The Key West Citizen Newspaper, June 3, 1953, Page 6

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BRAVES WHIP DODGERS } TO «TAKE LEAD IN NATIONAL TUESDAY Baseball Results |Poor Pitching Tigers, Athletics Battle To Tie In 14-Inning Game By BEN PHLEGAR ~ AP Sportswriter What a difference a day makes —at least in the standings of the National League. Starting right from the top where the Milwaukee Braves brought an abrupt end to Brooklyn’s 48-hour feign of glory, six of the eight Senior circuit clubs found their po- itions changed today. The Braves were back in first ice by half a game. Brooklyn d slipped to second. Third place belonged to Philadelphia instead of | \ St. Louis. And at the other end Pittsburgh was out of the cellar and Chicago was in it while Cin- einnati was all alone in the sixth | spot. Milwaukee moved in front the hard way—by whipping the Dod- gers. They went into the ninth in- ning at Ebbets Field trailing by one run and pulled a 4-3 victory on a two-run homer by Andy Paif- The drive by Pafko, all the more | humiliating te the Dodgers since! he was on their payroll until early this’ year, snapped a 10-game Brooklyn winning streak, the long- est in either league. | The Phillies traded places with | the Cardinals as Robin Roberts blanked the Redbirds on seven hits | for his eighth victory, 5-0. The New | York Giants and Cincinnati played | the longest National League game of the season—13 innings—with the Redlegs scoring twice in the 13th for a 53 decision. Pittsburgh nipped Chicago, 4-3, in 11 innings at Forbes Field. The National League had no monopoly on the marathon con- tests. In Detroit the Tigers and! Philadelphia Athletics battled four | 4 hours and 28 minutes through 14} ) innings to a 17-7 tie. The game, which will have to be replayed, from the start, was called because of the league curfew which pro- hibits the start of any inning af- ter 12:50 a.m., local time. Joe Collins’ ninth inning homer, his second of the night, gave the New York Yankees a 4-3 margin over the Chicago White Sox. Cleve- land kept pace with the Yanks by defeating Boston, 7-3, and St Louis outlasted Washington, 5-3. - Jim Wilson and Lew Burdette combined to limit Brooklyn to five hits with Burdette, who came on in the eighth, picking up the vic- tory, his third without a loss. Russ Meyer went all the way in defeat for Brooklyn. For the Braves, who bowed 18 times in 21 appearances with the Dodgers last season, this was the second victory over Brooklyn. The Dodgers have won three. Both of the Milwaukee triumphs have come at Ebbets Field, where the Dod- gers have lost only two other games while winniny 16. Roberts’ eighth victory, over the Cardinals, was one of his easiest since his teammates got him four Tuns to work on in the first in- ning. Cliff Chambers, the St Louis starter, retired with an injured muscle while pitching to the sec- ond batter, Gerry Staley came in after barely warming up and im- mediately got into trouble. He threw a home-run ball to Del En- nis with two on base and another one to Granny Hamner with the) bases empty before he could fin-/ ish the inning. At New York the Redlegs ruined NATIONAL By The Associated Press Lost Pet. Milwaukee 13° .667 13 rk 2 (13 innings) n 3 Milwau! Cineinn St. 1 By The Birmingham Little Rock AU Mobile New Orleans Chattanooga Jacksonville Col RESULTS ta 2 8 20 charleston 3 Jacksonville 2 Savannah 3 Columbia 0 Jacksonville at Macon at Colt Savannah a! bus L RES! By The Associated Press INTERNATIONAL Toronto 3-2 Buffaia, 2-1 Montreal 4 Rochester se 1-9 ingtield 0 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Louisville 6 Columbus 0 Kansas City 3 Charleston 2 Toledo 3. Minneapolis’ 2 St, Paul-7 Indianapolis 3 TEXAS Dallas 3 Fort Worth 2 Houston 7 San Antonio 4 ‘Tulsa 11 Oklahoma City 7 Beaumont 2 Shreveport 1 ALABAMA-FLORIDA Andalusia 9 Fort Walton 4 Graceville 2 Dothan 1 Panama City 6 Butaula 4 PACIFIC COAST Sacramento 5 Oakland: 4 Los Angeles 5°San Diego 1 Seattle 5 Hollywood 4 San Francisco 3 Portiand 2 :~\Lengthens :,|American Tilts In FS League by CHARLES CHAMBERLAIN CHICAGO (®—A rash of ineffec- tive pitching, requiring frequent mound changes, is making Amer- ican League baseball games longer and longer this season. That’s the opinion of statisticians {Frank Lane, general manager of the Chicago White Sox. So far, game have averaged 2 hours 36 minutes to complete, a {gain of 11 minutes over last year | and 32 over the first postwar sea- son of 1946, “As long as there is action, no one is going to beef about length j of games except the sportswriters,” said Lane. “Certainly the fans {don’t care—they’re getting their | money’s worth. “But it is interesting to note that games are longer than usual this Page 6 THE KEY WEST CITIZEN Wednesday, June 3, 1953 Cocoa Holds Slim Lead | | By GAYLE TALBOT NEW YORK —Ben Hogan wifl Sports Roundup }303 and Johnny Revolta 311. They | were lucky to escape. with their Invigorator Is Favored In Peter Pan Race By The Associated Press find an opponent worthy of his lives. A sudden windstorm on the remarkable talents waiting for him , final day—the natives didn't seem By JOHN CHANDLER Weird Things — Happening In FIL These Days MIAMI —Weird things happen in the Class B Florida Tinternation- season. It probably can be traced! Cocoa is still ane breath in front ; when he tees off over Carnoustie’s | of the Florida Siate League, but | grim, windswept acres in his first the Indians had to play a game | try at the British Open Golf Cham- of doubles aplenty to beat Lees-| pionship next month. burg, 8-6, Tuesday night and stay| The little battler from Texas has | ahead. jehosen—maybe _ deliberately—the The first seven Cecoa hits were | longest and the meanest links in doubles and eignt cf the total of | all Scotland as the crucible in | 12 were good for two bases. | which to prove his claim to authen- Daytona Beach walloped the tic greatness. No player before once-contending DeLand red Hats, | Hogan has subdued Caraoustie, nor 13-7. That kept Daytona Beach| gone really close. If Ben does, half a game back of Cocoa and | there can be no further argument. dropped the waning DeLand Red| We note, incidentally, that Ben Hats to sixth place. {is wondering whether they can dig Jacksonville Beach scored six|UP a hotel room for him in the runs in the 10th itiming to swamp | little stone town which owns and the cellar holding Lakeland Pilots | Teveres the famous links. We can and stay hip deep in the pennant | 2nswer that one for him. They'll race, one game behind the lead-| supply him with a suite and lay er. to notice it especially—swept away a refreshment tent big enough to house a Wild West show. There is nothing freakish about | Carnoustie—no skating rink greens or deeply furrowed traps. It is just a long, tough golfing layout, bleak and windy and unfriendly to any except the finest golfing shots. It is an entirely fitting place for Hogan to face his doubters on both jsides of the Atlantic and try to | prove to them he is the best the world has seen. Carnoustie stretches out over 7,200 treeless, heavily trapped | yards. Like all of Scotland’s older |links, it carries no official par, that being strictly an American invention which has come to mean NEW YORK (#—Eleven 3-year- al League but the strangest of all olds, 10 of them eligible for the|iS Postponing games because. of $100,000 Belmont Stakes June 13,| “Fain” 24 hours will meet today in the $25,000-add- ed Peter Pan Handicap at Belinont Park. The Saxon Stable’s Invigorator, under top weight of 123 pounds, is | expected to be made the favorite ut 3 to.1 as Alfred Vanderbilt's Native Dancer stays in his barn to await the Belmont next week. Ben F. Whitaker's Tahitian King, who finished second to Native Dancer in the Wood Memorial just ahead of Invigorator, is next in the weights with 120 pounds. Invigorator finished third in the Kentucky Derby behind Dark Star and Native Dancer, but skipped on morning tea. Golf is a way of | | ess and less. Suffice it to say | the Preakness won by the Vander- A Sanford’s rising Cardinals won to the great number of Pitchers | their 9th in the last 11. starts, being used—a time-consuming pro- |11-8, over Orlando and climbed cedure. 2 ‘ | into fifth place. . | “Because of this general ineffec- | | life in Carnoustie. | We ‘chanced to have been on :hand the last time this country’, {top stars came to grips. with also to be much time lost by cat- 4% | ichers going out to talk to their LTs {first 12 innings) SCHEDULE By The Associated Press AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Louisville at Columbus (2) Kansas City at Charleston Minneapolis at Toledo St. Paul at indiana; ALABAMA-FLORIDA Dothan at Andalusia Eufaula at Fort Walton Only games sche Dallas at San Antonio Fort Worth at Houston Oklahoma City at Beaumont 5 port TERNATIONAL t Toronto at Montreal 5 Ottawa Baltimore af Springfi BASEBALL By The Asso INTERNATIONAL a fine relief job by Dave Koslo} as they bunched two singles and a} triple by Jim Greengrass for two/ runs in the top of the 13th. Koslo | had pitched excellent ball before | Gus Bell opened the 13th with a/ Boop single. Bud Podbielan went | all the way for Cincinnati. i Frank Thomas broke up the Pittsburgh-Chicago game with a bases-empty blast in the 11th. The Chicago White Sox are the only team in the American League with Yankees and the Yanks are trying to scrape this flaw from their record immediately. Until last) night's game the White Sox had won four and lost only one to the world champions with the four victories coming in succession Collins’. two homers changed all this and-also extended the Yankees’ winning streak to five games The Boston Red Sox burned up the West in their first swing a month ago and they began their successful campaign in Cleveland. | This time apparently is going to be different since the Indians led all the way last night and clinched matters in the eighth when Al Rosen homered with two on, Mike Garcia picked up the decision. Satchel Paige, the ancient won- der of the St. Louis Browns, fin- ally won his first game of the 1953 season. Satch took over in the sixth inning againit Washington and retired 10 men in a row. It | was his 19th appearance. He has Deen charged with two losses. Golfers Comp ers Compete TAMPA W-A St. Petersty professional and a Tampe: am teur. will head the Florida-South Georgia contingent in the U. 5; u Won Li Montreat 25 Rochester Toronto Ottawa Buffalo Baltimore Syracuse Springheld AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Kans: St. F India’ Toledo Louisville Charl tam a season's edge over the} ALABAMA-FLORIDA Panama City Andalusia Gracevilte Eufauta Fort Walton Dethan Shrevepart Tulsa Fort Werth ont Pet, 13 638 576 S75 ‘312 487 Aa? 432 34 Pet. 619 “343 321 432 415 ~ Pet 793, $14 433 42 386 364 3 |6. | pitchers, They are doing this more then ever.” Statistics show that starting pit- chers are failing to finish games more often this season than usual. |The White Sox have made at leat peel pitching changes and the De- troit Tigers 114. The league has averaged five different pitchers per game thus far. and Philadelphia, I'll bet nearly levery other club has used 100 or | more,” said Lane. “The only an- ;swer is ineffectiveness, and the only reason for that probably is the streak of cold weather earlier this season. It was ripe for sore arms and other ailments that re- tard a pitcher’s development.” All this also has led to more scoring with each game averaging more than nine runs, MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS By The Associated Press NATIONAL LEAGUE BATTING — Schoendienst, St. Louis, .368, RUNS — Campanella, Brooklyn, 38. RUNS BATTED IN—Campanella, Brooklyn, 54, HITS — Schoendienst, St. Louis, 63. DOUBLES — Schoendienst, St. + Louis, 14, 7 TRIPLES — Bernier, Pittsburgh, 5, HOME RUNS — Campanella, Brooklyn, 17, STOLEN BASES — Bruton, Mil- | waukee, 6-0, 1.000; Burdette, Mil- waukee, 3-0, 1.000. STRIKEOUTS—Simmons, Phila- delphia, 56. AMERICAN LEAGUE BATTING—Kell, Boston, .356. RUNS—Minoso, Chicago, 37. | Cleveland, 34. HITS—Vernon, Washington, 57. DOUBLES—Kell, Boston, 15. TRIPLES— Jensen, Washington, HOME RUNS — Rosen, jland, 11. Cleve- cago, 11. |_ PITCHING — Lopat, New York, 5-0, 1.000; Hooper, Cleveland, Ford, , New York, Shea, Washington, 4-0, siz | 1.000; Stuart, St. Louis, and Mo-/two innings, finally got going to renon, Washington, 3-0, 1.000. STRIKEOUTS—Pierce, Chicago, 49. ‘Southern Amateur | ‘Blum Is Leading DALLAS w—Arnold Blum, an amiable young man from Macon, | Ga., seeking to regain the Southern Amateur golf championship he held in 1951, headed the field into the second 18 holes of qualifying play / today. Blum carved a magnificent three-under-par 68 from Lakewood Country Club's 6,496 yards yester- day to top the first 18-hole round by a stroke. A card that showed 0 eagles gave him first place just ahead of Don Schumacher, Dallas veteran, who was doing a ree-under-par coming into 18. But umacher sent his second shot to a trap there and wound up with a 69. Four others managed to best par as the 14 id, trimmed to 3 generally nd the, tree-lined, rolling course tough to handle. wht the 6 low shooters for & al { Lexington Champion, who di Gav Brewer he defending n't have to post FY | tiveness on the mound, there seems | “With the exception of Cleveland | Hitters held sway in all four |fearsome layout on the wind- games—as they have most of the, whipped Firth of Tay, That was season. Jack Cade, defending lea-| in 1937, when our entire Ryder Cup gue batting champion who is on|team tried to tame Henry Cotton, {top again this season in spite of the great English player, and |the decline of his DeLand team,| Carnoustie, in that order. They | managed only one hit in five tries. | came out of it bleeding from every It made a little cent in his i-| pore. | inflated average. Cotton won that Cpen with a | Only one of Cocoa’s eight doubles | total of 290 strokes. Byron Nelson | figured in the three runs the Indi-! best of the Americans, finished | ans scored in the fifth inning that| fifth at 296. Carnoustie threw Ed | clinched the victory. Dudley for 297, Horton Smith 299, t the competitive record for Carnoustie the last time we knew s 70, shared by four profession- al Fine players have told me | that, depending upon where the | wind is coming from, Carnoustie's | par would be anywhere between }72 and 75. Where American-born players have won British Opens over most that country’s championship St. Andrews, Sandwich, Hoy- Prestwick, Lytham and St. Annes, Muirfield—none has won it Carnoustie, Tommy Amour, then | living in this country, captured the | |1931 event with a fat 72-ho'e total | | of 296, but Carnoustie happe.ed to} ‘have been his home town, Daytona Beach cut loose with|Sammy Snead 300, Ralph Guldahl 14 hits against DeLand and helped | 300, Denny Shute 302, Henry Picard billow the score with five Red Hat errors, Joe Angel, Jacksonville Beach, N EWS not only pitched e victory but helped it along with three hits. The Sea Birds beat Lakeland’s| TAMPA (#—Unable to contact Bat Hamm for the second straight | Mrs. Gladys Vanaman, U.S. Dis- night. This time he came on in|trict Attorney Herbert S. Phillips relief in the “10th inning and was} Says he will subpoena her to ap- hammered for six runs. pear before a fetieral grand jury Sanford scored six times in the | convening next week to consider seventh inning to clinch its vic-| charges against a man and woman Calvetti, winning pitcher, it was} William Ray Vanaman Jr., 9 a farewéll. He goes to military | months, was found here last week service, TUESDAY RESULTS Cocoa 8 Leesburg 6 Daytona Beach 13 DeLand 7 Jacksonville Beach 10 Lakeland 4 (10 innings) Sanford 11 Orlando 8 WEDNESDAY GAMES Daytona Beach at Leesburg Orlando at Jacksonville Beach Lakeland at Sanford STANDINGS: Mrs. Joanne Elizabeth Strickland. 28. Mrs. Vanaman had told federa authorities in St. Louis she hire: Mrs. Strickland as a baby sitter there May 17 and the sitter dis- appeared with -the child. Mrs. Strickland said she was given the baby to care for until supported her story. They are being held under $10,000 bond each on kidnaping charges. The district attorney said he has 31 19 .620}been unable to establish contact 31 20 .608| with Mrs. Vanaman, now in De- 29 22 .569 | troit, to arrange return of the baby 24 27 .471|to her or see if she still maia. 23 28 .451| tains the child was kidnaped. WL Pet. Cocoa 32 19 .627 Daytona Beach Jacksonville Beach Leesburg Sanford DeLand tory over Orlando. But for Lou|accused of kidnaping her baby. | with Jack Claude Allen, 44, and | Orlando Lakeland 17 34 .333 16 34 .320 Duke And Georgia MIAMI BEACH (—Harold Sha- piro, former Miwaukee attorney, was in line to be named Miami Beach mayor today following his victory in Tuesday's city election RUNS BATTED IN — Rosen, | STOLEN BASES — Rivera, Chi-| when he topped a field of 16 can didates with 6,757 votes. . The 45-year-old Shapiro was mak- ing his second bid for council and led the second man, Harold B. Spaet, by 37 votes. Spaet received 6,720. Compete For Spot In College Series CHARLOTTE, N. C. —Duke and Georgia moved a step nearer next week's college world serie’ in Omaha, Neb. with opening | round victories Tuesday night in the NCAA District 3 baseball | jtournament, while Rollns and} | Mississippi State met this after- | noon to stave off eiimination and jget another crack at the leaders. | Duke stage’ a five-run seventh jinning to turn back Mississippi | State, 9-3, behind the 17-strikeout, | Six-hit pitching of Joe Lewis, senior jfireballer from Fall River, Mass. | Earlier, Georgia, down 4-0 after Frank were re-elecied to the coun- cil and Councilman Melvin J Richard was a close fifth. Council- man William Burbridge retired after serving 19 years, MIAMI Sheldon Greenberg, 27-year-old Air Force veteran, to- day was in jail on a first degree |murder charge the slaying of ‘pretty Diann Dubbin three years ago. Greenberg was arrested Tate | Tuesday, a few minutes after a {Dade County grand jury indicted him for the murder of the 24-year- old girl in her home on May 25 1950. Police and State Attorney George A. Brautigam said the jwas based on evidence ty during a two-year invest. plea for Greenber2’s rei Pica Ne eee et habeas corpus writ was denied by | Casey Stengel is the only former | Cireuit Judge Vincent C. Giblin. outfielder now managing in the) wie. pubbin was found major leagues. through the head and beaten in f the living room of ber home. She died severai hours later thout being able to name the killer. whip Rollins, 8-4. | Duke and Georgia meet tonight, jwith the winner advancing to | Thursday night’s finals. The loser | will take on the atternoon Roll- jins - Mississippi State survivor in a second night game for the jother finals berth. a qualifying score. Match play starts tomorrow. Tied for third at 70 were Dick Collord of New Orleans, Ernie] VERO BEACH (#—Indian R Vossier of Fort Worth, Jim Head | nistrict members of Florida Cit of Birmingham and Tommy Barnes | yutual re-elected their three di of Atlanta, a former Southern | rectors Tuesday—R. C. Brady, Ti- champion. Head set a competitive | tusville; W.. G. Strickiand, Ve course record for the last mine| Beach and A. B. Michael, Webss when he came in with a four-| They also favored reappaii under-par 31, ment to the Growers Administra- No golfer ever made a more itive Committee Correlius van der inauspicious start than Head om Lught, Ft. Pierce, es principal and Harold Turk and Bernard A.! 25, | RIEFS ! stump. The car door flew open and |she was thrown out, striking her head on the stump. | Bertrand said Mrs. Hasbrouch !and her husband, Thomas, were starting a trip to Indiana and ex: pected to visit their daughter. Has- vouch was not injured, | | ‘TAMPA @—Alonso Montes was onvicted of illegal entry into the Jnited States in spite of the fact e has been living — legally — in Tampa, | Federal Judge William J. Barker.ruled Tuesday that Montes, }a fruit ship captain, technically | was guilty because he went ashore + jin the Dry Tortugas Islands off the mother wanted him back. Allen | Key West before inspection at @| basis,” ‘port of entry. Montes was senten- ced to 40 days in jail, which he has served while waiting trial. In a civil. proceeding, immigra- | tion authorities have ordered Mon- tes deported because of the landing | Montes contended he was just pass- jing time so his vessel wouldn’t |reach Tampa on a Sunday. He is a citizen of Honduras. BOSTON (®—A stubborn pier fire jon the Charlestown waterfront | burned on today after firefighters |halted its spread during a night | battle. Fire department officials be- lieved it would be two days before the last of the slow-burning flames under the pier and in cargo would | be extinguished, Fire Chief John V. Stapleton said damage approached $100,000. Dock officials said, however, there is about a half million dollars worth of wood pulp and wool on the pier, CAMBRIDGE, Mass. i — “Jer. ry,” a four-year-old parrot, is set for life today thanks to a $20,000 | inheritance. Luther A. Sawyer, 82, of Arling- ton, who died recently, left the money to his pet in a will filed in Middlesex probate court. Under terms of the will, the par- H | | rot will be cared for by Sawyer’s | | sister, Mrs, Vera Barnes, 73, Mrs. Barnes said she is “not at! j all pleased” with the will, but will | not contest jt, nd chilling rains elsewhere. | | Britain had a repeat of the cold/ damp weather that brought dis-| comfort to the millions who! watched Queen Elizabeth's corona-| | tion procession yesterday, | The thermometer reading in Oslo .| Wa» 4 degrees. Denmark had 2 but chilly day, Western Ger- unseasonable cold and rain. Near blizzards swept the Austri- an, French and Italian Alps, WASHINGTON @—Franz Ei an officer in Hitler's army Was captured by American forces his round. He was five over par| Paul Robertson, Vero Beach, as E on the first four holes but kept! alternate, plugging away, trimming a stroke here and there, and he climaxed/ pAHOKER it with birdie, eagle, birdie on the |have been a lor last three holes. jended in traged b | Eight players bad par Tl, among it began Tuesday when Mrs, Dor them Eddie Merrins of Meridian. | A Hasbrouch, 55. Lake We Miss. runnet-ep in 1951 to Blum, fe and Don Cherry, the New York from Wichita Fellas, Tex who was 4 semi-finalist in the National Amateur last year. P. Rertrand sand ix brouch was de rain and crate |bilt ace. Native Dancer and the | Spring Hill Farm’s Jamie K., sec- jond in the Preakness, will renew | their duel in the mile and one-half Belmont Stakes. With Dark Star retired due to an injury, the Cain Hoy Stable will send Count Cain, a broyn son of Count Fleet, after the “mile and one-eighth Peter Pan, Count Cain has 112 pounds today. The Rokeby Stable’s Magic Lamp, second to Native Dancer in the Gotham Stakes, has 114 pounds in the Peter Pan and a good show- ing by this son’ of Alibhai would qualify him for a crack at the Dancer in the Belmont, Others entered today are the Greentree Stable’s Powhatan, 111; Maine Chance Farm's Flight Cloud, 105; the Warbern Stable’s Sickle’s before play is scheduled to’ start, This happened Tuesday night on the eve of Miami’s departure by Plane for Havana to open a three- game series, The league leading Sun Sox from Miami were scheduled tg Play Havana’s Cubans a double. header in Gran Stadium tonight, and a single game Thursday night. But a telephone call from the owner of the Cubans in Havana, Roberto Madura, to Miami Sun Sox president, Jost Aleman, said the games would not be played because of rain. Miami officials had no written record of the call but they hesi- tated to fly the team to Cuba in the face of developments. League President Phil O,Connell was asked for a ruling but he Pointed out he had nothing to rule on until there were reports in As Miami officials explained late Tuesday night, “we're undecided if we will go or not. We don’t know what the outcome will be.” Hogan Will Shoot For 4th Open Title PITTSBURGH w—Ben Hogan banged out a few balls and looked over the Oakmont course where he will try next week for his fourth Sound, 114; Jack Amiel’s Sun War-| U. S. Open Golf Cahmpionship and rior, 107; C. V. Whitney's Fly{ Said, “Judgment of distance is go- Wheel, 115; the Brookfield Farm’s Tsasmoothie, 118; and Ogden Phipp Bassanio, 108, Sickle’s Sound is eligible for the Belmont. Divorce Planned 4 ing to be the deciding factor here.” The bantam golfer, who is lead- ing the pros in money winnings this year, arrived in Pittsburgh yester- day and headed straight for the course. “I'll be a daily visitor from si on through next week,” he bai HOLLYWOOD m — Actress Ann} Hogan’ won the Open title in Rutherford says she plans a trip| 1948, to Las Vegas or Reno, Nev., soon | any 1950 and 1951. He didn't make Prediction about thisser's to divorce David, May, heir to a/ classic, which opens next Tuesday, mercantile fortune. “I better net even think about it They have been estranged six | until I qualify,” he declared, Hogan quickly observed the wide years, “It’s true,” Miss Rutherford said | fairways and said, “It will make it when asked about reports that she Planned to divorce May, “It's all on a very friendly and amicable The Gloria, 9. Boxing Results } tremarked, and * couple has a daughter, have to know whete the pins are. easier to play the ball from tee to green.” ‘ But the greens are wide, Hogan you're going to there's going to be a lot of three and four putting. And that kind of putting doesn't win’ tourna- ments.” Ben is noted for his tee shot accuracy and placement drives. But he said he wants to get a lot FT. WAYNE, Ind.—Chuck Day-|°f Practice in on the course, which ey, 149, Lansing, Mich., outpointed | he has played only once before. Sammy Mastrean, 150, Pittsburgh, in 10, MIAMI BEACH, Fla. — Harry Braelow, 15744, Miami Beach, out-| Said. Pointed Jackie La Bua, 151%, Brooklyn, 10. WASHINGTON—Jimmy Cooper, 125, Washington, knocked out Gene Smith, 126, Washington, 6. oon » Fla. — Red ‘ameron, 195, Miami, outpointed Jack Harding, 203, Buffalo, N. Y., 10. LS ANGELES—Sal Flores, 160, Anaheim, Calif., stopped Armando en 14, Guadalajara, Mexico, We Are Prepared To Furnish You With Clean, Pure Cube » Crushed ICE (Ice Divi. Dial 246831 Inc. ) Key West, Florida

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