Show These Men Direct Future AlhAmerican Boys' Games §PORT HIGHWAY -- THE OSDEN (UTAH STANDARD-EXAMINE- R FRIDAY EVENING AUGUST 29 1947 1 " Brilliant Field Starts Play in Western Open at Salt Lake City 1 with RHS55I bIf :aa Jkk sfiv asfsB jES Cravath Is Put On the Sport In looking ahead to the football season of 1947 Jeff Cravath anticipates his sixth season as head football coach at the University of Southern California and his tenth season as the chief football mentor of a collegiate team Cravath's Trojans are rated as the team to beat for the Coast conference championship this fall and the automatic bid to represent the West in the m football Rose Bowl on January 1 Jeff Cravath is the only Trojan alumnus ever to be head of American football at the University of Southern California He fame on the Trojan campus in that capacity in 1942 after his predecessor Sam Barry had en- tered the navy Barry had been the emergency successor to How-ar- d Jones following the latter's sudden death in the summer of 194L Cravath has guided the Trojans to three Pacific Coast conference championships and to two Rose Bowl wins in three appearances at Pasadena His other two non title teams were each in the thick of the conference race up to the very last week of the season In five seasons his teams have lost only five conference games each by only one touchdown margin He staff was on the College at Chicago both in 1944 and 1945 Born in Breckenridge Colo on Feb 5 1903 Cravath was raised He is the in Santa Ana Calif nephew of Cliff (Gawy) Cravath former major league baseball home run king in the 1913-1- 9 era At Santa Ana high school Jeff played all sports playing center in football running the 880 in track and letters In basketball and earning ' baseball as well He entered university in 1923 to play center on an unbeaten Trojan freshman team in 1923 and then earned three varsity monograms in football at S C the last two years under Howard Jones In Cravath's senior season as captain S C missed national title recognition by only two points The Trojans of '26 lost only two games each by 2 scores Cravath was cenunanimously chosen ter on honor teams that year In 1927 following graduation Cravath assisted Coach Jones at then went to Denver SC andwhere he coached three university(1929-31seasons His 1929 team ) for the Rocky was runner-u- p He returned to Mountain title California to assist at Chaffey J C in 1932 and then rejoined the Trojan staff in 1933 first as frosh coach and later to handle the varsity line He remained until 1941 when he became head coach at San Francisco university where he produced the far west's highest scoring collegiate team of the -- All-St- ar 13-1- all-coa- st season The death of Howard Jones and the departure of Barry caused Trojan officials to request S F U to release Jeff from his contract and the Don administration yery kindly obliged Cravath coached the single-win- g offense at Troy in 1942 but swung in 1943 over to the and has retained that system for four seasons and exnects to continue for 1947 as well Jeff is married to an S C aliaajp na the former Margaret GPeg) Colegrove and they have two charming daughters Ann Marie 17 and Carol 14 Sports Tkl Bite Harry Parker one of the North coaches in the recent Utah Boys baseball game is recuperating from a serious major operation Harry dropped into the editorial sanctum of The Standard-Exainer today to say hello He'll be back at Weber high this fall but will pass up coaching until he regains his health Ed Schlensker one of the stars of the Oirden Reds of 1946 dropped his eighth mound game f the season last night Ed jut cant seem to have his mates get rum when he works Some days ago at Salt Lake he let the Bees down with three hits yet lost a close decision The Reds are five and a half games off the pace now with 18 remaining games They still have a chance to win the second half but a mighty slim one With nearly 150 golf experts competing the western open at Salt Lake this week-en- d ises some record shattering promgolf and Ail-Americ- an m -- SALT LAKE CITY Aug 29 (UP) — This is the day they knock par out of the way as the 44th Western Open Golf championships begin at the Salt Lake Country club —whose links look like they'd been laid out by a drunken snake Johnny Mize Is After play-for-pa- Homer Record - - ot NEW YORK Aug (UP)— 29 Today maybe or surely tomorrow or the next day the New York Giants will set a new team home run record but that feat is lost in the individual effort of John Mize to better Babe Ruth's season mark of 60 Sentiment is divided as baseball fans watch the big Georgia slout-e- r creep up on the most famous record of the game's d player Ruth still is "Mr Baseball" the most colorful man the game has known Mize a steady plodder is perhaps less colorful than any other player who has achieved such prominence But Mize can hit and he has 44 home runs today with 31 games to play Sixteen more homers tie the mark 17 beat it a pace of one every two games will do It The team record is a cinch When Mize hit No 44 yesterday to lead the Giants to a 6 to 5 conquest of the Cardinals it was New York's 180th round-trippjust two shy of the mark set by the 1946 Yankees Babe Ruth himself has commented on Mize's chances freof a quently decrying new record then possibility that admitting Mize's pace — he's now five games ahead of Ruth's speed in 1927 — makes it close His three-ru- n blow in the first inning yesterday started the Giants toward the victory which dropped the Cards seven games behind Brooklyn and big John doubled home another run in the third inning The Redbirds tried valiant-p-wit- h home runs by Enos Slaughter Stan Musial and Whitey but just couldn't makeJt Brooklyn added to its lead bv beating the Chicago Cubs 6 to 2 as Johnny Jorgensen returned to the lineup and drove in four runs with a double and single He had been benched since a disastrous error which enabled St Louis to beat Brooklyn in an important game Boston's Braves won a double-headfrom Cincinnati 8 to 7 in 16 innings and 3 to 2 in 5tt innings Ed Erautt who allowed only two hits in the 9 23 Innings he pitched for the Reds walked Earl Torgeson to open the loth and a wild throw by Ray Lamanno on a pickoff try seflt Torgeson to third Two intentional walks filled the bases and an unintentional walk to Tommy Jones ended the game Boston bunched four hits and two Cincy errors to score three runs in the second inning of the nightcap Schoolboy Rowe pitched his first shutout of the season as the Phils whipped Pittsburgh 7 to 0 Rowe allowed six hits as he got his 13th victory Harry Walker led the winners with two doubles and a single The Boston Red Sox walloped Detroit 13 to 3 with a attack that started on Hal who resented it bitterly imand ended with a $250 fine posed bv Manager Steve O'Neill because Newhouser wasn't trying hard and because he refused to give way to a relief pitcher O'Neill finally came onto the mound and took the ball away from the lefty who had allowed seven hits and five runs in the third inning The White Sox needed 12 innings to defeat the Cleveland Indians 4 to 2 winning on Cass Michaels' double singles by Mike Tresh and Pitcher Joe Haynes and a long fly Haynes batted in the winning run in his 10th victory in Which he allowed nine hits four-bagge- Army Eleven To Miss Grid Stars rs ' jjjr best-love- er Ku-rows- ki er 22-h- it New-hous- er Builders 137 Vineland 8 Cabinet Makers! thh nee! SPEEDMATIC RADIAL ARM See N Tennis Jousi Opens at Forest Hills er By Gayle Talbot NEW YORK Aug 29 (AP— Figuring no doubt that the international situation is troubled enough without risking further "incidents" our tennis officials have worked overtime to see that everything runs off smoothly in the Davis cup challenge round against Australia starting tomorrow at Forest Hills Jack Bromwlch the veteran Australian star will be permitted to strew tennis balls all over the court if he feels like it and if JMI of the visiting players has a foot fault called against him it will not be because he was not adequately and carefully instruct-O- d how to avoid the penalty Bromwich who hits his drives OOtn the right side with both hands grasping his racket caused a brief but violent storm just before the cup matches at Melbourne last winter by his habit of dropping the second ball on the court after completing his first service The Americans complained that the loose ball distracted them Bromwich curbed the practice both against Ted Schroeder and Jack Kramer in cup play One of the first things that Roy Cowling captain of the Aussies was told upon his arrival at Forest Hills was that it had been decided that Bromwich would be permitted to play in the coming matches "exactly as he played in 1939" In '39 the last time Bromwich played in this country he and Adrian Quist won the cup 2 and took it back home for the duration of the war non-playi- National League By The Associated Press W- - 78 70 70 84 Brooklyn St Louis Boston New York Cincinnati Chicaso Pittsburgh Philadelphia 61 56 S3 32 L 4B 53 57 58 60 70 73 72 rHE 010 100 000—2 6 0 400 010 01 x—3 13 0 Borowy Kush Passeau and McCulloughChipman Lombard! Behrman and Edwards Wyse r 201 001 001—5 302 001 OOx — 6 H E 9 1 6 2 Batteries: Dickson Hearn and Wilber Garaglola Jansen and Cooper r Score: h ib 000 000 000—0 6 1 Pittsburgh 010 060 OOx— 7 11 i Philadelphia Batteries: Singleton Higbe Bagbv Sewell and Kluttz Rowe and Seminick Detroit Philadelphia Cleveland Chicago Washington St Louis W 79 68 66 65 63 58 52 45 L 45 56 59 59 KAMMEYER'S SPORT STOHf 31824th Street W Salt Lake City Twin Falls Idaho Falla Pocatello 588 577 577 490 469 308 Al 3 2 2 OlLeyrer 4 0 3 n lessen 70 426 383 79 Detroit Batteries: Smith Murphy and Teb-betNewhouser White Benton Corsica and Swift ts Entries Close For Net Joust 1320 4310 pail Totals 32 5 24 Totals 1 Score by Innings: Ogden 41 18 27 12 001 000 000— 1 241 320 20x— 11 Ko-rales- Dalton ss Gust 2b Collins If Luis c Neil If 3 0 1 5 1 3 3 0 1 Angelos If Pa redes 3b 14 0 0 4 Lister DDrilling p 0 0 0 k Vinbladh lb Kissane e Habenicht p xThompson 10 0 Savarese p 0 0 0 yBrocker 10 0 Totals 34 8 24 Griggs p record-- ki 5 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 4 3 0 2 3 2 7 1 4 3 5 0 2 0 0 0 2 1 3 0 7! Totals 4117 27 11 xGrounded out for Drilling in eighth yGrounded out for Savarese in ninth zRan for Neil in eighth Sco1"8 by Salt Lake innings: 000 034 001— 8 Pocatello iso Oil 25x—15 Summary: Errors — Jacinto Bacciocco Rymer Gust 2 Luis Lister Lane Stolen bases — Bacciocco Lane Paredes 2 Sacrifice hits— Paredes Home runs— Neil Paredes Two-bahits— Vinbladh Sheehan Runs ???u8iUn Datted in— Bacciocco 2 Rymer 2 Luis Lane 2 Gray Cecil 2 Sheehan 2 raredes Vinbladh 3 Habenicht Neil Griggs Vinbladh Lane to 2 Vinb""U toGust to Dalton to ? TSL ?tor ne to Gray Runs responsible 3 vres Struck out— J wllf I V !f Gri ft Base on ball- snti -Sfii Passed Salt Lake 9 7lm?-- 2:Winning pitcher Losing pitcher— Lister Pa-red- es se lay-G- ray r jg riggs ball-Kis- "— Evans 2b Hill ss Oldnbrg Tapp c Haworth Garland Brickner Po-e2- Boifi nn rf p p lb 4 2 0 3 1 1 1 0 7 I 1 0 0 2 4 2 0 2 4 12 1 0Uiw et 2 0 0 2 2 3 DmIi Glbb A 4 2 12 2 0 2 3 10 10 TZ S 3 £j' ABHO - V c limJke t Franks pT' p 41402 3 2 11 5 2 3 5 0 3 3 2 0 0 0 0 10 0 10 0 6 1 1 0 14 last-plac- league-leadin- four-bagg- er second base Boise started strong and held a 7 to 1 lead in the third inning but Idaho Falls counted seven during the aext three frames Boise added four in the bottom half of the sixth to again lead 11 to 8 Idaho Falls tallied two in the seventh and scored another in the ninth to knot the count at 11 all Boise scored the winning run in the ninth with two away Briskey smashed a line drive into left to send Jim Daniels home Tbje Pilots pulled a triple play in the seventh to cut the Russets short after two Idaho Falls runners were on bases Tonight's probable pitchers: at SaJt Lake City (Sevier at eight Pocatello (Staley p m at Twin Ogden (Sanders 13-Falls (Rose eight p m Idaho Falls (Pitcher not reported) at Boise (pitcher not reported) eight p m -- 4-- 1-- 77 76 74 72 71 70 71 71 530 520 514 72 487 474 467 464 thriller iLoa for the other tackle position End Tom Hayes has a sprained ankle while Barney Poole didn't show up He returned to Mississippi It must have been a this fall right good football team to produce so many candidates Doc Blanchard who wore No 35 on his Jersey through his college career had to settle for 35 as an Seems the original number was retired for good after Merlyn Conditf s great performance a few years ago Bill Schuler is the only Giant player who'll be opposing his own team next Wednesday Bill doesn't mind be cause he plays football for fun instead of the money and plans to be a pro only one season Steve Cipot of St Bonaventure Is the squad's tension reliever and is so popular that the boys pick him as "captain in photographs All-St- Ail-St- ar ar -- left-han- has a slight dogleg a deep creek to cross and numerous sand-fille- d traps No 18 stretches its 538 yards canyon— and alongside Parley' over two deep gullies Far is five strokes But in past tournaments the canyon and gullies have frebeen littered with lost balls quently — and broken hearts ' I - fj was soundly Portland whipped by third-plac- e 1 aa old submariner Ad Liska spun a Oakland the' fourth contender ll race failed to in the The Oaks bowed to Sacgain 5 as their two-ru- n ramento ninth inning rally fell short Hollywood rising to sixth place made it three out of four over San Diego whipping the Padres behind Ed Albosta 4 Angeles ference here Par for the 72 holes is 288 Guesses on the probable winning score run from 270 to 276 way way under par of the visitors said they expect to have most of their trouble on three holes — Nos 4 11 and 18 No 4 is 355 yards long par four But it has a sharp dogleg — with a lot of trees in the bend The long hitters try to clear the No 11 is 536 yards par five It 7-- Treat Yourself six-hitt- er free-for-a- To a Genuine 7-- CEDAR CLOSET! 7-- Do ft Your$elil R H E 5 10 3 Seattle 6 H 1 San Francisco Fletcher Posedel Reis and Hem-sle- y Stagg Brewer and Gladd Enjoy the Beauty and Protection of Real Tennessee Cedar R H E 3 13 0 Oakland 7 7 0 Sacramento Wilkie Mulcahy and Raimondi Kearse Dasso R Smith Cecil and Fitzgerald R H E 7 15 Hollywood San Diego Albosta and Unset Rice 4 7 3 Seats and R Portland 1 7 Los Angeles H E 1 9 6 0 2 NOW AVAILABLE Comes in x 4 tongue and grooved just like ing Nail it right over walls in no time Average closet costs only about— I BRAKE JOB In Town! e It Tomorrow ml Ph 6697 at KETCHUM'S dcB II 5Jfi I: 2300 Wash Blvd I soaoo sflaS' Liska and Silvers Chambers Baker Osborn and Malone Sarni Best floor- o-- wli I Across From Depot 4) 4) 8) 2-- 2) Air Travel May Solve Problem LOS ANGELES Aug 29 (UP) transportation" today 1 "Airplane ' 0 seemed to be the main objection jxSpeno n of a major league baseTotals 39 15 26yl3 Totals ball committee headed inspection runwor"16 xSlTinto Tief? rin"S A B Chandler against invadby Choice Xor Fr in ninth coast the Pacific ing Score by The committee which also inIdaho Falls innings: rS cludes the president and a repreVU int Summary: Errors— wAtf sentative of each of the major lean Runs batted leagues and Chandler's secretary verthom Markert 2 wilter Mulbry placed themselves Brickner Briskey Tamone 22 3 at the disposal of the Pacific Coast Lowe 3 Daniels 2 kert Evans 2 Aldenburg toiS?!! r" league officials when they arrived base hits— Silverthorn Brlskf TJJree' yesterday They had little to say run-S-ites Sacrifice hiTano EZ The major officials agreed Stolen bases— Tann a team couldleague only be moved by & s2n-- 8 unanimous consent from the league t0TBKnVbaSsrlaid S"M involved and said they believed a aU 8 Boi Double pySfaanht°orf majority consent from the other to Daniels to Low Briskey -- Molitor to Gibb to Lowe league was necessary SsTan°tonD2 5Stand H£°J I six-ma- ' In-Lp- Men's tennis entries for the annual Ogden City championships close this evening Players may register at Lester park or by phoning iay in the city championships gets underway Monday with a field Players of Og- Struck den Salt Lake Logan and Provo H1fk in 3 3 will compete 98 80 6-- 4104 Briskey Stantn lbo 85104 i k- Owens rf 528 on 321 Markert If 3 2 2 D 67 oan Francisco Portland Oakland Seattle to 1 AljNeil and Fern Paredes poled circuit clouts for Pocatello and the e Cards ran wild over the g Salt Lake City Bees 15 to 8 Boise fielder Ernie Sites added his voice to the home run chorus to help by getting a his Pilot team mates edge the Idaho Falls Russets 12 to 11 The results left the Bees atop the league standings with Boise and Twin Falls tied for second just one-ha- lf game behind the Salt Lake City crew Leyrer drove In four runs in the Twin Falls Cowboys walkaway scored in six of the eight innings And meantime Cowboy chucker Frank Logue held the Reds to five hits Three of these came in the third! inning when Ogden collected its only tally At Pocatello the Bees were charged with seven miscues as the Cards blasted chuckers Walter Lister Pick Drilling and Ted Savarese for 17 hits The Cardinals scored five runs in both the second and eighth innings and counted in every other frame except the third and the fourth Russell Gust who learned the sport on Utah diamonds appeared for the first time on second base for the Bees Nell Cardinal leftfielder meanwhile dropped from the Pocatello lineup after he suffered a probable sprained ankle on a slide back to Reels It Murphy ss 3b 4 0 4 2Balas8i rf Egert c 4 0 0 Wellman li White lb 64110 Buck rf Otadtke 2b 3 3 4 3 401 4 0 7 3Loewe ss 4 0 4 3 Bush lb McConell cf 3 1 3 U' Burleson e 5 12 1 Mederios 2b i 13 5 Koraiesgi 3b 5 1 1 2 Schlnsker OiLogue p 1 0 0 0) W61f p 341 516 464 Pacific Coast League By the Associated Preft" W L Pet Los Angeles 83 69 546 i AB It O A 4 3 2 0 cl 50-5- Seals The Utah-Idah- o circuit batsmen were again only 2lk games back league-leadin- g Los didn'jt confine themselves entirely of the Coast Angeles Angels today to sliort blows either as six home The Seals let Seattle score three GB runs were recorded runs in the first of the 10th last Mi George Leyrer Twin Falls out- night then came back with a four-ru-n blast started by Hugh Luby's fielder smacked three home runs homer and ended by Ted Jen6Mi 14 2 as the Cowboys blasted the Ogden nings' pinch single to take a 5 Twin Falls Ogden AB H O Guth U Pet Lb 30 31 30 32 30 32 23 26 23 27 16 36 Boise Ogden AB 105 020 050—13 22 4 010 00 000— 3 iMfM r breaking 2-- A Press By The Associated atM Lapham 3b t matic Saw users Pioneer League Idaho Palls Thursday's Resalts H E Score (12 innings? 000 000 110 002—4 13 1 Chicago 000 000 1 110 000—2 Cleveland Hatteries: Haynes and Tresh Lemon Klieman and Hegan Boston : Prt 39 Angels Hold Lead in r Coast League By The Associated Press 78 80 Hollywood of the teams entered the Pioneer league twilight days 81 San Diego 81 1947 season last night with a vengeance as a total of 12 Sacramento for the six teams were blasted for 75 hits and 61 By the Associated Press pitchers — runs in the three games The fighting San Francisco Twin Falls Summary: Errors — Murphy 3 McCon-nel- l White Burleson Tworbase hits— Mederios White Home runs — Leyrer 3 — Stolen bases Leyrer 2 Hit by pitcher — Leyrer by Schlensker Bases on ball —Off Schlensker 1 Wolf 2 Logue 1 — Struck out By Logue 3 Runs Datted In — Schlensker Leyrer 4 Jessen Balassi White 2 Radtke 3 Loewe Burleson Runs responsible for — Schlen sker 12 Wolf 1 Logue 1 Double plays— Loewe to Radtke to White Left on beses — Ogden 5 Twin Falls 7 Hots— Off Schlensker 13 in 4 Wolf 5 in 4 Bianck and VogeL Losing Pet Umpires——Schlensker 814 pitcher 3S0 351 Salt Lake City PoraSf AB H O A ABH O 320 469 Jacinto 3b 2 14 Lane ss 5113 444 Baciocco rf 4 15 O'Lgniin rf 6 3 3 0 5 12 421 Cecil lb 0 6 5 6 2b Gray 4 3 4 Sheehan rf 4130 419 Rymer cf 3-- e4Sc°re: Louis New York George Leyrer Hits Three Homers as Cowboys Run Wild Against Reds ng American League any cutting position desired raised lowered swung with convenient accurate automatic indexing at 45 degrees either to right or left also at 90 degrees for ripping This entire rig was engineered by precision machine tool builders to give efficient dependable service under all conditions and to provide DOUBLE UTILITY for Speed- - all-Ameri- By The Associated Press New York Boston A demonstration of this new Speedmatic Radial Arm will Instantly show you how quickly and easily the saw is sat to will direct the Newspaper sports editors of five sections of the nation ana 1948 at programs oi baseball game unicago boys' City last week-en- d following years The men elected at the Windy are left to right: Zipp Newman Birmingham News treasurer Fred Johnson NashDifby New Orleans Item vice president Raymond ville Tennessean president Al Warden Ogden Standard-Examinsecretary and Bill Leiser San Francisco Chronicle vice president f Mssi J Jli rs Thursday's Results First game (16 R H E Cincinnati 100 041innings): 100 000 000 0—7 15 5 Boston 012 130 000 000 000 1—8 13 0 Batteries: Vander Meer Hetki Llvelv Peterson Erautt and Lamanno Sain Shoun and Camelli Masi Second came: R H E Cincinnati 100 100—2 6 2 star — Brooklyn's Boston Yesterday's 030 OOx—3 7 1 John Jorgensen who batted in (Called In the sixth darkness) 2 6 Batteries: a to four runs in Raffensberger Lively Petervictory over son and Lamanno Johnson Spahn and increased the Chicago which oouin Ainca against the Cleve Bailey Conlractc " A big silver cup two gold med- -f — als and $12500 in cash mone- y- the top pro The rest of the money are the incentives for the nation's will be split among 24 other places top professionals and amateurs to The big J K Wadley cup goat to y or give their all during the next four the n low scorer — a final The rounds—barring days Actually the Western Open aec- tie— will be made Monday Labor ond oldest of American biatime 18 four holes of each with the day tournaments is for the benefit golf Tues daysHAny playoff would be of the caddies Each year the West: dayGolf association makes its profThe first prize of $2200 goes to ern into its scholarships for the bag-tthe pro turning in the low medal score for the 72 holes The top to ers and sends a dozen or so off school amateur gets a medal and so does But for all practical — and spectator — purposes the game Ls for the sheer golf (and money) of it And that's where such gents as Ban Hogan Bobby Locke Jim Ferrier Sam Byrd Ed Furgol Vic Ghezzi Bob Hamilton Chick Herbert Clay rieatner Lloyd Dick Metz Ed Oliver Johnny Pal mer Frank Stranahan George ton Jimmy Thompson Ellsworth Vines Sam Snead and Emery Zimmerman come Jn Hogan a gift to golf dom froralhe chocolate town of Hershey Pa Js By Hugh Fullertoft Jr tne aeienaing cnampion by vi rtue BEAR MOUNTAIN N Y Aug of the 271 he fired out last ear 29 (AP)— For the benefit of foot- over the Sunset Country club lay- ball fans who spent last season OUt in St LOUIS f) However Hogan' s practic e shots discussing the greatness of the Army football team here's what's here have —been on the wiId aide likely to happen when a good part some times and that hurts because of that squad turns out for the east- the Salt Lake fairways are crooked ern All-Statussle with the New and narrow The man all fairway fans Here York Giants next week Arnold Tucker Glenn Davis and Doc are picking as the probable 1947 Blanchard likely will be in the Western Open champ is South Afwhose suitcase starting backfield but won't play rica's Bobby Locke more than half the game except already holds more man $iduuu under extraordinary conditions as a result of winning seven out Bill West Blanchard s sub will be of the 13 tourneys he's entered fullback in the alternate backfield since coming to this country ? 0 Locke's favoritism comes from Center Jim Enos is a Lou his choice of Daukas with accuracy —on the tee on the starting is a possible fairways and on the green He Cornell Shelton Biles tackle Penn doesn't hit as long a drive as many although starting State's Red Moore seems likely to of the others — say Sammy Snead has get the call while Alf Tavzel is and Clay Heafner But Locke difmake That'll the Bill control the Yale's behind Shuler running play-for-fu- hn 01 : By Murray M Moler lead to seven games record-breakin- g attend- Dodger Score: ance Chicago This corner likes De-Jo— Y N SYRACUSE Joey defending Brooklyn champion Ben Hogan and Bobby 152 Batteries: Syracuse outpointed "Re field m ham' 3°'' raij TH?' iJ&klin fson 10 Franks in 3 Runs responsible for— Haworth 7 Garland 1 Stanton 4 ison 3 2 Franks 1 Losing pitcher— Stanton Winning pitcher — Franks Time 4 1 S HitsOff Ifaworfh 2-- 3 HifksSf ?n°l-3- l SBC "CHOICE OF G F Bogae Lsndscape architect: "I learned from experience— there's no other cigarette like s Camel!" EXPERIENCE" Sheila G Bibie Asfhtsnt buy r "I smoked many brands during the war rime shortage -- Camels are the choice of experience with me!" jab i |