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Detroit Free Press from Detroit, Michigan • Page 13
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Detroit Free Press from Detroit, Michigan • Page 13

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Detroit, Michigan
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Page:
13
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KALINE' HOMER WINS DETROIT FREE PRES; Saturday. Aug. 1'-. oi Give OYt ck osox 0 iwtiiiii 9 jrienty IS ii sll53iWt4n.ii III' lO-- fe Vs a of BY HAL MIDDLES WORTH Two Tigers with contrasting records against the Boston Red Sox this year got the job done in Tecord time Friday night. In a sparkling game which required only one hour and 52 minutes to complete.

Paul Foytack hurled a sensational shutout for a 2-0 decision on a two-run homer by Al Kaline. Foytack, with four straight losses to the Red Sox behind him when he toed the rubber, breezed to his 12th triumph of the year before 16,781 fans in the shortest contest of the Briggs Stadium season. Foytack, who has lost 10, gave up only four hits, walked one batter and fanned eight in his second shutout of the campaign. The other was a three hitter against the Yankees two weeks ago. Foytack yieled only one hit after the first two innings and retired the Red Sox in order with his sizzling fastball six of the last seven rounds.

i i MAVERICK PASSES PHYSICAL Gold Cup winner Bill Stead (right) had open house Friday aboard hi Maverick for the Harmsworth Inspection team. Stead and his boat were declared the finest American de fender by the committee of (from left) Leonard Thomson, Edwin Rodkin, Jack Robinson. Harmsuorth et-eran Orlin Johnson. Clyde Palmer and I'd Hiller, hidden behind Stead. OFFERS HELP TO Lions Get Guard Up For Browns Tonight I i Ni Detroit 'Adopts'' Maverick GENE STEPHENS, who singled with one out in the first inning and Jackie Jensen, who led off the second with a similar blow, were wiped out in Tiger double plays.

Sammy White also singled in the second but the only other safety off Foytack was a sixth-inning double by Marty Keough which Harvey Kuenn missed at his shoetop. Among Foytack's strikeout victims was Ted Williams, whose only appearance of the night was to pinch hit In the eighth inning. Kaline, who has clobbered Boston pitchers all season long, gave Foytack all the help he needed by tagging Bill Monbou-quette for his 22nd home run of the campaign in the third inning. The blow, into the lower left-center seats, followed a walk to Kuenn who led the Tigers' six-hit offensive with a double and two singles. THAT WAS Kaline's ninth home run off a Red Sox hurler this year and his 27th run batted in against the Red Sox.

His season average against his "cousins" from Beantown now stands at .408. Monbouquette. who pitched seven strong innings except for homer, suffered his A 3t BV JOE DOWDALL The United States' defending boat in next week's Harms-worth Race is misnamed. Just ask her driver Bill Stead. "Golly, the boat is called Maverick, but she's anything but a maverick," Stead said Friday after the boat had passed inspection by the Yacht-men's Association of America Selection GrouD.

inow ski Rote oar Kuenn (left) and Maxwell greet Kaline after winning homer BY GEORGE SCAS You may have to be patient for still another week; our Lions continue to experiment. Four rookie guards will be employed in the offensive line Saturday night, when the Lions face the Cleveland Browns at Akron in their third exhibition game of the summer. Coach George Wilson's training timetable calls for the Lions to make steady progress toward the opening of the National Football League season in late September. But the rookie guards have forced a slight dela'. THE FOUR all were with the College All-Star squad and have trained with the Lions only since last Monday.

Wilson is anxious to see what they can do; hence, they will play most of the game. Game time Js 7:30 p.m. (WJR in Detroit) with some 30,000 expected at Akron's Rubber Bowl. "We have to know how much help we can expect from these new men," Wilson said, "so we'll throw them g'lai an i c. the plan to make greater of vrtorans than they did in their first two game.

The Detroit exhibition record lists a 20-20 tie with the Lns Angeles Rams and a dismal 21-19 loss to the Chicago Cardinals. 9 MM I I. loc.il hero making good with the Browns, will start at quarterback against the Iion. Ninowski has moved ahead of veteran Milt Plum, and Cleveland places its title possibilities in the hands of th one-time Pershing High Roe. Cle eland is troubled by injuries which hae cracked its offensive line.

The Browns, who seemed certain to win the Eastern Division title in 1058, then unexplainably fell apart and lost four of their last eight games (including a title playoff with New York) will throw football's fastest hack-field at the Lion defensp. Next Saturday, the Lions will make their home debuf when they play the Giant at Briggs Stadium in the annual Free Press Fresh Air Fund game. "Detroit's owners and drivers have taken both the boat and me under their wing like they did with Shanty when she won the 1956 Harmsworth," Stead said. STILL 214 UP fifth defeat a a i four victories. He gave up only four hits land fanned I seven during against the Browns and what happens." The rookies involved are Mike Rabold.

Bob Grottkau. Harry Jacobs and Phil Blazer. Rabold, the Lions' No. 2 draft choice from Indiana, seems the strongest of the quartet. THEY ARE by no means alone in their first taste of professional play.

Nick Piet-rosante, the bulky new fullback from Notre Dame, will make his debut against the Browns. With the rookies providing his (shield, Tobin Rote will make his first start of the season at quarterback. The Texan has parkled in Lion workouts this week. Except for the rookie MM Harshman Mean to Birds, 5-0 CLEVELAND Southpaw Jack Harshman, Chisox Nudge Senators, 5-4 his tenure, with Nelson Chittum tapped for the Tigers' other two hits in the eighth. Foytack "THEY HAVE offered us en-; gines, parts, tools and even' their crews to help us prepare for the Harmsworth.

"You can really say this Is an all-American effort." Detroit's two top drivers, Bill Cantrell and Chuck Thompson, have offered to go over the 1 course with Stead. They knovv the currents, the location of the hazardous ground swells and Turn to Page 14, Column 1 Except for their one scoring thrust, the Tigers got only one runner past second. Kuenn advancing on an infield out after his sixth-inning two-bagger. The turnout on a sticky, hot night pushed the Tigers an even 5.000 ahead of their total attendance for 1958 and thev making his first start in! CHICAGO (UPI) The league-leading Chicago White Cleveland Stadium since the Sox put together two unearned runs and two small rallies Indians bought him from Friday night to beat the Washington Senators, 5-4, and Boston, held the Baltimore stay 212 games in front of second-place Cleveland. 1 The victory was only the sec-i ond in the last six games for have 12 remaining home dates Jine vvnue Dut was ineir lo add to the present mark of BACK-TO-THE-BOOKS SPECIALS FROM HUGHES HATCHER WASHINGTON li Allison, ct 5 0 1 1 Aparicio.ss I 1 siirtigiiL u' a Green, rf 5 2 Fox, 2b Senators and came after Chi-1 Lemon, If 3 0 BOSTON DETROIT Orioles to three singles Friday night for a 5-0 victory.

Jim Baxes hit a pair of doubles, drove home a pair of runs and scored two himself to spark an Indian attack on Hector (Skinny) Brown. Brown went to the mound with a 5-0 record against the Indians over the last two seasons and had beaten them three times this year. AB AB cago lost two games of its lead to the Indians in the last two days. 0 Landis.cf Bsttev.c McAnany.rf Rtvera.rf Donovan, Stalev.p bRomano Lown.p I I I Courtney, 4 4 Sievers.lb 3 1 2 aBecquer.lb 2 Consoio.ss 3 eThrorebrv 1 0 Stobbs.p 2 0 cBertoia 1 hyde.p 0 fNaragon 1 iveouwn.ct 4 0 1 4 0 Runnels, 2b 1 0 0 Harris, lb 4 0 2 0 0 3 1 Stephens, If 4 1 Kaline.cf 4 1 VVertz.lt 3 0 0 Maxwell, If 2 Jensen.rf 3 0 1 Bol.in9.2b 3 0 3 0 0 3 0 Whitcc 3 3 Buddin.ss 2 0 0 Vea 0 aGeiger I 0 3 0 Mancnev.ss ft 0 riXCH HITTER John Romano's bases-loaded single in the sixth inning put the Sox ahead. 4-3.

Then singles by Jim and Rnhba Phillins enbouqtt.p 2 0 0 Landis around owiiiiams 1 0 0 an infield out scored 33 Totals 37 4 11 Totals Totals 29 0 4 Totals 2 i Sintled for Aspromonte in th; bS-n-'what proved to be the winning sled for Staler in 6th; cStruck out for run in the seventh. Clevenaer in 7th; dWalked for Battey in i 7th; euned out for Consoio in 8th; i Romano, who has a pinch (Grounded out for Hyde in th. ui hinninH tm-t average of .669, batted aStruck out for Buddin in th; bStruck out for Monbouquette in 8th. Boston 000 000 00 00 Detroit 002 000 00 2 STAKED TO a four-run lead In the first inning. Harshman was in command all the way as he posted his fourth victory against nine losses.

Harshman walked none, and no runner reached second. He struck out five. The Indians got nine of their 10 hits off Brown, who was replaced by Jack Fisher in the sixth. PO-A Boston 24-10, Detroit 27-11. DP Natural Shoulder Sport Coats in Smart New Fall Patterns Chicago 2 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 x-S ior oerry aiaiey in me sev enui Boiling, Bridges and Harris; Yost, Boiling E-Sievers, Courtney, McAnany.

PO-A after Washington Starter Harris -LOB-Boston 3 Detroit Chuck StObbs had loaded KaHnl 1 B'- LoMar- the bases. er bb so Mnoouqute (L, 4-5) 7 4 2 2 2 7 cnirtum 2 0 0 0 0 Senators scored in the Foytack 12-10) 9 4 0 0 1 8 The 2B Green, Phillips, Bequer. SB Ap-aricio. Fox, Green, Allison. RBI Ro mano 2.

Phillips 2, Courtney 2, Beqer 2. eighth off reliever Turk Lown i-ianerrv, umont. Berry and Hono-chick. si. A-UTIl IP CLEVELAND er bb so on Ron Samford's single and a AB Clnkhc fl l.Al 95 double by Julio Becquer.

ccupled with te perennial f-sve'e natural snculo'er sport coai. Tr'-rn, 3-button model in a '-wooi or Or 20 2-3 7 1-3 0 2 2 7 1 1 3 3 Power.lb 3 1 2 cievenser Minoso.lf 2 12 Hyde Francona.cf 4 0 1 Donovan bPiersall.cf 0 0 0 staley (W, 7.2) Colavito.rf 3 1 1 i own 4 2 2 Duron Saves Yanks. 9-7 BALTIMORE AB Carrasql.ss 4 0 0 Woodling.rf 4 0 0 4 0 1 10 0 Ginsberg, 2 0 0 Tasbv.cf 3 0 0 3 0 0 3 0 0 3 0 1 Brown.p 10 0 aPilarcik 1 0 1 Moran.2b 0 0 0 HBP by Stobbs (Fox). Balk Hyde. Strickland, 3b 4 0 1 Rice, Rommel, Stevens.

Naop. 2:52. 3 0 1 A 37,986. Fitzgerald.e 4 0 0 Harshman, 4 0 0 HP 'Forecloses' x. I i I fef 1 0 Totals 30 0 Totals Singled for Brown in 6th; Worsted Flannel Plain Front Slacks in Smart Fall Shades NELLIE FOX, who received an estimated $50,000 in gifts in a special night in his honor, failed to get a hit in three trips but helped the White Sox score two unearned runs in the first inning.

Luis Aparicio opened with a single and Fox was hit by a pitch. The two Chicago speedsters executed a double steal and Aparicio continued on to bRan for On Colclasure Francona in 7th. Baltimore 000 000 00 00 Cleveland 4 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 x-S PO-A Baltimore 24-11, Cleveland 27- 11. DP Robinson, Gardner and Dropo. KANSAS CITY tjpi Ryne Duren came on in the ninth inning Friday night and preserved a 9-7 victory for the New York Yankees over Kansas City.

The A's were trailing, 9-6, as they came into the last inning with Bob Turley pitching in relief of starter Duke Maas. Singles by Dick Williams, Bob Jockey L. J. Colclasure, 43-year-old veteran, ws suspended LOB Baltimore 3, Cleveland 7. 2B Baxes 2 Minoso.

RBi Baxesn. days Friday for rough riding 7, Strickland 1, Held JS9 Trim, smart! styled slacks 'n a smooth worsted flanrel. Oxford grey, Cambridge qrey. olve, blacic, bro-. Wa'st s'zes 30-42, regular a-d Ic-g.

1 1 i j. r-t ER BB SO' 11 niuisuaj a sialii xaue at ljic siure wnen caicner Ijlini. Court IP Brown(L-7) 9 5 5 2 -3 Hazel Park Race Course ney threw the ball away. Fox scored on a single by Fisher i 2 -1 9 looos He is a recent arrival from Runge, paparena, nuney ana Mew Southern Illinois. Phillips.

art. PB Ginsberg. 2:04. 'Cerv and Kent Hadley scored one run and brought on Duren. He walked Frank House to load LAMBSWOOL-AND-ORLON CREW-NECK SWEATERS the bases, then struck out Joe DeMaestri and got Roger Maris on a game-ending foul pop.

Going to 49 Your favor'te bu'ry in a rw rj4 'eatu'53 a sar? cre-rsc. c'ive. came', cxtcd, b'eclc. XL. 5 Mew York Kansas City 202 103 001-9 14 1 030 110 101-7 12 1 MAAS.

Turlev (). Duren (9) and How-rd, Berra (5); Herbert, Dickson (4), COLEMAN (5). Grim (7). Sturdivant () and House. HR Lopez, Williams.

IVY SPORTS SHIRTS IN SOLIDS, FOULARD PRINTS Cosmo Little Leaguers One Victory Away TV Radio Sports Fare 39a wi-'n coi'ar, in ceep-tce sc'id; cotton foulard prints. XL. 3 for 11.50 Special to the Free Press HARVEY, 111. Hamtramck is one game away from its third trip to the Little League World Series in six years. Only Missouri's champions stand in the way in the regional finals here Saturday afternoon, with the winner advancing to Williamsport, Pa, next week.

The Cosmos knocked off Illinois' titlists from Elgin, 4-0, Friday with 12-year-old Art Deras throwing another no-hitter. DERAS ALSO homered for the first Hamtramck run in th fourth inning. runs with a sixth inning homer. The hitless game was the 10th of the season for Deras, but he wasn't the starting pitcher. Greg Pniewski started for Hamtramck, threw the first pitch wide of the plate, and switched to catching.

Dera-s came on to fan 14 and run his scoreless pitching streak to 69 innings. In nine tournament games Cosmo hurlers haven't allowed a run. Missouri edged Indiana, 2-1, in the other game. Hamtramelc 000 1034 4 1 Elgin, 111. 000 ooo- 1 Pniewski, OSRAS (1) and Milewski, Pn.ewski (1) KELLY, Durenburser U) and Heinde, Kelly (.

-1 -T---X SATURDAY, AUG. 22 TELEVISION" 1:30 p.m. Baseball. Detroit vs. Boston.

3:30 p.m. WTrestling. 4:00 p.m. Wrestling. 5:00 p.m.

Bowling. 10:00 p.m.--0 Pro Football. Chicago Cards vs. Pittsburgh. RADIO 1:25 p.m.

WKMH; WTJBK: Baseball. Detroit vs. Boston 7:30 p.m. WJR: FootbalL De. troit vs.

Cleveland. COWNTOWH Woodward ot Montcafm NOCTHlAKDCfinter EASTLAND Center LINCOLN PARK Shopping Center, Sourhfleld ALL 4 STORtS OPEN TO 9 P.M. SATURDAY. FREE PARKING AT ALL STORES Art Deras Outfielder Reggie Ferrebee accounted for the other three.

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