PAGE TEN DAILY SENTINEL, ROME, N. Y., TUESDAY EVENING, … 23/Rome NY Daily Sentinel/Rome NY... ·...

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"'•' ^iT" *m asaaaassswasaasp aaaasaapi PAGE TEN DAILY SENTINEL, ROME, N. Y., TUESDAY EVENING, MAY 13, 1958 WRUN AM—1150 • WRUN FM—106 Dodgers Last for First Time in 10 Years WINNERS CONGRATULATED—Carl H. Clippinger, left, general secretary of the Rome YMCA and Milt Theobald, Boys Work secretary here, congratu- late trophy winners at last night's dinner of the Revere Rome Division Em- ployes Social and Athletic Assn. From left to right, the boys are Richard Spado, Peter Yousey, Frank Froio, David D'Auito, Don Simon and Brian Bauman. AT PHYSICAL FITNESS DINNER—A portion of the speakers table at last night's banquet of the Revere's Rome Division Employes Social and Athletic Assn. *t the YMCA shows, left to right, Stan Cook, chairman of the Revere Physical Fitness program, Billy Mills, guest entertainer and Lynn Eggan, YMCA physical director. Standing is Sam F. Peraino, general chairman of the Revere Revere Physical Fitness Progtam •ii i "»» Association Distributes Awards Ravere's Rome Division Employ- es Social and Athietic Assn. flayed host to some SO parents and children at its third annual physi- cal fitness and basketball banquet at the YMCA here last night Billy Mills, celebrated baseball comedian, provided tha entertain- ment. Sam F. Peraino, chairman of the association's sports committee, served as toastmaster. Speakers included Carl H. Oip- pinger, general secretary of the Roma YMCA; Lynn Eggan, YMCA physical director and supervisor of the Revere physical program; Milt Theobald, boys work secretary and Stan Cook, chairman of the physical fitness committee. Gold basketballs went to each member of the championship Bob Cats including Capt. Orlando Spado, Donald Alvarez, Bruce Av- ery, Don Simon, Richard Lombinp David Angelicchio, Richard Spado, Peter Yousey and David Miner. Other awards included: Most improved boy, Richard Spado, ton of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Spado. Sportsmanship, Frank Froio, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Froio. Citizenship, Brian Bauman, son Physical fitness, David D'Auito, son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred D'Auito; Don Simon, son of Mr. and Mrs. Don Simon and Peter Yousey, son of Mr. and Mrs, Robert Yousey. Dinner was served and prepared by Mrs. Fred Schatz, Mrs. Carl Chppiflger, Mrs. Stan Cook, Nancy Cook, Betty Gleasman, Ken Tucker and Bob Larkin. Mays Gets Eye for Distance By The Associated Press Weep no more lot 1 Willie, now that Mays has unfrocked those Los Angeles Dodgers and discov- ered they're his old Brooklyn bud dies. After 22 games with San Fran cisco this season, Willie was bat- ting a dandy .372, but folks were concerned. The kid who had led the Giants in home runs and runs-batted-in for four years had only .nine extra-base hits, only one a homer, while knocking in Just nine runs. Then he recognized those Dodg- ers, the guys he's always killed, and Willie started beltin*. In three games against Los Angeles he's rapped five home runs, driven in 1L Hits Two Mays hit a pair of homers, one his second grand slam in the majors, and had five RBI Monday night as the Giants ripped the Dodgers 12-3 and moved back within a half-game of the Nation- al League lead with their fifth straight victory. It was the fourth consecutive defeat for the Dodgers, who plunked into the cellar for the first time since July 2, 1948. The St. Louis Cardinals quit a three- week stay in eighth place by win ning their fifth in a row, 6-4 at Chicago, in the only other game scheduled. Stan Musial doubled for his 2,999th hit, but after grounding out three times was "benched for hitting" by Manager Fred Hutch- inson for today's game with the Cubs. Unless he's needed as a pinch-hitter, the Cards figure to save The Man's 3,000th hit for the home fans. Mays triggered a 17-hit attack as the Giants made it five in a row over Los Angeles. Daryl Spencer also counted two homers. Ruben Gomez won his third, all against the Dodgers, with a six- hitter and fanned 10 to take the NL strikeout lead with 32. Mays tagged loser Don Drys- dale (1-6) for his first homer in the third!. Then he cleared the left field screen at the Coliseum by plenty on a bases-loaded pitch from Ed Roebuck that capped a .six-run fifth in which all the runs were unearned. A four-run fifth, on four singles and two errors, bagged it for the Cards as right-hander Phil Paine collected a So record in two days. Glen Hobbie was the loser, blow- ing a 3-0 lead after Ernie Banks hit his seventh homer, with a man on, in the third. Kentucky Derby First 4 Dominate Preakness Field We hsa* Hunlmcj & Iisriino Licenses "Herb" PHILIPSON'S AlMT AND NAVY STORE 257 W. Deahks Si. LAUGHS »<0ADS! Johnson &t*r&»-H<mV5© BALTIMORE W — A pair of elimination races brought no ap- parent new faces today to a prob- able Preakness field dominated by the first four from the Ken- tucky Derby. With four days to go for entries, the solid lineup consisted of nine for Saturday's second $100,000 leg of the Triple Crown. A few more 3-year-olds were still on the rail for the mile and three-sixteenths classic at Pimlioo. Tuneups in the Preakness Prep and the Withers Mile at Belmont Monday strengthened the resolve of only Mrs. Richard E. Lunn to part with $1,000 to start her Gone Fishin' took the mile and six- teenth Preakness Prep with con- summate ease. But he had already been considered worthy of a shot at the Preakness after finishing 8th in the muddy derby with a twisted shoe. The Withers had 12 Preakness eligible? and the outcome left it doubtful if any would continue on to Baltimore. The race was won by John S. Kroeses* Sir Robby, a 17-1 long shot no better than third in six previous major races this year. Gone Fishin' won the Prep by a length and three-quarters over Christiana Stable's Staysail. It was only the second start of thei year for Staysail so he may be given a chance at the Preakness. Gone Fishin* secured his place together with Calumet's Tim Tarn, Sunny Blue Farm's Lincoln Road, Crabgrass Farm's Nour- wirtin. and Maine Chance Farm's Jewel's Reward who led the Der- by Parade. Also undaunted by the outcome of the Derby were Mrs. A, Cannuli's sixth place Chance It Tony and Ross & Klipstein's 12th place Silky Sullivan. Among the most likely new challengers of the Derby crop are E. G. Potter Jr.'s Plion and Mrs. Ada L, Rice's Talent Show. They earned their Preakness spurs by finishing first and third in Satur- day's Delaware Valley handicap in New Jersey. Softballers List Games Flint Victor At Buffalo ML DM'I pmmptt fMt < 9 Joaaiaws i w "V* a** SMC II I p l faf a IlTCfWIC €K faS »w«f pifftfwosM to 50 Changes in the playing sites ofj two Gty Softball Leagues have been announced by Supt. of Rec- reation William G. Keating. Today's American League sched- ule: National Reweavers vs. Rome Plumbing at Harry Pint! No. 1; West Rome Merchants vs. Brew- ster's at KranJdyn's Fteld No. 1; Chick's Radio vs. Skto's at PlntJ I No. 2; Sanzone vs. K. of C. at jFranklyn** Field No. 2» Thursday's National League | schedule: Mohawk Airlines vs. K. of C. at Franklyn's Field No. V, Chick's Radio vs. Griffiss R&D at RFA No. 2; West Rome Merchants vs. Brewster's at RFA No. 1 and San- zone's vs. St, Gregory at Pint! No. The International League sched- ule Wednesday is unchanged, Rome Hurlers Blank Ufes On No-Hitter Jerry Mead and Vic Simiele combined in a no-hit pitching per- formance as Rome Free Acad- emy shut out Proctor High School of Utica for a 1 to 0 victory at Utica yesterday. Rome scored in the first in- ning on three walks and an error. The RFA Junior Varsity also won yesterday from Proctor, chalking up a 4-2 decision. RFA plays Whitesboro here mis afternoon at 4:45 o'clock and has a game Thursday in Utica with Catholic Academy, also at 4:45. The scores: Roma | abr hi DeCosiy.aa 3 1 0| M'ehant.ef S 0 0 F-R-eratd.Sb 2 0 1 Z'rine.ff.H Vinci,<? Pfnti.lf Wahal.rf Senua.Sb Pl*mti»K,3b Heotl.lb 8tmi*t»,p Mead.p.lb 1 o ft 2 0 0 1 0 0 2 0 0 1 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 SaMelti Gim'laro Cotnjpe GrTmaldl Martelto Betore Mancmo Gigtin Pap'ella Frajnw!! r/Brtndlat 3 0 II Graaiano | aLucar*lll Proctor •brh 2 0 0 1 0 0 3 0 ft I H 1 0 6 1 0 6 2 0 0 3 0 0 2 0 ft 1 o 0 ion 1 ff 6 1 0 6 WELLS BOAT SHOP HU W, tistilrt k. Off* ML i MO*. WININ&S Syracuse Boob Maryland Eleven Making a 30-seeond final-quar- ter spurt. Cedar Crest Pride out- did Flourish by half a length Mon- day night and snared the $3,500 Admiral Class A Pace at Roose velt Raceway, Westbury, in 2:06 for the mile. Meanwhile, in duplicate per- formances at Buffalo Raceway in Hamburg, two $1,500 Class B mile paces were both won in 2:07 2-5. The respective victors were Flint in tha sixth race and Dagsworthy Lady hi the seventh. Cedar Crest is a 5-year-old geld- ing owned by Roy T. Morgan, Lin- coln Park. R. I. He was driven Monday night by Charles Fitpat- rick Jr. and paid $13.30. Misty Hayes, the favorite, finished third. At Hamburg, Fred Parks guided Fhnt to a length victory that re- turned $10.80. $7.00 and $4.30. Dagsworthy Lady, with Jimmy Ar thur at the reins, paid $6.10, $3.70 n l 21 n o » e Struck out for Fraxnoli in 7th. a Struck out for Graaiano in 7tb. Roma 100 000 0—1 Proctor 000 000 0—# K— n#Co»ty, GiKlio. SB— DeCoaty, FUnwraM. Ziirrino. S—Grajtiane, DP —Rome (Mead and Hcott): Proctor fGlallo. Sarn>lll and Marttllo); (Gimmillaro, Gialto and Martello). L*>ft—Rome 8, Proctor S. BH—Grasi- ano S, Maad 4, Simlala 0. SO—Grfcal- ano 2, Mpad 1, Pimlda 3. HO—Ora*l- ano 2 In 7: Mead 0 in 4: Slmlale 0 tn 3. HBP—By Mead (Qrlmaldt). W— Mend. I*—Gruziano. Roma JV I ah r hi Koskl.ef B.Kikcrf Val*tln#,M Thay»r,!f S^nal'cp.lb T.Fik*.2h Gaudln.Sb IV! Piano, e ttollorfc.p Tard'no.C Parker, p Proctor JV ab rh 2 2 11 Oambtno,2b 2 0 0 4 0 1! MI«'lllk,M I 1 0 4 t 0! Kttl'akl.cf 3 0 2 3 fl nt Tacca.3t) 3 ft ft 3 B 01 rarlo.lf 3 0 0 3 n 2 Zito.lb 3 1 1 J 0 0) Salcrno.e I 6 1 3 6 0{ Adorina.rf 3 0 0 3 111 pal men te, ft 3 0 8 0 0 0 1 0 0! 2} 4 Si Roma JV'i Proctor JV'i K—Gaud In. Koakt, —Kulakowakl. tj«ft- 25 2 4 101 001 1—4 001 100 0—2 Mi*UU*k ?. 2H -Row* S, Proc- tor S, RB— Dellork 2, Delmonta 3, SO —Dellork 4, Belmonta ». HO—F»*I Wrk 4 tn •; Delmente I In ?: Parker 0 tn I. HBP— Rv r»etiork fMlalawekl. WP—rjeJIorfc. W—DftHork. L^-Del- rnont*. i Eastern League Wiihamsport 6, Springfield S (10 Innings) Albany 11, Binghamton 1 SYRACUSE, N. Y. j»-§yracuse j University's feotbaff tarn wffl [meet University of Maryland heref Aitentown 9, Lancaster lOct. 3, im, in the opener of a)York |, Reading 2 homeland-home series. The ret urn game will be played) Syracuse ©fficMs announced Mao- at Coilega Park, Md., Oct, 7, 19$L da*. Grace Edwards Leads Bowlers Grace Edwards, with 179 and 438, set the 1© and 30-frume aenr hTg pace In the Hf-Lo Bowling League, only mm in action here last night. The scores* Rolling Stone* 4, S o Pokes 6 WhJizers 3, Go Getteri 1 Pin Spiittari 3, Alley CaU 1 Franci% Regan's Sports View* and Reviews Death Thins Ranks Of Can-Am Leaders He is not dead, this friend, not dead But in the paths we mortals tread Got some few trifling steps ahead And nearer to the end. So that you, too, once past the bend Shall meet again as face to face The friend you fancy dead. —Robert Louis Stevenson Ranks of the once-prospering but now-defunct Canadian* American Baseball League are being thinned, all too fre- quently of late, by the Great Umpire, who in His providence has seen fit to call a third strike on the Rt. Rev. Msgr. Har- old J. Martin, the Catholic priest from Northern New York, who founded the Class C Can-Am League and served as its president from 1937 through 1944. And as Father Martin, or Judy, as he was affectionately known, goes to join, in an eternal fellowship such Can-Am figures as Dr. Dan Mellen, Amby McConnell, Louis Schneible, Johnny Page, Albert Gaucher, Joe Carr, Harold Ford, Stan Clarke and the others who have proceeded him, including those members of the playing ranks who made the supreme sac- rifice In World War IT, there is sadness for days long gone and grief for departed friends. There have been requiems for Father Martin, a national figure, from far more facile pens than this, including one yes- terday from the New York Herald-Tribune's Red Smith. Here, however, the memory of the man to whom base- ball was second in importance only to his religious calling, will long be' cherished. President When Rome Joined League in 1937 It was during Father Martin's first term as Can-Am pres- ident that Rome became a member of the Can-Am League and it was his advice and encouragement that made it pos- sible for this city as well as a number of others to weather the stdrms besetting professional baseball operations in the lower classifications. Even as World War II was In full swing. Father Martin had no desire to follow the general trend that called for a suspension which eventually developed. To him baseball was an entertainment to be provided without charge to the trainee serviceman in camp or home on leave, it was a sport to at- tract and hold the interest of the soldier's schoolboy brother, it was a release for the tensions of a defense worker, it was America, at war or at peace. As part owner of the Ogdensburg club, he argued that me Can-Am League continue even though he well knew the fi- nancial hazards that would hit him personally as hard as any of his fellow club owners. When he was over-ruled by the league directors he cast his lot with the Utica entry in the Eastern League which continued operations through World War n . Eventually his Utica holdings, along with those of his partner, the late Amby McConnell, were sold to the Philadel- phia Phillies and Father Martin retired from the area base- ball scene. Shortly after his name appeared again in the dispatches which told of the organization of the Border Baseball League. He served in an advisory capacity with that circuit through its existence. Played Minor League Baseball An ambidexterous pitcher at Fordham University, Msgr. Martin, a Boston native, played minor league baseball for New Haven and Albany before his ordination. As a young assistant in Ogdensburg, he pitched semi-pro baseball at $75 a game donating his salary for the establish- ment of a children's playground there that later became the home of the Ogdensburg professional clubs where children were always admitted to every game free of charge. His baseball skills provided Father Martin with a schol- arship to Fordham. where he was a baseball teammate of Frankle Frlsch and from where, shortly after his gradua- tion, he entered a seminary to study for the priesthood. He never forgot the sport that made his education and his vocation possible. "I'm trying in a small way to repay baseball for what It has done for me," he once said, when asked why he was devoting time to professional baseball. He had another reason too. "Throw open our ball parks to our youth," he proclaimed, "and with tiie help of God, we may be able to close our juvenile courts." Syracuse Seeded Third in Saturday's Sprint Race NEW X 0RK ** — Undefeated Yale against Harvard and Rut- Yale and Harvard are seeded [gers. 1-2 respectively for the East- Seedings and "pairings also were ern Rowing Sprint Champion-(announced for the Eastern Light- ships at Lake Carnegie, Prince-j weight Rowing Championships on ton, Saturday, May 17. Thirteen | the Charles River at Cambridge, crews entered. "to be rowed May 17. Syracuse is seeded third and Cornell and Pennsylvania are Jointly placed fourth. Yale drew Navy and Dartmouth foe the varsity race, starting at 11 a. m. Harvard was placed in !5 ^ f S ! 2 ? - S ^ E T S vard, Yale and Dartmouth. and the Massachusetts &<tats of ^ f h ^^ in Mch Technology. Syracuse rows in the ^ ^ ^ fi _ Competition starts at 10 a. m., with the varsity finals climaxing the regatta at 6:30 p. m. In tiie varsity, the first heat matches Penn. Cornell, Prince- ton, MIT and Columbia. The sec- ond heat sends Navy against Har- third heat with Princeton and Columbia. Cornell, winner of this champi- onship for the last two years, was in the fourth heat with Rutgers, Penn and Boston University. Winners of each heat qualify for the 6 p. m. final over the 2,000 nals. The same conditions held for the freshman and junior var- sity races. Here are the heats in the fresh- man race: 1. Dartmouth. MIT, Princeton, Cornell; 2. Harvard, Yale, Columbia, Penn. Junior varsity: 1. Navy, Yale, meter Olympic distance (one mile; Princeton. Columbia; 2.' Perm, 427 yards) PaMngs were announced yester- day by Asa Bushnell, commission- er of the Eastern Coflege Athletic Conference and secretary of the Eastern Association of Rowing Col- leges. The freshman heats will oner the program at t a* m. For this race, the seedings were: 1. Har- vard; 2, CoraeD; 3. Navy; 4 Perm. The draw toe the heats sent Harvard against Princeton and Syracuse: Cornell againsj Dart- mouth and Rutgers: Navy against Columbia and MIT, and Penn against Yale. For the junior varsity race, Cornell was seeded first, followed by Navy, Penn and Yale. Competition tn the JV sends Cornell against Coltmibia and Princeton; Navy against MIT and Dartmouth, Perm against Boston U., Syracuse and Wisconsin* and Dartmouth, MIT, Harvard, Cor- nell. Pacific Coast League Seattle 5. Spokane 0 (first game) Seattle 3, Spokane 0 (second game) Vancouver 7, Sacramento 3 BASEBALL onth«Air N. Y. Yankees vs. Baltimore Wednesday—2 P.M. WRUN-1150 The Senlinel Stalion Castoff Beats Sox For Nats By The Associated Press The first home run was the toughest for Neil Chrisley. Four games ago he never had hit one in the majors. Now he has three for Washington, and it's no coin- cidence that the Senators are still second in the American League, two games from the top. The 25-year-old outfielder, trad- ed out of the Boston Red Sox farm system to the Nats in 1955, was up 51 times without a homer as a rookie last season. He didn't get one in his first 14 at-bats this season. Now he's hit three in seven trips, hauling the Senators to a 5-4 victory over the Red Sox Mon- day night on a shot that bounced off center fielder Jim Piersall's glove into the bleachers at Grif- fith Stadium for a two-run homer. A's Snap String A home run won for Kansas City, too, as Woody Held pickled one in the 11th that beat the Chi- cago White Sox 2-1 and ended the A's losing string at six in the only other game scheduled. Chrisley, carried as a pinch- hitter by the Nats, has banged his homers in three games. Chrisley started Monday night's game and cracked a 3-3 tie with his homer, giving the Senators a 6-1 record against the Red Sox. Dick Hyde won his third with a six-hit, five-strikeout job over 5 1-3 innings in relief of Hal Griggs. The game was delayed an hour and 15 minutes by a power failure at Washington. Ray Moore nursed a 1-0 White Sox lead for seven. The A's tied it on Bill Tuttle's triple and a sacrifice fly by Hector Lopez in the eighth. Held was the first man reliever Gerry Staley faced. Mur- ry Dickson won his second with four innings of hitless relief. Second baseman Nellie Fox of the Sox was spiked and sprained an ankle making a diving tag on Bob Cerv in the fourth inning. Musial Hit To Come at Home Field CHICAGO UV-Stan Musial, the St. Louis Cardinal slugging star who is only one hit away from 3,000, will not reach the coveted goal today according to Manager Fred Hutchinson. ' Hutchinson Monday night an- nounced he was benching The Man so that Musial can register his 3,000th hit at St. Louis. "Stan has always expressed the desire to make his 3,000th hit in St. Louis and I'm going to give him that opportunity," said Hutchinson. Musial rapped out his 2,999th hit in the first inning of a M victory over the Chicago Cubs. He stroked a double into left center- field. He walked in the third and then grounded out weakly in his next three appearances. "It'll be a good clean shot when I get it." said Musial after Mon- day's game. Major League Standinas National League Team Milwaukee ' San KrancUco Ptttaburgh Chicago Cincinnati Philadelphia St. Louta Los Angelea W L P.C. OB 15 7 .«S2 - 16 I .(40 H 15 t .(25 1 IS 1) .500 4 U .450 5 16 .375 7 S 14 .384 7 9 16 .360 7tt Result* Yeiterday St.' Loula 6, Chicago 4. San Franctaco 12, Los Angelei S. Only games scheduled. American League Team New York Washington Baltimore Detroit Kansas City Cleveland Host on Chicago W L P.C. 01 13 & .722 13 9 .591 3 11 9 .550 3 12 12 .500 4 9 10 .474 4', 11 11 .453 5 10 15 .400 6H 7 13 .350 7 Yesterday's Results Washington 6. Boston 4. Kansas City 2, Chicago 1. Only games scheduled. Graham Dogs Gain Coveted AKC Crowns A rare ocurrence in dogdom took place on the last two weekends when two Scottish Terriers owned and bred by Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Graham of Rome gained their AKC championship in out-of-town dog shows. Ch. Todhill's Phoebe Snow, an 18-month old terrier bitch finished her championship in AKC point competition Sunday, May 4 by go- ing best of winners at the Trenton, N. J. Kennel Club Show under Judge Edwin L, Johnstown of A litter brother, Ch. Todhill's Honest John gained the same award to complete his title last .Saturday at the Springfield, Mass. Show under Judge Percy Roberts of Norton, Conn. In completing their champion- ships, which under AKC rules re- quire a minimum of 15 points, in- cluding at least two major or three point victories, each Rome dog registered four major wins under different judges. New Coast Team in Bad Slump LOS ANGELES (fl — There were suggestions during the spring that tiie Dodgers might not deva- state the National League this season. Still, about the last place you'd expect to find them is in last place. But there they are — for the first time since July 2, 1948. And Manager Walt Alston could prom- ise no swift ascent after the latest humiliation — 12-3 loss to the San Francisco Giants Monday night. "If a couple of guys get in a slump," Alston said, "you can take them out. You can't take out the whole team." Hard to Smile Alston, who likes to smile but found it a difficult expression to achieve Monday night, was asked whether the ex - Brooklyn club might not be trying too hard to please its new audience. "Playing at home? No, I don't think that has much to do with it. If we play away like we played here, we'll get beat just as bad." The conversation turned to Don Drysdale, the young pitcher who was supposed to win 20 games this year but who suffered his sixth defeat in seven decisions Monday night. "I don't know what to say about Drysdale," Alston said. "But I do know he doesn't have quite as much stuff as he did last year. I don't think his control of his curve is as good." After the -feeble-promise of Ms early outings, will Drysdale be removed from the regular pitch- ing rotation. "If I had somebody that was hot." Alston said, "I'd go with him. But I don't." American Assn. Denver 6, Charleston J St Paul 7, Indianapolis S Only games Ruth Leaguers To Report Here The first tryout for Babe Ruth League candidates will take place Wednesday at the RFA diamond at 6:30 o'clock. Eligible players from last year (up to 15 years of age) and any newcomers are asked to report. Domestic and Imported Wines • Liquors • Cordials r r M Porkinq at 6UASPARIS Liquor Store 70 r 2 I. Dowislck PhsM 4171 FREE DIUVftY YOU AUTO BUY NOW "IMPORT BUY OF THE YEAR" 1958 SIMCA 4 Door Aronde FRANCAIS MOTORS, INC. 411 Trentoa Ay*.. Utica, N Y . Dsertfold Corners PKona 5-841* or CALL ROME 1706-M or 2953 Sure vacation pleasure (with no reservations) Travel to the corners of the nation... the seashore... tiie mountains . . . the lake country... one old friend will be there, waiting to greet you. Seagram*! 7 Crown, the whiskey of unequalled popularity, coast to coast. Wherever you seek your pleasure,.. Say SCQpram's and be SutC Or THE n F A S T A N D nNKST AMERICAN WH1SKEV suGiM-omiutis eotmyflf.Nwranart. sums wmn.u mm. n% «wt mnn tnitn,, Thomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com

Transcript of PAGE TEN DAILY SENTINEL, ROME, N. Y., TUESDAY EVENING, … 23/Rome NY Daily Sentinel/Rome NY... ·...

Page 1: PAGE TEN DAILY SENTINEL, ROME, N. Y., TUESDAY EVENING, … 23/Rome NY Daily Sentinel/Rome NY... · "'•' iT"*m • • • asaaaassswasaasp aaaasaapi PAGE TEN DAILY SENTINEL, ROME,

" ' • ' ^ i T " * m • • • asaaaassswasaasp aaaasaapi

PAGE TEN DAILY SENTINEL, ROME, N. Y., TUESDAY EVENING, MAY 13, 1958 WRUN AM—1150 • WRUN FM—106

Dodgers Last for First Time in 10 Years

WINNERS CONGRATULATED—Carl H. Clippinger, left, general secretary of the Rome YMCA and Milt Theobald, Boys Work secretary here, congratu­late trophy winners at last night's dinner of the Revere Rome Division Em­ployes Social and Athletic Assn. From left to right, the boys are Richard Spado, Peter Yousey, Frank Froio, David D'Auito, Don Simon and Brian Bauman.

AT PHYSICAL FITNESS DINNER—A portion of the speakers table at last night's banquet of the Revere's Rome Division Employes Social and Athletic Assn. *t the YMCA shows, left to right, Stan Cook, chairman of the Revere Physical Fitness program, Billy Mills, guest entertainer and Lynn Eggan, YMCA physical director. Standing is Sam F. Peraino, general chairman of the Revere

Revere Physical Fitness Progtam • i i i " » »

Association Distributes Awards Ravere's Rome Division Employ­

es Social a n d Athietic Assn. flayed host to some SO parents and children at its third annual physi­cal fitness and basketball banquet at the YMCA here last night

Billy Mills, celebrated baseball comedian, provided tha entertain­ment.

Sam F. Peraino, chairman of the association's sports committee, served as toastmaster.

Speakers included Carl H. Oip-pinger, general secretary of the Roma YMCA; Lynn Eggan, YMCA physical director and supervisor of the Revere physical program; Milt Theobald, boys work secretary and Stan Cook, chairman of the physical fitness committee.

Gold basketballs went to each member of the championship Bob Cats including Capt. Orlando Spado, Donald Alvarez, Bruce Av­ery, Don Simon, Richard Lombinp David Angelicchio, Richard Spado, Peter Yousey and David Miner.

Other awards included: Most improved boy, Richard

Spado, ton of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Spado.

Sportsmanship, Frank Froio, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Froio.

Citizenship, Brian Bauman, son

Physical fitness, David D'Auito, son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred D'Auito;

Don Simon, son of Mr. and Mrs. Don Simon and Peter Yousey, son of Mr. and Mrs, Robert Yousey.

Dinner was served and prepared by Mrs. Fred Schatz, Mrs. Carl Chppiflger, Mrs. Stan Cook, Nancy Cook, Betty Gleasman, Ken Tucker and Bob Larkin.

Mays Gets Eye for Distance

By The Associated Press Weep no more lot1 Willie, now

that Mays has unfrocked those Los Angeles Dodgers and discov­ered they're his old Brooklyn bud dies.

After 22 games with San Fran cisco this season, Willie was bat­ting a dandy .372, but folks were concerned. The kid who had led the Giants in home runs and runs-batted-in for four years had only .nine extra-base hits, only one a homer, while knocking in Just nine runs.

Then he recognized those Dodg­ers, the guys he's always killed, and Willie started beltin*. In three games against Los Angeles he's rapped five home runs, driven in 1L

Hits Two Mays hit a pair of homers, one

his second grand slam in the majors, and had five RBI Monday night as the Giants ripped the Dodgers 12-3 and moved back within a half-game of the Nation­al League lead with their fifth straight victory.

It was the fourth consecutive defeat for the Dodgers, w h o plunked into the cellar for the first time since July 2, 1948. The St. Louis Cardinals quit a three-week stay in eighth place by win ning their fifth in a row, 6-4 at Chicago, in the only other game scheduled.

Stan Musial doubled for his 2,999th hit, but after grounding out three times was "benched for hitting" by Manager Fred Hutch­inson for today's game with the Cubs. Unless he's needed as a pinch-hitter, the Cards figure to save The Man's 3,000th hit for the home fans.

Mays triggered a 17-hit attack as the Giants made it five in a row over Los Angeles. Daryl Spencer also counted two homers. Ruben Gomez won his third, all against the Dodgers, with a six-hitter and fanned 10 to take the NL strikeout lead with 32.

Mays tagged loser Don Drys-dale (1-6) for his first homer in the third!. Then he cleared the left field screen at the Coliseum by plenty on a bases-loaded pitch from Ed Roebuck that capped a .six-run fifth in which all the runs were unearned.

A four-run fifth, on four singles and two errors, bagged it for the Cards as right-hander Phil Paine collected a So record in two days. Glen Hobbie was the loser, blow-ing a 3-0 lead after Ernie Banks hit his seventh homer, with a man on, in the third.

Kentucky Derby First 4 Dominate Preakness Field

We hsa* Hunlmcj & Iisriino

Licenses "Herb" PHILIPSON'S AlMT AND NAVY STORE

257 W. Deahks Si.

LAUGHS »<0ADS!

Johnson &t*r&»-H<mV5©

BALTIMORE W — A pair of elimination races brought no ap­parent new faces today to a prob­able Preakness field dominated by the first four from the Ken­tucky Derby.

With four days to go for entries, the solid lineup consisted of nine for Saturday's second $100,000 leg of the Triple Crown. A few more 3-year-olds were still on the rail for the mile and three-sixteenths classic at Pimlioo.

Tuneups in the Preakness Prep and the Withers Mile at Belmont Monday strengthened the resolve of only Mrs. Richard E. Lunn to part with $1,000 to start her Gone Fishin' took the mile and six­teenth Preakness Prep with con­summate ease. But he had already been considered worthy of a shot at the Preakness after finishing 8th in the muddy derby with a twisted shoe.

The Withers had 12 Preakness eligible? and the outcome left it doubtful if any would continue on to Baltimore. The race was won

by John S. Kroeses* Sir Robby, a 17-1 long shot no better than third in six previous major races this year.

Gone Fishin' won the Prep by a length and three-quarters over Christiana Stable's Staysail. It was only the second start of thei year for Staysail so he may be given a chance at the Preakness.

Gone Fishin* secured his place together with Calumet's Tim Tarn, Sunny Blue Farm's Lincoln Road, Crabgrass Farm's Nour-wirtin. and Maine Chance Farm's Jewel's Reward who led the Der­by Parade. Also undaunted by the outcome of the Derby were Mrs. A, Cannuli's sixth place Chance It Tony and Ross & Klipstein's 12th place Silky Sullivan.

Among the most likely new challengers of the Derby crop are E. G. Potter Jr.'s Plion and Mrs. Ada L, Rice's Talent Show. They earned their Preakness spurs by finishing first and third in Satur­day's Delaware Valley handicap in New Jersey.

Softballers List Games

Flint Victor At Buffalo

ML D M ' I pmmptt fMt < 9 Joaaiaws i w "V* a**

SMC II I p l faf a IlTCfWIC €K faS »w«f pifftfwosM • to 50

Changes in the playing sites ofj two Gty Softball Leagues have been announced by Supt. of Rec­reation William G. Keating.

Today's American League sched­ule:

National Reweavers vs. Rome Plumbing at Harry Pint! No. 1; West Rome Merchants vs. Brew­ster's at KranJdyn's Fteld No. 1; Chick's Radio vs. Skto's at PlntJ

I No. 2; Sanzone vs. K. of C. at jFranklyn** Field No. 2»

Thursday's National League | schedule:

Mohawk Airlines vs. K. of C. at Franklyn's Field No. V, Chick's Radio vs. Griffiss R&D at RFA No. 2; West Rome Merchants vs. Brewster's at RFA No. 1 and San-zone's vs. St, Gregory at Pint! No.

The International League sched­ule Wednesday is unchanged,

Rome Hurlers Blank Ufes On No-Hitter

Jerry Mead and Vic Simiele combined in a no-hit pitching per­formance as Rome Free Acad­emy shut out Proctor High School of Utica for a 1 to 0 victory at Utica yesterday.

Rome scored in the first in­ning on three walks and an error.

The RFA Junior Varsity also won yesterday from Proctor, chalking up a 4-2 decision.

RFA plays Whitesboro here mis afternoon at 4:45 o'clock and has a game Thursday in Utica with Catholic Academy, also at 4:45.

The scores: Roma |

a b r hi DeCosiy.aa 3 1 0| M'ehant.ef S 0 0 F-R-eratd.Sb 2 0 1 Z'rine.ff.H H « Vinci,<? Pfnti.lf Wahal.rf Senua.Sb Pl*mti»K,3b Heotl.lb 8tmi*t»,p Mead.p.lb

1 o ft 2 0 0 1 0 0 2 0 0 1 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0

SaMelti Gim'laro Cotnjpe GrTmaldl Martelto Betore Mancmo Gigtin Pap'ella Frajnw!! r/Brtndlat

3 0 II Graaiano | aLucar*lll

Proctor • b r h

2 0 0 1 0 0 3 0 ft I H 1 0 6 1 0 6 2 0 0 3 0 0 2 0 ft 1 o 0

i o n 1 ff 6 1 0 6

WELLS BOAT SHOP

H U W, tistilrt k . O f f * M L i MO*. WININ&S

Syracuse Boob Maryland Eleven

Making a 30-seeond final-quar­ter spurt. Cedar Crest Pride out­did Flourish by half a length Mon­day night and snared the $3,500 Admiral Class A Pace at Roose velt Raceway, Westbury, in 2:06 for the mile.

Meanwhile, in duplicate per­formances at Buffalo Raceway in Hamburg, two $1,500 Class B mile paces were both won in 2:07 2-5. The respective victors were Flint in tha sixth race and Dagsworthy Lady hi the seventh.

Cedar Crest is a 5-year-old geld­ing owned by Roy T. Morgan, Lin­coln Park. R. I. He was driven Monday night by Charles Fitpat-rick Jr. and paid $13.30. Misty Hayes, the favorite, finished third.

At Hamburg, Fred Parks guided Fhnt to a length victory that re­turned $10.80. $7.00 and $4.30. Dagsworthy Lady, with Jimmy Ar thur at the reins, paid $6.10, $3.70

n l 21 n o » e Struck out for Fraxnoli in 7th. a Struck out for Graaiano in 7tb.

Roma 100 000 0—1 Proctor 000 000 0—#

K— n#Co»ty, GiKlio. SB— DeCoaty, FUnwraM. Ziirrino. S—Grajtiane, D P —Rome (Mead and Hcott): Proctor fGlallo. Sarn>lll and Marttl lo); (Gimmillaro, Gialto and Martello). L*>ft—Rome 8, Proctor S. BH—Grasi-ano S, Maad 4, Simlala 0. SO—Grfcal-ano 2, Mpad 1, Pimlda 3. HO—Ora*l-ano 2 In 7: Mead 0 in 4: Slmlale 0 tn 3. HBP—By Mead (Qrlmaldt). W— Mend. I*—Gruziano.

Roma JV I ah r hi

Koskl.ef B.Kikcrf Val*tln#,M Thay»r,!f S^nal'cp.lb T.Fik*.2h Gaudln.Sb IV! Piano, e ttollorfc.p Tard'no.C Parker, p

Proctor JV ab r h

2 2 11 Oambtno,2b 2 0 0 4 0 1! MI«'l l lk,M I 1 0 4 t 0! Kttl'akl.cf 3 0 2 3 fl nt Tacca.3t) 3 ft ft 3 B 01 rarlo.lf 3 0 0 3 n 2 Zito.lb 3 1 1 J 0 0) Salcrno.e I 6 1 3 6 0{ Adorina.rf 3 0 0 3 111 pal men te, ft 3 0 8 0 0 0 1 0 0!

2} 4 Si Roma JV' i Proctor JV' i

K—Gaud In. Koakt, —Kulakowakl. tj«ft-

25 2 4 101 001 1—4 001 100 0—2

Mi*UU*k ?. 2H -Row* S, Proc­

tor S, RB— Dellork 2, Delmonta 3, SO —Dellork 4, Belmonta ». HO—F»*I Wrk 4 tn •; Delmente I In ?: Parker 0 tn I. HBP— Rv r»etiork fMlalawekl. WP—rjeJIorfc. W—DftHork. L^-Del-rnont*. i

Eastern League

Wiihamsport 6, Springfield S (10 Innings) Albany 11, Binghamton 1

SYRACUSE, N. Y. j»-§yracuse j University's feotbaff tarn wffl [meet University of Maryland heref Aitentown 9, Lancaster lOct. 3, im, in the opener of a)York | , Reading 2 homeland-home series.

The ret urn game will be played) Syracuse ©fficMs announced Mao-at Coilega Park, Md., Oct, 7, 19$L da*.

Grace Edwards Leads Bowlers

Grace Edwards, with 179 and 438, set the 1© and 30-frume aenr hTg pace In the Hf-Lo Bowling League, only mm in action here last night.

The scores* Rolling Stone* 4, S o Pokes 6 WhJizers 3, Go Getteri 1 Pin Spiittari 3, Alley CaU 1

Franci% Regan's Sports View* and Reviews

Death Thins Ranks Of Can-Am Leaders

He is not dead, this friend, not dead But in the paths we mortals tread

Got some few trifling steps ahead And nearer to the end.

So that you, too, once past the bend Shall meet again as face to face

The friend you fancy dead. —Robert Louis Stevenson

Ranks of the once-prospering but now-defunct Canadian* American Baseball League are being thinned, all too fre­quently of late, by the Great Umpire, who in His providence has seen fit to call a third strike on the Rt. Rev. Msgr. Har­old J. Martin, the Catholic priest from Northern New York, who founded the Class C Can-Am League and served as its president from 1937 through 1944.

And as Father Martin, or Judy, as he was affectionately known, goes to join, in an eternal fellowship such Can-Am figures as Dr. Dan Mellen, Amby McConnell, Louis Schneible, Johnny Page, Albert Gaucher, Joe Carr, Harold Ford, Stan Clarke and the others who have proceeded him, including those members of the playing ranks who made the supreme sac­rifice In World War IT, there is sadness for days long gone and grief for departed friends.

There have been requiems for Father Martin, a national figure, from far more facile pens than this, including one yes­terday from the New York Herald-Tribune's Red Smith.

Here, however, the memory of the man to whom base­ball was second in importance only to his religious calling, will long be' cherished.

President When Rome Joined League in 1937 It was during Father Martin's first term as Can-Am pres­

ident that Rome became a member of the Can-Am League and it was his advice and encouragement that made it pos­sible for this city as well as a number of others to weather the stdrms besetting professional baseball operations in the lower classifications.

Even as World War II was In full swing. Father Martin had no desire to follow the general trend that called for a suspension which eventually developed. To him baseball was an entertainment to be provided without charge to the trainee serviceman in camp or home on leave, it was a sport to at­tract and hold the interest of the soldier's schoolboy brother, it was a release for the tensions of a defense worker, it was America, at war or at peace.

As part owner of the Ogdensburg club, he argued that me Can-Am League continue even though he well knew the fi­nancial hazards that would hit him personally as hard as any of his fellow club owners. When he was over-ruled by the league directors he cast his lot with the Utica entry in the Eastern League which continued operations through World War n .

Eventually his Utica holdings, along with those of his partner, the late Amby McConnell, were sold to the Philadel­phia Phillies and Father Martin retired from the area base­ball scene.

Shortly after his name appeared again in the dispatches which told of the organization of the Border Baseball League. He served in an advisory capacity with that circuit through its existence.

Played Minor League Baseball An ambidexterous pitcher at Fordham University, Msgr.

Martin, a Boston native, played minor league baseball for New Haven and Albany before his ordination.

As a young assistant in Ogdensburg, he pitched semi-pro baseball at $75 a game donating his salary for the establish­ment of a children's playground there that later became the home of the Ogdensburg professional clubs where children were always admitted to every game free of charge.

His baseball skills provided Father Martin with a schol­arship to Fordham. where he was a baseball teammate of Frankle Frlsch and from where, shortly after his gradua­tion, he entered a seminary to study for the priesthood.

He never forgot the sport that made his education and his vocation possible.

"I'm trying in a small way to repay baseball for what It has done for me," he once said, when asked why he was devoting time to professional baseball.

He had another reason too. "Throw open our ball parks to our youth," he proclaimed,

"and with tiie help of God, we may be able to close our juvenile courts."

Syracuse Seeded Third in Saturday's Sprint Race

NEW X 0 R K ** — Undefeated Yale against Harvard and Rut-Yale and Harvard are seeded [gers. 1-2 respectively for the East- Seedings and "pairings also were ern Rowing Sprint Champion-(announced for the Eastern Light­ships at Lake Carnegie, Prince-j weight Rowing Championships on ton, Saturday, May 17. Thirteen | the Charles River at Cambridge, crews entered. "to be rowed May 17. Syracuse is seeded third and

Cornell and Pennsylvania are Jointly placed fourth.

Yale drew Navy and Dartmouth foe the varsity race, starting at 11 a. m. Harvard was placed in

! 5 ^ f S ! 2 ? - S ^ E T S vard, Yale and Dartmouth. and the Massachusetts &<tats of ^ f h ^ ^ i n M c h

Technology. Syracuse rows in the ^ ^ ^ fi_

Competition starts at 10 a. m., with the varsity finals climaxing the regatta at 6:30 p. m.

In tiie varsity, the first heat matches Penn. Cornell, Prince­ton, MIT and Columbia. The sec­ond heat sends Navy against Har-

third heat with Princeton and Columbia.

Cornell, winner of this champi­onship for the last two years, was in the fourth heat with Rutgers, Penn and Boston University.

Winners of each heat qualify for the 6 p. m. final over the 2,000

nals. The same conditions held for the freshman and junior var­sity races.

Here are the heats in the fresh­man race: 1. Dartmouth. MIT, Princeton, Cornell; 2. Harvard, Yale, Columbia, Penn.

Junior varsity: 1. Navy, Yale, meter Olympic distance (one mile; Princeton. Columbia; 2.' Perm, 427 yards)

PaMngs were announced yester­day by Asa Bushnell, commission­er of the Eastern Coflege Athletic Conference and secretary of the Eastern Association of Rowing Col­leges.

The freshman heats will oner the program at t a* m. For this race, the seedings were: 1. Har­vard; 2, CoraeD; 3. Navy; 4 Perm.

The draw toe the heats sent Harvard against Princeton and Syracuse: Cornell againsj Dart­mouth and Rutgers: Navy against Columbia and MIT, and Penn against Yale.

For the junior varsity race, Cornell was seeded first, followed by Navy, Penn and Yale.

Competition tn the JV sends Cornell against Coltmibia and Princeton; Navy against MIT and Dartmouth, Perm against Boston U., Syracuse and Wisconsin* and

Dartmouth, MIT, Harvard, Cor­nell.

Pacific Coast League Seattle 5. Spokane 0 (first game) Seattle 3, Spokane 0 (second

game) Vancouver 7, Sacramento 3

BASEBALL onth«Air

N. Y. Yankees vs.

Baltimore Wednesday—2 P.M.

WRUN-1150 The Senl ine l Stalion

Castoff Beats Sox For Nats

By The Associated Press The first home run was the

toughest for Neil Chrisley. Four games ago he never had hit one in the majors. Now he has three for Washington, and it's no coin­cidence that the Senators are still second in the American League, two games from the top.

The 25-year-old outfielder, trad­ed out of the Boston Red Sox farm system to the Nats in 1955, was up 51 times without a homer as a rookie last season. He didn't get one in his first 14 at-bats this season.

Now he's hit three in seven trips, hauling the Senators to a 5-4 victory over the Red Sox Mon­day night on a shot that bounced off center fielder Jim Piersall's glove into the bleachers at Grif­fith Stadium for a two-run homer.

A's Snap String A home run won for Kansas

City, too, as Woody Held pickled one in the 11th that beat the Chi­cago White Sox 2-1 and ended the A's losing string at six in the only other game scheduled.

Chrisley, carried as a pinch-hitter by the Nats, has banged his homers in three games.

Chrisley started Monday night's game and cracked a 3-3 tie with his homer, giving the Senators a 6-1 record against the Red Sox. Dick Hyde won his third with a six-hit, five-strikeout job over 5 1-3 innings in relief of Hal Griggs.

The game was delayed an hour and 15 minutes by a power failure at Washington.

Ray Moore nursed a 1-0 White Sox lead for seven. The A's tied it on Bill Tuttle's triple and a sacrifice fly by Hector Lopez in the eighth. Held was the first man reliever Gerry Staley faced. Mur-ry Dickson won his second with four innings of hitless relief.

Second baseman Nellie Fox of the Sox was spiked and sprained an ankle making a diving tag on Bob Cerv in the fourth inning.

Musial Hit To Come at Home Field

CHICAGO UV-Stan Musial, the St. Louis Cardinal slugging star who is only one hit away from 3,000, will not reach the coveted goal today according to Manager Fred Hutchinson. '

Hutchinson Monday night an­nounced he was benching The Man so that Musial can register his 3,000th hit at St. Louis.

"Stan has always expressed the desire to make his 3,000th hit in St. Louis and I'm going to give him t h a t opportunity," said Hutchinson.

Musial rapped out his 2,999th hit in the first inning of a M victory over the Chicago Cubs. He stroked a double into left center-field. He walked in the third and then grounded out weakly in his next three appearances.

"It'll be a good clean shot when I get it." said Musial after Mon­day's game.

Major League Standinas

National League Team

Milwaukee ' San KrancUco Ptttaburgh Chicago Cincinnati Philadelphia St. Louta Los Angelea

W L P.C. OB 15 7 .«S2 -16 I .(40 H 15 t .(25 1 IS 1) .500 4 • U .450 5 • 16 .375 7 S 14 .384 7 9 16 .360 7tt

Result* Yeiterday St.' Loula 6, Chicago 4. San Franctaco 12, Los Angelei S. Only games scheduled.

American League Team

New York Washington Baltimore Detroit Kansas City Cleveland Host on Chicago

W L P.C. 0 1 13 & .722 — 13 9 .591 3 11 9 .550 3 12 12 .500 4 9 10 .474 4' ,

11 11 .453 5 10 15 .400 6H 7 13 .350 7

Yesterday's Results Washington 6. Boston 4. Kansas City 2, Chicago 1. Only games scheduled.

Graham Dogs Gain Coveted AKC Crowns

A rare ocurrence in dogdom took place on the last two weekends when two Scottish Terriers owned and bred by Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Graham of Rome gained their AKC championship in out-of-town dog shows.

Ch. Todhill's Phoebe Snow, an 18-month old terrier bitch finished her championship in AKC point competition Sunday, May 4 by go­ing best of winners at the Trenton, N. J. Kennel Club Show under Judge Edwin L, Johnstown of

A litter brother, Ch. Todhill's Honest John gained the same award to complete his title last .Saturday at the Springfield, Mass. Show under Judge Percy Roberts of Norton, Conn.

In completing their champion­ships, which under AKC rules re­quire a minimum of 15 points, in­cluding at least two major or three point victories, each Rome dog registered four major wins under different judges.

New Coast Team in Bad Slump

LOS ANGELES (fl — There were suggestions during the spring that tiie Dodgers might not deva­state the National League this season.

Still, about the last place you'd expect to find them is in last place.

But there they are — for the first time since July 2, 1948. And Manager Walt Alston could prom­ise no swift ascent after the latest humiliation — 12-3 loss to the San Francisco Giants Monday night.

"If a couple of guys get in a slump," Alston said, "you can take them out. You can't take out the whole team."

Hard to Smile Alston, who likes to smile but

found it a difficult expression to achieve Monday night, was asked whether the ex - Brooklyn club might not be trying too hard to please its new audience.

"Playing at home? No, I don't think that has much to do with it. If we play away like we played here, we'll get beat just as bad."

The conversation turned to Don Drysdale, the young pitcher who was supposed to win 20 games this year but who suffered his sixth defeat in seven decisions Monday night.

"I don't know what to say about Drysdale," Alston said. "But I do know he doesn't have quite as much stuff as he did last year. I don't think his control of his curve is as good."

After the -feeble-promise of Ms early outings, will Drysdale be removed from the regular pitch­ing rotation.

"If I had somebody that was hot." Alston said, "I'd go with him. But I don't."

American Assn. Denver 6, Charleston J St Paul 7, Indianapolis S Only games

Ruth Leaguers To Report Here

The first tryout for Babe Ruth League candidates will take place Wednesday at the RFA diamond at 6:30 o'clock.

Eligible players from last year (up to 15 years of age) and any newcomers are asked to report.

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