1
PAST AND PRESENT—Byron Nelson, upper left, de- fending PGA champion; upper right, Long Jim Barnes, winner of first tourney in 1916; lower left r Lloyd Man- grum, 1946 Open champion; lower right, Gene Sarazen, youngest winner at 20 in 1922. Walter Hagen, center, who copped title most times. i . i i Ben Hogan, Hot as a Pistol, Guns for Nelson's PGA Crown • y NED BROWN Ow. — (NEAr Whether Ben Hogan, hot as a pistol, fresh from vie- in the Canadian PGA with L. can wrest the United States PGA title from Byron Nelson is the burning question among 130 golf stars, past and present, here for the 28th renewal of the fix- ture over Portland Golf course, Aug. 19 to 25. Although he has won oodles of tournaments, the slim star Hershey, Pa., has won only other major title, the West- ern Open. Following two days of 36-hole qualifying rounds, 64 survivors tee off at match play Wednesday, Aug. 21. in the first two rounds at 18 boles. From then until Sun- r, play continues at 36 holes to the winner. Long Jim Barnes was winner of the first tournament played at Siwanoy, N. Y.» in 1916. Colorful Waiter Hagen copped the title flve different times, more than any other golfer. Gene Sarazen was next with three. Gene was only 20, youngest of all victors, when he took his first crown in 1922. Tin* Squire of Brookfleld also won the U. S. Open that year. and Is the only player to date to accomplish that feat Byron Nelson won his second PGA championship by defeating Sammy Byrd in the final round at Dayton, €>., last July, when the net proceeds of $51,500 were turned over to the local Army hospital for rehabilitation. Sam Snead's brilliant play In winning his first national title was the highlight of the 1942 tourney when he beat Sgt. Jim Turnesa. 2 and 1. Turnesa had eliminated Harold McSpaden, Ben Hogan and Byron Nelson on his way to the *final. The longest match in the his- tory of the PGA tournament was between Hagen and the late Johnny Golden to 1932. Golden winning on the 43rd hole. Paul Runyan traveled the r\erte«t distance to grab the 1938 crown at Shawnee in defeating Sem Snead, eight up and seven to .go. Harold McSpaden holds the for extra hole matches to one tournament, with three sud- den death engagements in 1937 at Pittsburgh. In the first two he downed Bunny Torpey of Kansas City after two extra holes in the second round and eliminated Henry Picard in the fourth in 39 holes. Then Jug lost to Denny Shute in a 37-hole final. Sarazen defeated Picard, 1 up, in 1940. Picard was three down with three to play and finished with three birdies, only to have Gene halve the last hole with an- other birdie after Henry had put an iron shot only 18 inches from the pin. Lloyd Mangrum, present U. S. Open champion, has a chance to tie Sarazen's double of 1922. All Lloyd has to do is add this year's fixture to his Open crown. With Hogan at steam heat, the odds are ag'in Mangrum accom- plishing that feat. 4 5 Craft from 14 States, Four Foreign Countries To Compete In International Snipe Regatta Here i ^ JAMESTOWN POST-JOURNAL THURSDAY, AUGUST 15, 1946 PAGE 26 California To Have Strong Representation Forty-five sailing craft from 14 states and four foreign countries will compete in the International and Junior National Snipe Regat- ta here Aug. 21 through Aug. 23, a complete list of entries released today by Committee Member Harold Griffith reveals. It is the largest field to ever , compete in the International af- Partitions Win, 12 to 3, For 9th Straight Victory Topple Dahlstrom's to Continue Unbeaten Pace at Top of Class A Muny League By WAITE FORSYTH The vehement Bombers of the Jamestown Steel Partitions con- cern continued their rambunctious dash toward the second half title in the Muny Class A League to a twilight game at Allen Park yes- terday, prancing to an almost ef- fortless 12-3 conquest of the sec- ond-place Dahlstrom Metallic Door team. It was the ninth straight second half league triumph for Manager Joey Nagie's run-getting special- ists and served to maintain their spotless record in the homeward run. The Bombers might fairly Baseball Fans! GUESS WHO —— LEAGUE STANDINGS W L Pet. Steel Partition! 9 0 1.000 Dahlstrom Door 6 3 .867 Jamestown Legion 4 4 .500 Falconer Legion 4 5 .444 Falconer Milling 3 « .333 Vikings 2 6 .250 Newberry Insurance 1 6 , .143 YESTERDAY'S SCORE Partitions 12. Dahlstrom 3. . TODAY'S GAMES Vntings vs. Jamestown Legion. OR LEAGUE Standings Atlanta Chattanooga Memphis New Orleans Nashville Mobile Birmingham Little Rock W 77 69 71 64 62 HSU 94 45 L 48 54 56 63 63 64 70 80 Pet. .616 .561 .559 .304 .496 .487 .435 .360 Greenville Augusta Columbus Columbia Jacksonville Macon Charleston Savannah iTLA! W 66 66 63 62 56 54 83 42 IffC L 49 52 53 54 61 63 63 67 Pet. .574 .559 .543 .534 .479 .462 .457 .385 PONY League Standings Jl ! iJ * I A J*** Bat* la Olean Brad d Welle Lockt Ham n Horll 6 — 8 3 S 10 4 1 1 5 4 4 5 4 8 7i 9| 6—| 5 8 6 6 4 9| H 6j 9 10 12 14 66 34 8.1310 85945 6 6 7 5 46 56 8 81044!55< 9—t 810(4558: 9 5—1 74263 7 2 6—3764 .660 .567 .451 .444 .437 .400 Boats Compete In Series The Snipe and Lightning fleets of the Chautauqua Lake Yacht Club sailed in light air in one of the mid-week racing series on the lake last evening. Walter Crocker turned in a good race to lead the Lightnings across the finish line, followed by Dick Moran in TeTa and Bob Walkerman in Thunder. Red Garfield sailed the Griffith- Garfield Tell-Tale II to first place in the Snipe event, followed by Patty Ann III. skippered by Mike Hine. and Jimmy Kay in Wee- One II. be said to be doing all right with their "nines" since the. win was also the club's ninth consecutive over-all triumph, that is, in muny. New York-Pennsylvania League and independent competition. The Nagle clan needs only one more victory to clinch the second half title. Right Hander Elly Norton pitch- ed steady six-hit ball, and Only a I spot of carelessness by his romp- ! ing infield mates prevented him ! from notching a shutout. Batter 3 Hurler* While Norton wa« baffling the Door batters, the Bombers were making rather free with two of the three pitchers sent to the mound by Manager Leo Squinn, mauling the offerings of Gus Al- bright *nd Johnny Lodestro for 11 of their total of 12 hits and 11 of their 12-run total. Leslie "Flash" James, the Bombers' classy first baseman, was the mainspring of the win- ners/ attack, banging a triple and two singles in five trips to the plate and propelling six runs over. Right Fielder Lefty Pratt whack- ed a two-bagger and two singles and walked twice to share in the hit spotlight. Bobby Brown, the able second baseman of the victors, stole home with the Bombers* last run in the top of the seventh to add to the general jollification of the contest. light on Defense But. while the offensive laurels went to the Partitions, the Door- men grabbed the defensive lime- light. Little Tommy Mistretta, the Dahlstrom's keystone,sacker. galloped far to his right to make a meat-hand grab of Bobby Brown's hard hit grounder near second in the fifth and his peg beat the nimble-footed Brown to first by yards, while Left Fielder Jimmy Donato made a nice catch of Lou Brown's towering foul fly after a hard run in the fourth I frame. The Bombers "eased" to their first run in the first inning, tak- See PARTITIONS Page 27 -I il •', .rails ' III I r 6 iH 1 i HM LEAVE US NOT FT5RGET/ CALIFORNIANS HERE The Influx of early arrivals for the International Snipe Regatta, scheduled to be held on Chautauqua Lake, Aug. 21-23 under auspices of the Chautauqua Lake Yacht Club, has commenced. First to arrive for the regatta Is a party of Cali- fornlans who reached the club yesterday. The party included Boh Carrirk of the Lake Merrill Snipe Fleet Of Berkeley, Cal.; Man- Grounds of the Corin- thian Snipe Fleet, Belvedere, Cal.; and Commodore Peter Newell, Pierre Havre (Junior national Snipe champion) and Hal Kuttner, all of the Lake Merritt Sailing Club of Oak- land, Cal. The sailors trailed three Snipes from California in four jiay*. A Colonel In World War II. Began night ball in majors. Brought Brooklyn 1941 flag. New president of Yankees.* (Answer Bottom First Column, Next Pace) ———i Big Football Season Seen Chicago—UP)—College football is bustling towards its greatest attendance season in history with advance ticket sales ranging from 25 to an astronomical 800 per cent ahead of last year, an As- sociated Press survey indicated today. From every corner of the coun- try flow reports of record pre-sea- son ducat distribution which later will blossom into a golden harvest of more sell-out throngs than the game has ever known. The postwar spending fever has gripped bona fide and synthetic alumni alike, not to mention over- flow undergraduate groups on al- most every campus in the coun- try. At least a half-dozen schools- Michigan, Notre Dame, Ohio State, Southern California, U. C. L. A. and University of California —will play before a half-million or more fans, while other institu- tions will be restricted to smaller crowds only because their play- ing bowls are made of concrete instead of rubber. r* SCORES HorneJl 5. at Jamestown 8 €11 Inn- •K s t a r t s 12. St Bradford 7, Wellsvllle ?. at Lockport 3. Hamilton 11. at Olean 3. TODAY'S GAMES Hornefl at Jamestown <8 P. M). Batavta al Bradford. WcUsrtite at Lockport. Hamilton at Olean. National W P«t. Brookly. M 4t .€19 St. L*ai» •» 41 .St7 Chicago M M 5?8 Baataa 53 55 .5*5 (iaclaaatl 48 58 .453 New Tark 48 «1 .448 Philadelphia 45 8* .4SS Ptttabargh 43 81 .413 YESTERDAY'S SCORES Brooklyn 8-t, N. Y. 4-1 SI. Loals 8, Chicago 4 PiHsb'rgh 3, Cincinnati * Bostoa 5, Philadelphia 4. TODAY'S GAMES New York at Brooklyn Pitt*, at St. Laais, night Philadelphia at Boston, 2 ( inrinnati at Chicago, t American Rostoa Now York Detroit Washington Cleveland Chicago St. Louis 79 ft 81 55 54 58 47 S3 45 47 56 53 81 SS Philadelphia S3 78 Fet. .781 .587 .585 .483 .478 .438 .431 .388 YESTERDAY'S SCORES Boston 3, Philadelphia 1 Cleveland 8, Det. 5. 12 la. Now York 4. Wtik 1 Only games scheduled TODAY'S GAMES Chicago at Detroit St. L. at Cleveland, night Washlagtoa at N. Y„ 2 Only games scheduled International Moat real Buffalo Baltimore Newark Syracuse Toronto Rochester Jersey City W L Pet. 83 41 .667 68 66 83 57 84 68 63 61 67 63 78 546 .535 .516 .5*JJ .452 416 48 77 .383 saR»a III flaW a BaW 4BM a ¥••^11 Do It Every Time YESTERDAY'S SCORES Jar. C. 8, Buffalo 5 (1st) Jer. City 8-6, Boffale 5-5 Toronto 3-6. Newark 2-5 Moat. 2, Rait. 1 (16 las.) Rochester 7-3, Syra. 2-7 TODAY'S GAMES N Syra. at Buffalo, aight Newark at - Mont., night Jer. C. at Rock., aight Baltimore at Toronto By Jimmy Hatlo ALL YBAR. QUIN/ER LIVER ATE N %AT- Ar4D-BEAT-rT5* SONECOULP AFFORD A K VACATION- THURSDAY Baseball—Jamestown vs. Hor- nell, Municipal Stadium, 8 P. M. Baseball Muny Class A League, Vikings vs. Jamestown Legion, Allen Park, 6:30 P. M. Softball—City League play- offs, Jamestown Malleable Iron vs. Falconer Merchants, Allen Park; Chautauqua Sportsman vs. National Worsted, Roseland Park, both at 6:30 P. M. Football—Jamestown semi-pro squad workout, Roseland Park, 6:30 P. M. FRIDAY Baseball—Jamestown vs Lock- port, doubleheader, 6:30 P. M. Baseball — Muny Class A League, Newberry Insurance vs. Dahlstrom Metallic Door, Allen Park, 6:30 P. M.; Muny Class C League playoffs, Raiders vs. Green Brothers, Roseland Park, 1 P. M.; F. O. Eagles vs. Field & Wright, Allen Park, 10 A. M. Football—Jamestown semi-pro squad practice, Roseland Park. 6:30 P. M. Ashville Wins Again In Junior Baseball The Ashville Merchants con- tinued to rush along unchecked by downing the previously unde- feated Atomics. 10 to 9, in a Class D League baseball game. Trapped off third, Kenneth Steves scored the winning run in the extra inning affair, which wen£ eight frames, when the Atomies' third sacker lost the re- lay from his catcher. An outstanding bit of relief hurling by Brown for the winners was a feature. The line score: n u t Ashville 023 020 21—10 14 1 Atomics 101 005 20— 9 9 4 Hilton, Swanson, Brown and Pearson; Seagren. Sabun and Neubauer. fair and will be by far the strong- est with such eminent sailing personalities as Bob Carrick of the Lake Merritt Yacht Club, Berkeley, Calif., who defeated the 1945 International Champion in the California eliminations; John T. Hayward of > the widely known Sequoyah Yacht Club, Tulsa, Okla.; Frank «J. Moyer of Olcott. New York State's "Grand Old Man of Sailing," 65 years young and a forme? state champion; Pierre Havre, Lake Merritt Sail- ing Club. Oakland. 1945 Junior National Champion, and James- town's own Vic Larson, twice New York Slate champion and present holder of the diadem, pro- viding their share of the competi- tion. From foreign lands will come Don Clouston ©f St. Johns, New- foundland, representing the Ava- lon Yacht Club, one of the great- est figures in national competition today; the colorful and capable Francisco Rebello de Andrade from the Lisbon Fleet at Lisbon, Portugal; Brazil's pride from Rio de Janeiro, Dirk vanEyken, and Dr. Raymond Martin du Pan, sailing under .the colors of the Geneva Yactft Club, Geneva, Switzerland. Four of tht top stars of the Junior Nationals will also com- pete in the International event. They are Johnny Montanari of the Miami Yacht Club at Miami, Fla.: Donald Munson. Jr.. repre- senting the Privateer Yacht Club. Chattanooga, Tenn.: Bob Carrick of the Lake Merritt Snipe Fleet, Berkeley, Calif.. and Man- Grounds of the Cornithian Snipe Fleet at Belvfdere. Calif. Swimmers Train Shnkamak State Park, Ind.— UPS —A dream collection of bathing beauties backstroked, crawled and otherwise propelled themselves across Shakamak Parkls artificial lake today in practice for first events tomorrow in the women's national senior A.A.U. outdoor swimming and diving champion- ships. OLSON NIGHT SET FOR AUGUST 28 Marvin Olson appreciation night, honoring the stocky, genial manager of the James- town Falcons, will be held at Municipal Stadium Wednes- day night, Aug. 28 when the Batavia Clippers, now the Falcons' closest rivals for the PONY leadership, hit town to open their series with the locals. Business Manager Mark Hammond made the an- nouncement last night, and also announced Thore Carl- son, public address system maestro at the Stadium, will be chairman of the committee In charge. Hammond said plans are to book one special event be- tween Jamestown and Batavia players as an added attrac- tion. Just what the event will be cannot be determined until Manager Jack Ttghe of the Clips oan be contacted, he said. FARMER OWEN—-Mickey Owen, wearing a western- style hat, points out a distant object on his 340-acre farm near Springfield, Mo., as he questions his brother, Comer (left), about things while he was away playing baseball for the Mexican League. His seven-year-old son, Charles, is an interested onlooker. Owen was catcher with the Brooklyn Dodgers before jumping to the Mexican base- ball circuit. International Regatta Field Club Location Skipper Canandaigua Yacht Club, Canandaigua, N. Y., George Bridgman Clearwater Yacht Club, Clearwater, Florida. Guy Roberts Olcott Yacht Club, Olcott, N. Y.. Frank J. Moyer Corinthian Snipe Fleet, Belvedere, Calif., Marr Grounds Privateer Yacht Club, Chattanooga, Tenn., Donald Munson, Jr. Portage Lakes Yacht Club, Akron, Ohio, Carl D. Zimmerman Money Island Yacht Club, Money Island, N.J., J. F. Stillman, Jr. Wawasee Yacht Club, Syracuse, Indiana, Frank K. Levinson Eagle Lake Yacht Club, Eagle Lake, Mich., Curtis Gerber Chicago Corinthian Yacht Club, Chicago. 111., Kenneth Schmid Wichita Sailing Club, Wichita. Kansas, Ted Wells Lake Merritt Snipe Fleet, Berkeley, Calif., Bob Carrick Winchester Boat Club, Winchester, Mass., Donald Simonds Dallas Snipe Fleet, Dallas, Texas, Dick Gozzaldi Diamond Lake Yacht Club, Cassopolis, Mich., Bill Borough Chautauqua Lake Yacht Club, Lakewoed, N. Y., Vic Larson Youngstown Yacht Club, Youngstown, N. Y., Clarke Cassidy Corpus Christi Sailing Club, Corpus Christi, Texas, Billy Wicker Balboa Snipe Fleet, Los Angeles, Calif., Bob Davis Cedar Point Yacht Club, Westport, Conn., Patricia Hurley Sequoyah Yacht Club, Tulsa, Oklahoma, John T. Hayward Detroit River Yacht Club, Grosse Point, Mich., Victor Schneider Mentor Harbor Yacht Club, Mentor, Ohio, Newton D. Baker, III Clear Lake Snipe Club, Davenport, Iowa. John V. Hayward Loon Lake Yacht Club, Hornell, N. Y., Ed McHenry Newport Yacht Club, Rochester. N. Y., Ernie Coleman City Island Snipe Fleet, City Island, N. Y., Ray Kaufman 9-Mile Point Yacht Club, Webster, N. Y., Tom Hanna Miami Yacht Club, Miami, Florida, Johnny Montanari Lake Lotowona, Kansas City, Mo., E. W. Wililams Sea Cliff Snipe Fleet, Sea Cliff, N. Y., Edw. C. vonWolffersdorf Foreign Entries Geneva Yacht Club, Geneva, Switzerland, Dr. Ray. Martin du Pan Rio de Janiero Fleet, Rio de Janiero, Brazil. Dirk vanEyken Avalon Yachting Club, St. John's, Newfoundland, Don Clouston Lisbon Fleet, Lisbon, Portugal. Francisco Rebello de Andrade Junior National Races (Skipper and Crew must be under 18) Nine Mile Point Yacht Club, Webster, N. Y., Jed Hanna Lake Merritt Snipe Fleet, Berkeley, Calif., Bob Carrick Wawasee Yacht Club, Syracuse, Ind., Harry Levinson Privateef Yacht Club, Chattanooga, Tenn., Donald Munson, Jr. Chautauqua Lake Yacht Club, Lakewood, N. Y., Mary Hough Chautauqua Lake Yacht Club, Lakewood, N. Y., Beebe Russell Corinthian Snipe Fleet, Belvedere, Calif., Elaine Kirchman Corinthian Snipe Fleet, Belvedere, Calif., Marr Grounds Detroit River Yacht Club, Grosse Point, Mich., Jerry Jenkins Detroit River Yacht Club, Grosse Point, Mich., Billie Free Youngstown Yacht Club, Youngstown, N. Y., Don Allen Canandaigua Yacht Club, Canandaigua, N. Y., H. D. Rohrer, Jr., Miami Yacht Club, Miami, Fla., Johnny Montanari Lake Merritt Sailing Club, Oakland, Calif., Pierre Havre Jamestown Motorcycle Club Riders Take Part in Tour Major Boxes (American ) Bottoa Philadelphia ABRH ABRH McBride rf 3 0 1 Valo rf 4 0 1 Metkovlch rf 1 0 0 Grimes 2b 4 0 • Pesky M 5 0 2 McCoaky el 4 12 DIMaggloef 5 1 2 Roaar c 3 00 Williams If 4 1 1 Suder as 3 0 1 York lb 3 0 1 Chapman If 3 0 0 Doerr 2b 4 0 1 McQuInn lb 3 0 0 Russell 3b 4 11 Majeskl 3b 3 0 0 H. Wagner c 4 0 0 Fowler p 3 0 9 Hughson p 4 0 1 o Totals 37 3 10 ToUls 30 1 « Boston 011 000 001—3 Philadelphia 100 000 000—1 E—Suder. Grimes. RBI—McCoakr. McBride. Doerr, Dl Maggie 2B— Williams. Hughson. HR— McCoaky. Dt- Magglo. DP—RuaaeJI to Doerr to York. BB—Fowler 4. SO—Hughaon 3. Fowler 4. T—1:32. A—13.733. Detroit ABRH CletclaaJ ABRH Lake »s Kell 3b Ever* cf Greenberg lb Wakefield If Cu lien bine rf Mullln rf Webb 2b •Outlaw Blood Wth 2b Swift c ••Cramer Rlrhards c Hutchinson p 6 1 5 0 4 1 3 1 1 0 3 0 2 •1 0 I 0 0 2 1 0 00 0 1 0 Case If f Conway 2b f Macktewlc* cf • Edwards rf Becker lb Boudreau as Keltner 3b Htgan c Gaaaaway p TROM 6 5 5 5 f 1 0 1 « 0 Krakauskas p 1 0 • 1 1 Embree p 2 0 40 C 15 Totals 45 5 II Total* • Batted for Webb In 9th. •• Batted for Swift In 9th. x Batted for Gassaway in 5th. Detroit 100 110 002 000-3 Cleveland 100 020 020 001—€ E— Kell. Boudreau. Wakefield. Mul- lln, Edwards. RBI—Greenberg. Con- way. Boudreau 2, Cullenblne. Kell. Keltner, Cramer. 2B—Boudreau 2. Greenberg, Cullenblne. Edwards. Case. 3B—Case. Kell, Keltner. DP—Lake and Greenberg; Cullenblne and Green- berg. BB—Hutchinson 2. Gaaaaway 2. SO—Hutchinson 6. Gaaaaway I. Kra- causkas l. Embree 1. WP—Embrea, T—2:36. A—7,527. Washlagtoa ABRH Coan If Lewis rf Prlddy 2b Vernon lb Spence cf Travis 3b Hitchcock as Early c Leonard p •Grace Hudson p New Tark ABRH Stlrnwelss 2b 3 1 0 Johnson 3b 4 2 2 Henrich lb 3 0 1 D I M S R R I O Cf 4 0 1 Keller If 4 0 0 Robinson e 3 11 Llndell rf 3 0 1 Rlzzuto ss 3 0 1 Bevens p )0I 30 4 7 Totals 31 1 5 Totals • Batted for Leonard In 8th. Washington 010 000 000—1 New York 111 000 01*—« E— RlKuto. Coan. Leonard. Prtdd*. RBI—Henrich. DlMaRglo 2. Robinson. 2B—Prlddy. 3B—DIMaggio. HR—Rob- inson. DP—Early and Prlddy; Lewis and Vernon; Rlzzuto. Stlrnwetss and Henrich. BB—Off Bevens 3. Hudson 2. SO—Bevens 4. Leonard 2. LP—Leon- ard. T—1:48. A—33.588 paid. (National) Philadelphia sWstaa ABRH ABRH Hughes ss 5 1 2 Culler ss 3 11 Wyrostek cf 5 1 1 Ryan 2b 3 0 2 Northey rf 4 1 3 Holmes rf 4 0 2 McCormk lb 4 0 0 Lltwhller If 4 11 Tabor 3b 4 0 0 Max! c 4 0 0 Ennls If 4 0 3 Fernandez 3b 4 1 1 Semlnlck c 4 0 1 Gillenwter ef 1 0 0 Verban 2b 4 11 Rowell cf 2 0 0 Hoerst p 1 0 0 Sanders lb 4 12 Karl p 1 0 0 Cooper p 3 12 •Gilbert 0 0 0 Johnson p 10 0 Sain p 0 0 0 33 5 11 023—4 00«—5 Hughes, Totals 36 4 II Totals • Batted for Karl In 9th. Philadelphia 000 001 Boston 002 201 E—None. RBI—Northey 3, Lltwhller 2. Cooper 2. Holmes. 2B— Northey 2. Verban. Cooper HR- Northey. Lltwhller. DP--Sanders and Culler; Culler. Ry»n and Sanders. B3 —Off Hoerst 3. Cooper 1. Johnson 1. SO—By Hoerst 1. Karl 2. Cooper 1, Johnson 2. WP—Cooper. LP—Hoerst. T—2:05. A—13,529. Break! ya New Yark Rlgney ss Rosen cf Marshall If Cooper c Young lb Gordon 3b Graham rf Wltek 2b Budnlck p Volselle p Thompson p •Rucker Gee p ABRH ABRH 5 0 2 Stanky 2b 5 3 3 4 1 2Galan If 3 0 1 5 0 l Reiser cf 5 2 2 5 0 1 Furillo cf 0 0 0 4 1 3 Walker rf 4 0 ? 5 0 0 Stevens lb 3 12 3 2 2 Reese ss 4 10 3 0 1 Edwards r 3 0 1 2 0 0 zzWhltman 10 0 1 0 0 Anderson e 0 0 0 0 0 0 Mlksls 3b 3 12 1 0 0 Head p 0 0 A 0 0 0 zHermanskjr 1 0 1 Casey p 10 0 Behrman p 2 0 0 Eight riders, representing the Jamestown Motorcycle Club, cap- tured a fair share of the laurels in a "Gypsy Tour," which at- rtacted a field of 843 competi- tors to Lockport recently. The field was one of the largest to assemble since pre-war days. Riders came from several states in this section and from Canada. The tour is one of the banner motorcycling events of the year and is sponsored annually by the Motorcycle Dealers' Association. Chautauqua County cyclists, as- Eagles Get Kuzcinsky Saranao Lake—(JPl —The Phila- delphia Eagles of the National Professional Football League to- day had a hometown boy, former University of Pennsylvania Cap- tain Bert Kuzcinski. training with the squad here. His arrival brought the squad strength up to 58 players. sembled early in the day for the ride to Lockport. Burt Rolander of the local club finished fifth in a field of 48 in the first event, a slow race. He came right back to place first in the low-gear race, only to be dis- qualified because his wheel touched the finish rope. In the stake race. Bud Fran- cisco of Jamestown scored a third place in a field composed of the topnotch riders of the Buffalo and Niagara Falls clubs. The Chautauqua Lake area was well represented in this event. Ray Ahlstrom and Jim Scarry also be- ing entered. Jamestown clubbers were matched with Hornell club cyclists in a tug-o'-war in the final contest of the day, the Hornel- lians winning in an epic battle. Riders attending from the lo- cal club were Ray Ahlstrom, Syd Anderson, Wes Anderson, Bud Francisco, Ivo Johnson, Robert Lindahl, Rudy Lundberg and Clar- ence Metcalfe. Touts 38 4 12 Totals 35 S 13 • Batted for Thompson in 8th. z Batted for Head in third. zx Batted for Edwards In 7th. Giants 110 020 000—4 Dodgers 001 221 SI*—J E—Graham. Gordon. RBI—Marshall. Stanky. Stevens. Mlksls. Graham 2. Reiser, Galan. Whitman. Walker. 2B— Rosen 2. Cooper, Galan. Young. Walk- er. HR—Steven*. Graham. DP—Reese. i Stanky and Stevens. BB—Off Bud- : nick l. Volselle 3. Thompson 1. Head | 4. SO—By Volselle 2. Head 1. Caaey L | Behrman 4. WP—Behrman. LP— Voiaelie. T—2:47. A—38,970 paid. New Rlgney ss Rosen cf ••Kerr •••Blattner Marshall If Cooper s Young lb Gordon 3b Graham rf Wltek 2b Kennedy p •E. Lombard! Tark ABRH 3 0 0 3 0 1 0 4 4 4 4 2 .1 2 1 Schumacher p 0 0 0 Break!?* ABRH Stanky 2b 4 0 1 Reese as 4 11 Reiser If 3 12 Walker rf *. 4 0 1 Furillo cf ' J00 Mlksls 3b 3 n a iMedwIck 10 1 rzTepalc 0 0 0 Ramazzottl 3b 0 0 O Edwards e 2 0 0 Schultz lb 3 A 1 Stevens lb 0 0 0 Hatten p 3 0 t T Totals 31 1 4 Totals 29 2 T •• Batted for Rosen In 8th. • Batted for Kennedy in 8th. ••• Ran for Kerr In 8th. 7 Batted for Mlksls In 7th. ' zz Ran for Medwlck In 7th. , New York 000 000 010—1 Brooklyn 000 000 20*—2 E—Cooper, Edwards. RBI—Walker. Medwlck. 2B— Reiser. BB—Kennedy «. Hatten 2, Schumacher 1. SO—Ken- nedy 4. Hatten 3. Schumacher 1. LP—Kennedy. T.—2.30. A—30,254 paid. Happy Chandler Rules Owen Out of Ball for Five Years Ciaelaaatl ABRH Set Practice Vfllanova, Pa. —- (JP) — Head Coach Jordan Oliver h*s invited 60 candidates for the Villanova College football team to report for preseason practice Saturday. The Wildcats, with a 10-game schedule, including Army and Navy, open Sept. 14 with a home- coming game here against Kings Point (N. Y.) Merchant Marine Academy. Cincinnati, O.—<U.P>—There was ( 1 no place in major league baseball today—nor will there be for the next five years—for ex-Dodger Catcher Mickey Owen or any of the other players who left to seek {their fortunes in the Mexican j League. Baseball Commissioner A. B. (Happy) Chandler made that plain last night when he issued a reiteration of an earlier ruling that all Mexican League jumpers were automatically suspended for five years. "No evidence has been shown to ! the commissioner that would alter his opinion on the suspension of players who jumped contracts in organized baseball," the statement j said. Owen, who fled from a lucrative | Mexican League contract in an effort to regain a catching job with the peiwiant-seekinK Brook- lyn Dodgers, had hoped that he would be given amnesty by the commissioner because he had not actually been under contract to Brooklyn when he made his jump, i Contending that his case differed from those of other jumpers be- cause he weat directly from the Navy to Mexico, Owen emphasized that he would be in a good posi- 1 tion to persuade other jumpers to return if he received lenient treat- ment. Chandler, who refused to meet Owen personally despfte the fact that the catcher made a special trip to Cincinnati to see him, was not here at the time the official announcement was made. His secretary, Walter Mulbry, merely stated that Owen's formal request for reinstatement had Jjeen certi- fied to Chandler by National League President Ford Frick and that there was nothing that the commissioner could do for the catcher. Chandler was at Wichita, Kan., to participate in the open- ing of the annual National Semi- Pro Baseball Congress. The ruling against Owen was NELSON MAY BE OUT OF TOURNEY Seattle—</P)—A sore hack may keep Byron Nelson, na- tional professional golf cham- pion, from defending* his title at Portland, Ore., next week. Byron disclosed during his Seattle exhibition match to- day that he suffered a sacro- iliac condition last Saturday and has been wearing a brace ever since. expected to halt any "north-of- i the-border" exodus by other Mex- . ican League players, particularly Louis Olmo, who applied for re- | instatement to the Brooklyn i Dodgers through a friend in San Juan. P. R. Olmo. a standout wartime Dodger ouifielder and in- flelder who has difficulty with the English language, reportedly asked the friend, Jose Otero Suro, to write a letter to Chandler stat- ing that he wanted to "be replaced on the eligible list and permitted to petition for a return to organ- ized baseball." However. Olmo's wife denied heatedly in Mexico City that her husband, star performer for the Veracruz Blues, had sought rein- statement. "There seems to be a deliberate campaign to embarrass as many Mexican League players as pos- sible," she said. "Louis and I are very happy in Mexico and he in- tends to stay here to finish out his contract." Frick expressed elation In New York over the Chandler ruling. He said that he had submitted "with- out recommendation" Owen's re- quest for reinstatement. "Chandler did the proper thing," he said. **It certainly was a good ruling." Corbltt si Zientara 2b Frev rf Hatton 3b Mueller c West If Haas lb Usher cf •Lukon Ma Hoy p "Llbke •••Clay PUtibarra ABRH 0 0 0 2 0 1 Glonfrlddo cf Fletcher lb Workman rf Elliott 3b Russell If Brown 2b Cox ss Baker e Strtncevtch p 3 0 0 0 0 Totals 36 2 10 Totals 27 2 f • Batted for Usher In 9th. •• Batted for Ma Hoy In 9th. ••• Ran for Llbke In 9th. Cincinnati 020 000 000—2 PltUburjrh 300 000 00*—3 RBI—Russell. Brown 2, Malloy 2. 2B- Brown, Malloy, Zlentara. DP— Haas (unassisted). BB~-Off StrJnca* vlch 2. Malloy. SO—Malloy X T— 1:33. A-3.890. st. U«!« ( h!e*s* ABRH , ABRH Schoondst 2b * 0 l Ostrowskl 3b 4 2 2 Walker cf 4 0 1 Johnson 2b 4 11 MuM.ii l b 5 0 2 Lowrey If 4 0 0 -, Slaughter rf 4 11 Cavar'etta lb 2 0 0 ! Kurowbkl 3b 4 0 0 Waitkus lb 2 1 1 i Slsler If 2 1 0 Pafko cf 4 0 1 I Dusak If 2 11 Nicholson rf 4 0 2 Garaglola c 3 10 Livingston c 2 0 0 Marlon ss 3 2 2 •••Rlckert 0 0 0 Pollct p 4 0 1 M *rullo as 4 0 1 B ^rowy p 1 0 • •Murgeqn 1 0 0 Chlpman p 0 0 0 • •Stringer 10 0 Bauers p 0 0 0 ••••Schefflng 1 f> 1 Totals 33 6 9 Totals M4t • Batted for Borowv in 5th. •• Batted for Chlpman tn 7th. ••• Ran for Livingston In 9th. '•• Batted for Bauers In 9th. St Louis 001 401 000—t Chicago 200 000 020—4 E—Kurowskl. Johnson. RBI—John- ;on 2. Walker, Dusak. Marlon. Pol- let. Pafko 2. Schoendlenst. 2B— Marlon 2, Waitkus. HR—Johnson. Du- sak DP—Muslal and Marlon; Marlon, Schoendlenst and Muslal. BB—Otf Pollett 3. Borowy 1. Bauers 5. SO— Pollet 4. Borowy 2. Chlpman 1. Bauer* 3. LP—Borowy. T—2 08. A—28 496. . ; • Thomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com

45 Craft from 14 States, Four Foreign Countries To Compete ...fultonhistory.com/Newspapers 23/Jamestown NY Post... · Ben Hogan and Byron Nelson on his way to the *final. The longest

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Page 1: 45 Craft from 14 States, Four Foreign Countries To Compete ...fultonhistory.com/Newspapers 23/Jamestown NY Post... · Ben Hogan and Byron Nelson on his way to the *final. The longest

PAST AND PRESENT—Byron Nelson, upper left, de­fending PGA champion; upper right, Long Jim Barnes, winner of first tourney in 1916; lower leftr Lloyd Man-grum, 1946 Open champion; lower right, Gene Sarazen, youngest winner at 20 in 1922. Walter Hagen, center, who copped title most times.

• i — — • . — • — • — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — i i

Ben Hogan, Hot as a Pistol, Guns for Nelson's PGA Crown

• y NED BROWN Ow. — ( N E A r —

Whether Ben Hogan, hot as a pistol, fresh from vie-

in the Canadian PGA with L. can wrest the United States

PGA title from Byron Nelson is the burning question among 130 golf stars, past and present, here for the 28th renewal of the fix­ture over Portland Golf course, Aug. 19 to 25.

Although he has won oodles of tournaments, the slim star Hershey, Pa., has won only

other major title, the West­ern Open.

Following two days of 36-hole qualifying rounds, 64 survivors tee off at match play Wednesday, Aug. 21. in the first two rounds at 18 boles. From then until Sun-

r, play continues at 36 holes to the winner.

Long Jim Barnes was winner of the first tournament played at Siwanoy, N. Y.» in 1916. Colorful Waiter Hagen copped the title flve different times, more than any other golfer. Gene Sarazen was next with three. Gene was only 20, youngest of all victors, when he took his first crown in 1922.

Tin* Squire of Brookfleld also won the U. S. Open that year. and Is the only player to date to accomplish that feat

Byron Nelson won his second PGA championship by defeating Sammy Byrd in the final round at Dayton, €>., last July, when the net proceeds of $51,500 were turned over to the local Army hospital for rehabilitation.

Sam Snead's brilliant play In winning his first national title was the highlight of the 1942 tourney when he beat Sgt. Jim Turnesa. 2 and 1. Turnesa had eliminated Harold McSpaden, Ben Hogan and Byron Nelson on his way to the *final.

The longest match in the his­tory of the PGA tournament was between Hagen and the late Johnny Golden to 1932. Golden winning on the 43rd hole.

Paul Runyan traveled the r\erte«t distance to grab the 1938 crown at Shawnee in defeating Sem Snead, eight up and seven to .go.

Harold McSpaden holds the for extra hole matches to

one tournament, with three sud­den death engagements in 1937 at Pittsburgh. In the first two he downed Bunny Torpey of Kansas City after two extra holes in the second round and eliminated Henry Picard in the fourth in 39 holes. Then Jug lost to Denny Shute in a 37-hole final.

Sarazen defeated Picard, 1 up, in 1940. Picard was three down with three to play and finished with three birdies, only to have Gene halve the last hole with an­other birdie after Henry had put an iron shot only 18 inches from the pin.

Lloyd Mangrum, present U. S. Open champion, has a chance to tie Sarazen's double of 1922. All Lloyd has to do is add this year's fixture to his Open crown.

With Hogan at steam heat, the odds are ag'in Mangrum accom­plishing that feat.

4 5 Craft from 14 States, Four Foreign Countries To Compete In International Snipe Regatta Here

— i ^ —

JAMESTOWN POST-JOURNAL

THURSDAY, AUGUST 15, 1946 PAGE 26

California To Have Strong Representation

Forty-five sailing craft from 14 states and four foreign countries will compete in the International and Junior National Snipe Regat­ta here Aug. 21 through Aug. 23, a complete list of entries released today by Committee Member Harold Griffith reveals.

It is the largest field to ever , compete in the International af-

Partitions Win, 12 to 3, For 9th Straight Victory

Topple Dahlstrom's to Continue Unbeaten Pace at Top of Class A Muny League By WAITE FORSYTH

The vehement Bombers of the Jamestown Steel Partitions con­cern continued their rambunctious dash toward the second half title in the Muny Class A League to a twilight game at Allen Park yes­terday, prancing to an almost ef­fortless 12-3 conquest of the sec­ond-place Dahlstrom Metallic Door team.

It was the ninth straight second half league triumph for Manager Joey Nagie's run-getting special­ists and served to maintain their spotless record in the homeward run. The Bombers might fairly

Baseball Fans!

GUESS WHO ——

LEAGUE STANDINGS W L Pet.

Stee l P a r t i t i o n ! 9 0 1.000 Dahls trom Door 6 3 .867 J a m e s t o w n Legion 4 4 .500 Falconer Legion 4 5 .444 Falconer Mill ing 3 « .333 Vikings 2 6 .250 Newberry Insurance 1 6 , .143

YESTERDAY'S SCORE Part i t ions 12. Dahlstrom 3.

. TODAY'S GAMES Vntings vs. James town Legion.

OR LEAGUE Standings

Atlanta Chattanooga Memphis N e w Orleans Nashvi l le Mobile B irmingham Litt le Rock

W 77 69 71 64 62 HSU 94 45

L 48 54 56 63 63 64 70 80

Pet . .616 .561 .559 .304 .496 .487 .435 .360

Greenvi l le Augusta Columbus Columbia Jacksonvi l le Macon Charleston Savannah

iTLA! W 66 66 63 62 56 54 83 42

IffC L

49 52 53 54 61 63 63 67

Pet. .574 .559 .543 .534 .479 .462 .457 .385

PONY League Standings

Jl ! iJ *

I A J*** Bat* la Olean Brad d W e l l e L o c k t Ham n H o r l l

6 — 8 3 S 10 4 1

• 1 5 4 4 5 4

8 7i — 9|

6 — | 5 8 6 6 4 9| H 6j

9 10 12 14 66 34 8 .1310 8 5 9 4 5 6 6 7 5 46 56

8 81044!55< 9—t 810(4558: 9 5—1 7 4 2 6 3 7 2 6 — 3 7 6 4

.660

.567

.451 .444 .437 .400

1 «

Boats Compete In Series

The Snipe and Lightning fleets of the Chautauqua Lake Yacht Club sailed in light air in one of the mid-week racing series on the lake last evening.

Walter Crocker turned in a good race to lead the Lightnings across the finish line, followed by Dick Moran in TeTa and Bob Walkerman in Thunder.

Red Garfield sailed the Griffith-Garfield Tell-Tale II to first place in the Snipe event, followed by Patty Ann III. skippered by Mike Hine. and Jimmy Kay in Wee-One II.

be said to be doing all right with their "nines" since the. win was also the club's ninth consecutive over-all triumph, that is, in muny. New York-Pennsylvania League and independent competition. The Nagle clan needs only one more victory to clinch the second half title.

Right Hander Elly Norton pitch­ed steady six-hit ball, and Only a

I spot of carelessness by his romp-! ing infield mates prevented him ! from notching a shutout.

Batter 3 Hurler* While Norton wa« baffling the

Door batters, the Bombers were making rather free with two of the three pitchers sent to the mound by Manager Leo Squinn, mauling the offerings of Gus Al­bright *nd Johnny Lodestro for 11 of their total of 12 hits and 11 of their 12-run total.

Leslie "Flash" James, the Bombers' classy first baseman, was the mainspring of the win­ners/ attack, banging a triple and two singles in five trips to the plate and propelling six runs over. Right Fielder Lefty Pratt whack­ed a two-bagger and two singles and walked twice to share in the hit spotlight.

Bobby Brown, the able second baseman of the victors, stole home with the Bombers* last run in the top of the seventh to add to the general jollification of the contest.

l i ght on Defense But. while the offensive laurels

went to the Partitions, the Door­men grabbed the defensive lime­light. Little Tommy Mistretta, the Dahlstrom's keystone,sacker. galloped far to his right to make a meat-hand grab of Bobby Brown's hard hit grounder near second in the fifth and his peg beat the nimble-footed Brown to first by yards, while Left Fielder Jimmy Donato made a nice catch of Lou Brown's towering foul fly after a hard run in the fourth

I frame. The Bombers "eased" to their

first run in the first inning, tak-See PARTITIONS Page 27

-I il

•', . ra i ls '

III I r6 iH 1 i HM

LEAVE US NOT

FT5RGET/

CALIFORNIANS HERE The Influx of early arrivals

for the International Snipe Regatta, scheduled to be held on Chautauqua Lake, Aug. 21-23 under auspices of the Chautauqua Lake Yacht Club, has commenced.

First to arrive for the regatta Is a party of Cali-fornlans who reached the club yesterday.

The party included Boh Carrirk of the Lake Merrill Snipe Fleet Of Berkeley, Cal.; Man- Grounds of the Corin­thian Snipe Fleet, Belvedere, Cal.; and Commodore Peter Newell, Pierre Havre (Junior national Snipe champion) and Hal Kuttner, all of the Lake Merritt Sailing Club of Oak­land, Cal.

The sailors trailed three Snipes from California in four jiay*.

A Colonel In World War II. Began night ball in majors. Brought Brooklyn 1941 flag. New president of Yankees.*

(Answer Bottom First Column, N e x t P a c e ) — — — i

Big Football Season Seen

Chicago—UP)—College football is bustling towards its greatest attendance season in history with advance ticket sales ranging from 25 to an astronomical 800 per cent ahead of last year, an As­sociated Press survey indicated today.

From every corner of the coun­try flow reports of record pre-sea-son ducat distribution which later will blossom into a golden harvest of more sell-out throngs than the game has ever known.

The postwar spending fever has gripped bona fide and synthetic alumni alike, not to mention over­flow undergraduate groups on al­most every campus in the coun­try.

At least a half-dozen schools -Michigan, Notre Dame, Ohio State, Southern California, U. C. L. A. and University of California —will play before a half-million or more fans, while other institu­tions will be restricted to smaller crowds only because their play­ing bowls are made of concrete instead of rubber.

r* SCORES

HorneJl 5. at Jamestown 8 €11 Inn-•K s t a r t s 12. St Bradford 7, Wellsvl l le ?. a t Lockport 3. H a m i l t o n 11. at Olean 3.

TODAY'S GAMES Hornefl at J a m e s t o w n <8 P. M ) . Batavta a l Bradford. WcUsrti te at Lockport. Hamil ton at Olean.

National W I» P«t .

B r o o k l y . M 4 t .€19 St . L*ai» • » 41 .St7 Chicago M M 5?8 Baataa 53 55 .5*5 ( i a c l a a a t l 48 58 .453 New Tark 48 «1 .448 Philadelphia 45 8* .4SS Ptttabargh 43 81 .413

YESTERDAY'S SCORES Brooklyn 8-t, N. Y. 4-1 SI. Loa l s 8, Chicago 4 PiHsb'rgh 3, Cincinnati * Bostoa 5, Phi ladelphia 4.

TODAY'S GAMES New York at Brooklyn Pitt*, at St . Laais , night Philadelphia at Boston, 2 ( inrinnati at Chicago, t

American Rostoa N o w York Detroit Washington Cleveland Chicago St . Louis

79 f t 81 55 54 58 47

S3 45 47 56 53 81 SS

Philadelphia S3 78

Fet . .781 .587 .585 .483 .478 .438 .431 .388

YESTERDAY'S SCORES Boston 3, Philadelphia 1 Cleveland 8, Det . 5. 12 la . Now York 4. W t i k 1 Only games scheduled

TODAY'S GAMES Chicago at Detroi t St . L . a t Cleveland, night W a s h l a g t o a a t N . Y„ 2 Only games scheduled

International Moat real Buffalo Balt imore Newark Syracuse Toronto Rochester Jersey City

W L Pet . 83 41 .667 68 66 83 57 84 68 63 61 67 63

78

546 .535 .516 .5*JJ .452 416

48 77 .383

saR»a I I I flaW • a BaW 4BM a

¥••^11 Do It Every Time

Y E S T E R D A Y ' S SCORES Jar . C. 8, Buffalo 5 (1st) Jer. City 8-6, Boffale 5-5 Toronto 3-6. Newark 2-5 Moat . 2, Rait . 1 (16 las . ) Rochester • 7-3, Syra . 2-7

TODAY'S GAMES N

Syra. a t Buffalo, a i g h t Newark at - Mont., night Jer . C. at Rock. , a i g h t Balt imore a t Toronto

By Jimmy Hatlo

A L L YBAR. QUIN/ER LIVER ATE N %AT-Ar4D-BEAT-rT5* SONECOULP AFFORD A K VACATION-

THURSDAY Baseball—Jamestown vs. Hor-

nell, Municipal Stadium, 8 P. M. Baseball — Muny Class A

League, Vikings vs. Jamestown Legion, Allen Park, 6:30 P. M.

Softball—City League play­offs, Jamestown Malleable Iron vs. Falconer Merchants, Allen Park; Chautauqua Sportsman vs. National Worsted, Roseland Park, both at 6:30 P. M.

Football—Jamestown semi-pro squad workout, Roseland Park, 6:30 P. M.

FRIDAY Baseball—Jamestown vs Lock-

port, doubleheader, 6:30 P. M. Baseball — Muny Class A

League, Newberry Insurance vs. Dahlstrom Metallic Door, Allen Park, 6:30 P. M.; Muny Class C League playoffs, Raiders vs. Green Brothers, Roseland Park, 1 P. M.; F. O. Eagles vs. Field & Wright, Allen Park, 10 A. M.

Football—Jamestown semi-pro squad practice, Roseland Park. 6:30 P. M.

Ashville Wins Again In Junior Baseball

The Ashville Merchants con­tinued to rush along unchecked by downing the previously unde­feated Atomics. 10 to 9, in a Class D League baseball game.

Trapped off third, Kenneth Steves scored the winning run in the extra inning affair, which wen£ eight frames, when the Atomies' third sacker lost the re­lay from his catcher.

An outstanding bit of relief hurling by Brown for the winners was a feature.

The line score: n u t

Ashville 023 020 21—10 14 1 Atomics 101 005 20— 9 9 4

Hilton, Swanson, Brown and Pearson; Seagren. Sabun and Neubauer.

fair and will be by far the strong­est with such eminent sailing personalities as Bob Carrick of the Lake Merritt Yacht Club, Berkeley, Calif., who defeated the 1945 International Champion in the California eliminations; John T. Hayward of > the widely known Sequoyah Yacht Club, Tulsa, Okla.; Frank «J. Moyer of Olcott. New York State's "Grand Old Man of Sailing," 65 years young and a forme? state champion; Pierre Havre, Lake Merritt Sail­ing Club. Oakland. 1945 Junior National Champion, and James­town's own Vic Larson, twice New York Slate champion and present holder of the diadem, pro­viding their share of the competi­tion.

From foreign lands will come Don Clouston ©f St. Johns, New­foundland, representing the Ava-lon Yacht Club, one of the great­est figures in national competition today; the colorful and capable Francisco Rebello de Andrade from the Lisbon Fleet at Lisbon, Portugal; Brazil's pride from Rio de Janeiro, Dirk vanEyken, and Dr. Raymond Martin du Pan, sailing under . the colors of the Geneva Yactft Club, Geneva, Switzerland.

Four of tht top stars of the Junior Nationals will also com­pete in the International event. They are Johnny Montanari of the Miami Yacht Club at Miami, Fla.: Donald Munson. Jr.. repre­senting the Privateer Yacht Club. Chattanooga, Tenn.: Bob Carrick of the Lake Merritt Snipe Fleet, Berkeley, Calif.. and Man-Grounds of the Cornithian Snipe Fleet at Belvfdere. Calif.

Swimmers Train Shnkamak State Park, Ind.—UPS

—A dream collection of bathing beauties backstroked, crawled and otherwise propelled themselves across Shakamak Parkls artificial lake today in practice for first events tomorrow in the women's national senior A.A.U. outdoor swimming and diving champion­ships.

OLSON NIGHT SET FOR AUGUST 28

Marvin Olson appreciation night, honoring the stocky, genial manager of the James­town Falcons, will be held at Municipal Stadium Wednes­day night, Aug. 28 when the Batavia Clippers, now the Falcons' closest rivals for the PONY leadership, hit town to open their series with the locals.

Business Manager Mark Hammond made the an­nouncement last night, and also announced Thore Carl­son, public address system maestro at the Stadium, will be chairman of the committee In charge.

Hammond said plans are to book one special event be­tween Jamestown and Batavia players as an added attrac­tion. Just what the event will be cannot be determined until Manager Jack Ttghe of the Clips oan be contacted, he said.

FARMER OWEN—-Mickey Owen, wearing a western-style hat, points out a distant object on his 340-acre farm near Springfield, Mo., as he questions his brother, Comer (left), about things while he was away playing baseball for the Mexican League. His seven-year-old son, Charles, is an interested onlooker. Owen was catcher with the Brooklyn Dodgers before jumping to the Mexican base­ball circuit.

International Regatta Field Club Location Skipper Canandaigua Yacht Club, Canandaigua, N. Y., George Bridgman Clearwater Yacht Club, Clearwater, Florida. Guy Roberts Olcott Yacht Club, Olcott, N. Y.. Frank J. Moyer Corinthian Snipe Fleet, Belvedere, Calif., Marr Grounds Privateer Yacht Club, Chattanooga, Tenn., Donald Munson, Jr. Portage Lakes Yacht Club, Akron, Ohio, Carl D. Zimmerman Money Island Yacht Club, Money Island, N.J., J. F. Stillman, Jr. Wawasee Yacht Club, Syracuse, Indiana, Frank K. Levinson Eagle Lake Yacht Club, Eagle Lake, Mich., Curtis Gerber Chicago Corinthian Yacht Club, Chicago. 111., Kenneth Schmid Wichita Sailing Club, Wichita. Kansas, Ted Wells Lake Merritt Snipe Fleet, Berkeley, Calif., Bob Carrick Winchester Boat Club, Winchester, Mass., Donald Simonds Dallas Snipe Fleet, Dallas, Texas, Dick Gozzaldi Diamond Lake Yacht Club, Cassopolis, Mich., Bill Borough Chautauqua Lake Yacht Club, Lakewoed, N. Y., Vic Larson Youngstown Yacht Club, Youngstown, N. Y., Clarke Cassidy Corpus Christi Sailing Club, Corpus Christi, Texas, Billy Wicker Balboa Snipe Fleet, Los Angeles, Calif., Bob Davis Cedar Point Yacht Club, Westport, Conn., Patricia Hurley Sequoyah Yacht Club, Tulsa, Oklahoma, John T. Hayward Detroit River Yacht Club, Grosse Point, Mich., Victor Schneider Mentor Harbor Yacht Club, Mentor, Ohio, Newton D. Baker, III Clear Lake Snipe Club, Davenport, Iowa. John V. Hayward Loon Lake Yacht Club, Hornell, N. Y., Ed McHenry Newport Yacht Club, Rochester. N. Y., Ernie Coleman City Island Snipe Fleet, City Island, N. Y., Ray Kaufman 9-Mile Point Yacht Club, Webster, N. Y., Tom Hanna Miami Yacht Club, Miami, Florida, Johnny Montanari Lake Lotowona, Kansas City, Mo., E. W. Wililams Sea Cliff Snipe Fleet, Sea Cliff, N. Y., Edw. C. vonWolffersdorf

Foreign Entries Geneva Yacht Club, Geneva, Switzerland, Dr. Ray. Martin du Pan Rio de Janiero Fleet, Rio de Janiero, Brazil. Dirk vanEyken Avalon Yachting Club, St. John's, Newfoundland, Don Clouston Lisbon Fleet, Lisbon, Portugal. Francisco Rebello de Andrade

Junior National Races (Skipper and Crew must be under 18)

Nine Mile Point Yacht Club, Webster, N. Y., Jed Hanna Lake Merritt Snipe Fleet, Berkeley, Calif., Bob Carrick Wawasee Yacht Club, Syracuse, Ind., Harry Levinson Privateef Yacht Club, Chattanooga, Tenn., Donald Munson, Jr. Chautauqua Lake Yacht Club, Lakewood, N. Y., Mary Hough Chautauqua Lake Yacht Club, Lakewood, N. Y., Beebe Russell Corinthian Snipe Fleet, Belvedere, Calif., Elaine Kirchman Corinthian Snipe Fleet, Belvedere, Calif., Marr Grounds Detroit River Yacht Club, Grosse Point, Mich., Jerry Jenkins Detroit River Yacht Club, Grosse Point, Mich., Billie Free Youngstown Yacht Club, Youngstown, N. Y., Don Allen Canandaigua Yacht Club, Canandaigua, N. Y., H. D. Rohrer, Jr., Miami Yacht Club, Miami, Fla., Johnny Montanari Lake Merritt Sailing Club, Oakland, Calif., Pierre Havre

Jamestown Motorcycle Club Riders Take Part in Tour

Major Boxes (American )

Bottoa Philadelphia A B R H A B R H

McBride rf 3 0 1 Valo rf 4 0 1 Metkovlch rf 1 0 0 Grimes 2b 4 0 • Pesky M 5 0 2 McCoaky e l 4 1 2 DIMagg loe f 5 1 2 Roaar c 3 0 0 Wil l iams If 4 1 1 Suder as 3 0 1 York l b 3 0 1 Chapman If 3 0 0 Doerr 2b 4 0 1 McQuInn l b 3 0 0 Russel l 3b 4 1 1 Majeskl 3b 3 0 0 H. Wagner c 4 0 0 Fowler p 3 0 9 Hughson p 4 0 1 o

Tota ls 37 3 10 T o U l s 30 1 « Boston 011 000 001—3 Philadelphia 100 000 000—1 E—Suder. Grimes. RBI—McCoakr.

McBride. Doerr, Dl M a g g i e 2B— Wil l iams. Hughson. HR— McCoaky. Dt-Magglo. DP—RuaaeJI to Doerr to York. BB—Fowler 4. SO—Hughaon 3. Fowler 4. T—1:32. A—13.733.

Detroit A B R H

CletclaaJ A B R H

Lake »s Kell 3b Ever* cf Greenberg lb Wakefield If Cu lien bine rf Mullln rf Webb 2b •Outlaw Blood W t h 2b Swift c • •Cramer Rlrhards c Hutchinson p

6 1 5 0 4 1 3 1 1 0 3 0

2 •1 0 I 0

0 2 1 0 0 0 0 1

0

Case If f Conway 2b f Macktewlc* cf • Edwards rf Becker l b Boudreau as Keltner 3b Htgan c Gaaaaway p TROM

6 5 5 5 f 1 0 1 «

0 Krakauskas p 1 0 • 1 1 Embree p 2 0 •

40 C 15 Totals 45 5 II Total* • Batted for Webb In 9th.

• • Batted for Swift In 9th. x Batted for Gassaway in 5th.

Detroit 100 110 002 0 0 0 - 3 Cleveland 100 020 020 001—€ E— Kell. Boudreau. Wakefield. Mul­

lln, Edwards. RBI—Greenberg. Con­way. Boudreau 2, Cullenblne. Kel l . Keltner, Cramer. 2B—Boudreau 2. Greenberg, Cullenblne. Edwards. Case. 3B—Case. Kell, Keltner. DP—Lake and Greenberg; Cullenblne and Green­berg. BB—Hutchinson 2. Gaaaaway 2. SO—Hutchinson 6. Gaaaaway I. Kra-causkas l . Embree 1. WP—Embrea , T—2:36. A—7,527.

Washlagtoa A B R H

Coan If Lewis rf Prlddy 2b Vernon l b Spence cf Travis 3b Hitchcock as Early c Leonard p •Grace Hudson p

New Tark A B R H

St lrnwelss 2b 3 1 0 Johnson 3b 4 2 2 Henrich l b 3 0 1 D I M S R R I O Cf 4 0 1 Keller If 4 0 0 Robinson e 3 1 1 Llndell rf 3 0 1 Rlzzuto s s 3 0 1 Bevens p ) 0 I

30 4 7 Totals 31 1 5 Totals • Batted for Leonard In 8th.

Washington 010 000 000—1 New York 111 000 01*—« E— RlKuto . Coan. Leonard. Prtdd*.

RBI—Henrich. DlMaRglo 2. Robinson. 2B—Prlddy. 3B—DIMaggio. HR—Rob­inson. DP—Early and Prlddy; Lewis and Vernon; Rlzzuto. St lrnwetss and Henrich. BB—Off Bevens 3. Hudson 2. SO—Bevens 4. Leonard 2. LP—Leon­ard. T—1:48. A—33.588 paid.

(National) Philadelphia sWstaa

A B R H A B R H Hughes ss 5 1 2 Culler ss 3 1 1 Wyrostek cf 5 1 1 Ryan 2b 3 0 2 Northey rf 4 1 3 Holmes rf 4 0 2 M c C o r m k l b 4 0 0 Lltwhller If 4 1 1 Tabor 3b 4 0 0 Max! c 4 0 0 Ennls If 4 0 3 Fernandez 3b 4 1 1 Semlnlck c 4 0 1 G i l l e n w t e r ef 1 0 0 Verban 2b 4 1 1 Rowell cf 2 0 0 Hoerst p 1 0 0 Sanders l b 4 1 2 Karl p 1 0 0 Cooper p 3 1 2 •Gilbert 0 0 0 Johnson p 1 0 0

Sain p 0 0 0

33 5 11

023—4 00«—5 Hughes ,

Totals 36 4 II Totals • Batted for Karl In 9th.

Phi ladelphia 000 001 Boston 002 201 E—None. RBI—Northey 3,

Lltwhller 2. Cooper 2. Holmes . 2B— Northey 2. Verban. Cooper H R -Northey. Lltwhller. D P - - S a n d e r s and Culler; Culler. Ry»n and Sanders. B 3 —Off Hoerst 3. Cooper 1. Johnson 1. SO—By Hoerst 1. Karl 2. Cooper 1, Johnson 2. WP—Cooper. LP—Hoerst . T—2:05. A—13,529.

Break! ya New Yark

Rlgney ss Rosen cf Marshall If Cooper c Young l b Gordon 3b Graham rf Wltek 2b Budnlck p Volsel le p Thompson p •Rucker Gee p

A B R H A B R H 5 0 2 Stanky 2b 5 3 3 4 1 2 G a l a n If 3 0 1 5 0 l Reiser cf 5 2 2 5 0 1 Furi l lo cf 0 0 0 4 1 3 Walker rf 4 0 ? 5 0 0 Stevens l b 3 1 2 3 2 2 Reese ss 4 1 0 3 0 1 Edwards r 3 0 1 2 0 0 zzWhltman 1 0 0 1 0 0 Anderson e 0 0 0 0 0 0 Mlksls 3b 3 1 2 1 0 0 Head p 0 0 A 0 0 0 zHermanskjr 1 0 1

Casey p 1 0 0 Behrman p 2 0 0

Eight riders, representing the Jamestown Motorcycle Club, cap­tured a fair share of the laurels in a "Gypsy Tour," which at-rtacted a field of 843 competi­tors to Lockport recently. The field was one of the largest to assemble since pre-war days.

Riders came from several states in this section and from Canada. The tour is one of the banner motorcycling events of the year and is sponsored annually by the Motorcycle Dealers' Association.

Chautauqua County cyclists, as-

Eagles Get Kuzcinsky Saranao Lake—(JPl—The Phila­

delphia Eagles of the National Professional Football League to­day had a hometown boy, former University of Pennsylvania Cap­tain Bert Kuzcinski. training with the squad here. His arrival brought the squad strength up to 58 players.

sembled early in the day for the ride to Lockport.

Burt Rolander of the local club finished fifth in a field of 48 in the first event, a slow race. He came right back to place first in the low-gear race, only to be dis­qualified because his wheel touched the finish rope.

In the stake race. Bud Fran­cisco of Jamestown scored a third place in a field composed of the topnotch riders of the Buffalo and Niagara Falls clubs. The Chautauqua Lake area was well represented in this event. Ray Ahlstrom and Jim Scarry also be­ing entered.

Jamestown clubbers were matched with Hornell club cyclists in a tug-o'-war in the final contest of the day, the Hornel-lians winning in an epic battle.

Riders attending from the lo­cal club were Ray Ahlstrom, Syd Anderson, Wes Anderson, Bud Francisco, Ivo Johnson, Robert Lindahl, Rudy Lundberg and Clar­ence Metcalfe.

T o u t s 38 4 12 Totals 35 S 13 • Batted for Thompson in 8th. z Batted for Head in third.

zx Batted for Edwards In 7th. Giants 110 020 000—4 Dodgers 001 221 SI*—J E—Graham. Gordon. RBI—Marshall .

Stanky. Stevens. Mlksls. Graham 2. Reiser, Galan. Whitman. Walker. 2B— Rosen 2. Cooper, Galan. Young. Walk­er. HR—Steven*. Graham. DP—Reese .

i Stanky and Stevens. BB—Off Bud-: nick l. Volsel le 3. Thompson 1. Head | 4. SO—By Volsel le 2. Head 1. Caaey L | Behrman 4. WP—Behrman. L P —

Voiaelie. T—2:47. A—38,970 paid.

New

Rlgney s s Rosen cf • •Kerr • • •B la t tner Marshall If Cooper s Young l b Gordon 3b Graham rf Wltek 2b Kennedy p • E . Lombard!

Tark A B R H

3 0 0 3 0 1 0 4 4 4 4 2 .1 2 1

Schumacher p 0 0 0

B r e a k ! ? * A B R H

Stanky 2b 4 0 1 Reese as 4 1 1 Reiser If 3 1 2 Walker rf *. 4 0 1 Furi l lo cf ' J 0 0 Mlksls 3b 3 n a iMedwIck 1 0 1 rzTepalc 0 0 0 Ramazzottl 3b 0 0 O Edwards e 2 0 0 Schultz l b 3 A 1 Stevens l b 0 0 0 Hatten p 3 0 t

T

Totals 31 1 4 Tota l s 29 2 T • • Batted for Rosen In 8th.

• Batted for Kennedy in 8th. • • • Ran for Kerr In 8th.

7 Batted for Mlksls In 7th. ' zz Ran for Medwlck In 7th. , New York 000 000 010—1

Brooklyn 000 000 20*—2 E—Cooper, Edwards. RBI—Walker .

Medwlck. 2B— Reiser. BB—Kennedy «. Hatten 2, Schumacher 1. SO—Ken­nedy 4. Hatten 3. Schumacher 1. LP—Kennedy . T.—2.30. A—30,254 paid.

Happy Chandler Rules Owen Out of Ball for Five Years

Ciaelaaatl A B R H

Set Practice Vfllanova, Pa. —- (JP) — Head

Coach Jordan Oliver h*s invited 60 candidates for the Villanova College football team to report for preseason practice Saturday. The Wildcats, with a 10-game schedule, including Army and Navy, open Sept. 14 with a home­coming game here against Kings Point (N. Y.) Merchant Marine Academy.

Cincinnati, O.—<U.P>—There was ( 1 no place in major league baseball today—nor will there be for the next five years—for ex-Dodger Catcher Mickey Owen or any of the other players who left to seek

{their fortunes in the Mexican j League.

Baseball Commissioner A. B. (Happy) Chandler made that plain last night when he issued a reiteration of an earlier ruling that all Mexican League jumpers were automatically suspended for five years.

"No evidence has been shown to ! the commissioner that would alter his opinion on the suspension of players who jumped contracts in organized baseball," the statement j said.

Owen, who fled from a lucrative | Mexican League contract in an effort to regain a catching job with the peiwiant-seekinK Brook­lyn Dodgers, had hoped that he would be given amnesty by the commissioner because he had not actually been under contract to Brooklyn when he made his jump, i Contending that his case differed from those of other jumpers be­cause he weat directly from the Navy to Mexico, Owen emphasized that he would be in a good posi-

1 tion to persuade other jumpers to

return if he received lenient treat­ment.

Chandler, who refused to meet Owen personally despfte the fact that the catcher made a special trip to Cincinnati to see him, was not here at the time the official announcement was made. His secretary, Walter Mulbry, merely stated that Owen's formal request for reinstatement had Jjeen certi­fied to Chandler by National League President Ford Frick and that there was nothing that the commissioner could do for the catcher. Chandler was at Wichita, Kan., to participate in the open­ing of the annual National Semi-Pro Baseball Congress.

The ruling against Owen was

NELSON MAY BE OUT OF TOURNEY

Seattle—</P)—A sore hack may keep Byron Nelson, na­tional professional golf cham­pion, from defending* his title at Portland, Ore., next week.

Byron disclosed during his Seattle exhibition match to­day that he suffered a sacro­iliac condition last Saturday and has been wearing a brace ever since.

expected to halt any "north-of-i the-border" exodus by other Mex-. ican League players, particularly Louis Olmo, who applied for re-

| instatement to the Brooklyn i Dodgers through a friend in San Juan. P. R. Olmo. a standout wartime Dodger ouifielder and in-flelder who has difficulty with the English language, reportedly asked the friend, Jose Otero Suro, to write a letter to Chandler stat­ing that he wanted to "be replaced on the eligible list and permitted to petition for a return to organ­ized baseball."

However. Olmo's wife denied heatedly in Mexico City that her husband, star performer for the Veracruz Blues, had sought rein­statement.

"There seems to be a deliberate campaign to embarrass as many Mexican League players as pos­sible," she said. "Louis and I are very happy in Mexico and he in­tends to stay here to finish out his contract."

Frick expressed elation In New York over the Chandler ruling. He said that he had submitted "with­out recommendation" Owen's re­quest for reinstatement.

"Chandler did the proper thing," he said. **It certainly was a good ruling."

Corbltt s i Zientara 2b Frev rf Hatton 3b Mueller c West If Haas l b Usher cf •Lukon Ma Hoy p " L l b k e • • •Clay

PUt ibarra A B R H

0 0 0 2 0 1

Glonfrlddo cf Fletcher l b Workman rf Elliott 3b Russell If Brown 2b Cox ss Baker e Strtncevtch p

3 0

0 0 0

Totals 36 2 10 Tota l s 27 2 f • Batted for Usher In 9th.

• • Batted for Ma Hoy In 9th. • • • Ran for Llbke In 9th.

Cincinnati 020 000 000—2 PltUburjrh 300 000 00*—3 RBI—Russell . Brown 2, Malloy 2.

2 B - Brown, Malloy, Zlentara. D P — Haas (unass is ted) . BB~-Off StrJnca* vlch 2. Malloy. SO—Malloy X T— 1:33. A - 3 . 8 9 0 .

s t . U « ! « ( h!e*s* A B R H , A B R H

Schoonds t 2b * 0 l Ostrowskl 3b 4 2 2 Walker cf 4 0 1 Johnson 2b 4 1 1 MuM.ii l b 5 0 2 Lowrey If 4 0 0

-, Slaughter rf 4 11 Cavar'etta lb 2 0 0 ! Kurowbkl 3b 4 0 0 Waitkus l b 2 1 1 i Slsler If 2 1 0 Pafko cf 4 0 1 I Dusak If 2 1 1 Nicholson rf 4 0 2

Garaglola c 3 1 0 Livingston c 2 0 0 Marlon ss 3 2 2 • • •Rlckert 0 0 0 Pollct p 4 0 1 M *rullo as 4 0 1

B ^rowy p 1 0 • •Murgeqn 1 0 0 Chlpman p 0 0 0 • •Stringer 1 0 0 Bauers p 0 0 0 • • • •Scheff lng 1 f> 1

Totals 33 6 9 Totals M 4 t • Batted for Borowv in 5th.

• • Batted for Chlpman tn 7th. • • • Ran for Livingston In 9th. ' •• Batted for Bauers In 9th. S t Louis 001 401 000—t Chicago 200 000 020—4 E—Kurowskl. Johnson. RBI—John-

;on 2. Walker, Dusak. Marlon. Pol -let. Pafko 2. Schoendlenst . 2B— Marlon 2, Waitkus. HR—Johnson. D u ­sak DP—Muslal and Marlon; Marlon, Schoendlenst and Muslal. BB—Otf Pol lett 3. Borowy 1. Bauers 5. SO— Pollet 4. Borowy 2. Chlpman 1. Bauer*

3 . LP—Borowy. T—2 08. A—28 496.

.. ; •

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