The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 139, Ed. 1 Friday, June 11, 1948 Page: 5 of 8
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SAIN, SPAHN ONCE AGAIN
MAKING HAY FOR DRAVES
ORC LOOP LEADERS WILL
PERFECT RECORDS HERE
Braves Move Into
Second Place Spot
By Ralph Rotten
Amo^IiM Press Sports Writer
Johnny Sain and Warren Spahn
once jiRnifi are being called the
'Mrr^lighV and Mr. Left of the
Boston Braves' pitching staff.
Sain and Spahn each won 21
games Tor the Braves in 1847 and
the National league pennant hopes
of the Braves hi-igc on their du-
plicating that feat this year.
Both howev er, got off to poor
starts. Each won only one game
out of his first three contests.
Sain, the righthander, pitched
the Braves into second place last
night by beating the St. Louis
Cardinals, 10-2. In a night
game at St. Louis.
Braves Fifth Straight
It was the Braves' fifth straight
victory and second in a row over
the Cardinals. Spahn, the left-
hander. stopped the Red DSrds,
11-7, Wednesday night for his
fifth win and fourth in his last
six starts. He was knocked out
once during this skein but wasn't
charged with the loss.
The Braves are only a half
game behind the firs't place New
York Giants and two percentage
points ahead of the Cards and
Pittsburgh Pirates who are tied
for third place.
The Giants were beaten, 6-4,
by the last place Cubs in a day
game at .Chicago while the Pi-
rates turned back the Brooklyn
Dodeers, 4-1, in° a night contest
at Pittsburgh.
Sox Pound Indians
The American league's front-
running Cleveland Indians took a
15 7 pounding from the lied Sox
in a day game at Boston. The
loss ended a five-game Clevefand
winning streak and cut their mar-
gin to three games over the New
York Yankees and .Philadelphia
Athletics.
Bob Feller started for Cleve-
land but was routed in the third
inning when the Red Sox jammed
eight runs home.
Righthander .foe Dobson went
the distance for Boston, scatter-
ing nine hits to pest his seventh
Steers Ready for
Olympic Tryouts
AUSTIN, Tex., June 11. (AP)—
Six University of Texas track
and field n^en finish drilling here
this week for the National Colle-
giate competition in# Minneapolis.
Jerry Thompson. Texas distance
see who seeks his third NCfAA
title; Is the only senipr on Coach
Clyde I.^ttlelield's squad which
will'try to make Texas one of the
five top- teams. That would be
higher' than any Southwest con-
ference team has finshed in re-
cent years.
Winner of the two-mile event
in, 1943 and 1947, Thompson will
face a toucher test this year over
the 5,000-meter, route, This is an
Olympic distance, more than three
miles, but the tiny Texan is one
of tho fa\oi ites- A top opponent
will be Horace Aschenfelter of
Penn State.
Charley PftTMr and Perry Sam-
uels, hoth-fnMfejSan Antonio, are
the Texas, thunoerbolts in the 100
and 200 metefNsyents. Parker ran
the fastes of ^Is career last week
at Dallas, a 2CWI that matched the
best time in the country this sea-
son. >
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SPOT TOMGHT
Strong rivals meet tonight in
the Orange Recreatffljn commis-
sion's industrial softball league
and one of them will lose a per-
fect record unless the Keown
and Slade's battle ends up in a
tie. Both teams have been talked
up as top contenders for the title
and neither has lost a loop game
as yet. Tonight's winner will re-
main in a tie for first with the
dark horse team, Shell Oilers.
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By Wilbur Martin j Ah ®xtr >•> '< ! hud to be play-
AsMH-lated Pre* Staff ! «>rl Thursday night before the
Houston., pins Its hopes to take j Powerful Oilers could down the
over the Tebcas league lead tonight I rrlla1' holding NFKF. boys 9 to 8
triumph of the year.
The Athletics also enjoyed a
big innign in trouncing the De-
troit Tigers, 10-4. Philadelphia
pushed seven runs home In the
fourth inning.
Senator Edge Browns
Philadelphia now trails the sec-
ond place Yanks by four percent-
age apoints. The Yanks' sched-
uled game with • the Chicago
White Sox in New York wfys
postponed because of rain.
The Washington Senators tri-
umphed 5-4 o\vr St. Louis'
Browns in a night game at Wash-
ington when Frank Biscan walk-
ed Mark (.'hiistmas with the
base .loiMled and one out in the
ninth to force in the deciding
run. /':
The• Cinclnrftiti Reds and the
Philadelphia I'hill'ies were idle.
on the strong left arm of little
Pete Mazar. '
The Buffs moved within half-
game of the fop spot by handing
the league - leading Fort Worth
Cats a 5-4 licking last night It
was the fourth defeat in! a row
for the Cats.
Fort Worth has had little luck
against left-hand pitching this
year and in Mazar they face one j ii'edit
of the best southpaws in the lea-
gue. He has won his last six
games.
Ollera Rout Shipper*
While Houston crept closer to
the Cats last night, Tulsa plaster-
ed a 10-4 defeat on Beaumont; j
Shreveport downed Oklahoma j
City, 3-1, and San Antonio ral-
lied to beat Dallas, 7-3.
Cloyd Boyer ran his string of '
strikeouts to 87 by whiffing ten
Fort Worth batters. He issued
nine walks, however, and the
Cats had two men on base when
the 20-year-old Buyer whiffed
Vic Marasco for the final out and
a five-hit triumph.
Wildness and bad fielding hin-
dered Cat Twirler Dwaln Clout,
who gave up only five hits. Hous-
ton made its first tatley in the
first, added two more off two hits,
wj'lk, hit batsman and fielder's
choice in the third. Milt Schmees
drove ib two Cat runs in the ninth
with a single.
Grand Slam Homer
Jim Matthews' grand slam ho-
mer highlighted Tjilsa's 12-hit at-
tack as Jim Avirea limited the
Shippers to four hits
Bill Sarni came through with a
pinch triple in the eighth inning
to score George Brown and Hal
Simpson and give Shreveport a
close victory over Oklahoma City.
Two of five hits given up by
Dallas Pitcher Paul Hinrichs
were home runs by Tom Jordan
and Joe Fra/.ier. These clouts
helped the Missions take the open-
ing game of a three-game serlVs.
The schedule tonight finds the
same teams playing at the same
sites.
Electric eels in the fresh wa-
ters of South.and Central Amer-
ica discharge electric , shocks
strong enough to sun human be-
ings.
The first written use of the ex-
pression, "hair of the dog," Is be-
lieved to be contained In an
Rnglish translation of a French
book published in Ifl H, when
''hairs of the l east that hath made,
thee ill" Is prescribed as a cure
for "the head that complain* it-
self of too much drinke of wine."
North Orange edged Deweyville
Baptist by the same score In the
early game after gaining the win-
ning run with two men out in
the lust frame.
The victory made four straight
for North Orange to keep them
easily on top in church play.
Deweyville has two wins and the
same number of losses to their
The North Orange first base-
man, Harmon, again sparked his
team to victory with three hits
-•••. •#' V
and the same member of runs ty ^
his credit. Other runs for thai
squad were brown, two; and one
each by Ward, Dennis, Ha 111 bur- w,
ton and Granger. Dewe^mta
runs were by Parrish, two, •mr.W,
one each by Tynes, Davis, H.*1*'
Williams, C. Wifliinrli, Tolbert
adn Cain.
Belt/ pitched for North „Qr«J j
ange while Hewitt was hehtn£u, 1
the plate, and the battery fo£
Deweyville was Davis pRchinf-?.'
and Tynes catching.
Run Makers Named
Kimball counted for the tie- "
breaking run for the Oilers In
their «amcu with NF'FE,
Runs for Shell were made by
Wilkinson, Sargent and Kimball,
two each; Debcnetto, Walker and
Dickey, one eac( . NFFE runs
were by Arnaud. two; and " one
such by Moore, Johnson, Schrelb-
er, Morgan, Perry and McCurley.
Melancon covered the mound
for Shell and Dickey was behind !
the plate. Schrieber pitched for
NFFE while their catcher was
Gla/.e.
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The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 139, Ed. 1 Friday, June 11, 1948, newspaper, June 11, 1948; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth308745/m1/5/?q=%22~1~1%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.