. 1 11 i aatiiilif-li-lriirr-rri-fT- r- a year ago.

"He cut me up good," Jake confessed. "I wasn't hurt as bad as I looked but I sure couldn't complain too much about the decision. Some guys thought it could have gotoe either way. I'm not so sure. The kid's all right Page Emily Post! JAKE SURPRISED not a few Detroiters last Winter in his fight here with Dick Wagner.

He had Wagner cut up badly so badly that he actually stepped back and pleaded with the referee to stop the fight instead of allowing him to further punish his opponent. This was no gesture the old LaMotta would have made. Neither were the ones when he twice stepped back to allow Tiberio Mitri to recover his balance after slips in their title fight last July. These sporting gestures never were a part of Jake's boxing code before he became champion. But like I said, on him thej' look good.

LaMotta is the first middleweight to successfully defend his title (against Mitri) since Tony Zale knocked out Rocky Graziano the first time in 1946. Rocky kayoed Zale in Tony's first defense, in 1947. Graziano then defended his title against Zale in and he was knocked out totnake Tony the champion a second time. Then Zale defended it against Cerdan later in the year. Cerdan knocked him out.

Then last summer at Briggs Stadium, LaMotta lifted Cerdan's crown when Marcel was unable to keep fighting after injuring his shoulder. "I'll beat Dauthuille," Jake confidently insisted. "I've already beat the jinx which said no middleweight champ could defend his title the first time. I don't think I ever really lived till I became the champ. I sure don't plan to stop living already indoor gate mark is $88,522.

which! 16.975 fans contributed for Ray Robinson's welterweight match against Chuck Taylor at Olympia on Dec. 19. 1947. The bout will not be broadcast or televised in the United States or Canada. There will be a short- If No.

6 for rowm Wiilmar SuImIucs Athletics, 6 to 0 ST. LOUIS (TP) Al Widmar hurled the St. Louis Browns to a three-hit 6-0 shutout over the last-place Philadelphia Athletics, extending the Brownies' winning streak to six straight games. Only in the eighth did Widmar appear to be in trouble. Elmer Valo opened with a single, the A's third hit, and Billy Hitchcock walked.

After the next two men fifed out, Widmar walked Joe Coleman, filling the sacks, but Eddie Joost flied out. St. Louis opened up with a four-run barrage against Bob Hooper in the first inning, two of the runs coming on Hank Arf t's single. In the fifth Sherman Lollar homered after Ray Coleman singled. PHILADELPHIA ST, i.oris AB A AB A Jnoct.4 4 I.ehner.lf a 1 rain.l 3 hap n.ef 3 Vwlo.r 4 I 3 Wah 1.

3 3 1 4 Wnod.r 4 13 0 4 K.Col n.cf 4 4 7 I l.ollar.r 4 "I 1 I kikii.lf 3 3 2 Sifters.3 -J 1 'i 4 I I i Arf 1. 1 I lit 1 3 I 3 114 Tinlon.c 3 llrinner.D I 1 fl I lit. 3 il I 4 Viilltiir.i 3 1 1 Total 'ZH 10 Totals 31 9 Philadelphia St. l.ouU nun ii 4 II II ii -i II It Wood. R.

Coleman. lollar Kokon. Kit I Siever, Arft 'i, Stirnwei-. I.ollar 'ill Siever. If If l.ollar.

IIP Siever. Htirnwei1 and Arft: Stirnwei, 1 nton and Arft. I.B Philadelnliia Jt. 4. BH Hooper 2.

Widmar J. Coleman I. SO Hooper 1. Widmar 1. II Hooper .1 In ti.

J. Coleman in 3'. HP Widmar O-fJI. I.P Hooper 113-9). Attendance 2,1.11.

Army Exam Sri for Calvin Coacli GRAND RAPIDS (JP) Chuck Bult, Calvin College basketball coach and physical education director, will report at Fort Custer for physical examination for active Army duty. Bult holds a reserve captain's commission. 159 2 5 ft. 8 in. 67 in.

42 in. 45 in. 16 in 13V2 in. 12 in. 33 in.

23 in. ISM in. 9 in. a pound crown. He made his first defense when he decisioned Tiberio Mitri, of Italy, at New York on July 12.

MATCHMAKER Nick Londes forecast a crowd of approximately 14,000 and a record Olympia gate in excess of $100,000. The current NATIONAL LEAGUE TUESDAY'S RESULTS Brooklyn 3. Cincinnati 1. New York 3, Pittsburgh 0. Philade'i 1.

St. Louis 0. Chicago 3, Boston 1. WEDNESDAY'S GAMES Pittsburgh at New York (2). Cincinnati at Brooklyn.

Chicago at Boston, night. Pins in Family Lots PHILADELPHIA (U.P.) Pity the plight of Templt Football Coach Al Kawal, who has a set of twins and two sets of brothers working out for this year's varsity. The "twins are Bill and Mike Feddock. Also on the squad Brothers Tom and Andy Sklad.iny and Brothers Joe and David Lill. Helping round out tne roster are Gavin (Bob) White and Robert White, who are not related; and Paul Maguire and Tom McGuire.

Cm n.nn in. IX ANOTHER night game, the third-place Boston Red Sox nicked the Chicago White Sox, 2 to 1, and are only one game behind the Tigers, a half-game behind New York. The Tigers were uthit by the Senators, 8 to 5. Their lone home run Victor Wertz' 27th of the season was offset by Ed Stewart's fourth. The pair of doubles by George Kell and Wertz were matched by those of Harold Keller and Sam Mele.

THE BIG BAT of Wertz won the game but in the final analysis it was the work of Paul "Diz" Trout and his battery mate, Catcher Bob Swift, which decided the issue. Swift came up with a brilliant block of the plate in the seventh inning to throttle a Senator spree. With one out Pinch Hitter Sherry Robertson singled and Harold Keller, young brother of Tiger Charley, batted for Pitcher Gene Bearden. He rifled a fat Trout pitch off the left center fence for a long double and Robertson sped around the bases for home. Johnny Groth relayed the ball to Johnny Lipon.

Lipon flung it to the plate. Swift went down to one knee to block the plate and although Robertson's slide was ahead of the ball, he was unable to tag home-plate before Swift put the ball on him. TROUT PITCHED strongly in the early frames but was holding on at the close as he racked up his 13th victory against four defeats before a slender gathering of 5,092 faithful on a dark and clammy afternoon. Not until two were out in the fifth did 35-year-old Diz yield a hit. a Texas League- blooper over short by Catcher Len Okrie.

The Nats tagged him for a score in the sixth on a single by Stewart and Mole's double into the right field corner. But by that time. Diz had been his three runs. Two of them rame in the third after the first two batters had been simple outs, r.ut Bearden. bothered by his control, then walked Lipon.

Kell slapped a 3-2 pitch high off the left-center screen for his 49th double of the year for one run and then coasted home ahead of another two-bagger in the same spot by Wertz, IN THE FIFTH, Kell opened with a pass but was picked off first by Bearden just before Wertz lined his home run into the lower deck in right to give Trout a 3-0 lead. Swift's decisive maneuver held it to 3-1 in the seventh before Stewart slapped Trout's opening offering In the 8th high off the upje- deck railing in right center to make it 3-2. From, then on in, Diz. had to scramble. Mickey Vernon singled with one out after Stewart's home run but Mele rammed into a doubleplay.

Came the ninth and Pinch-Hitter Gil Coan singled for Washington's eighth hit with two gone. Fred Taylor batted for Pitcher Mickey Harris, successor to Bearden in the seventh, and hit into a force-play to end the battle. THE TIGERS utilized three of their five hits to score all their runs. The Senators bunched two safeties in each of three frames but couldn't dent Trout's armor to do more than make it close. The victory gave Detroit a 12-9 record over the Senators with the final game set for 3 p.

m. Wednesday. It was only the fourth time in 10 games the Tigers have been able to defeat Washington at Brings Stadium. WASHINGTON DETKOIT CHAMPION JAKE LaMOTTA Stadium wave broadcast to France. The The main go is expected to start at 10 p.

m. LaMotta is the solid two-to-one favorite to take the decision and keep his crown. The fighters will weight in at 10 a. m. Wednesday at Olympia.

WHILE LaMOTTA has shrouded his weight during the twJ weeks he drilled in Detroit, there were no indications he was experiencing difficulty in getting under the limit. "I expect to be at 159 at the weigh-in," Jake said. Dauthuille scaled 158 when he opened drills here Sept. 1 and likely will enter the ring at that figure. This is the second meeting of LaMotta and Dauthuille.

They clashed the first time in February, 1949, at Montreal. The Frenchman gave LaMotta a thorough going-over in that battle to take a 10-round decision. With the title at stake, however, LaMotta likely will be a far different fighter. LaMOTTA figures to set the pace and force the fight through the early rounds. The only style Jake knows is to move in constantly and batter away with both hands.

The lone question about Jake Is his ability to go the full 15 rounds at a fast clip. In his 94 professional fights, LaMotta has gone that route only twice against Fritzie Zivic in 1943 and then in the Mitri fight. The fight will be Jake's fifth of the year. In addition to the titie fight with Mitri. he scored knockouts over Dick Wagner at Olympia and Chuck Hunter at Cleveland and decisioned Joe Taylor at Syracuse.

DAUTHUILLE has campaigned principally at Montreal since he left Europe. His only previous battle in the United States was an engagement at Holyoke, with Ernie Forte. While Dauthuille rates as a stiffer puncher than LaMotta, ring experts still do not believe he can stop LaMotta. Jake never has been on the floor in 10 years as a pro fighter. In their first meeting, the Frenchman fought cautiously for the first five rounds and forced LaMotta to chase him.

Then when Jake showed signs of tiring he stepped in and took command. Indications are the plan of battle may be much the same this time. TUESDAY'S RESULTS DETROIT 3, Washington 2. Cleveland 8, New York 7. Boston 2, Chicago 1.

St. Louis 6, Philadelphia 0. EDNESDAY'S GAMES Washington at DETROIT. New York at Cleveland. Philadelphia at St.

Louis, night. Only games scheduled. ROYAL OAK LOSES Pepsi Power NONE FROM STATE Alabama Team, 8-6 Special to the Free I'rei-s i YOUNGSTOWN, O. Power-hitting paid off for Pepsi-Cola, i of Detroit, and carried the Motor City champions to- an 8-6 triumph over Birmingham, in the National Amateur Base-I ball Federation tournament here Tuesday. The triumph was Pepsi's third straight and kept the Detroiters rpfn.

nl frttv in an unbeaten class, along with: t-fIJJlC jClS New York City's defending cham- 7 pions and Atlanta, Ga. 1 IS LrTWlCierS Pat Devany, Mary Wall Eliminated in U.S. Meet ATLANTA, Ga. Michigan's delegation was relegated to the sidelines after only two rounds of the National Amateur Women's Poholsky Loscsj 5-4 Free Press Wire Serviee Jersey City and Balitimore captured opening victories in the International League semi -final playoffs. Tom Poholsky, Rochester's most valuable player of the league who lives in Detroit, was the losing pitcher as Jersey City edged out the Red Wings, 5 to 4.

Russ Bauers pitched a three-hitter as Baltimore defeated Montreal, 6 to 2. By Frank Williams PERILS OF PAULINE PENNANT PBPSI RUSHED across three runs in the third, then came back with a winning four-run outburst that sewed up the contest in the fifth. Bill Rakocy started the uprising with a 400-foot blast over the ccnterfield wall. Will Lang then doubled and Dan Vcrterbar singled him home. Then Ted Blaszezyk homered into the left-centerfield stands to score Yer-terbar.

Dan Lovcndosky, a southpaw, started on the mound for' the Detroiters, but needed help from Lou Blackmore, when Birmingham rushed across its second cluster of three runs in the eighth inning. ANOTHER Michigan title-contender. Royal Oak, fell by the way side in the two-defeat knockout series, when it bowed to Cleveland, 4 to 1. Royal Oak loaded the bases in the third but got only one run out of the rally and never seriously threatened again. Pepsi-Cola 003 Oil! IIIO -ft 13 Birminicham OOO 003 030 li 11 0 LOVEXMOSKV, Blaekmnre 8 and Mancan: EMMONS.

McConkej 5. Morgan (H and rands. OOO 013 H1 1 ft 1 Koval Oak (HI I OOO OOO I 5 3 hakan and Hare: ITKIIWSKI. Cer-1 vone and Cain. Vi Again ICO SEATTLE -F i Baseman George Vico, of the Seattle Rainiers, has been recalled effective next spring by the Detroit Tigers.

N.V.'SuCKER-ST'erJMl-jTo UO CLEVELAND iNiOkJ. AMD LEAPS toThe Rescue cTJjei- -r-, I AB I 7 3 3 1 4 -i 3 II 4 5 a-siineled fur Okrie in 7th. for Kerden in th. eSiliKled ort in llh. d- out tor Harris in Pth.

ii-liine'on IlKTMHT POO 001 01 I ii fl I.iiii. Kell. Wert, 1 ioon Kill Stewart. Kell. Wedtz Mele.

II. Keller. Wertx. UK teart. Wertz.

IP lente. Mirhaels and ernon: lipon. Priddy and Kollouav. I.B Washington 7. Ketroit 7.

BB BeardonT. 1'rnnt '2. f(l Beatden 1. Trout 3. Bearden 4 in B.

Harris 1 in 2. Trout U3-. LP Bearden 3-8). Attendanee fc.091. All II A VikI, 31.

IOII Kiil'nv, l.iiKin.ss 3 5 Keil.3l num. Hi I 1 Heru.rf Melr.rf 4 110 Kvers.lf 4 0 14 tiroth.rf I 1 4 Okrie. '2 I I Swjft.r 1 1 Trout. II )l rl nan 110 0 1 3 Ml. KMer 1 1 Harri.n dim lor 1 T.ilal Totals 34 8 'il JO 111 I AO LIME MAMIES )S I A LAW-LIKE dftSP I 'i AS 'BtAMTbwM orAE.U-L r'Z" I Trestle v-aou hei? Sf I Xv-.

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