The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 122, Ed. 1 Monday, May 22, 1950 Page: 4 of 8
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THE ORANGE LEADER
ORANGE, TENA6, MONDAY, MAY 22,1950
llv^itei
With the Yankees Now That Joe DiMaggio Is Back on the Team
. -i ■; if!
" rv
Is Qwkklj Elminated Jolter s Slugging
I AaatewTMVaey Helps Champs Cop
Two from Cleveland
whustac Hr* Irmm the C»kt,
3-2 sad 4-3. PHMwik tnO
‘put Um Cafe* htto fifth place,
iwMptoi both nth *f a 4—hie-
header from the Ohah hi New
HK ANORCTm' Scwftond. May Ueh burgar* twirling their kilt. • /,LwJliaJ *"*’ 4** *'*
Crnwby bowed out to excitmaot , I WO frOIII VJCVClOIMl j Philadelphia and St. Louia split
t)M> British Amateur golf chain- He had to step the practice an American league twin bill, the
to um first round today round yesterday on championship All a well with the New York A’i winning the second game. 8-3
beaten by J. K. Wilson St. Andrew's old course, where Yankees now that Joe DiMaggio I after the Brown* had won the
Rottghnecks Ease Missions Out of Fourth Place With 4-3 Win
W __ . _ ... ... ..... _ .. ..... .w- Ml 4 T™. " 1 —1
By Wilbur Martin
Aaaaeiated Preu Staff
Fort Worth with a tenth inning Buffs on four in the first. Joe
home run. Tulsa tumbled Okla- Montalvo’s fifth - inning single
Scot, 3 and 1
the Sabbath is observed strictly.! u back on the team Apparently
The Crooner started well, win- Hwttod. he played a single tuneup i all both DiMag and the Yankees
MMa the first two hole* wtth 00 * ****** known local course. He j needed was t change of scenery.
S£n5m threes, but Wilson pulled ,***n walloped 80 practice shots a sweep of the doubleheader in
Cleveland yesterday. 14-5 and
12-4, established the world cham-
pions more securely than e'er in’
r ■:
WM* Ss ___
Oreatty arrived here onlv P*11 Osat ball, said Bing, who, they’re better off than they were
„r and did not have a was swinging for the benefit of
to practice over the famous newsreel earner amen I’ll be out
Course,” which is closed on °' ther* ln * huTrL
Record Field
doe 41 or Beats BlvaJ I Th* r*roTri ttoU, which includes
The first of 2* American entries » •*»" °,f' ‘,h“ had won the opener, 7-0, gave the
to finish hJs opening round was *®rT,ln« *nd '*U1 flni*h ,n ,h* Yanks a two and a half game
Bill Ooodtoe of Valdosta. Oa . who *'* 7 . * u n ___ , bulge over the second place Tigers
ppmlclud hi. British rival. Sir «» and . three-game edge over the
John Cradttoek-Hartopp. 7 and 5 interest centered around the Rcd gox
Ctttaby had not been optimistic * of B ,fi“ °f A*"***™"* •** | When the Bronslte* left the
•bout his chances *”***”* *® "5Tn usually friendly confines of the
1 *T’ve got a leservatioo beck to trn^1 ,d*'end!n? ^ McC ready
| lamdon on tonight’* train.” he ®' The three are Turnesa
fOnUded o' Elmaford. N Y.; Chapman, vet-
' Crosby’s appearance drew at-1 *T*n Pine hurst. N. C.. Amateur,
ttottoa usually reserved for royal- *“d rr*"k Sir an a ban of Toledo,
ty. He had normally dour Scot-! OM4who won the championship
"*' • in IMS.
Turnesa, 1847 British Amateur
•bamp and finalist against Mc-
Tready last year, was pitted
7gainst James Knott ot New York
*0 a first round match. Chapman
was slatad to face another New
Yorker, J. Ellis Knowles, in a
•eeond round match. Atranahan
drew a bye.
opener, 11-8.
DiMaggio enjoyed
Dallas ought to tack this motto homa City out of second place;
on the clubhouse door: Shreveport hammered Houston
“One can’t win if one doesn't deeper into the cellar and Beau?
score one more run.” mont replaced San Antonio in
. fourth.
The hanging of such heroic
spoiled the new Sport pitcher’s
bid for a no-hitter.
Dicker’s game - winning blow
came off Bob Austin, third Fort
Worth pitcher. • ,
^f^SStOTM^
T3
esujfe
words wouldn’t be as bitter today. Tulsa clubbed Oklahoma City
game, saw fed Lopat and AUie
tuynoids each win his fourth
game for the Yankees. Bob Feller
a yaar ago today when they had *nd Early Wynn were the losers
a 10-10 mark | Conrado Marrero, a pint-sired
Washington’s 8-2 triumph over I 3'7 Cuw,n righthander, who toiled
Detroit and Chicago’s 4-3 victory for Havana to the Ciasa B Florida-
over Boston after the Ked So* Intwnattonol last year, stopped
tne ligers with three hits for the
{senators. It was Washington's
10th victory in the last 14 games.
The triumph moved the Nats into
his biggest
uay oi ioe year yesterday as he 8-8. yesterday
baited in eight runs in the twin even. They’.c now won
mu. A crowd of 70,470, third *»mes and lost four by one-run
largest ever to see a mayor league margins in the last eight games
Beauassnt ia Foorth
SHELL
While Heinz Becker was beating
Ip
Jig5
1 tare an eatabibbed nfc
folly equipped, and
to suave hi
and ewerst* It far tVasaetv-
as a»4 pay me ou'r a tow
veto. N"thin* far yea to bay
tat IV uasaaaaw foe** . . ,
If yaw e»a ran a e*e*n *t*‘-
am raf# and are saber sad
ratable, write 8*s 14, Or-
aage leader (enflfentlal.
■MiiMataUuaammsumamaBMawmawumaaMaaunaaaauiMaauaai
FEDDERS
Boom Air
C ondltinner*
♦ v»«w wAwnawTY
SABINE ELECTRIC CO.
1088 - 141b Ftaue 2844
On ntruRN
SAVING
W''
7-> v
»*■
RIO GRANDE VALLEY
FXMIII1VI SRHVICR TO
CMNWIQ. HARLINGEN
MlgMON, MaALI.EM
leaving Jafforaan Cossuty Atrpart Dally
late Reaervsttous — PHONE BKAtTMONT 1-1425
i <=-^iA. v«*i.hu THwai- auaMv_ |
Trans Texas Airways
Yankee stadium a week ago Bun-
day they were in second place and
DiMaggio was in the midst of one
of the worst hatting slumps of his
career He was batting .225.
Once on the road, DiMaggio be-
gan belting like the Jolter of old
and the Yankees wasted little
third place.
Lefty Bill Pierce snapped a
teen-game losing streak for the
White Sox with a seven-hitter
against Boston after Ellis Kinder
nan shut out Chicago on four,
hits in the opener. Bill Wight,
Kinder's opponent, allowed only
seven hits, but one was a three-
iun homer by Walter Dropo
Home runs by Virgil Stallcup,
Johnny Wryostek, Grady Hatton
enabled
_________ ^ Tonight Tulsa is at Dallas,
The Fugles bumped Fort Worth, 10-5, J0-3; Shreveport slapped Houston at San Antonio; Beau-
to make matters Houston, 8-2, 3-0, and Beaumont mont at Shreveport and Oklahoma
now won f o u r nicked San Antonio, 4-3. City at Fort Worth
Teh run* in the eighth inhirig,
seven unearned, buried Oklahoma
City in the first game. And Tulsa
took charge of the charge com-
pletely with a flve-run first inn-
ing outburst.
Grand Slam Homer
Clinton Courtney's bases-loaded
home run in the eighth inning
beat San Antonio for Beaumont.
The three men on base had been
issued walks.
Lee Holloman set Houston down
with one hit in the second game
after Hugh Sooter had stopped the
are easy to achieve with the
9
BASEBALL RESULTS
By The Associated Press
Ease Texaa League
Giadewater 5. Marshall 0.
Tyler 7, Kilgore L
Longview 8, Paris 3.
Bryan 1, Henderson 4.
OYSITH OR TLAIH
For Driveways, Garage Do—v.
Parking lots. Ft".
PHONE 2518
HARMS SHELL CO.. INC
01) English
££ee&u&
FLOOR POLISHER
Longhorn Le.agne
Vernon 5, Roswell 4.
Ballinger 7, Midland 2.
Odessa 0, Sweewter 4.
San Angelo 8, Big Spring
time climhihg to the top. They’ve
won nix straight with one more i Danny Litwhiler
to play In Cleveland and two in j Herman Wehmeier to go the dls
Detroit. ' lance In the Reds’ 10-5
The leading figure In the j over Brooklyn. ’
Yankee surge has been DiMaggio. ' Catcher Joe Garagioia was the
In the six games Joe collected hero of the Cards' 8-5 triumph
Mg State League
Wsco 12, Wichita Falls 4
Temple 0, Sherman-Denison
(1st game).
Temple 8, Sherman-Denison
(2nd game).
Greenville 4. Austin 3
’
Texarkana 8, Gainesville 6 (1st
-9 victory Xame>-
Texarkana 3, Gainesville 3 12nd
game).
nine hits in ?3 tfm»* at bat for
• batting mark of 391.
The FTooklyn Dodgers’ lead in
the National league was cut to •
half game when’ Philadelphia’s
over the Phillies in the first game,
tie hit a single and two doubles
and drove in a run. In the first
inning after the Phils’ Ed Waitkus
took a third strike, Garagioia
Rk» Grande league
Corpus Christ! 8. Del Rio 4.
Laredo 14, McAllen 2 '
Phillies divided a doubleheader j whipped the ball to third to nip
with the St Louis Cardinals while ; Richie Ashburn. A quick relay to
the Cincinnati Reds were nosing
out the Brooks, 10-0 The Cardi-
nals neuried a triple play to win
first caught Gran Hamner off the
oag for a triple play.
Curt Simmons was credited
W, Texa*-N. Mexico league
Lubbock 20. Borger 0
Amarillo 9, Pampa 8.
Abilene 14. Clo is 7.
Albuquerque 4. La mesa 3.
the first game, 8-5, but the Phil* j with hia fifth victory in the night-
came back to win the nightcap, | cap.
that
this
4-2, on Andy Semlnlck's two-run
homer in the last of the ninth.
Beaten’s Braves moved Into s
third place Ue with Use Cards.
NEED A
PLUMBER?
PHONE 230?
l~ G. ELMORE
PH A TERMS
Johnny Sain registered his sixth
triumph for the Braves in the
3-2 victory over the Cubs. He
pitched six scoreless innings to
raise his string to 24 shutout
frames before Chicago scored in
the seventh.
Ralph Klner slammed his eighth
home run for Pittsburgh in the
Greek philosphcrs taught
the world ix round, although
knowledge was later lost to man-
kind for centuries.
Eratosthenes, a Greek, ealcu- j
lated the circumference of the i
earth with an error of only 14 per
cent in 200 E-. C.
Lifetime outside venet’an
b'lnds modernise# and pro-
tect* your home.
Smalt down payment, FHA
Financing will put these
hltnds on your home. Cust-
om made to your tndh Huai
requirements.
PAYNE’S
Furniture Store
306 PARK AVENUE
PHONE 4715 or 7183
Air View Metal Awning Co.
Fort Worth, Texas
HAMBURGER
STEAK
50
Light-easy to manage
due to floating action of
tw o rotating brasses.
Polishes a gleaming
path 12 inches wide.
Works ciese to base-
boards and comers.
Robber bumper
prevent* damage.
Complete with
2 waxing and
scrubbing
(A
brushes, 2 pel-1
ishing brushes
and 2 revers-
ible buffifig
pads.
5
f -
50
WOP SALAD
25c
Steak & Shake
210 FIFTH
Hollywood Cafe
204 FIFTH
TERRY'S
812 Park Phone 7414
- FREE PARKING—
j "first game triumph over the
—
! (Bants and followed with ;
\ loot triple in the second
win,..............--1_____
475-
game
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mu
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PACKAGE!
If 7'
Worn,- - r
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fM v ' ;’
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Only low-priced car with
a V-type engine!
Ah-
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Costs less
fhe NEW
COMPLETELY MODERN
1950 CAS RANGE
Ford—only Ford—in the low-price Raid
offert you the smooth, ipirited performance
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The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 122, Ed. 1 Monday, May 22, 1950, newspaper, May 22, 1950; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth557755/m1/4/: accessed April 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.