Newspaper Page Text
PAGE EIGHT
BANNER - HERALD
SPORTS
808 OLIVER, SPORTS EDITOR
&
Pro Grid Yankees
e
Sign Gene Chandler
BY DAN MAGILL, JR.
Gene Chandler, an outstanding University of Georgia
defensive player the last four football seasons, has signed
a.contract to play for the professional New York Yanks.
The 6-3, 202-pound Atlantian,
an. all-Southern high school choice
at center for old Tech High, played
center at Georgia in 1946 and 1947,
r.“p switched to end in 1948 and
Chandler played in three bowl
1 here—Sugar against North
m‘m in 1947, Gator against
Maryland in 1948 and Orange
against Texas in 1949,
Affiliation with the Yanks will
&\mltc him with a teammate at
oxc'f‘x. T-quarterback Johnny
Rau
The Chandler brothers, Chuck
:ldf Jim—sophomore center and
back aspirants at Georgia—
were offered scholastic scholar
ships by Stanford and the Uni
versity of California for their fine
Earks at Balboa High in San
ancisco. They came to Athens,
though, because thejr father re
turned to his native state of Geor
a. Chuck, incidentally, was of-
Ered a football scholarship by St.
ary’s—Georgia's second oppo
nent this fall. ‘
. R ‘
Georgia tackle Dick Yelvington, |
Junior from Daytona Beach, Fla.,‘
and Leon Butts, sophomore from
Atlanta, have landed jobs this
mcr working in the wheat
8 of Kansas,
Zeke Bratsowski, Georgia soph
more T-:Luarterback from Dan
ville, 111., holds the long distance
punting record for his high school
o:nt;d-rencte. Helonce got off an 86~
2 against Catlin High of
Banvilie.
f
Larry Doby’s .402
Leads AL Batters
CHICAGO, May 30 — (AP) —
) batters of the American
took nosedives together
wuk&eavlnz outfielder Larry
of evelanch still in the van
» a hefty .402 despite a skid of
fim
_Rufiner~up Paul Lehner of Phil
%lnphh maintained second place
ufi falling 26 points to .385.
Sam Mele of Washington was
third, in averages computed
through Sunday’s games, with .372,
a drop of 17 points. |
Doby got nine hits in 25 trips
dur!ni the week, Lehner collected
¢ight in 27,
Other leaders were Bill “Good
man, Boston, .368; George Kell,
Dttroi:i .360; Walt Dropo, Boston,
346; Rizzuto, New York, and
Johnny Pesky, Boston, .341 apiece;
Birdie Tebbetts, Boston, .338; and
Dom DiMaggio, Boston, .333.
* 3
Fights Last Nite
M—W——
By The Associated Press
MIAMI — Art Davis, 148, Mia
mi, and Glen Hendershot, 149,
Miami, drew (10).
BALTIMORE - Arthur King
137, Toronto, outpointed Georgie
i)mn. 133, Hartford, Conn. (10).
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Atlanta Nips
Vols, 10 To 9
BY HUGH SCHUTTE
Associated Press Sports Writer
The heck which Nashville Vols
had over the Atlanta Crackers
may be at an end. The Southern
Association pace setters have
marked up their first victory over
the Vols this season and their
fifth in 26 starts.
It took some luck, some weird
playing — such as a catcher mak
ing both putouts 11 a double play
—three managers and five pitch
ers, but the Crackers won out,
10-9,
The Birmingham Barons, whose
paid attendance for the season has
reached 150,815, recorded their
fourth straight victory in squeez
ing out a 3-2 decision over Chat
tanooga. Mobile elimbed back into
third place with a 5-4 win over
Memphis’ Chicks and New Or
leans downed Little Rock, 7-4.
Atlanta’s luck came in the eighth
inning when Nashville was lead
ing 8-7. Gene Verble slashed a
sizzler into left field that bounc
ed over John Liptak’s head for an
inside-the-park homer, That
blow, with two on, gave the
Crackers the victory.
Big Ebba St. Clairs, Cracker
catcher, made the unusual twin
killing. With the bases loaded
Jiptak bounced to third baseman
Ed Mathews who threw Carl Sa
watski out at the plate. St. Claire
threw to first to try to double
Liptak. The throw was too
late, but when Paul Mauldin tried
to score Hank Ertman fired the
ball back to St. Claire for the sec
ond out.
Manager Dixie Walker was giv
en his walking papers during an
argument in the seventh. Coach
Whitlow Wyatt took over the
reins, but followed Walker to the
showers in a few minutes when he
continued to press the dispute.
Second baseman Ellis Clary then
became Atlanta’s third manager of
the night. Hugh Casey was the
winner and Dan Emmerich the
loser.
It was a pitcher-catcher combi
nation that won for Birmingham
as Lookout hurler Bob Ross sti
fled the vaunted Baron power.
Dick Littlefield held Chattanooga
to three singles and Red Mathis
drove home the winning run in
the eighth.
The Barons scored a pair of
markers in the first stanza on two
hits and a double steal. Chatta
nooga evened it up in the sev
enth and then Mathis drove home
Ed Lavigne who had walked and
advanced on Carl Olsen’s one
baser.
The Mobile Bears had a few bad
moments when shortstop Mel Rue
had to be carried from the field
after his bad leg folded under him
on a pivot.
TOMORROW’S SCHEDULE
National League
No games scheduled.
American League
No games scheduled.
Phils Enjoying
Half Gamel.ead
BY JOE REICHLER
Associated Press Sports Writer
If anybody had predicted a coyple of months ago that
the Philadelphia Phils would come into Brooklyn on Me
morial Day as the National League leaders he’d probably
have been regarded as nothing more than a died-in-the
wool Philly fanatic.
But here is is May 30 and those
fightin’ Phils are sitting on the
roof of the standings, enjoying a
half game margin on the defending
champion Brooklyn Dodgers.
The amazing part of the Phil
lies’ tremendous showing is that
thye've done it with a minimum of
help from Russ Meyer and Ken
Heintzelman, the two pitching
mainstays of 1949’s third place out
fit. Last year Meyer and Heintzel
man won 17 games each. With six
weeks of the ’SO seasen gone, the
pair have won only one game be
tween them. They’ve dropped sev
en.
Who then among the pitchers
are responsible for the Phils’ suc
cess? Just a pair of 23-year-old
bonus kids—Robin Roberts and
Curt Simmons. Each has won six
games while losing only two, Rob
erts won 12 games all last season
while Simmons won only four.
A year ago today, the Phiis were
in sixth place with only 17 tri
umphs against 19 losses. As they
opened their impeortant twin bill
with the Brooks today the Phils
boasted a mark of 22-13. They
owned the best road record of any
club iu the circuit with 12 wins
against seven losses. The Dodgers
‘have plaved no better than .500
'ball on the road, with a 9-9 rat
ing.
Inability to win sufficiently on
the road, a deficiency which cost
them the flag the past two seasons,
again keeps the Boston Red Sox
from the American League lead.
As they pgepared to face the front
running Yankees in New York for
a holiday doubleheader, Joe Mc-
Carthy’'s men showed only a 10-10
record on foreign fields.
The Red Sox were in third place,
three lengths behind the Yanks,
because they’ve won 14 of 20 at
Fenway Park.
Although .the .Yankees .came
home today after one of their most
successful tours in the last three
seasons, they’re still not the road
champions .of .the American
League. That honor goes to the‘
While playing under .500 ball at
While playing under :500 ball at
home (7-8), Red Rolfe’s Bengals
have been tops away from Briggs
Stadium, winning 14 of 17. The
Yankees, boasting a two-game
bulge on the Tigers, have a 14-4
mark on the road and a 10-6 re
cord at home.
While the Yankees and Red Sox
were battling it out at the Yankee
Stadium, Detroit was playing host
to the fourth place Cleveland In
dians. ’
In other American League dou
bleheader, Bucky Harris’ astonish
ing Washington Senators engaged
the Athletics in Philade!phia while
the St. Louis Browns were host to
the Chicago White Sox.
The third place St. Louis Cardi
nals, back on the beam after a
three-day “nightmare” at Cincin
nati, can climb on the backs of
the leaders with a double triumph
in Pittsburgh today. They trail
the leaders by a game and a half.
Fourth place Boston, three games
behind the pack, took on the sev
enth place Nek York Giants at
Braves Field.
In the only big lezgue game
played yesterday, the Chicago
White Sox came up with six runs
iz the last two innings to outlast
the St. Louis Browns, 12-8. Phil
Masi, veteran White Sox catcher,
drove in five runs with a single
and triple. Eight pitchers were
used, five by the losers. The vic
tory went to Howie Judson. I
THE BANNER-SERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
lSome 175,000
Expected At
Ilndianapolis
| BY DALE BURGESS
INDIANAPOLIS, May 30—(AP)
—Prospects of hub-to-hub com
petition and a' new record for the
500-mile Memorial Day auto race
| pullea a mammoth crowd through
the Indianapolis motor specdwey’s
11 gates today.
Speedway officials had facilities
set up to handle more than 175,-
000 spectators.
The fastest field in the 34 in
nings of the Sweepstakes was ca
pable of finishing the 200-lap con
test in four hours or less at a
speed of 125 miles an hour. It de
pended on the weather — with a
possibility of showers — and
whether the race was slowed by
bad wrecks.
Twe Former Winners
Bill Holland of Reading, Pa.,
and Mauri Rose of South Bend,
Ind., who edged out Holland for
first money in 1947 and 1948,
were the only former winners in
the 33-car field.
Rose, co-winner with Floyd
Davis in 1941, had shifted from
the Blue Crown team to a front
' drive car owned by the Howard
‘Reck Co., of Los Angeles in his
campaign to become the first
four-time winner.
. Jimmy Jackson of desert Hot
Springs, Calif.,, had the only un
orthodox racer in today’s field, a
new six-cylinder Cummins diesel
special built as an experiment by
the Cummins Engine Co., of Co
lumbus, Ind. It was the slowest car
in the qualifications, but never
theless showed more speed than
can be used in the race and has
proved its durability in more than
800 miles of test runs.
The rest of the cars were pow
ered by four-cylinder engines,
Moayer-Drakes or their predeces
sor Offenhausers. |
It lacked only one car of being
an All-American field. The ex
ception was an Italian Maserati
chasis, fitted with a Meyer-Drake
engine and driven by Henry Banks
of Compton, Calif., who was born
in England. ‘
Rookie on Pole |
Sitting in the number one
starting position was Faulk—{
ner of North Long Beach, Calif.,
the first speedway rookie to start
on the pole since George Boillot of
France won the spot in 1914, «
The jockey-size Faulkner led
ten first-time speedway drivers in
time trials with a record 10-mile
average of 134.343 miles an hour
The field’s over-all average was
131.045, about two miles faster
than anybody ever drove at any
stage of the 500-mile grind.
eos \)\ STanDinGs e
SOUTHERN ASSOCIATION
W L Pcl
ATLANTA ... w 0 U3¢ 82
Birmingham ....... 26 18 .591
OIS ¢ e D 18 BB
Memphig .......... 25 19 .568
New Orleans ....... 23 19 .548
DA .. ... 8B
Chattanooga ....... 18 28 .391
It ek . ......... 8 N
SOUTH ATLANTIC LEAGUE
Y B P
DEROUE . . iuiveh iy SR ISB TN
SAVEONAN (\seivenes B 8 30 B 9
COMRBIS . civiaec 38 23 01
DANOMIR . . ivieenwes a 4 28 - 400
Charleston Jiuv.eiis RB4O
Columbus. ~ issaeen 3220 481
Greenville ...+, o 0 19 M 880
Jacksonville ........ 19 81 380
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W L Pet
i) ORI | G |et
BIURDORE 50 s a 8 4 S 0
o R R s
leveland ..........:19 18 .53
Washington ........ 18 16 .529
Philadelphia ....... 18 23 .361
SRS i R
O LOWE .. . tiisd 2 S
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W L Pl
Philadelphia ....... 22 13 .629
BIOORIYR \ici..o<. .31 13 618
B LDHIS ias.iiia, 30 14 588
BOBUON ... ivesonens 8 15" IS
CIMOREO .. ivgvesd il 10 B
Fatsburgh ..... ... 16 2 95
TN XOTE . iviaaees 1L 2D -RY
Seinnat il 9. N
YESTERDAY™S RESULTS
National League
Brooklyn at New York, post
poned, rain.
Only game scheduled.
American League
Chicago 12, St. Louis 8.
Boston at Washington, postponed
rain.
Only games scheduled.
Southern Association
Birmingham 3, Chattanooga 2.
Atlanta 10, Nashville 9.
Mobile 4, Memphis 4.
New Orleans 7, Little Rock 4.
South Atlantic League
Jacksonville 11, Columbia 10.
Charleston 10, Macon 6.
Columbus 6, Augusta 3.
l.ai(;reenville at Savannah, ppd.,
n.
Georgia-Alabama League
Alex. City 2, Carroliton 1.
Newnan 5, Opelika 1,
LaGrange 4, Rome 2.
Griffin 5, Valley 4.
. Georgia-Flerida League
! Cordele at Moultrie (ppd.-rain).
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HIGH STEPPER—Dick At
tlesey, Southern California’s
six-foot four-inch, 185-pound
senior, stepped over the tall
timber in 13.5 seconds in the
Fresno Relays, knocked one~
tenth second off Harrison Dil
lard’s accepted world standard
for the 120-yard high hurdles,
Musial’s 442
Sets Paceln NL
NEW YORK, May 30 — (AP)—
Jackie Robinson of Brooklyn is
rallying to the defense of the Na
tional League batting title he held
last year, but the fleet Dodger ace
has quite a bit to go to eatch St.
Louis’ Stan Musial,
Averages including Sunday’s
games showed Robinson with a
.368 average, an increase of 36
points during the week. It gave
Jackie third place behind Musial
and Johnny Hopp of Pittsburgh,
who took over the runner-up spot
with a .371 mark.
Musial is 71 points ahead of
Hopp with a .442 mark. The Cards’
one-man gang has slashed out 53
hits in 120 at bats.
Joe Garagiola, also of St. Louis,
slipped 20 points to fourth-plate
at .357. Hank Edwards of Chicago,
a newcomer to the top 10, held
down fifth place with .352. Then
came Andy Pafko of Chicago,
.340; Dick Sisler of Philadelphia,
.336; Duke Snider of Brooklyn,
.328; Danny Murtaugh of Pitts
burgh, .310; and Sam Jethroe of
Boston, .308. B
Hank Sauer of Chicago was tak
en over the RBI lead with 30, a
shade ahead of Pittshurgh’s Wally
Westlake, who has 28. The home
run lead is divided among four
men — Ralph Kiner of Pittsburfih;
Sid Qordon of Boston; Willie
Jones of Philadelphia and Pafko,
each with eight.
Jones also is tied with Tommy
Glaviano of St. Louis for most
runs scored, 30. Teammate Rickie
Ashburn of the Phils has most
triples, 4. ‘
T™e Praves’ Earl Torgeson is
| setting the pace in base stealing
lwith six. :
Thomasville at Tallahassee
(ppd.-rain).
Valdosta 8, Americus 6.
Albany 2, Waycross 1. ;
Georgia State League '
Dublin 10, Eastman 7.
Fitzgerald 9, Tifton 5.
Jesup 9, Douglas 8.
Baxley 9, Vidalia 5.
TODAYX’S SCHEDULES
American League
Boston at New York (2).
Washington at Philadelphia (2).
Cleevland at Detroit (2).
Chicago at St. Louis (2).
National League
New York at Boston (2).
Philadelphia at Brooklyn (2).
St. Louis at Pittsburgh (2).
Cincinnati at Chicago (2).
Southern Anooizflon
. Chattanooga at Birmingham
(night).
Nashville at Atlanta (night).
Memphis at Mobile (night).
Little Rock at New Orleans
(night).
South Atlantic League
Greenville at Savannah.
Columbia -at Jacksonville.
Charleston at Macon.
.Augusta at Columbus.
Georgia~Alabama League
Alex. City at Carrollton.
Opelika at Newnan,
Rome at L.aGrange,
Griffin at Valley.
Georgia State League .
Jesup at Douglas. |
Vidalia at Baxley. |
Fitzgerald at Tifton. ‘
Dublin at Eastman.
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2 ,-.-,:%.A ‘ " R,» Gkl §r
3AR L Lot \.,-'l'3; & i
§- o e e
OWN YOUR OWN BUSINESS —NO
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A national organization wishes to contact parties interested in
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product, which has no rival in taste or eye appeal. KEntire cost
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you in gedting started. Contact DARI-DELITE, 220 Rutledge
Ave,, Charleston, 8. C. Phone 7911.
: e i g 433 o 'i's‘«l 2 < N
S -—————M-_—fl
Athens Mfg., Oconee
Athens Manufacturing Company and the Oconee Street Methodist Chureh won their
opening games in Municipal League play last night at Legion Park. The Manufactuy
ers turned back the Junior Chamber of Com merce team, 11-3, in a game that was close
all the way except for one big inning; and the Oconee Street Church capitalized om 20
hit:s‘;‘and_go Coca-Cola errors for a lopsided 28-3 victory.
Athens Manufacturing Company
got 10 hits, while the Jaycees
managed only six. Home runs by
Paul Hartley, Henry Cobb, and
Charles Cheek were the longest
hits of the game., =~ .
The Methodist team used a total
of 16 players in their rout of the
Coca-Cola team, collecting 20 hits,
with two home runs by Lawrence
Hancock and one by Tom Eber
hart furnishing the punch.
Ben Mitchum held the Bottling
Company to three hits until he
was relieved by “Fireman” Joe
Saye in the seventh. He gave up
one hit.
The University Profs play the
Optimist Club at 7 o'clock to
night, and Prince Avenue Baptist
Church meets Post Office in the
second game,
JAYCEES— ab r h
Ao S bRy
Hartiey, of <Jii.. 00l v @l )
Seomnett. Bb aoNavs 0400
EObh 08 .ik
S n s e e Y
T 25 si e 2 i
SUSURR. ab- si B 0 0
ntdure, of | taudo o 8 8l
Pmell ofse - 0 L eniiie 270 0
Bloodwarth, ¥ ........:, 3 0 0
Telele . 30 88
ATHENS MFG— ab r h
WK 10 i B
Mondaw clf o 0 a 3 B
SR ¢ oot 4 2 3
R 1 Lil 4 198
FAROIERE. 8.. oiliioiiia A 1 2
TRI YT L livuiiens 81D
Whilley. vs (ccociivives. B 300
SRR W . D
T et W Li.aiios 40 @
SRRy I e T 8
e Seattn oF ..l 8 1.2
Folal v een a 4 1100
Jaycees .......... 001 002 0— 3
' Athens Mfg. ...... 108 200 x—ll
~ 2B—Cheek, Flanagan, Bailey.
HR~—Hartley, Cobb, Cheek. SO—
Flanagan 7, Bailey 2. E—Jaycees
8, Athens Mfg. 2.
(Cecond Game)
COCA-COLA— abh . r B
Bramlett, ¢f-3b ........ 4 0 2
Burrell, 3b-¢f .....0006s. 3 0 0
Pock, B [ oiaviviiier L 8
Jordah, M i iniaiiian 8 1.0
Mortan, 'lb s .8 0
SNt 204 D s iacevin BDD
Bradberty. gs ...... 0 390
FEVERder, € i i eTisve 1 X
Saane 7t .8 0
Sothls ..o 08 8 B
OCONEE METHODIST ab r h
Davis, 9b-9b .....0..., 7T 8 8
Eaomach 3b ... ciieianie .88
Middlebrooks, 2b ....,. 4 3 2
Tt 1B vk DB R
Hanoock, 88 ........00:0 8 4 &
Sebiraves. ¢ ... 0004 81
P Pichavas ¢ ......;. 0. 2 @
MR B e 08 L
B e P i DR
T ¥berhort, #f . ......s.. 5 3 8
NBawiwr 0010 0
Major League
Leaders
By The Associated Press
: NATIONAL LEAGUE
Batting — Musial, St. Louis,
.442; Hopp, Pittsburgh, .371.
Runs — Jones, Philadelphia and
Glaviano, St. Louis, 30.
Runs batted in — Sauer, Chi
cago, 30; Westlake, Pittsburgh, 28.
Hits — Musial, St. Louis, 53;
Jethroe, Boston and Robinson,
Brooklyn, 45.
Doubles — Musial, St. Louis, 15;
Robinson, Brooklyn, 14.
Triples — Ashburn, Philadel
phia, 4; Kerr and Jethrce, Boston
and Musial and Slaughter, St.
Louis, 3.
Home runs -— Kiner, Pittsburgh,
Gordon, Boston, Pafko, Chicago
and Jones, Philadelphia, 8.
Stolen bases — Torgeson, Bas
ton 6; Jethroe, Boston, Terwilli
ger, Chicago, Reese and Snider,
Brooklyn 5.
Shikeouts — Roberts, Philadel
phia, 47; Spahn, Boston, 42.
Pitching — Rush, Chicago 6-1
.gsg; Bankhead, Brooklyn 4-1
.800.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Batting — Doby, Cleveland,
.402; Lehner, Philadelphia, .385.
Runs — DiMaggio, and Steph
ens, Boston, 37.
Runs batted in — Stephens,
Boston, 43; Williams, Boston, 39.
Hits — DiMaggio, Boston, 52;
Stephens, Boston, 50.
Doubles — Kell, Detroit, 12;
Witrtz, Detroit, 11.
Triples — Dillinger, Philadel
phia and Mapes and Henrich,
New York, 5.
Home runs — Williams, Boston,
11; Dropo, Boston, 10.
~ Stolen bases — Dillinger, Phil
adelphia, DiMaggio, Boston and
Doby, Cleveland, 5.
Strikeouts — Reynolds, New
York, 42; Lemon, Cleveland, 35.
Pitching — Byrne, New York
4-1 .800; Hudson, Washington,
6-2 .750. L
Ny R s N Y
Sne M Uil io.. 2 00
T B s DD
o Ticharge of 0 0001010
B. Eberhart. of-c"....... .8 00
Totals ........... 52 28 20
CocarCola .- c..... 210 000 0— 8
Oconee Meth. ...... 284 455—28
2B — Middlebrooks. 3B—Mid
dlebroocks. HR — Hancock 2, T.
Eberhart. E—Coca-Cola 20, Oco-~
nee Mqthodist 3.
L GOLF
NEW YORK — Australia’s Nor
man Von Nida and two Texas
pros—Wally Warden of El Paso
and Elroy Marti of Houston—set
the qualifying pace for mnext
month’s National Open ehampian
ship.
MOVIES ARE BETTER THAN EVER
%
B T\ .
é—"’flfflffls ** | 0//6' 4-/0
) I 3
e T
‘_'__—"—_-__ Y ATLANTA HIGHWAY Y
Last Times Tonite: Wed. and Thurs.
Robert Young Clifton Webb
Claudette Colbert Maureen O’Hara
“BRIDE FOR SALE” I “SITTING PRETTY”
m STARTS TOMORROW
TS THE BIG STORY
BEHIND THE AIRLIFT
«..OF HOSE WONDERFUL GUYS WHO DROPPED
OUT OF THESKIES... TO WIN THE HEART,
OF ACITY ... AND THE WORLD! .
MONTGOMERY CLIFT
PAUL DOUGLAS
. THERE'S NEVER BEEN A PICTURE LIKE G
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JOHN PAYNE — RHONDA FLEMING |
in “THE EAGLE AND THE HAWK” ‘
PALACE FEATURE STARTS: 12:39, 2:46, 4:53, 7:00, 9:07
m TODAY and TOMORROW
UFE'IS SHORT BUT SWEET IN MALAYA! |
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Screen Play By FRANK FENTON » Based On An on.amsuq»ynks'snbd& Sl
Directed by RICHAAR[P)‘ Jfiflfiffi" ;."P:egu:ig Esy EDWIN H. KNOPF
GEORGIA FEATURE STARTS: 1:11, 3:12, 5:13, 7:14, %:15
% Wednesday
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COLOMBIR PITTURES prosents
JENNHER * JOUN
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_'We WERE STRANGERS |
MMW
— Last Day —
“VILLAGE BARN DANCE”
TUBSDAY, MAY 30, 1950,
3
YESTERDAY
——
M
By The Associated Press
"RACING
NEW . YORK — Ted Atkinson
rode five straight winners at Bel.
mont Park, difxing his day's
performance. by scoring: with
Barefoot Boy ($22.10) in the feat
ured Patchogue handicap.
CHICAGO — Enforeer ($3.40)
won the Lincoln fields feature at
Washington Park.
BOSTON — Daunted Did (4)
won the featured six furiong sprint
at Suffolk Downs.
Wednesday - Thursday
GABLE 1c%.:
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| Any Number Can Ploy §
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— Last Day —
“SANDS OF IWO JIMA"”