Newspaper Page Text
FRIDAY, JULY 21, 1950.
T amr—————— e -
HERE AUGUST 3-6
- e
‘ : :
3 Star Netmen
In Crackerland
hree outste ding tries for th
eoo Sk
: xi(:ue Atlantians:
. Wilford Gragg, formerly of Memphis, Te
D No. 30 raniSng by the S Tewn Tam
i Association.
e . Mullis, three-time Geor=-
7 n School class AA cham-
B Bass High in Atlanta and
b oversl iimes Georgia State junior
% p“ McKean, numbqr one play
or for Emory University in 1948
nd 1949,
"'\ hae been previously announc
ed that Don Floyd of Atlanta, for
o neorgia State and Atlanta
vitv champion, has entered the
tournament.
1 B Wheeler, recent winner of
i Aihens City championship and
‘svorite to win the Augusta City
(ournament there next week, has
entered and will be trying to give
Athens its first finalist in the
T
rEEE TENNIS LESSONS ‘
Another free tennis clinic for
Athens boys and girls is to be |
hel¢ Saturday morning at 9:30
on ihe University’s courts by
Woodruif Hall. Georgia Tennis
rach Albert Jones will conduct |
e olinic. .
- M
reackerland men’s singles. Fred
1 +nch of Gainesville, Ga., won the
oioinal Crackerland men’s singles
iy 1029, defeating Jud Fowler of
Atlants in the finals. Louis Faquin |
of Memphis, Tenn,, beat Cortezf
Suttles of Atlanta in 1940 and Neal |
walker of Clearwater, Fla., beat
rred Lynch, who had moved to“
Criffin, in 1941—last year the
t ey was held.
Competition will be held in eight
( ne: men’s singles and dou
} women’s singles and doubles,
or men’s singles and doubles'i
, years and under), and boys’
‘ ¢ and doubles (15 years and
1 “er), Entry deadline is Wednes
t noon August 2. Entrance fee
50 f‘or each singles tourney,
30 for each doubles team. Enter
eiting in touch with Tourna
~nt Manager Dan Magill jr.,'
~hletic Department, University
(' Ceorgia, telephone number
e fcurnament committee, an
rounced today, consists of Albert
Jones, CGeorgia tennis coach; Joe
icklife, Dr; Marion Dubose, How~
1| Holllg, Milton Jarnagin jr., Bob
Maupin and Magill,
\ll indications point toward
' vear's field as the strongest
- or sssembled for a local tennis
nament.
ilonkeys Take Safe
Lead At Pine Tops
PINE TOPS “Y” CAMP.—Collecting 15 hits, the Mon
kevs moved into a comfortable lead in softball action at
ramp vesterday with a victory over the Hawks, 19-11.
Veanwhile the Blackbirds held
i to their newly acquired second
place with a narwew win over the
(nkspots, 5-4,
Top hitters r the Monkeys yes
lerday were Yames Key and Dan
Matthewy. Key got two doubles
and fltzgle in four official times
at bag-while Matthews collected
four eingles In that many times
t the plate.
Collecting two singles in four
mes up was Bill Garrison while
ston Steiner hit a double and
Igle In four times at bat. Get
¢ the other hits were Ken Car
t, Ray Danner and Baxter Crane.
_ Gets Homer
For the Hawks, who got eight
fetles, Albert Hammock hit per
ctly with three singles, while
‘mmy Crowley got a homer. Oth
" hitters were Jeff Mills, Buzzer
fowell, John Key and Bill Bruce.
In the other tilt the Blackbirds
SPOTLIGHT on SPORTS
B T TTTTISN
A FAMILY OF GOLFERS
I# lbm't often that an entire
famlly, and such a large family
at thad, makes the h::‘di:t:.
cons y
....-‘-" for the same
fi AA .Y Turnesa bro
£\ " \f thers...golfs
(“‘ e ’/59 A first family.
(, Reoe, l 3 Thu.mnm
e 19 ; bers i
N | against such
Gt seasoned pros
as Walter
Hagen, Byron Nelson and Ben
Hogan , , , plus the greats, Sam
Snead and Jug MoSpaden. All
theso will attest that the bat
tling Turnesas are some of the
finesy golfers in the business,
But that's not the end of the
story, because & new generation
18 coming along now, led by a
voung man by the mame of
Richarg Turnesa,
.. Ong thing My, Turnesa and
Dl six brotkers have agreed
UPN, «ddly enough, is that
young Richard Turnesa should
remain an Amateur, and mnot
follow in their Tootateps to be
come & professiomal. Whether
Richard follows their advice or
lo}, one thing is certain. the
;\a Turnesa will alw.yg
for an excellence in gor
sirle which seems destined for
Semae soré of all-time honors.
- e s ui—
e summer days, sit
down snd enjoy & cold bottle of
oßimet s SHOP.
’ .
We : - advertised
":’. - oup are low.
Rip Cracke
In “Y” Game
Under the capable hurling of
Troy Matthews, the Grubworms,
currently holding down the second
place spct in the Cub League
standings at the Athens YMCA
set the league leading Crackers
back by an impressive score of,
8-4, in a game played yesterday
morning, ;
Matthews struck out five and al
lowed the Crax only six hits as he
led his team down the victory
trail toward the first place birth.
He was ably assisted hy his team
mates afield, too, with only one
error credited to them.
Larry Lavender and Tommy
Matthews worked well at tl e plate
for the Worms as they collected
three and two hits apiece and
scored four of their team’s eight
runs. Bobby Thompson, Cleveland
Garrison, and “Speedy Perteet all
hit twice out of five times up.
Jimmy Kile and “Skeet” Reynolds
scored one run each on errors
made by the Crax but were unsuc
cessful in four times at the plate.
$ Schultz Pitches
Herschel Schultz handled the
pitching assignment for the Crack
ers giving up twelve hits and al
lowing one base-on-balls.,He was
unable to remove a siné& Grub
worm with a strike out during the
course of the game.
Schultz made a valiant try to
win the game at the piate as he
collected two hits in four times
up but was unable to cross home
for a tally. Charles Singleton, not
long home from “Y” Pine Tops,
got one hit off the opposing staff
and scored one run, and Joe Inglis
had an almost perfect dar at bat
as he collected two for three and
scored one run. This rounded out
the Cracker hitting for the day as
their other two runs were scored
on errors made by the Worms.
Standings: e e
CUB LEAGUE
TEAM w. L PCY
Crackers S 3 500
Grubworms 33 e
Hardrocks 3 iSO
got seven hits with Billy Howell
‘getting two. Other sluggers were
Jim Hall, Brantley Alexander,
Jackie Burke, John Fort and Chet
Tucker.
Top hitters for the Inkspots were
David Bell with a double and
Hugh Inglis with a ftriple, the
teams’ only two safeties.
Football action yesterday put
the Monkeys over the Hawks, 24-
13 and the Blackbirds over the
Inkspots, 33-6. |
Softball Standings:
Team WL T Pct
Monkevs .......... % 0.1 1.000
Wiy ... 2 11 661
Tawks . . ...5.0 1 3 0 280
llnkspots L 5y
R R
—————————————————————
Major League
Leaders
By The Associated Press
American League
Batting—Kell, Detroit and Dro
po, Boston .353.
Runs—Stephens, Boston 80, Di-
Maggio, Boston T 77.
Runs Batted In—Stephens, Bos
ton 96; Dropo, Boston 94.
Hits—Kell, Detroit 122; Rizzuto,
New York 112. &
Doubles—XKell, Detroit 27; Za
rilla, Boston 24. |
Triples—Evers, Detroit 8, Doerr,
Boston 7. |
Home Runs—Rosen, Cleveland
27: Williams, Boston 25.
Stolen Bases—DiMaggio, Boston
9: Lipon, Detroit 6.
Strikeouts—Reynolds, New York
and Lemon, Cleveland, 91.
Pitching—McDormott, Boston 5-
1 .833; Lemon, Cleveland 14-4 778,
National League
Batting — Robinson, Brooklyn
.354: Musial, St. Louis .348. |
Runs — Kiner, Pittsburgh 69;‘
Jones, Philadelphia 67. |
Runs Batted In—Kiner, Pitts
burg 74; Sauer, Chicago 67. |
Hits—Slaughter, St. Touis 106;
Snider and Furillo, Brooklyn 105.
Doubles—Musial, St. Louis 28;
Schoendienst, St. Louis 27.
Triples—Ashburn, Philadelphia
9: Jethroe, Boston, Kiner, Pitts
bfll‘%:l, Musial, and Howerton, St.
Louis 6.
Home Runs—Kiner, Pittsburgh
| Snider, Bir,'ooklyn and Jones,
24: Bases—Jethroe, Boston
¢ and Rle:se, g:&klyrllz'zl.
n, n ’
Simmons, Fqdelphia 98. =8
. Philadelphia
8-1889; " Louis 9-8 .750.
Gt R RN RR T A B T
AT SR e:& "‘; §
. RaEa S LR S T o
S N _”;"'-:_;‘:;.j:ifi;fi‘~f'.,\-‘2:~ B ?- 8
e R L : :
e Bt et By R S §3 i
BT cconha TTR o o e
Y SR X . e
4 3 R SR il
3 R RT R . e \‘fi\& SR 3 § i
e TAN :"_\%}Efi,}{‘fi% LR 3 ;.3 i
RS AR LN SRR R SRR
S I e GRS R RO S R a
BT (R N R Sl e% SR
TR ei R O R L FUEY
e \3§ »ée??‘:._:y'\':{.»\‘v e, TR & N © O
R R B LT LT b
BN S A S SN % 3 B
P TR e e N TR i
& s\\ SR Sy RTR e SRR
P x& R L
M K R S B R e
SRR SRR TR TR Gap RN i L
BT R s SRR s R
RPR SR SRR st 1 Rl N S e
i eoS FEA LS R L ¥ i
o ol e o SR A TR R .
S R B B TR 4A S RIS AR ‘. T
R R ey SRR BRI ¥ o SR QQC\?‘\~ RS j
o S RS “' R R SRR S
BPR SRS e PR T TR S SEE L
ian o SR 3"‘\“\“\‘s‘(’ e R3\ -
P S el BT § ¥
P g &
el s R T
g e : B R Bk .e R i L
B Sadag gy % % SRR R S
; SRI " : SRR o
WB O 3 3 S R ‘@1&“ S g
P TRO L 8
Bl LR : i g ;§ |
TN : TR R e o ¥ b& |
FROM HORSE'S ‘MOUTH—"AII hoss players must die broke,”
laughs Oil Capitol, in his stall at Arlington Park, hard by Chicago,
after running sixth in the $76,450 Arlington Classic. Coupled with
Lot O Luck, the colt which also failed in the Kentucky Derby was
made the favorite at 8-5, but Greek Song get up to beat Bed o’ Rosesi
_by a nose in the big mile and a quarter heat and pay SIO.BO for $2.!
Post 20 Takes
District Crown
Athens’ Junior American Legion baseball team moved a
step nearer state-wide acclaim yesterday by sewing up the
Tenth District title with a 17-5 victory over Richmond
Post 63.
Yesterday’s victory was the se
cond straight in a two-out-of three
play-off for the district title. Ath
ens took the first game 4-3. By
virture of the two wins the home
lings will battle Savannah. first
district champions, in a two-out-of
three affair to gain a place in the
state meet.
The Athenians, sponsored by
American Legion Post 20, took the
victory on ten hits while the losers
managed to get 11,
Pitching the Panthers to victory
was Jimmy Thompson. !
Top hitter for Athens yesterday
NEA-Acme Sels Up War Picture
Bureau To Speed Korean Photos
By NEA Service
Acme Newspictures and NEA
Service have‘set up a special war
picture bureau in Tokyo to intensi
fy camera coverage of the Korean
conflict and to speed transmission
of photos to America for use in
The Banner-Feraid, among other
papers. i . ;
George Gaylin, Acme bureau
managed in the nation’s capital
for 12 years, has left Washington
T i @to direct pictorial
d g operations in the
i 'g‘g B Far East. Gaylan
i f . " is an outstanding
" P ¢ | picture executive
¢4 . | and has had wide
i s | experience with
B e | the camera and
(¢ 8 | as an assignment
TN ~v. chief. ¢
i+ @ He directed
SR A e me’s Wash-
George Gaylin ington bureau
throughout World War 11, when
nearly all the war pictures cleared
over his desk, and is completely
familiar with Defense Department
operations. Under this direction
the Washington bureau has pro
duced a record number of prize
winning pictures.
Gaylan will be assisted by a
staff of NEA-Acme photograph
ers on the scene in Korea, and a
complete picture crew at bureau
headquarters in Tokyo. Among
these are Richard C. Ferguson,
Acme Far Eastern manager who
has already been taking warfront
pictures, and his wife Martha, a
news photogrpher in her own
right, with an extensive knowl
edge of the Orient. Ferguson has
been in the Far East for NEA-
Acme since 1946, covering Japan's
reconstruction, Chinese warfronts
¥ _ x\ s~> ,‘ . :
e ; * S e 3
P T J
e T Le s :
. %il A oo ‘-3:’:«-:’,':4?’-9;3:2;‘:7".5 B R T T e
E o TR R %w"% %
3 AR e TT e RS g
> ¢ R B i PRR L B O IR
s 3 b Rhien ot o v ik R 0%
TR e . e L e A gy
% b SRan * %ol BRI n_'?,:g;;»;_\ STeo SR W
e e, Sty 3B e «;;f s
RS W“ - a%a:w ot e ¢
e b iSN ‘“}?*% R R S, gl R
SN IR ke £ 0
ROLEE N o @‘;*g;?**< TORM AR AN
i ;3,’%*‘ he e L
P :E?w;.‘w ,@%:}«: i :fiv&?}, PR *~ "\ A o
~ W S ”’“"" S
P j;"a‘» e o .e R EgA ei i ,‘\: s B
PERedl ol e s e i
i Wt el W ake R A
e G GBS YLe MK s
S SRR eio R A ey oSR R egl
a 7 i el 1 ew R 3 S e A
SR o SRR % omo P R .J-‘-‘:?‘:%;:;’L’!'? o T o
G PR, R e Ra R TAT M i
o, A BT " SR Y t@v-‘.’-’%v B B P %
LPR . T e, B BERIRERE .TH
%53 o ¥ SR PN % 2.%:;" »;g‘* i )Za- O %el
T PR o eßoUgo SR S 8 g g T
SR 4 A 5 A b S 2St e S RN g
i S ¥ iSSeI Tt F g
. g, e g 2;,, esl bl
R % > g 3 R R B i goGn e TAR
T LAI B %“’*W~M “‘ e Y
TR e, AL e S s #.
g fifi Wi g ot o
SelS g 0 RPN f*%;‘w%% Wi e
B @.mw’vg TR R s gl TR Sy TN BT .
:b3g §TR ee St \«*,,@s_{:,?3_ e
735 ~pc\{' . “;{‘ w 4 W:y ! ’bfig‘i‘ -:' PR (a:f‘ik:
s e B Aty S %fi By
P werven R IR R oҤ
Lol ‘ s S
L o &.. G e
i£ AR %‘:ég }‘v&,,,«.: G
Rié g ”",%j‘%@% S
Y R o S L e e
o R W ”?»%W&Zfizl‘«
NG R e AR Bt Rt e R R
NP & o e
v Y. B R B g R e
] . : A "‘Gv'fflr;‘ji' A s B ’?& i
et e sWO R Bl S
@. ; PP RLoe TN ¥o AR
% R Ry
HEAD START—An Offenbach player gets off pass with his head
in hst@ovmi championship soccer match before a capacit "
an Bo,rh‘r:'s ‘O t)"emp'}c Stadium. - Stuttgart defeated Oggn(ga{hcrz“;d
in clash of U est-German : : g
3 t towns held in the Beitish sector.”
. HE BANNDE HERALD, ATHENS eForRGIAI
was Sonny Saye, alternate cap
tain, Left Fielder Carnes also got
two safeties, his coming in five
trips at bat. Getting the other hits
were Charles Roberts, 2, Captain
Avery Harvill, Bobby Booth, Right
Fielder Hanson and Thompson.
Catcher Hall, of the Augusta
team, was the game’s outstanding
slugger with a three for four re
cord.
Athens went ahead in the first
inning and stayed in front
i throughout the tilt. They scored in
l every inning.
ana pre-war Korea.
Photographers flown to Korea
from NEA-Acme bureaus in the
U. S. include:
Edwin Hoffman, San Francisco,
an experienced lensman who has
covered some of the west coast’s
biggest news stories in recent
years. Hoffman flew to Korea
right after the war’s outbreak, and
has already sent many action
packed pictures to WNEA-Acme
client newspapers. :
Norman Williams, Kansas City,
a former Navy pilot with four
years of camera work in NEA-
Acme bureaus, including coverage
of Kansas City’s turbulent politi
cal situation.
Stanley Tretick, Washington, a
former Marine Corps combat pho=
tographer, whose work as an NEA~
Acme photographer in the nation’s
capital since 1945 has won several
awards.
Pictures taken by NEA-Acme
photographers in Korea are flown
to Tokyo for processing, selection
and radio transmission to the U,
S. Received at Pacific Coast points,
they are immediately flashed to
all parts of the country over the
nationwide Acme Telephoto net
work.
The best of each day’s pictures
are rushed to Athens Banner-Her
ald from nearby NEA-Acme re
gional bureaus to provide fast
news-picture coverage of the dis
patches from Korea.
The Rev. James A. Carey, ath
letic director at Seton Hall Uni
versity in South Orange, N. J., was
chief chaplain in the Middle East
during World War 111.
Vitamin B-12 is important in
hatchability of poultry eggs.
Diamond Hill And Comer Lead
Independent Action Tomorrow
Atlanta Crax
Defeated By
Chicks, 10-5
By STERLING SLAPPEY
Associated Press Sports Writer
The Birmingham Barons are
having their turn finding out the
Little Rock Travs of July aren’t
the Little Rock Travs of April and
May.
The lesson was drilled home
last night with a 7-6 defeat by the
Southern Association’s eighth place
Travs. Five other Southern teams
already have learned their lessons
well and each shows scars for the
effort.
In games this month Little Rock
has whipped Memphis twice and
lost once; whipped Chattanooga
three times and lost once; won
three and lost two to Nashville;
won two and lost one to New
Orelans, and split with Mobile,
one victory and one defeat.
The victory last night was the
first of the month for the Travs
over the Barons. The series con
tinues tonight.
Little Rock’s 11 victories and
seven defeats in July make the
last placers in season play the
second best in the league this
month. Only Birmingham's 11
victories and six defeats top the
team by the same name which
lost 21 straight games just after
the season began. Since that re
cord breaking string of defeats the
Travs have been almost complete
ly rebuilt.
How does the rest of the league
stack behind Birmingham and Lit
tle Rock in games this month?
Here they are and there are some
surorises in the standings:
Nashville, 12 victories nine de
feats; Atlanta, 10-8; Mobile 9-9;
New Orleans 7-10: Memphis, 6-11,
and Chattanooga 7-13.
Little Rock shows the greatest
change this month compared to
the season as a whole with a jump
from eighth to second. Atlanta
ranks fourth for July and first for
the year. Memphis rates a weak
seventh this month but fourth for
the vear.
Little Rock won last night in the
10th inning when Floyd Fogg
singled and later advanced on an
obliging error by Birmingham Joe
Demaestri. Fogg came home with
the winnine run on a single by
Duke Doaslittle.
The night was another case of
first place Atlanta and second
ranking Birmingham losing at the
same time. The Crackers failed to
improve their three and a half
game lead by losing a wierd 10-5
game to Memphis. Memphis made
six errors, four of them in the first
inning, and still Atlanta couldn’t
win. Ed McGhee made one of the
great catches of the season. He
came up with the ball after a
diving backhand stab on a low
liner to rob Atlanta’s Gene Verble
of .extra bases. The great play
kept Memphis ahead 6-5. Umpire
Tom Fleming got in the fans’ hair
when he called Bill Higdon out
for failure to touch third. Higdon
had hit a pitch by Al Hennencheck
to the distant rightcenter field
corner with two men on base.
After eizht pitchers, 24 hits and
20 runs New Orleans an” Chat
tanooga settled for a 11-9 New
‘Orleans victory. In all that flurry
of hits and runs there wasn't a
hemer and only eme triple. Chat
tanooga came close to snatching
the game out of the oven with a
four-run rally in the ninth inning.
Bobo Newsom was the losing
pitcher for the 13th time this year.
Norman Brown, Bill Scoft and
Royce Chandler also pitched for
Chattanooza. Bob Purkey was the
winner with help from Johuny
Mims, Harry Fisher and Bill Ken
nedy.
The Mobile at Nashville game
was rained out. They plav a dou
bleheader tonight in Nashville,
weather permitting.
Vegefable And Arimal Fafs Are
Neceesary For A Norma! Dies
By EDWIN P. JORDAN, M. D.
Written for NEA Service
Fats are one of the three great
kinds of foodstuffs, the other two
being starches and proteins. Fats
are not used by the body as easily
as the starches or proteins. A fair
ly complex chemiecal process bas
to take place before they can be
burned up like the others.
Fats used bv the human body
are generally divided into those of
vegetable origin and those of ani
mal origin. Margarine, many
nuts, cocoa, and the like, are ex
amples of vegetable fats. Animal
fats include butter, cream and fat
meat, such as bacon.
Butter and cream are well worth
while, in addition to their fat
value, because they are good ear=
riers of vitamin A, which is so
important to good health. Most of
the other fats carry very little of
this vitamin
Fats are present in many parts
of the body. They make excellent
heat insulators. They cushion vital
organs and when stored, fat sure
nishes a comnact form of energv
whieh ¢an be drawn-upon at need.
Certain fats are necessarv to the
structure of the cells which make
living possible. Some fats are in
around nerve” tissues.
While they are imvnertant to the
body in all of these ways, large
quantities of fat are not needed,
and if teo much is eaten and
stored, it ean be a disadvantag~,
Furthermore, -the starchv foods
can be transformoed by the bodw
into fats and so make fatty foods
Walton Mills, Farmington
In Battle For Final Play
BY SONNY HUFF
Independent League Sports Writer
Diamond Hill and Comer meet tomorrow afternoon at 3
p. m. on the Comer diamond for the top game of the day in
the Independent League. L e .
Comer has won all three of the games that these two
clubs have played this season, winning the first, 15-14; the
second, 13-4, and the third one, 8-5, but tomorrow should
i;ee (fn end to Diamond Hill’s losing streak to the league
eaders.
Diamond Hill will send Dwight
Strickland to the mound with
“Red” Henderson behind the plate.
Comer will start Milton Moore
toeing the rubber with John Til
litski behind the plate.
Walton Mills - Farmington
Walton Mills will journey to
Farmington to take on the Farm
ington nine in another top game.
Farmington has won t and
Walton Mills one in thpthree
times these teams have met. Farm
ington won the first, 12-8, and in
a twin bill, Walton Mills took the
opener, 10-5, and Farmington won
the nightcap, 11-8. Both these
teams need this victory in order
to get into the top four and be in
the play-off at the end of the
season.
The starting battery for this en~
counter will be Tap Carey and
J. B. Ruark for Farmington and
“Lefty” Garrett and Joe Bolton
for Walton Mills.
Statham - Watkinsville
In another one of the top games
of the day, Statham will move in
to Watkinsville to meet the Wat
kinsville nine of that city.
In the three times that these two
clubs have met this season, Stat
ham has taken all htree games,
winning, 15-12, 17-6, and 7-4, in
order. Statham will be in there
tomorrow to try to make it four
in a row from second place Wat
kinsville since they still stand a
chance of getting into the top four
also.
The starting batteries for this
encounter will be Boyce Holliday
and Dick Steed for Statham and
Chaple Tate and Ray King for
Watkinsville.
Ceolbert - Winterville *
Colbert will journey down to
Winterville to take on the Win
terville nine of that community.
These two clubs have met only
once before this season. Colbert
hammered out a 22-8 visitory over
the Winterville nine, but the latter
team will be in there trying to
morrow to try to get revenge from
that terrific walloping they suf
fered to Colbert.
Colbert will start Narlan Lord
on the mound with Emmett Lyons
behind the plate. Winterville will
start James Thornton on the hill
with Travis Westbrook behind the
plate.
Athens - Bogart
In the final game tomorrow,
Athens will tangle with Bogart on
the Bogart diamond.
In the three games that these
two clubs have played, Athens
won the first game 9-4, Bogart
won the second 11-9 and Athens
took the third one 8-7.
The starting batteries for this
game will be Talmadge Miles and
Leonard Fowler for Athens and
Bob Cash and L. C. England for
Bogart.
All league games start at 3 p.
m.
SUNDAY’'S SCHEDULE
Athens at Farmington. |
Walton Mills at Winterville. |
Diamond Hill at Watkinsville.
Statham at Comer.
Colbert at Bogart.
STANDINGS
Team W L Pct. GB
Comer ... ..... 2% ‘4 2888
Watkinsville .. 19 8 .704 4%
Colbert . ...... 17 10 6830 &8
Diamond Hill .. 15 12 556 8%
Walton Mills .” 13 13 .500 10
Statham ...... 12 14 .462 11
Farmington ... 12 15 444 11%
Bogart-........ B .19 296 15%
ATHENS ...... 8 20 2850 16%
less necessary.
Fats In Proper Diet
Nevertheless, the normal diet
should contain some fats. For a
person eating ‘a 2500-calorie diet,
for exampole (which is about aver
age for a reasonably active per
son), about 50 grams of fat a dav
might be included. This would
be about the equivalent of five
narts of butter one inch square and
one-half inch thick. ‘
For pecple doing heavy labor
more fats are desirable as they
furnish such a good source of en
ergy. The fats formed outside the
body carry small quantities of a
desirable material which has a
vitamin-like factor. A person who
is on a diet for obesitv and may
be taking onlv.£oo to 900 calories
a day may be restricted to a fat in
take of only 20 to 25 grams daily.
As in so many things, it is de-
sirable to have some fats,and the
right ones in the diet, but not to
ezt too much.
The Philadelphia Phillie infield
averages 25 years of age as eom
pared with Brooklyn’s 29. The
Phillies’ average age for its eight
regulars is 26, Brooklyn’s 28,
When Roy Sievers of the Browns
broke into organized baseball in
1947 with Hannibal, Mc., he hit 34
lzlgme runs and batted .317. He is
Don Lenhardt, fist baseman-out
fielcder for the Browns, belted 26
homers for San Antonio last year
and 22 the year before at Spring
field, INL
Cincinnati
Muffs Dodger
Flag Chances
BY JACK HAND
Associated Press Sports Writer
Shades of 1914. Can Luke Sewell
perform a miracle at Cincinnati?
You have to streicn a point to
call seventh-place Cincinnati,
11 1-2 games out of first, a pen
nant®factor. But you can tip your
hat to Sewell for the Red revival
The man who led the St. Louis
Browns to their only pennant
doesn’t quit.
Last by 17 lengths June 24, the
Reds may not qualify as the 1950
miracle team but they sure are
the Dodger-Killers. If Branch
Rickey muffs the pennant, he can
blame Cincy. et
The sizzling Reds polished off
the ambitious Brooks last night in
both ends of a twilight-night dou
bleheader, 3-1 and 6-2. That made
it eight out of 11 over the Dodgers
this season and 19 wins in their
last 25 starts. Or, if you prefer,
21 0L 29..
Kenny Raffensberger’s cunning
control stuff silenced the Brooks
in the epener despite Don New
combe'’s five-hitter., Then Ewell
(the whip) Blackwell struck out
nine in a sizzling night perfor
mance. Neither Cincy pitcher
walked a man. ;
Ted Kluszewski was the big
man of the first game. His first
inning single drove in one of two
Ciney rung énd his 17th homer in
the sixth added the last,
Blackwell bested Young Chris
Van Cuyk, a sensational winner
in his only previous big league
start. Van Cuyk with the score
tied, 2-2, and two men on in the
seventh., Joe Landrum walked the
bases full. Then Landrum took
Bobby Usher’s roller and threw
to catcher Bruce Edwards, who
let the ball get past him for a
two-run error. Joe Edeock singled
home the other two.
As a result, the Dodgers are
‘three full games back of St. Louis
and Cincy is only a half-game
back of the sixth place New York
Giants.
' Lead Narrows
While Cincinnati lowered the
boom on Brooklyn, the New York
Giants bounced back to smother
St. Louis, 13-3. The loss didn’t
——— . oo s =y 2
r YOUR pIAMOND &=
B eavror A
NA“ONG‘ED -
. ADVERT S x
i =2 b \
== s o
k £ : )¢ m £
= o
== ' wa! \<F
s
= SAVE AS UTTLE AS : :
——— '
~ 25 ADAY
E:% .’ : rbl.s LO\,Q/‘.’ T
g S R "
’{%fl ,? 2
o§ 7 T i
" [ LY
P N
/$/< }“ i \w,-;"e“. {
D 1 O Bomants CE |
Renge O' Romance rShds\ |
AN, Pt 3
: PN/ s N
Diamend Duette | Y £ 5o
" gy N
V‘“a ) y
\‘ e N \.¢ \% 7
0 {L 1) “TOKEN O'LOVE" {
135.00 * \&F »
Enjoy the beauty of this precious diamond i
dustte while you pay fox it! Thrilling choice
with the sparkie of many diamonds accented
by rich fishtail settings, Thrilling value, (00,
at this low costl
CHovelss,
e /ey '
JEWELRY DEPT.
PAGE NINE
cost the Cardinals the lead but
narrowed theirr advantage ever
Boston and Philadelphia to a sin
gle game.
The rammed-out Braves didn’t
have a chance to gain and the Phil
lies missed their opportunity, bow
ing to Pittsburgh, 10-8, in a slug~
fest that lasted almost three hours.
Ted Beard, Gus Bell and Danny
O’Connell each had three hits in
the 16-hit attack.
Despite homers by Dick Sisler,
Gannny Hammer and Del Innmis,
Pittsburgh struggled .iome to.win
for reliefer Murry Dickson. Ralph
Kiner’s 27th homer off Russ Meyer
in the eighth helped nail it down.
~ Giants’ Revenge -
Leo Duroucher’s Giants really
got revenge for the 18-4 and 10-3
beatings of Wednesday as they
piled it up against the Cardinals
with an eight-run third inning.
Dave Koslo, a non-winner since
June 28, copped his ninth with a
nine-hitter. Five double plays and
16 giant hits, including three by
Don Mueller, madeé it easy.
Everybody closed in on the De~
troit Tigers yesterday when they
lost to Boston, 6-5, in 11 innings.
The runnerup New York Yankees,
not scheduled to play&ngained a
half game. Cleveland Boston
each picked up a full game,
Dom DiMaggio’s double off Art
Houtteman scored Billy Goodman
with the winning Red Sox run to
ecap an uphill struggle. Detroit did
all its scoring off Walt Masterson
before he was knocked out in the
fourth inning. After that Chuck
Stobbs and Ellis Kinder pitched
‘excellent relief ball. Pat Mullin
bashed an inside the park homer
for Detroit with a man on in the
third and Walt Dropo hit his 24th
for the Red Sox in the fourth. The
Sox pulled within ene of a tie on
'Bobby Doerr’s 13th homer in the
;efghth and evened matters in the
ninth on two walks and Vern Ste
phen’s single.
Cleveland Wins
Sam Zoldak and Bob Kennedy
teamed up on Philadelphia for
Cleveland’s 3-2 victory in 11 in
nings. As a result the Tribe is only
4 1-2 games back of Detroit.
Kennedy tied the score with a
homer off Alex Kellner after two
were out in the ninth. Zoldak, who
replaced Steve Gromek in the sev
enth, shut out the A’s with two
hits the rest of the way and drove
in Kennedy with a “bloop” singl
to left in the 11th. Kennedy scored
all three runs. e
‘Rain postponed the scheduled
night game ?etween Chicago and
Washington, It also washed out the
daytime game in the National be
tween Boston and Chicago.
President Clark Griffith of the
Senators led the American League
‘pitchers in 1901 when he won 24
games and lost seven for Chicago.
Five members of the Champion
shi% Detroit Tigers of 1945 still are
‘with the team. They are Pitchers
Hal Newhouser, Art Houtteman,
Virgil Trucks, Dizzy Trout and
Catcher Bob Swift.
Experts estimate that it costs
about three times as much to pro
duce a dramatic program in tele=
vision as it does in radio.