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PAGE FOUR-A
The first half winner of the City Softball League might well be
decided this evening when Beunson's Bakery and Rosenthal’s clash at
6:30 at the Lyndon Hougse iield.
Both of these teams have
showed they were superior to
every ‘eam they have met, and
t.ie winner eme~ges as a heavy
favorite to take the first half.
While these itwno powerhouses
are going after one another, over
at Dudley fielg “the two cellar
mautes, Georgia Motors and Ath
ens Mfg. Co., will determine who
comes out of the basement and
viao stays in.
In yesterday’'s games, Climax
g 4 a firm hold on second place
by knocking off its rival, Bell's
in a one-sided affair, 20-6.
D. Allen again put on a pitch
ing performance that showed he
is among the best in the league,
giving up only five hits. He re
cecived relief in the fifth, but
not because fie was in trouble.
Joe Barone was the losing
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PALACE— Now Showing
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: F;:ATURE STARTS — 1:11, 3:13, 5:15, 7:17, 9:19.
GEORGIA — Last Showing
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THE Bisfci EVER v,, : e ke g."
Bt o ;%5 ¥ TR
b g et oA Poromoual Piguts ..,
S/ 451" A Brian DONLEVY-Sonny TUFTS §
N, o f" ry -« Barbara Britton -Fay Bainter
i‘» e, Tom Tully: Henry O'Neill 3
FEATURE_STARTS — 12:54, 2:36, 4:18, 6:00._:41:. 9:24,
FRIDAY — SATURDAY
CEUAIRE S
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' “SONG OF ARIZONA”
: ROY ROGERS
~ FRIDAY - SATURDAY
PRANTOMEDNMAR_ ONARHED KILLER!
ix \g 3(0 caiid
W Ay il
s VENGEANCE"
Ml KIRBY
& GRANT
i B ruzzy KNiGHT
e W= Jeanifer Holt . Densis Mocre
BB ond JDHNKY BOND and is
& )Q" ‘ RED RIVER VALLEY BOYS :
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,lflur]er, giving up 14 safeties.
| Over at the Lyndon House
' field a ding-dong baitle took
place between Dixie Canner and
:Georgia Power, with /the former
finally coming oul on top, 28 1o
0
. Willis Nash was the victor on
the hill, while J. B. Emory was
tae loser.
Line scorers: '
Climax .... 920 459 o—2o 14 1
IBells ...... 420 000 0— 6 5 6
Allen, Cape (5) and Hansford;
Parone, Berry (5) snd Salters.
Officials: James Griffeth, “Skeet”
Cobb.
Dixin Canner 820 %5} 2—20 16 2
\Ga. Power 193 105 o—l 918 2
Nash - and Connelly; Emory
ond Lowe. Officials: ‘“Bodie”
Townsend, Bobby Gentry.
League Standings .
Team— e Pet.
Benson’s ....:3 0 1,000
Rosenthal’'s .. 3 0 1.000
Climig .. .. 3 50
TPe R R e
SRt L - o 500
Ga. Power .. 2 38 250
Ga. Motors .. & 3 Rilili}
Athens Mfg. 0 3 4.000
APPLE PRODUCTION DOWN
Production of apples in the
United States only {otaled 64,-
000,000 bushels in 1945, as com
pared with 124,000,000 bushels in
the preceding year,
eath
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‘STRAND Today
“CORNERED”
DICK POWELL
FRIDAY -~ SATURDAY
T i gedias
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T —
Dixie Walker Triples Twice
As Dodgers Take Reds, 4-2
Bulldog Golfers
Hamer And Crowe
In College Tourney
PRINCETON, N. J., June 27—
(AP)—Lock for these names in
the headines about amateur golf
—Maybe not this year, but in a
few more years when the amateur
‘game again gets up full speed af
ter its wartime interrupticn:
John Jacobs of Iowa; Jimmy
Whittenberg of Louisiana State;
Bill Cambel] of Princeton; Cieorge
Hamer and Harold Crow of Geor
gia; Charles Lind of Denver;
Howard Baker of Ohio State;
Charlie Cole and Andy Anderson of
Oklahoma; Dick Whiting of No
tre Dame; Tom Lambie of Stan
ford Henry Rampelt of Baldwin=-
Wallace; John Cohill of Arizona;
Manuel Dela Torre of Northwes
tern.
They're al] entered in the 49th
National Collegiate A. A. Golf
championship, which starts today,
and the word is that they're the
boys who will be heard {rom not
only during the next few days but
in the future.
Jimmy Hagen, Pittsburgh Ath
letic director who handles the
tournament for the NCAA, main
tains that the college boys of to
day are the top-flight amateurs of
tomorrow.
A total of 168 golfers, repre
senting 42 colleges, were entered
in the three-day, 72-hole medal
play test. -«
Yesterday's
—Stars—
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Dave Koslo, Giants — Blanked
the Pirates with five hits as
Giants emerged from National
League cellar with 4-0 triumph.
Hal Newhouser, Tigers, and
Ted Williams, Red Sox — New
houser waon his 13th game with a
nine-hitter, 16-2 in the opener;
Williams blasted his 19th homer
and two singles to help the Red
Sox win nightcap 9-3.
Sid Hudson, Senators-——Won his
own game when he singled in the
ninth and subsequently scored
winning run in 4-3 16-inning
conquest of White Sox.
FIGHT IN SEPT.
BUFFALOQ; N. Y., June 27—
(AP)— Heavyweight champion,
Joe Louis says he will probably
fight in September and the match
probably will be with Tami Mau
riello.”
Louis said last night he would
attend a meeting with Promoter
Mike Jacobs in New York tomor
row when definite arrangements
might be made.
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THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA.
Yankees Stop Cleveland As Red Sox
__ll I . " " 5
Split With Tigars; Cards Nip Phils
& y
BY JOE REICHLER
Associated Press Sports Writer.
Almost any Brooklyn citizen will tell you in all sincerity that the
greatest thing that ever happened to that fair borough since its dis
covery 300 years ago was when Dixie Walker came to the Dodgers
back in 1939.
Probably never in the annals of
baseball has a player so,captured
the hearts of fans as has this soft
spoken drawling southerner from
Villa Rica, Ga.
Walker’s popularity is so great
that Ebbets Field patrons some
times tip their hats toc him on the
street. Dixie, in his eight year
reign at Ebbets Field, has won so
many games that invariably the
By HUGH FULLERTON, JR.
PRINCETON, N. J., June 27.—
(AP) — The “kids” call it the
“old men’s” tournament — and
with good reason — though the
voaches who came along for the
49th National Collegiate A. A.
Golf Championship still refer to
the players as kids . .. About
three out of four of the 168 play
ers entered were wearing one of
Uncle Sam’s khaki or blue suits
less thgn a year ago . . . They'’re
a lot older than the boys who us
ually play college golf—averag
ing somewhere around 22 with a
few up in the 30’s. One theory is
that the winner will be the play
er whe came out of service first
and has had the most time to re~
gain his golfing form . . . On that
basis, Oklahoma’s Charlie Coe or
Louisiana State’s Jimmy Witten
berg should be a good bet,
They're not only cracker-jack
golfers, but they had time to
play .golf while they were in the
Army . . . By way of contrast,
Joe Totten, who compiled a fine
record as an Army flier, is only
the No. 6 man on the Notre Dame
team.
ONE-MINUTE SPORTS PAGE
. Princeton alumni, and there
were 7,300 of them here for
reunion last Sauirday, are steam
ed up over the lack of emphasis
on the Tiger sports program.fCur
rent excitement is about the re
fusal of the school to let the
crew race at Seattle last week,
although the oarsmen wanted to
go and the Westerners would
have footed the expense bill . . .
What's this story that Army’s
Shorty McWilliams has been
working out with .the football
sguad at Mississippi State, his old
school? |
HE GOT THE BREAKS
Dick Goats, Joplin, Ma., infield
er, tripped over a step at the
clubhouse during spring training
and sprained an ankle . . . Nine
days later he got back into the
Miners’ lineup, was struck by a
thrown ball and suffered a bro=
ken jaw .. . . Several weks later
he again got into action; a groun
der took a bad hop and broke his
nose . ... That's okay, but was his
patting average hurt?
Th recent vears the percéntage
of waste in oil wells has been
cut from about 80 to approxi
mately 25 percent.
newspaper vendors yell “today’;
score, Dixie 4, opponents 2.”
That’s what they were yelling
yesterday following Brooklyn’s 4-2
victory over the Cincinnati Reds,
which enabled the Dodgers to re
tain their three-game first place
margin over the St. Louis Car
dinals.
Terrible Dixie
Dixie himse¢if smashed two
triples to knock in three runs and
scored the other himself. The
Dodger Ace leads the National
League in patting and runs batted
in, and is runner-up in hits, tri
ples and stolen bases.
The Cards kept pace with the
National League leaders by end
ing the five-game winning streak
of the onrushing Philadelphia
Phillies 4-1., A ladies day crowd
of 25,616, which swelled the sea
)son’s attendance to past the half
million mark, saw the Phils collect
only six hits off “Murry Dickson,
who recorded his fourth triumph
against only one defeat.
, The American League leading
ißoston Red Sox had to come from
behind to stave off their most dis
astrous day of the season. After
dropping the first game of their
doubleheader against Detroit 16-2,
'the Red Sox came up with seven
runs to whip the Tigers 9-3 and
[earn an even split.
. Detroit hammered 15 runs in the
first two innings of the lidlifter
lto allow Hal Newhouser to coast
to his 13th victory.
Yankees 8, Indians 4
The New York Yankees narrow
ed Boston’s margin to seven games
by defeating the Cleveland In
dians 8-4, while Washington edged’
out the Chicago White Sox 4-3 in
116 innings with pitcher Sid Hud
son scoring the winning run on
‘Bob Kennedy’s fumble in the
longest game played so far in the
majors. The St. Louis Brown
smothered the Philadelphia Ath
leties 11-4. |
The New York Giants and Pitts
burgh Pirates exchanged places in
the National League when Lefty |
Dave Koslo pitched the Giants out
of 'the cellar with a five-hit 4-0
shutout over the Bucs. The fourth
place Boston Braves walloped
Chicago 11-2.
VOTE FOR
SPENCE M.GRAYSON
FOR
LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR
® Garduate University of Georgia
e Veteran of World War 1
® 18 Years Service In Georgia Legislature
e Has Always Supported Appropriations
For The University System |
Tine Vole Mcf-gufzfzau' a/ The
People of Athens and Clarke County
s Capecially Solicited
Tune In WGAU 7:00 F.M. Saturday June 29
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THURSDAY, JUNE 2%, 1946
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